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B e e REV. HUBBARD IS IN CITY; | TOLECTURE g . . . . | Glacier Priest’” Will Show Pictures Tomorrow, | Sound Effects v. Bernar¢ “The nown as rrived in successfu in the Aleutian Islands. Hubbard di 2 wing to op- holding v, on which he is en- | to the States, he decided to | Juneau and nge for | his popular ures and | latest” films ure will be an entirely \ version of his films in sound | will be the first time he has| wn a motion picture with sound to ascending with Lieut. Comdr. T. When S‘tratosphérewFlier Flopped on R. R. Tracks where a complete Arctic village, the electric Start and end of attempt to pierce the earih’s stratosphere to a record height. Photos show balloon G. W. Settle, U.S.N. (insert), at Chicago, in the night, and the railroad tracks a short distance away where it landed after rising only 5,000 feet. Though it looks wrecked here, balloon did not suffer serious damage. Arrangements for the film and lecture are being! today, and the place and| will be announced tomorro ympanying the ‘‘Glacier are Bdgar Levin, a gradu- student, who has completed two Fathur Hubbard in r explorations as a gool- t, and George Gatty, ¢ student at the University of gon, Eugene; Rodcrick (Ref) Chis- 1 Gotaen (Botarson, | Gains T8’ ScattBted {Over guide of the party, remained on| Wide Front with Alco- Unimak Island to take motion pic-| A s of wild life for Father Iiuu-‘) hols Favorites made time STOCK PRICES “TAKE ADVANCE TRADING TODAY Father Hubbard's NEW YORK, Aug. 21.—Stock enth consecutive year of explora-| Prices moved into higher itory tion in Alaska. He is in the best | today with most of the categories of condition, and it verifies his|displaying a strong undertone prediction he made last May wh hroughout the session. Trading at in Juneau enroute to False Pas: was dull. Gains of one that the bracing air and healthful |to more than three points W climate of Alaska would complete- | scattered over a wide front with Iy restore his health. Last spring| alcohols favorites. The close was after a strenuous lecture tour, nec-| firm but the turnover was small. essitating long trips and much bro-| Traders generally were inclined ken rest, he spent | to exhibit considerable caution considerable | time in a hospital. | the matter of new commitments, — et | but the selling pressure was Eager for Test ticeably lackir and buyers frequently forced to raise bids. WASHINGTON — Demand for yrains were hea the tuberculin test by owners of gay, cattle herds in 23 States is greater Bonds were fairly than the veterinarians, employed Distillery sha by the State and Federal Govern- Missouri repeal vote ment, have been able to meet, re-| of three to around five ports the United States Depart-| Gainers included Commercial ment of Agriculture. Industrial Alcohol, National e Old papers for sale a. Emplre. Aere their most of firm reflected h Other advances of one to three o THE BEST of the BETTER BEER FALSTAFF ST. LOUIS DRAUGHT 10c Glass “THE CHOICEST PRODUCT OF THE BREWERS ART” e Alaskan Hotel DAVE HOU ln‘ no- | the! points Ame United Steel, included Allied Chemical, an Can, Case, Chryslen, Aircraft, United States Dupont, Union Pacific, Wes- Union, Sears, CLOSING PRICES TODAY NEW YORK, Aug. 21.—Closing es of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 27'%, American Can 88%, American Power and Light 12%, Anaconda 17%, Armour B. 3%, Bethlehem Steel 40%, Calumet and Hecla 6%, American Telephone and Telegraph 127%, American Smelting 35%, General Motors 31% International Harvester 38, Ken- necott 21, Missouri Pacific 6%, Packard Motors 5, Radio Corpora- tion 8%, Standard Brands 26%,| United States Steel 54%, Western JOUN KEY 1S ACCIDENTALLY SHOT ON HUNT Bullet From: G Fieed by Burr Johnson Proves Fatal (Continued from Page One) The bullet entered near the solar | plexus in the center of the body | Union 66%, United Aircraft 37%,'and came out under the left arm,| Ward Baking B 3%, Curtiss-| missing, the lungs, but probably | Wright 3%. | striking’ the liver. | No inquest is to be held, ac-| ing to United States Commis-| sion rles Sey. The body is at the Charles W.- Carter Mortuary | until funeral arrangements can be! made. | Lisbon Squatter Section Rebuilt by Unemployed LISBON, sug. 21 “Liberty Town,” which lies within the city Here Two Years | boundaries of Lisbon and where Al there are no rents, taxes or police,) John Alden Key was born in| is to be modernized. | Fletcher, Oklahoma, in 1910, and| The “best people” lives in caves attended Eastern Oklahoma Col-| hollowed out of a hillside and.lcge at Wilburton. He came here| have a door, but most of the in-!to Juneau about two years ago,| hal nts are content with pack- and was the junior partner in the; ing cases. | Pantorium Cleaners. On April 2| Unwilling to demolish the qu.nm»jux this year, he married Miss Eliza- and scatter the population, the city [ beth Thordarson, and they hayvel council has decided to give work|been making their home in the| to the unemployed by modernizing | Knight Apartments. the place. ! co Lorg Time Friends The three men in the party e friends of long standing. They {have boarded together, and for a | time the three batched together.| | Johnson and Key came to Juneau| 1011 the same steamer two yegrs ago. Key is survived by Mrs. Key, {who is a sister of Mrs. Erling K. Olafson; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. R. Key of Fletcher, Okla- homa, a sister, Miss Grace Key, also of Fletcher, and two brothers, one older and one younger. The first party of firemen which went out was composed of Frank | Heinke, Elroy Ninnis, B. Bostrom, Leroy Carrigan, J. S. MacKinnon, {Dr. J. W. B. McAuliffe, Tom New- combe, V. W. Mulvihill, and Roy Noland. They went in Noland's |boat. Mulvihill went up until he met Mrs. Key, and then he assisted her to return to the boat, where {Noland had remained. | The hunting season opened at midnight Saturday and the first fatality in this section occurred soon after daybreak. Johnson, who formerly operated a gas-filling station here, is near prostration from the shock. e Recreation Not Cut WASHINGTON—Camps for ‘un- employed men who are working in the forests this summer do not interfere with the use of the Na- tional Forests for recreational pur- poses, says the United States For- est Service. Juneau lIce Cream Parlors | Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S | | DANISH ICE CREAM | . 12TH ANNUAL S. E. ALASKA FAIR JUNEAU September 13, 14, 15, 16 Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” | NANUK IN PORT ‘SUNDAY; MOVIE * CROWD ABOARD | | | {Whaling Scenes for “Es- kimo” Taken — Capt. L. Lane in Command The three-masted auxiliary schooner Nanuk which arrived in| Juneau and tied up at the Pacific Coast Dock yesterday forenoon at figure that the amount of cash spent in the Territory for the making of this one film is equal to the pay-roll of the Alaska- Juneau mine for-six months, the benefit is easier to see.” Is Old-Timer Capt. Lane is the son of C. D. Lane, who once owned the orig- inal claims which became the Al- aska-Juneau mine. He made his first trip to Juneau in 1891, and has been coming back off and on ever since. He is very well known in the Territory. On the present voyage he is accompanied by his son Allen, who is 15 years of age. The Nanuk, formerly a trading schooner, has also made many trips in the north. The name is Eskimo 11 o'clock, is the Mctro-Go]dwyn—‘ ver vessel in command of Cam.'\ Lane, which has been tak-| for “Polar Bear.” She is 135 feet long, has a beam of 28 feet, and is rated at "325 tons net. Aux- iliary power is supplied by a 275 Vogle, John Diggs, Henry Gonzales, Phil Prertrude, John Decker, Wm. Foxxall, Bill Scheving, John Phil- lips, M-G-M cameramen and ac- tors. MISS SATHER 'GOING TO WASHINGTON, D. C. in the local offices of the Alaska Affairs, will leave on the steamer Aleutian this evening for Seattle, enroute to Washington, D. C. She has been transferreti to' the na- tional headquarters of the bureau, it was announced. Miss Sather has been attachad to local headquarters for the past two years. She is a bona-fide { Alaskan and was born.in Nome, | Miss Kristie Sather, stenographer Division of the Office of Indian| AVIATION CODE IS INTRODUGED Highest Minimum Rates Under NRA Proposal Are Outlined WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. — The | highest minimum rates of pay pro- | posed by the NRA are provided in | the code for aviation. Hearings | are set for next Thursday. The provisions called for at least | $250 a month for 110 hours max- | imum flying for pilots, and a minimum of $150 for 150 hours of flying for co-pilots. The program has been present- | | | | | ing | Capt. Lane was able to get a har- whaling sequences for Lhat} g £ company’s new picture, “Eskimo,”| DOrse-power Aflas Diesel engine, the Arctic Ocean. :which gives her a cruising speed The expedition went north last|of 6% knots. The old trader has summer to Teller, on Bering Strait, | been thoroughly = remodeled, and lights and refrigera- built for the filming of the | tion system would be a strange During the winter, actors| Sight to her former skippers. e flown in and out by air-| Well-Known Craft as their sequences were, _The Nanuk is the same ship Imed. None of the stars are, Which figured so prominently in cll-known, but the nature of the!Alaska aviation history a few years icture, and the feature of genu-| 320 when Col. Ben Eilson, in at neness achieved by actually tak-|empting to fly some of the val- ing the scenes in the north have|Uuable fur cargo which the ice- led the Metm,c,o]dwyn.mflyer‘;bound ship contained to civiliza- company to decide to send it out|tion, became lost in a storm and the first 1933 road show. | Plunged to his death on the Si- 5 | berian steppes. Captain Doubles 1 Capt. Lane has been doubhng\m:“r:m:gh;‘::f g;‘e b%alzfi Ll‘!’;ssf):z. for i A o i for Ray Wise, the principal char- MEOM | Aotorighn Havens, a5t acter, who by the way, was born| . c A on Kotzebue Sound. After a great | Soront director, Len Smith, Paul in e ure. as graduating from the Nome High ed by the Aeronautical Chamber School and attending a Seattle of Commerce described as repro- business school before coming here. | centing 90 per cent of the air ot ¢ o transport industry. The ads bring you une insorma- | iR e T tion about quality, style and nrlce.l Daily Empme Want Ads Pay FRUIT JARS NEW “PRESTO”—WIDE MOUTH Quarts, per dozen Pints, per dozen deal of difficulty in getting ac-/ ceptable pictures of a fight wilh.fll"" a whale, the company to == San Francisco for Capt. Lane, who is a bar pilot there, to go north, which he did, on the first: trip of the Victoria. He took immediate command of the Nanuk, and from his twenty years of experience as a whaling vessel skipper, was able to get the sort of pictures desired. The Na- nuk spent most of the present summer in the Arctic Ocean off the coast of Siberia, where she not only ran the risk of cracking up in the ice, but also being con-| fiscated by the Russians, Whale Harpooned Several good pictures were ob- tained before the prize appeared. poon into a whale that filled the | bill perfectly, and which took to his part’ like a circus elephant. After he was harpooned, the whale did all the things he was supposed to do for the benefit of Metro-| Goldwyn-Mayer, sounding at the; right time and barely missing the| boats with his flukes, running for five hours with the boats in tow, attacking them to destroy his tor- mentors, and finally making 8-foot | jumps out of the water with two; boats firmly fastened to his back,| during all of which time the cam- eras were able to get good shots, | as the weather was very clear. Bad Weather ‘When the negatives were sent in to Hollywood, the company ex- pressed ftself as so fully satisfied that they radioed back for some more sequences to be used in a later film. The Nanuk has been in Icy Straits for the past week or so trying to get these pic- tures, but nasty weather finally forced them to give up. The outfit came to Juneau for supplies, and when the party left here at midnight last night, it headed out through Stephens Pas- sage for the south end of Bar- anof Island, where an attempt to get views of the sperm and right whales there will be made. Last winter, the film company maintained a cast of more than forty actors at Teller, with as many as a hundred natives em- ployed at once part of the time. More than $890,000 have been spent already in the filming of the picture. “The people of Alaska do not realize the benefits to be derived from the making of such pictures in Alaska,” said Capt. Lane, in commenting on the cost of the picture. “Most of the money spent by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on this expedition went into the hands of Alaskan business men. The sum of $70,000 went for airplane trans- portation alone. More companies should be induced to come up here to make their picture, When you NEW ALL-SOU Airplane Flight Bogoslaf and T S TWO SHOWS ON CAPITOL TOMORROW NIGHT ONLY'! FATHER HUBBARD WITH THE FIRST AMERICAN SHOWING All New! NO ADV ANCE IN ADMISSION 0RO OO IIIIIIIIJII|IIIIIIIII_lillllliil_lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIfillIilillllll"fllllllll IN PERSON OF HIS JND MOTION PICTURE ADVENTURES IN THE FROZEN NORTH i s Into Burning Volcanoes Shishaldin and Pictures Never Shown Before in Juneau All in Sound! LY 7:30 P. M., 9:35 P.M. T The Place to Meet YOUR FRIENDS Here, in clean, pleasant surroundings, you can meet for a quiet personal or business talk . . . then dance if you wish to the strains of good music. If this is not your desire, then eat a bowl of Mary Young O'Dea’s chicken chop suey or a dish of home made chile prepared in a professional way by George Weiss (you know the fellow that plays the piano plenty good) or take a booth and have a glass of Hemrich’s good old draught beer served you or your party ice cold. WE ARE HERE TO PLEASE ALL OF YOU CAPITAL BEER PARLORS Phone 569 for reservations-