Assistant Secretary of Commerce Claude Huston visits the Arctic region to study Arctic fisheries and fur seals. A group of men throws fur seal pelts into a room. A man sprays water through a pipe. They wash the fur seal pelts. People walk in and out of a building. Claude Huston and other officials stand in front of a building.
Assistant Secretary of Commerce Claude Huston visits the Arctic Region to study Arctic fisheries and fur seals. Claude Huston and other officials stand in front of a ship. They converse with each other. A sailor standing on the ship deck releases a rope into the sea.
Assistant Secretary of Commerce Claude Huston visits the Arctic region to study Arctic fisheries and fur seals. Claude Huston walks out of a building and wears his hat. Officials walking. They pose for a photograph. A woman holding a child in her arms. Officers and sailors enter a building. They pose for a photograph. View of houses and sea in the background.
An iron and steel factory in the United States. Pig iron, scrap steel and molten iron is changed into steel by melting it in an open hearth furnace. A horizontal charging machine empties boxes of metal and scrap into the furnace. Finished molten steel pours from the furnace into a ladle. A row of molds filled with molten steel; small sample ladles or spoons are carried away by workers for analysis.
An iron and steel factory in the United States. Huge ingots on flatcars being pushed by a locomotive. A row of ingots on the flatcars. Steel fingers transfer an ingot from a pit to a conveyor. The white hot ingot goes on to a bloom mill. Hot ingot on the conveyor being drooped onto a conveyor car on tracks.
An iron and steel factory in the United States. Powerful and heavy rollers in a bloom mill roll a steel ingot into a rod. The ingot enters the rollers, moves back and forth in the rollers and changes shape. Workers tend a rolling machinery. White hot rods are drawn into desired sizes. The rods in several different machines. The workers operate machinery and move the rods with prongs. They guide the rods into a cutting machine.