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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,302 F__—_'_—_:——————__——_————_ UGE ARMY APPROPRIATION FAVORED H FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU STAGE DETAILS TOLD C-of-C Hears Busman 0'Harra'sPlansfor Land- | Water Inferior Link Kenneth O’'Harra, Alaska’s young busline tycoon since 1939, today re- vealed full details of his proposed Juneau-to-Fairbanks overland bus route which is to be in operation probably the last week of this month. Speaking as a special guest of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce 8t its regular luncheon-meeting in W€ salaunol this noon, Mr. O'Harra said the trip would cost approxi- mately $47 plus a 15 percent Fed- eral tax and would take three days. Juneau passengers will be trans- ported by bus from this city to Auk Bay. From there the Motor- ship Leota will ferry the travelers across the Lynn Canal to Haines. An OHarra bus stationed in Haines will transport the passeng- ers 159 miles to Haines Junction | on the Whitehorse-Fairbanks por- tion of the Alaska Highway where | the Whitehorse bus will pick them up for the 630-mile drive into Fair- banks. Cover Over 1,700 Miles This link will complete more than 1,700 miles of Alaska road- way covered by the O'Harra Bus- lines that just seven years ago started out with two small, battered trucks in Fairbanks. The company now operates 28 busses. The one to be used on the Juneau link will be a modern Pony Cruiser, equip- ped with 21 reclining chairs. Housing and restaurant accom- modations along the Juneau-Fair- banks proposed line have been in- vestigated and are all ready for the first load of passengers from the Juneau bus' “maiden voyage,” O’Harra said. The Juneau-Fairbanks run wili be scheduled three times a week, passengers will spend nights at Haines and Tanacross enroute. Channel Mayors Speak Also speaking on today’s Cham- jof Wasl J 'one of the main issues in our case JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — PRICE TEN CENTS DECISION IN Nehru Arrest ALASKA CASE 1S CRITICIZED Differential in Longshore- | men’s Cost of Living Was | Not Considered, Claim | SEATTLE, June 20.—A spokes- | man for CIO-affiliated longshore- |powerful Congress party delayed in- Communist member of Parliament, | | definitely today a decision on the| was sentenced today to six years' the New York State Boxing Com- men issued 2 statement today cri- ticizing strengly an failure to allow a 15 percent “cost| of living diiferential” for Alaska | lcngshoremen in the decision hand- | ed down in the dispute. ‘ At the szme lime, a Seattle| spokesman for Alaska dock opera- | tors said the award is “still being studied” by employers, but that| they “definitely are not in accord! with provisions for retroactive pay.” Dr. Vernon A. Mund, University | ngton economics profes- sor and arbitrator in the case, rul- ed for retroactivity to October 1, 1944, for wage increases granted last April; for a vacation with pay clause and for application of skill and penaity differentials now in ef- fect on the Pacific coast. Steve Glumez, Pacific N. W. Inter- national Representative for the In- ternatinal Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union, declared in a news release: “Tisy award 1s ine minimum we could have received. It is our feel- ing that the arbitrator failed to act impartially and favored the em- ployers’ arguments in the proceed- ings. He overlooked the fact thaf was the cost of living differential. In some parts of Alaska where longshoremen are employed the |cost of living is 45 percent above that of ‘he mainland.” ——eoe — — PACIFIC NORTHERN AIRLINES BRINGS 9 FROM WESTWARD Pacific Northern Airlines yester- Upsels India State-Making Congress Party Halts Ac- tion on British Inde- pendence Plan 20.—The NEW DELHI, June interim Indian government, be- cause its President-designe, Jawa- harlal Nehru, had been arrested in Kashmir State. Maulana Azad, retiring Presi- dent of the party, said its working committee had adjourned sine die because of the, arrest and "wheni we meet again depends upen Pan~‘ dit Nehru's return.” | The dominantly Hindu Congress |party *is the largest in India and dramatic Canadian espionage case without its aherence, the indepen-|that began last March when he |dence plan hardly could be made was arrested in his Ottawa apart-, night's and boxing will be ruined An air of the deepest in Congre: workable. gloom was apparent | circles, which only yesterday radiat-'scheduled to appear ed confidence that a favorable de- cision might be possible by the end of the week. Nehru was reported to have been| wounded slightly on the cheek yes-! terday when he attempted to en- FRED ROSE SENTENCED |Most Damage 106 YEARS ‘ i '& Communist Member of‘ Canadian Parliament ! Guilty of Espionage l MONTREAL, June 20—Fred Rosn,i o \Public’s Chin d Fraud Tag on Fight- Worst Ever, Tunney | | | | | "Toole (D-NY) demanded today arbitrator’s | British independence plan for an|imprisonment for sending informa- mission hold up the purses of Joe |tion illegally to Russia during the!Louis and Billy Conn until an in- | war. vestigation can be made of last Rose told the court, before the|night's championship fight. ;Judge pronounced sentence, that he O'Teole voiced his demand in a {hed never done anything against|telegram to Edward Egan, Com- |the interest of his country. mission Chairman, which asserted “Whatever has been said., I still|that the championship bout was say that I am innocent,” he de-!*“a fraud.” clared. It declared that the purses Sentencing of the 38-year-old de-{gshould be held up and the investi- {fendant ended one phase of the|gation be made “in justice to those |who were swindled” at the fight. “One more fraud such as last ment. He still faces charges un-|jn the United States for many der Official Secrets Act and s years to come,” O'Toole declared. for trial onl them next September, although thisi NEW YORK, June 20—Promoter Mike Jacobs' only comment today case may be delayed by an appeal from today’s sentence. Mrs. Emma Woikin was sgntenced;on the statement of Rep. O'Toole today to six months in prison for! n_Nv) that last night's Joe Louis- contempt of court and four -Other| Byjy Conn heavyweight champion- “NO TICKEE—NO LIKEE"” InTitle Bout \N. Y. Congressman Pins WASHINGTON, June 20. — Rep. | |Longest Day Is ' Tomorrow, So Summer Is Here Tomorrow is the longest day | of the year and incidentally it is the summer solstice which means summer is here. Tomorrow the sun rise is at | | i i {Two Government Agencies — = o ———— BIGGEST EVER PEACE BUDGET UP T0 HOUSE {Immense Chunk of Extra Cash Recommended | for Atomic Project WASHINGTON, June 20— A $7,091,034,700 Army budget—biggest NO-STRIKE PLEDGE IS AiM NOW Seeking Armistice in Labor Disputes WASHINGTON, June 20.—Stabil- ization Director Chester Bowles' sald today he is hopeful of getting lever in peacetime and with an extra a no-strike pledge from labor $o0|¢175000,000 tossed in for atomic that industry can hit and maintain energy development—went to the full scale production. {House floor today. He told a news conference he is| 1t was almost twice as large as discussing a proposed truce with[mo last pre-war allotment, voted AFL and CIO leaders and is “by no |in 1941. means discouraged about the final| Nearly balancing the extra cash outcome.” granted tkz army’s famed Man- Bowles statements coincided with | hattan project which produced the disclosure that Housing Expediter |atomic bomb, the appropriations Wilson Wyatt is seeking a strike |committee trimmed $150,000,000 off armistice for the building industry |Budget Bureau estimates for army- to speed construction of homes supervised relief and government for veterans. ;actlvnws in occupied countries. In the housing field Wyatt is Relief Fund Trimmed sounding out the building trades| The Budget had recommended unions on a six-month voluntary |$500,000,000 for the relief-military pledge against striking as a mc:\ns:g()vernmem program and $200,000,-" of removing obstacles to the homes- 000 for the atomic service. for-veterans program, | The committee ~ revised the This became known today as the amounts to $35,000,000 and $375,- National Housing Agency ordered (00,000, respectively. The army it- into effect a multi-million-dollar |self had asked $397,000,000 for the subsidy program for softwood ply-|Manhattan project. ter his native state of Kashmir injpcrsons charged with contempt in |defiance of a District Magistrate’s connection with Rose’s trial receiv-| lorder. He was arrested today atl'ed sentences of three months each. Domel, 120 miles from the Kashmir|They had refused to answer ques-: istate capital of Srinagar. tiens. Dewan Chamanlal, central legis-| !lator who was with Nehru at the | frontier yesterday, also was wound-| ed slightly in the chesk when he| and the Congress leader attempt-| ed to push past armed sentries. 1 — e —— | TWIN CREEKS (C TR AN BISCUITWARE BY ALASKA POTTERS (LUB DISPLAYED Alaskan Arts and Crafts, Inc, spurring interest in its current \membership drive with a series of |creative arts displays in the show |window of the U. S. Public Health |Eervice office in the Shattuck FOR pUBlI( SAl {Building on Seward Street here, is |currently presenting an array of The Regional Office of the U. S.,‘"biscuihware" creations, by members Forest Service here today announc- of the Alaskan Potters Club of Ju-} | | i | | | | | | | | | Gross receibts less taxes, ship fight was a ‘“stinkeroo” and warranted an investigation was: “Before the bout, O'Toole’s office called me up and demanded com- plimentary tickets to see it. I turned them down. So now he's hollering.” NICE PIECE OF CHANGE NEW YORK, June 20.— Pro- moter Mike Jacobs said today that Champion Joe Louis’ purse for the eight-round knockout he scored over challenger Billy Conn last night was $605,600. Conn, who re- ceived 20 percent of the receipts in contrast to Louis’ 40 percent, was paid $302,800. Jacobs said the net receipts— pay to officials and supporting bouts—was $1,514,000. wood, designed to open that major| Ctherwise the committee gener- | 3:51 a.m. and the sunset is 10:08 p.m. Net so many years ago, scores of Juneauites went up Mt Roberts to see the sun rise and perhaps many will do so late tonight, provided the wea- ther permits. sl SOVIET WOULD | JERKU.S.ATOM L1 4} H NEW YORK, June 20.—Members of the United Nations Atomic En- ergy Commission weighed today a; Russian plan for a world conven- tion to outlaw atomic weapons which, if adopted, would compel! the United States to destroy all her atom bombs within three months. | The Russian plan, offered as a| substitute for an American pro- posal under which the United States has conditionally offered to chare her atomic secrets and destroy the bombs, would be put into force by ratification of half the nations of the world. Drastic Variance On vital points, it was drastically | at variance with the conditions| which were laid down last Friday |by U. 8. Delegate Bernard M. [Baruch and which must be met be- |fore the United States would pool her atomic “knew-how"” under aj guarantee of world control. H The Russian plan would forbid ! use and production of ntomicl weapons, provide for their destruc- tion three months after the con- vention is ratified, and require each |signatory nation, within six months after enactment, to provide its own i legislation prescribing severe pun- | ishment for violations. i It would set up two committees to handle exchange of scientific | ed public sale of the former Twin| Creeks CCC Camp, 7 1-2 miles ouf.‘v on the highway from Petersburg,| day flew the following passengers| to Juneau from Anchorage with Captain Claude Ferguson, First Of-| neau. On show now are examples of! the workmanship of E. L. Ken.h-l S | information for peaceful use and to WORST EVER KNOWN provide international controls em- NEWARK, N. J, June 20.—Gene pracing a system of sanctions for! BULLETINS bottleneck in home construction. ally followed the Budget Bureau's Manufacturers will be authorized recommendations for War Depart-, to pay $7.50 per 1000 feet more Ment funds for the fiscal year for “peeler” logs, the kind needed |Starting July 1. Net changes in the for plywood, and to get full reim-!Fi8 measure represented § reduc- bursement from the Government ‘ion of $117,172,729. if they boost production 25 percent Air Allotment OK'd or more above normal guotas. | Ths committée approved in full PR o 'the $1,100,500,000 allotment for the 'Air Corps, after hearing General Carl Spaatz relate plans for an air force adequat> to detect and re- pel any surprise attack, to launch a crippling counter-offensive and to back up the land and sea forces. WASHINGTON—President Tru- Spaatz, Air Corps Commander man declared emphatically today 'told the committee the minimum that he favors civilian control of POstwar airforce needs 70 combat atomic energy. He told his news 8TOUPS backed by & pool of at least conference that the atomic control One Alr National Guard squadron measure passed by the Senate suit-|In_€ach state. . ed him exactly. The Air Forces' cash allotment \included $388,776,454 for the pur- DAYTON, Ohio—The U.S. Army's ¢hase of approximately 1,046 mod- partly jet-propelled XA-26F fly- °" planes and gliders. At the end ber of Commerce program were Juneau Mayor Waino Hendrickson | and Douglas Mayor Marcus Jen-| sen. The Douglas Mayor said: “Feel- | ing between the two cities” had im- proved tremendously this last year; that Juneau had shown it was will- ing to cooperate to the fullest in many small but significant ways.” He particularly mentioned and praised financial and moral back- ing Juneau business men gave the recent Douglas Cannery issue. He said the cannery was operating with Alaska money for the first "(Continued on Page Two) The Wéshington Merry - Go- Round By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — “Heigh-ho Sil- ver” McCarran, silver - thatched Senator from Nevada, nearly pulled a fast one recently but it was not quite smooth enough to get by ar- istocratic tennis-playing -Senator ficer Richard Chamberlain, and Stewardess Patricia Bowers: Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gottstein, M. Pac- zekowski, L. C. Gosnell, Robert Bagwell, Bill W. Scott, Jt. J. J. {Splaine, Ron Livingston, Harry De- Land, Tommie Dallas. To Yakutat: M. L. McKinney, Mrs. M. L. McKinney, Irenz Mc- Kinney, Nita McKinney. To Anchorage: Harold Mayo, Scna Thompson, Fred Vangilder, John Elliott, Helen Moran, Ed Coffey,! Harold Horshover; Raymond Liew, Sam Sweazy, Georgia Sweazy, Theo- dore Leska, Michael Sotak, C. E. Hanson, and ,Hap O’Brien. | To Kodiak: Grace Ralph, Don-| ald Ralph, Clyde Rhodes, and Gor- | don Dacaceo. A3PASSENGERS IN ABOARD PAA PLANE Pan American Airways yesterday flew the following passengers to and from this city: From Seattle: Nora Grant, Lynne Grant, Laurie Grant, Earl Bright,! Bertell Johnson, Clarence Carroll, Alaska. Bids are to be opened here ahn, Mrs. Henry Harmon and Mrs.} on July 22. The Twin Creeks Camp was con- ed by Dr. Keithahn, deriving their structed in 1938 and was abandoned |inspiration from Indian ceremonial, at the termination of the CCCart, are a bowl and mask. program in 1940. It has been un-| The “biscuitware” is displayed af-, used since. Though it was turrgd 'ter its firing in the new kiln re- over to the Army during the war,|cently constructed by the club. The the armed forces never made use objects are as yet unfinished—a sec- of the camp and it has now been ond firing will glaze the ware. returned to the Forest Service. —_— Facilities offered for sale in-| 3 clude frame dormitory, mess hall and office structures for a camp| 'I'ops (AlE“DAR capacity of 40 men, together with shops, some supplies and equip-; ment. The land on which the‘ camp is situated will be available At its second regular June meet- ing tomorrow evening, the Juneau: City Council will delve into con-] sideration of the lengthy new build- for special use permit, forest offi-| cials stated. Further information | ing code which has been compiled by the City Engineer with the( may be obtained at Room 412, Fed- assistance of a citizens committee. eral Building, Juneau. First action on a building code or- ALBRECHT ELECTED T0 OFFICIAL POST, o eie™s ¥ 5. BASIC SCIENCE BD. 2t extending bar and liquor store} Dr. C. Earl Albrecht, Territorial| { | i i hours, which comes up for rinulz reading and passage. Little else is on the Council’s Tunney says the Louis-Conn fight application against the unlawful use {Grace Henning. Two objects creat-: “was the worst thing I have ever of atomic, energy. known.” Tynney, former world heavy- weight champion boarding a plane here for Mexico City for a vaca- tion, said today that last night's ititle fight was “just what I pre- American bombs only after inter- dicted six months ago.” “John public took it on the chin again,” he told a reporter. U.5. A-WONDERIN' WHERE GOES LEND LEASE TO SOVIET |Russians Are Reporfed in Equipment Trade Deal with Argéntina WASHINGTON, June 20.—The State Department has asked the American embassy in Moscow for information on reports that the {Russians are planning to trade ma- chinery, trucks and other scarce| ing round trip between Wright of April of this year, the Air Forces Primary Difference | The primary difterence between {the American and Russian proposals | with a 1,000 kilogram payload. |is that Baruch offered to yleld the atomic secrets and destroy the |national control is assured, while Gromyko proposed a ieasure tak- hands by international convention. | The Russian proposals were pre- |sented to the Commission yester- 1day by Soviet Delegate Andrei A. Gromyko. Gromyko did not refer ito the Baruch program as he off-! lered his plan. i |Bahy Born with Heart Ouiside ° 1 ‘ 5 jfor an 8-hour day for seamen on ing the control out of American{gmnay coastal vessels. WOMANIS KEY WITNESS " REDIN TRIAL Fleld and St. Louis set a new, speed record of 413 miles per hour' today over a 1,010 kilometer course | SEATTLE—The Wage-Hour Com- | mittee of the International Mari-/ time Committee has given approval NEW YORK-—The AFL Seafar- ers Union has issued a demand for more pay, shorter hours on Atlan- lic and Gulf ships. The men will| SEATTLE, June 20.—With the |zako a strike vote during July If espionage trial of Lieut. Nicolai G. | the demands are not granted. | Redin, erstwhile Seattle represen- |tative of the Soviet purchasing SEATTLE—Mayor George Carroll, Ccmmission scheduled to start ot Skagway, Alaska, is here and| Tuesday, the Government disclosed says the razor business is on the that one of the witnesses for the bum in his home town, every man| prosecution will be the wife of a 0f Body, Dies srewing a beard for the “Days of | trial engineer in a Seattle shipe 98" celebration during the first' yard. four days of July. |” The woman is Mrs. Rowena Ken-: LANCASTER, PA, June 20.—An| operation, performer shortly after birth, failed to save the life of a tiny baby girl who entered the world with her heart outside her | body. Doctors at Lancaster hospital said ! | | IPARENTS OF FORMER nedy, wife of engineer Herbert Kennedy, who previously was iden- tified as the key witness througk whom the Guvernment alleges Re- 4in arranged to obtain detail plans for a Navy destroyer tender. MUSIC TEACHER NOW Theodore F. Green of Rhode Is-!giqney shults, Donald Rolph, Grace | Commissioner of Health, yesterday| docket, a large portion of the most | the operation successfully restored land. { The two have been fighting for| vears over the price of silver—! with Green seeking to boost the price of silver The House has provided for the sale of silver for industrial uses at 7111 cents per ounce, and also passed a separate bill by Minority Leader Joe Martin of Massachu-| setts, pegging the price of silver at T1.11 cents. When the first of these bills got to the Senate Appropriations Committee, McCarran was able to substitute a price of 90.3 cenés for silver for the next two years in-| stead of 71.11. The Bill was scheduled to go be- fore the full Senate Committee,| with McCarran anxious- to get agreement from the Committee membership that his silver amend- ment would not be fought on the flocr. Green accepted the amend- ment in order to get thé Bill out of committee, but planned to fight it out before the full Senate, with (Continued on Page Four) Rolph, Eugene King, Helen Moran, (was elected Secertary-Treasurer of | pressing matters having been dis-| equipment to Argentina for Argen-i Mike Moran, Harold Horshover, Mary Gruben. Beatrice Woodworth, Otis Arm- strong, Chester Pike, Ray Hoover, William McKeller, Ed Coffey, Ed- ward Skeels, Harland Bosworth, Clifton Wingate, Jennie Wingate, Marie Pietschmann. John Tennison, Clara Raspuzzi, Louis Raspuzzi, Charles Crossman, Theodora Crossman, George Hite, Dr. Archie Stewart, Dolly Stewart, Alleine. George, Raymond Lien, Freddie Grant. From Whitehorse: Ken O'Harra; from Fairbanks: Joe Meherin, Al Shyman, Emmett Botelho, Charles Cummins; from Ketchikan: Ed- |mund Wilcox, Bert Wills. To Seattle: Anna Gottstein, Ja- cob Gottstein, Margaret Paczekow- ski, Marvin Rathburn, Tom Dallas, Caroline Mathews, Bernice Tudor, William Mitchell, Margery Ongman, Norma Stueben, Dr. Ray Bannister, Jack Kobielus; to Nome: Mary Lue Comer; to Fairbanks: Bud Leaf; to Whitehorse: John Male, Rex Hermann, Herbert Lenz, F. Rossi. the Basic Science Board, which for| |the past two days have been hold- |ing an organization session in Ju- |neau. i posed of at the special meeting, called Monday night. | tine products. Diplomatic informants, who with-| held use of their names, told re- |porters today United States repre- the heart to its normal place but ancovered a malformation of the DAWES' GUESTS HERE The Kennedy's were social ac- quaintances of the Lieutenant and Dr. and Mrs. R. A. Parrott, of | his attractive Russian wife and the Twin Falls, Idaho, have arrived| Redins were reported to have been lung which caused the baby’s deathjin Juneau for an extended visit| yesterday. The iInfant was the|and are the house guests of Dr. and often in the Kennedy home. In this connection, the Post-In- The meeting officially closed yes-| terday afternoon following the elec-| tion of Dr. Albrecht and the creat- ling of a Board of Examiners con- sisting of the four doctors of the Basic Science Board. Besides Dr. | Albrecht, the doctors are: Dr. S. N. Bredlie, Fairbanks; Qr. R. G. Ban- ister, Seward; and Dr. Howe Vance, Juneau. Don Skuse, layman mem- |ber of the Board, is chairman. During the meeting the group set up necessary functions for meet- ing annually and planned to hold examinations in the five basic sciences :anatomy, physiology, path- ology, chemistry, and hygiene. during the last week of February These examinations will be held| jsentatives have thus far been un- (able to find out what Russia's trade |plans are. The Russians have been ————— COASTAL AIRLINES IN, OUT YESTERDAY |having a hard time getting enough | hinery and trucks for their own Alaska Coastal Airlines flew the mac! following passengers yesterday to Uuse, but there is speculation at the Ketchikan: Cyril B. Christianson, | Eatl Rambo, Cecil Miller, William Paul, Jr., Patrick Gilmore, Jr, G Deffenbaugh; from Ketchikan: | Burton Lyons, Fred Birch, Ted|the Russians would be a violation Birch. {of the lend-lease arrangement dur- To Hoonsh: Mamie Williams, ing the war. The United States Genevieve Williams, Bob Pederson, | specified that each country receiv- Frank Wright; to Pelican: Mrs. ing lend-lease items must get the use these things for political rea- !sons in trading with Argentina. Don Mil- | United States before reshipping such to another country. — .- Pelican: J. Engstrom, nes, J. W. Hageman, J. A. Smith, material |E. D. Johnson. ! State Department that they migh'.‘ Any use of lend-lease supplies by | Fred Grant, Pred Grant, Jr.; from approval of the President of the and August. The Basic Science Board was created by the Alaska Legislature at its special meeting. Its pur- pose is to regulate the practice of To Haines: Tom Dyer, E. White-| head, J. Phillips, H. V. Davis, T iCaldwell; to Sitka: Esther John- stone;- Charles J. Pieka, Mrs. CARVEL SITKA BOUND Jack Carvel, of the United States Employment Service, will leave for A.!Sitka on the North Sea on routine Basic Science Board meeting, left Hope; from Sitka: T. H. Haus, Joc USES business,. He will return yesterday by Pan American Alr- within a few days, Ihealing within the Territory, Keller, Thomas Savore. daughter of Mrs. Willis Steffy, 35, former Canadian Army nurse. T Sl N Major General Dies Listening fo Fight WASHINGTON, June 20.—Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion, 65, who was |the army’s Provost Marshal Gener- al during the war years, died of heart failure last night while listen- ing to a radio account of the Louis- Conn championship fight. — o —— R. BANNISTER LEAVES i DR. Dr. Ray Bannister, Seward phy- sician who has been in Juneau for the past few days attending the! ways on a trip to Seattle, {Mrs. L. P. Dawes. 'quomuon of Alaska Juneau mine | 166,05, utdliti telligencer said here today that “it is reperted that the Federal Bu- reau of Investigation had the Ken- The Parrotts are the parents of Miss Helen Parrott, former Junedu | jschool music teacher and accom-|pedy home wired for sound from plished violin soloist. Dr. Parrott|cejlar to garret.” is a Twin Falls optometrist. The Kennedy's .have been re- — e — ported as on a trip to Canada since s'o(“ 0“0""0"; Kennedy's name entered the case, Kennedy, 50, was born in Scotland NEW YORK, June 20.—Closing | and is a British subject although he has resided in the United States stock today is 8%, Alleghany Cor- for 30 years. poration 6%, American Can 101, Anaconda 45%, Commonwealth and {lh In'“'d 'o Southern 5%, Curtiss-Wright 7%, Corporation 5%, U. 8. Steel 85%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 1,310,000 shares, Dow, Jones averages today are as follows: industrials 200.52, rails es 41.45. International Harvester 96, Ken- necott 55, New York Central 25%, Northern Pacific 31% United WASHINGTON, June 20—The United States today invited Trygve Lie, Secretary-General of the Uni- ted Nations, to witness the coming :f::flc bomb demonstration at Bi= i