m o) fo) MA ulUc ny ritANK jknkinh TIIIC UrllUIi uuvei nitivnL announces today Dial It will Homier power 111 llllllll to tlx IlKllnllK BllllOM 1M- MtCDlATKLV mid will let Uie Indian people decide whether there shall bo unr of two HUveriminiilK. 't it .t history It inutlo 111 spile of problem. , , , ' Tills problem U whether the Mot Icmt iiiuuiberllig about 90 mil' Hum! cun got along with the Hindus i numbering about 300 iiiIIIIoiis.i , They never live got along logcUier "'oo'tuiig aluiig would bo quits pos lblo It only the coimnuii people 'whose No. 1 desire la to get enough to ml. enough to wear and a com iortablo house to live till wore coll leriicd. Unfortunately, ambitious leaders are a part of the picture. Ambitious leaden seek power for themselves llrst and Uis welfare of the people second. .... Aiwway, the die l about to be 4$, and we .hall o what we iflwli tee. ... THE hope U to eel up India a an independent, self-governing do mlnluii wiUiln Uie family of the HrllUh comiiiuiiweallh of nation .Canada, Australia, elc.i The prob lem I whelher a country uch a India Mil aucceatlully govern Itself in Uio world a at present cunsll- lUThi only way to find out U U THY IT. , . . tN the background of all national problem uuch a Indlai Hen war. There U quite a llllle on the tubjeel of war In the new today. The United Nation (now head quartered at 10 Success. New York I lruggle to reconcile Amer ican and Russian differences on atomic control, which I the biggest war Issus eoiifronllng the wor d. Uavld Llllenthal. chairman of the U 8. atomic energy communion, tell the U. N. flatly that the United State Intend to maintain and IN CREASE IU upreme position In the field of atomic energy and alomlo weapon until ADKWUATE llilenia tloiml control machinery la estab lished. . . . . That I to ay. we don t Intend to give up the advantage we now possess until a WORKABLE ytm of abolishing atomic warfare It de vised, agreed upon and put Into operation. That u aound. tough common seme. , . MEANWHILE Chancellor Arthur T. iu Complon of Washington Uni versity, one of the arlriiilta who helixd develop the atomic bomb, says the new weapon has In all piobablllty made major war be " trrrn great power a thing of tht PTh danger of RETALIATION, ha think, would be too great a risk for ANY NATION to take. T11A au to aay, in tin age of atomic weapon, an aggressor na tion must delro Ita victim UT- TKRI.Y at the first blow, leaving no cell of resistance remaining Intact not even o much a a tingle bomber, for a tingle huge bomber carrying a cargo ot atom bombt at a speed of hundred! of mile per hour might easily be able to ttrlke back and DESTROY THE AG GRESSOR IN ITS TURN. Destruction of hit victim to utter ly and completely at a tingle blow would be quite a problem tor an ag greuor. It doesn't teem humanly possible. Maybe nobody WOULD be willing to try It. Anyway, It It a thought. rjR. COMPTON. who tpoke at St. u Loult last night to the American Petroleum Intlltute'a refining di vision, tald the development of atomic energy has made II Inereaa Ingly clear that In the future a nation's economic advantage lies In promoting Its own Industrial de velopment aa a part of world pros perity rather than In looking to wart of conquest at a meant of get ting richer. IP. by any chance, he should be right, It might be possible that a ne-v and better world la In the mak ing. nus TIE-UP CHICAGO. June 3 (Pi Oper ations of the Burling Transporta tion company's bus llnet continued stalled today, six days after a walk- out of 378 union drivers, with no settlement of the wage dispute which precipitated the ttrlke In ' sight. The company's but lines, known as the Burlington Trnllways are In Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, Mon tana, South Dakota, Utah, Arizona, California and Nevada. I Day'sicM i'.iii,il,r,ii-n"-1'-' nw'f rnr - Reporter Clutches Brow In Frenzy Over Lost Man By HALE SL'ARUKODGII Some disconcerting things hap pen on the sidewalks ot Klamath Falls, but when little men In brown suits disappear Into thin air right on Main street It's enough to make Olio pauso for reflection. I,o to yesterday afternoon a re porter for The Herald and News walked down the 1100 block of Main a few steps behind a small-sized m a n, brown-sultcd, baro-hcaded and clutching his skull ns If afraid If he rcloanod the pressure he'd pop right up Into the air from sheer Involuntary muscular reac tion. The little man wits muttorlng to himself, but not loudly enough for the eavesdropping reporter to catch anv of his words. Crossing the streot as a precau tionary measure, the reporter pin ned one eye on the strangcly-actlng pedestrian and let the other room In son roh of a cop, Maybe the guy was nuts. - Still bearing down on his pate with both hands, the little man In tho brown suit stopped otf the curb, threaded his way through oloslng tmc traffic and also crossed the street. , ""ijle stood a second on the side- wftlk, then poooof he was gone. The reporter, almost flattened by tho sudden turn of events spent 10 WEATHER ftUa, ijHni fl) It Min, Ir trip IU lln Uil tl hurt , Miriam ' .... It. it ... 11. ai Normal , . rrri,iti Partly rlu4y uiRilr4 ' Unlglil FKICK I'tVK IKNIH 11,703 Cars Of Potatoes Shipped Out Potato alilpmenlt from the Klam ath basin for the 1046-47 season came to a virtual end today, with 11,701 earloadt of spuds having moved from basin points to market The previous years total waa 13. 001 carloads. Ntale-Kederal Inspector Kosa Au brey aald lilt figure does not Include potatoes diverted during the season tor livestock feeding purpose, lie aald these potatoes would represent an equivalent of at least IM carloads, which would bring the season total to about 11. tl. County Agent C. A. Henderson has estimated the value of the 1846-47 crop as about fl.8oo.OOO. Itanner Months The months of October and Feb ruary were bsnner shipping periods In the 1046-47 crop movement, ac cording to a table prepared by Au brey. It follows: 1040-47 1844-48 20 1347 3017 1SI7 1408 1785 1515 1307 38 182 Tax Battle Delayed Again HACRAMKNTO. June 3 (P Re newal ot the legislative battle over taxes between assembly republicans and democrats was postponed today until tomorrow. The delay was at the Instance of Assemblyman Alfred Robertson (Di Santa Barbara who deferred for 34 hours hit motion to reconsider the roll call which defeated the Warren lax reduction bill, to continue for a year present schedules saving tax payers an estimated gso.ooo.ooo a year. Robertson In making the an nouncement stated the postpone ment was sought to permit prepara tion of amendments which would In crease the tax reductions effectuated by the Warren administration In 1043. Laughllne E, Eaters IR) 1-os An geles county, who Is handling the administration bill In the house, tald he will oppose additional tax cuts and atand pal for the Warren sched ules. Under It the estimated $00, 000,000 a year was trimmed from the sales-use, personal Income and bank and corporation franchise tax levies. Robertson said his amendments will be designed to slash off an extra 140,000.000 to 10,000.000 a year. Fire Department Answers Calls The city fire department was called out at 0:04 a. m. today to the Southern Oregon Barbecue, 1330 Oregon avenue, where grease In the oven was burning and creating con siderable smoke. There was no damage. A burning cigarette between davenport cushions In the living room of the Hnrold Brandenburg residence, 735 Martin, destroyed the davenport and, caused a great deal of smoke late Sunday night. The department received a call at 11:05 p. in. and firemen said both Mr. and Mrs. Brandenburg could easily have been overcome by the smoke which did considerable damage to the residence. Both were asleep Just before Brandenburg was awak ened by the amoke. minutes going over the sidewalk and poking his nose Into various business houses In the neighbor hood looking for the little custom er, but he Just wasn't there at all. Worse still, from Uie reporter's point of view, nobody else seemed aware of the disappearance ot Uie transitory little gentleman. So tho reporter crossed himself and went on home, walking on heels, clutching his head and mut tering to himself .... August 70 September .......I. 13110 October 1(157 November 1581 December . 1671 January 1504 February ..... 143 March 163 April 46 May 140 History Professor Blames Lincoln WA8HINOTON, June 3 lP Dr. Charles C. Tanslll, Ocorgqtown university history professor, blames- Abraham. Lincoln for the Civil war. Lincoln, he told a meeting of Confederate organizations, "tricked" tho South Into starting the strife. i Tanslll was spenker at a wreath-laying ceremony at a statue ot Jofferson Davis, Confederate president, ' In the United States capttol yesterday. ' ! ' He asserted Lincoln "played fast and' loose" with Southerners "In ordor to trick them Into a bombardment" ot Fort Sumpter and make thorn appear "the aggressors." ' "The responsibility for the Civil war," he asserted, "rests securely upon only one pair ot shoulders and those shoulders belonged to Abra ham Lincoln." Subsequently Fred P. Myers, commander of tho Sons of Confederate Veterans told reporters "I think he went too far I don't think he should have made such an attack on Lincoln." IGBN KLAMATH FALLS, O" r)'0 m1 (Telephone till) No. 10M8 Crowd f " ' iir" 'r- ? ai h ;'t" L M Avak llagoplan (arrow), Armenian faith healer, leavea the Armenian Apostolic Holy Cross church In Lot Angeles behind a police escort as hundreds swarm for a glimpse o( the 30-year-old mystic If IT" To Take Over Canteen; Re-Opening The student council of the Teen Age canteen. In a meeting Mon day night with directors of Uie YMCA, agreed to accept sponsor ship of the "Y" and the canteen, closed the past three weeks, will re open within a short time, Plun and rules or conduct were prenepled to the student group by Cecil Kollcnbom, executive secre tary of the YMCA. The plans were previously approved by Uie senior advisory council which, In the fu ture, will be known as the YMCA youth sponsoring committee and re sponsible to Uie board of directors. The canteen will continue in operation at the armory until other quarters are located, Kollcnbom ad vised. The canteen will open as Planes Join In Search MEDKORD, Ore., June 3 (JPi Aerial search for plane wreckage reported sighted In the Rlchter mountain area was to be resumed today after a ground party return ed Inst night from Uie scene of a wartime and apparently different, crash. dipt. P. H. Fosberg, In charge of Uie army search unit, said the wreckage found by the ground searchers was of a plane whlcft car ried a Wasp ferry service pilot to her death three years ago. It had previously been Investigated, A navy pilot on Friday reported sighting a wrecked plane of the type flown bv Douglas Locke, miss ing since February 16 on a (light from Red Bluff. Calif., to Beaver ton. Ore. Two other Oregon pilots, one fly ing his mother home to Portland, disappeared In the general area last winter. Train Delayed By Smashup PENDLETON. Ore., June 3' ( The Union- Pacific railroad's west bound passenger train No. 11 was delayed about seven hours yester day when It smashed Into the caboose of a side-tracked freight train 40 miles east of here. Lee Mead. Pendleton agent, reported today. The passenger train plowed Into the freight train's caboose which had not cleared Uie siding. The cnboose was damaged considerably and the passenger train's engine lost all Its stenm when Its boiler cock was knocked off. No one was In Jurodk.Mcad said. LAND TKADE PORTLAND, June 3 W) A con gressional bill to allow exchange of federal lands for non-federal tracts In Uie Silver Creek Falls recreational area Involves less than 100 acres, State' Park Supt. Sam H. Boardinan reported today. The recreation area, now a na tional park service tract. Is to be transferred to Uie state of Oregon. sm Swarms Around Faith ' Expected Soon - 1 toon as a few changes can be made. depending on now soon skilled tabor Is available. Some plumbing Im- rovements are scheduled, Kollen am said. Proposed Hours Proposed hours, under YMCA operations, wUL be from U a. m. i The budget, committee has tuggest oVth PeeroirouDU P" ?? ed Uuil Instead & holding., special in taxing over uie responsibility of Uie Teen-Age canteen, Uie YMCA expects full cooperation of Uie par ents and townspeople, and If there Is any Information needed In con nection with our plans, we will wel come Inquiries," Kollenborn said. He may be reached at his offices, 8270. According to Kollenborn. a long range YMCA program Is outlined and membership In the "Y" will take Uie place In admission pay ments at Uie door of Uie canteen. This will entitle members to full particlpaUon In the "Y" program, including Teen-Age club privileges, recognition of the card as a cour tesy pass to YMCA's In other towns, a chance to engage In physical edu cation programs of Uie Pacific Northwest Area YMCA champion ships and participation In various sports. Participating Program Present plans call for a partlcl- fiatlng program "more than danc ng and refreshments," Uie "Y" official pointed out, Kollenborn will have offices In Uie armory. The following rules of conduct were ap proved by both the senior advisory group and the student council: Members shall conduct themselves as ladles and gentlemen at all times, and will be responsible for (Onllnsei Fsit 4. Cslama t Rain Threat To Corn Crop CHICAOO, June 3 lP A wet spring In the mid-western corn belt was causing apprehension today over the ouUook for the country's two most Important feed grains corn and oats. Both grains are essential in the food economy because they are fed to farm animals to produce meat, milk, cheese and other foods. With Uie farm lands in parts of Illinois and Iowa under water, crop experts said that corn planting, al ready late, will be further delayed. The danger In this situation arises from the possibility that an early frost might catch the crop this autumn. Some grain men feel that Uie late season can be made up by the plant ing of hybrid seed corn, now almost universally used In the corn belt, as well as the use of mechanised equipment. Oraln dealers reported that of the 104 cars of wheat received at Fort Worth, Texas, yesterday, 90 to 05 cars were new crop. Body Found In Old Oil Drum PHILADELPHIA. June 3 W Police were confronted today with one of their most baffling mysteries following the discovery of a blonde woman's body In an oil barrel In a secluded ravine. The corpse was wrapped in a May 7 newspaper, padded with sawdust and doubled up In the discarded 50-gallon metal drum. ! A bath towel from an AUantlo City hotel, a dark raincoat, a full set ot woman's clothing and a heavy cardboard lining also were In the barrel. . - : The discovery was made late yes terday by a Junk dealer In an eight foot ditch in northeast Philadel phia, only a short distance from a cemetery. Mite Healer Ij ... ! I Meter Vote Plan Talked With June marking the end ot the six-month trial period on park ing meters, city officials are dis cussing meant of holding an elec tion to bring the matter to vote. election this month, the city put Uie meters on the ballot in Uie state election slated for October 7. Mayor Ed Ostendorf said today t uiat uie committee I ecu tnat oy voting on meters In a regular elec tion, Uie expense of a special bal loting. In the neighborhood of $3000, might be avoided. The mayor added that the prob- lem will probably be brought to the attention of Uie city council at Its meeting next Monday. The meters were insiauca on January 25 on a trial basis, with the understanding that Uie public vote to decide whether or not to keep them. The same agreement will be ef fecUve should the elecUon be held off until this fall, Uie mayor aald. Rainfall Figure Climbs The amount of rainfall from the past week's storm in the basin area was still climbing today as scat tered showers brought Uie total pre cipitation since last Tuesday to 1.79 Inches. Rain from B a. m. Mon day to 8 a. m. Tuesday accounted for 0.23 of that figure, according to the California Oregon Power company. Temperatures were low along with the rain and wind, with a minimum of 44 degrees Monday night and 36 Uie previous night, lowest In some Ume. , Cloudy skies and occasional show ers were forecast by the state weath er bureau tor tonight and Wednes day. Pedestrian Killed On Pacific Road VANCOUVER, Wash., June 3 iP A pedestrian was killed on Uie Pa cific highway 11 miles north of here early today. State Patrol Sgt. James McFeeley said Identification was lacking but his name was believed to be Michael O'Hare and his age about 35. He said he may have been a farm laborer In Uie Ridgcfleld district. McFeeley said the man was struck by a car driven by Hubert R. Men denhall, Portland, who reported the pedestrian stepped into Uie path of his car. First Jury Trials in Federal Court Due Today The first Jury trial for Uie cur rent session of federal court here may get under way late this after noon, after Uie attorneys outline their cases In a pre-trial confer ence . with Federal Judge James Alger Fee. Both the government's condemna tion suit concerning the Beaumont tract, which has been chosen as site for a veterans' hospital, and the $35,000 personal Injury suit brought by Jerry O'Sulllvan against Weyer haeuser Timber company are due for conference, but Uie damage suit Is expected by court attaches to be brought out first. O'Sulllvan, a former Weyerhaeuser employe, asks $35,000 damages tor Injuries allegedly received when a load ot logs tell on him. He Is repre sented by R. B. Maxwell and Ben Anderson of Portland Is attorney for the company. Bloiise Democrats Expect Veto On Measure WASHINGTON, June 1 W) The HOM.OOO.OOg-a-year income tax cut cleared the eenate today and headed for the White House, where it fate la uncertain. The compromise bill, worked oat by a botne-senate committee, patted the senate br a 48 to 2 rote, abort of the two-thirds majority which would be required to override a veto. It Won bouse approval yesterday 22 to 99, more than tbe required two-fiirda. Bat each home would bare to run op a two-thirds tally to make the bill law over President Truman's disapproval. Some of the democrats opposed to the legislation expect a veto In Uie next few days. Mr. Truman re peatedly has expressed his opposl Uon to a tax reducUon this year. The measure calls for cuts In In dividual Income taxes ranging from 10.5 to 30 per cent, effective July 1. Challenge Made Before Uie senate acted. Senator Ta-'t IR-Ohlo) declared that Mr. Truman can't afford to veto the bill. The republican policy com mittee chief asserted that, such a step would put the chief execuUve "definitely on Uie side of high taxes and high expenses." Taft declared In a statement that "all Uie spenders want to keep the tax receptta up to $40,000,000,000 In order to maintain a high standard of government spending." "The quicker we can revile our alghts downward, the lower we can keep expenditures," Taft said. Be aaara: "Furthermore, the determination of tax policy has always been peculiarly the function of congress and the house, of representatives, just as foreign policy Is peculiarly the function of the president. "Tbe president ought not to veto this bill unless he regarda it as a dangerous threat to the welfare of the country, which it obviously is not." The bill Is exrjected to come tro In Uie senate today for final action which will send It to the White House. The house oassed it yester day, 220 to 99. Naval Diver Joins Search Melvln T. Storer. SF1, an expert naval diver who took part in Uie salvage operations after the . Jap anese attack on Pearl Harbor, ar rived in town today from Portland and was on his way to Odell lake this afternoon for a Dossible attemDt to locate the bodies of two men who j All the money they spend for fun drowned on Uie lake May 24. i In their first post-war reunion Is With him is Charles K. Kay, GM1, 1 going into a fund for a new hos of the Portland naval recruiting of- pltal fr St. Lo. Uie town recap f Ice, and they are accompanied to tured bv the 35th and Uie break the lake by Deputy Sheriff Marion i through point of Uie allied drive Barnes. Storer will be in charge of any further search for Leonard Callller, 39, and Harold Hadley, 36. Uie miss ing men. Callller was navy recruiter here and Hadley was deputy col lector of internal revenue. The men disappeared and are pre sumed to have drowned while on a fishing trip. Their boat and fishing gear was located the next day. Storer plans a complete search of Uie lake, as far as weather and water conditions will permit. Boy Accidentally Hangs Himself NEW YORK, June 3 MV-Eight-year-old Clifford Scott accidentally hanged himself last night, police said, while showing two compan ions the penalty for violaUng the code of their "secret society." Police said the boys had decided an offender must hang himself un til he counted five. The Scott boy placed a noose around his neck and kicked a box Irom under his feet. Frightened, his companions ran for i aid but the boy was dead when I help came. The only criminal action on the docket this morning occupied Uie full morning session today. Two 14-year-old Indian boys from Chtloquln admitted on the stand that they had raped an Indian girl, aged 13. on the Klamath Indian reservation. They were placed tn custody of the U. S. attorney general, probably to enter a federal reformatory until they become of age. Both the boys and Uie girl gave similar stories ot the incident on the stand and the girl admitted un der questioning that she had been intimate with both boys for periods dating back to last summer. A third Indian boy was involved In the attack against the girl, but no charge was placed against him. Judge Fee found both the youths guilty of a charge of being Juvenile delinquents. r Church Presideril V, fV J " r' ' ' u ' :' J '... ' . , m Mrs, Helen Chaffee Elwell, C.8. (above), of East Hebron, N. H.. waa elected president of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, at the annual meeting in Boston. Freight Car Probe Asked WASHTNOTON. June 3 WV-Attorney General Clark tald today he ha asked a grand Jury to InvesU gate alleged violations of Uie anti trust laws In the railway freight car building industry. Clark said In a statement that certain corporaUons and individ uals" are aUeged to have engaged In restraints of trade and viola tions of Uie anti-trust laws but men tioned no names. His announcement comes after an acute freight car shortage In Uie country for many months. ' The lustice- department M ti subpoenas are being Issued "for Uie- Sroaucuon lor a Ulstnct 01 Colum la grand Jury, of certain docu ments and records of the freight car building companies, railway and car building trade associations and More Farm Labor Urged WASHINGTON. June 3 OPV-The government issued a call today for more seasonal workers to help farm ers produce another food crop of wartime proportions. Despite the return ot many vet en8 nd war plant workers to agriculture, there still Is a shnrtu. of manpower for such seasonal oo araUons as planting and harvesUng. The department said surveys in dicated that the' l947 farm labor supply will be Bt about the 1943 level somewhat better than Uie ow point reached in late 1943, but still short of pre-war. ' It said the accent is being- placed on employment of domestic workers because farmers prefer them. Some foreign help will be needed this year In sugar beets and some other crops, but this force will be smaller than last year. Unlike last year, no pris oners of war will be available. Veterans To Build Hospital KANSAS CITY. June S fv IXS.'i6 38" toffhtry division, President Harry S. Truman among them, will reunite here Thursday i,reLiv?,Jtnelr experiences and to help build a hospital for a French town they liberated in World War out of Uie Norman peninsula altev Diooay umana oeacn. i 3 maM I t ' r - - t i j f I 6 I - Sporting a tie advertising the President Jim SUiwell tries one on cameraman happened by. Truman Will Confer Vith Opposition WASHINGTON, June 3 MaThe) ' m m. K""? 1oU,M R LeslnaU D-Mieh.) today that democratic ZZZ'u hou- labor em. !vF5iiiM,,B,r c.omP'W I" union- . Truman at noon tomon-nr Of coarse;" Bep. M;rf -,, :.r.fA.) told reporter, "we a"! c!n tat aak for a veto." Noting speculation aba (i wl-eUief Mr. Truman will veto ar la tbe measure. Rep. Case (R-to.D.i tnid tne house today: "If anT of th fi ii... the president or any so-called leaden j V w" "ui3ii pnrases about so KnSLiFVi,1'6 lab0J leR''tlon and ?M?te?i' 15" PwWent into vetoing thta bill. Uie American people will nave witnessed a bunch of gangsters beating the president with a wooden The house Is scheduled td act on the COmDromlse tnnv,rrnr ,v. . S,' lnd Strike Cheek Intended tn rh.fir - i.u . .... umon activities, the meaaur fas whipped together from a - I u, t,nairman Hartley (R-NJ.) ,. ' the house labor commits nrf other by Chairman Taft (R-Cmio of the senate committee. tne nouse passed the Hartley bill and the senate the Taft blU by more than the two-thirds margins re quired to override a veto. Among other things the com promise would: Let the government obtain court orders to atop "naUonal calamity" atrikera, aa in the coal or ateel In dustrie, for an 89-day mediation Ban tbe eloaed than, whirh nn employers to hire only union mem bers. Permit the national labor reUtioaa board to Mock jurisdictional strikes or secondary boycotts with In luna tions. A Jurisdictional strike usually ' arises from a row between two anioas over which does a given piece of work. A secondary boycott is tsttst by unions to put indirect pressure on an employer by compelling- other . esnptojeis to stop doing business with him. . Crawford Rites Wednesday Final rites for Edward Tliomag.. Crawford, well-known Merrill rest- ' dent, will be held at 10 o'clock Wed- . nesdav morning in 8t-. Augustine's church, Merrill, with Interment la Mt. Calvary cemetery. Business houses of Merrill win. close from 10 to 11 a. m., the fu neral hours, out of respect for Mr. Crawford who was long active In civic affairs of the community. The Rev. Father James O'Connor will officiate st final rites. Active pallbearers will be Bo Walker, Karl Dehllnger. Victor Shuck. Clifford Shuck. Joe Bally and W. E. Hammond, and honorary pallbearers. John McNeill, John O' Neill. William Colbert, Orvllle Elf ert. Homer Fields and Scott Mc Kendree. Big Storm Hits Kansas Crops HATS, Kas.. June S Wi A tre- : mendous electrical and rain storm, causing the heaviest damage to wheat this spring, hit this area last night. A total of 3.14 Inches of rainfall was recorded at Uie Ft. Bays ex periment station. "All our wheat is down here at the station," L. C. Alcher, superinten dent, reported. Highways were flooded by water flowing over Uie wheatflelds. Ii ilSBaasaaTuslHi v.-. ; J 'Junior chamber boat regatta Juns 33. this morning as the 9 Clock Bpoelal 7 i 1