Tomorrow's Tides " Still Another Group Considering Going to Next Provincial Poll Imon of British Columbia Municipalities Thinking of Putting Candidates Into Contest Four Victoria Aldermen Said to be Ready to Run ; I ' KIA, July 5: (Canadian Press) It is learned . liable source that the Union of British Columbia ihties is considering nutting municipal party '.'. into the provincial election contest It is indi- ' v four Victoria aldermen are already prepared U 1 object is said to be to give the province a non- Tnrnont backed by or- k -tut would otherwise be straight indepei The primary object Sieved to be in the al- u e held by municipal i vf marnit s gainst the iovnuMOt for sealing .:.nU Sjrrf Cutting bw - of imtM MttcJs the and cMm had Dates of Visit Of Warship to Port Altered s 1 !.wiontr W J. Alder terday that Um . . vult to this port of H ::' o( the BrIUah West ;viron of the Royal Navv i:v ..f i roast crater had rd from AUSUSt 9-11 M i.nouneed. toAisgtjst II- w F Wake-W'alker RX nd Mnoee Lodge has offer-"1 ronneeUoo with Uw n;i i,t of the sailors on Um '' here by putting 00 r-nrfrt and. umsndy. a ' 'lament. mtbjeet to V--f detail with the ahlp. Vancouver Stocks 8ji ; i"i bv s D. Jamtn Os. Ufi N..h,. f-,Vf M I IK Torunlu 'v,;' '. I 44. Vancouver " Mi w.urt. J. " X . 49. Hlv" Cons.. St. "' Wrd. 04. I k ' "vines. SI. 0,,' Qiwrta, m. ," ,k" River. .0SV. ,: ';-"vlrw. 0H 1 " kv Jim. .0411 ' ' 11ml silver, MH. Son. .11. 13 l OrollU i ;"m'T 1 is. 1) McDonald, M. J,lv"r 'rt. MH. '"lewater, 40. A , oiu 11 "imt. 08 ,,bvnn, .0014 ''"'hold 07 ;,;;rr;" pstinr. 35. :lNEW WAGES IN EFFECI Ten rrrwit Intrease In Scale a Anyox Started July 1 Strike-Breakers Leaving ANYOX. Jail 5 The new wag wale of the Omnby Co. here. ev lot an all around increase for all employ w of the company appro! ; matins ten percent, went Into effort a from Jury I after which date wages of M per day and under were Increased by 40c and om $4 per day by Mr This restores Uw ' watt scale to the same level aa be lore Uw cut In July 1MB. Employees of the company who were here before Uw recent strike are mutually returning to their old Jobs. Quite a number of the so-called strike-breakers have already drifted bark to Vancouver AUTO HEAD IS SUICIDE Albert ltMell Krtklne of Slude-baker Corporation I'uU Hullrt Throuah llh Own Head SOUTH BBfTD. Ind . July 9: Ca nadlan Pmsi Albert Kuasell Rr-tklrn. aged 73. whose management of the aiudebaker Corporation terminated a few weeks ago by ra-etJvenhlp proceeding, ended his Ufe by shooting himself In the head at tils home here. Prince George Half Breed Sentenced to Two Months in Jail Albert Plerreway. half-breed Indian of Prince Oeorge. has been sentenced to two monU' Imprisonment by Judge H. A. Robertaon at I'riuoe Oeorge on a charge of common assault, according to Information received at divisional headquarters of the provincial po- IMw holt. Tne cnargc aui. Plerrwway was reduced from one of Indecent assault upon a girl. Vancouver Wheat VANCOUVER. July : (Canadian Press) Wheat was still strong on the local exchange yesterday, being quoted at 78V sllnt n over Monday's price of 78'c Today's price was 78' o She mmln Aviator Had Narrow Escape - - . j. , . Today's Weather it pjn. X8A o:su ajn. it. 'a Prince Rupert Overcast, light 18:30 pjn. 1A ft. westerly wind; barometer, 30.38; temperature, 58; sea smooth. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISn COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1933 MUNICIPAL PARTY IS ENTERING FIELD L Mattern Rescue Plane Is Forced Down In This District lUppy Unding'' Ye and no Charles RochevtU- of Huntingion Beach. Calif , was testing a Tern - amphtbtan in which i.e intended to photograph the upper Mackenzie river district. Suddenly the aeroplane went Into a long slide, crashed to earvh. Charles crawled out of wreckage slightly Injured OFFICERS New Discovery INSTALLED1 0 Gold is Made N. W. Applryard New Head of Odd fellows' Ledie Here Installation of officers of Um lo cal Oddfellows' Lodge was conduc ted hut nlaM by District Deputy Grant1 Master Mardo MeArUmr as fotfewt: Noble Orand-N W. Apktyard. Vice O rand J. Delorme. Recording Secretary 8. V. Cox. Financial Secretary A. B. Wood Treasurer N. MooreawiMs. Warden II. IMgget. Conductor W. A. McLean. Cna plain-L. Mcintosh. R. & N. O J. E. noddle. U 8. ft. O C. O. Mlnnft It g. V O.J W. McKlnley. L 8. V. O. -J. E. Jack. . Inside Guardian P. Soten. Outatde Ouardlan A. & I Mack-hall. L. S. 8 M. McLeod. if. 8 8 -II 8 Jorberg. Albert Campbell, Vera Hutchings, Are Golf Champs VICTORIA. July 5: (Canadian Preesl Albert Campbell of Seattle defeated Alan Taylor of Victoria 3 and 3 In the final of the Pacific Northwest golf tournament. Mrs. Vera Hutchings of Vancouver defeated Marian McDouaall of Portland 7 and 6 to take the women's UUe. WKI.L KNOWN FLlf.lt IHIS INDIANAPOLIS. July 5: (Canadian Pros) Russell Doardman, aKed . Urana-AUantic aviator, U dead here from injuries sustained on Saturday in a transcontinental air race. II. It. neaven and Two Companions Make Find on Islands 8K 10 BOATS. July S: A new i discovery of gold has been made five miles west of Miller Creek sven miles north of Sksiegate by H R. Deaven. J. OUlatt and M. Newman. It Is a vein of Iron and quant with good gold values. Perjury Charge Laid Against Interior Man . Andrew Miller, who was acquitted at the recent session of the Supreme Court Assises at Prince Oeorge on a charge of defrauding an Insurance company In connection with collection of Insurance following a fire which destroyed his house In the Mud River district has been re-arrested on a charge of perjury In connection wltt) evidence which he gave at the trial and will come up for preliminary hearing at Prince Oeorge on this latest charge on July 11 according to advices received at divisional headquarters of the provincial police here. TO ASSIST ML MANDY A. M. Rlelimond of headquarters ; staff of the Department of Mines In Victoria Is spending the summer In the field assisting various resident engineers In their work and It due here on July 17 enroute to the At-lln gold district where he will be stationed for a month or so as an Resistant to Dr. Joseph T. Mandy. resident engineer for the northwestern mineral survey district with headquarters In Prince Rupert. Mr. Richmond is at present In the Cariboo district OPERATION UPON HEART West Coast of Vancouver Island Indian Owes His Life to Medical Science PORT ALBERNI, July S: (Canadian Press) Charlie Sasn, KUdonan Indian, si apparently on Um road to recovery following one of the rarest operations In the history of medical science. During an altercation Sam was SUbbed by a knife alleged to have been wielded by Andrew Motes, another Indian The knife severed a rib and entered the left ventricle of Sams heart. Dr. William C. Hlggs, assisted by Jr. C. T. Hilton, used six stitches to draw together the edge of the leart wound and. barring complications. It to declared that Sam will recover. Dr. Hlggs advanced the theory! that the amount of hemorrhage around the heart temporarily closed the wound, permitting the man to live until the ope ratten wit per , formed. Moses is being held on a feharg! of attempted murder. DEAD IN VICTORIA A. S. Innrs, Prominent lUrrlstrr and Resident of Capital Forty Years, Tasses VICTORIA, July 5: (Canadian Press) A. a Innea, aged 70, prominent barrister and resident of Victoria for forty years, died here early this week. Mrs F. Dresser of Anyox was a passenger aboard the Catola yesterday afternoon going through for a trip to Vancouver. MATTERN RELIEF ; PLANE LANDS AT TERRACE SAFELY WILLIAM ALEXANDER AND THREE COMPANIONS BOUND FROM EDMONTON TO FAIRBANKS NON-i STOP PASSED OVER PRINCE RUPERT THIS I AFTERNOON. A large wheel-equipped monoplane circled several times over Prince Rupert about 2 o'clock this afternoon looking for a landing field and, after remaining a few minutes hereabouts, continued its flight in an easter ly direction. It was believed to be the Mattern relief plane. The plane finally dropped a note on Third Avenue immediately in front of the Daily News office reading: "Going to Exstew on the Skeena River to land." The note, which was weighted, attached to a light paper and bore no signature, was immediately turned over to the provincial police. The plane turned inland soon after dropping the note. Joe Ratchford actually picked the note up. The plane dropped a second note in the Gurvich backyard stating that it was going back up the Skeena River to look for a landing. Government Telegraphs reported that the plane, before coming on here, had circled over Terrace as if looking for a landing. The machine was later definitely identified as the Mattern relief plane. ( The plane was evidently in some sort of difficulty. Ex-' stew is a station on the Canadian National Railways be-; low Terrace about 70 miles cast of here. J William Alexander and three companions, enroute from; New York to Nome with an airplane which will engage in' a search for James Mattern, who has been missing fof three weeks now on a hop from Khabnravosk, Siberia, to Nome, Alaska, in the course of a projected flight around the world, were flying through this district this morning v bound north. Planning to fly non LONDON IS VERY BUSY London, as usual, presents a very buav aonearanre and. to the casual ston of this city, who returned this week from a trip to the Old Country. The great metropolis is always full of tourists and visitors and business there seems to be flourishing. In the .industrial cities and districts of the north of England, however, the story Is much different and conditions there are bad. seemlpg particularly so when compared with those which existed at the end of Uw war when Col. Johnston was last there. Col Johnston, who Is officer commanding the First North B. C. Regiment. lOSnd. Battalion here, while In England, took part In Uw celebration of the tercentenary of the founding of the famous Royal Scots Regiment In London, Edinburgh and Aldershot. He was tlx official representative of the Sixteenth Canadian Scottish Regiment in which he served as an otfcUe) during the Great War. Col. Johnston also visited th battlefields of France as well a other parts of Burope and varteut points In the British Isles. stop to Fairbanks, the relief pkrp left Edmonton early this mornlrrj and at 10:34 a.m. was reported by Canadian National Telegraph & have passed over Smtthers, Canadian Press reporting Uiat It had pasted over Haselton at 10:86 anj. From Fairbanks, the New York visitor, there is little evidence of Plne was expected to Jump to Nome depression, says Col. S D John- tomorrow and, from there, was to. commence an aerial search cf coastline and Islands of Western Alaska and Behrtng Sea for trace, nf Mattern. United States. Russian and Japanese vessels have been conducting a search for Mattern ever since be became missing but have been handicapped by unfavorable weather conditions. The Government Telegraph operator at Temee reported at 4 o'clock this afteftoon that he be-tteved the Alexander plane had eome down on a field some dlst nce from tho town of Terrace. He was mveaUgaltog. , Down at Terrace The Alexander plane landed safely In Harry Franks' hay field two and a half miles west of Tei-race this afternoon, neither plane or occupants being Injured. On Monday evening Pete Ohea-oskl of U.is city was heard over the radio from Ketchikan as waj llso Benny Wendle, formerly of this city and now of Anyox, arti i then. .