PAGE TWO THE DAILY NEWS sf DIX WINNER The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIi BOXING MATCH Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert News. Limited, Third Avenue. Daily Ol'TCLASSEI) MJT llAKItINO IX TEX F. J'ULLEN - - - Managing Editor. norxn holt at moose HALL LAST Mfllle SUBSCRIPTION RATES City Delivery, by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance $5.00 For lesaer period, paid in advance, per month .SO By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period $3.00 Or four months for $1.00 By mail to all' other parts ot British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance per year .... $6.00 By mail to al! other countries, per year $7.50 Contract Rates on Application Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone DAILY EDITION Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations 93 86 Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1928 PEOPLE WHO DO THINGS The people who do things are not those who spend all their afternoons and evenings playing cards or attending parties while talking inanely about things which do not matter. This is not intended as any criticism of cards, dances, bridge parties or any such activities. They are all useful and enjoyable. We mention them only because we have been reading of people in other places taking up handicrafts, art work, decoration and such activities. There is a sheep-like similarity about our homes. We follow each other. Our pictures, our drapes, our furniture, our linen, our clothes are similar. Very few show any real individuality. Many houses resemble barns, either inside or out. Sometimes the rooms are barnlike in their bareness and sometimes the outside is barnlike by reason of having no garden decorations. HOMES REFLECT PERSONALITY The homes reflect the personality of the residents. If the home individual. Wealth and poverty have nothing to do with it. Many homes of the wealthy filled with furniture, hung with pictures, choked up with drapes, are the most expressionless places one could enter. They indicate nothing but riches. They have no Individuality and are only one big emphasized vulgarity. On the other hand there are many modest homes which immediately brand the owners as persons of culture, refinement, artistic taste. They are exclusively expressions of the person creating them. ARTS AND HANDICRAFTS Tbe Indian woman who makes a beautiful basket is much more to be admired than the white person who is wealthy yet creates nothing. Today people are beginning to consider these things and are turning from the herd type to encouraire the expression of Indi Workers in the News subscription campaign are now making their deposit of subscriptions and votes in the sealed ballot box now located at the Royal Bank of Canada. With no means whatever of knowing what competing workers are doing, candidates last night and today were working under high pressure. The last published score board, which will appear in tomorrow's News, will indicate a close race for stellar honors in all districts and every ambitious candidate is showing a determination to make each one of the last two days count to the utmost. Standing will remain a mystery until . v pjn. rnoey, wood we seats on tne ballot box will be broken, tbe box unlocked and the final count started. In the meantime every candidate Is strictly on "his own," with nothing but hU conscience to guide him. ' The campaign closes promptly on the stroke of 8 Prlday night. All subscriptions and vote that are to be turned until after the last oandldate has departed will the hex be opened and the final count begin. The doors at th bank will be locked promptly at 0 o'clock Friday night, and no one will be permitted to enter after that hour for the purpose of easting subscriptions or vote. in must be in the ballot box at the The Campaign Manager will furnish closing hour. Under no circumstances each candidate with a checking slip for whatsoever will anyone be permitted tp tfim to put In the ballot box with make deposits in the box after the their final remittances these checking final hour. When the final hour ar j slips may be obtained by railing at earn-rivea any candidates in the bank whojpalgn headquarters and are used for have not completed their voting will be the convenience of the Judges in mak-permitted to do so and depart, and not tng the final count. .MANY SPECTATORS OUT WHOLE CAM) PB0VE8 IXTEKESTINf! AN1 LIVELY AXI WAS fiOOII ENTERTAINMENT Outclassing tils willing and tough opponent In the. finer points ot tbe game, Madison Dix of Seattle wpv a fair decision over Alf Harding of Oalgary In a ten-round .bout at Uie Moose Hall last night under the auspices of the Fair Board. Though Dlx was no doubt entitled to the decision on points, there were many spectators. who felt that Harding, owing to the manner In which he went In and forced the fight, might, have fairly been given a draw. In any case, it should prove a popular return event at some future date. A large crowd ot fans was in attendance and the whole oard, arranged by Charlie Brown, prov ed a lively one. .There was only one knock-out In the course of the seven events, this being In the semi-wind up when Nina Ounrtch met with disaster In the first round with Young Lawaotk Port Simpson native. The curtain raiser was a lively tlltl between Hammy AntoneiU and Howard Keefe. Yonrng Italy forced the going ton found his opponent elusive and tt was a good exhibition, the boys' efforts being rewarded with a shower t sUver. Stanley Shaw ot Kltlmaat was much heavier than Mike Quwksh and slug ged the focal boy around until the latter could hardly keep his feet. At a matter of fact, ' Mike proved Ms gameness by lasting out the twee Is bare and wfthtfut decoration, the person responsible is a soulless rounds, the native getting an easy Tommy De Marco had the weight over George Dyer but the latter ws brave In the face of these odds and tetit his share of puniahmest, par ticularty in tbe third round. The most of the fighting was to tbe aoee and face. His gameneea entitled Dyer to the draw deeteton. De Mateo having tbe most of the fighting. Victor Robinson of Metektte and Curly Nelson of Prince Rupert engaged in a rough and tumble boot. The leaping native forced the going but Curly had the beat of most whang a, Robinson was a shiner and Ntoe viduality. Our schools, where forty children are educated along'' tMn Tb exactly similar lines in one room, do their best to stamp out individuality. It is no fault of the teachers but of the system. All must i tt called a draw. If Curty had goe la little more, he oouM have won the decision. write alike, read alike, sit alike, stani alike, and do various other, Fri Bodu. things just like their neighbors. It Is unity without harmony. When : than Rav Jackson, winnioea. all sing alike, the result is far from pleasing, but when each takes! put the latter was fairly good at cov the part suited to him or her and the parts blend that is harmony. ' ertn' UP and Boulter bad a hard time so in all walks of life. There must be differences and the differ- ,r wnu "Mn P" nw " mt ences need to be encouraged. It is useless to make the bass singer Uke the tenor part. It is useless to try to force the contralto to sing soprano. So In all the other activities. Each has his own particular bent and it it very often the child who does not fit in with the rest of the class who makes the great success in life. Arts and handicrafts may be an expression of the individual and as sueh are to be encouraged. One likes wood carving, another weaving, another water color or oil painting, while others prefer music or some other hobby by which he expresses himself. 1 It is with the hope hat Prince Rupert people may follow In line with some of the country districts and form groups for the study of some form of art or handicraft instead of wasting time reading indifferent authors, playing cards, dancing, .or otherwise wasting spare time. There is little expression In any of these things. They are all right for recreation but when indulged to such an extent as to exclude everything else they become a curse. The people who so Indulge stultify themselves. PERSONAL LIBERTY While we are saying this we recognize that each person has liberty to employ his time as he wishes. We simply mention what we consider the better way. People who realty amount to anything are those who have some definite activity outside the work by whieh they earn their livelihood. A large number of the men and women who have made a mark In the world have done so through their pcuiier provraea we most 01 tee action and drove Jackson to every rope In the third round. It was called a draw though tbe local boy might have been given the decision. The Nina Ourvleh vs. Young Law-son affair did not last long. Lawson led the pace and was getting fab- return in heavy slugging exchangee before Nina ran Into a resounding clout on tbe chin which dropped him flat on hie face to be counted out. Nina tcok hu beating like a little man although other memebera of the Ourvleh family did not hobbles. Sir Isaac Newton thought himself a theologian and science!" rounlD ' seeming t to him was simply a hobby. .ITJT 'X Ballot Box Hides Scores of all Campaign Candidates From Prying Eyes Until Final Close Friday Workers Are Striving to .Make Good In Final Hours With Mr Prizes In Mew for Those Who do Most seem to be pleased. .MAIN EVENT Dlx was first on tbe ring for tbe main event. Harding got a hand from tbe crowd when he came In. Johnny May and Rot Barnes ware announced ae Judges with the refree, Pete La-port. Past on his feet and carrying a punch In both bands, Dix. It appeared at first, was going to outclass th? boy from Bristol. Harding ploughed right lato it, howevetMUMt made up In forcing what be might have lacked In skill. Dlx was boxing and 'Hardlnp Harding did moat of tbe leading and quite a Jot of hitting In the second Dlx being the cleaner hitter and the beat defender. The round was Hard-log's by a shade. Harding waded right In in the third and they put up a stiff fight. Dlx was looking for an opening with a vicious right but a hit had no more effect than a miss upon Harding. The)' were both dealing punlahment, Dlx working on his opponent's body while Harding kept after Dlx' faco. It was a fairly even round. Alf tore In In the fourth with heavy body blows and ,ln turn, received acme stiff one which seemed to arfeot bun little. Dlx was swinging wildly and then came on with a sure attaek. It was Dlx' round. In tbe first of the fifth. Dlx developed a bleeding eye which was to trouble him later on. Harding, by sheer doggedneas called the fight and had a fair share of the mixing. Dlx could not finish his opponent though he tried. Harding's round. Harding bored In the sixth to no effect and then started slugging. They mixed It well tough both appeared to be tiring. Harding was warned for holding. Even round. , Dlx dealt some heavey body blows In the 7th and tried a vicious upper-cut, He was flndleg It hard to get through Harding's crouching style. Dlx' round by a shade. Dlx tried hard for an opening In the eighth and worked on Harding's body to no avail. Alf gave him a Qjout on the face which made him wince and then delivered another on Dlx' ear Blood was streaming down Dlx' face. Harding had the best of this round. Leading off with his left In the JVedne.$day, September 12, m P 8 1 Barnea gave Dlx the dectslor whUe Judge Johnny My called It . draw. Max Hellbroner and 8. D Jlaconald were time keepers. LOG SCALING FIGURES SHOW CUT OF LUMBER The log scab- lor Prince Rupert dis trict during the month of August was 11 .68 7. BOS board feet ae compared with 14 376.344 feet in the seats month last year. The scale for 1030 to the end of August stood m 48,303,860 feet a against &6J71.609 feet for. the first eight months of ivrt. While the pro- ; auction of sawmiuing timber continues to lag, forest products In tbe Interior ate still substantially in exeeas of last ' year. Following were the August scaling figure: I Douglas Fir 366,682 Rd Cedar i...f... 2.147,041 Spruee, coast , SAM .638 Spruce, interior - 1M.SS4 Hemlock S.8S7.84A Balaam , 2,317,156 Cottonwood 364, MS t OKKST niODl CTS I tMles, Unoal feet 309,490 I Pile, hemlock, lines) feet .... 1B.1M Piles. Cedar, lineal feat 188 : Oerdwood. cords 187 j Shingle Dolts, cord '15 Ttea, Fir, number 3,490 Ties, Hemlock, number 4,308 1 Ties, Pine, number ... 118318 ! Fence Posts, oords 34 1 EXHIBIT FROM PRINCE I GEORGE WAS DELAYED, Considerable dlmipointment was ex pressed at the opening of the Exhibition last night that riio priure Oeorge dU- I trlct exhibit was not in place Due to wen vour nose hiows token its tea. i - tnyour name INSTEAD of wasting hours and strength at even the old-fashioned task of supervising the laundress make lis your washday servant. No longer need your house be upset and reeking with soapsuds odor. We offer so many services that you are certain to find among them one exactly suited to your family budget. 6 Laundry does it best! in error on the railway, the cai. confining the Prince Oeorge produce as sidetracked at Indako instead of omlng along here although William iPkysr and a. O. Wilson of Prince 3corge were here to mount it. Tbe '.allway Company is rushing the car :ong by the earliest possible means l It is expected the exhibit may be - piece by today. WHY BE EMBARRASSED BY PERSPIRATION ODOUR It's so easy to avoid this obnoxious social error. Simply use Lifebuoy, the superb toilet soap, for face, hands and bath. Let Lifebuoy's creamy, antiseptic" lather neu- tralizc the one to two pints of moisture which the human body expels daily through the pores. When you use Lifebuoy you can be sure of never giving offence from bath to bath. LMC1 LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP Purifies and Protects UVW BROtMEHi UMIttO toMuNto Ask for This Bookl ollictitv jSttutubiktuLm oAsk us for your copy of Alice's delightful litte journe Into Laundcrland Call us by 'phone, an I your copy will be delivered to you at ones- CANADIAN LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS - Phone 8 ninth. Dix hit Harding but every tlm be did be got a clout on the fao which dlatrtessed htm. Harding went to his knees once under Dix' attack Dix' round by a shade. Dlx concentrated hie body at lac In the tenth and was reckless of pun lahment. They mixed things viciously right to tbe end but nstther sowld sit the other, but' round for leadlns. Referee Laporte and Judge Ho. For The Benefit of Visitors To Exhibition We arc holding A SPECIAL SALE Ladies' and Children's Coats, Dresses, Under wear, Shoes, Rubber Footwear, Hats, etc. Wo also have a fine range of Ladies' and Children's Raincoats and Hats in all colors and our Drygoods Department is right up-to-date. We are selling out our line of Boys' Clothing and you can secure Suits as low as 95.95 and $9.95 A libera! discount is being given in every department, and you are cordially invited to come in and see them for yourselves. Jabour Bros. Ltd. Phone 645 Cor. 3rd Ave. and 7th St. If your paper docs not arrive, telephone the office