V. JAXVARY 7. 1976.
milsr The V
^Hk'IU DEFEND T/rLE
IN -JATTLE WITH NEGRO
v\ ' L'p Against
^Rr-s 15 Rounds to Finish.
^^ Yi.'k .' Negotiations!
i "i '('day under which
< i' I'ittslutrgh will de-I
?, iimMli'weiffht eham^^R
ayains! Hirer Flowers, the j
^^m ( :? round j
(' '' -^i.idjson Square ,
Hie titlcholdsr
d to terms hy Which '
MM 11
I C.X.WH,
plumbing
KKl'Allv WORK
LET US FIGUI
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| he is expected to receive at least
j $60,000 fqr the bout.
Greb himself announced he had
[closed with Promoter Tex Richard to
I meet the challenger selected by the
State Athletic Commission as the
most logical opponent in the middleweight
division. Flowers was cont
sidered as having qualified for the
match by his recent exhibition against
Mike McTigue here, although judges
awarded McTigue a decision. Newspaper
men at the ringside were almost
unanimous, however, in declaring
that Flowers has outpointed the
former light heavyweight king.
I
(VTHERS II
I' |:
& HEATING I
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L A SPECIALTY | ,
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RE WITH YOU | 1
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J? own doorw;
j?P be in. your ?
|gi for 1926, is
wish to eve
l?|g? owner of f
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(continued on page 4.) det
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Greb said he Iwould star , training 1
immediately' for four matches by i
which he seeks to condition himself I
for theVflowers bout. i
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Nicklin and Higgins Buy Franchise.
- Chattanooga, Tenn., Jan, 2. ? An- I
nouhcement was made here today that
Strang Nicklin, president of the Chat- I
tanooga Southern ^Association Base- i
ball Club, and Bob Higgii s, former 1
Southern Association plaver, have i
purchased the Danville franchise of 1
the Piedmont League. The club will 11
be operated as a "farm" for the Chat-11
taAooga club, with Higginf as manage^-.
Higgins managed the Asheville ;
team of the South Atlant ,c League
for [ the past year and a h ilf.
j
JONES-GUNN MEET EUR),
PEANS IN ST. AUGUSTINE
Golf Match Marks Debut of Compston
and Massey in Florida'^, frogram.
!
Sf. Augustine, Fla? Jan. 2. ? The
first" international sporting competifJnn
nf f ba Mour Vnar will alro nldPQ
herk tomorrow, when Europe's greatest
j professional golfers w 111 oppose i
America's premier amateur pair in a
36-h|ole match. It will be Arcbie Comp- i
stop of England and Arnaud Massey i
of France, against Bobby *ones, the :
American amateur champion, and i
Watjts Gunn, runner-up for the title i
and ! 19-year-old pirotege of he invin- ;
cible Bbbby. i! 1
The match will mark the debut in I
the United States of Compaton and 1
Mas^ey. The former is the "white !
hope'* of European golf. He holds i
BBS?
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A\ S
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sr-present jjby of
Jxis,visible from.
ay on Lake
Allotment csfjprosj
our sincere NEW1
sry owner or pros1
ihomesite onthaik)
)N DEVEUlFMEt
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led In the town's <jnreer. Real e?- j
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THE POLK COUNTY NEW8.
:he British professional championship
and finished only one stroke behind
the 1925 winners of the British open
ind French open titles. Massey is the
present French open champion and
was the first foreign entry to win
the British, open crown.
Compston and Massey are in America
primarily to fill winter positions
it St. Augustine. During the next
three months they will appear in a
series of special matches and Florida
tournaments as representatives of
this city. They will play exhibitions
here regularly.
Strange as it may seemfl the young
amateurs will probably be favorites
to win the big match from their notable
and seasoned professional opponents
tomorrow. This is due to
the fact that Compston and Massey
arrived in America only a few days
ago, and have not had as much practice
as they might like. However, they
kept in condition aboard the ocean
liner, by driving several hundred
balls out to sea and by polishing up
their putting aboard the Homeric.
Compston is the biggest figure in
European golf, and his season's record
stands out as one pf the most
remarkable in the history of the game
in the other side. Besides winning
:he British professional championship,
the Manchester Giant?he towirs
6 feet 31-2 inches?finished a
stroke behind Jim Barnes for the
3ritish open crown; he tied Massey
or the French open title, losing on
he play-off; he twice defeated Abe
Mitchell in match play and won two
15,000 tournaments besides taking a
lumber of qualifying medals.
jj
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kKE IAN II
TRYON. HortJv Care
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ROBERTR. REYNOLDST
PENSGYPSY TRAILS
North Carolinian Writes of His Adveiv
tures Around World in Auto.
.. 1_
"Gypsy trails" is the title of a
book: published by the Advocate Publishing
Conjpany of Asheville, N. C.,
which was Written by Robert R. Reynolds!,
a North Carolina lawyer, more
familiarly known as "Our Bob," while
making an adventuresome trip around
the World in an automobile.
The book, which ip illustrated by
photographs made by the author while
en tour on this far-reaching^ and trailblazing
jaunt, is a compilation of
notes! made from time' to Hime by
camp fireside and lantern light describing
what he saw, what he experienced
and how he made this ventures
arne journey.
In it the author dbes not attempt
novelistic peaks or threads of mystery,
but merely sets down in the
pages of his diary some most interesting
experiences describing vividly
a stqaway aboard a freight ship, ar'
I
in Tfnlv ?h on Anstrinn snv
! adrift 'on the sun-balked deserts of
j Africja, the raiding of! a ship by Chinese
bandits, and many other days
> around the globe.
'i't")1!' 4"i"l"i' ???* '|"l'
; * j ?
1X Use the Polk County News {[
j + )Vant Column for quick., re- * J
i X suits. It will pajj you well, jj>
X ,n.i. J.' cost is stnall.
AAAAAlAlllJiAAAAiiAliiAitAiiAitiiti
VVVVVVVVTVVTTTTTTTTTTTTVVT
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Khedive's Ex-Chef
Gives Cooking Tip
Great chefs are born, not made.
Rarely If ever do they rise to tfcg
heights In their
profession by dint
of perseverance. JTOjP |
In Europe and B
the East a chef %lt wS I '
with the true
gastronomic instlnct
is treas- P |jftl 1
ured Jealously. Wifp^V A | '
He expects and M ;
obtains the treat- dmWaSmgfy \ 1
ipent of an am- | d -' % $ ' '
baseador. His Vp?<!-i-j'
dishes are the ! '
.pride of 1 his I
master, to be ' H. Gedojlan. |
boasted, of to
friends In the cafes and bazaar i
Such a chef is Haroutoun Oedolian. I
sometime chef to the family royal of !
the khedive of Egypt, now the owner I
of a bizarre gold coast restaurant in
Chicago. In his forty-three years us a '
chef extraordinaire, Haroutoun's word i <
has been law in the cuisines of three i I
Egyptian princes and one princess, i <
the mother of the khedive. When 1
Lord Kitchener was sirdar of Egypt,j '
before the trouble in the Soudan,
Haroutoun cooked for him.
One of Kitchener's favorite dishes, | 1
according to Haroutoun, was schischkabb,
a dish made from milk-fed baby I
lamb. Prince Jamiel, another of his
masters, was particularly fond of '
dried cream and honey, a preparation
which Is one of Haroutoun's zealously i
guarded secrets. Prince Saad Pasha j t
was a keen admirer of a confection I <
Haroutoun makes entirely ou of;
f flour, butter and nuts. i t
I Continuing
! Women's a
I COATS and
*
?fr
I $10.95 Coats and Dresses,
* $15.00 Coats and Dresses,
X * $19.50 Coats and Dresses,
* $22.50 Coats and Dresses,
* $25.00 Coats and Dresses,
| $29.50 Coats and Dresses,
?t? ffOK AA Pnofo onrl nPHGGPQ ?
^ ?pOU.VV V;UaLO aim .
f / $39.50 Coats and Dresses, :
| $49.50 Coats and Dresses, !
f $59.50 Coats and Dresses, ;
f $69.50 Coats and Dresses, i
$ $79.50 Coats and Dresses, :
$ $89.50 Coats and Dresses, i
| $98.50 Coats and Dresses,
| CHILDREN'
J $ 5.95 Children's! Coats, sa
J $ 7.95 Children's,! Coats, sn
| $ 9.95 Children's! Coats, ss
* $11.50 Children's Coats, ssi
| $12.95 Children's Coats, ss
+ $15.00 Children's Coats, ss
| $17.50 Children'^ Coats, si
* $22.50 Children': Coats, ss
| $25.00 Children': Coats, ss
1 $29.50 .Children's Coats, ss
"JACK | TAR'
X - - ~ I i
4? $ 4,l)U uresses, saie price.
X $ 5.00 Dresses, sale price.
* $ 7.95 Dresses, sale price.
* $ 8.95 Dresses, sale price.
| $ 9.95 Dresses, sale price.
1 $10.95 DresSes, sale price.
$11.50 Dresses, sale price.
$12.50 Dresses, sale price.
WOMEN an
COATS and
I! ON SALE AT
2*
Entire Stoc
At Half
I! Note Windo v Display f
I They'i
I Ha'"
I GREENE
I ' . | .
I LADIES DEPAS
I j Spartanb'j
i
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Lion at Washington University injmox,'
?- - ? ?'?sh
' . vffl
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In many 'of his admirable dishes,
Harnutoun uses evaporated milk,
which is simply fresh cow's milk
sterilized In cans and with sixty per
cent; of the water removed. Because
of la homogenizing process through "
which evaporated milk is put. the
fat globules In the milk are broken
up into microscopic Rallies ar,d distributed
throughout the milk, where
they remain in homogeneous suspension.
This breaking of the fat globulea
?ives a distinct buttery ijavor to every
drop of the evaporated product, a
flavor which ordinary market milk
does not have. Haroutoun says he
uses evaporated milk in preference to
market milk in the preparation of all
sorts of baited dishes, as wel! as la
nek ins.
*
Of Course Minister Had
to Heed Flock's Opinion
_The late Odam Wagnalls. the New
fork publisher, reproached a inagatlne
editor one day for never printing
ran si at lops in his magazine.
"Here are Anatole -Fr: tee and
Uonmn ar\A T7 onil il Hn*on
V^uic uauocu auu muiq, uuu v v- ?
>ther wells of genius for you to draw
,'rora," he sold. "Why don't you
iraw?"
"Because," said the editor coldly,
'the public prefers native talent."
"You remind me," said Mr. Wagnalls,
'of the country minister who never
Jsed the Lord's prayer.
'"Why oont you use It, nianf a
'rlend from the city asked.
"'Well, you see, we don't need It,'
said the minister.
" 'A sublime prayer like that! And
pou jilon't need It. Come, now. even
i chip as gifted as yourself can hardly
Mjunl a prayer like that can he?' /
"'Ah?er?no,' the minister slm)ered,
'but my flock thinks otherwise.'"
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Our Safe jp
nd Misses J
PRESSES !
>
.ale price $5.48 t
sale ] trice 7.50 s .>
.ale price 9.75 %
sale price .V. 11.25 $
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.ale price 11.7,5 >
*ale price. 17.50 1
sale price 19.75 f
V
sale price. ....... 24.75 *
tale arice... ;29.75 *:! t
sale price. 31.75 *
sale price 39.75 f
sale ]:rice 44.75
sale price 49.25 / %
: .;.
S COATS |
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le priice. 3.9 5 |
ile price 4.95 ?
tie price 6.95 ?
ile price 7.95 *
lie price 8.95 %
ile price 9.95 %
ile price] 11.95 ( %
ile price 15.95 'i %
< 4?
ile price 16.95 . ' *
ile price 17.95 $
|
p DRESSES | '
^ $i>.95 I
1,..' 3.75 t
l 5.95 X
6.75 * \ .
7.50 X
8.50 *
..\. nS.95 |
..I '9.95 *
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d MISSES I
DRESSES i
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Price j
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" and a number of plays.
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