u!iTiLsu:i::iffi!i;OioESttu;;;s UTEBBWM Registrars Will Reman at Poliinj j Place UntH Late Today to Give Late Comer Chance. POLLING PLACES GIVEN Roles Governing RexWatioo and Who Is Lefally Entitled to Cast Ballot. This Li the tit day on which the rcg itratln book for the cowing flection eilt to open and those he are entitled , t. veto in the election of November 7 nd whose names are not yet on the looks in their respective voLiag fcorincUL,,, eTerr coUHtry where are urged by their respective part to a a .a L . aot overlok this last and fleeting op portunity. Should the act of registering; be neglected or forgotten, there will not be a chance to Tote. The book are, open all day today in High Point at the itdlowing places with the follow'mg reg istrars presiding: First ward Rear of the Home Bank ing company, L. J. Ingram, registrar. Second ward City hall, Jordan street, J. L. Sechrent, registrar. Third ward Old Jarrell hotel build ing. South Mam street, W. F. Brown, registrar. Fourth ward vteiens siaMe, i;ankiu;rvon jf n(, street, J. F. Hoffman, registrar. Any man over 21 years of age today, if he possesses the qualifications requir- ed of being able to read and write and interpret the constitution of the United States; if he has resided in the state two years, in tlur county m Ppnth and irt the precinct iu.wuich he seek to register four months; rf he be a natur- ajized citizen of the United States; and if he has paid his poll tax before May I, 1916, to 1915, unless he be exempted on account of age or special cause, is entitled to the ballot; and these are all the qualifications required of him in thc matter of registration. Those who have removed to new precinct since the last Kei.cral electi.e, j must register aKain. provided such r,-, nioval tK-eurri'd at least four months be fore the date of election. The iiii'Ktiini has Ix-en asked whether a man 21 years of ae on a day follow ing thi closing the registration lio'ks mihI ii: fcr.' election run vote or not. 1 1 cii.i, ami he (un vote if lie becomes 2! years A ae on .tiveiuisT H, this yi the flu y alter election, lhat is a pe-l rirl'.'T fact, hut has been tested, The .i.i r i: i. i . i ii.. . f m r...K ,aw i.h.k i.o i.on.-e .rn.y i j jiortions of a day. and if a man wasj lorn "1 vears n"o mi ovemlmr S lie is i torn -i .xars ago on nou.muor n, in is i.'isni.o.l t l.uve livi.il i imiMM :;. i I - , .'uys .,. November 7. and therefore is al j lowed the right of suffrage in an elee- j t.on .,f that day. ou.1; men therefore, I .o will IsH'on.e 21 on or U'fore Novem- . her S, can ;o to the voting booths oij NovcmlaT 7 and ilenuind registration, 'f j they enn otherwise qualify. This also applies to the man who has not lived tour ir. iii thi in bin preein:t, six months' in his precinct, six months in his county er two years in his utatc if the qualr ! licatitii is met la-fore election he can! I te.'Mer ! elctcion day. But t ' piht. i for all other citi.eus than thos' ex , jncted cIiishcs, the registration books are. 'letrng with llnality. ' IRON ORE SHORTAGE BEFORE SPRING MAY PE CAUSED BY 1CEI ' PittslmrKh, tH. 2H An iron ore short-jfor ne before spriii is foreseen by steel men her today, due to thc fad that th '' lake ca'i'ers have leen ? biny fr-iuhting fr the week to-week tr.ulr, ti.ey have net been Rblo to pile pu s rt serve. H'ith the closing down of !uk frei: hthig by Ice, expected early next iim 11th frei.'htin; will Is pracllct'.ly ovtr a- h"'1 r?i rates are prohibitive, 't hey v 'he cos if pig iron mire tUn 4 pe' ton. ' d that 65,000,iMKi t(mja aou'd be Mcesarv to carry the fur nni-t. over v the opening of navigation in pri'. Tie most optimist J n. v' ile- h.r'e thflt i 'll be impossihla for the l;.ke bouts lo deliver enough ore to swell the reserv.- i.ow on jisndlo fl0,WJ0.(H0 tcni. - 'C'V;'V"Y?w'- ' "Girv" to Work ia Wsr Zone. rsrls, Oct. 28,-Gipsy Smith, who hajrnest " L. IV McBrayi, "f aneeUed all over the world will spend p -'. new' .g ss e cutiv - evangeUed all over the world wiU spend the 'months from November till April In France done evangelistio work under the -auspices of the Young Men's Christian association. He comes as a represents- -live of the Wesleyan MeUodist church. 2) Absokv ly; Removes Indigo, on. Onepackage proves it c at all drumsts, JBELU'AN TliniLLlUG nECORD! Geltaqj Ashamed of Taking the Money on Account of His Frequent Victories. IS "DAREDEVIL DRIVER TliU-YearHe HafWoa the Bif Events at Chicago and Indianapolis. (By HAMILTON, TTaitcS Corrtspsade&t.) Piess Stiff Vw York. fW 0rWr!A PmIi tt . . . - , - who has hogged American auto track records and stuck his fingers into tLe I.. -.. they tear around tracks in high-powered automobile?, ia just taking a breathing spell. Kesta. says he is getting ashamed to take the money, and has promised not to enter every event in the future. He's going to skip a few to give theother boys a chance. Rest hurtled into the limelight back in 1915 when he hit the high spots ia New York. Prior to that ho had done a few fancy tricks for the natives of France, Italy and England, and when he hove in view of the statue of Liberty l he was well fortified with a bank roll hadn't scattered records on auf Krom ltjdy Kcu gnorted his intrepid wtJ. inU England ftnd h, immediately dare-deviled h way to victory in three of KngaI)(i'8 highest class events. That WM in a Mercedes, but he forsook his to cllmb sunbe.ni. Thls-tad Bo effect on' Ms neckbreakiiikjHpVd, for he went tiA m 8mMhiag tecotii tnd W(m thc grmad prix mt Amien8t jugt Mon the prtM.nt European war broke ou Jn ms ne agln Ami.ricmn KtM aud hled himself back tQ t(1 ghorM of the ,and of fentj, p.,ee nnd JIe waH in New York jU8t a and thpn ,p t fof SaQ ftgn. whorp ,r vtWfM t) wia wo tnt ,,u,TP,,8ion. th( Vander- hilt ciii mid t lie grand prize, something ! unheard of up to that time. Then he went to Indianapolis and cii- vaged in one of the tiertst automobile ' racen ever run ami forced I)e I'alma. an- I ether Italian, to the very limit to wio.ieor.t bulbs is not amiss above his brow. At (liieago he won the .KKI-mile event' Maud established a new record. Then they pulled off a challenge racejnadine further the country of Sao Paulo.! at ChicaL'o and Kesta and nailrsl hisi " ,, t(( ,,, Ilst flrHt This vear lias iust lieen one victory i .. . .nother. inc. ud nil" the Ikj events ... I at (liicaL'o and ImlianaiHiIis. t IT ,ir. ,1 I Itil til IllillU If ,n ft .llmin,ont!,lip sorie8 of ru00l( at ( i(, every tM ,,y th(, . - E AS "REVFKOORS" DRAW KFAR ILLICIT STILLS Hickory, tVt. 2S.- Dynamite placed on a mountain "k and exploded to give warning of the approach of revenue offt cits is the unique method of spreading the alarm among the illicit whisky dis jt filers in Burke county, according to j Deputy Collector I. P. Jones, who makes ' his headquarters here. The "moonshin !crs" have ample time to rciieh places of safety, Mr. Jones said, and it is only with great difficulty thst the officers ! i cate the stills and their operators. i Officials are rr.ntinuotisly on thr watch nli(.it 8tHN nnd lh(j attil.hed to the Hickory headipiarters are ket busy searching the hills and valleys in their territory, the several counties west of here. The last big outfit located in this, Catawba, county this week was oper i ted with a steam engine and equipped' with a still that held 2.T7 gallons of "lieer" or mash, with a capacity of 60 gallons of liquor per. day. The wmto matter was conaucwa unuergroonw w 1 . 1 1. M 4. nearby sawdust pile, where it was al lowed to seep Into the sawdust and earth. ' PROSPECTS BRIGHT FOR A BIG SALE OF , RED CIIOSS SEALS The Red! Cross seal esmpaigik la on la se- retary, Dr.,McBrsyer says th prospects art very encouraging and ne believes ibt In many places the sale of seats will be doubled in fact, he h so thoroughly con. vinced of this that he placed an addi tional order last week for B00,0C mslt. His first order was for 1,000,000 end he Is expecting these to arrive any time, wkavlJOoMpH various Woman's clubs and other com - mittees. However, the commRtces will not begin the active sale qf seals until Thanksgiving. EXPLODE DYHAMIT it !H OS EB 03 THME 1K Expert Coffee Growers of Brazil Get Mocha and Java From One Bush. (SETTLE COFFEE QUESTION What Makes the Difference Be tween the Two Varieties Fully Explained. j (By MARGARET MASON.) i Sure Mocha and Java, well mixed, and ground fine else. Is Coffee I always have ordered for? Kolbie U one of the few active base mine, Lull men left from the "good old days" My Mother before me. my Grandmother of the Baltimore Oriole. Hugh Jennings too, itna John McGray are two others. Have always insUted on this blended j Kobbie ha had a long experience in brew, baseball, beginning in Haverhill. Mass., But now I must shatter traditions, I see,! way back in 1SS3. In that e'rty he was For Mocha and Java I've picked from one tree. Sao Paulo, Brazil, Oct. t (By Mail). ! This certainly is going to be an awful j blow to the domestic coffee connoisseurs. The epicures who smack their lips and extol the elusive flavor of the Java as it subtly intermingles with the Mocha. Indeed it furnished me coffee grounds for surprise when I found the Mocha nnd I the Java not only growing on the same family tree but even or the same branch oi nv lamuy. ; The best way to settle the coffee ques-1 tion is to take a night's train trip .from Rio to Sao Paulo. The state of Sao Paulo is the greatest coffee growing country in the world. Its-capital, the city of Sao Paulo, is justly dubbed the "Chicago of South America." A two - hours' run by train brings us to the lit tie town of Campinas right out in the midst of the open rolling coffee country. The "King" of Campinas himself took us by auto out through thc coffee plan tations. He is a king by my ow n dub bing. This successful North American from Lawrence, Kansas, chose to make ; light of my appellatoin just as he chotw-: to make light of Campinas. You we he controls the electric liht plairt and the i traction line in Campinas as well as in! thirteen other small Brazilian towns. , Sun ly a neat little crown of ineanden-j I've heard ef people painting the town , ired but they would be helpless to incur-1 All flip xnil is of u marvelous redm-ss.i shading to vivid crimsons and rose. With " I its tiillowinc reil tiills it is start liiiflr i 1 ,.' I nmiiramnt of Sr 1) eao .wuntv. Ca - ..." . fornia. Showing a llilierinan tendency t I II I..nj.' . these hills all have the green of the cof fee trees alaive the red soil.- As far as the eye can see the coffee plantations strtch away into the distance. Some plantation boast of over a million trees. To speak of coffee trees is very mis leading. In reality they are like noth- I ing so much as big lilae hushes except that the leaves are smaller. The- ooffee norry useti iooks i.Ke a.cnerry turning. from green to a bright cherry red j through its different stages of ripeness. , Dnlik tb cherry, however, the coffee berry grows in clusters, interspersed j with letres, closely fastened, without i stems, to the branches of the tree. It , has little pulp and no juice and' the j coffee beans proper form tho heart of j the berry like a cherry pit split into.. nalTe8 ' And here is where the difference be- , tween tne Mocna ano . isom-s in: Not beinor a nrize stndent of botnny I (Km I Know me vcvanuaii wTimn- ui j wmething happen to the stamen of ; seme coffee briwnm8 so that they maKe j fitunU'd bewns and nnind of shape which . , cajied Java while the perfaet Mtichttj j anft are trge oval in oemtour. So j itB the gubtlp difference ia their 'shares vou taste when they aire all ground up together.. , In coffee picking time uvea th fittlest tot help In the harvest. Everybody works,, even father,; Thep wkisg eoosists in stripping all the berries oft right down the branch. As the leaves get in some what en the general strip, after the bar vest,, the poor old eeffee tree looks s bit denuded. The berries, are stripped off nnd allow ed to fall on the ground where they are raked up and carried away, in baskets. The next step is to spread them out on an open, cement ( court, to -dry in thp Sun. ... ;: '. . When the berries are all shriveled and! dried to the consistency of husks they sre put through successive machines thai husk them and separate the Mocha beans from the Java. They finally land in sacks ready to be shipped down to San tos snd eiported. As you sip your Turkish, French, or U. 8. A. coffee you may' be almost sure it hss a Brazilian past. For it is only by the different degrees and processes of roasting in tho ' different countries to , Brazilian bean becomes dismiised ss a terrible Turk or in true Parisian man ner, starts a liason with chicoree and becomes "cafe " l'.SELI. C.'IiEER Of g (By HAMILTON. United Press Staff Correspondent.) Nw Vrk. U-i. :N.lriite I'.nvk- dfitai i;i tiie world's seri.i there! i1" "m ma "i tht- ivxi! I iu nerr vu.i mrne anvinili;; lul , ijraW for his hare of the work that ;sd the first National If a cue pennant J for Brooklyn sinec the American league ; got into the big league field, j WilVrt r.oberton is hi name and. like most fat men, he ia loved every- where -even in Manhattan, where they 'hare little tine for love or anything j the battery mate of John K. Tener, then ;a oudoir pitching star and now presi- j d. nt of the National league. Robbie t to the Athletic, then in the Amer- J ieun association, and became a member of the Orioles in 1KOO when the Amer ican association club in Philadelphia teased to exist. In 1900 Robbie and Mcfirsw went to' St. Ixniis, but their sojourn there was brief. From St. I-ouis they went backj t Baltimore, where, with Joe Kelley,: i they became owners of the Oriole fran- L .hW whk,h bse-ntty passcd to New! York and now thr propertv of thc' Kiippert-Huston duo. The trio forfeit tho fnfa jn 190-2 and Robbie be came manager of the Baltimore club in the Fastern. now the International.! league. j In 1904 Robbie decided he was tired ' of baseball, so he "retired" for just four vtarf returning to the game in 1908. He drifted back by practicing with the Ori-i oles hi thc mornings, and wound up by J signing a contract to play with them.j In 190C John MctSraw got Robbie's Johni Hancock to a Oaint contract. He stay-j in! in New York coaching Giant pitchers! until 1914, when he went to Brooklyn to ead the perg to victory. MAY START SHORTLY lleiiitHrson t-t "'M- AsKiiranei friini . . , - . . . Mrs J M lnmir nt KoiitiK'kv tlini. active steps will In taken in the near . . .. tuture iwelnninary to the construction of ! the proposed railroad from Henderson to Wilson, by way t4 Cnstalia, is contained in u letter receiveti here by J. C. Kit Icell, secretary of ttv company organized tnnanco the proposition. Mrs. Turner's husband initiated' the movement, and she assumed the active- direction as the larg; i et singfe investor, following Mr. Tur- i tier's deattb three years ago ; The matter has been iteder considers- v,. lite board of trade jpcent,y R ia of TOBfltruction of the m Tajwf notified iMm.gtj, wpre 4.ow,MriBff Mkin? the IegisBltur0 f(H, a nw ehartcr BnIp88 wprp d(.Uy An fXbgmhn we from here to wbmf te prpoa line tooching B,xbor. and Yaneeyville also is tinder tuwaiderafcian. Yanceyville, the w of Cftawen fa ' wrted by any tai1rdu at the present time. . mTEEESTINC PROGRAM SUSDAY AT WXSLET KESfOSIAL CHTJSCH An iwterestfiie pevigram is scheduled ti take place ait OJ30 o'clock tomorrow, moreiag at Wesley Memorfial Sunday MrhooL A class ftf children from the Chil dren's home at WinstonrSalem will be present at the Sunday soaool houc and; give a program at he opewing andl olos ing exercises of the soheol. A fulll attendance iss expected aad visi tors are-especially itiKtted to be present und learn some of" tine things that ace ! being done by tftii interesting class from; tie home.. . STOCKHOSJESSSS MEKtllWi. Tae annual mertmg of the stockhold ers of the HJga Ptrfat Peractnal Build iAfr andIion association will' be held La the dircetoeV room of thi Commer cial Nations, bank, Monday eight, Oc tober SO, Ml. .. . ' . , . V, A. J. IDOL, Seeretsry. Sept. n, mt. lo-so High Point, N.COct, 18, 1918. A meeting of the subsoribers to the stock of tho Big. Point Morris Plan Company is called, for on Monday, Oc tober 30th, at 70 p. m to saeet at No, 109 Bast Commerce street ia the SheriTBuMng electing director and perfecting tae per manent organization. FRED. A. UULU CONSTRUCTION mi RAILROAD r t is mo bilking, and he is going to lay siege to your castle if you , don't strengthen yvur defense in that cold Bath Room. To f defend that roo:n against Jack's assaults yon should have ooe . of our cone of reflector heaters. They act very quickly and V gire fine results. Wc sell hundreds of them. Phone us your order or have Mr. Moise call and show yon cuts. i EVERYBODY NEEDS' BETWEEN-SEASON HEAT Tfcare a time in tbe spring and a want a heater ftra, and! yet k"s toocoW to be witboot any heat ia the houe, Thwe ere the seasons fehen the wondermJ little EEIIttl GAS HEATER QUICK HEAT FDR COLD ROOMS J 1 - M comes ia handiestr You showld have one tn the Uvtn room, the (flning-roooi and yoor bedroom, so as to kflt dampness in chilly weather. TheSSheatere bumBtUe gas bat furwlsh a great eW of genuine hoat and comfort. Both for a luettroe aod rtrj t "I ornamentaL Drop ia and let m demonstrate then you 11 be delighted. $3.00 and upwwrds. Reznor Heaters are the Origtrat Copper Keflector GeaKeatcra. y Oar eervlc U hxpi at no SiaeoML We carry eempfcM On ofime swIUniM mMihwi ili,b-t)it tuut you to omm. R.C.PublicServiceCo PHONE 700 SOUTHERN BELL 3S Look Your BestIt Pays Yoo are judged by the clothes you wear- It is not necessary that you buy expensive new Fall and Winter clothes when you can send os your last Fall's clothes and let us apply our method o( DRY CLEANING PROCESS. We can remove all spots, stains, dirt and- gnre the garment a new lustre. Every particle of dirt is -ab4 stracted from the very hber of like new and last a long time if you will list us Dry Clean them High Point Steam Laundry t PHONE 99 Owen-Smith, Til D. Office Over Riog Drug Co. Vbtam 510 Residence 222 Sosxb Main St PHONE 629 UelKchampe Printing Co 110 T10 1-2 HAMILTON ST. UUIWH OYSTER Season - ' Fresli shlpmenU f Extra Select York River Oyster TUESDAYS, TIRJRSDAYS and SATURDAYS FImim us jroor order. Market PHO:ZS 351-CG2 in "I time In the fell when too hardly 1. the fabric Your clothe will look' b nxamine the- eye without thtt u drops.. I grind my own leases to s. the requirements f the eyek My prise ate lowest that good work will permit. " DR. MAX RONES OPTOMETRIST. Office Moan 8 a. m. and f p. ra. 'Phone 6av located With . Rosea k So IIIEZ!lllllllllllC!2linSli!l!ir. Run ... To "E5inir 4tilltllll, ...... .a,,. ,..,,, .".iJ.-.V."' f ' .3.... ' KfeM