FOR EARLY FALL \ ' t S r 1 /" W k *W HEX summer millinery be gins to look jaded and it is still too warm for Heavy winter hats, one must take to "between seasons" mil linery or to the styles that come un der the head of "all-the-year-round" millinery. The silk covered hats that appear in September and those made of silk fancy braids offer the best choice to the purchaser for a number of seasons. First because they are not too heavy looJdng for warm autumn days; then they are conserva tive in shape, not running to any ex tremes, and they are very durable and able to stand the little spells of bad weather that portend the coming "winter. After serving their purpose for fall, they come in handy during the winter for stormy weather when the best hat must be saved, and they prove altogether desirable for general utility until early spring arrives and demands its own between seasons head wear. These hats are manufactured ready for trimming and are excellent in shape and lit well on the head. As a rule no bandean is required with them, and they are therefore easy for the home milliner to manage. The trimmings selected must be in harmony with the shape, that is de signed to withstand weather and wear. Natural or very well made wings, fancy feathers, ribbons, velvet and compact, strong-colored fall flowers PLAIN AND DAINTY. This is quite u !>lain blouse DWii with paint<'-.Chine tic Bra worn. Material required, yards SK Inch*** wltli" Nsck Huf.h«». f'rocti) u>l in ik ruche* are a novel Idea and *erv •mart ami prat-thal If |««rd to fold* of lawn or lln»R thru)- rm Itiu i i .it> l>t* lauiiilt*! -it with out taking apart !">•» lut y *hatle* of wa*h iii.iiiti.il to mati It gown* may ul*u be used. and a chlltou fold in it to the thru!* add* to the attractive lit-** >tf Ute saiie- give one an ample choice—malines, especially those that are waterproofed, are very useful and the fashion of drawing maline over the feather trim ming to keep it from blowing about is sensible and pretty as well as thor oughly appreciated. In fashioning the trimming for such a hat, folds and plaitings or other com pact arrangements of the fabric used, are altogether desirable for they aro not easily disarranged. The hats of silk braid and silk hats with velvet facings are often simply trimmed with big bows made of taffeta or corded silk. A single strip of silk Is split, along the center, lengthwise, hemmed at the edges and stiffened by thrust ing a fine wire in the hems. A single large mow and collar made of two yards of silk, which makes a strip four yards long, is all the trimming required. Its great advantage lies in the fact that it may be taken off, freshened, pressed and replaced on the hat. There are any number of pretty and inexpensive fancy feathers to choose from and they are all made from the plumage of domestic fowls or birds that we may use with a clear con science. Wings always make a smart trimming and the big ornaments, many of them in Persian colorings and designs, are destined to be a great help to the amateur milliner in turn ing out a creditable and useful hat. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. FOLLOW ONE COLOR SCHEME Advice From Writer Who Should Be an Expert on Art of Dressing Economically. It seems strange that more women who must practice economy In dress ing do not follow a distinct color scheme. I find It best to use the same color for a year; then have a change for the sake of variety. In this way all of one's accessories correspond, and a much better effect Is producud for tho snmo expenditure of money. The "best" afternoon gown may be worn with either tho summer or win ter hat ami yet look as If they were made for each other, tilrdles, collars, and parasols may always bo made to do double or triple duty, and yet al ways be cxtpilsite taste. This idea Is not ii)'w, but it Is surprising how sel dom we see it carried out by the wom an of moderate Income; more often , we heur the explanation that the blue ' gown was chosen because "I haven't had anything blue for an age," and It ( Is accordingly worn with a brown coat, tan gloves and a black hat. —The ! Housekeeper. Milady's Locksts. The newest very large. They are worn on a slender gold or platinum chain The locket Itself Is Studded with brilliant* or colored stones. These are of course only for "dress up" occasions. For Mrt el or day wear the Jeweled locket set-ms out of place. For this purpose there are many in allvor and steel which are both ap propriate ami rhlo. With two or three Imitation dark ttlolD-s Iht- effect I* elegant without be- I lt;( overdone Art tony Skirt* to Come 112 Sot \i-t hi i tie- long «klrt come to lie acctiplt-l for other than dreasy weitr. >«t the makers of fashloii ret» Hiiiiiii ml It (or more constant use, and the Ann rl'-an women are adopting it I nkisly. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 191«. 1 mmm gysk A Afeev HE Tagabanos are dls ■ consolate, for tlieir i KM man-god, soldier-kfng V is dead. Salip Akib ®7 and Salip Tomi, the }y// P' ra t° Moro chiefs, are j v' again despoiling the peaceful and fertile • —yH[ ~ "" ' island of Palawan, for 11// was not the inan they IVI had come to fear aa the devil incarnate seen to tumble inglo riously from a boat, flounder helplessly and gink to the bottom. Lieut. Edward Y. Miller, the governor of the most out- I lying of all Uncle Sam's territory, and | the inspired uplifter of its people;, has | been drowned in the course of duty | and where is the man who will be able j to fill his place? This is the question that is facing the Filipino government and the Bu reau of Insular Affairs. This is the question that is bringing to light a piece of work that has been carried forward In the wilds of the great East that is as full of romance and accom plishment as the most fanciful yarn ever spun by the imagination. For Lieut. Miller, U. S. A., has for eight years been absolutely ruler over 34,000 people; wild, barbaric, unchrls tion. He has single-handed brought peace to those people in the place of continuous warfare. He has repelled the Moro pirates in many pitched bat tles, armed and drilled his natives and made his coasts a place to be shunned of all else by these gypsies of the sea. Yet Miller died ingloriously a month ago from falling overboard from a boat in the still waters of an inland stream. The Moros have learned of the nature of his death in such a sim ple emergency that any mere native would have been able to save himself. The fear of him and his kind has con sequently vanished and the Moros are again at war. Dean C. Worcester, American sec retary of Uie interior for the Philip pines, came a little later into Palawan to inaugurate Emergency Governor Evans, was attacked by the Moros and much blood has been shed. All is chans in Palawan, where peace has reigned for six years. The insular bu reau and the provisional government is looking the 00,000,000 over for a man who can fill the place of the dead governor-king, but with little hope of success. All of which leads to the story of Lieutenant Miller. He was at the time of his death a member of the Twenty-ninth Infantry, but had never seen that regiment and was unknown to its officers. This because of the fact that he had been, since the time of his appointment, on detached duty as governor of Palawan. At the breaking out of the Spanish-American war he had been an officer in the Chi cago militia and had enlisted. His service was with the Fifth Illinois Volunteer Infantry and had first taken him to Porto Rico and later to the Philippines. He served In the outly ing southern provinces and his supe riors soon recognized his genius for getting along with the natives. He cause of it ho received his appoint ment in the regular army and his de tached detail. Lieutenant Miller was but 24 years old when he first enlisted. Yet he left a soldier's sweetheart behind him in Illinois and when he received the permanent detail the sweetheart came into the wilds to him and they were married. All the years between then and now Mrs. Miller lias spent at the side of her husband, and hand In hand they have sought to lead the way for their charges from the darkness of barbarism to the light of civilization and to better living. They have left behind a monument of accomplish ment that Is perhaps unequalcd in the history of so small a force working for the uplift. Palawan Is the very outpost of the Philippines. It lies In that great reach of the Island that runs out to the southeast, two days' Journey nearly to ilorneo, and separates the China Sea from Hutu Sea. It is a strip of land 20 miles wide and 275 miles long. Tim bered mountains store the moisture which makes its valleys perennially fertile. Its long coast line offers It self to the spoliation of the Moro pirates, who have swarmed ihrough these waters for centuries and have preyed continuously upon their na tives The mountain people and those of the valleys are wild but sweet na tared and simple. They are the Tag ballon, good-natured wanderers, for whom much hope is expressed. Yet all was chaos, and war never ceased in the old days. It was Into these conditions that lieutenant Miller brought his young wife. The men of the army protested .tgiilnsi such exposure, hut tin- young ■ ■Nicer believed that he knew the na tlv< s better than tliey and that he was safe with them He established hlmseli at Puerto Princeaa, which had once limit a Spanish town nf mime tin parlance, but had become a dd ■ tty of the south setts Here he made his capital and here he begun hi, work with the natives. Hoon lie was able to muster a nuiu bet of choaeit young natives Into a mill tie organisation Thee# ho sup plied with arms and drilled. His aim was the repelling of the Moros. Salip Akib had long been the terror of the coasts. The natives had ben Inef fective as warriors and the trades were at the option of the pirates. lieutaiwit Milter was well prepared before he struck a bk*s\ Then one summer night the news was brought that the pirates were ashore at a village up the coast and the natives were being robbed of their stores and animals. The raiders had gorged themselves, had stolen a score of the pretty women of the settlement for barter In other ports and were carousing In the village. The gover nor massed his constabulary and crept upon the town. The pirates were sur prised, but expected an easy victory. Hut they had reckoned without the big American, who was a fiend when aroused. His followers had been drilled into efficiency, but were yet timid, not knowing their strength when armed with American guns. Hut they followed their chief to battle In fairly good part. The pirates were cut to pieces and the band broken up. The American that day won for him self the title of"the demon." The timid natives learned that they were able to stand against their hereditary enemy. The gratitude of the whole community came to the governor. Re cruits came to his arms. The band of Salip Tomi gave the second big battle In the working out of the problems of this isolated law and order scheme. "The demon" met this band under similar conditions and the results were tho same. The timid natives found that they could fight und that they liked it. They placed themselves at the command of the governor and did his blddlug without question. They came to call him king and his word was law. They carried tho tale.s of him to the ends of the island and all the people proclaimed him. None would have dared stand against him, even had they not loved him. He gave his orders aa to cessa tion of war among the tribes and the allotment of land. In two years he had hrotiKht peace Into the wltolc inland and found It In readiness for his real programme. The fear of his arms among tho Moros became so great that for six years before his death there was not a piratical raid on any part of the island. The natives called him king, and his powers with them were absolute. To all intents and pur poses he was iu reality king; for them there was no authority In the land but his. Helng a practldbl man, Lieutenant Miller know that If the people pros pered. It would be through a cultiva tion of their fertile soil. They were mostly nomadic, wandering from place to place. He exerted all his Inllueiice to get tbe into settle down and make themselves permanent homes, cultivat ing more land The Tag ha n os, or Inland people, were the favorites with the governor. They were Intelligent, tractable, um steal, los tblc ll<- ih teriHna d that he would do something for Miens people to tlx their habits and tie th< in lo ibe soli. It was In the carrying out of this plan that he lost his life. The Aborlaa river runs Inland Ihrough a fertile talley near Puerto I'rlnct na Twenty six tulles up this stream Ooveraor Miller »• iected the site for a model colony he planned to plant. Here he would erect a school that should be an agricultural and demonstration plant. Here he would get the children of the Tagbanos to goto the industrial school. On the fertile lands that lay round about he would locate their parents. These he would show how to farm at the same time that the children were attending school. He would teach them the vir tues of a farm life by actually demon strating it to them. Governor Miller told his little plan to the provisional government and se cured an appropriation with which to begin it. A little money he made go a long way, for the natives volun teered to do the work without charge, and there was not much call for the fine finish. The colony was this spring drawing on toward completion, and an it was the particular pet of the governor, he formed the habit of run ning up to see it every night after work in a gasoline launch. It was while returning from one of these trips I hat the launch was upset. Governor Miller, though a great, strong, athletic man, had the vulner able point of an Inability to swim. The men who knew htm were surprised to know that he should drown In a nar row river. They supposed, of course, he could swim. But when the boat turned over the King of Halawan, the savior of the people, the man who had started the thousands on the road to development, went unceremoniously to the bottom and his native compan ions dived for hours before they were able to recover his body. So there had settled down upon Palawan the gloom of the great loss. The people mourn the death of the American as they have never grieved for anything before. The great work which he has established for them is at a standstill and its future is in doubt. Such work requires the gen ius of a man who flts into just such a nook, and civil service or the discre tion of the men higher up is unable to determine just what are the quali ties needed even wero the man with these qualities Idealist enough to give up the world to which he lias been ac (ucfuned to live among the people of the wild for the Bake of doing good. And the Moros, these Samals or gyp sies of the sea, are again at their depredations. They had thought this big American a demon, a thing of Mi|i"rnatural strength and of charmed life. Yet he had sunk and drowned with his boat turned over. So would all his kind. They would throw the next big American overboard and drown him. Hefore a congressional committed last winter Major General Hell, chief of staff for the army, Has telling of Minn of the remarkable uieu of that service and of the effective work th» were doing Lieutenant .Miller cited 'is the most prominent of ihei Genera) It* II told of his work, and concluded by saying I hud heard It stated that he could not l« replaced by a company, prob ably r.ot by a battalion, und possibly not by u i egliih-nt of troops ' Tnls was merely troin the military standpoint of keeping the pegee, and a • redly the Island overrun with ti-M woi.ld not have the besi'flhul «ff« t uistu th« natives that was be in* • ■ ..Mi.jMlshed b) .Miller. } The Place to Bar Chap j >J. F. PARSONS'J CRMI RHEUMATISM! LUHBISOI SCIATICA I NEURALGIA and I KIDNEY TROUBLE! "f-OtOPS" taken Internally, rtds the blood ■ of the poisonous matter and aolds which ■ are the dlreot oauses of these diseases. H Applied externally It affords almost In- H atont relief from pain, while a permanent H oure la being effected by purifying the H blood, dissolving the poisonous sob- H ■tanoe and removing It from the system. ■ DR. 8. D. BLAND , I Of Brewton, Oa, writes! -a£ "I had bm a lulartr (or a nanWr of yMrs w«th Lumbago aud Rh«um«tiim la mj «nm H ||ga, »mi tried all tba remedies that I oonld H| gather from madioal work*, and alao consulted with a Dumbec ortbe beet phytlolane. bat found H nothing tbat gar* the relief obtained from •♦DROPS." I ah all prescribe It In my praotiM ■ Sa Hr rheumatism and kindred dlaeajee.'' IFREEI I if you are suffering with Rheumatism, H ■ Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kin- ■ ■ dred disease, write to us for a trial bonis H ■ of "»-DROPS." and test It yourself. B I "g-DROPS" oan be used any length of H ■ time without acquiring a "drug habit," ■ ■ as It Is entirely free of opium, ooealne. ■ ■ aloohol. laudanum, and other aimllar ■ ■ Ingredients. ■ Large S lee Bottle, -S DHepS" (SOe Dmm) ■ ■ SI.OO. F«» Sal* by Draggleta. ■ BWARIOI RMEQNATtQ OURE OOKPAIY, 1 ■ Dept. 80. ISO Late Stmt, J Sk J THIS ad. is directed at the man who has all the business in his line in this community. Mr. Merchant —You say you've got it all. You're sell ing them all they'll buy, any how. But at the same time you would like more business. «o|>l« ■ w«nt; wliiu thty wont &.3T0..-S I your b4 Id thto I ilffci. UIM, b) W It IT)