f If rilK OMAHA SUNDAY REE : SEPTEMBER 2fi, 1000. U.oIk2 IL,3sttcBini2 TTTiIimIk:2 In no line of business does honesty count for so much as In the felling of fur, and in no other lin will you find so much deception. True, not always from dishonest motives on the part of the seller, hut often from a lack of that expert knowledge necessary for the true description of a fur garment. Why take a chance on bo important a purchase. For 42 . the name of Hubeiman has been tha symbol of absolute honesty In the manufacture and selling of fur garments In Omaha. In that lifetime of business experience we have made friends of thousands of satisfied cus tomers. We know and frankly doecrlbe every garment we sell; when you buy from us you know the true name of your fur and Just what to ex pect of it, and If your garment does not fulfill our promise we Insist that jou give us a chance to make It good. We deserve your patronage, but more Important we desire your good will. Do not fall to see our great showing of handsome natural Mink Sets at $73 and up; Jap Mink Sets, In great variety at $25 to $50; beautiful far northern Foxes, In all shades, at $20 to $50; nobby Blended Squirrel Sets, $15 to $35; Long haired silky Canadian Wolf Bets, In grey, brown and black, at $35. Dotens of styles In Rug Muffs and Shawl Collars, made from Wended Musk rat, Marmot, Opossnm, Coney, Etc., at $5 to $20. Our label means a guarantee with tvery set. A fortunate heavy purchase of Russian Poney Skins early In the year enables us to easily undersell all competition In this popular coat material. We have many styles of these coats on hand, In 24 Inches long, at $35; 38 Inches long, at $55, and 50 Inches long, at $65 to $125. The elegance of those garments must be seen to be appreciated. Let us show you. Gowns, Robes, Suits i Fr Ladies i To have the charm of beauty, origi nality of design and distinctive exclusiveness must be made by CmaAa. M. E. HUBERMAMN Room 0, Continental Block. Take Klevator to Second Floor. f. K. Comer lRth and lKmrls Mrwts. y i ...... ""''"'f I Miss A. Holland H igh Class Tailoring for Gentle Women Exclusive designs in afternoon and evening frocks, high class materials and trimmings. Suite 205 Paxton Block Phone Doug. 3049 . nil i i: EARS ARE OUT OF FASHION Nowadays They Are Hidden Or Else Disguised. DRESSING THE EAES IN C0L0ES doeer Jewelry I ! tu Distract tke Eye Karleea Drinlag Room In I.oadon Kmr Harnesses and Tiar Hinlet. Merschiem Importer Fall Millinery Opening and Display of fashion s most elegant offering:. An exhibition for those who recognize and appreciate ar tistic a n d s ty lis h millinery. Special Data: September 27 September 28 September 29 ri Suite SOi-Slo Paxton Block Second yior Convenient K tvatof NEW YORK, Sept. 25." 'If I had no ears I would be so happy I' one woman said to another wlUi a nigh. " 'You needn't have ears If you don't want them,' was tha prompt reply. Tv.i been in London and Paris all summer and I've seen (ewer ears than I ever saw be fore,' "There was once a belief that where there was a face there must be two ears lurking alongside. But this was In the long ago. Now the really pretty woman does not show her ears, or If she does show them they are so disguised that you hardly recognise them. "It was In the long ago that women dis covered that no artist In search uf beauty ever drew ears. In tb art galleries seldom or never does one see a pretty woman upon the canvan wearing ears. There are little bunches of side curls that hide them, or more likely the woman wears a head decor ation that puts the ears out of sight. "The trouble, a Paris artist explained to me. Is that few women have nice ears. Either they ara too big or they are too nar row. Eelther they stand out from the head or they twist downward. The right sort of car at the right sort of angle Is almost unknown. "The Italian peasant woman owns such an ear and the Spanish girl boasts the most exquisite brown ears, well shaped and faultlessly set against the side of her head. But the lady of the blue book, the one who makes her bow at court, has ears which are either transparent from diet or fat to bulklness. "Well, there are remedies for poor ears. In Paris they sell a head harness which goes over the top of the head and across the tips of the ears. Again It goes around the head, this lime taking In the lobes of the cars. The harness csn easily be made at home, but the Important thing Is not to cow the orifice In the ear a. the hearing suffers If the air be shut out. "If the ear harness be well planned It also lifts the chin. There Is a broad strap which goes under the chin, supporting the flesh and keeping the chin from growing more double than It already la. If wnrn constantly at night hls double chin will disappear entirely, and so the ear harness does double work. "Strapping a atrip of elastic around the head so as tt hold down the tips of the ears Is a good thing, but the elastic must not be tight enough to leave a mark. Its virtus Is that It adjusts Itaalf to the move mente of the head and la leas uncomfort able than a Unen harneas, but If too tight It makea the head ache. The very aeweet thing In an ear band age la the compreaa of moist cotton. Over this wet cotton compreaa a atrip of cotton cloth Is bound, and under It the ear sweats and takes on a new ahape. "Feather pillows are bad for ths ear and that la why the Japanese woman sel dom has ugly ears. She does not aleep on a feather pillow and her eara do not be come turned and twtated underneath her head. "The woman who wania to vm wrm her eara are Bleeping correctly ahould wear a nightcap. A pretty little pink linen cap, all trimmed with lace, la becoming, and It protecta the head from draughts. At the same time It hulda the ears In place. They cannot double forward In the deTha of the feather pillow. Twtated ears and ears that are queerly turned, can almost always be traced to the feather pillow and to the trick of wallowing the ears In It. "The eara, even when passably good looking, are Improved by treatment. Thete are, for Instance, women who are slightly bald behind the ears. Such a woman should InVcst In somu good hair grower. With this she should massage her scalp each day, taking care to rub well the spots back of the ear. A little good oil will coax out the hair. As soon as It be gins to curl It is the salvation of ths ear. There are few ears that are not Improved by little whlsps curling over them. "If the baldness persists until the ears stand out unpleasantly there can be sub terfuge. It Is a simple matter to have hair pin curls built to match the hair, and with these snugly tucked into the head the ears can be concealed. Many artists con ceal the ears with tiny ringlets. Kor beauty's sake the shorter the ringlet the better, for It should suggeat a curl rather than actually kink around the ear. in t-onaon tins summer I saw some artistic ears. It seems that the reigning London beauties appeared In public, at garden parties, teas and dinners, earless, so that the rank and file of beauties had to follow suit or look behind the year, So the strange spectacle of an earless drawing room wus presented to the ob server. "One way of concealing the ears was by dressing them. The eara were there and you 'understood the fact. But they were so fully dressed as to be almost out of sight. "One woman had long and shapeless ears, but she dressed them so that they were chic when she appeared In public. The tips were hidden under a bandeuu of hair. The lobes were rouged till they were a pretty Infantile pink, and set In the pink lobes were round silver balls. They were Immensely becoming to the face and did not outshine It as diamonds do. "Few of the real beauties wear dia monds In the eara. They are afraid of outsparkllng the eyes. Diamond earrings are left to the downgera and to those who are so pretty that nothing can dim the luater of complexion, eyes or hair. But the beauty atrugglers wear pearls. "At one of the London beauty shorts they ahowed me a pair of bizarre silver earrings shuped like a fan. " 'They are for a woman who has very usly ears.' the attendant told me. 'She coureals them by wearing always some very odd pieces of Jewelry in her ears. You see the Jewelry without realising that the ear that wears it is really more bli.trre than the earring Itself. Once she wore a bronxe gold snake as an earring. It made a hit. "In most of the Paris beauty shops, where they dress you as though you were a doll, they make it a point to match your earrings to your gown. They give you gurnets, turquoises, Jade, umethysta or gold. They offer you topaxes, rubles and baryla and they suggest new and strunge tones by which you can secure correet I matches for your gown. The Jewelers are In sympathy with the shop and are willing to color their gold to any shade of yellow, brown, bronse or green. "But where real beauty Is required, as In the case of a we man who has no great beauty of her own, then the beauty special ist will almoat always advise a woman to match her earrings to her eyes. If the eye are small they can be wonderfully brought out In this manner. You can make tiny blue eyes look like sapphires by wear lng deep blue earrings the color of the eyes. And as for pale blue eyes, they are deepened and colored by the wearing of a deep turquols stone. "At tha same time that the earrings are matched to the eyes the ears are being dressed. And a dreraed ear la always pretty. Tha ahape of the face often de termines the blxe and shape of the earring. "It the face be long and slim then the earring should te short and rather round. If the face be ciooktd md many faces are should never be a dangling crooked-thfn the earring one. Many nn otherwise symmetrical appearing face W made to look twisted by the mere hnnginn of a long earring alongside of It. "The safest earring is the wmll, round screw which goes into the ear and deco ntes it. Ikdd buttons ns big as a dime look well In certain ears; others n"ed tiny sparkles of goM. while thero are queerly shaped ears that can carry a nugget of gold as big as a doll's watch. Some earring rules of a Patislan beauty shop ars these: "If your ears are fat and your face fat also, then lengthen both with hanging drops. Let them swing to ward the ear never away from it. , "If the face be small and thin the hanging drops ars good, for they give dignity. They should swing out and sway from the head, so as to broaden the face and make the head seem larger. "Hound earrings are for the woman no longer young. They are the most youthful of earring. They should be worn close to the face and should match either the eyes or the complexion. "Women past the flush of maturity should never wear red earrings. Garnets, rubles snd red stones of any kind bring out the red that la In the face. Women of mature years should strive for pallor. "Odd-eared women should wear odd earrings the odder the better. They call the eye away from the ear Itself. "Keep the ears young. Kouge the lobes. If you do not use rouge, then pinch them until they are pink. Let the upper part of ths ears be very white and tha lobes very pink. That la the sign of youthfulness. "Mash the ears down to the head. If they stand out they will be ugly. "Never pull the lobes of the ears. If the ears are too short you can lengthen them with dangling earrings. "Cover the ear entirely with a coiffure, letting only the lobe show. To the lobe attach the earring. That Is the way to make them In conspicuous. "Various lotions were ad vised for the ears, all being based upon a good cold cream or upon pure cream of milk. In Parts blxarrs ear decorations are occa sionally seen, but women wear them only once In awhile and never for a long evening. "One French beauty I saw had a wonderful gold filigree and torqunlse earring, and Into It was woven a tiny bit of blue satin ribbon. It was strikingly pretty. The same design appeared at her throat. "Banding down the ears with Batln ribbon may be classic, but It Is seldom becoming. A pearl head decoration that held down the tips of the ears was worn by a pretty woman, but it had an odd look and was not really becoming to the face. "Spikes at each side of the head In the shape of fancy halr Dlns have the effect of making the ears look big. A high stock makes the eara look little. A ruchlng. on the other hand, makes the ears stand out. "Puffs of hair right behind the ears are tne resource In case of the hopelessly unman-au.-ahle ear. The rat or roll Is pinned as close as possible be hind the ear and tht hair Is thrown over It, making a full puff at each side of the face. It Is almost always beaumlng. though a little bit difficult to build. It takes prac tice to make It shelter the ears and wave . well, as all ear deco rations must wave. ! "One secret of the j well dressed ear Is the I waving process. The woman who insists upon waving each and every hair of her , head will h sure to have her ears shaded ; at lean. The waving take, forty-five min utes In a hslr dressing establishment, bui I the woman who waves lu hair at home I !apt to give it not more than ten minutes. "Don't neglect your ears. It U the ear that listens; it Is the ear into which a man whlspeis the sweet nothings which a woman like to hear. Without a pretty ear a woman cannot listen to best advan- j taife. "Ue careful of the color of your Jewels. You can make or mar your face by your choice of colors. Blue If your eyes are blue Is a safe rule. Pearls If your eyes are b'ack. If your eyes are a limpid brown wear gold earrings. They will be twice .4 liniLid and melting to a degree that will I stamp you a a beauty. ftv3v i yip. Hi i di. Hfe'ikll b mm mkJm ' V t wm wMmlwI' t-- , . ... U.n,-4fB' dm1 i r W1' " ... . .fe l' tSs ir j-fif Xi:ri r&m;irr - -- " -; - -;te, v - JmMm I iUitlJ JM. " j. U jf ' ,1 II . i ' L -.r . ' f. r' .i ' -ft' . rC I1 ' ti.i . i . - - - . ' 1 r : - i,,. ' L . " . J. ' -V ' .... V. !t,. Ii.lnil I MmQil."!:!. j'Hj. iitSiW, .s . j. i. i -rj'1 1 Jv.ii-iV y--- :..!'" wmmw- : sum-in !i.V"t'': 4 lU .r- . : .J J ' : A m ncF ... .. :-- P'ltr ..! it Ili'i Nil ' .Ii "tsljillr'jljilils" illlliilSaJM I. 'I f ' : - ii nisfciaiw'" t''opyiighted im bv THE POPE AND THE COMET M. H. Deveneau Co.) Correction uf l he lloarj Old Fake About a "Ilnll of ICxcoiunmnl- ' The reappearance of HalUy's comet has ' given the Associate Presa an opportunity . of adding to its already laige sIlm k of un ! truths. Monday a New Yoi k dlpatch n-I nourclng that the flaming body had again been observed for the first time in Uun: nuarters of a century added that It was the I Identical comet aialnxt w hich, once upon a time, "the pope launched a bull of excom munication." ' The statement that any pope at any time Issued a bull excommunicating a cornet is ; not only a lie. It la an absurdity of the ! first water. The man or paper that repeati the ancient fuke makes himself or Itself ridiculous lefore millions of S'-nnible peo- I pie. No man, -voman or child with an j ounce of sane brains will believe that any upe ever Md any such unutterably foolish thing It is absolutely unthinkable. I The fjl.le Is asserted of l.'alllxtus III. but . investistion has demonstrated tha: ! theie Is not a shred of truth In the charge ' Some years ago a Catholic clergyman of ) this city heard a lectuier in the University I of Chicago repeat the hoary fake In a talk j befoie a class. The clergyman at once laid before the licturer positive proof that tht statement was a lie and the professor frankly h4 nut.d his bunder In repeating a bald forgery and promised never to make the assertion again, lie has not done ao. more especially since his own investigations have led him to regard it a hoax. Kvery I.. .lar the world over knows the asset apparently think It a sensible thing to spread the ancient lie once more. The Associated Press evidently needs somebody uii Its editorial staff who has some Knowledge of history and r proper appreciation of truth. It has willfuly, If not maliciously, circulated an attocious He , and owes the Catholic church an apology. If it has any sense of honor It will apolo j gls for Its Insult to the Catholic church , in the l.'nlted States and the world. In the plainest terms possible we assert that It I has spread a lie for the perunal of Its : readers. The New World. Chicago. UettliiaT u 'he K l. The opening of court this week recalled the tesnmony of a coined uttiosa before Judi-e Siihnple a few ni.nnns am. It a a divorce cbm and one attorney wa at tempting to s(.ow that the im.-tiaii.l had been guilty of overdoing the drn king put -ault to the pulnt of habitual drunk, nn -a. "How many dilnks do you generally take In a day?' I.r a-ked the wniies "How manv tines I Ken l take" the witness repeated "Well, suh. I s gt.ln' tu be hones' 'boot it. Smiietlme Ken'iy takes five or six drinks a !.. and then tion is false, yet aom. of our great d.,1... SAXWxZ T '