is THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1919. :t I J- a "Will the salaried man cit by and see the uneducated day-laborer earn tsirace as much as he ? W: ILL the architect be forced to work as a carpenter? Must the journalist go back to the print shop? Our bank clerks, salesmen, buyers, actors, public officials, clergymen and college professors what thanks do they get for their services ? With prices of necessaries "slued" high, how are their wives to manage? And, mean while, the uneducated, foreign -born day laborer earns and spends as much in a day as the salaried man does in a week or sol Samuel Hopkins Adams ' thrashes out thoroughly the problems that con front the man and wom an of formerly comfort able means today. Bow to build your own house without going brohe BUILblNG a home is usually the most heart-breaking thing In the world. You start out with a fixed budget of ex penditure. Youthinkevery thins is provided for, and then you .find you need all kinds of things you didn't dream of. Do you know that by a new way of planning your ap&c; you can save all this trouble and expense? In Pictorial Review for November, N. M. Woods begins a new series jon Economy in House Designing. His idea is entirely new and has already met with extraordinary response. . Experts declare that no magazine has ever published anything to helpful and practical. . . v , ; A : w V SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER If you live in the country or in any town where there is no news-, dealer, we will enter your name on our list to receive PictorisTReview for twelve months for Two Dollars, or for six months a special "getting acquainted" opportunity for only One Dollar. Send $2.00 " for one year's subscription or $1.00 for six months' subscription. Tbs Pictorial Review Company. 301 W.st 39th St., New York City "AS one youthful mistake to cast its shadow over Harriet Field's whole life? Beautiful, adored, her story utterly unsuspected, was sne to risk telling the man who loved her now, of that terrible secret of her youth? Read this extraordinary story of a supreme struggle in a young and ambi tious woman's heart Should she have told? And given up wealth, position, luxury, a good man's love all that she longed for? Or should she have married the proud, honest man, in the fullness of his success, without giving him a hint of the risk he ran? "If you dance, you must pay the piper," the old saying has it. Did Harriet Field have to pay? 1 v- . .. ' i Skillfuljy, with sustained interest, Kathleen Norris develops this absorbing situation. It is one which must stir every woman's neart. As you turn page after page eagerly, will you be moved with profound pity for the beautiful young woman overshadowed by the dark reality that sprang out of her youth and inexperience? Or will you denounce her? Don'tmiss a line ot r bu Kathleen Norris (Author of "The Heart of RachaeIN; " Jossclyii's Wife," etc., etc) . ' : The first stirring instalment a big, generous one appears in Pictorial Review for November. The remainder follows swiftly, riowerfully, with in- tense feeiing in three succeeding issues. It is the most absorbing love-story Pictorial Review has ever published. Winter patterns of distinction Pattern 8596 35 cent ABSOLUTELY correct styles and per j fection of fit explain the tremendous JLjL success which has swept Pictorial Review Patterns into the foremost position in the style wprld. In the November issue of Pictorial Review the Big Winter Fashion Number fifteen pages of exquisite styles of bewitching grace for women, misses and children are displayed. These include several pages of authoritative winter designs in new and fascinating colorsr The New Silhouette Showing Hip Fullness The'New SnuglyFitted Sash Bodices The New Choker and Scarf Collars The New Chic Redingotes The New Long Jackets The New Looped-Under Panels , For each of these there is a perfect-fitting Pictorial Review Pattern enabling you to make any garment look exactly like the design. Pattern 8541 - 85cot .. f . J V THE; LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY 20 CENT MAGAZINE IN THE vWORLD V r 1