The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 5, 1923, Page 4

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THI EATTLE 8% MURDERE y Bootlegge WENTY-NINE government agents have been DO YOU believe that prayer will cure sickness? Thousands do! murdered by bootleggers and rum runners Episcopal churches, Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians are preach- ee se i me Rd ing the power of Christ as a healer today. d Thousands of “moderate drinkers” have Are There Modern Miracles? Mabel Potter Daggett tells in been poisoned by deadly bootleg booze. The Journal what preachers and doctors are saying about the Decent citizens, who shudder at the thought of new movement that is sweeping epshise Bi murder, who have never committed robbery or Has healing prayer come to your city’ arson or bigamy, break the Constitutional law ae hares, i wi compunction. Read also in June the story of scandalous Newport, by Mrs. John of the United States ithout on i King Van Rensselaer; Minding One’s Own Business, by Harry Defiance of the Prohibition Law is a Emerson Fosdick; Bryant, Father of American Poetry, by i ; William Lyon Phelps; Imagination—and a Few Mothers, by national joke. * * * * F. Scott Fitzgerald; The Showman’s Shifting Sands, by Florenz Ziegfeld; Women in Athletics, by Dr. Dudley Allen Sargent. The enforcement of prohibition is the biggest job in the United States today. * * * * It requires fearless, honest, efficient agents, paid As for summer fashions, get the June Journal and enough to keep them from the temptations of booze © see the new appliquéd dress trimming that is all the bribery. ; \ rage in Paris; the dress made of a Hindu cover- It needs, most of all, one big man as head of ' let; the silk-crépe frock with a printed cotton the National Enforcement Bureau in Washington. coat; the newest type of knitted dress, and The man who now holds that job is honest, every version of the plaited dress. upright, hard working, a long-time believer 9 There will be ‘‘nobody home” in your in prohibition; he is doing his best, but— kitchen for several additional hours every He is unknown; he lacks public con- ‘ day if you follow the June Journal. The fidence; he is not now the man for Cosmopolitan Cookery of New York, the job. Delicious igcted With Fe de f / bles, The Versatile Meringue, Fa- Whois Roy Haynes— Complete Novel roi Sta Pane Howse and Why? keeping in the Little House are a : @ worked out for maximum re- Under that title Charles A. Sel- In This Issue sults with minimum effort. den discusses, in the big new The June Journal will June issue of THE LADIES’ make you an authority o HOME JOURNAL, what is Sed I for th “ . perhaps the biggest rea- & ly’ shige ‘air sien] son why prohibition tye ae ees does not prohibit— APPAN’S BURRO is full of the thrills of the great old-time ofa We ce Econtane West. In the colorful setting of Death Valley’s heat and snow- of The Perfect why thedrinkers smothered mountains, Mr. Grey has vividly pictured the adven- Ee ie ee os i. tures of the lone gold prospector. A short novel, the story is New York City printed complete in the June Journal. . . . Other stories of note nary by Roland Pertwee, Eleanor Hallowell Abbott, Herbert Quick, Margaretta Tuttle, Bernice Brown, Fannie Kilbourne. - Bo AD Yo Ree HOME JOURNAL! 15C the Co Largest June Issue ; From Any Le On). NOW ON SALE. $1 00 the Year You can subscribe through any newsdealer or authorized agent or send your order direct to THE LADIES’. HOME JOURNAL, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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