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STAR—THURSDAY, AUG. 3, 1916. HUGHES T0 GET COIN AND VOTE OF THE WOMEN ~MISS ANNE MARTIN PAGE 3. 3 DAYS STARTING TODAY “Under Cover” — That Famous New York Cort Theatre Hit IS HERE with all its thrills and novelty, in photoplay form THURSDAY TO SATURDAY AT THE -COLISEUM— WITH AZEL DAWN AND WEN MOORE OTHER FINE OFFERINGS 15¢c Children 5c Loge Seats 30c BEBE BBE SRBBESBESE ES FI | WAS WET MONTH , BESSIE BARRISCALE > eee eeeesess| STARRED AT LIBERTY js the record for being the wet- the last two years - month in the history of Tacoma — a by aan aie Noe t wy he precipitation, but {t was also the P po wgn ; test month since the big drought, SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 2—I ran seven months ago, according *45 rumored today that, owing to lack of evidence, the charges of records at the e smuggling Chinese coolies into! ce, compiled today. 555 permits to import intoxicating Port by steamship compan and be dis-| Wor were granted during the 25|!mmigration officers will orking days of July, or an average | missed Knows Hughes Plays Politics| But Will Hold Him | to Promise WOMEN RAISING $100,000 DENVER, ( Aug One hun dred fluence of the will be thousand dollars and the in National Woman's east into the of Ches. F party balance n favor Hughes and Wilson if the ane the federal against Prerident democrats fa suffrage amendn t ent seasion of r Miss Anne Mart the woman's perty, stated to United Pr € We muat part on it rmance and republicon y on it The lead of the woman's party are ne mbes in the w “ds We realize that polities and hope of victory may have had a great deal to do with the change 4 toward nationel at the pres | the democratic | the! Gov favoring not even rath have deme confiden fall ° 11 freedom women, wi « bl | dying loyalty and adherence women voters, Will the democrats | give this great opportunity to the republican party? PORT ASSURES Panama: A Photoplay of the Highest ner Sullivan—by Far One of the Best These Two Stars ave Appeared In of the] would be given protection, Ham!! ton Higday, secretary of the port }commission, replied Thursday “All wo ask is that a notice of a vessel's approach be given tn suf. fietent time to allow a segregation of the union and nonunion dock workers. A reasonable notice wit prevent trouble A party of nonun rushed the union men workmen at recently f ili & iAbby din charging salmon from the steame: al Evans while were Germany now has iron money in ctroulation lof more than 222 » da: Up to and including the last day of July, 22,187 permits had been issued since Jan uary 1. Receipts of the police court for the month of July exceeded the . POOR PAPA! a two-part usual, “father is mighty funny one. OLIVER G. WALLACE | . $35,000 Wurlitzer Unt Orchestra real music for reel pictures. EVENINGS (After 7) 15¢ comedy—as goat”"—but a 10c ese 10c Big Crowds ARE SEEING Theda : ‘ days, starting Thureday, combines! entitle New two significant phases of modern|adheres to the life. One is the r tell, and MATINEES 10c CHILDREN 5c York The theory that blood that heredity over story of the science will Bara IN “Under Two Flags” —and they go out saying it’s one of the best pictures they've ever Theda Bara is at her best Wirt oe The great sand storm : scene alone is a great big feature —only a short time remains to seen. positively. see it. Don’t be disappointed by miss- ing it. Second Avenue Bet. Spring and Seneca ALHAMBRA & COLONIAL, Dust LIBERTY “THE is the climax |wituation of & tion. Bessie I William De Miss Bar Poor Papa In “Davy i news weet Cavalier! in Mazel Under Cover”; Winifred Benste dy, Detective willy Heed in » Bare in themselves which reat rriscale ts mond 10c eee 10c §.....: “DAVY CROCKETT” Crockett oo] (At top) —Scene from “The Payment,” at the Liberty. (At bottom) —Scene from “Under Cove: at th PROGRAMS Farnum in tile “The ¥. fire scenes Owen tray Dawn and comedy; Greenwood in fan 6 “New York Under Two PAYMENT"—LIBERTY The n release, wt Liberty, starting Jin a striking which mad ambition | who surrender | Espectally forceful latest Triangle will be shown at the Thursday, depicts the lengths t¢ drives those to it and pathetic nbraces a tribula featured is excellent as mental ipport a» two-part Trian the t ALHAMBRA Paramount production, which is playing at the | Alhambra until Saturday night, } aoe ee * why Ses antl ie Coliseum, |Dustin Farnum appears as the ro |mantic backwoodeman The fa mous frontier story offers a splen did motion picture subject, due to its continuous thread of vigorous action, which includes the famous cabin-in-the-woods scene, with the hungry wolves trying to break thru the door “Fighting Infantile Paralysis” is added attraction on the pro-; gram H It is a picture that every mother | and father will be interested in, to} protect their own children | The animated news pictorial, pre senting the world's letes the program | | | “UNDER COVER"—COLISEUM | Hazel Dawn and Owen Moore are the two stars in the Thursday-to-| Saturday film pla the Colis um, “Under Cover Thia mystery | drama ran a whole season at the Cort theatre, in New York. It is |full of big, exciting punches, [brought about thru the smuggling | of a $200,000 necklace into Ameri ca from France, ‘Things are every There and new current events, com doing second are a com Travelogue musi Coliseun jedy, a as well at the DETECTIVE DRAMA—MISSION “No, 16 Martin St the drama playiag at the Mission for three |prevalence of the ithe | sere the other the evil, In this picture fan” 1s given a treat which has long been known to the readers of A. Conan Doyle as Craig Kennedy The eleventh chapter of “The Se cret of the Submarine” is also on program Henry's Little Kid with Billie Rhodes in part, concludes the bill Bee er “UNDER TWO FLAGS”"—STRAND Theda Bara continues in her tre mendous popularity with Strand audtwn In her new vehicle, Under she is seen {in a rather role, for the vampirish “nature” of her in tt n vanishe she offers he If as a sac for the man she loves of criminology, anc dope movie a comedy the leading N. Y, FIRE—CLEMMER The Clemmer theatre has secur ed thru Eastern connections and sent by special nm | two special features, Begining Thursday, the Clemmer will ghow New York's big $25,000,000 fire of last Sunday This picture shows shrapnel shells bursting in midair Lina Cavaltert, tn “The of, Her Past,’ is the feature bill. Coming Sunday, will be first pictures shown in The Battle of the Somme” (Th Allies’ Great Drive), showing Ger many in the trenches actually sur rendering. Shadow on the the “DUST"—COLONIAL Thrillin, among oth terest in Colonial netion, a factory fire r things, keep Mvely to Dust,” the feature at the for the balance of the week A youn author is in love with the daughter of a manufac turer, and only thru an exeiting ar ray of events, are the factory ditions finall lettered “NEW YORK"—REX Florence Reed is featured in th new attraction st the Rex theatre beginning Thursday, The play America ot| nment. A wealthy blackmailed ana ed to believe he {« father of a boy orn toa chorus girl. He raises him in The boy ts incor gibi It er developed he is child comes envirc New Yorke secret ome one el “WINDOW DREAMS"—CLASS A Grace De Carlton, in the “Wir dow of Dreams. is scoring a tre. mendous ait at the Class A the atre. The play is one that, calls easily for sympathy, and Miss De Carlton ts a charming little actress FIRE INSPECTION UP TO FIRE HEAD The fire marshal will be respon for inspection of all big build heatres and motion picture operating rooms in the future it passes an amendment Wednesday by the public safety committee. The inspection work has been divided among the police and building departments The proposed measure making building owners or managers Hable for costs of putting out fires, after they have warned of danger was sent ration coun sel for an opinion council adopted been to the e ‘FIRST KIDS’ MART | OPENS IN COLORADO | GREELEY, Colo, Aug. 3.—Gree ley school children who started gar dens under the direction of Prof A. Ogle, city agriculturist, are selling their produce today in the en's market ever open > parent home making use and rabbits chickens, squab Star Want Ade carry your offer lanswer soon, Q.—! have read your letters for a long time, and liked them; but never dreamed that | should ever write, | have been very ill. When ! came home again my mother-in- law was living here with us, and is still here. Oh, Miss Grey, | can’t nd it, having to please the whole bunch and her also. | want to live alone. Miss Grey, what | have gone thru, just having her around, would set any woman crazy long ago. | can’t drive her out, for the place belongs to them, but we are renting It, and use some of their thing: We need these things, and if we them to get out they will take them all, 80 what am | to do? | am think- ing of packing my suit case and run ning away, but | don't know if it would be best. My sister told me to come any time, and she would even send me the money to come on. None of my husband's people care for us, and my husband doesn’t know what to do about it, so | come to you and hope to read the WORRIED GIRL. \ A disagreeable mother-in-law is only one of the many distressing problems you must face and solve if you would make your life a suc ce You must learn to be a law unto yourself, live for your famliy, and relegate annoyances to the background as much as_ possible. This will gain you strength, poise and experience, which will enable you to meet a more difficult situa tion with less effort, Let the strug gle be one of the silent chapters of your life. Please do not think that I would advise you to bear the brunt of the self-sacrifice indefinitely, Make it clearly understood to your husband that you are doing it for him, and that will expect him to make effort to find a way out of surroundings as every the unpleasan soon as possible Q.—I have been dreaming of a for a whole week. Have been told that this person is thinking and talking about me all the time, and |that is what cau me to dream like that. Can one person's thoughts |of you do that? | will anxiously look for your reply. GEORGIE.” A.-It is generally conceded that the human mind has power to in: fluence other minds, but the 1. which govern its phenomena are } tle understood. According to the | advocates of this theory, man is en- |dowed with a dual mental organi | zati the objective and the sub- jective mind. The objective mind usually dominates, and takes cog- jnizance of the world thru the fi physical senses. The subjectiv mind {s operative thru tntuition, but only dominates and becom marked when the objective senses jare held in abeyance, as is the case in sleep, or in the so-called hypnot- ic state. | The aspect of telepathy, which |comes within the scope of the phys- | teal sciences, is the question wheth- er there are or are not emanations |from the brain capable of travers |ing space and affecting another or ganism similar to its own, Whil | there analogies among the physical forces, there is, as yet, no \definite answer to this question. Q.—Isn't Mental Science prac |tleally the same thing as Christian |Science? ARGUMENTATIVE, A.—Mental Science differs ma- te: ly from Christian Sefence in- somuch as the latter is based on the ief in Christ. A Mental Sei Jentist bases his belief on the phys lical powers of the mind, without reference to anything divine. Men- tal believes fn the domf- nant power of mind over matter, and in the cure of all diseases by mental effort Science purely it will pay you to look over the many bargains offered in Star is! inas inte over 60,000 homes dally.'certain person almost every night! Want Ads.