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ily for Ontario, Segieca Weather Forecast * GENEVA, N. Y., Price Three Cents WITH MINERS Asked Than nt. More ' * ^ 1' • I? 1 * \ \* ft by Authfriae|||ICeqEHng Peace ^SyVfS'to reconvene me Lt coal commission, to con te rollers who went ot taking a. \tl.e men te one ml even themselves. 1 '' B^Jdent in refusingr to reopen ^aa, negotiations ' declared that ' M not l\<-k the world In fai^ r justify cur m-tion to our own ife tad our consciences, it w* tone iota t o * hp TO)lj ers in tW* cite coal fields who are vlfilatliiB traet s<» recently entered >itstc( themselves, the t nment of .Wage award we ask will add •ottt-68 i -CBnts-artoTt—to—tHe—cSat 6T coal, 1 -\ Kennedy explained. \The -Siihe.- operators last April, anticipat- ing, the wage award* increased., prices t6 ,fj a ton. Surely the miners are notPunfair-jwhen they ask 32 per cent Wlien the operators\ already have soaJsea the pablic for nearly double the amount of the wage increase. If .that -isn't pro/flteerlng what Is?\\ The tie-iip to<|ay was 85 per cent 'untold sanlfices\ in the wS among: other things; that. inn,agreement siiall not b e 4onr a \mi-re scrap of paper;'! [68 President's refusal was* <an- (taTta a letter to Phillip Mu'tray, M Collins, Timin.-is Kennedy,, i*hd. KiJi Golden,' representing the miners aton. Pa. • --- Formulate New Demands ijs-Ba'fre, PH . * Sept i^ rule by authorities is keeping h hit l ti i in the anthracite coal strikers have pg strike... pmge demands and their leader's,. regular and insurgent; ftope. i trill n'l' nt an^d review toe [Ipr cent wagr nward. were the uotstanding fle- Jijtaents today in the t strike; wh'r!i hi i Interrupted th e I tolly output of 250,000 tons. A |jnore collbrus in District 1 *m- ip'ttd' to resume work today ' lie miners have decided oil hew Kennedy, . praSU f -of Bistrirt-T minors, -annpilnxieit They now want 15 fcet *\\ wages than the 17 per I for tho ci'titraot miners, f the total urn. use of 32 per r ion labor outside the mines\ now i aii addiiif.n.ii flat increase .of a flay, nMi.mc; a minimum- of |T8 a'day inM.'.ul of the $4.20 of- ijbyou back them up in this?\ lie Masked. m, like other orfirials, and the mln ||| themselves, beheve thQ award, to' Dftrnjust,\ Kenm.ly answered.\ miners .w enjoying- taklnpr tht.i iirst real yacafibix; 11916. They have been WOrkbtfe •\l.nlght—mir.y of them on twO; id they arc entitled, to a 4 T am will come ' front )n uitl.m a couple of of n*s,c stnd the \miners fWlllyou advisr the men t<> gbfcack tentisp'\ •\*•»-•••'* wise? Kennedy repliea. h hat- ndy repliea. foxrithat ' fl Imply I -inlnr-d them out, WhiCfi wnt Ti i f ^u ^jj m ^ y^j own a.-.i.rd. Let WaSnilif* S.fy.an adjuhtmrnt will be\ •made\ £<Ifoj>l certain the miners will not ~5 stubborn.\ * >v .'.Qjigsatgrs declare that if the min^ era r^ftiain out another week ' they will -h&ve lost in wages a sum equal *& fhe nSyOOO.OOP wage award a-etrO- jy^ plnce April, wage HARDING ^ y Judgment— Prejudiced in Favor of the Senator and ore Than Satisfied With Their Original W to Ail a Pleasant Surprise. J DAVID LAWRENCE Copyright 1920 by Geneva* Daily Time* St. EftulHuinn.,. Sept. Hardlngimacle a hit in Minnesota.-Dem- in 9—SeMtoi\ of guests waited patiently to shake . _ 1 \- > -- t ---'-a\o% the chief executive. does it all mean? The' writer -»,. a Republican friend whose begrudge that i jfudgment isn't as partisan as his pol- effeistive in Districts 1 cent in District 1. ana 9 and 70 |ptJn, manager of the Sus- jiftieh.anna Coal Company, employing ^ O fr-m«B% declared t<»dayi • _ \Whatever ia t o be \done by Wash- ington, let: It i>e done quifiltlly... .\Eur... tlier 4 . dallying might prove worse trouble. •? The men are restless from five; months' negotiation.\ Mr r . Quinn permitted inspecHph of his company's records showing con- traot, miners averaged * from $240 to 1280-mQntliJy, some even making. 1326 a month. -The average of 2ga at one mine, was $7.62 a. day and oth ers %%%%, $6.75 ana $6.H a lay. Only 35 tier .cent of the miners are .con- tract workers earning their high pay,, M tjl id '\ :' Mr. said. ^m, he a^ded, \Ihe ,^ ernment'S award\ of. i7| per cent has not yet been put on, That wittl make coiitract miners' pay $8;to f 12 a. day.\ now on Iten ^ j Sept, ift—St$kh^meH va'cation\ in antHrkcite coal; regions have-not violated any existing jgar- 4Im£ sffttutgr-nor has 'taee\S \suBniitte\d\~f6\\' r sTjow~ ' conspired to restrict anthracite output, iUtorney General. Palmer * \--—=--•\• i-nrlnVr ' * aay. ..? \The attorney general' field, that the wttUcout ,was in ji<? sense analogous to the \bituftifnous opai ktrifee, wherein the gi inkd * th injpnctlve invoked * the i- of the~eourtg. Cities Will __„„_„_ statement, and Repubjlcans will pri-f Itical aimiiatlon\\might~Tnd*icate7 ^He vately admit that the Spnator ' ' -—• - - - j - • \ \\Tin T~i*i i**m~7^* WTf t . - * *-** so much better than they \expected.. He was to them a pleasant surpiiser— a dignifled, flgure\ wltli plenty of hu- man qualities! to catch the imagination of a crowd ready from the outset to like htm. Comparison of the reception given Governor Cox two days ago and that given genator Harding, is not jdifncult for they are almost exactly the same. Both candidates talked at the same state fair. The Democratic nominee faced a hostile crowd; the Republican nominee stood, b.efore gs reverent al- most affectionate audience* They liked Har-diag'a plettwes befMer t&ey saw the man. They we're ready t>e- lleysrs. In. ..bis. p'hJlQHQpby.jQf .antt^Wilr- slonlsin, they Were born and b.red Re- pubjftians and felt Batisfled that War-, xen Harding came from good Eepubli- can Btoclc and would do.- Governor Gox, on the other hand, won friends and made some\ votes. He the to greet a hew presidential figure. In- deed, It suggested in its psychology, the long-llve-the-lrtng enthusjasin which comes out of the body politics •when there is a change in rulers vs.' other lands. \ Eight years is a long ttrhe for a man to. be president of the United States and lilinnesptas' greeting to Harding was that ofi a ^epu|»ll'i3ah -stronghold eager to \see 'tjie citldels of government They came prejudiced in favor of of the Ir [ sh j lunger strikers will bo Harding and' cattic away more than * satisned with thdir_ original Jdt left a good ltopressioh but as one Re- publican expressed even George Wfc ld Mi t miners ln gton couldn't carry WHnnesota _on and oth- the Democratic ticket this \fer- The Democratic .nominee won more ap- plause when he drove a horse, around the race track than by his speech at the state fair, but he did get a, rqtising reception wlien he Spoke at the Audi- rcpi wjen torium at night. Senator Jlarding's f tbT f away from fh,e Tftl ~*'-- frontsgiio i^ first experience jl 4 on rjk te, a. big §ucciei^i ujne^nationat ibllcan- cprnmi,ti4e^S,electea. a. ,good \for- tfie Texjrerjnteii^' The Twin are niorel than eagei?, for nor- ,... and most people here wHo Cheered Hftfding imagine he will bring soihe sort of change in economic con- p£ ent.t. dayy worries.'. Bth G da worries Both. Governor Cox and' Senator itlft Il Both. Governor Cox -Harding-were asked-not to talft p ttcs at the state fair. The Demo- cratic nominee spoke of his candidacy therefore only by implication. The KepubllcaTrnominee was In the hands f fiid on the state fair board and 29th Day of MacSwiney's Self-imposed Starvation The British Government Is \Staining Patron Its Irish Policy - v » London. Sept. 10<— Terence Mac- . Swiney, the. hunger striking 1 lord mayor of Cork still lives. He spent a restless night In the Brixton jail Infirmary and suffered considerable pains in his arms,\ This was the 29th day of MapSwiney's' self-imposed starvation. • Mrs. MacSwt|i!B3f and the blood rel- ative of the'lfiwifelnayoP continue theU 1 vigil. They-S'&^made no Start-io ^t vigil. They-S&^made no Startio persuade th«nl^ieatm%yor ; to relinquish his apolitical principles and taX noufislunentr ^he * suggestion was p noufislunentr p X suggestion was i made to Mary MacSwlney, a sister, but sho spurned it, doctors declared that lt was im- possible to say how long MaoSwlney 'Woula' linger between life and death if he continues his hunger strilte. At timeB he appears to be dying 1 , but rallies - _, with unexpected displays of vitality The, British government Is? now commanded, again by Republican sol- \standing pat\ on its Irish policy and /HnW _ • .\ I *1 -*.«„..« itiVin Ut.nHl,«n1 iUnl- nviir diery. there appears lfttle Hltelihool that any London, Sept. 10,—More than 1,400 persons were killed, by earthquake shocks rf Northern Italy on Tuesday and Thursday and thousands were la jured, according 4o~a Rome '\' ^nu<\ to the MornitB Post, Heavy adtlitiohat- casualties snd h #ge^j tremors Th tlie ; b about Regglo T said', '-and no-evidence is available to show that the men tn the anthracite fields are continuing on vacation tnrough any\unlawful means,\ ->• Officials', declared, there appears to 164 lees, disaffection,, among, the miners over 'th# recent wage awttf ds, and re- imports, showed, larger number of Hren- i t k J_ ' —„ = to \worfe , , 'Attorney General. Palmor . a hand today in the; Department Jusli in the p against coat prof- >'JI11 yhiif o r\Yi the T relished pledses and They Understood his discourse on ag- riculture, liked the tone of his voice, and the cut of his jib and gave him the kind of a greeting that was.un- mistakable poth in warmth and f sin- cerity. Over in —. __ — captured the town even more decisive- ly. .Streets that turned.out handfnls, To see Woodrow Wilson a year agOi were packed from store wtadlow to •' Some of the natives say '{Theo- 'the __Sena.tor,^Lthe western termiAua, Pilot Ray Iteers, and calling for full reports on <- f Ro0 sevelt alone gpt such ja re- nlnisflnnii hrnnns? liflril ana SOIt Coa l \._.. _ . n»t__««r,nlie.\ , otmong ftard anp soft coal dealers, directed that the most vigor- ^u»-prosed\iti&na b^ instituted to check tho-bpOsting 'of prices and if possible drive prices down to reasonable levels ception in *.*.^..-w«j . ' Certainly thp writer can testify tnat Minneapolis while gonarous in Its ap- plause at Wilson meetings, npver stop- ped work In mid-day to the extent •\• ••-- • '- did this ,g& awartL «,na. frejlght rate advances. Want ^pp Will Not fie^yWfliaii Says Leader for Senator _ Similarly. In'St Paul In the evening, the Republican nominee stood In the c) . flt< , pftoitol and shook hands w\ thousands of people. For two bsurs, the eager Republicans^ waited- fo? a chance to grpet Mr. Harding. It re- minded one «f White .House recep- tions of ancient days when long linos Y arl!, Su-t. 10—The. \?pman's, al party to be organfeed by the intion of wumen voters P* assemble in Washington ^f oe BUided by men's brains, sex quality remains an'empty term. > ^ r t t h best the National Woman'si Parts, E ™\ ltant 8uffr - l S 11 orga,nizttttoa will: •according to. Mrs. i anti-man ' H. p. ment. imont, leader of th e inteni, v today in which she the new pup-, 1 the Ami i J scltlah and i o.\ B\ii. m' al « meeting ti Ut her t,..-.. • t , th<> . . fOr tne ~i Mrs. Belmont •>«* woman %» .mpered \the too to .! lon tw u ''\ Ma. • be held this attet- \ «t Port Washlng.-- • utive commiffeejvM: i:i's Tarty will set : •\•' national conven- ••iU-B. According to •• convention ' \ ia *\\ December ' . . - „ for the womeni .i<L,: ^'1'ing in th'6 \aid. \WS the congressiojJol < hence. Ou-tMPlans anempty term • ^.FWe expert- the best type of men to co-ope rate with us lii our program td Sia politics. «f bosa- control and corruptioii! , \•We\ fe6l a separate woman s party necessary* t o save the new Vomai vStfe* tr.6in. Wsing herself; In the old A o as 6be affiliates vStfe* tr.6in. Wsing herse ; Parties. As soon as 6be affiliates with, one pi* the other of tljein, she is lost and\ beepjhes a silent endorser of the party .code that party expedi- ency and Uarty politics are superior tcTtng uair gf tiutn-am HgWft 'It may take many years to edu- cate the American, woman,\ Mrs. Bel- continued. \She teas much to advanced .women of and Em'iliarbeginning at 2:30 Thui's- day morning,- said a' news agency patch tiioiajgk&mQ, The_nesvs-ag cprfespandenf 'eHifffiatecT 'ffle\ re'dti'wi'off •dead in Tuesday's quake\at 327. How- eyfer, < _njg.ny, bodies .were still buffed under- the . ruins and the complete death toll could,' not be accurately judged. . More ttian 500 Injured were under treatment in- hospitals a t Spesia, and 300 were being treated at Lucia, . ——r »•-• w ——V Plane \Hops Off\ Fifom Frisco f6t East San i?rancisco, Sept. 10—Inaugurat- ing^ transcontinental, air mail service f ree( j Ma'oSwtnoy- tn converse y w briefly, during tho morning although hi i U J&& bU fii y g .his - voice .urns, so, .w.§aU J&S& .bU Sfiifp ers could be barely heard. His rnlnu seemed' to ramble slightly at tltn6j, but for the most part he was lucid. He dictated replies to several mes- sages of sympathy received from the United States. These replica vero taken by the Rev. Father Dominie, taken y .personals jspirltual lord mayor. adviser to Iho IRISH TOWN PARTLY DESTROYED BY FIRE Dublin, Sept. 10.—A reign of terror prevailed, at Tullow during the night when the town was shot op and part- ly destroyed by fire, according; to ro- pbfts received here. Policemen were said- t<t havo exploded bombs In the streets and opened; fire with rtrtes. Tim inhabitants fled from the town in. alarm. A fire brigade was called from a neighboring town to extinguish the •felaze, - - -' — ts, ilt y ...hopped off at «:15 o'clock ttate morning In \Lucky 71,? the first plane of tho ap.rvlpp. to ho eastwardT 'He cjd'rled 1^00 letters. \LBtofcy 71\ is a Veteran plane of the New york'Chldago mail circuit having 78,008 tntles of alf travel to its credit without an accident. The first Westbound plane is due her\e at two o'clock this afternoon. Federal, city .and county officials will be on hand to welcome it. Monthly Statement Show$ Decrease. New -York, 'Sept. 10—-In its monthly statement of v unHiled orders Issued to- day the United States Steel Cos reports unfilled orders as of August 31, of 10,805,03!? toria compared With 11,118,- 46$ toiid on July 31Bt, & decrease 6t 30^,430 tons. \~ Desire To Be Movie S Prompted Girl's Action ' Boston, Sept. 10.—A desire to become a movie star is believed to have prompted Miss Lillian Elizabeth Jen- se% aged 16, an orphan, of Somer- virie, w plant a \blind' 1 felghiiig aul- cide. A bundle of clothing 5 foufid on' the Charlestown bridge by Frank Davis and identified, as belonging to tho (jlrl coupled with her disappearance led tno police to believff She 'had committad anfoitlo. • - ^ =-.- People with whom she lived scout the theory \of suicide because of the Heiress Mystifies Parents. By Strange Disappearance Laura S. Fletcher of Indianapolis Is Seen To Don Overalls, Clip Her Hair, Shoulder Pair of Oars and Start Down Beach at Gloucester, Mass.—Police Fear She Has Put Out to Sea in Open Boat • , ••\S* Gloucester, Mass., Sept. 10.—Police gono away, As hours passed and sno this afternoon said they feared Miss Laura S. Fletcher, 17 y?ar old heiress to the. millions of Stoughton A. Pletoh- er, banker, manufacturer, and horse breeder of Indianapolis, Ind., had put out to sea in an open boat. Discovery was made, they said of a white paint- ed dory missing from the wharf near where tho girl clipped her halri donned ll g pp i overalls and started away with a pair of pats. I)espHe a heavy £oll of rain today, tho seat was - calm. Searchers were combing the' waters of£ Cape Ann for some\ trace of the craft; ..:\.'Parents at a Gloucester, Mass;, 'Sjept. 10.- tlon-wide police search was -A na- started ay for Miss Laura S, Fletcher, 17 yew old Indianapolis heiress, who dls- frs:m parents 1 pg : p home, here, after clipping oft her hair and donning a pair of overalls. Her parents are at a loss to explain why she went away. • The girl eluded a maid in whose care she had been placed and fled from Grapevinp Cove, where her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Stoughton L. Flet- cher occupy a cottage. Later a fisherman saw the missing girl near a copper paint Caetory at Kocky Necu more than a mile from hei* home. Astounded, he watched hur put on tv pair of overalls after discarding some feminine apparel and cut off her Imlr vvltli ar pair of scissergr—Thgowlns the scissors away, tho fisherman and walked along Monson Street in -the direction oC Rjji'ky Neck. She was later seen in R«dJy Neck where all trace of her was lost. The clothing, hair and scissors were lo lliu miming glil ? a par- twned- _ _ ents; They identified all as belonging. to their dftushtoc Miss Fletcher's Boclcty girl friends along the north shore were shocked when they heard that she had de- stroyed her beautiful tresses and haa failed to return speculation developed into acute alarm. The Gloucester po- lice feared the girl might have- rowed Out to sea during a fit of temporary derangetnent due to nervous break* down. Search was rnacia along tho coast and ships at sea were notified by wireless to bo on the lookout for' her. Ponds in this section were drag- ged. • ' - The strange caprice of the girl has baffled the police and her parents, Sho Bad.. tJeennjuWe licit or IieulOT. and . spirits, according to her intimates and her sudden Ipjpulse caused a 'sensa- tion in exclusive • circles along tBo north shore. Mrs, Fletcher Directs Search Mrs. Stoughton A. Fletcher, wife of the millionaire banker and manufac- turer of this city, today hurried to Boston- -te- a-fa-eet tho Boareh—fwH cuuple's 17 year old daughter, Laura, who <31so;p'peaiBd ! from a sunanier colo- ny near Gloucester, after clipplngr her hair, and donning overulls. Although branding the disappearance us a. \girlish prank\ and \oacnpiido that would develop ljito nothing more than a two days' wonder, Mr. Fletchor, who was in Indianapolis today was plainly alarmed, tho father expressed tlra hope that tho missing grift may hayo planned a lark In company with other students of a n artist colony at Grape- vine Cove, at the same time however, ho admitted the girl's mother waa deeply-ngltnt mil. Miss Fletcher, her father explained, sway of the beautiful Fletchor estate near Indianapolis. The girl and her mother have been\ sp_endlnjr_ the summer ftt the_ Gulotto cottago at Grapevine Cove, and whoa lls recently, tjie girl was left in the . £QVCCI1?§ S J_ It hud been to romaln until late in the Tall when Miss Fletcher was to de- part for New York to enter an Art' School. OLIVE THOMAS, Late Czar of Russia and His Alleged Assassin : jthe & the first place tbe' American woinan is flh^y m pam- renoh partner of woman doesn his business and and intertainni6»t; The average - - tfaifed States hasn't even njrfed -cteatan* on earth, I th bsines is coat ,bp±her r Tbanfe account m y that time may be endorse some lit doesn't candid .-Hi w thew \oininatf madp clear without Fire Causes sex antogdnism 8tiL^4 us r Wit}i »4 ptnon would it of obtntnitttnK tsttloiae »liow« a darlnf 6 automobile? natnes tollowefc an «tha in one. « th b stunt iacwr . his trtCk will glrl'a aKibitioii tp clfrnb to movie rasue. Miay Settle Italian \~\~ Iron and Steel Strike London, Sept, 10.—A settlement of the iron and steel strike in Italy, In wlilch workers seized \hundreds of- Swallowed Solution of Alco- Hol and Bichloride of'Mer- xury Several.Days Ago Paris, Sept. lOt—JTl«s Olh'o Thomns, famous Amei'ica^n motion picture ac- tress, died Jn tho American hospital, at Netillly at 10 o'clook this morning of mercurial polBcmins. Her husband, JPlclOEord, brother of Mary Plek- was at her bedside. Dr. Joseph Choato, an American physician, who attended Miss Thomrts, made a hard h-nt unsuccessful fight for her Hfc Sho died peacefully, ap- parently suffering neither bodily nor mental anguish.' ~Ensa\~TnoTnjiir awfillowcd—a—sohtfteit- of alcohol and bichloHtlP of mercury BCVeral days, nyrn Tlfp frifmlg t!^- Glared that the. deadly potfSn bml boon taken by mistake aniyndiirnntrtly <!-•- rtie<3 rtitnors th'at Miss Thomns M*>1 quaw'olfijl wiJhs. hei* husband. Miss ' Thomas took tho poison, thinking It a plants ani-C»taWl lt dVdl jBOvlcts, is l p , s mlnent, \adcoVdlng to a Central News \ 1 ^ <V Tfmva tnrtmy. j the Home Trlbuna, The Italian eotir fedei - atlon of Labor was summoned to meet at* Miian-' today to conieider plans pi extending tjie soviet move- ment to other branches oJ industry in event-the metal workers and! :ulll owners were unable to reach an agree- ment. . Uncle of F. D« Roosevelt Killed Lute Yesterday i i\ n g Ar rarigements. will be ma# today for tho funeral of Warren- Delano, uncle Of Franklin D. Roosevelt, be%ocratilc fiomlnee for vlcerjiresident, who . was killed at Barrytown late yesterday when a horse he was driving dashed in front of an express train, 3Ir. De- lano, whb.was'CB yeirs old, was one of the most prominent residents of t Nurse Brings Suit Jor $20,000. New York, Sept, lO^Mise* Martha Lewis, a nurse^ has ; brought suit fur $2O;0OO d&ftiageri farakicii; ift tho stom-- h\ received: \^whiie\-earing for five- yipld (luBtaye Batnett. Sh«r-chartsi Gustave with having; \evil and vicious iti^ ; The actress was rushed to the Am- erican Rospitf^ at Neuiliy -where if was found phf> had ta'koti enough poison \to fciu saveral pwple, U. S, t Denies-Econdmic — Aid Offered Wrangel Washington, Sept. 10—The United 'States- has not offered economic aid to General Wrangle, State Dopartmpnt' officials stated today in denying -press dispatches from London purporting to show tljat Bear Admiral Newton Mc- Guijy, represontatlvo of tho United States in southern Russia had pro* feaspd 6cottomic ntd to tho Wrangle •BoVcrnineht. Tho reports aro without basis, •officials laid, and, Ut«y were ttt-= clincd to doubt whether Admiral Mc- had made any offers to Wrangle G.O.F. SEEKS Absolute Maximum Aimed at by Republicans 1 ~j\ J * Total Required for National, State, Senatorial and Congressional Campaigns Sept. 10—The Republican campaign fund for 1920 for national, state, senatorial and congressional campaigns will tetal exactly $4,897,000 \!f all tllo money IS raised whlclT 1ST sought\ charged and pot the \$16 by Cuvemnr Jaroori at. -fnT p This suin; tho flat testimony given by Kred W. (Tjibam. treasurer of tho Re- publli'aii National tuminltlee as fie loft tho-wltnesa stand today for tho sei'i>nil time In the Hi-nate auti-com- mittce investiBalins the \slush fund\ churKcs by tho (Jhio governor. Tho campaign fund uf $t.b7!>,000 liphum told the Senate investtsatyrSj 5s tho \absolute maximum\ mr.wd at by the National Hyuubllcan t>rsani- ^aUffltk offloials. tn^derdte teWiperatures. aho*ery dt(rtiig . the » • hours. Jalght ft but,fre(iu<5ri(; • erft- c'tfea ;durlfif ttie \Wsat&ei* * \CsyftdtitlOnSf Irttv^ \hech 4k j, iho : »a»t -M & Mt, tihovf' ••• „ tne nlgltr, • f \continocd threat-* eliltig today.' *At times th«\»tin • fcroke' througK tile 'clouto but • i it «l»ne for only a, fe*-«f»om«nta i rat » time,, The \ from the joiiiti to I \W Murray Crane, former United State* Senator*..lsjBiBriausly i'l Prudential Trust Company of Boston Closed Tqdsy -v • ~- Boston, Sept. 10—The Prudential Trust Company, No. . 83 Summer street, of which John H. H. Me- Namee, former mayor of Cambridge!, Is president, waS ctoaetl today.. A no- tice posted on the door stated that the boailc had been taken over by BanJf Commissioner Joseph C. Mien. No Information was forthcoming aa to the reasons for the action. The Trust Company wus one of the depositories for state funds of which. ' there WOTP $40,000 on deposit, the amount having been reduced to this figure by a $0,000 withdrawal of Au- gust 2nd. City Treanurer, Thomas W. Murray, stated thatr Unai.'ii'B ac- count with the Prudential wns dosed a $16,(MM) deposit >van »itli.:fai. u. PASSENGERTREMOVED FROM STRANDED SHIP horn? in Dalton, W&& The eS-SeiS- ator ha» feecnr crKfcally. il}> for sfiv* ' day» and *ra% 'shewn ite signs,of fl, Sept. 10—Thn pas have b«en removed frnm HIP Amerl-* Can steamHhip Hibuncy, which went' aground fn th< harbor of 5fi«'>-. Spain, •said .a. dlspatcii .. from__ that _rfty t o Lfoyd's today. Th,- Slhnncy wflts up- on mrtts, ttml It is tt-ureH She wUl tia a total less. The- vessel il'^ilnrpd 7,653 ton». It was built in Philadel- phia for tho United Slates Blii'ipin^ Board in 1918. ..——i. . ;i^.'«. ••••$—- - •:.'•-•• .'•'\•-\'•••' - U.S. CniiserPittsburgh 'in No Immediate Danger WasiiSJngton, Sej)t/ : - States crulset^^ittg'bjl^ the jo ii fit tio inlraT KGWk. mf^m