M THE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-JOURNAL . . . . . NOllKOI/K. NEBRASKA. I'MUDAY. ' OCJTOHEK 15) ) 1006. ELGIN FARMER'S SON HAS SUD DENLY DROPPED FROM VIEW , STARTED HOME TUESDAY NIGHT .HODE BLACK HORSE BUT NEVER ARRIVED AT THE FARM. THE HORSE HAS NOT COME BACK With Every Reason to Believe -That .the Youth Would Have Returned 'Homo Unless Molested , It Is Feared 'Something Serious Happened. I * . Elgin , Neb. , Oct. 18. Special to The "News : Elgin and the entire country side for miles around are In a state of Intense excitement today because of the mysterious disappearance from home of August McCllntock , a young man twenty years of age , whoso pa rents live on a farm four miles north west of this place. Started For Home. "Young .McCllntock loft homo at 7 'o'clock Tuesday night , riding a horse , aind rode a mile and a half to the "homo of a neighbor. Ho spent the evening nt the neighbor's home and left at 9 o'clock , to return to his own 'farm. He has not been seen since. The horse , which was raised on the farm , has not como back homo as it would naturally do If It were rider less. There is every reason to be- If llovo that the boy would have como straight home If nothing had happened to him. The natural supposition Is that the young man must have met with foul play. Horse Seen , Strange Rider. The foul play theory Is strength ened by the fact that a farmer from this vicinity , who was west of Clearwater - water yesterday morning and who knew nothing of the disappearance of the boy , met a man riding a horse which he nt once thought ho recog nized as the horse In question belong ing to the McCllntocks. Ho returned to Elgin and asked the McCllntock's if their black horse was gone. He said that he was positive this was the animal. A strange man was riding the horse a heavy set man , with a saddle on the horse , though the boy .had no saddle. Searched All Day Yesterday. Farmers and citizens of this vicin ity , when they learned yesterday of the non-arrival home of the McClin- tock boy , began a thorough search And kept It up all day long yesterday and last night. Every nook and cor- Tier of the country has been scoured , tout without avail. Telephone wires have been used in - < avery direction , but no , trace of the missing youth lias , been found.j. The boy , , , when , ho .left home ' , was dressed In a suit , p oyeralls. 'H.O had no money , w'jlh himHo was riding & black horse. ,7 , No Trouble at Home. There Is no reason to believe that the young man would leave home vol untarily , and there IB every reasons to believe he would have returned straight home if he had not been mo lested. He had had no trouble of any Kind at home , and his relations were ' exceedingly pleasant and amicable with all of the family and farmhands The man who wns seen riding the black horse west ot Clearwater was dressed In black. He was riding In a heavy saddle and with a heavy brl die. die.The The horse had never been away from the farm for any length of tlmo and it is therefore believed that , If the boy had been thrown and left the an Imal riderless , It would have returned to the farm. Guests Have Narrow Escapes Columbia , S C , ' Oct. 18 The.tow'n of Seneca was vlsltod by n fire am ! property worth $70000 was destroyed The property was Insured for $25,000 The flro oilglnated In the Oconee Inn a new brick hotel , which was totally destroyed The Palmetto hotel to gether with several stores , wer burned. Both hotels were filled wit ) guests and there were several narrow escapes. > Carnegie Hero Fund Awards. Plttsburg Oct. 18 Sixteen mor awards were made by the Carnegl hero tund commission to Individual who have saved lives and whose deed of heroism have been brought to th atfent'op ' of the commission. The to tal awards up to date number 47. and It Is announced ( hat the delivery of the medals , which have been tn course of preparation , would begin at once. Dance Hall Wrecked by Dynamite. San Francisco. Oct. 18 The rear portion of a saloon and dance hall , In Pacific avenue , was wrecked by dyna mite , the six Inmates narrowly escap ing death. One of the women In the place asserted to the police that Will , lam Bowman , bartender In an adjoin. Injr cnloon , with whom she had quar- reM had threatened to blow up the building and he was arrested. PRETTY WEDDING AT PIERCE. Miss Hubble Marries Man From State of Idaho. Pierce , Neb , , Oct. 18. A pretty wed ding took place nt the C. A. llublilo realdonco , southeast of town , when their daughter Margaret was married to Dexter Williams of Bonnor's Kerry , Idaho , Uov. E. J. T. Connely , pastor of the M. E. church , ofllclntlng. The couple loft this morning for the Idaho city , where they will make their fu ture home. Mrs. Williams Is a graduate of our public .schools , being a memHor of the olaBs of 1OG. ! ) She possesses n very cheerful disposition nud has many filunds who will wish her much hap piness In her new life. " FORMER UNITED STATES SENAT OR FROM ARKANSAS. I Wj ' K ® fflfo 'N OFFICE STAIRS y//Yo ' J. D. Walker , ° PStatesman of Arkansas , Met t a Fatal Acci dent at Fayettvllle This Morning. Seventy-six Years Old. Fayettvlllo , Ark. , Act. 18. Ex-Unit ed States Senator J. D. Walker , a prominent lawyer In this state , fell down his office stairs this morning and was killed. Ho wns seventy-six years of ago. TAFT PARTYJS HOME Secretary Is Pleased With Condltlono In Cuba as He Left Them. Washington , Oct. 18. Secretary and Mrs. Tnft , Assistant Secretary of State Bacon and Mrs. Bacon , General Funston and others composing Secre tary Taft's party , arrived In Washing ton from Cuba. Secretary Tnft Bald there was but little to say regarding the situation In Cuba that already had not boon told He sold he was pleased with the con dltlons ns ho left them and felt con fident that Governor Magoon would bring about satisfactory results al though , he remarked. It would lie with some difficulty tTial things could bo stralRhtenod out after a revolution such as occurred. It will take time ho added , but just how long he could not sny , to readjust matters In Cuba. Arriving in Washington , the mem bers of the party drove to their re spective homes. MISSIONARY CONVENTION CLOSES Meeting of Woman's Home Society Ends at Lincoln. Lincoln , Oct. 18. The twenty-fifth annual convention of the Methodis Episcopal Woman's Home Missionary society concluded. Boston was select ed as the meeting place for next year. Mrs. C. W. Gallagher of Washing ton , associate secretary of the bureau for young people's work , read the re port of that bureau. The past yea has been one of splendid profreBB , both in the matter of riumerlca growth and from a financial stand point , Mrs. Gallagher took a firm and aggressive stand against child labo and was heartily cheered by the dele gates. Miss Carrie Barge , field secretary for young people's work , also mads her report. Mrs. Anna Kent , secro tary of the bureau for New Mexlo and Arizona , reported upon the work among the Spanish girls In the south' west. For this work the society mala tains Harwood homo at Albuquerque N. M. , and a homd at Tucson , Ariz , The report of the home mission read , ing circle was read by the secretary Miss Katherlno Bassett. ' The silk banner was awarded to th Detroit conference for the greates Increase in reading clrclu member during the year. M'INTYRE ' PLEADS OWN CASE Prisoner at Lincoln , Said to Be Des pcrate Man , Before Supreme Court Lincoln , Oct. 18. Philip Mclntyr convicted of separating Captain Flsl i. er of Chadron from some $2,00 ( pleaded his own case before the prcmo court in the presence of a larg crowd , of which a number were won * en. Mclntyre was brought back from Virginia , where ho was arrested. H 8 brought his case to the supreme cou on a writ of error , but asked the cour to change that and hear the case a an original appeal for habeas corpu The court took the matter under a vlscment and Mclntyro was take back to the penitentiary. A letter was received by Warden Boomer from W.B. Laughlln , saying Mclntyre wns a "desperate man and would probably attempt to eicapo while arguing his case. He Is badly wanted , the letter Bald , at Fort Scott , Kan. Warden Beemer and a. deputy ; euardcd him. of ( ln > Hlivli lint. Cycling dealt the top hat the flrst serious blow ; then golf "got one In , " and now , BAVH the Oxford Isls , tbo motor has It well In chancery. CABLE COMMUNICATION WAS CUT OFF LAST NIGHT. HAS NOT BEEN RESTORED TODAY As n Result of n Storm In the Cuban' Vicinity , the Cable Wires Were Put Out of Duslnens and Hnve Not Yet Clicked Today. Now York , Oct. 18. Cable commu nication with Havana , Cuba , which WUH Intoiruptotllust night , has not been leslorod tip till 1 p. in. o'clock ( his uftoinoon. The break wn undoubtedly caused by a sovcro storm which Hwopt o\or Cuba and which was dcHcilhed by the Havana operator Just before the com munication was lost , ns having reached oyclonle londenoloH. The Amoilciui soldleiH woio suffer ing discomfort , according to the op erator at that time. FIVE KILLED , ONEHUNDRED HUR1 Result of Gasoline Explosion In Dry Goods Store at Cellna , O , Cellnn , O. , Oct. 18. live persons wcro killed and about 100 Injured by a gasoline explosion In the Mclucrdln&j dry goods and hardware store at Fort Recovery The dead : Miss Clco Wels , Henry Lammer , Joseph Uoesner , Charlci Wagner , all employes of Melnordlng ; unknown tnCn. traveling salesman The most seriously Injured are : John McMuller , leg almost torn from body , cannot live ; Mrs. John McMul ler , badly cut on right side. D Kldder leg broken ; Henry Claughman , body badly biulsed Tbo othois were only slightly In Jured by ih Ing glass. The explosion occurred In the rear of the Meinerding store. The cause Is not known Fire resulted and the entire building was soon ablaze All the window glass at Fort Ilecovery wns broken The loss by flro and ex plosion has not been estimated , but will bo heavy. SILVEIRATANDSf ATcURACOA Carmellna Takes on Coat and Then Sails for Porto Cabello. New York , Oct. 18 The steamship Carmellna , with Manuel Sllvelra. tha Cuban banker , whose recent dlsap peaiancu from Havana was said to have brought about the failure ol Ceballos & Co , his v/ife and two chll dren , steamed Into Curacoa a week ago last Sunday , according to Captain Bennett and several ot the passengers and crew of the steamship Zulla , which reached here from Curacoa and Venezuelan ports. The Carmelina left on the forenoon of the following diy , after taking on coa ) , and ostensibly for Porto Cabello. "I was curious enough to lookup the Carmellna's passenger list , " said Mr. Chase , one of the passengers on the Zulla , "and I found the names oJ Sllvnlra his wife and two other Sll velras , presumably children. I was told that they landed at Curacoa , say lr.g that they were going to New York , probably on the Zulla. I learned that they shortly afterwards went to Porto Cabello. " McGovern and Corbett Draw. Philadelphia , Oct. 18. Terry Mc Govern and Young Corbett fought n hard six-round bout at the Nattonn' Athletic club. When the gong an nounced the close of the battle , there was little to choose between the fight crs. The fight wns one of the bloodies over witnessed In this city. Breeders Secure Injunction. Chicago Oct 18 Judge Brentano fssued an Injunction restraining L H. Kerrlck and four other directors of t the American Aberdeen-Angus Breed ers' association from taking advantage of what is alleged to be an unfair ma- Jortty In the directorate and thereby ousting the remaining four directors. Thr e Terrorists Killed at Warsaw. Warsaw , Oct. 18. Three terrorists wore killed by soldiers here , vrhllo at tempting to rob a store otf Nalefka street DEATH FOR I5JN SUBMARINE Little Doubt That Crew of French Plunger Have Perished. Blserta , Tunis , Oct. 18. The officers engaged In the salvage work express ' the certainty that the crew of the French submarine Lutln have per ished. Members of the crew of the tug Ishmul which convoyed the Lutln on her last voyage , declare that the submarine plunged twice successfully and after she had gone down for the third lime her bow showed twice : ab'ove the surface of the water before Bho finally disappeared. This leads to the belief thattho , catastrophe re sulted from a sudden leak at the stern. The water probably rushed In very rapidly and overturned the nccu jnulators , This would cause death giving fumes to emannte from the adds , and the crew of fifteen would have no change for life. RAILROAD OFFICIALS CALLED Heads of Departments of Western Lines Must Face Grand Jury St. Paul , Oft. 18. - Subpoenas have noon HIM\od horn on Ilio complnillcrM tronsuroiH and heads of claim ilopnrt ments of the Great Northern , Omaha Minneapolis it SI Paul and tin1 U'U cousin Continl tallroailH , dlicrtlni ; them ( o appear befoie a Hpcclal gnmd jitM' in thn United Static dlHtitrt I'ouil it MlnnenpollK no\t Tuesday with the bool.H ol their rehpeilhe dc pnilmenlR. Thin action Is mild to have been takin IIH a io iilt of an ln\i < tUiitlon tib bj Ihc ovcinmcnt of the uMtin nf ic hntt'M in connection with HhlpmentH of lielclit HARRIMAN FAILS TO WREST CON TROL FROM FISH. CLASH AT CHICAGO MEETING William Nelson Cromwell , Represent Ing Harrlman , Says Result Is Not a Final One and That Battle for Con trol Will Be Renewed Next Month. Chicago , Oct. 18.-Tho light for con trol of the Illinois Ceniial Hallroad company waxed hot hero. Htuyvosant Fish , president of the road , and Will Inni Nelaon Cromwell , representing K II. Hturlmaii , president of thu South ern Pacific , clashed openly bofoio lif.C " kholders , who ad eomo from varl ous parts ofuie cWntty to attund the meeting. On the face of the record Fish appoarn to haVe been the victor , but that the result Is not u Jjnnl one la Insinuated by Cromwell The lopre sentatlve of Hurrlman said "Of a directory of thirteen poopln. there are Btlll seven mombeiH who have placed thoniBolvos on record In opposition U Fish In thin contest Thoiovlll bo n mooting of the boanl , piobably In November This boa id will olet I thr oflloerH of the rallimul. You can draw your own eonolusloiiH. " The "lash between llniilman and FlHh was wngod over an iigioemont dated July 27 , lOOC , . and slunod by Stuyvosant Fish. Charles A. Ponbmly and K. 11. Ilairlnnn In Juno Fish had begun tbo collection of pioxlo ? for general use at the mooting hero. Ho stales an offoit wns also made bv Harrlman lo g t proxies thiough Kuhn , Ixioli R' f'o On Inlv 1R Pe i body Intmdnood a resolution nt a meeting of tbo bonid of dliodors that ii rommillM- the dlioctorv be ap pointed to collect pioxloH. However , on July 27 Fish , Poabodv and Hairl man entered Into an agreement , aa follows : Clash Over Agreement. Three outgoing directors to bo reelected - elected ; GrlnnelPs succoBhor to be se lected by a majority of the several directors acting ; Peabody's resolution of July 18 to bo withdrawn and not to be revlvod this year ; Harrlman will ask that Harrlman-Kuhn-Loeb proxies bo given to Fish. W. Morton Grlnncll , a member o ! the board of directors , had died dur ing the year. Fish claims that the Harrlman faction agreed that Grin noil's successor should he a man whose presence In the directory would not be Inimical to the Indcpcndenco of the Illinois Central and wo-ild be acceptable to Fish. Henry Deforest a director of the Southern Pacific , of which Harriman is president wag 'named In a petition.signed by Harrl man and six other directors to suc ceed Orlnnell. By reason of hl9 Southern Pacific affiliations DcForost was not acceptable to Fish Crom well declares that under the agree ment Fish was bound to accept DeForest - Forest and to cast both his own and the Hnrriman proxies for him. Fish Opposes DeForrest. At the meeting Fish , after fonnally being called upon by Cromwell to cast the proxies In favor of DeForest , arose and declared , with great emphasis : "I will never under any circumstances vote for Do Forest. " Fish thereupon placed James Do- will Cutting of Now York in nomlna- tlon. Ho then cast a total of 013.703 shares for Cutting. Cromwell , ns a matter of record , voted 2.100 shares against Cutting , and later cast them for DeForest , whom ho had placed In nomination. Cutting was thereupon declared formally elected to fill out the unoxplrcd time of Grlnnell , which IB two years. Charles M. Beach. J T. Harahnn and Cornelius Vanderbllt , whose terms had expired , were reelected - elected without opposition. JAPANESE WANT DAMAGES. Owners of Ship Bearing Seal Poacher * Make Claim Against United States. Victoria. B. C. , Oct. 18. According to advices from Japan , directors of the Toyl Fishing company of Wakn- ynma. owners of the schooner which had flvo men killed and twelve cap- lured when raiding the St Paul rook- ery In Boring sea last July , have an- preached the Japanese government , asking that a claim for damages bo lodged with the American government. The foreign minister said action would be deferred until the report from the member of the Washington legation Kent to Investigate had been made. This leprescntativo Is tn route back from Junoau. CURRENCY REFORM IS KEYNOTE OF ST. LOUS CONVENTION. WARM DISCUSSION IB LIKELY Multiplicity of Piano Presented Re- nulls In Confusion President Ham' llton , Comptroller Rldfjeley and Con grcssman Fowler Deliver Addresses. SI LoulH. Ocl 18. Tlio nesMtm ot thu ihln.x i > coi.d atiiiiiul tuu\n.tlon of tln > Anu'tUan Hankers' ii'fcoclntlou \\H > - di'votiMl almost entlro ! > to the Uui'i.ij ' of ioit.no iotoits | There woi OIK' tlinn ilu. Ing thu day when the do- Itbeial'ri.1 * of tie ! convention throat uiu'tl In I > t oino oxtiaonltnnrll ) mil matt'il and that was touching on the iuontloii ) ot cuiiency icforin. The fed- onil loglHlittlxu roininlttuo will lay bo- foie the tonviMitlon an clastic cur- runry plan It has pi opined. Currency rolonn Is appaiently Hie keynote and main Idea ol the convention nud BO many plaiiH hnvo bnmi piofiontcd and tuiKKi'ritod for cnnildoiatlon that con- tuMon has rosultrd Theicfore It Ifl ho unanimous opinion of ( ho dele thaf the M'hHlon will lie ohnr ai'teil/ed by war m dlscusblim when the Hiibjecl IH brought up. but conserv ative and influential members feel cor- alii that.n plan of currency reform vlll be agiced upon before the con- entlon flna'.ly adjourns PicHlde.nl J \j. \ Hamilton of Hoopos- on III. dellverod his annual addrcsB. Mis \ , A Uatcholder of Flngal. N. ) . ormplod a pioir.lncnt position on he slam * , being the only woman BO iimoieiU because she IB ( ho only wom an bank president attending-the con- ontlon She Is president of the First National bunk of rintral anil her hus band \ C 1C noteholder , IB cashier In \ icr bank. After dlrrusslng reports , regular luslncss was suspended and the con Ycntlon was addresHod by Hon. < .harlos \ , Fowler , chairman of the committee , on banking and currency In I bo IIOUBO of representatives and Comptroller i of the Currency William OR , BROUWER ACQUITTED ; Jury Brings In Verdict of Not Guilty Inside of an Hour , Toms lliur , N. J. , Oct 18. After a trial lasting bout ten Uuyb , lr Fninli L. Uiodwu. Imlletud for the muidui of his wile 'j ' > poison , was ucfiultted The Jur > biougbt in a verdict ot "not guilty" Inside ot an hour Inbtanil ) iho court room was in au uproar ? Men and women clieeted and applauded In tplte of the rapping foi older and the court ofltcers bad difll cully In suppressing the noise. Final ly , when quiet w-us restored , Dr. Brou wor was foimally discharged. He wai so overcome that ho could scarcely apeak. Wbon the excitement had died somewhat , JJr Brouwer shook handi with his counsel and brokuuly thanked Judge Hendrlck'eon and the jury fet their treatment of him. The doctoi then shook hands with each juror At ho turned" Irani the Jurymen , men , women and children again pressed about the acqUltto'd man , who finally backed up to a wall of the court room * and grabped each extended hand at tbo crowd , shouting Its congratula tlons , filed past him. A fourteen-year old girl panned In the line long enougb to kiss him. TWO KILLED IN A WRECK Santa Fe Express Trains Crash To gether In Colorado. Pueblo , Colo. , Oct. 18. Two men were killed , while more than a score of passengers were Injured , as the re suit of n head-on collision between two Snnln Fc express trains near Man zanlllo. Both locomtlves were totally demolished , as was the baggage car on the east bound train. Of the four enKlnemon , all but W T McMunay engineer of No. G01 west-bound , Jumped for their lives and ostaped without Injury McMurray struck to his post and was Uninjured Ho made every effoit to avoid the col llslon. Immediately after the collision the wreckage caugl.t fire. The killed- Harry Murdock. Kan os City , express messenger ; unknown negro , stealing ride. TELEGRAMS JERSELY TOLD The Southern Pacific has carried 20,000 colonists Into California since the 1st of September , under the low rates prevailing from the east. William Cason , while hunting near Hayfield. Minn. , shot and killed Mabel Bevenson. fourteen years old. whom he had mistaken for a woodchuck Owing to the recent steady gain In silver the wages of miners In the As pen ( Colo. ) silver district will be in creased from $2.50 to $2 75 a day A Southwestern railroad locomotive exploded near Almogordo , N. M. . kill ing Fred Dobbin , the engineer , and T C. Brandon , the fireman , and seriously Injuring C. O Gallagher , a brnkeman. A man named Schovc , who tried to sell to the French government the secret of the manufacture of the Ger man nickel coated cartridge , has been sentenced by the German supreme court to four years In the penitentiary for treason. THE CONDITIONJF THE WEATHER Temperature for Twenty-four Hour * . Forecast for Nebraska. CoiulllloiiH of the woalhur HM record * ml for thu twenty-four bourn ending it 8 a m. today : Maximum 05 Minimum 37 AVOIUKU 51 llaiotnotnr U9 70 Italnfall | { : 2 I'liloiiK" . Oct. 18. Tlii ) bulletin l - Hiied by ( ho Chicago Htiitlon of the Unllod StuloH wealhor bureau jlvon ; Lho foiucaHt for NoliniHka ait followa : Pair imilKhl and Pilday C'nnlor oiml purl Ion tonight. CLO&ING PROCEEDINGS THE MOST STRENUOUS OF THE TRIAL. DEMONSTRATION IN COURTROOM Attorneys Indulge In War of Word * and Judge Danker Rebukes All Con cerned Kline Concludes for Defents and Attorney General for State. Flndlay , 0. , Ocl. 18. After a trial of BOVUII dayu the fate ot the Stand ard Oil company of Ohio , charted wltb conspiracy uKiilnst trade , waa placed In thu hands of thu jury. The day's proceeding were the most strenuous of the tilal Thu heavy speeches on both tildca wuio mado. Virgil P. Kline concluded for the defense and Attorney General Hills for the proBCCti tlon The defeiiHo uubmlttcd 14 points of law for Incorporation in thu charge of the court to the jury , all hut twool which were rejected. Judge Danker than read his elaborate charge and the jury retired to deliberate. The tension between counsel on either side , which has been on the Inoreasa as tbo rums progressed , reached thr breaking point and hot words of crit icism paused , the crowded court room het'imie demonstrative for the first ( Imp and I ho court sternly rebuked all concerned. Tbo collision resulted from the roeclpt ot n telegram by the attorney general stutlng that the Man hattan Oil company had sold out to the Standard for $2,000,000. This waa declared by the defense as a trick to Inllnenro the Jury. The prosecution r'-lorted that the matter would never have icurbed the juiy had not Mr. KlliH1 who m.iilc the chiyp , men- Honed life matter In court The inci dent closed by a severe admonition from the court. The Jury waa also told not to regard the matter. SUGAR REBATERS GUILTY Jury Returns Verdict Against New York Central and Official. New York , Oct. 18. A verdict of guilty of giantliiK rebates on sugar shipments was icturned by a jury ID the United States court hero against the New York Central Hallway com pany and Frederick I * Pomoroy , the company's general traffic manager. Sentence was deferred until tomorrow , to permit tha attorneyu for the de fense to file motions with the court. In discussing the jury's verdict , AiiBten G. Fox , counsel for the defend ants , placed the responsibility for tba conviction of his clients upon public opinion. "You can't defend rebate cases In the present state of public opinion , " said he. Under the provisions of the Elklna act , under which the convictions are secured , the maximum penalty Is $20- 000 As the Central and personal defendant - fendant , Frederick I. . . Pamuroy , are convicted by the Jury on all of tha six counts charged in the indictment , the total fine for each can be $120.000. 000 TRADERS DENOUNCE RULES. Members of Chicago Board of Trade Testify Before Commission. Chicago , Oct. 18. W. H. Bartlett , a prominent member of Hie board of trade , was the first witness called be fore the interstate commerce commis sion when the hearing regarding the grain trade was resumed Mr. Hartlett declared that n rule re cently passed by the board of trade fixing prices to bn bid on grain In the country Is , In his opinion , In re striction of competition and of trade ami not n good business proposition lor m"n dealing In grain ns ho deals. James Bradley , another member ot the board of trade , declared that ho bellevod the rule of the board de-1 scrlbod by Mr Bartloti was In re-1 stralnt of trado. H. D. Woimore , another operator I on the board , was In favor of the rulo. PYTHIANS GET DOWN TO WORK Supreme Lodge Discusses Amend-j ments to Clnstltutlon. New Orleans. Oct 18 The supreme I lodge , Knlghta of Pythias , held a long ! session , In which amendments to thof constitution were dlscussod. The mat ters dlscussod wore not made public. ! The supreme tribune wns also at I work. Ha most Interesting case Is Its ! Investigation Into assertions against ! one member of the Pythlans declaring ! ho Is n member of the negro raco. | The rank and Ille of the Pythlans pa raded , several thousand strong , ] through crowded streets.