REWARD FOR M'KINNEY$500 DEAD OR ALIVE(Continued From First Page.)ning to have great respect for him, j on account of the earnest manner in | which he is pursuing McKinnev, HeI ' !| comes from Kingman, Arizona, but he |i has passed the border line of hisI county, crossed the line of his StateIand is still in pursuit of the outlaw, with the determination to catch him.!if it be possible to do so.IJBrother Not Constable.Tht San Bernardino dispatches,! however, contain one statement thatj in an error. They say that McKinney's I brother is constable at Randsbiirg, whereas both the McKinneys are min-ers and neither holds any official posh 1 tion. John Arnold is the peace officer of the desert metropolis and J. R.( Price, brother of the county jailer, is his deputy.Both brothers, Ed and Jake, are men of nerve and determination, Rnd it Is said that, while honest and peaceable themselves, they are devoted to their j outlaw brother and will no doubt pro-! tect him even to the extent of fighting i with the officers of the law.iIIt:Mild Looking Outlaw.The newspapers and descriptions of McKinney in no way portray the appearance of the now noted outlaw. He is not the fierce looking bandit shown by the published pictures. On the contrary he is a small man with a rather pleasant countenance; his features are regular and he formerly cultivated a long drooping mustache. He has very blue eyes but there is a steely look In [ them, which shows the man’s deter-I mination.Ilj When McKinney resided in Bakers( field he was a gambler and is well i known to the sporting fraternity here. HU gambling partner and boyhood friend was Tom Sayers, whom he shot■h . ^dead in Jap Alley three years ago. At Randsburg before he came to Bakersfield McKinney was also an habitue of the gabling hails, and the serious trouble he is now in originated In n1card game In the town of Portervillei