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?WOES THIS WEEK. ?hp Itllon feralft. MIDDLING COTTON 8.90. \ ESTABLISHED IN 1895. DILLON, SOUTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1911. Vo1- 17- No- 36 < ? __ White Man Chi With Planned Wreck to Co Children NEGRO ADMITS BEIfl * A?ENT FOR PATEJfT AWX IS 'I HAVE PLANNED THE CtRI T1VES. LIVES OF The following Special to the* Charlotte Observer throws some further interesting light on the recent attempt to wreck the C. & N. W. Railway northbound train at Gruwder's Creek trestle:.. Gaotonia, N. C-, Oct. 6. ? De[ tective Thomas Loving, of Madison, who was employed by the officials of the Carolina & Northwestern Railway Company immediately ? after the dastardly attempt was made Tuesday, September 19, to wreck northbound passenger train No. 10, at the Crowder's Creek trestle, to ferret -out the ajtteinpti ed crime and, if possible, run down the criminals, was .in Gastonia yesv terday. In fact, he is maiking his headquarters here and expects to remain in Gasbonia permanently. Detective Loving was not very much inclined to talk but gave the newspaper man a few facts regarding the progress -of the case, with^ holding names lor obvious reasonns. According to the detective, Milas \ Partlow, the negro on whom suspicion has rested from the start and | 4 who is still at large, had an acaccomplice, a white man, .who spent k some days, perhaps weeks, in this section selling a .patent awl. It is highly probable, from the evidence in hand, that this -White man, whose , name is known to the .detective and th*e officers, was the one who planned the crLme and used Partlow I as a tool. It was probably his plan to rob the passengers after the [V wreck or perhaps he was to get some of the insurance Partlow was I counting on receiving Wh?n hl? two children, aged 14 and 16, were killed in the wreck. It is a fact, states Mr. Loving, that Partlow had a pol' icy for $1,000 on each of his children in the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, having taken policies out from the Ohafltte branch of that company. Evidence has accumulated against ? .both of these men and the officers are confident they can convict them. One reputable New York county citizen testifies that on the morning of the wreck, he Baw Partlow, about 4 a. m. going in tb direction of the trestle. Partlow was In a buggy and his two children were walking. These were the ones y that were on the tcaOa. It is further learned that Messrs. Stewart & Jones, contractors, grading the road-bed here for the Piedmont & Northern Railway Company, had a spike bar stolen away from their camps on the 17th, two days prfcor to the wreck. The one found in Partlow's crib has been already positively identified by them as theirs. In Partlow's crib was also found a track bolt wrench and a locomotive engineer's wrench. Two other York county citizens, 'who were in route to Clover just at aunrise on the day of th.e wreck with some cotton to be ginned, ? slate that they saw Partlow and white man sitting on the end of the trestle. They recognized both men. Two other York county citizens state that Partlow talked to them on the afternoon of the day on k which the wreck was attempted. Partlow told them he had heard of I the wreck, told them that he had * two children on the train and asked them what they thought he could } have gotten from the railroad cornpan v in the event the children had j "been killed. They told him they did not think he coull recover anyk thing for the reason that the train iras wrecked by some person not I connected with the railroad and * that nothing could be recovered in the way of damages unless he f coirld prove that "the accident was k due to negligence on the part of the | railroad employees." Partlow told them that he had $1,000 insurance I or each of them and remarked that he would have gotten that much | anyway. " Detective Loving, in investigating k the case, also found a lady who is a trained nurse In a Charlotte t hospital, who testified that Partlow " had often asked her what was a proper dose of morphine and how P much it would take to kill a person. ^ , She told him she did not know. The 1 lady originally came from this neighborhood and Partlow worked } for her father for some time . Both Detective Loving and SherJ Iff MdTiian r\t ttiifi pnnntv an/1 t.hft local police have been working hard h on this case and aeem to have good hopes of catching and convicting k t^jese two men. It Is known that the Monday following the wreck a Partlow and this white man were were seen In private conversation at Rock Hill, S. C. They are both ? spotted In 8outh Carolina and their arrest Is expected at any time. The P officers also have locked up at New-] ton a negro. Sam Watson, on subp plcion. He was seen In the neighborhood of Crowder's Creek trestle a the morning of the wreck, but declares he knew nothing about the attempt to wreck the train. i verged Heinous Crime llect the Insurance or 's Lives JG AN A CCOMPLICt 'he man -who is alleged t< me. shadowed by detecmany imperiled. i how thomas hayes was kili ed. Further l>etails of the Deplogiabl X ashville Trajcwly . Mr. N.B.Hargrove returned Frida night from Nashville, Tenu., wher he went to investigate the death c Mr. Thomas Hayes, a son of Mi F. H. Hayes, of Gaddys Mills, wh was killed on the railroad at Nasi ville. From the information gatt ered by Mr. Hargrove it seems ths Mr. Hayes, who was a fireman o the railroad, returned from Decai ter, Ala., on the night of the trag edy, and complainedL of feeling il The engineer said Mr. Hayes wa sick on the entire trip and that fit quently he left his place at th throttle and assisted him in passin coal into the engine. When th train reached Nashville that nigl about 11 o'clock Mr. Hayes left th engine in the railroad yards an told the engineer who accompanie him on the run up from Decautt that.he was feeling so badly thi he would not return for his usu; run out to Decauter the followin night. Mr. Hayes was last see alive as he was walking down th railroad track toward his horn The next morning his badly man} led body was found strewn alon the yard tracks about half a mi! from where he had left his engine The body was so badly mangled th; it could not be embalmed and M Hayes was burried at Nashvill The presumption is that he wi overcome with weakness and si down upon the traoks to rest an probably fell asleep when he wi i killed by some outgoing or ii j coming train. Mr. Hayes was vei j popular with the railroad emplo; i ees and his death was a grei j shock to his co-workers. The eng uuci w uu wuioni iie n&a oeen mai I ing trips over the division wi shocked and grieved over his ui timely and tragic death. He was very efficient man and was rising i rapidly that, he would shortly ha> I been promoted to the position ? engineer. Mr .Hayes widow au i one small child returned lion | with Mr. Hargrove and Mr. Mille 1 a brother-in-law of the deceased. INDICTED HIMSELF. I I'JJice Justice of South Orange, I J., Does Freakish StuntSouth Orange, N. J. Oct. 7.?P, lice Justice J. Martin Roll arraign* j himself to-day 011 a charge of viola ing a village ordinance, plead* guiity, fined himself, paid the fii and collected it. This was his moo ologue. "J. Martin Roll, you are charge by Patrolman Asher with allowir one of your employees to tie h horse to a tree in Church stree this village. How do you plead 1 the charge? Ouilty. I fine you $5, The judge pulled forth a bill an ! deposited it in a desk drawer whei he keeps the fine money while wai inPr to turn U ??">? *l ":n m V?. VMII1 IV l/ICI IU lilt." Vtllilg l treasurer. DEATH KKYEAIjS FATHHK/ I Though Living in Same City, l'a^-ei Kept Identity Secret ThrrJiui! I Pride. t Kalamazee, Mich., Oct 7?"AVoi der if that man can be my father, asked Felix G-allegber, a. well "know Kalamazoo cigar dealer aftct> reat ing account of the death oil J oh Gallegher in Borgess Hospit/al. The son's conviction that yhe de) man was his parent grew s/> stror that he went to the hospital to s< the body. He is positive The dei man was his father. i For two years Galleghejr lived this city unknowtn to his/son Ftl and another son named Charle The boys' father "eft hbfc home Chambersl/urg. Pa., tiwenity-thr years ago. It was fourteen yea ago when they saw theliw father tl last time. It was th?4,t year th they came to Kalamazoo jto live. T father was then travelling in tl Eastern States. During* the pa five years they have hegard nothii from him. f What caused the fatjfher to coi to Kalamazoo to live land not 1 his sons know anythin g about it something the sons cir^nnot und< stand. >1 y<> Miles in 20^' Minuted. Monroe, La., OctJ. 7 ? Using home-made aeroplar'je Carl Moi field, a country boy \ living ne ; here, flew tweivty mijies in twer minutes. Mourfleld fitted up workshop in the Interior, so as r to be annoyed by tl \ie curious. I flight Included the grossing of t' wide rivers. His rrtliachlne is sli lar to the Curtiss 'Lfolpiane . , . J COUNTY NEWS SI AND HAPPENINGS i NEWSY LETTERS FROM DIFFERENT SEC- SH( TIONS OF THE COUNTY COMING AND MNG OF PEOPLE RE ) News Items of Interest to Herald 1 i?r< Headers. Ebb and Flow of the | Human Tide. ] Red llluff. tht j. By the way, what has become of 1 as Casey Jones? He must have gone j ers into winter quarters. He seems so , ne1 e i sueiit 1 tnougn I would write again j th* 1 and perhaps wake him up. I of Mr. J. E. Willis and Miss Lizzie i cei Ann McCall visited Mrs. N. H. Har- a y grove Tuesday, Mr. Hargrove being sei e very sick. jth< '*! Miss Hattie Quick is on the sick i fai r- list at this writing. j str ? Messrs. N. L. Giheon and J. E. thi l" Willis took a flying trip to "Guess" J rel Tuesday. inj ln Mr .Bascomb Claik was a caller j th< (J in this section Sunday evening. Sa p_ ; Misses Annie and Gertie McDon-1 aid spent Sunday in Harmony sec-1 br< 1 tion. j of ?_ Mr. N. L. Gibson and daughters,1 tin e I Misses Atlanta and Anna Belle, do g went to Mason's cross Friday and So e were accompanied back by Miss thi !t! Sunia Falls, the popular young ! ha te | teacher of that school. tit d Mr. N. L. Gibson and family we d spent a few pleasant hours in Jud- ih ?r j son Sunday. fa; Messrs. Truss, Booth and Ham- all iljllton, of Pages Mill, were pleasant g I callers in this section Sunday. do n I Many in this section have been da suffering with sore eyees. aa e. James Adams' Bhow passed ^ through here Sunday en route to tb ig j L1 lo. bo ie' Messers. Allen and Parker were! e. in this section Tuesday. j at Messrs Quick and Gibson i r. j went to Bennettsvllle Monday. e. I The R. B. L. A. S. met last Wed- | 1S ntsday at Miss Sarah Stanton's. ' it: Mr. Napier McColl has a little,^ d "Brush" and keeps the roads hot. i P11 is With best wishes to The Herald ! R* a_ and its readers. y A. B. O. |br it Olive Branch. iof 1- ,nt t- We had an excellent Sunday ?r is School lesson last Sunday. The sub- ? a- ject was the "EJver Giving Stieatn."! a Tti? cotton fields are atill white a" so with cotton, and pickers are scarce. w< re Farmers are feeling blue over the n | price and when the cotton gets blue JU id I they will feel still bluer, le Rev. Mr. Fox worth preached a *r r, very inuterestlng sermon at the r* I Methodist church Sunday which was Q greatly enjoyed by a fairly large congregation. Rev. Mr. ?pink's apI pointment is on the 4th Sunday of " | each month, at 3. p. m. P j The writer won't write very' I much at this time. A Friend. 1 f'i ^d ACTO FOR CAKBYIM1 IKHJS. .t-| t d ' allioun County Fox Hunter Fits * ie l*p Xovol I>evice. u- atl j St. Matthews, October 9?Special: ,'sp ^ When Mr. O. H. Wienges, an exten- ,n; lR.sive and successful farmer of the Singleton section , rolled into his t I home Saturday afternoon in a dash-; to new automobile, his friends set Al .. about guessing the mission of the j intruder. The ouly theory advanc e ed was that three automobiles on a single farm served only as a ree,e ! ord breaker for the county. He is ' i the most enthusiastic fox hunter in jj^ these demesnes; knows the pedi- co grees of every thoroughbred among e(j the Uirdsong, Bywaters, Walker and cjj Twiggs breeds and loves his dogs ye it with the ardor of a "John Ran- "fa j, dolph, of Roanokee." It now devel- sa ops that he will remodel one of his:0f touring cars, improvise a cage on fr< the nether end and thus transport jy his pack from place to place. th Calhoun thus bids for the first tj, . honor of being the only county inth ? the State where a pack of the fin- gi est strains of fox hounds are haul- e(j ed to the hunting grounds in a s^. ig stylish Overland touring car. ha Td HYDE BAPTIZED. 8p to In Condemned Wife-Murderer Taken iQ Fro*n Prison Oell to Baptist vi (8. I. !><.?! ??.. I...I ?.. ii-i? i'J . ? ? ? \ II m t(?F| r? Hum* ?? v/nii*r? ?* i th e<! Aiderson, Oct., 7. ? l^ato yes- 11,1 terday afternoon Samuel N .Hyde, lb le the 'white man u?'der sentence to ba hang ^n October 20 for the mur-!ut he der of his wife, and who also slew th h? I her lather, was taken by L?t Sheriff md Deputy Sheriff Martin " to the hirst Baptist church where tli he was baptized by Rev. Dr. John ly ne p Vines. This was accorded to an et order issu?d by Judge George E. Fi Is Prince, wh* passed sentence on st ir~ Hyde. Onlj a few witnessed the o* baptism, those present being the deacons of tie church. Hyde pro-|st feased conversion several days at ago and Dr. Mnes sent a petition in ; a to Judge Princ* asking for permis- h? lr- sion to have th? prisoned conveyed hi >ar to the ch^irch to- baptism. In the in ity | meantime severa. petitions asking a Governor Blease to commute the lot sentence to life inprisonment are t lis being circulated, and are being 01 wo signed, it is statei. These peti- o\ nl- lions will be forwirded to- the w Governor to-night. gi RIKE BREAKERS / m BEATEN IW SIGNS OF BEING HANDLED WITH- M OUT GLOVES TURNING IT NEW YORK " UVssimuil Slrikt" Itmkkm Sa) s"* Union Men Made it Hot. for Tlieni In Augwita. In every large city in the North Jre is a large body of men known the "Professional Strike Break- ^ i." These men are kept in idle- *rt 36 until a strike occurs when 11 iy are sent out to take the places so striking men. During the re- J*0 it fireman's strike in Augusta uo body of strike breakers was . it there to take the places of 1(1' ; union men, but it seems they co *ed baxlly at the hands of the a' ikers and the rear guard pass- an rough Florence the other night ,1U Lurulng to New York after hav- ??' ; experienced the roughest time 2y ever had at strike breaking. r? ys the Florence Times. The train from Augusta last ought in a tough looking crowd (;j, badly battered men. They were e strike breakers, who had been I e(^ wii in Georgia on the Georgia > ^ uthern and Florida road to take p{ p places of the strikers, and they5,^ d evidently been struck several " ues themselves. Those who >re able were returning whence 1 ey came, from New, but like thejvi mous Six Hundred, they were not to 1 there. I Ja A large crowd of them had gone e(] wn on the Coast Une a few i] ys ago, and the tattered rem- i cii .nts of them will be sent back th soon as they can be taken from e hospital or the proper size jn xes can be made for them. ot One of the railroad men said tr at they would go back at half A re as damaged goods. 1 j0 The strike breakers are sent I bi it by contractors in New York'th st as laborers are sent to the i fu losphate mines in Charleston and Pi irkeley. They are kept on cold ! orage while not in use sis strike j cc eakers, and as soon as aji order tii received for a certain number th men for a certain kind of work,1 n< > matter what it is, the contract- w will get them, becsiuse the re- th urces of the labor supply in that1 vi eat cess pool is inexhaustible th id the men who do this kind of th jrk are generally a desolate set ci artv fnr n.nvt.hinor nvrmit ? otoor? v b that has no excitement in it. th There were a number or riots, I al at and small In the strike in hi iorgia, and a number of men, tli th strikers and strike breakers,' in i hard knockB. Many of these tli llows will never forget Georgia, cc r tney will carry the impression p? Georgia witli them for many a ul Qg 3 ear. The fctiike is over now and the, "eraen 1 ave won the figlit. They inted fifty per cent of the money .id the engineer, and the road co d not want to give it, and that ts the cause of the fight. The 1? :id was tied uo for some time P? id the business men of the section co rved got together and had the ot atter adjusted. M . ^ cli INDIAN CHASED BY MOB. tn Ieged Victim of Ro*<s French ,)e PI' Found in North Carolina Woods, Her Throat Cut. Hv Aslieville, N. C., Oct. ? 8. ? jss Prencii, 21, a Cherokee Indian, so ing on the Bird Town, Swain hi unty, reservation, was safely lock- er in county jail here to-night, ro arged with the murder of the 14- fi< ar-old daughter of a Bird Town p\ rmer after having attempted to as- th ult her. Her arrival here was m fected after an exciting escape am a mob of 100 men bent on )1{1 aching the prisoner. The body of vi e dead girl was found Friday in < h e woods near the town with her roat cut. This morning Deputy ja, leriff Beck of Swain county arrest- j,, French on tlie strength of blood sjj ained finger prints on the Indian'fc it. gr The news of French's capture ba read quickly to the neighboring wns, and a mob of 100 men folwed the deputy sheriff to Waynes- dr lie, where French was lodged, in'cit 11. As the mob continued to grow tu t sheriff called out the militia, ws id the crowd was dispersed. Beck st< en took the prisoner through the th iclc door of the jail to a waiting an itomobile at Clyde, 20 miles from hi is city, arriving here at 6.80 to-; ght. Telephone messages from m? aynesville to night, stated that Sp reats of lynching were being free- Pr made there. , fli When captured this morning th rench claimed that the blood of ains on his hat were t"nos of an! vl which he had shot In the woods, fa To-night he is alleged to have lcl ated that the girl made a desper- po e fight and that she had hit him ro . the head with a rock. He said an i did not intend to harm her but ov id asked her to accompany him ge to the woods. th Mr. L. Edwards is out again af- vi! >r an illness of a week which at 11c ie time threatened to become serins. Mr. Edwards is still very eak from his lllnesB, but is re- tw lining his strength rapidly. lei egro Rapist By I Vill Jackson, Chargi Body Riddli CITIZEN99 JOSH A 'ORY <*F AN EXCITING < JHAS SPARTANBURG. NEGRO S GRAPH POLK ANI> T Greenville October 10 ? Specia long distance telephone niessag >m Honea Path. says that J .24 o'clock to-night, Willis Jac n was swung to a telephoi le by one of his heels and h dy riddled with bullets. The negro was carried to tl mtical spot where the crime wi mmitted and from there w ken to the nearest telephone no d swung up by one foot. Foi ndred shots as near as can 1 timated. were fired into his bod inchester rifles, magazine pistol volvers and shot guns being tl sapons of death used. Hob Forcibly Takes Prisoner. Greenville, October 10. ? Sp il: In the depths of a forest, iles north of Greenville, an an mob of twenty-five men, head "Citizen" Josh Ashley, of Hon ith, a member of Anderson cou 's legislative delegation, ov? iwered Deputy Sheriff Van artin, of Anderson county, a leriiC J. Perry Poole, of Gree lie county, this afternoon a ok from their custody one Wil ickBon, a 17 year-old-negro, chai I with criminally assaulting t L-year-old duagther of a promint tizen ofHoneaPath at 7.30 o'clc is morning. The trembling negro was plat the car in which Ashley and fc her men rode, and followed by ain of several automobiles fr nderson and Greenville counti aded with determined men a istling with shotguns and rifl ie ringleaders turned in th iry and started toward Hoi ith. The capture of the alleged rap included one of the most seni onal man chases this section ie wjumy lias ever Known. au< uon to-day Sheriff Pool receh ord from the Anderson shei lat he had sent a negro to Gre? lie for safe keeping and ash tat the prisoner be confined ie county jail. Sheriff Poole ired an automobile at once a ent to meet the parties bringl ie negro to Greenville. Shor 'ter he left a telephone call Is office, from Piedmont, stat lat the automobile conta g the negro had just pass lere and that some ten macbin intaining the mob, were in clc irsuit and not more than 10 m :es behind. Mob Close Behind at Greenville, At 1.50 o'clock the Anders ltomobile dashed through t reets of Greenville and up to t mnty jail door. Within ten minutes after the a mobile bearing the negro had c irted, a big Anderson touring ci 'ntaining Josh Ashley and fo her other men, steamed throu uin street. "Citizen" Jo utched a Winchester rifle in 1 mds and eagerly inquired whe e negro had been taken. Up ing told that that the party h oceeded to Spartanburg, the wo command was given and the t ito dashed on up the street. Different Koutes Taken. At Greenville the mob divide me taking one road to Sparta ire while others took anot Others took to the L?aure ad, thinking perhaps, that the < :ers would spirit tlie negro >untain Inn or some station < e C. H XV. C. Railway and pla m aboard a train for Columbia. Within an hour after the neg d been hurried through Cree lie, the lad who drove the ni ine reappeared in the city. Within a few minutes after t 1 re-appeared the car bearli bn Ashley and his party rolled iht. The pursurers had fail overtake the party with the r o and were evidently on their w ck to Anderson. Korctil to Reveal Hiding l*lace. Ulpon learning of the lad wl ove the automobile being in t :y, "Citizen" Josh Ashley ins ted a search for him. The li is chased into the rear of a dri >re, where, despite the efforts e police to protect him, Ashl d his crowd laid hands up< m. The lad was placed in Ashle] ichine and carried back towa lartanburg. According to Sher >ole, upon his return from t ght, Ashley and his crowd fore is iaa to reveal the wnereabou the deputies and the negro. When seen to-night Sheriff Poc id: "The automobile in which i ft Greenville was making su ior headway over the mud ads that Deputy Sheriff Mart id I, fearing that we would ertaken by the mob, decided t out of the machine and hide e woods. We told the boy ive the automobile back to Gree lie by a circuitous route and t< ? one where he had put us out. Mob Captures Prisoner. "Martain and I had gone abo -o miles from the place where i ft the machine, and were concef Lynched Lonea Path Men zd With Assaulting Girl, ed with Bullets SHLEY LED THE MOB ik through greenville and Wl'xc; rv HKKIjS to teleh ex sh< r to death. i: * e, ed in a thick ixidy of woods, when at we heard the shouts of the purk suers. Within a few minutes we ie were overtaken. John Ashley was is the first man 1 saw. He grabbed the negro and we had a sharp tusie sle over him. Within a second as some twenty five or thirty men as had collected about Martin and myle self and we saw there was no use ur of shedding blood, be "They took the negro from us, y, but promised that they would not Is, harm iim. They said they would ie carry 'he negro back to Honea Path and consult the 'older heads' of the town as to what was best to ie- do." 21- A EI.EG ED DYNAMITERS' CASK ed ea (liniielo^-j of Events Relating trt n~ I*n \ngeles Times Explosion. ;r IJ Las Angeles, Cal.. Oct. 9. ? The nd chronology of the Los Angeles dysn" namiting case, which is set for n.d trial next Wednesday, October 11. lis is as follows: rE-| 1910. October 1. ? Times newspaper >nt plant destroyed by explosion and lCh fire. Twenty men killed. Bombs found at home of Gen. Harrison :ed Gary Otis, proprietor of The Times. >ur and Felix Zeehandelaar, secretary a Merchants and Manufacturers Assoom | ciation. es? October 9. ? Experts appointed .nd by May0r Alexander to investigate cause of disaster reported that high elr I explosive, such as nitro-glycerin> iea , ?la(j been used. 1st October 3. ? Job Harriman, atBa_, torney representing labor union interests, questioned witnesses before t coroner's jury, eliciting statement . that in their opinion explosion was caused by gas. sn- October 25 ? Special grand jury, :ed impannelled by Judge Bordwell, bejn gan sifting alleged evidence that se- three men known as J. 13. Brice, nd Milton A. Schmidt and David Capng ! Ian, had blown uj> The Times with tly j "Eighty Pert' ent. Gelatin," purto chased September 26 from Giant :ed Powder Works at San Francisco. in. Five hundred pounds of dynamite, ied | "ELghtly Per Cent. Gelatin," pures, chased by trio, was found cached jse in house at South San FTancisco, In-! October 16. December 25. ? Llewelly Iron Works partially wrecked by exploon sion. he i 191J. he January 8 ? Grand Jury returned secret indictments against !U- Brice, Schmidt and ("apian, le- March 14. ? Coroner's jury filed ir, verdict declaring victim met death ur in wreck and fire caused by dvnagh mite explosion. sh April 12. ? James B. McNamara lis and Ortie E. McManigal arrested in >re Detroit and taken to place of bidon itig in Chicago. ad April 15. ? Secret indictments rd filed by grand jury against James lig B McNamara. Ortie E. Manigal and John J. McNamara, charging them With destruction of The Times, d, April 22 ? John J. McNamara n- ii* rtsted in offices of International h- Association of Bridge and Structure ns al Iron Workers in Indianapolis >f- Extradited immediately, and rushed to aercss the continent to Los Angeles, an beMig joined on way by James Mece Nanara and McManigal. Joseph v.mi, assistant district attorney of ro Los Angles, who obtained extradin tiou, arrested later on charge of a- kidi.sipping. Detective v\ illiani J i'urns and Detective James Hosick, he ot Los Angeles, subsequently fnng li- i d on same charge, in Ap.il 2d. ? Prisoners arrived in ed Los Angeles. ie- May 4. ? McManigal taken beay t-oie grand jury, where lie made sworn statement accusing James BMcNamara of having blown up the lio Times and declaring himself rehe sponsible for Llewellyn Iron Works ti- explosion. lid, May 5. ? Grand jury returned tig indictments accusing McNamara, of Schmidt, Caplan, John Doe and ey Richard Roe of nineteen murders in an connection with Times explosion, and holding McManigal responsible r'8 jointly with John J. McNamara, for rd attempt to wreck Lleyellyn Iron iff Works, McNamaras arraigned. Bail he asked. This denied May 9. ed May 23. ? Clarence S. Darrow its arrived from Chicago to become chief counsel for McNamaras Time ile for entering pleiui deferred to July ve ch July 6. ? Instead of entering dy pleas, defense assailed jurisdiction in of Judge Bordwell denying his be' right to try case, and moved to to I Quash indictments, in July 12. ? Bordwell overruled to hoth motions. Defense filed exn ception, McNamaras pleaded not guilty. Trial set for October 11, 1911. ut w. Stackhouse, of Marion, was ve shaking hands with Dillon friends 11- last Friday |H