ANOTHER PROFESSIONAL,Capture of a Th.ei Tnought to Be Fo-’ ley** AccomplfceEdward G. Griewe notified the police yesterday morning that a diamond stud had been stolen from him on an Avondale car the day before. He also notified the jeweler from whom the stud had been purchased.Before— ^ W m. m w m m m • f—»--jeweler and offered it for sale. But the jeweler recognized a slight flaw by w hich he identified it as the one he had sold Mr.Griewe. Word was conveyed quietly to the police, and while the jeweler was still debating about the purchase of the stone Officer Harding walked into the store.When the fellow had been taken to Cen-‘ Rodgersof San Francisco. He said he got the stone from a cripple on Fountain Square. He is a German, and his pockets are full of anarchistic circulars. On one of them is what is supposed to be a thief’s cipher. The§olice think that he is an accomplice of one 'oley, known as “the Goat.” He has come to Cincinnati probably in order to “work” the races as a pickpocket. Mr. Griewe thinks that he recognizes in Rodgers a man who crowded against him in the car a moment Defore he missed hi3 diamond.Rodgers is locked up on suspicion.