OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1917 age BILL WHICH MEND STATE WIDE WORK FILED SALEM, Or., Sept. X. Fishing in the Btreams of Oregon with seines, traps or fih wheels Is absolutely prohibited by the provisions of proposed initia tive bill which was submitted to the secretary of state Friday afternoon for approval as to form, by Charles C. Mabcock, street superintendent of Or egon City. If carried to completion it will go on the ballot at the general election in November, 1918. The text of the bill is as follows: ' Section 1. That from and after the first day of January, 1919, it shall be unlawful for any person or persons to fish for salmon in the waters of the state of Oregon or any part of the waters over whih the state of Oregon has concurrent jurisdiction, by means of seines, traps or fish wheels. "Section 2. Any person violating the provisions of this act shall be pun ished by a tine of not less than 1C0 and not more than $1000, or !y impris onment in the county Jail not less than 60 days or more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment! 'Section 3. AH acts and parts of acts In conflict herewith be and the same hereby are repealed." In the past Oregon City Interests have fought for the right to fish with nets in the Willamette river below the falls at that place. Where the dead-! line should be placed below the falls' has been an Issue which has caused fireworks and rancor at every session of the legislature for many years past At the last session the deadline was moved down the river to near Oswego. The drifnet Is not included In the pro posed bill. This is the first proposed initiative measure to be submitted to the secre tary of state since the 1917 law relat ing to initiative petitions was enacted. The law provides that signatures on a petition must be checked by the county clerk with the voters' registra tion lists. The county clerk is re quired to certify to the genuineness of the signatures. The genuineness of the signatures of legal voters who are not registered may be established by the affidavit of a notary public that he has personal knowledge that such persons are legal voters. Under the new law the ballot title for the measure shall be prepared by the attorney general before, instead of after the petitions are circulated. The official ballot title must be printed on the petitions. To initiate a measure 22,533 signa tures of legal voters are required. How By George S. Dougherty Inside Story of How the Famous Clark Diamonds " Were Recovered After Billy Coleman, a Notor i ions Thief Had Stolen Them and Then Buried Them On the Lonely Shores of a Lake. ' f ' Copyright, 1813, by The Iateraatlona Syndicate, 8 EM robberies are of almost dally eocnrrenoa. In fact If it waan't for the publlo's Interest In such matters many of our beat known ctreasee would find that even with the errtcVa of a hard working and reeooreeful press agent H would be much harder to get their Dames on the first paces of the yellow journals. But when real and genuine rem theft has been perpetrated, and the . vlotlm Is a woman whose name oc cupies an exalted place In the society eolumns of the most dignified of our newspapers. It Is a different matter and on that creates world wide In terest I am referring now to the theft of $100,000 In gems from Mrs. V. Ambrost Clark, whose husband, a noted sportsman, was a stepson of th late Bishop Potter, of New York. Safeguarded Her Gems. This young matron had come to the country estate for a visit and fearing to trust her wealth of jewels in a country home sent them to the offices of the estate In Cooperstown that they might be locked in the big vault and there kept until she had occa sion to wear them. The gems were kept in a big jewel casket and this In turn locked In a safe within the big vault Supposedly they were Just as safe there as though they were reposing in the strong box at the safe leposlt company in New York City. The robbery occurred at a time when I was with the Plnkerton Agency. We were notified of the rob I cry the day it occurred and I was virt to Cooperstown at once to take ' '.urge of the Investigation that was ii follow. I learned that at an hour . hen the clerks employed by the s-.ate had left the building for their ij.icheon, the watchman supposedly i .-.ng left on the Job, somebody had '! ped into the building, gone stralgh; i".t the "vault, opened the smaller safe . iihin and then took the Jewel casket i the cellar where with a hatchet he v :id broken it open, extracted the : ms, end decamped. The puzzling ;-.ature of the case was that none had I eard a struggle, or any unusual noises in the building although the floor r'out the shattered Jewel casket waj Vnspattered with blood. At first i lance one would naturally suppose ihat the thief had been interrupted 1: his work of extracting the gems ;' a fight followed, or else there had liuan more than one person concerned the job and the thieves had fallen . . t and battled over the division of hi spoils. Either theory seemed iiUuslble. yet neither seemed to take i, very far In our deliberations and 'Eductions. Footprints Point To Woman. Another puzzling feature of the ws ws picked up in the cellar was M frequent appearance of a worn .il a footprints. They were well de ii 'd and seemed to encircle the spot re the casket lay. That led to :- supposition that a woman was - m-erned In the Job in which event . might bear out the theory of the rks and members of the Clark fam I that It had been an inside Job and ! WASHINGTON POLICE D 24 IN CHARGED ill WITH AIDING L W. W. SIX) KANE, Wash., Aug. SO. Twenty-four more alleged 1. W. W. are held in the county jail here today as mili tary prisoners, following their arrest last night when they arrived from Troy, Mont, on a Great Northern train. Conductor L, A. Brauekhauser, of the train, said the men created a disturb ance almost the entire way from Troy, where they had been fighting forest fires. The men, with three others who later were released, were met at the j railway station by policemen and held at the city Jail, until Major Clement Wilkins, in command of the Idaho Na tional Guardsmen here, arrived and took them into custody. Major Wil- i kins declined to make a statement j regarding the arrest of the men, other ! than that they would be held as mili tary prisoners. James Rowan, district secretary of the I. W. W., and 11 other alleged mem bers of the organization, arrested here August 19, the day before a general strike of agricultural and construction workers in the northwest, called by Rowan, was to take effect are still held here as military prisoners. The alleged rioters were met at the depot by a detachment of police and 2" of them were taken to the city Jail, where they were held until the arrival of Major Wilkins. Later 24 of them were taken to the county jail by a de tachment of SO Idaho National Guards men. Three of the men were released on, their protestations that they had taken no part in the disturbance. Eugene Delvoye, said to an I. W. W. organizer, ia one of the men held by the military. BOARD'S SECRETARY DIES CHICAGO, Sept. 3. Charles F. Mer rill, 66, secretary of the Chicago board of trade, died today of angina pector is. He was president of the board in 1911 and since that time has been its secretary. So Be Cheerful. "It pays to he Hiwrful." "You bet. As long as you- lok is if you had money your creditors will have confidence in yon "-Boston Tran script. Giva Hor Tim. Teacber D ymt know the population of New Vork? Mamie Backrow-Nof all of them mri'nm Hut. then, we've lived bereojJy two year Puck. someone In the Clark household had directed the footsteps of the real thief to the big vault and the strong box within. Naturally every clerk In the estate's offices, as well as all the servants In the Clark home were grilled. Not one was overlooked, but there wasn't a single lead from that source that even looked promising. The all Important point to establish was the presence in Cooperstown that day of any suspici ous looking person or persons, or of any stranger that might have been noticed In the vicinity of the office. That meant many persons were to be Interrogated and, strange to say, 1 found two such persons In far distant points in the village who were able to shed a little light on the subject A woman told me she had been Dass- lng the estates office shortly after the noon hour and her attention was attracted by an old man who wa lounging near a fruit stand across the street. She gave a very good descrip tion of the man, adding that he crossed over from the fruit stand corner to that of the Clark office Jus; as she was about to board a car In anotner part or the village I found a young man who said he too had seen an old man standing near the fruit stand and later cross to the Clark office side of the street. His descrip tlon of the stranger tallied exactly with that given by the woman. ThN was at least promising and I value..' It more highly than anything else had gathered In Cooperstown. The Plnkertons. in those days, aM much store by their Rogues Gall.;ry. They had photographs of all thp cleverest crooks in the country and these were duly classified. When a detective went out on a bank Job h was given a book containing likenesse of the country's most noted bank sneaks and yeomen. Prior to locat ing the young man and woman who had sepn the stranger I had run over In my mind all the crook" who woulc' have been likely to pull such a trick had they been near. There were many fully capahle of doing the Job, but nearly all were eliminated because n' first one and then another reason Indontifles My Suspect. I went to call on the young womar who had seen the stranger and of course took my little "gallery," the "hasty pulling bag" som of th "Pinks" called It. She had dwelt on the fact that this stranger, while a bit nervous and fidgetty, Impressed her as being the soul of good humor be cause of his "pleasant, laughing eyes." That settled it. I knew the man she meant and upon opening the book pointed to the face of Billy Coleman and asked: "Ever sea that face be fore?" "Why that's the man I saw." she exclaimed. Then I went to see the young man who said he had seen a man near the office. I handed him the book and asked him to pick out any likeness In the book that resembled the per son he had seen. Without the least hesitation he picked out the same face the young woman had done. "That's Sharpshooters Adopt rv t 1 - Sv v v .v' ' ' 1 MMImm 4 f, .iMiijiiiniiiWm.imL.i. .i ..il i. ill, .t ' I "r ' rl-v"v ' " ' ' ' !s ? 1 - . ' ; ,aiiMiiwjiwafc'ww-'',v ty t'niW'Hn.iinHiHtl"l!'-.'"W wimi; u,Jnn,iiiiMiiMiijiimniiipun-'"ii.-i-"iini' - ,,m A s i 1 4 v y ' . ' , . iV i Italian sharpshooters have a new plan to protect Venice with hor costly works of art and architecture from raid ing Austrian airplanes. They have built a frame work on the top of a house for gun rests, and there So or more of them all take aim at the Invading plane and fire on It This gives a concentrated tire, which It Is difficult for the airman to escape as from a rapid tire gun. FRANCE, BY TAXING WAR PROFITS UP TO EIGHTY PER CENT, IS ABLE TO PAY FOR THE CONFLICT PARIS, Sept 3. France proposes to put the cost of the war on those best able to bear it by taxing war prof its up to SO per cent. Minister of Finance Thierry made this announcement today, explaining France's scheme of financing the war. He added a special plea that Ameri cans aid FVance by purchasing their luxuries from FTCtu-h factories these industries yielding a large part of France's taxes. "We in France are following very closely the financial debates in Amer ica," declared M. Thierry. "We ap preciate the dftticuUies and the new problems before America especially the problems of taxation for war pur poses. 'Effective legislation regarding the ; latter has been difficult, particularly in ranee, where there was no In come tax before the war. This lack has made it necessary for us to estab lish the fixed revenue in before-the-war periods in order to tax the excess. the man." he said "I don't know A'hat he was doing here, but hu was n that corner all right and I'd stake my life on It. a man can'l forget hat face. He waa loo tood natured .uokiiiu." Now to hnd iillly Coleman 01 ourse, 1 had nothing on rum. .None nad seen htm In the oilice and none had seen him emerge from II. 1 luesn't always follow that a country magistrate will hold a man for the Lcrand Jury simply on the charge that he was In the vicinity of a burglary when It was committed. There wasn't a particle of doubt In my mind what Billy was doing In the vicinity and I felt confident that It would only be a question of time before I would con nect him up with the case and get him right at that. I returned to New York and roamed the streets looking for Billy day and night. 1 had asked that he be picked up by the police In the event of their running Into him, but I didn't look for a grent deal of help from that source. After roaming around for about two weekj without seeing, or even hearing of Coleman 1 met one of his old pals coming up Eighth avenue. I figured that this man would New Plan to Protect Venice w TS: ' "The war profits in France during the first year of" the war have been estimated at 1330,000,000. The second year was about the same. But collec tions have been slow, owiiii; to the difficulty in establishing the taxable Bums." 'To daje, only about J loo,ooo,00i has I t,en collected. "Our law of July, i;U!, taxed war profits under $300,000 f0 per cent. "We are now Introducing a law tax Ins these profit-makera' revenues of fmore than a million dollars a maxi mum of SO per cent, according to a sliding scale "The French nation is well able to boar the larger share of war ex penses." To date, she has contributed 13.000.000,000. But this Is hardly a fifth of the total war cost New taxes will add a billion of state revenue to this. "It is naturally difficult for France to subject large properties and Indus hi The I hioehl ultimately get In touch with Billy, so I determined to keen him In sight. I shadowed him all night following him from h' in f to h.-nmt. The next morn ing when he retired to a rnonilmf house and asked for a bed. I put two otlie- men on hi.- trail while I caught a Fh.vi ntip Thirty-six hours after 1 first sighted this hlrd he Joined Hilly, 1 had pro vided myself with a warrant charging Hilly with the robbery, although I knew deep in my heart I h.idn'l a leg to stand on unless the unforncen hap pened and 1 picked up some much stronger clews than I had at that time. I followed this pair for several days. Billy Is In constant touch with thieves Just as notorious as himself. -These he would meet In saloons and other cribs. In the evenings ho frequently left his home, far uptown, and ac companied by his wife take their lit tle dog out for an airing. One even Ing, to my amazement, he and his i wife entered an Episcopal church, re maining all through ihe service. 1 told Bishop Potter this and ho laughed heartily saying: "Surely Dougherty you don't want me to believe that one good Episcopalian would rob another, do you?" mYjOyy' I.it!liitfii indies it: tow Tlif Milled- in .1 i l Ol Willie From Enemy Air Raida y I. v.t U4 s4s) tries to any generul tax Imk'huims many Industries are now no longer in opera tion. The Invasion by the (ienimns aeUod many of our plants, but the French fiscal system Is most demo cratic and most flexible. "We feel confident our new legisla tion will have the desired results namely In throwing the main burden of taxation on our richer cluaaes. "Our aim now Is to consolidate our strength and safeguard our financial prestige to enable France to fulfill all her obligations to the allien. "If we nrcompllitlt this It Is enact. tial that France continue her eco nomic effort for a long period after! the war reforms now Instituted. Our easy before thewar mode of living must become generally more ntistere. It Is especially necessary to forego luxuries as far as possible. "We are now Introducing a law tax ing such luxuries.. On the other hand, the Industries manufacturing luxuries In France have been always a great source of revenue to u. Therefore It Is essential they bo maintained and encouraged. "For this encouragement we are de pending on our allies, and especially on Americans." u. I Jar V nipped Kiiblier. Were Tie C'lai-K Jewels. I figured that as things were now going I was miking no headway. Billy hadn't made a single suspicious move that might tend to shed light on his connection with tho Clark rob bery. 1 decided that it would be best to arrest him arid let him see hat I had really nothing on him. Mo would be released and maybe flushed with success he would grow careless and let something drop that might prove of value to me. Of course, 1 had na Intention of permitting him to be out of u Plnkerton man's sight for a sec ond. Held For Hrand Jury. Hilly was arrested, arraigned and held for the Urand Jury. I did not deny that my case was very weak. In fact I let everybody believe It was even weaker than It was. The grand jurors were much Interested In the blood stains and when tney railed to find any scars or swathes about Billy they uron ptly discharged him. Then two detectives, disguised as typical rubes became his shadow and he was never out of their sight. That was In October. It was not until early In January that the con stant shadowing of this wily old fox ESPEE HELD RESPONSIBLE The fact that freight car cannot be secured at any chhI led the members of the Slate Highway commUnlon, meeting in ttalom Saturday, to agree to tin) cancelling of the contruct.wlth the Ilassaitt t'nvir.s company for the mv- IngMf ten miles of road lit Cluckamui and Mill ion countlim. Tlio contract was let recently for the paving of five miles of road south of the Marlon coun ty Una and five miles north of It, In Clackamas county, For a mouth the contractor hint had his plant at Hubbard ready for work and Is under an expense of $7B a day, Ho ha tried everything within his power to Ret cars to bring rock to the Ob but without success. H. Ilcuxon, 'halnunn of the coiuiiiIkhIoii, hna plend- eiKwIth the ralUroud, but also without success. About 40.000 cubic yard of rock are needed and If the contractor could obtain ten car he could worry along, The railroad company ha ex plained that It Is not uj))oncd to high way development, but It nlmply hasn't car kvntlablo. The solution offered by the commis sion I to cancel the contract and re- advertise for eight mile from Oregon City to Canby, on the alignment now being graded, with the exception of ettlng new contract In Marlon coun ty In the spring. There I 30,000 available, half from the state ijnd half from Clackama county, for the new grade from Can by to Oregon City, but this In not enough to complete the job. The uew road will have a 5 per cent maximum grade and will not only save two mile but will ellmtnnte the dangerous hill at New Kra where so manw yople have been killed or Injured, The Oregon Hassnm company will 1 bid on the new work and the prospect Is that other contractors, reallxlng the I'"'" thiv'"i','l'tor Is In, will keep off and let the Oregon Hassam coin pany bid without opposition. 10,000 MARCH AT TACOMA TACOMA. Sept. 3 -Weather I an aplclou for the Labor day parade, In which upward of 10,000 marched Many floats were In lino. K. T, Kings ley, of Vancouver, was the speaker of the day at Wright park, A program of sport In the afternoon and a great ball In the evening are feature of the celebration. led to results, I found that Billy was making frequent trip to Morning side Park. lie always mad for th same locality where he appeared to walk aimlessly around although with his eyes glued to th ground and sm Ingly counting hi steps. I was con vinced I was In the right track at last. On morning, thr was dep now on th ground, he returned to the pot and at the trunk ft a tre began to dig. Whatever ha was seek lng he failed to find for he rturnd home and th air of dejection plainly howed that h was worried. Wha I knew Billy waa isfely houd In hi home I returned to th spot where he had been digging, McDonal and Wade, two Plnkerton men accompany ing me We Find The Jewels. After digging for a fw moment we at last struck our lead. Ther eighteen Inche below th lurfac In a fruit Jar, wrapped In th thlnest of whit rubber, were th Clark Jewels almost Intact, excepting a few loose stones which Hilly evidently had re moved and realized on for running expense. We removed the gem from the Jar and wrote Billy a note, signed by each of us tolling him we had the lewels and would bo around to see him at the earliest opportunity. We then rcburlod the Jar and left things a we had found them In that vicinity. We lost no time In going to a near by room and checking up the loot w htu: found. According to the list given us by Mrs Clark only a few piece were missing and wo felt sure ws would ultimately recover them. From there we wont to Billy's horn and arrested him. If he was shocked or surprised ho cleverly concealed It, for ho greeted un In the most nonchalant manner saying: "Hello George. I thought you would pay m a call sooner or Inter. What'U you have t drink" In searching Billy's home we fount all tho loose pieces of Jewelry. Om unset diamond wo found sewed lot the lining of one of his neckties 1 1 1 i I was Just as good a hldcr as h w-i a thief hut we went over that (' with a fine tooth comb and mil bit got sway from us How llillv (Jot The Jewels. When Billy saw the gums wo h i taken from ihu fruit Jar ho made i clean breast of everything. He salil ho was In Cooperstown simply to In cttte soma easy crib to crack. Whci ho entered tho Clark office ho thought It was a bank, finding no clerks In and the safe door ajar he said he couldn't resist the temptation to ex plore a little. The Inner safe looked promising and as that waan't locked either ho opened It and found th Jewel casket. This he took to the col lar and opened It with the hatchet he found there. 1 asked him about the blood which he explained by sayln that when he opened the casket and saw the fortune In gems that had fal len Into his possession he became so excited that it brought on a hemor rhage of the nose. He said hi clothes were to blood stained that he was In mortul fear of being arrested on that account, but fortunately he had worn a black suit of clothes and the stains didn't show up as plainly as they might have under other circumstance. Well, old Billy was convicted ol course. But I think my mention ol Billy's evening spent In an Episcopal church appealed so strongly to Bish op Potter that he pleaded In his be half and Billy got off with a seven year stretch. OF WASHINGTON, Aug, 3l.The prion of No. 1 Northern spring wheat wa fixed nt $li)0 a bushel at Chicago for the 191T crop today by tlm wheat fulr price committee, headed by lr. it, A, Garrield, whose finding, reached, after three tiny' deliberation, were submit ted to and approved by President Wilson. Labor representative on Ihn com mittee voted first for ft, 84 ami the farmer for 2,M, Afyr long discus sion tho compromise at 13 M ws ap proved unanimously. To be Maintained The announcement wntjimda at the WliltH House In the follow lug state ment by th president: 'Section 11 of the food act provide, among other thing for the purchase ol whout and flour ami Ihe utu thereof by the government and appropriate money for the purpose, Tho puit bnse of wheat and flour for our allies and to a considerable degree for neutral countries also hn been placed under the control of the food ailinlimitr.itlun, I have appointed committee to de termine a fair price to be paid lit gov ernment purchase. The price now recommended by that committee- $2 20 per bushel at Chicago for Ihe basin grde-wll Ibe rigidly adhered to by the food administration. "It I the hope and expectation of the food administration and my own also that this step will at once stabllUe and keep within moderate bound (he price of wheat for all transaction throughout Ihe present crop year, and In consequence the price of flour and bread also. The fowl act ha given lurge power for the rout nil of tor- age and exchange operation and these power will be fully exercised. . , Dealing are Expod "An Inevitable consequence .wilt be that financial dealing cannot follow their usual cnuriie. Whatever the ad vantage and disadvantage of the or dinary machinery of trade. It cannot function well under nuch disturbed and abnormal condition now ex ist. "In It place the food administration now fixe for It inirchasers a fair price, a recommended unanimously by a committee representative of all In terest and all suction, and believes that thereby It will eliminate (pecula tion, make possible the conduct of ev ery operation In the full light of day, maintain the publicly-stated price fur all and, through economies made pos sible by slnhilltaUon and control, bet ter tho position of consumer also, Hoover Left Out "Mr. Hoover, at hi expressed wish, ha taken no part In the deliberations of the committee on whose recommen dation I determined the government's fair price, nor hns he In any way In timated an opinion regarding that price." "In Its deliberations the committee hn kept constantly In mind the three following factor: Kirst-Tho fact that the United Stntes Is at war. "Second The need of encouraging the producer. "ThirdThe necessity of reducing tho cost of living to the consumers. Abnormal Conditions "Tho normal laws of supply and de mand have been violently Interfered with and congress hag undertaken to remedy this disturbance by conferring ordinary power upon tho president tot stabilize prices. Each of tho foregoing factors grows out of conditions which have received the careful attention of tho committee. OF SEDITION MADE AGAINST U. S. COLONEL WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. Mrs. James Anderson, of Victoria, B. C, wife of a captain In the Canadian ar my, testified today before a somite mil itary committee yesterday In support of hor charge that Colonel Carl Ileich mann, nominated to bo a brlgndlcr general, matin pro-German statements. Mrs. .Anderson reiterated state ments made previously by her In let ters to Senator I'oindexter. She said that at a tea in Chicago she heard Col onel Uolchmann criticize this coun try's entrance Into the war, doclare it was an outrage for the United States to send troops to France and defend ed air raids over England by saying all the warring countries In Europe were doing the same thing. Colonol Relchmann was presont at the hearing and denied all the charges. Bend: Brook-Scanlon Lumber com pany working two shifts, box factory running to capacity. POLK'S P GAZETTEER mm n ununene inrecto Town and Village I Wrectorr f eacK Clin Village la Oregon and a, giving a Ieirintiva Hketeu of each ulsen, Lorntlnn It. Xk rone ft CO. Is. Ui(l. sr- w mm T 68