-THAW DENIED TO NEW YORK STATE Attorney General Will Rec ommend That the Requi sition Be Refused Here * . Attorney General William I. Schaffer late yesterday informed Assistant District Attorneys Kobei I S. Johnstone and Edwin P. KUroe, of N'cw York, that the place to begin proceedings to have Harry K. TUavr returned to New York for irl.il on a cnarge of assault was lu the Phila delphia court where Thaw was ad judged insane. Mr. Schaffer will roc , orumcnd to Governor Sproul that the l-equisitlon of the ilon'i'i'f New York for return to that couuly of Thaw, now in a Philadelphia in- , sane asylum, be refused- This action will be In line with j that of Governor Brumbaugh in May, 191", when he refused requisi tion on recommendation of P'rancts Shunk Brown, then Attorney Gen eral. The New York attorneys asked requisition on the ground that Thaw ■ WAS reported to have left Philadel phla at various times, to have been , seen in theaters and cafes and to oc : transacting business. This was de nied by Ex-Judge James Gay Gov-, don, counsel for Thaw, who said. that the man had only beon out of | the asylum twice and liven '■>• | court order. He presented papers: A showing the orders of the couri in the case. The New York adorney"] asked a hearing to establish favtij Sj io sanity and Judge Gordon repbiJ) mat Thaw teiug a < n-t.: •• riNK-| ment of a court he Is in tae o-n-tody, of the law and testimony here would be Irrelevant. . I Mr. Johnston contended that the United States constitution > m l >o ®f d a duty on the governor of Pennsyl vania to honor a requisition from another state .hut the Attorney Gen eral held that Thaw having declared a lunatic by formal pro ceeding in court it acted as a fo y" closure and should he accepted un ' der the "faith and credit < clause of the constitution, advising that a the court ordered fixed the statusi M fThaw as a lunatic proceedings should be taken in the court where j he was so adjudged. He added | that he thought the decision Of Mr. Brown in the former proceeding was correct and expreese.d dmibt whether if Thaw was taken to New York he could be tried when he was a lunatic under the law. He Oso said that if a man was in P rlso " j contempt of court he could no J| taken out until he purged himself. Until Thaw is adjudged sane b> the court which committed him he held j that he must stay in custody and while there could not harm anybody, t If he is ever adudged sane, said the Attorney General, requisition pro ceedings can be started. Coral Jewelry has Increased Popularity Chlcag i Coral Jewelry has sud denly bei ome popular and many peo ple including some jewelers have been at a loss to account for the fashion. It is due. it may be ex plained, to the fact that good coral jewelry has become extremely scarce ' since the outbreak of the war in 1914 and the other fact that people want most what they can not get. Some light was thrown on the sit uation bv Matsu Ashyuto. a Japanese jeweler 'who is in this country to study designs in carved coral that appeal most strongly to the Ameri can public. . "The best coral carvers have al ways been in Italy." said Mr. Ash yuto, "but In recent years the Medi terranean coral beds have been prac tically exhausted. Italy depended to a large extent on shipments of crude .coral from Japan. This Japanese coral was carved by the Italians and marketed throughout the world as Italian coral. The war shut off these Shipments and the output of coral . Jewelry from Italy reached the van ishing point. This has made coral rare in the world's markets. "As the supply of coral jewelry diminished, the demand increased to a surprising degree. Coral jewelry that had been fashioned several gen erations ago but had lost its vogue suddenly became popular again. To help meet this new demand, the Jap anese government opened a school where native Japanese are taught to carve coraL Their carved work is / done in Japanese designs and has met with a ready sale in Japan but there has been little demand for it abroad 1 because It was not done In the style * that appeals to occidental people. The Japanese government recently sent several emissaries to Europe and America to learn the designs occi dental people want. In time, the Japanese believe their carved coral will become as popular as the Italian coral has been." Winnipeg Strike Held up Sheep Shearing Uethbrldge, Alta.—The Winnipeg strike held up sheep shearing In southern Alberta for more than a week. The strike made It impossible to get enough wool sacks for the clip from Winnipeg. The sheepmen got around the situation by getting their sacks from Montana and Minneapolis. The shearing which was In progress for ten days is now practically com pleted. Two hundred thousand sheep were sheared in the Lethbridge dis trict with a yield of 1,600,000 pounds of wool. Some of the wool already has been marketed at Great Palls, Montana. Prices there ranged at or near maxi mum prices paid in Canada last year. William Itae. a wool buyer, paid 60 .. cents a pound for a shipment of 20,000 pounds. J. C. Hollindrake who has had charge of grading the wool in * this district says it is of better qual ity than last year's clip. All the • wool will be marketed by the Can adian Co-operative Wool Growers' Association. MANGANESE I'HODI'fED IN 101 ft The domestic production of manga nese ore In 1918, according to statis tics compiled by V. P. Hewett, of the United States Geological Survey, De partment of the Interior, was greater than In any preceding year. The of highgratle ore during the last quarter of the year were ~ 76,485 tons, against 90,738 tons, 82.- 481 tons, and 66,<82 tons for the third, second, and first quarters, re spectively, and the total for the year was therefore 304,386 tons, or two and a half timet that for 1817, which was tha highest previously recorded. The ehtpmente of low-grade material were alio the highest on record— -881,113 tons containing 10 to 15 per cent of manganese and 143,616 tons * Anuintna 6 to 10 per cent of manga >l4. THURSDAY EVENING, ' SautmSBORO IllSSftl TErnnoM JULY 10, 1919. / "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" Friday —The Day Of All Days At Doutrichs "Big" Shirt Sale We have never seen anything like By all means don't miss Doutrichs the success of this "Live Store's" "Shirt Sale" "Shirt Sale" for it's the most wonderful"Shirt There's no let up in the buying, the crowds are coming Sale" that has ever been presented to Harrisburg, not here with unabated interest and are buying Shirts in such quantities alone to this loyal city, but the people from all points of the compass that it keeps our stock men busy filling up the empty places The have been here. One of our customers was from far-away Boston — values we are offering would tempt any one to spend their money he was attracted by our mammoth Silk Shirt Window Display as he freely. This is a real Shirt Sale in which every shirt is reduced (ex- passed down Market street and said he never saw anything like it. cept Manhattans). Very few people have Think of it! A SIO,OOO "SILK SHIRT" DISPLAY t Then too—every available space on the inside is filled to overflowing with high grade shirts of all fabrics and qualities and styles you would think you were going into a fairyland when you look over the moun tains of Shirts But to see the eager and enthusiastic crowds coming to this "Big" Shirt Sale is what puzzles everybody but it's the confidence the people have in this "Live Store" that brings them here we alwav have what we advertise we never fool the people lt's a great thing to have a reputation for square dealing and honest representation. * EVERY SHIRT IN OUR ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED (EXCEPT MANHATTANS) AU$l.5O Shirts $1.19 All $6.85 Silk Shirts sfi.R9 AH $2.00 Shirts j $5 OO Shirt* All $7.85 Silk Shirts sfiSq All $2.50 Shirts $1 K9 I