Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 12, 1937, Page 4, Image 4

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    TifEDTOTlD MAIL TKTBTJNE, MEDFOIIU OKECON'. MONTttY. .TTTLT 12. 1937.
"fc.rreae ! gontherm Ont"
Beads lb stall Trlhon."
Dally EiMPt SalsnUj.
PuDllahes br
HEDrOBD PBINTINO CO.
N. nr sl paeneti
ROBBRT W.RUHU Bdllnr.
IILNIST B. OILSTRAP. Manager.
Aa la)d.p.nd.nt N.wepspw.
iuil t .eoona-claea matter at Mea.
lor, Croon. onder Apt et Msrcn s. !
((arniPTlDN RATES
Br Msll Is Ao.sscei
Dsllr. ene rear 'I !?
Dtllr. ets mnntba
Daily, nne month WHIZ!' Ami
Br Csrrler. In Advene. Medtora. AsB-
land. JukMirlllt. Culnl Point.
Pho.nli. Talent, Oold Hill ana
' llshwsre.
' Dellr. on. rear.. !?
BaJly. sis month
Dally, one month
- All terme. esah In advance.
Official Paper f tne CUT nl Medlnr
Oinrlal Paper of Jnraaos tnnalr
If EMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PHICM
cJ'lni tall Leaal Hire mn
' The Aeeoclaied Pree. eiclualv.ly en
titled to th. ui for publication of nil
aewa dlapatchea eradiud lo II or oth.r
via credited to thla paper, and alaa to
the local newe publlahad herein.
All rlfUta for publication of apeeial
etapatehee haralo ara aiao rea.rvd.
MBUBER OF UNITED PRESI
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
OF- CIRCULATION
Advertletos ftspraaanlallve.
mm
Offleaa In Now Torn. Cbleaio. Detroit.
. (an rranclaoo. Loa Aneeles. Best lis.
5 rtland. St. Loula. Atlanta. Vancouver.
' B. C.
10
nrg
Ye Smudge Pot
Bj Arthlil Perry-
I
mm.j,r,a ara hilav Inaulrlnei "Is l
kc enough for you?" This Is hold
bf many to be felonloua Inqulsltlve--rjsss,
and unnecessary corroboration
el what they already ehould know.
It la In the ame classification
in legal re-argument of the argu
ment on the argument.
a a
Noted economist now hold "Amer
ica can never enjoy luting proa-
parity" until the rest oC the world
la In the name happy atate. Neverthe
lata. It might be worth trying. There
Menu no logic In the theory, how
ever brotherly, that Americana ent
no beana. because the Hindus have
no rice.
a a a
The two Washington atate kids
who shot their grandmother In the
back with a 32 rllle present a prob
lem, and eiperta seek the underlying
eauees. The layman does not know
where to place the blame, me cul
prit probably lacked the viumlnt,
but had too many bullets.
a a a
CIVIC PROBLEM BAFFLES.
(Klamath Falls Herald)
"They were on hand by the
hundreds at the air circus staged
. hare by the Oregon Air Tour.
Country roads In the vicinity of
the airport were lined with auto
mobile, many ot them of late
and fancy design whose owners
muat havo had the amall admis
sion fee aaked at the gate."
a a a
. Hog prices are reported tha high
at In seven years. The situation Is
gradually working around to the
stage where a ham sandwich won't
eoat more than a hog.
a a a
'The crowds mob her so that she
has to have police protection. Clara
la ai yeara old snd haa wrestled ever
since the was seven." (Chlco (Cal.)
Enterprise) Lad y wreatlera Just
prove the "weaker aex" Is weaker
than they have to be.
a a a
Out of 340 ataff organiser of the
John l. Lewis CIO. 121 tre listed
aa "aelf - avowed communists." It
would be Interesting to know how
many had forgot to take out their
first citizenship papers.
a a a
The threat of war hovers once
more over the Orient, a Japan
rushes troops to China. As hereto
fore, nobody can make heads or pig
tails of what they are fighting about,
a a a
"Some of tha members of Congress
are actually atroggtlng hard to be
come free American citizen again."
(Detroit Free Frees) Herola and
herculean effort.
a a a
nigh-prlced and streamlined trail
ers adorn the highways. Other look
like the driver had stuck three
wheel under his woodshed, and bit
for Nova Bcotla.
a a a
"It la too early to weigh . the pub-
Ho re-actlon to the mounting list
of auto deatrta on the hlghwaya.,"
observes the Siskiyou New. The full
heft of the publio re-actlon will not
be known, until the nest time the
public gets chance to vote on Pro
hibition.
a a a
TIRF.II Ol.n MEN.
"The bua aet them down at their
destination near the close of a long
day. They were tired old men wear
ing ribbons pretty blue ribbons
which Informed the curloua world
thst they had been guest at
Townsend picnic. The attendance.
they aald, was not a large a It was
last year, In speaking of the event
to one who met them. But there were
some good speeches, and the fire of
enthusiasm still burned. True, tne
apeakera had told them, the league
had fallen short of Its golden prom'
tana, but the feet of Irglalatora and
statesmen had been aet in the right
direction." (Southwestern Oregon
News.)
Rail i:erutlte Dies
SUMMIT. N J.. July 12. tTl-M
ward Eugene Loom Is, 72, chairman of
the board of the Lehigh Valley Rail,
road company, died here Sunday.
ORKOON CITY. Or July 12.
(API Funeral services for Richard
Solomon Blacks-ell. R4. a veteran Of
the Bannock Indian war. will be held
here Monday, lie died Thursday.
. . . ,M
George Gershwin
."A prophet I not without honor save In hi ova country
and hi own house."
Soma critics have regarded the above as ens ot ths most
awkward sentences in ths Book of Matthew. Be that aa it may,
it expresses a fundamental truth. True genius like true great
ness is seldom recognized by one's contemporaries. And tha
closer and more intimate the relationship, the rarer ths recogni
tion. In fact history is pscked, like a fig with seeds, with
instances of individuals, obscure during their life time, becom
ing famous, many years after death.
GEORGE GERSHWIN, 38 years old, died yesterday morning,
following an operation for brain tumor. It was a tragio
case for two reasons. Gershwin had not been feeling well for
several months. But he was a very busy man, who had always
worked at high pressure, and enjoyed good health. He didn't
consult a physician, but calling on his reserves, worked harder
than ever, to provide a musical score for a new movie.
About a week ago he collapsed in the studio. Rushed to a
hospital, his ailment was diagnosed as nervous prostration,
which our own Dr. Brady maintains is a disease that doesn't
exist. i
However that may be, it didn't exist in THIS case. There
was a physical cause for the nervous collapse, which the doctors
failed to discover, and released from the hospital, the composer
returned to work.
SATURDAY Gershwin again collapsed. This time the cause
of the trouble was diagnosed, as brain tumor. An effort
was made to rush Dr. Walter Dandy, famous brain surgeon
from John Hopkins to Hollywood, to perform an emergency
operation. But the discovery came too late. After a consulta
tion of physicians, it wag decided any further delay meant cer
tain death, so the operation was performed by the attending
surgeon. Gershwin never came out of the anesthetic.
HAD the famed composer, consulted a physician when he
first felt out of sorts, his life might have been saved. Time
is the essence in such cases. And of course had more time been
allowed, Dr. Dandy might have been able to do, what the best
brain surgeon in Los Angeles wag unable to do.
Then again he might not. One can never tell, and it's
probably both futile and unfair, to speculate, in such an un
certain realm, as that of human fate, in relation to life and
death.
MOREOVER we are not concerned so much with the details
of Mr. Gershwin's passing, as with the fact the composer
of the popular "Rhapsody in Blue" is dead, and the career of
the king of classical jazz, has so suddenly and abruptly ended.
What will be his place in musical history t How will he
compare with the Jlozarts and Bachs and Beethovens of the
grent and glorious past!
We have an idea the popular answer will be, "Don't be
silly I" There can be, critically speaking, no comparison.
Gershwin was merely a cheap piano thumper from the lower
East Side, with a flair for the bizarre and the eccentric, which
happened to catch the superficial fancy, of a more or less
demoralized post-war era. He will have no more permanent
place in musical annals, than Mae West in drama, or Bugs Baer
in literature.
And that may be entirely right of course. For time alone
is ths final judge in such matters.
THE present writer however happens to believe otherwise.
Wo have a hunch Oorefl Gershwin is coinu to live. Not
as a great "composer necessarily,
one of the post-war era, the most original and the most ad
venturous. Like Wagner he cut away completely from the
traditions of the past, and struck out, in an unexplored and
virgin territory for himself. We doubt if he reached the
heights, but he showed the way to a new and a permanent form
of music, where heights exist.
In Bhort there has been a revolution in music, as there has
been in so many other things, and Gershwin was one of the
pioneers in it. In the rarified atmosphere of the higher criti
cism this will be regarded as heresy of course. Either that or
plain ignorance.
But look back a few centuries and see how many heretirs
of the pBst have been the heroes of the future; the heresy of
today the gospel of tomorrow. "A prophet is not without
honor save in his own country and his own house,"
OUR rrophecy is, that a hundred years hence, George Gersh
win and his "Rhapsody in Blue", together with many of
his lighter and more popular works will have been accepted as
American classics, whereas his
with their melodioui and imitative gestures to the past, will
have been forgotten completely.
We may be wrong.
Well that's always possible.
Julv 12th. 2037, to prove it I
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
Mstury from the flies ol the
.Mali Tribune 10 snd 10 rrs
g.
TEN VtARS AGO TODAY
July II, I'll
(It wa Tuesday)
Midwest farmer hold that vetoed
McNary farm bill "best bet." and ld
to farmere In min isaue of neat
year's presidential campaign-
Holy Utnd Is shaken by earth
quakes. Ray Evanson realgn a chief ran
ger ot Crater Lake park.
Cornelius Vanderbllt, Jr. on way
to Reno to secure divorce.
Temperature Is at. A year am It
was 104.
Mr. snd Mrs. Clayton lmac left
on a buslneaa and vacation trip to
San Francisco.
Olen Arnoplger stresses tli Kl
wanls. Mildest June In years, with .43 ot
an men of run.
but as the most significant
more orthodox contemporaries
But you will hsve to wait until
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July It, lfM
(It we Wednesday)
The largest cherry crop in the his
tory of the valley Is ready for har
vesting and there is a shortage of
pickers at t2 per day.
The highest temperature of the
year waa reached yesterday m-hen the
mercury rose to too degrees.
The Kelly Island Fishing club will
open on Friday. July II. tnvitatlona
have been extended to friends of
members to attend the opening.
Frank Salter haa been awarded the
contract for erecting two log cabins
at Crater Lake.
Frank Redden has been elected
school district clerk.
Tourists are able to drive auto
within two milea of Crater Lake rim
Snow la melting fast.
The Weather.
Northern California: Partly cloudy
tonight and Tueeday: fogs on the
coaat; afternoon thunderatorma in
high meuntatne: little change
temperature: moderate northwest
wind off coast.
Oregon: Fair tonight and Tues
day: but cloudy and foggy near
coast: little change in temperature:
gentle to moderate norhtwest wind
off tout.
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters prUimn to persons, health as4 bMlenc. Dot to dtftciM
dlagnotli or treatment will b uuwered by Dr. Brmdy U a tampotf talf
addreMed. enrelop la atioaed- Latter hould ba brief aod written Id ink.
Owing to the Urge' number of letter received onlj a few caa ba answered
No repl can be cuede to quertee not conforming to Initruetloru. Ad drew
Dr. William Brad;, 266 EJ Caminu. Beverly, Calif.
THE I'NDER-PAR PA
, PARTICULAR
Laet lummer, reports a correi
spondent, I got to run down and
nervous that X could hardly work
or eat. 1 read
where you aald
lack of vitamins
would cause un
der - par condi
tions like mine,
and alao that
lack of vitamins
would cause ridg
ing and Irregu
larity and poor
growth o f the
nailaand smooth,
pointed tongue.
I called thla to
my doctor's at
tention and he advised me to follow
your suggestion. I Immediately be
gan taking liberal dally rations 01
B. O and O and my condition began
to show Improvement In less than a
week. It la now nearly a year since
X started on the vitamins and today
X enjoy excellent health and endur
ance. I like my work and I like my
food. At one stage of my trouble a
very good doctor said he thought 1
was getting pellagra, but I couldn't
take the foods he aald I needed I
couldn't eat at that time. Now I
can eat anything and like It. Thanka
to your fine column. You do not
realize how much good you are do
ing. I know most of us do not both
er to tell "you when we have obtained
great help from your teachings. (H.
O. B.)
Sometimes I think it la unfortu
nate that the nutritional deficiency
disease known as pellagra was ever
given that name. I suppose It was
necesaery to apply some specific
name to the trouble when It had
advanced so far that victims began
to be helpless and require Institu
tional or other care. But when the
name pellagra woa applied to the ad
vanced stage of the trouble, that pre
cluded proper diagnosis of the nature
of the trouble In tens of thousands
of cases In the earlier stages. Theae
earlier cases, occurring not only In
the south but everywhere In the
United States and Canada, would
have a better chance of being recog
nized m nutritional deficiencies,
moderate vitamin deficiencies. If the
vague symptom were called simple
"run down conditions" or "under
par" or poor health. Not by the old
timers, but by the younger physi
cian who Is getting a better training
in the diagnosis of nutritional disor
ders. -O.O.Mclnfyre
Early up and note from Elsie Janls.
on a tour of Veterans' hospitals In
from Peg How
ard and daugh
ter Jane In far
off Australia.
Also a note from
Lea Cope land,
who used to Im
provise so wist
fully on the
piano for those
of us who turn
ed Parle nights
Into days yeara
sou.
Then typing, but with languor. Bo
planning with my wife for a high
walled-ln French garden at our Gal
llpolla home and for the moat lux
urious hsmmock we can find any
where to swing from the 123-year-old
water maple. And oft to sit with
Bob Hsgue, the oil tanker man.
awhile.
Dined at old Ouffantl s. about the
same as it was 25 years ago, and
walked through Hell's Kitchen snd
Psddy's Market. Then put in st
Jack Dempsey's but the champion
waa off at a broadcast. So home
and Alma Clayhersh and daughter
dropped by on their way to embark
for Europe.
vr.rV vtj.ran newsoaoer-
man, contributed for yeara to the
support of his aged grandmother i
I turn , tmAl ... killed
nciniti; aw., iomj
near Baltimore. She waa 88 and
Markey was called In to settle her
meagre estate. In an old trunk he
salvaged two ancient atamp albums
and brought them to his New York
apartment.
..!.. rt.raarrf MlTkll WAS
stricken with arthrltla and was art-;
vised by his doctor to tene a trip
Ready ceeh wss lacking for the long
stay In the tropics. During his qusn-,
dary Kmll Gavereau, a newepapei :
editor, came to call and while there
chanced to see the stamp albums
He la an expert collector snd de
clared one stamp alone In the out
lav was worth 10.000.
Markey excitedly called In a pro
fessions! philatelist snd lesrned his
grsndfsther. from whom the grsnrt
mother Inherited the etsmp, hao
started the collection bck In ll
He had gone to Europe on a ni!
and picked up number of Euro
pean lasues. The collection la com
plete of stempa used from ths flr:
days up to the Spenlsti America!,
wsr.
Some stsmps were In duplicate anc
Msrkev sold one for M100 snd tec.
his trip. The collection now repoer;'
In s safety vault and the owner i:
besieged by agents who have offn
more than 1100 000 for the lot. H
prefera to sell one at a time wh
needed. The pay off: There Is no In
come or Inherltsnce tsx on stsmi
Persons! nomination for the meet
exciting buckltty-buckttty In tense
radio broadcasts Clem M.-Csrthy.
' An under-cover crowd of Ameri
cans sre orgsulsmg to S'tempt tc
induce Colonel Lindbergh to return.
Brady, M. D.
TIENT WHO HAS NO
COMPLAINT
i
Probably the moat frequent defi
ciency In the country today Is vita
min B deficiency. It Is true, how
ever, that the condition of the nails
and the tongue Indicated by the cor
respondent la more specifically due to
prolonged moderate deficiency In vi
tamins Q and D. -
In any circumstance It la ex
tremely difficult to get an optimal
or adequate dally ration of vitamins
B, O and D In food sa food is avail
able today. Aa for D, the only sources
at all adequate are fish oils, and few
.persons can tolerate flah liver 6tl as
"steady diet." In another talk we'll
endeavor to ahow why the majority
of people get Insufficient vitamin B
to maintain anything like fair health.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Flake White Is Lead Carbonate
You showed your Ignorance when
you aald flake white is bismuth sub
nitrate and harmless In a face pow
der. Flak white Is lead carbonate,
and lead Is poisonous. (A drugglat).
Answer. You are right, and thank
you. Flake white Is lead carbonate
and If used aa face powder or cos
metic it might produce chronic lead
poisoning. Bl&muth subnltrate or
other bismuth salts are often used
in cosmetic preparations, sometimes
called "orchard whlte,' and bismuth
aalts In cosmetics axe comparatively
harmless.
Powilered Milk
Going on a trip. Do not like any
of the canned milks. Friends aay
there Is some kind of dried whole
milk as nourishing, wholesome and
containing the same vitamins aa fresh
milk. (Mrs. K. G.)
Answer. Dried powdered whole
milk Is available. Water added makes
It practically the same aa fresh milk.
Glas&es
Your position regarding glasses for
near - slghtednesa. Of course, in
street, one might cut one's best
friend or lose life In contest with
auto traffic. But for reading one
can see all right with page held close
(W. R. 8.)
Answer. It Is not my position. All
oculists urge near-sighted persons
(myopia) to wear suitable glasses for
close work in order to conserve vi
sion. Without such glasses the strain
of using the eyes for close work tends
to Increase the trouble.
Ed Note: Persons trUnlni to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D.. 263 tJ
Cam) no, Beverly Hills. Calif.
The one thing they have to avoid
at the outset is publicity. And they
realize that the flyer's grievances
nre many and well sustained. He
could not be expected to dlsplsy
much eagerness 'or a lsnd where a
beloved child could ba so cruelly
kidnspped and murdered and frantic
parenta so pitilessly hoaxed In hon
est effort to recover tl son. Yet it
Is said all this would not have driven
Lindbergh away. It was more the
curiosity of the people who made
it impossible for him to move off
his estate without being mobbed. He
has found he can motor to London
and stroll through Its crowded streets
snd not even be slightly snnoyed by
gawkers.
Msgs&ne editors find Ernest Hem
Ingwsy the most difficult of writers
to keep hsrnessed. He win go slong
for a short trot snd then slip hslter
and be off to some lost corner of
the world. Recently a magazine con
fessed it thought it had pinned Hem
Ingwsy down for regulsr monthly
contributions put It wss only for a
few months and he flew the coop.
Any magazine in the land has It
ssnctum doors open and pages wait
ing for anything he cares to write
on any subject the Big Desire of
slmo.t everybody who lives by the
pen. But Hemlngwsy prefers to roam
snd write as he pleases. Sensible
fellow.
Bagatelles: Fred Allen likes to chew I
tobacco when nobody la looking . .
Jack Norworth la also smong tne
lst of the metropolitan thanv'
JACKSON COUNTY BUILDING &L0AN ASSOCIATION Medford, Ore.
Fifty-Seventh Semi-Annual Financial Statement, June 30, 1 937
ASSETS
Cash
Mortgage Loam, unpaid balanceg
Real Estate Owned and in Foreclosure .
Real Estate Sold on Contract
Stock Loans
Government Bonds .3.'.'..'."'.
Warrants
Shares in Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland'
Shares in Medford Federal Savingi and Loan
Association
Furniture and Fixturei .!
Home Office Building
Other AsseU
Total Assets
eaten . . , H. f. Burton, magazine
editor, la a pushover for black bean
soup . . . And Cecil Rhodes often
demanded It for breakfast when on
engineering expedition . . . Until
his death only Intimates knew that
James Barrle-had lost control of hi
right hand through neuritis 30 yeara
ago.
Trigger tinklng: He wsa one of
those slick-habited old boys who
strut Park avenue at sundown. Near
4 1st a misstep rhumbaed him Into a
comle fall to his knees Juat aa a
group swung around the comer.
"Something to amuse the children,"
he beamed. "They are generally
around at thla time."
(Copyright, 1937, McNeught
Syndicate, Inc.)
Comment
on the
Day !s News
By FRANK JENKINS.
A HEADLINE tells us: "Nortn
China Gripped bjr War."
It Is war between Chinese and
Japanese not between Japanese and
Russians, aa haa . seemed probable
from the headlines ot the past few
daya.
But It emphasizes the unsettled
state of affairs existing In much of
Asia, which la a powder keg that
Big Pines Lumber Co.
Phone 1
$ 17,426.42
. 206,157.45
. 46,929.10
. 171.888.42
. 2,022.02
. 1,400.00
420.53
4,300.00
40.500.00
1.695.00
26,375.00
1540.13
$520,354.07
State of Oregon, County of Jackson, ss.
We, John 0. Mann and J. H. Fletcher, Vice President and Secretary re
spectively of the Jackson County Building and Loan Association, being first
duly sworn, depose and say:
That we are Vice President and Secretary respectively of laid Association:
w have read the foregoing statement and know the contents thereof and
tamo is true and correct as we verily believe.
JOHN C. MANN, Vice President
J. H. FLETCHER, Secretary
Subscribed and iworn to before me this 12th dav of July, 1937.
H. F. ELDEN
(SEAL) Notary Public for Oregon
My Commission Expires: February 4. 1941.
at any moment mltht be tot off by
a spark.
THOSE who profes to know tell ua
that If war come In Europe
(when It comes might be more c
curate) It will be between the HAVE
NOT power, such a Italy, Oermtny
and Japan, and the HAVE powers,
such a Brltal; France and Rusl.
When you hare lee thn you want,
It 1 human ntur, to cot what
SOMEBODY ELSE ha. Th eoretou
impulses of Individual h been
restrained aomewhat by Uw, but
the only lw that ntlons reccgniee
1 the primal law of claw and isng.
What nations covet, they TAKE, If
they are 8TRONO ENOTJOH.
MAE WEST makea headline by
admitting that she mrrled
tank Wallace away back In 1U.
but say ahe never actually lived
with him. feanwhile, It appeara from
the tangled atory. he married gln
without the -formality of divorce.
The suspicion la natural that Mr.
Wallace la more Interested in Mae
money than In Ma herself.
AS for money, she haa quite i lit
tle of it or at least ha earned
quite a little.
Federal and state Income ta of
ficiate reveal that In 1S31 ahe made
1480,833, which la o little short of
a half million a to be hardly worth
considering.
That is a nice year's take.
"Tl TFsn?aSB,Jl
BMCeMtfatfjHHHsTHallBHHan
Ntturally horn cin b no better train thi mittrlilg
from which It h built ird the workmanship applied to
them. ...
A good home li the result of cartful planning, joocj
materieli, and skillful fabrication. We can help you with
all the parti of thil picture ... but more particularly
are we concerned with the material.
No lumber, or other home building material, ever leavet
this establishment which It below grade . , , which with
reasonable fabrication will not produce a good durable
home in which your money li safe.
We have the materials . . . plan suggestions
. . , and information concerning the FHA
easy payment plan.
COME IN and let ui help you with your new
home.
Dependable Building Advice
6th and Fir Streets
LIABILITIES
Shares
Incomplete Loans
Accounts Payable .
Advances from Federal Home Loan Bank
of Portland
Reserves :
Contingent Fund $20,
De)reciation on Real Estate Owned. . 9,
Surplus . 6
Deferred Profit
Reserve for Taxes
Dividends Payable ....
Total Liabilities
AN old saying ran something like
this: "Them a haa gits"
Maea earnings totaled In ltM
more than M80.000. Of this sum ths
federal government took 234,0OO.
and the sute somewhst more then
ISO COO.
It looks a If w might have) to
ehange the old asying to: "Them a
baa gits It taken wy from 'era.t-
R1SH GIRD FOR
ANNUAL BATTLE
BELFAST, Northern Ireland, July
U.ijKBelfast was pstrolled by
heavily armed po"" " thou-
and of Orsngemen gathered for the
Protestant celebration of the 347th
anniversary of the battle of the
Boyne.
Police reserve were mobilised to
prevent the Ptotestant-CathcJlc clah
e which in other years have claimed
scores of lives.
The ancient battle, in which King
William III, prince of orange, defeat
ed the Stuart King Jamea II. estab.
Usher Protestantism securely a the
official religion of Great Britain and
gave Ulstermen religious liberty la
predominantly Catholic Ireland.
Official feared that any outbreak
might Inaugurate a period of tension
during the state visit of King George
and Queen Elizabeth to Belfast July
28. .
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