Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1940 — Page 7

MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1940

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The Indianapolis Times:

SECOND SECTION

Hoosier Vagabond

BROOK, Ind, Aug. 12—Tt has been about four years since George Ade wrote his last piece for publication. When he finally quit, he had been at it almost half a century. Most of my generation knows his work only vaguely. Yet there was a time when he was as much the toasted New York playwright as George Kaufman is today. Ade had the world by the tail-—and time has never been able to take it away. He still has it. He has always been generous. He has an unusual capacity for enjoyment, and he can make other people enjoy themselves. He is famed in Indiana as a host. Nearly 30 years ago he started a golf course on his farm, gradually enlarged it, and finally gave it to the community. It is called the Hazeldon Country Club. Ade himself hasn't played golf for about four vears, although he was once of championship caliber. He walks out of the house hardly at all, although inside he seems agile and not at all in poor health. His eyesight is perfect. He spends nearly all his time reading and playing solitaire. He has occasional callers, but not too many. He loves picnics; has a picnic ground and swimming pool and dance hall right on his lawn, west of the house. He has about six farms scattered around this vicinity. t x» 2 Purdue’s Good Friend Ade has contributed heavily to Purdue nearly all his life. Probably close to $100,000, Purdue officials tell me. And he has certainly contributed to the gavety of the world with his pencil. (Yes, pencil, for he has never learned to use the tyepwriter.) Ade helped build the Sigma Chi Fraternity house And the great stadium there is named the Ross-Ade Stadium. That's Dave Ross, about whom I wrote a couple of days ago. He and Ade are old and fast friends. George Ade was born at Kentland, a few miles from here. He worked on newspapers in Lafayette after leaving school, and then for two years with a patent-medicine company

habit,” Ade laughs, “provided the patient faithfully

Our Town

APROPOS OF NOTHING at all, save the eternal wonder of things in general, I woke up this morning thinking about the whereabouts of Minnie Vehling and Anna Donnelly and Kate Donaghue. It's 36 years

now since I last heard of them. Which is to say that they were the talk of the town at the time of the St. Louis Exposition. That was the vear the old Sentinel sponsored a contest for the most popular clerk in Indianapolis. The prize was a week’s stay at the St. Louis Exposition with all expenses paid. The contest lasted a little over a month, with the result that more than a half-million votes were cast. A lot of people voted several times every day Miss Vehiing, a New York Store clerk with blond hair, blue eyes and a fetching set of dimples, came out on top. She gat more than 25 per cent (142,172) the ballots cast. Miss Donnelly, a clerk in Fowler's Hair Store, was second (87.661), and Miss Donaghue, who clerked in Shosker's grocery out on English Ave. was third (78.862). The rest of the votes were distributed among 120 other contestants, all of whom were women. To the best of my recollection, the terms of the contest didn’t say a word ahout sex, some reason, the male clerks of Indianapolis thrown into the discard. 3 2

Vash Notes for the Girls By

Af al} 0 ati

but, for were

»

which I don’t mean to imply that the contest was crooked. Quite the contrary; it was the squarest election ever run off in Indianapolis. When the votes were counted, County Recorder Lew Shank was present to represent Miss Vehling. Albert Zearing, of the Roard of Public Works, was there to watch over the interests of Miss Donnelly, and City Clerk William F. Fogarty saw to it that Miss Donaghue got what was coming to her. Most of the other contestants had watchers, too. James Brennan, for instance, repre-

Air ‘Heretics’

THE FOLLOWING is culled from the recent comments of an outstanding British airman. He was speaking of those Englishmen who aggressively protested against neglect of the Royal Air Force during the rearmament period, prior to the war. “They were unpopular,” he said, ‘even in the Air Ministry, a few years ago... . They were too openly claimant that the Air Force should come first They frightened even the big people in the Air Ministry And now, under the most fearful stress, in the time of Britain's greatest crisis, the Royal Air Force has, perforce, had thrust upon it the role for which these ‘heretics’ worked. . .. ” Such is the opinion of a prominent British airman. Such was the opinion of his fiying fellows, long before this war started. HERETICS—were they? As a matter of fact, they were prophets, tagged as heretics by those who had soft jobs and were determined to hold them irrespective of England's safety. u 2 n

Our Own Billy Mitchell

The word “heretic” recalls in this country the gallant Gen. Billy Mitchell. The everyday, hard-headed American believed and still believes Billy Mitchell

My Day

HYDE PARK, Sundav.—In writing the other day about increasing our knowledge of our Pan-American neighbors, I forgot to mention something which has come to my attention, and which I think most interesting. The Readers Digest is publishing a Spanish language edition for distribution throughout Latin America, and the subscription rate has been established at $1 a year postpaid, to make possible a very wide distribution. The Readers Digest Association is prepared to cover any deficit in the interest of ‘establishing a better under-

followed the directions on the bottle. The very first direction was ‘Give up the use of all forms of tobacco immediately!” It was from newspaper work in Chicago that Ade sprang into the literary limelight, around 1900. By | 1905 he was rich. He bought this farm and ile this | house. He has lived here ever since, in the summers. | He spends his winters in a rented house at ans | | |

|

Beach. He always used to go to Florida by auto, but the trip exhausts him so now that he goes by train. He says he gets vertigo on a long auto trip. Ade had his first auto back in the days when they | guided the things with a handlebar instead of a steer- | ing wheel. But he hasn't driven a car himself since | 1910. He has never married. His household here consists of Katie Krue, who is combination housekeeper and nurse, and a cook, a gardener and a chauffeur. Right now a great-nephew is visiting him—John Ade Plugge of Chevy Chase, Md. He comes out for a while every summer to work on a bibliography of his Uncle George's works. o

Mementoes Clutter Study

The Ade home is large and rambling. It looks like a gabled country clubhouse of a generation ago. It is two miles east of the little town of Brook, and 12 miles from Illinois. In one corner of the first floor is Ade's study, where 30 years ago he was writing some of America’s most popular books and plays. At this very desk he wrote “The College Widow” in three weeks. His study is lined with old photos, medals, diplomas, and letters from people like Riley. On one side is a large safe which contains most of his manuscripts. The house is full of little statues and images and trinkets that Ade brought back from his travels. He| has been around the world two or three times. In one | corner of his study stands a life-size cardboard cutout of Will Rogers, which Will sent him for a birthday present shortly before he was Killed. George Ade made real fame and fortune for himself. The lone fact that at the height of his career he came back here a few miles from his birthplace and built his life-long home, shows what kind of man he is. He's the complete Hoosier. He isn’t quaint— he’s the opposite of quaint—but he's a Hoosier from the soles of his feet on up.

» »

By Anton Scherrer

sented his sister, Miss Mayme Brennan, a clerk at Lawries, and Miss Florence Swhear (Block's) had aj representative in the person of Attorney Berthold. When the contest was over, it leaked out that most of the girls got a lot of mash notes. Miss Vehling,| for instance, had a fan mail big enough to keep three secretaries busy. One young man from Crawfords-| ville wrote that he was lying awake nights worrying about her future. He said he was crazy for her to] win for he wanted to spend his vacation with her at the Fair. He inclosed his picture to make sure she would know him when they met. { Miss Donaghue had a similar experience. When her photograph appeared in the paper, she got a letter from a Hancock County farmer. “Yours is the! sweetest face I have ever seen,” he wrote, and went on to sav that he was the owner of 160 unmortgaged | acres, the like of which could only be found around Greenfield. He inclosed his picture, too. u n »

Suggests New Type Contest

Miss Emma Smitha (Indiana Wall Paper Co.) and Miss Margaret Brady (Wasson's) had their hands full, too. One of Miss Smitha's admirers lived in Centerville and sent all his ballots tied with baby-blue rib-| bon. As for Miss Brady, she had an ardent corre-| spondent in Louisville. “I have seen your picture,”| wrote the Kentuckian, “and I am going to try and help you win. When it is all over, you will know who| I am.” As far as I know, his identity never was re-| vealed. | 1 don't know how vou feel about it, but it strikes me the time has come to have another contest. With this difference. however: If I had my way, it wouldn't be a contest for the most popular clerk this time. TIt| would be an election to determine the most patient clerk in Indianapolis. The idea came to me the other day in a department store, in the section where they sell patriotic jewelry A clerk—strangely enough, a girl with blond hair, blue eves and a fetching set of dimples—was showing a shopper a jeweled American flag, and what do you; think the shopper said? This will slay you. The] shopper said: “Doesn't this pin come in other colors?”

U. S. Backs Plan 2 to 1, Gallup Finds

By Dr. George Gallup

PRINCETON, N. J., Aug. 12.—If the voters of the 48 states went to the polls tomorrow to settle the question of compulsory military training in a na-tion-wide referendum, the military training principle would sweep to victory in every state in the Union.

That fact is revealed today in a state-by-state survey of the American Institute of Public Opinion, as Congress debates the pros and cons of the issue in Washington. Despite America’s long tradition of “no conscription in peace time,” the events of recent months have so altered U. S. opinion that compulsory military training would carry the country by a vote of 230i In a country with upwards of 60 million eligible voters, the survey indicates approximately 40 million in favor of conscription, 20 million opposed. States where conscription sentiment has reached the greatest peaks are Mississippi (87 percent), Texas (80 per cent), Geor=gia (79 per cent), Maine (77 per cent) and Florida (75 per cent). But even in such traditionally isolationist states as Kansas, Minnesota and Towa the vote favoring conscription averages well over 50 per cent. The closest division of opinion is in Indiana, where 55 per cent say they favor peace-time con-

| scription.

Just what plan for compulsory military training will finally emerge from Congressional conference rooms, no one can yet say. Anticipating that the question of peace-time conscription might come before the United States, the American Institute of Public Opinion began to measure public sentiment on the issue more than 20 months ago to measure public sentiment on the issue. 5 5 »

OTERS in every state in the Union have been asked: “Do you think ‘every able-bodied young man 20 years old should be made to serve in the Army, Navy or air forces for one year?” —this being the principle of conscription most familiar in European nations. It is important to note that this proposal involves the conscription of all able-bodied youths reaching the age of 20, without exception, In the survey just completed the national vote is:

Favor Conscription Oppose Conscription

Only one voter in twelve 8%) sald he was undecided or without an opinion on the question. In a supplementary question the Institute measured sentiment on one of the many proposals for selective-service training of men between the ages of 18 and 32. Voters were asked: “Do you favor increasing the size of our Army and Navy by drafting men between the ages of 18 and 32 to serve in the armed forces for

By Maj. Al williams BENDIX-UNION

|

was right—and that the admirals and generals were, | and are, wrong. 1 our people call for airpower—not two air services. They are demanding real airpower, and the Administration gives them warships and a no-plan program for building airplanes by the thousands. All during England's rearmament period the po-| liticians, spurred on by the Royal Navy and the Army, refused to see the flaring sighs of airpower in the skies. They permitted the British Navy and Army, particularly the former, to dominate the whole show, and spent major portions of defense funds for ortho- | dox warships that failed to meet the specifications of modern warfare. »

Same Old Story

At no time during that period was the Royal Air Force free to devote its entire technica! capacity to building England's airpower. No, it was forced to remain ever on the alert against political pressures and to protect its legal existence as a separate air force I know I have written these things before, many times. But it's the same dreadful story of bureaucratic lack of vision—and it must be hammered home. |! The selfsame dead ‘cloud of stolid bureaucracy hangs over our defense svstem and over American airpower that short-circuited British airpower during the pre-| paratory period. Right now the Army Air Corps is complaining that t shipments of warplanes to England are undermining | its expansion program,

2

P).-——Normal operations pected to resume today after settlement last night of the dispute be[tween the Bendix Products Corp. | and the C. I. O.-United Automobile Workers of America,

resentatives afternoon and reached a “mutually satisfactory”

DISPUTE ENDED

Agreement Halts Threat of

Delay in Defense Production.

SOUTH BEND. Ind, Aug. 12 (U were ex-

Company officials and union repconferred yesterday

settlement to a conroversy that was pinching produc-

tion in the company's aircraft division.

Terms of the agreement were not

I'disclosed pending a vote on them

onight by union members. It was understood, however, that

[the local union conceded the right of the company to name foremen

and supervisors when the international union failed to back it up on the issue.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

t

The dispute arose when the union

objected to company selection of

foremen, threatened seiiously to disrupt na-

and resultant friction

ional defense plans through a slow-

vork World's Fair which I think will be of interest. down in the production of carbure-

The National Youth Administration is

conducting tors

for commercial and military

vouth occupational trips, free to all of junior High airplanes engines.

school age and over. These trips offer, through talks

It was believed that changes were

and visits to selected fair exhibits, an opportunity to made in the company-union conany person interested in obtaining first hand infor- | tract to eliminate a possible recurmation of the requirements which various industries | rence of a slow-down in carburetor

and professions demand of potential employees. They cover such occupations as electricity, baking,

nursing and public health, printing, business machines | conferences were mechanics, general manager of the company;

operation, art and design, automobile

[ production.

the week-end P. Ferguson,

Participating in

farming, aviation and needle trades. They have been James F. Dewey, Federal Labor Con-

very successful through this new technique in giving

leiliator, and Richard Frankensteen

occupational information, and many organizations in land Richard Leon, regional directors

seme Draft Is Favored in All 48 States

ee

State-by-State Vote on Compulsory Training

Ii

all

% Voting Approve

[1.55% to 60% ‘Yes’

TEXAS)

HIN -61% to 70% ‘Yes' BE -71% and Over ‘Yes'

one vear?’ The replies to this specific proposal show an even greater majority favoring conscription.

Favor Draft for 18-32 Group .... Oppose Draf

1% 29%

Only one voter in twenty (5%) said he was undecided or without an opinion. 6 & &

OT ONLY WOULD the conscription principle carry every one of the 48 states at the present time, but it would win majorities with virtually all the important political and social groups which together make up

the American people, the survey shows, Labor union members, interviewed in the course of the Institute survey, averaged 71 per cent in favor of such a pelicy, despite the fact that labor leaders like John LL. Lewis and William Green have spoken in opposition.

Young people between the ages of 21 and 30—the age group most likely to be directly affected by conscription—averaged 62 per cent in favor of it. As analyzed separately, the vote of Republicans and Democrats, and men and women, are as follows: Against 37% 40 32%, 3%

Democrats Repurblicans Men Voters Women Voters ...

Baby Saved by

Oven Thrives

VAN, Tex, Aug. 12 (U. P).— { Vivia Marie Camper, who lived i her first four days in the oven of a wood-burning cook-stove, was two months old today, Kicking and apparently well satisfied with life. She weighed three and onehalf pounds. Dr. Charles Montgomery, who attended the mother and child at birth, three months pre-mature | said that Vivia's survival was | miraculous. Vivia is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Tom Camper. share- | croppers. Mrs, Camper, 33, is the mother of seven other children, the oldest 12. The mother’s cousin, Mrs. Vivia Swinney, who lives on a farm a half mile from the Camper's, took charge of the baby when she was born. She placed her on a pillow in the wood-stove oven, placing a pan of water below it for moisture and .leaving the door open for ventilation, She fed Vivia a mixture of water and cane syrup every three hours from a wmedicine dropper. The child stayed in the oven 45 hours. Then Mrs. Swinney took her home, placing her in a full-size bed and surrounded by bottles of hot water. Vivia's first dress was taken from a doll that Mrs. Swinney's daughter played with before she disd a few months ago The child now weighs a half pound more than at birth,

NYA WILL BENEFIT

800 STATE SCHOOLS

The National Youth Administration program in 800 secondary |schools of Indiana during the next (school year will be drafted at a con-

The Vote State by State

EAST CENTRAL

Ohio Indiana Michigan lineis

WEST CENTRAL

Wisconsin Minnesota nwa .. Missouri North Dakota South Dakota Nebraska Kansas

WEST

Colorade Wyoming

NEW ENGLAND Maine New Hampshire .,.. 4 Vermont .......uoo0 ¥ Massachusetts 1 Rhode Island 72 Connecticut . 69

MID-ATLANTIC New York New Jerse: Pennsylvania Marviand Delaware

For Against

Yi %

58% . 33 . 58 . 64

GR 7% 69 . 63 69 62

SOUTH Virginia North Carelina South Carelina ... Georgia Florida

27% 32 28 21 25 24 13 28 28 33 28 20 28

Mississinpi Kentucky Tennessee Arkansas 1 ouisiana Texas Oklahoma

Arizona California Oregon. ........ Washington

For Against

129 45 42 38

42 36 29 34 31 4“

43% 30 36 2% 43 30 37 29 32 28 33

T was not until the German blitzkrieg against Holland and Belgium last April that a majority of American voters came to approve a policy of peace-time conscription for the United States, Institute surveys reveal. Over the last 20 months the

lows

December, 1938 (After Munich) October, 1939 (After War Began) 39 June 2, 1940

oo 37%

trend of opinion has been as fol-'

For Against

63% 61

medi

(After Battle of Flanders) ..... June 23 (After French Surrender) July

50

36 33 34

In the last fortnight, the sure vey shows, opinion has levelled off somewhat, possibly as the result of eriticism of compulsory mili« tary training by some members of Congress. Nevertheless, Ameri can opinion is still approximately 2 to 1 in favor, Even in North Dakota, home state of the isolationist Senator Gerald P. Nye, the vote favoring conscription reaches 71 per cent; and in Montana, home of Senator Wheeler, the vote averages 64 per cent in favor, The results of the Institute's gurvev are in sharp contrast with much of the Congressional mail received in the last few weeks, Reports from Washington indis cate that a majority of the letters writers thus far have been against military training, and some Cons= gressmen have given great weight to such indications of sentiment, It is interesting to note, however, that the Institute's surveys at the time of the lifting of the arms embargo were also in sharp cone tradiction to the Congressional mail at that time, some of the mail running as high as 9 to 1 against selling arms to the Allies, while the polls consistently showed a majority in favor of sending arms,

NLRB REPORTS 'NO' VOTE EBB

Opposing Ballots Decline 4.8 Per Cent in Past |

Fiscal Year. |

Neu. Tah Reletims Board |!inkled, it was ational Labo tions Boar election figures disclose that the per. Cash register for 36 81 centage of an‘i-union votes iz de. total damage was $1710.20

By FRANK WIDNER

the peak of their form,

Last Hallowe'en the boys were at city boundaries, they may

In that 24-hour period of ghosts and goblins, 251 street lights toppled | from their perches and crashed to gecond with the Police Department, the ground. And each time the glass like punching The day's more,

the

Weddle Has Simple Formula gE For Vandals---Take the Guns

[their sons from shooting within the be reas (turned. If not, they are destroyed,

“The responsibility of preventing this vandalism,” said Sergt. Weddle, “lies first with the parents and

Besides the property loss, there is another factor which ig just, if not important, Sergt Weddle said. "That ig personal injury "Time and azain we hear of little

clining slightly as more factory| And so it is no wonder that Sergt. | hildren being seriously injured by (workers participate in collective bar- Charles Weddle, of the Police Juve- |

gaining polls | A survey of NRLB elections for the last three fiscal vears, ending | June 30. 1040, showed that the hundred dollars.

[board conducted 3087 elections, in | For the last

‘nile Aid Division, can be pleased if hands of a youngster he cuts the toll this year just a few

several years, it has

which 1,066.520 of the 1,187,223 eligi- (cost more than $10,000 each year to {ble workers cast 1.047010 valid votes. replace the havoe brought about by | The anti-union votes in the 1940 youthful snipers who take great de-

[fiscal year constituted 17.3 per cent light in taking pot shots at of the total, as compared with 22.1 lamps.

per cent in 1938 and 17.8 per cent) in 1938. | “This year,” said Sergt.

Up 3 Per Cent for 1940 ae Dave § enunve

[figure down considerably. The percentage of eligible workers port of damage for [casting their ballots went up in months of 1940, the toll (1940 to 91 per cent-an increase af 3 per cent over 1939 and 2 per cent wer 1038. “There were only slight changes in the proportion of the total valid] (vote cast for each of the major lclasses of participants” the NLRB report said. “Unions affiliated with either the A. F. Ih, or C. I, O. Ye[ceived a slightly larger percentage of the valid votes cast in 1940 than in 1938; unions unaffiliated with |these labor organizations received a slightly smaller percentage of the valid votes cast in the later year than in the earlier. | “The votes cast for unions afililated with either the A. F. LL. or the [C. I. O. constituted 87.8 per cent of all valid votes cast in elections in 1338; they constituted 68.68 per cent lof the total in 1939, and 69.3 per cent in 1940,

50 per cent.”

reduction, according to

Weddle

from bovs caught city limits. Police can

Population on

By Science Service

to pul In a Yethe first has cut $2363. Barring any unusual acs curacy Hallowe'en, there is a possi bility the damage may be reduced

street

The cost for 1930 was $11616. Weddle,

this

siX heen

And there is the reason for this |

Sergt.

It is the confiscation of air rifles shooting In take rifles from the youngsters and bring 3 the youths into the Juvenile Aid| Division for a severe lecture. Then, |g providing parents promise to keep

the these

Farms Gaining

WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.-—Farm

la B=B shot fired from a gun in the Hundreds (have been blinded for life by these guns, “It's a lot to pay for a few mo=

ments thrill.” a -—

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

1=-Quote the shortest verse in the Bible. Ts Virginia or Ohio called “Mother of Presidents’? 3--Where was the American Legion founded? Name the legendary inhabltiants of the Garden of Eden, Is a cuble foot of ice heavier or lighter than a cublie foot of wae ter? 6-Wag the nickname Grand Old Party (G3, O. P) ever applied to | the Democratic Party? On which peninsula is the Rock of Gibraltar? . Did New York or Philadelphia lose in population between the 1030 and 1940 censuses?

Answers

1="Jesus wept.” 2--Virginia, 3-<France, 4--Adam and Eve, S—=Lighter,

[2

§=

5

| ference at the Indianapolis Athletic

Club tomMOToOW. population in this country is still

increasing, estimates of the U, 8. Department of Agriculture indie cate, As of Jan. 1, 1940, the Amerjean farm population was placed at 32245000, which is an increase of 186,000 over 1039. The increase, however, has oc= eurred mainly in areas not well adapted to commercial farming. In the richer, commercial-farming regions there was enough migration away from the farm during the past 10 years to have brought ubout a reduction in farm popula

the various trips. The World's Fair Welfare Depart- Br a Ieeting: Mr. ment is offering reduced admission rates to educa- | Dewey said that “relations between : tional organizations and social agencies that wish labor and management have boun DE. Ohiaries Be Judd Rs Volts tast for unions Whatiliated I AR NE his Sepik Be us with Robert 8. Richey, state NYA |with either of the major labor bodies It seems to me this is valuable to the young| Mr. Frankensteen commented that) : : Wert te | : ; 3 aia 10, : {director; Quentin D. ert, state constituted 14.4 per cent of all valid people conducting the trips who must familiarize “the international union never has nya gilector of student work and vores east in 1038. 9.3 per cent of the themselves with the industries and exhibits which attempted to name the work super a advisory counetl Iv al Hy 1639 Bag 0 ak ih they tell about. Tt also gives an opportunity to other | visors.” Next year's program to aid stu: vy i young people to find out about various occupations| “The union was not trying gents in the state will be financed The followi table shows th and to choose more wisely their courses in school hame them in this case” he said. with an allotment of 8311171. AY Ver ji HE TT Boul Mie or in supplemental preparation. “The trouble was not backed by the | srudents between 18 and 24 in| 0 door bY year: My husband left Fridav night for Portsmouth, international union.” need of assistance to continue their | N. H. We had one last picnic with Secretary Knox,| Mr. Ferguson announced that the education will receive from $4 to Year Col. “Bill” Donovan, Gen. Watson and Capt Callag- | plant would open today and “rush $8 for work which does not replace 11038 han as guests, Last night we drove to Stockbridge, to get the assembly line on carbu- any of their school’s regular em- 1939 Mass, for an evening of beautiful music. {retors going.” ployees. ‘1940

standing between the North and South American ‘countries. I wish we ‘could do many more things of this kind, for we have this field of cultural relations almost entirely open to other nationalities. The first concert given in Brazil by the Stokowskiled American youth orchestra was received with great enthusiasm. I think this tour of young American musicians also is a step in the right direction. The youngsters are trying to learn some Spanish on the way, I believe, but fortunately music is a universal language. Since we are discussing young people, I might mention that they are doing something at the New

6-<Yes (in 1879), T=Iberian, 8--Philadelphia,

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the metropolitan area are sending groups to take for the union. | Minor Groups Tabulated

For Unions

Against Unions 282470 61.11% 138,032 30.183 430,284 05.04

Elections 1,152