Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 299, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1934 — Page 12

PAGE 12

The Indianapolis Times .% rmri' how Awn KKWiPApr.Ri hot W HOWARD TALPOTT POWELL. Editor EAKL D. BAKER Bugines* Minnjw I’hona— RH*y 3MI

Member* of United Pre*. Sf'ripp* • Howgrd Ncetpaper Allrtnre. .V*w;pip r ► titr-A**v-iation. New.-paper Information and Audit Bureau of i ip uiarion". Owni-d and publish-- I ds'.lr frifept Sunday) by The Indiattapolla 'lime* Publiahing Company. 214-220 Weat Maryland direct. Indlantpoltt. Ind. Tri'-e in Marion couufr. 3 cents a copy: elaewher*. X r , -a—delivered by carrie-. rents a week Mall etih>-r|p-tlon rates In Intl ana, $3 a year; otit*ld- of Indiana, <53 centa a month.

C*' e l.ijht an-1 the People Hi.'i Fin 4 Their Oun Wap

WEDNESDAY. APRIL 35 1934 TUGWELI AND TUG WELL 'i l THEN Rex Tugwell went to Washington a year ago he was already a myth. He was the "young red leader" of the brain trust who was going to blow up things generally. The old hands predicted that he would get the President into all sorts of trouble, and would not last long. Now he is being promoted bv the President to be undersecretary of agriculture. He is more than that title. He is one of the President’s closest economic advisers. How does it happen that the President—noted even among his enemies for being a very practical politician—stakes so much on a wild young red? The answer is, he doesn't. The Tugwell of the myth does not exist. Tugwell is not young, but middle-aged. Tugwell is not a red, but a middle-of-the-road liberal. Tugwell is not the leader of the brain trust or any other group, but works pretty much alone, keeping his own counsel until called in for advice. Tugwell is not a theorist, but a practical person. Tugwell is not the author of the so-called Tugwell food and drug bill and the securities act; nor is he responsible, as supposed, for NRA’s overexpansion, which he opposed; nor does he favor the rigid cotton control which farmers voted upon themselves. But he knows that the opposition is bound to have a scapegoat. Since he has more sense of humor than political ambition, he is only amused when critics, afraid to attack the popular President directly, blaze away at him instead. We are inclined to believe that Tugwell’s intellectual brilliance is as much exaggerated publicly as his radicalism. But it would be hard to overrate the common sense he has thus far displayed. All in all, he is an exceedingly effective public servant. He ranks with Secretary Hull and Secretary Wallace as the ablest of the Roosevelt advisers. Together they make a strong and courageous team. PLAY BALL! Indians opened the home season yesterday afternoon at Perry stadium. The Indians can be assured of one thing—all Indianapolis stands behind them, plugging for them to finish well up in the race. Baseball is a well-managed and clean-rut sport and Indianapolis is fortunate in having a real sportsman as an owner and a group of equally fine sportsmen as the members of the team. Indianapolis wishes the very best to Norman Perry and his Tribesmen. IT COULD bp: worse r T''HOSE Democrats in congress who have their minds on November seem to fear that approval of the Couzens amendment to the revenue bill will enable the Republicans to go into the campaign shouting: "The Democrats raised taxes 10 per cent.” What of it? The increase applies only to income taxes. A vast majority of the voters pay no income taxes. The taxpayer who earns $3,000 married, no dependents will not begrudge adding $2 more to his S2O income tax payment. If he earns $5,000 he can well afford to add $lO to his present payment of SIOO. If he earns SIO,OOO he will not miss the S4B that is added to his S4BO payment. If he earns SIOO,OOO, what agony will he suffer because his tax is $33,110 instead of $30,100? In the history of the republic, there probably never has been a party in power in so fortunate a political position as are the Democrats in respect to the coming election. The Roosevelt administration took control at the bottom of the depression, and it enjoys the credit for flic large strides toward recovery. The recovery measures have cost plenty, and the end it not in sight. Even though candidates for office are trying to soft-pedal it, the people know that the Roosevelt program must be paid for by taxes. The fortunate will not object to paying higher income taxes. They are happy to be enjoying taxable incomes. THE INDIAN’S RIGHTS N'EGLECT of the American Indian’s right to life, liberty and security has become so traditional that we likely are to overlook a studied attempt to block passage in this congress of the - Wheeler-Howard Indian rights bill. Interior Secretary lekes recently called attention to a far-flung campaign of false propaganda by land, cattle, timber, oil and other beneficiaries of the old order to defeat this new charter of Indian rights. "These renegades.” said Mr. Ickes. "are spreading reports that the measure will send the Indians ’back to the blanket’ and that it is a smoke screen behind which the federal government Intends to ditch its treaty obligations with its Indian wards.” The Wheeler-Howard bill for self-govern-ment, land restoration and educational and judicial reforms has had an airing out in the Indian country such as no other bill ever has been given. In spite of \he propaganda against It Commissioner Collier reports that 95 ■ per cent of the Indians who have voiced their 1 views are for it. Delay means more suffering ; and exploitation and loss of property for the Indians. As Mr. Ickes says: "In the arfca now occupied by reservation Indians, a territory’ in extent larger than New England, anarchy actually exists today. Those , iprj.ens axe without local government, local

courts and law enforcement agencies. Hitherto the government has systematically and successfully endeavored to smash local tribal Indian gm-rrnment, and until now has offered no substitute for the system it broke down, except paternalistic rules drawn in Washington. It is the purpose of the Wheeler-How ard bill to end this rule of bureaucracy and return civic and moral responsibility to the Indian citizens of the nation.” BLOOD MONEY ACHINATIONB of the international armament-makers are revealed again today in two interesting books, which come from the presses just as the senate prepares to investigate the munitions trust. H C. Englebrecht and F. C. Hanighen in their Merchants of Death” iDodd, Mead) and Gilbert Seldes in ‘‘lron, Blood and Profits” < Harpers) give the background of the munitions makers. They also show’ how deeply the senate investigating committee must go to get the facts about the operations of these great combines. Seldes charges, as the league commission and other experts also have charged, that the munitions makers have engaged in making war; that they prolonged the war; that the warship makers have stimulated navy building races, and that the armament makers have been among the largest financial supporters of patriotic, defense, naval, air and army leagues. It is time that Americans should know what influence the munitions makers are exerting in Washington. The whole sordid picture of profits from "Iron and Blood” should be laid before them. It is time, too. for Washington to find out whether this nation’s only protection from the racket is to make a government monopoly of the manufacture of armaments and munitions. The senate committee, headed by Senator Nye, has no more important function than to decide this latter question.

OUTLAW AND HERO II7HAT is there about human beings, any- ’ * way, that gives them a sneaking admiration for all outlaws? This man John Dillinger is a desperado, a killer, a robber, and a general, all-around rat. Yet somehow he has caught the imagination of a good part of his fellow-countrymen. The people of his home town have circulated a petition calling on the governor of Indiana to give him amnesty; unquestionably, there are a lot more people who hope to see him continue to foil the law and escape punishment. Why should this be? Why should the people of the United States, in the eventful year of 1934, set to work to build up a romantic Robin Hood legend about a lowbrowed criminal whose sole distinction seems to be that he is the most vicious thug unhanged? Partly, perhaps, it comes as a reaction from our years of reading about Chicagoese gangsters. These lads, the racketeers and hijackers and muscle men, always were too business-like and cautious to take on a romantic glamour. They did not so much fight with the police as connive with them. They used hired killers to gain their ends. When they killed their men, they killed by treachery, shooting from behind; the great American institution of "the ride” is the very acme of cowardly, safety-first cunning. Dillinger is more like a throwback to the bad men of the old west. He has traded shots with his victims in the old-time style, and risked his neck aplenty in his forays. Asa result, he has been built up into an impossible character; a sort of combination of Jesse James, Billy the Kid and Robin Hood, for whom law-abiding citizens are willing to sign petitions asking clemency. All this, perhaps, is human and natural. But it is nevertheless a queer and foolish mistake. For when all has been said and done, Dillinger is a menace to public safety, a homicidal freak who deserves neither admiration nor sympathy. The silly sentimentality that tries to make a hero out of him is as brainless a display as we Americans have made in many a month.

NO SECRETS MEN learn about women from the advertising copywriters today. Any gentleman with a gentle yearning to penetrate the surface view can do so vicariously and accurately. All he has to do is purchase a newspaper or a woman's magazine and peruse the advertisements. In this pictorial age the pictures tell all! No need now for any youth to wait until his wedding night to learn about the "unmentionables.” as our grandmothers called certain sacred garments. The intimacy of chemises and brassieres no longer exists. Not if a man knows his advertisements! Why stockings run . . . illustrated with a nice leg view, of course. Why women don't need petticoats now’ that gowns are Why silken nothings respond to this and that soap medium . . . There are just a few of the chapter heads. For there is no longer any surprise to romance. The allure that came from the unknown has disappeared. And yet—there are just as many rases and sweetpeas woven into gay nosegays to delight the hearts of hopeful maidens: there are just as many marriage licenses issued. Romance has not declined. It is just possible that the revelations that have handed out information to men have been of immense benefit to women. What if a man does guess that a woman's curved intentions are due to the elasticity of her girdle? After all, her dimensions are more pleasing to the eye. For chances are that if she, too. didn't have advertisements coming to help her with the same intentions as those of the fairy-god-mother with the pumpkin-coach w-and who hunted up Cinderella, she might yield to her too-plump shape, her too-thin arms, or whatever the trouble is—if there was one—and not know- that she can improve herself structurally. She wouldn't know about certain secrets of allure, either. Women owe a lot to advertising. Even if it did lift their petticoats and show the masculine contingent what they wear underneath! General W. W. Atterbury, president of the Pennsylvania railroad, say the national recovery program will fall of its own weight. It will, if it makes more such loans as it did to Mr. Atterhyry's road.

Liberal Viewpoint “■By DR. HARRY ELMER BARNES =

' I "'HERE is much being expressed among the more progressive supporters of the new deal concerning what they regard as a definite swing of the President to the right within the last couple of month**. Representative of this alarm is an editorial in the New Republic conceived in a friendly spirit but evading no facts. What is the evidence which the New Republic brings forward in support of its contention that the President is moving to the right? Failing at the God-given moment to end finance capitalism by taking over the banking system, the President has seemingly dropped all interest in any really fundamental banking legislation. Since finance capitalism was the dominating evil in the old system, banking legislation is the acid test of the insight and adequacy of the new deal. The President has not supported any forthright and intelligent revision of our taxation system along the line of taxation in proportion to capacity to pay. This, in spite of enormous increases in public expenditures. Mr. Roosevelt appears to have been frightened by banking, railroad and utility interests into abandoning without a fight the St. Lawrence waterway project which at one time he had supported with vigor and enthusiasm. The propaganda of reactionaries has apparently induced him to get out from under his intelligent and courageous proposal to uproot corruption and subsidies in connection with the air mail service. u tr tt TN spite of the most convincing evidence brought forth in public hearings at Washington with respect to the gouging of consumers by price fixing, the President has taken no effective steps to impose a type cf control over organized American industry and trade which might protect the consumers about whom he said so much in the early days of his administration. The President has undermined much of the progress he has made with respect to securing the indispensable light of labor to carry on collective bargaining through his short-sighted compromise with the automobile industry. This gave the automobile manufacturers the right to regard company unions as possessing the same status as genuine labor unions. This may mean the destruction of organized labor in the automobile industry and the precedent is bound to spread elsewhere. After demanding a law with teeth in it to curb organized gambling in Wall Street, the President has not combated the emasculation of the securities act or of the bill to control the Stock Exchange. In the end predatory finance will apparently escape almost unchastened. The pure food and drugs bill has been so weakened as to become largely ineffective and it has dropped out of sight altogether for the time being. Equally depressing is the record w’ith respect to those items in the new deal designed to increase mass purchasing pow’er and directly to stimulate recovery. The CWA is now’ in a state of dissolution; the public works projects are in no w ? ay adequate to the need; and the much touted housing problem has been allowed to fall by the wayside. From a strictly historical and factual point of view’ this record speaks for itself, but the contention that it means a deliberate and conscious shift to the right on Mr. Roosevelt's part is open to question. It may only be a strategic ruse which has much in it to comment itself at the present time. n it u , r | "TIE most fundamental criticism Which may A be launched against President Roosevelt is that he did not capture the main fortification of entrenched privilege and speculative piracy w’hen the enemy w’as dispersed and demoralized some fourteen months ago. Had he taken over the banking system in March. 1933, he could have ended finance capitalism and the new deal w’ould have had easy going for a decade or so. But there is nothing to be gained by crying over spilled milk. This is w’ater over the dam and we have to deal with the situation as it exists today. The pirates, usurers of high estate. Bourbon industrialists, partisan rascals and other public enemies are feeling their oats once again. They are organized, articulate, arrogant and aggressive. They are closing in on the President and hope to worst him. The day when he might have scattered them by a frontal attack is past. From now on it is trench warfare —digging in and saving the gains thusj far made. Behind these trenches a new' strategy may be evolved by means of which the President can outmaneuver the menacing hosts of predatory finance. Adroitness rather than bull force is now in order. Even the more radical members of congress can not be trusted to back the President in full today. Men like Senator Elmer Thomas are determined to have their own program slammed through congress at any cost even if it disrupts the forces of liberalism and plays into the hands of the reactionaries. Therefore, until w’e have unmistakable evidence to the contrary, let us assume that the President knows what he is doing and wish him well in any strategic move to outwit the massed conspirators against the w’ell-being of the United States.

Capital Capers * GEORGE ABELL

THE new dean of the diplomatic corps, bulky, well-meaning Sir Donald Lindsay, ambassador of Great Britain, is busily cultivating national and international harmony. Since the departure from Washingtion last week of the late dean of diplomats, Ambassador Ahmet Muhtar of Turkey, Sir Ronald has been very much on the go. He is taking his new job seriously. Diplomats and officials buzz about his activity. Some of Sir Ronald's harmonious moves: 1. Promoted closer Anglo-Canadian relations with a big luncheon in honor of plump, massivejawed Canadian Minister Herridge. 2. Donned old grey flannels and played three sets of tennis with American friends, who just love to beat his excellency. 3. Won the culinary esteem of Polish Minister Stanislaw Patek by serving English pheasant ala Polonaise at a formal embassy dinner. 4. Catered to the Back Bay aristocracy of Massachusetts, by wining and dining the John Coolidges of Boston. 5. Pleased .Republicans by putting former Secretary of State Stimson on the society page—as a British dinner guest. 6. Delighted French Ambassador Ahdre de Laboulaye with a dissertation in classical French. 7. Established cordial relations with Minister Close of the Union of South Africa over a glass of port—raised to toast their mutual sovereign, His Majesty King George V. 8. Thrilled Washington debutantes with the announcement that a small dance will be given soon at the British Embassy. 9. Placidly ignored the shouts of Representative Fred Britten of Illinois, who called for the dismissal of the British consul-general in New York. • 10. Gazed from a distance upon the cherry blossoms, but readily conceded the priority of Japanese Ambassador Saito to have his picture snapped under the cherry trees. 11. Wore tweeds to please the Scottish tailors and complimented the Irish minister on his complexion. 12. Tactfully feted three Cabinet members within three days, and carefully refrained from any mention of Dr. Wirt —even after coffee. Diplomats feel that if his Brittanic majesty's ambassador keeps up the good work, he won’t even have time to take his promised holiday to England this summer.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(Times renders are invited to express their views in these columns. Make pour letters short, so all can have a chnnee. Limit them to 250 words or less.) a tt a BANK CLOSINGS AND PROSECUTION By a Meyer-Kiser Depositor Please print these questions for the attention of Herbert E. Wilson, Marion county prosecutor and candidate for superior court judge. In your campaign speeches I have heard you express yourself in favor of special legislation on criminal law and am asking you to answer this in one of your speeches or preferable through this paper.. Do you think there is need of special legislation on some law which would bring prosecution based on closing of the following banks: Meyer-Kiser, State Savings and Trust. City Trust, Washington Bank and Trust and Wild bank. I, from a depositor’s standpoint am more interested in that than what you or any other county official has done in the last four years to perpetuate yourself in the “pie.' 1 tt tt tt DEPRESSION BRANDED PRODUCT OF GREED By an American Citizen Why is there a depression? Simply because the big shots in industry are so selfish and pig-headed. I am a worker at Real Silk, but ineligible to belong to the Hosiery Workers Union because I do not produce the hose, but believe me, I am in sympathy with the union. I pity the poor fish 'jelly) who is not. Word has gone the rounds that if the strikers lose their fight that Real Silk will cut the wages to the bone. How would the Goodman boys like to give up their mansion and live in the same circumstances as we workers? I don’t believe they would think much of the idea. They have closed the National Hosiery mills for striking. It was voted into the union by a majority of the workers, but was never recognized. It was withdrawn from the NRA. It has been rumored that the machinery of the National is to be sold to the Real Silk and moved to its plant, as though it did not already belong to it. It will be moved there to prevent recognition of the union. Mr. Goodman is very brave as long as he has all the police force around him. If someone looks crosseyed at him or his EMBA, he calls police headquarters and in a jiffy a whole regiment is there to protect him. He has hired a bunch of characters to protect these poor dumbbells who are knitting through the strike. One of the guards boasted that he could lick any five men. Six boys of 18 and 20 messed him up considerably and tore up his car; his statistics were very poor. I wonder where theses guards were during the war? Surely not in the service. They are being paid $6 a day and all hospital bills. The good old EMBA! Ah, there is an organization! The employes will elect an officer for the executive board and he will be immediately given a good job. Not long ago a man was elected from the office because he had access to the books, and now he is assistant paymaster. Still, it's on the up and up. A few months ago the EMBA board posted a notice that it had been in conference with the management and that it could not grant an increase asked for, since the mill wa* losing money. A couple of days later the bulletin was changed, stating that the sill was making raon-

gjfcj Jh ,V i ■ . **•..,. •- v -- * \ r '* ** *♦*'' “ "•. >1 r.. 1 -;. y }. ■’^ t .1 „. J". **• \ | £• I j* ~ *\..- '- •:• ~^6^ >v Joy i,• -j .-.. ? ... . v *\’ .... V '*v<-^v r •">

The Message Center

TRANSFORMATION

Relief Job Dispensing Branded Unfair

By Harold Stiles. I have been a reader of your paper for some time and I feel that I have the right to express my opinion of the way the socalled relief work is being dished out.. May I say that I think Governor McNutt has something to do with it as w’ell as his white-col-lared assistants. I am a young married man, and I have been out of work for some time and I can not get a job. I was refused help from the county. Why? Well, I don’t know. I guess my wife and I are supposed to starve because we are young and don’t have a family. I have not got a job in the civil works administration program because I have not a family of four or more. Well, if I start to raise a family, how am I to keep them from starving until I reach the total of four? Will some whitecollared smart aleck please solve that problem for me? I will tell you why I can’t get a job. If The Times will be so kind to allow me the space for my little say by a little guy. I say a little guy. lam poor and honest. If you are not a politician, you are a small guy. In other words, you are not a big shot. A man in the same neighborhood that I live in got a job with

ey then and would pass the good tidings on to the members of the EMBA and it always would look out for our interests. We got a 10 per cent increase. The hitch is that the President said all w’ages must be increased, and that the union had begun to get a fairly strong hold in the mill. The strikers are all fine people, citizens of the United States and have hearts as big as their w’hole being. They have determination—can you condemn them for that? tt tt tt DENIES STATEMENT OF CHRIST’S FAILURE By Edward E. Wittman I wish to thank you for publishing my letter last Tuesday. I think you used very good judgment. I read the Message Center every night. I noticed an article by J. A. Schmidt. I would like to have one in response if you think it fit. Mr. Schmidt might be right about the depression lasting until 1940, but he is wrong when he states that Christ failed 2,000 years ago. The fact is that the people have failed Him and therefore are at the height of ignorance. "We will look back with astonishment at our ignorance,” says Mr. Schmidt. He is right, but I don’t understand why, he doesn't look at his ignorance now, seeing he knows of- it. He might start by reading the Bible and especially the prophecies. If he did this he would find every one of them up-to-date, proving that Jesus Christ has not failed. No one knows very much about the Son of God unless he has the qualification for Eternal Life; also he wont have any room to dispute the word of one who has it, for he can know nothing about it. I dare that domestic animal, noted for it* long ears, to take God at his word and see if there is such a thing as being "born again.” "If there isn’t, he has not logt a thing or won’t lose anything, but

1 wholly disapprove of what you say and will 1 _ defend to the death your right to say it — Voltaire. J

the CWA. Will someone please explain why this man is entitled to a job any more than I am, W’hen he does not need it. Here are some reasons why he doesn’t need it. He is not married, there are only three grown persons in this home, and they have $36 a month income, which is from the government. Now they have $72 a month. Pray tell me why lam not entitled to a job or relief from the county. My father makes from $8 to $lO a week and he has to report to trustee what he spends his large sum of $lO for. so he can get a quart of milk from the county. Still they think they are giving a man 56 years old, who has paid taxes all his life, something to brag about. All this should show the taxpayers of this state what kind of people they are paying to be socalled investigators. lam sure that I can take half of the wages they get and keep my wife and myself. I can do the job better, and if you don’t think so, give me a chance and I will prove it. Ask me to O K. you for a basket when you get $72 a month, and see how many you get. I can’t get the job; I am too honest. If McNutt would stay home and attend to business instead of riming around this state, he would be much better off.

if there is, he will have found one of the most valuable things any one can have and part of it is good sense.” If Christ had failed His sayings would have failed, but Mr. Schmidt uses one in all earnestness. Yet he says that Christ failed nearly 2,000 years ago. Very shallow thinking. I think this man needs the attention of a doctor, preferably Dr. A. P. Gouthey when he returns to Cadle Tabernacle on May 6, after a brief rest. a tt ts FAVORS YEAR-AROUND BOUNTY ON SKUNKS By CharlM E. Hvman. A few words about fish, fourfeeted wild game and quail. Stocking streams with fish is a move in the right direction, but to put small fish in clear water that is almost barren of fish food will get the same result as placing sheep and cows on exhausted pastures. Occasionally I see articles about planting water plants for fish to feed on. This is right so far as it goes, and is something like satisfying the demand for greens by humanity, but a long gap is left in the supply of fish food. The way our streams are now the fish need feed from the time they are hatched until they start cut of the water for the frying pan. Rabbits are able to care for themselves in the meadow as far as food is concerned, except when the ground is covered with snow or sleet. So far as pheasants are concerned in this vicinity they are already extinct. QuaiLs are going the same road, which I will explain. The time they are damaged most is when they and the ground nesting song birds are nesting. Skunks and foxes destroy many times as many flocks as grow to maturity. House cat* destroy some, but skunks and foxes are at it all through the breeding season. Skunks and foxes don't stop at destroying all ■ the

.APRIL 25,1934

nests of ground nesting birds, but they raid the hen yards and de-. stroy nests. While they are on the raid they hunt out every guinea and chicken. The state of Indiana would do more for the protection of our game and song birds if they would pay a reward for skunk scalps the whole year, regardless of fur-buying time. Skunks and foxes have no closed season to prevent them from de-*** stroying all bird life. There are many pairs of quail and other ground nesting birds that never produce a flock of their kind. n n tt COMPANY UNION CALLED SCREEN FOR SCHEMES Bv a Reader. Hooray for The Times! It not only has printed the truth about the strike at the Real Silk, but the splendid cartoons literally speak for themselves. I have worked at Real Silk for years and I say (he E. M. B. A. is a screen, nothing else, for nefarious company schemes. I have never yet seen a decision given in favor of an employe when the management wished otherwise. And favoritism! The place reeks of it. We were all instructed to vote for the company union last fall if we wanted to keep our jobs This was the absolutely fair and abovp-board, government supervised election that was held at that time. Real Silk does not know the meaning of fair play. What started all this talk about the knitters making $35 a week? Some of them do, once in a while, but why shouldn't they; they earn it. Besides paying less than union wages, Real Silk penalizes these men outrageous amounts every week. I certainly hope they get what they are after. As for "A. D.” if he has gotten an overdose of truth, let him turn to the other papers and give that, gigiantic intellect a rest. a a tt DRUNKEN DRIVER WORSE > THAN DILLINGKR By J H H. I have read a lot of what you print about Dillinger, and I don't think he is as bad as a drunken driver and drunks who come into your home to start fights and when arrested, the prosecuting attorney wants the charges dropped. If he doesn’t get that, the judge dj .sses the case. I think Johnny is a far better man than a drunken driver who drives on the left side of the street and into yards.

DISILLUSION BY ELLEN PETTY I lit a candle And held it high, To light the path When my love came by. I put my heart On a silver tray. For my love to take When he came my way. The moon shone full, The White stars came. My love rode by On a golden flame. About his neck He wore a string Os blood-red hearts, A-guttering. My love rode by— I do not know. If he saw my heart Or my candle-glow.