Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 254, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1935 — Page 6
PAGE 6
The Indianapolis Times t\ .fRIPP-lIOWARD NEWSPAPER! ROT W. HOWARD rrr*t<Jrnt TAtCOTT POWELL Editor EARL D. BAKER rfnin**i Manager l’hon Rltrjr 5-iftl
Member nf t'nl" , *l Pr'** S'Tipfm - H-iwaril Newspaper Alliance. N-wpp-r Knt<*rA<nritT on. New(*ap*-r Information S>-raice an! Audit Bureau r.f Cirenlationn. Owned and publDh'-d daily le*cejK Sundayi by The |ndianapnli* Tinea i*ubhhing < *.. 111-t’Cti IV. Mary lar.d-sr, apolia. Ind I*rir< jn Marion County. 3 rent* a copy; deliverer! hv carrier. 1” rent* a week. Mail aub*> rtption rate* in Indiana. $. a year; of Indiana. 65 cent* a month.
A l I Oir Light nnd tk t'rnpU Will f<l TAnr Own o
MONDAY. MARCH . 1935 HALF-WAY JUDGMENT of the President's performance at Half-way House depends upon the yardstick used. If recovery is the test, his achievement is considerable. If the criterion is basic reform, he has accomplished less. Judged by both standards, the results are far short of his inaugural promises two years ago today, but there remains more to his credit than that of any other President in this generation. Within these two years the business activity Index has risen from 60 to 87 per cent of an estimated normal. The farmers’ purchasing power has been materially increased. Wages of low-paid uidustrial workers—though not of the middle and upper groups—are higher. Hour and working conditions have improved. Child labor has iyen greatly reduced. Relief victims are better cared for. Industrial profits an up. Federal credits have saved millions of farm and homes from foreclosure temporarily. The dollar has been stabilized temporarily at a more equitable level. Electric power is becoming cheaper. Progress has been made in regulation of security issues, and of stock and commodity exchanges; and banks are stronger. But neither in banking nor most other fields are the reforms yet sufficient to protect the nation from future business cycles and collapse. Among the basic causes of this depression. which still exist, are: Increasingly uneven wealth distribution which strangles the consumers' market, inadequate collective bargaining facilities resulting in industrial warfare which destroys profits and wages and markets, an unbearable debt load on farmers, small homeowners and industrial capital, an inefficient and expensive system of distribution which grinds the consumer; while in our foreign relations there are continued tariff conflicts, unsettled debts, lack of monetary stabilization, an armament race, and threats of another World War. Certainly all of these barriers to lasting prosperity and peace, and the sight of more than ten millions of American jobless, should sober any easy optimist who thtiks the job is finished. But those who understood the magnitude of the task inherited by President Roosevelt on March 4. 1933. did rot expect victory m two short years or even four. It was .not a mere tinkering job that had to be done. Our whole economic machine had broken down It has to be rebuilt as anew model — and kept running at the sAmt time. We can be thankful for the progress made so far. if we can hope for even more in the next two years. The real test of President Roosevelt, as of every leader, is his staying power. BAD BUSINESS 'TT'HE Navy, which is now spending $238,000.000 of public works funds on a building program which will eventually cost an additional $55,500,000. does not know whether it is getting its money's worth. Capt. Dubose of the Navy Construction Corps admitted to the Senate Munitions Committer that the Navy Department does not know whether bids it receives for naval construction are fair or excessive. He admitted that the department does not know the scale of wages the private shipbuilders pay. nor what goes into the item of •'cost," as figured in bids, nor what is included in the item. "overhead.*' This latter charge has been shown during the hearings to amount m some cases to more than SO per cent of labor and material costs ui bids for w arships The committee also has disclosed evidence tending to prove that private shipbuilders have forced the Navy to eliminate from contracts the rejection clause.” which formerly permitted the Navy to refuse a completed warship found faulty m workmanship or material during tests. These disclosures have not increased the prestige of our "first line of defense.*’ THE “THIRD HOUSE” EF you could get the seventh son of a seventh A son off in a comer and ask him. man to man. what the next great political reform in the United States was going to be. he would probably tell you that it would involve adoption of the one-chamber plan by state legislatures. This idea, which Senator George W. Norns put over single-handed in Nebraska, seems to be taking hold everywhere, for the excellent reason that it is a completely logical and sensible proposition. The weaknesses of democratic government lire nowhere more apparent than in the average state capitol. State government has grown expensive, inefficient and unwieldy. To a large extent this is because we cling to a ,'?vice invented by the British back in the days when the power of the throne was a thing to be feared. In theory, the British House of Commons and Hou.'e of Lords represent very differrn. groups. The former gets its authority Iron the people, the latter from the crown. Working side by side, they are supposed to act as checks on each other so that neither class can legislate to the detriment of the other. Because of that theory, the American state legislature has two houses. All reason for the division has vanished, what we have now i* beat described by Senator Norns. who calls the two-chamber legislature "as useless as a wagon with five wheels.** "You can not have a two-house legislature. 1 says the Senator, "without m reality having three, for the conference committees that must be set up to iron out differences between House and Senate constitute a third bodv. "Moreover, I‘. transacts its business in an un-American and undemocratic manner. Its
meetings are held in secret; there Is no such thing as a roll call, and there is no record of its proceedings. "A bill once referred to a conference committee can not become law unless It is agreed to by a majority of the conferees. Thus it :* within the power of the conference committee, in secret and without a record vote, absolutely to prevent, legislation and to kill or modify at its pleasure any proposed legislation within Its jurisdiction.” The lever which this gives to special interr vs to block legislation designed for protection of all citizens is too obvious to need comment; so. too, is the opening which it gives to all kinds of political chicanery and thimblerigging. Once the public awakens to the merits of the single-chamber plan, it is a safe bet that state after state will follow the lead of Nebraska. THE NOT YET UNITED STATES IN* Washington is meeting the Second Inter- ■*- state Assembly called by the new Council ( of State Governments and the American Leg- | islators' Association. Too much can net bo said for this move- | ment. It is a Delated attempt to incorporate the 43 states into a working partnership for meeting problems of common concern. Its efforts must succeed if the states are not to forfeit to the Federal government more of their dwindling sovereign powers. "The laws of the states conflict, their practices diverge, their policies are antagonistic,” says the council. And besides fighting one another the states and the Federal government continually tread on each other s powers : ana privileges. The 49 governments of this country should co-operate in taxation. Many states- invite bootlegging by excessive taxes on wine and beer. Others encroach on Federal tax sources and in turn have their sources tapped by the Federal government. The tax picture is a blind chaos of catch-as-catch-can revenue hunting. They should establish a more uniform system of relief, public works, social security, and labor laws. This is imperative now that the Federal government is leaving unemployment insurance standards largely to the states. They should join in a united campaign against the big interstate crime industry, through more uniform systems of identificat’on, reciprocal laws, preventive measures. They should co-operate in planning control of natural resources, in exchanging statistics, in establishing better public personnel, in educational and health programs, in eliminating duplicate governmental functions, in many other movements for more efficient public service. The states should set up in Washington a permanent secretariat or council through which they may keep their governors and legislators informed on Federal plans, clear model laws for each other, generally work on a more united front. "It is not enough,” says former Gov. Winant of New Hampshire, the Council's president, "for modern Jeffersonians to clutch the air and declare for states’ rights now and forever. The cold fact is that a claim of states’ rights must now be justified by a demonstration of states’ competence.” TRADE WITH BELGIUM THE new trade treaty with Belgium is another step toward re-establishment of world commerce. Although it is but a short and mincing step. United States and Belgian diplomats deserve credit for breaking the ice that has been choking the exchange of goods between this and the European continent. Consumers of the two countries, quite as much as the producers, will benefit. Lower tariffs granted to Belgian laces. linens and cement, for example, should result in lower prices for these products in this country. Lower Belgian tariffs on American lard, cornstarch iruits and oatmeal should result in lower living costs for the Belgian people. Now that a formula of mutual concessions has b"cn found which gains for our products a better market in this one small European country, there is more basis for hope that we may regain freer access to the larger markets of Germany. France and Italy. Our farmers and automobile manufacturers and their employes, chief American beneficiaries of the pact, have a great potential stake in other European markets still hedged about by import quotas, exchange restrictions and prohibitive tariffs retaliating against our Smoot-Hawley tariff. THE PUBLIC INTEREST Federal w. i. grubbs decision against the Tennessee Valley Authority is regarded as only a “temporary annoyance” by Henry T. Hunt, general counsel for the Public Works Administration, i David E. Lilienthal, Tennessee Valley Authority director and general counsel, likewise is not perturbed by the adverse decision of the lower court. [ They are anxious and willing for the United States Supreme Court to pass on the issues involved, confident, as are we, that TVA will be upheld in the end. We are concerned with the public interest which TVA is serving; fortunately, laws and ) court decisions, some affecting the very issues raised in the trial before Judge Grubb, are molded by this factor. • The Tennessee Valley Authority was created for several purposes: To improve the navigability and provide flood control of the Tennessee River; to provide reforestation and the proper use of marginal lands in the Tennessee Valley: to provide for the agricultural and industrial development of the valley; and to provide for national defense. To accomplish several of these purposes TVA builds dams and as a by-product of its dam building it manufactures hydro-electric power. It has started the transmission and distribution of the surplus power to demonstrate that electricity can be sold cheaply; it has set up its yardstick electric rates by which the I rates of private companies everywhere can be ' measured. Its power program should be continued and broadened because it is in the public interest. Judge Grubb has held, in effect, that TVA ' has a right to sell surpiu? power, but that this surplus has to be small, elsp TVA in disj tnbutmg large quantities of power goes into the "utility business.” He thinks it has overstepped its legal boundaries by putting itself into the "utility business.” Apparently, if Judge Grubb's decision were to stand, TVA might sell driblets of power, at
a switchboard, having no part in its transmission and distribution. We beiieve that if one of TVA's dams, for instance, can produce a million kilowatts of power in providing flood control and navigation, and that if it took only one kilowatt to lift the locks, light the power house, etc., it would not be in the public interest, or economical, for the remainder of that power to go to waste, for dynamos to rust., and the energy of the water tumbling over the dam to go unused. Recent decisions of the Supreme Court show that great tribunal does not believe the Constitution is a strait-jacket preventing growth and progress. We are not afraid of the final decision on TVA. TVA is perhaps the greatest single effort of this Administration to give the people a broader, fuller life. To hobble TVA's power program would be against the public interest. WHY THE ‘HEART BALM*? 'T'HE move to outlaw the “heart balm” -I- lawsuit, initiated in Indiana by an intelligent woman legislator, seems to be spreading. A similar bill is pending in the New York Legislature, and Senator McNabe, its sponsor, says that alienation of affection and, breach of promise suits “in many instances border on blackmail.” That is a mild and sensible comment. Consider, for instance, the suit recently filed in a middle-Western court by a young woman who wants SIOO,OOO from her forme’r boss for breach of promise. According to her suit, from 1928 to the end of 1934, the boss promised to marry her. At the end of 1934 he changed his mind. , By her own admission, this young woman played along with her boss for close to six years. Any girl intelligent and self-respecting enough to make her own way in the world might have been expected to smell a rat long before the bass broke the bad news. Offhand, would you say that heavy monetary damages are justified in such a case? GANGSTER'S STRANGE DEATH CHICAGO’S gangsters have done a great many surprising things in the last decade; but none of them ever did anything very much more surprising than did Frankie Rio, former body guard to A1 Capone, who confounded the expectations of everybody the other day by dying peacefully in bed from natural causes. * Tlie removal from the current scene of any gangster is good news, of course, and ordinary heart disease may be a civic instrument just as is th£ electric chair. But it is worth noticing that Rio was one of the very few Chicago hoodlums to depart from this life without co-operation of a machine gun or a revolver. Things must be getting strangely peaceful in Chicago, when a Capone gangster can die in bed like any ordinary citizen! RELIEF IS MOST URGENT WHATEVER is ultimately done about the security program in Washington—whether we get an outright dole, a system of unemployment insurance, or something else —we should not let ourselves forget that the problem is an exceedingly pressing one. For instance: Chicago police were obliged to take eight hungry children under their protection after they had found the children burning the furniture in their home to keep warm. The father, desperate over his family’s plight, had committed a theft and had been put in jail; the mother had died in a hospital from complications over another expectant childj birth. Grant.that the heads of this family mismanaged their affairs somewhat —there still remains an unbearably tragic picture. Whatever form our relief program takes, it must at least make repetitions of such pitiful cases impossible.
Capital Capers .BY GEORGE ABELL
IF the medals that glittered recently at the Army and Navy reception in the White House were converted into gold, the United States Treasury and the Aga Khan would look like pikers. As President and Mrs. Roosevelt greeted scores of ranking generals and admirals, the rows upon rows of decorations twinkled like a string of Christmas trees. Every Army officer seemed to be trying to outdo every other. And the Naval officers weren’t far behind. Brig. Gen William Horton, Beau Brummel of a hundred cotillions, won easily as the most bemedalled man in the White House. He must have wen at least 45 medals. "Did you count his decorations, my dear?” one awed young girl asked a friend. “Count them?” said the other. "Certainly not! I’d be here till tomorrow' evening.” Gen. Malin Craig, one of the War Department’s most noted men, sauntered through the state dining room, plastered with stars and wearing tw-o red ribbons around his nock. "I wouldn’t give a nicke.' for all these things,” he said to an admiring friend, gesturing disdainfully toward his medals. “But this one”— touching the topmost red ribbon —"is worth all the rest.” "Oh. General, do tell me what medal that is?” gushed a lady. “That top one?” asked Gen. Craig. "That's an Italian medal, my dear.” "Oh, how perfectly gorgeous it is!” "Tut, tut,” said Gen. Craig. “I haven’t any chance of competing with Gen. Horton.” And, in fact, he hadn’t. r o a WHITE-GOATEED Gen. Payton March, former Chief of Staff, appeared distinguished, slim-waisted. gallant as usual. He is one Army officer w-ho takes pride in keeping fit. There is no sign of a paunch behind his polished Sam Browne belt. "What's he got on his hip?” queried a lady with a lorgnet, as she looked the general over. It was not a whisky flask but the white enameled Legion of Honor, which hung from a blue and red riband, stretching across the chest and down the side. BBS Assistant secreary of the navy ROOSEVELT beamed at a group of ladies in the Red Room. As he bowed, his string of miniature medals chimed musically. Roosevelt's evening dress sleeves effectively hid, however, the beautiful "blue eagle tatooed near his elbow*. In the East Room. Assistant Secretary of War Woodring and his young wife < dressed in blue velvet) twirled merrily to the music of an orchestra <not the Marine Band), amid a sea of gold epaulets and brass buttons. While archeologists are digging up relics of the dim past, some explorer well might try to discover whatever became of Andrew Volstead. Bringing home the bacon isn't such a simple feat as it was in the olden days of rugged individualism —not at 45 cents a pound*
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The Message Center
(Times readers are invited to express their t itles in these columns. Make pour letters short, so all can have a chance. Limit them to 250 words or less. Your letter must, be signed, but names will be withheld at reguest of the letter writer.) B B B URGES SUPPORT OF ROOSEVELT By Robert E. A. Crookston, I wish to answer the Rev. Daniel Carrick, whose letter w’as published in the Message Center on Feb. 25. You have apparently forgotten that the Bible tells us to obey our rulers—and also respect them. I presume, from the way you write, you must be a red-hot standpat Republican; it is just your kind who are bucking the present Administration and holding up decent relief plans. You unjustly condemn Mr. Roosevelt, which shows that you think with Wall street instead of with decent legislation. Mr. Roosevelt is the only true humanitarian this world has had since the time of Christ. He has done and is doing everything possible for the poor man and his family. His sympathies are with those who are in trouble and hungry. But the Wall Street gang, the United States Chamber of Commerce, and such men as you, are attempting to hinder his work in every way. The money interests and the taxpayers are fighting against everything Mr. Roosevelt attempts to do. in which he would help the poor struggling families—and you are fighting him on the side of the money interests. Did the Republicans attempt to feed the poor? No; again. I say no! Did the Republicans attempt to give the poor man a job? No! Did the Republicans attempt to assist the hard-hit farmer? No! Did the Republicans try to control Wall Street? No! And Mr. Roosevelt has attempted all of this—and at the same time | the money wizards of the nation have been fighting him like demons! Better wake up. Mr. Preacher, and get on God's side. The Republicans won’t feed you; they proved that in the past. We are in a battle that rails for every man. woman and child to stand behind the Administration and not fight against it. We are all j members of uncle Sam's family; so I let’s get together and be a decent j family and stand by Uncle Sam. 1 1 used to be a good Republican but j now I am a better Democrat, be- i cause I've gotten my eyes open—and I I believe it's time to get away from j the god of gold and look to the God of the heavens. B B B DEFENDS CAPITAL PUNISHMENT IN MI'RDER CASES Bv Sankey Francis. As Rep. Carl E. Woodard is introducing a bill in Congress to do away with capital punishment, I will defend my reasons for upholding it. Os course God said thou shalt not kill, but Christ defined its | meaning in repeating the command- | ments to the rich young ruler when j he said (Mat. xxix. 18): “Thou shalt' do no murder.” Eccl. iii, 3, says there j is a time to kill but you won’t find there's a time to murder. David killed two men but only committed one murder. God was with him when he killed Goliath, but greatly resented the murder of Uriah. Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice, enmity or hatred. The state of New Jersey can not murder Hauptmann, for what they do is only carrying out God's law, and Christ says in Luke v, 17. “I came not to destroy the law but to | fulfill.” Shab lost his life because he failed to kill Ben llidad and obey
MAYBE HE WONT HELP
Upholds Capital Punishment
By Times Reader I note that Rep. Carl Woodard is preparing a. bill to abolish capital punishment. As I read about the terrible crimes that are occurring daily, I wonder that any one who has the interest of his family and country at heart could object to capital punishment. In the first place, when a prisoner is sentenced to life imprisonment (or for a number of years which are usually the best years of his life), he has nothing to lose and all to gain if at any time he can make a break for freedom. Certainly there will be some time during his imprisonment when, even for a few moments, the guards will, humanly, be a trifle careless—and that will be his opportunity. Every day a man is in prison (instead of being dead by electrocution, and therefore harmless) we risk the lives of every prison official and guard—not to mention the lives of all of us who would be at his mercy should he escape. This is not idle talk. It has been proved time and time again that prisoners will rob, murder, kidnap, or perform any other kind of crime necessary to prevent cap-
God’s orders. Samuel slew King Agag and obeyed God’s will (Samuel xv, 33) and Saul was deprived from being king because he failed to do so as God commanded (Kings xv, 23). “He that smiteth a man so that he die shall be surely put to death,” God says. And “ye shall keep my statutes and do them,” David says. The statutes of the Lord are right, and I think if Hauptmann is truly guilty that court and jury will please God when they carry out His law. B B B BONUS. OLD-AGE PENSION WILL BLOCK DEPRESSION Bv Mrs. Joseph Levi. Osgood. I am in favor of the old-age pension to old folk who have worked hard all their lives. They should, after 65, receive SSO a month. They should not have to wait until they are ready to die. Give it to them now so they can have a decent living and not let them starve, go naked and freeze. Give the work to our young men and pension the old. By doing this we will keep so many of our young .men out of prison, as our young men have to live as well as our old and I am also in favor of giving the World War veterans their bonus so they can enjoy it while they are here. They put themselves up for a target in the war and they now need and deserve what is due them. This would all put money out in circulation and save people from stealing from one another. Pay the old-age pension. Pay the boys their bonus and stop the depression. • B B B MR. STARK DRAWS MORE READER FIRE By D. W. In answer to G. A. Sta’k in the Message Center, Feb. 27. on cigarets, The Times should be very glad to lose a subscriber like him, if he was one, which I doubt, for any one so tight he wouldn’t put out a few pennies for a little pleasure, not luxury, certainly wouldn’t put out the large sum of 12 cents weekly for a good newspaper like The Times. Mr Stark says nearly all of our criminals smoke. Very true, so do most of our very good and intelligent people of this nation, excluding G. A. S. Mr. Stark says out of 35 men working on relief, of which he was foreman, there were only half dozen clean men among them. (I wonder if he was one of the half dozen.) Did you notice Mr. Stark say he
[I wholly disapprove of what you say and will j defend to the death your right to say it. — Voltaire. J
ture and provide themselves with necessaries and luxuries. For too many years we have tried the probation system, also, and pardoned many convicts who proved to be worse criminals after being pardoned than before. What we really should do is to put our. of the way all of these who are such a menace to society. The police officers will still have plenty to do to take care of the minor offenses. Then, too, why should the taxpayer be burdened with the cost of supporting such criminals when they are absolutely no good to even themselves? If we restored the torture chamber method that, too, would help stop our crime wave. It is up to our Legislature io uphold capital punishment to the fullest extent, for, as you say, the Lord said "Thou shalt not kill,” and I am sure He would say to you today, were He here, “Thou shalt not kill” the innocent people of this world by permitting murderers to live, escape and kill. The blood of these innocent victims should be upon the head of any lawmaker who votes against capital punishment. The execution of one criminal may save the lives of many citizens.
was foreman. I’ll wager if he still J works on the FERA he is on the : business end of a wheelbarrow or a pick and shovel. Mr. Stark also complained of the dirty stories the cigaret smokers told. Maybe if when he met his friends, if he has any, he would tell a good story once in a while they would enjoy his company better. But I don't think G. A. Stark dares to smoke those degrading nasty cheaters of health and morals, for this initials spell GAS and he has plenty of it. He might explode B B B K. K. K. MEMBERS ARE SCORED BY READER By H. H. Lynns. Nashville. I am writing concerning an article "Ku-Klux Klan Re-enters Indiana Political Arena.” Well, what I have to say is if the rabble that's in the K. K. K. tended to their own business as w’ell as the Negro they would be O. K. The Negro does keep himself clean and he tries to educate his children and make j something out of them. On the i K. K. K. side they haven’t the mind 1 to think for themselves, just a mob of inferiors who see the Negro going ahead of them morally, spiritually and mentally. The Negro as a rule has no desire to mingle outside his race. B B B LAND PURCHASE FOR FORESTS OPPOSED By Geor?e Allen, Bedford. Permit me to say through the Message Center a few words in regard to the state's land buying project in this county and several others. Why start a national forest in a district which has been settled for so many years? Why not have the i government pay us for the crops we can’t raise on our poor farms and let us stay on them? How many of us here in these counties have rela- | tilves or friends buried in nearby j country cemeteries? Are we going
Daily Thought
Burning lips and a wicked heart are like a potsherd covered with silver dross. —Proverbs 26:23. WICKEDNESS is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, and shame, accompanied with terror, commotion, remorse, and endless perturbation.—Plutarch.
JIARCH i. 1035
to let the state and government let these fall Into ruin? We people in these counties must oppose making a playground out of our farms. Get up a petition as they did in the slum clearance project in Louisville, and see if this land buying is constitutional. I voted for Roosevelt in 1932, but I am going to write an apology to Hoover. an n CIG A RET-SMOKING LETTER BRINGS REAL LAUGH. Bv George Baar. Good-by, Mr. Times; I hate to see you go. But go you must, because the guardian of our morals is going to quit you and save 12 cents a week. Oh, how dare you say a man should have the right to smoke a horrible cigaret? a a a WORLD WAR VETERAN SUPPORTS BONUS BILL By World War Buddy. Buddies of the World War, and being a buddy myself, I think we should get behind the Vinson bill which is being backed by the American Legion and its national commander, Mr. Belgrano. Now is the time to show action as we did in 1917 to 1919. Write your Congressman to support the Vinson bill.
So They Say
Coats and vests? Phooey! No market for them. But pants! Half the world needs them. I can sell ’em anywhere. I’m a benefactor.— Kenneth McCallum, sentenced in Chicago as pants theft specialist. You can rest assured that the Dionne quintuplets are not going to be. -put on exhibition to the detriment of their health. —Mitchell Hepburn, Ontario premier. You can't regulate thieves in the utility business. All you can do is supplant them with government ownership—Rep. Maury Maverick <D., Texas). Automobile w r orkers do not want to take over control of the industry. They want wages upon which they can live and support their families without dependence on public relief a large part of the year.—William Green, A. F. of L. president. I have never been able to bring myself to see that the United States had any right to go into the retail business.—Federal Judge W. I. Grubb, Birmingham. The Dean brothers are great fellows and great baseball players, but they will have to prove this year that they can take It.—Rogers Hornsby, St. Louis Browns’ manager. If married women were allowed to work, there would be fewer marriages.—Agnes Allen Harris, dean of Alabama University.
Life’s Pattern
by VIRGINIA KIDWELL Now there is a pattern in life for me, A definite pattern since I met you! It shines through the future so brilliantly And drapes every day in a rosy hue. Gone is my boredom, my restlessness too, A sense of completeness is glowing in me, For now I'm secure in the true lov# of you. You’ve marked out a pattern in lor me*
