AND BETTER GOVERNMENT! VO E TE DMOCRA TIC NA TIONAL - STA TEADCOUNTY TICKETS! VOTE, FOR FRAýNKLIN D. OOSEVELT. FOR PRESIDENT!t. "The considération whicb clînches the argument in my mind is that only by.the election ofRoosevelt does there appear to be any prospect whatever of orderly government in the ,next two years. Should Mr. Hoover be elect cd, there is no chance now in sight that he will command a working majority in either branch of Congress. "The Senate, by the manner in which vacancies occur this year, is certain to b. Demo. cratic; the House, judging by every indication, is certain not to be Republican. For it must be remenibered that the Republican party is actualiy split as it bas hot been split since 1912, and even if Mr. Hoover were to squeeze by lié would bave a hostile coalition on his hands. "Now there are some who are voting for Mr. Hoover in the belief that he will stand * firm and veto ail the undesirable things this next Congresa will wish to do.. They exaggerate, I.tbink, the power of the veto and they forget the importance of affirmative action on many grave matters. My..own belief is that the cou -itry will obtain a more coherent government from a Democratie Congresa led by Mr. Rooseveltt than f rom a Democratic Congress in * Perpetual deadlock with Mr. Hoover. Fortw years at least, wbile tbe. prestige of the new President is high and the patronage is stili being distributed the chances of leaders hip and discipline seem to be far greater under Roosevelt than under Hoover. "The next two years-I look no further ahead because no one can-wilI be ver>' im.- * portant. When I1 think that aftcr ail the. mise.ries of the people they stili are patient enough to have confidence in so moderate a man -as Gov. Roosevelt, 1 wonder what the conservatives are. thinking of when they talk as if the foundations of society were imperiled by the likelihood of his victory. "The truth, as 1 sce it, is that the election of R~oosevelt will flot only f acilitate inany readjustments which it is impérative to make, but will i'nsurç the co-operation and the patient respoinsibility, of a multitude of men who would otherwise be mrely*.embittered and reckless. With the élection of Roovsevelt theris1, in. short, a pro spect of, national unity in h da t yiga3s to come, wb)ereas the ie-elction of President HoOVoen .logv* of frustrated discontont and recrmnto.-Wle.Lpm nithCicg v'n Ps of October 10e 1932.1 iiin-iUrLpnan nti bo~ vngs Mll .itaiesme ndwe, u Who are Weim*gtod e .thifr sevicshi ROSWELL B. MAS7DON, »emocratic District Leader for New Trier, 569 Lincoln Avenue,. Wixrnetka, Illinois.