ALBERT H. BOWMAN, Managing ARTHUR ROBERTS, Associate Editor JAMES LEONARD LBE. Git? ettttof; 1 ' ' â- 'r " ' , 'li I V ij|flt SUBSCRIPTION PRJC9, lii* A|tpt||C AI1 matter for publication In any not Inter than noon en Monday. week's Issue should reach our ottce Entered as second-class matter June 2tV ItU. at tie nosteflce at Brass- ten, Illinois, under the Act of March 8, 1871. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 191g, ROOSEVELT HAS BEST WISHES OF ALL Colonel Theodore Roosevelt was nearly the victim of a brutal assassin in Milwaukee Monday, and as the startling news was'flashed abroad over telegraph wires hundreds of-thousands of Americansâ€"for that night there were no Progressives, no Republicans, no Democrats, all were Americans*â€"first were shocked, then angered, then, remindful of the tragic taking away of Mb. Roosevelt's predecessor in the White House, prayerful that the wound might not be dangerous and that the victim might be spared to his family and his friends. If it were not for the inappropriateness of theorizing or moralizing aj this time one would be tempted to say that such crimes as the assas- sination of the lamented McKinlet and this attempted taking away of Colonel Roosevelt is the price we pay in this country for the unbridled speech we so often allow ourselves in the heat and stress of political campaigns. But the sympathy of the world is with Me. Roosevelt now. Par- ticularly is it with Mrs. Roosevelt at the family home at Oyster Bay for who doubts the fears and forebodings that have been hers all these weeks of strenuous campaigning during which her husband has been exposed to countless and manifold dangers f k . May the colonel's wound prove as little dangerous as seems now to be expected, and may his recovery be speedy I ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A REPUBLICAN PAPER FOR CHICAGO Republicans everywhere and particularly along the North Shore were delighted with the announcement that Mb. Herman H. Kohlsaat, who has been since 1910 editor of the Chicago Record-Her- ald, has purchased outright the Chicago Inter Ocean and, beginning Saturday, will publish the paper as a Republican paper. In a signed announcement on the front page Saturday Mb. Kohlsaat among 6t$ier things said: "*"-" '.'.*'"""5"* '. "The Inter Ocean will be Republican, because H be- lieves in the principles of the Republican party, its traditions, reveres the memory of its great lenders, - and sincerely believes that this great party has not out- lived its usefulness, and that, under the leadership of pat- riotic, unselfish men, it will still be the party of progress . and sanity." ;.,.-•: This means that from now on the Chicago Tribune, which has been to flagrantly unfair to President Taft and to the Republican party during the entire preconvention and the present campaigns and which has during all that time and is continuing now to color all political news in favor of the third party candidate, will no longer be able to print unchallenged gross falsifications against the administration and policies of the president, or fanciful fabrications as to the achieve- ments and intentions of Mr. Roosevelt. The. News congratulates first the citizens of the Mississippi valley upon the change in the ownership of the Inter Ocean and secondly, congratulates Mr. Kohlsaat upon the opportunity which is his to do an almost inestimable good to the body politic ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A PUBLISHER'S DUTY TO HIS READERS Deep under a pile of anonymous communications which constantly find their way to an aggressive editor's desk was found one this morn- ing signed "E. G. O.," which immediately attracted attention for, to the mind of him who pens these lines, "B. O. O.," put together in the usual form without special capitalisation and periods, spells "ego," and "ego/' in this day and generation, can mean but one thing, Roosevelt. So we knew that the communication heretofore unread because anonymous must have something to do with the eoknel and its perusal was but precedent to its publication here: "I want to congratulate the editor on his editorial, 'Coloring the News for the Colonel,' in the Lake Shore News. It characterizes in altogether too mild terms one of the meanest and most inexcuseble sides of the paper of today. An editor and publisher who will stoop ' to this kind of jouroalaim--*a the editors of the Chicago Tribune and Post confessedly are 6toin#â€"are little ostler than men who obtain money under false pretences. "Indeed, they ara &m* that very thing. For tile man who boys a newspaper has tins right to expect that the news is honestly told therein, so far as it is told. But " - toth the Tribune and Post deliberately distort . » facts and suppress others, so that no one who reads can know what is the troth. If an editor who 6^ these " things is less dishonest than a man who sets up a ststement of any kind to get money,, or Jus sngar, why is hef The hones ,_.^ the truth in km news columns, hot all esneede to the right to any lawful opinion on tin) editorial but onV there. U. ^Mj^ And so ft wiH stand is* almost aajytlanc Need ef the Hour In Pulpit end Pew VelueJ •*, ;«*eod Atenetwent *or Sin, Pe*!*!^ )»»eter Raaej^l et Lynn. Lynn, Maes., Oct. 18.â€"One of Pastor Russell's discourses today was r o m t b e text 'Without the shed* ding of blood there Is no remission of In*." (Hebrews tx. 22.) He said In (pari?- * T b e Scriptures declare that the life Is in the blood (Leviticus xvli. 11); nee the shedding of blood represents death; abd death may be spoken of as the shedding of blood, regardless of Whether or not a single drop of blood be spilled literally. Thus tbe presenta- tion of tbe blood.of tbe sacrifices of old represented the offering to Ood of their lives as. typically, an offset to tbe for- feited life of Adam and bis children, who lost life through bis disobedience. Israel's Atonement Sacrifice*. ' Bach year, at approximately this sea- son, tbe Jews celebrate their Atoue- ment Day. by which their sins are thought to be covered afresh for the year begun. The underlying thought la a reminder that they are sinners, and that without the shedding of blood. without a ea«-ri0cial death, there can be no Divine forgiveness of sins. For more than sixteen centuries la- reel observed these typical Atonement Day services, up to the time that Jesus came. Since then the Jews can have no -Atonement Day. really, because their priestly line is lost and they have no Holy and Most Holy In.which to make the 'Atonement, and oo Sbeklnab Mercy-Seat on which tbe blood of Atonement may be placed, and from which Divine blessing and forgiveness should proceed. : In their typical procedure the Day of Atonement Included all the Atonement (work of the priest ion the tenth da/ of^ the. seventh month. His Atonement sac- rlnce consisted of two partsâ€"first a bullock, which he slew, and afterward a goat which he treated In like man- '"" He took the blood of tbe bullock the- stoat fioiy and applied it. not behalf of Israel, but simply on be- lt of the priestly tribe of I<ert After aceooipltabing this he came out and slew tbe secondary part of his offering, the Lard's goat, which typified thone consecrated to be his nnder-prlestbond. After treating the t precisely as the bollock bad been treated. Ms- blood was taken into the Most Holy and there was sprinkled on the Mercy Seat not on behalf of the tribe of Levi, but on behalf of all the other tribesâ€"on behalf of "all tbe peo- ple.'* ren^eeitfQjw .of all humanity- thus showing that eventually they win bebrooght tnto,hannony with God. *Th* aWHer feacriioâ€"" 4ntitypic*l. In tbe type the bullock represented Jesns, conKtH-nttrd to deatn. and dy- ing and dead: and the filjjh priest rep- resented Tbe Christ, spu It begotten. Jesue. a* the appointed autttyntenl Priest after riie order of Metenisedec, offered up flituxplf-Hk* human bodyâ€" when He nM'-hvd manhood's estateâ€" tbiny y«irs «Sradnally He fulfilled Blst Ifcprfauw unt» death, for three and s half year*.«ompletfng It at Calvary. During Hut eartbly mrahctry. an a Prfeit He *a* in the Holy. I feHesrship with the Father. At CeJ- vary. as lknt-st. He itaswed under the veil. at* I in Hie resurrection •rose on the other'side of the veil, hi Most IIMy-tn the perfect spirit You may be therefore beco: bank. We invite Bank of Evan It receives PPen a^MsnBnpr-wttn the siU, Bubject to check. In any amount; pays 35& compound interest on savings accounts from $1.00 upwards; issues Foreign Exchanges furnishes investndlbtB to customers; rents Safe Deposit Boxes for jsfoo a year, and serves in all trust capacities. ISWfV i.- ftijgi; V^jjigiaSlJ^r; m anaajs|s1r^rit i STATE BANK CAFITAfc, M>00 4 Makes loans on improved North Shore real estate from Rogers Park to Highland Park, and onnflmns in Lake county. #1 Issnes Certifica^asffcpe^posit foLs# lessMan six mootns in, denominations ojltoo and mnitipleson^y^h it pays ^pCttr percent in l jfl Offers for in vesjsntjy first mortgages on unproved real Vr estate, netting taVasrvestor five and one-half percent in sums of $500 and upward. Send for list. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS J. Fred McGnire. President Charles A. Wightman, Vice-President Ira J. Gear, Counsel B. O. Keller Arthur W. Veieoe, Cashier Banking Rooms Central Avenue and Sheridan Koad Highland Park, nnneft •â- ,,"' Aitwwnrw. Tsjacos, qma^x r^ >\ â- â- I Tht^sOat\vay Arj g r. Perforated 131N.Wa1 Tel. Central 3851 ig to Order