Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 99, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 March 1920 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

- Automobiles - March 9, 19 20. Dear Sir —“Let’s see the Hudson Super-Six first.’’ At all /be auto-* mobile Shbws that was the prevailing feeling. If you drifted with the crowds ■that flocked to the shows you would soon feel the irresistable pull that draws the discriminating to the Super-Six. Why? Because the Super-Six is the distinctly acknowledged leader of fine cars. Its beauty; its dignity, its past records surround it with an atmosphere that makes it always and the center of attraction. The Super-Six is the car so mainly of your neighbors own. Youi know of its performance and endurance, sc naturally you want to see how the latest Super-Six forecasts the trend of motor progress. You want to see tlhe Suiper-Slx too, because you know that you are going to be given a peep at Irnext year's style in motordorn, forthe Super-Six is always a year ahead of any other car. Whether or not you have been at tfie Auto Show, let us give you a private demonstration of the world’s most popular fine car where crowds will not annoy youi and where you will be able to examine every detail in comfort. We are always ready to serve you. Very truly yours, HUGH KIRK.

SKY ONLY, LIMIT FOR NEWSPAPERMEN HERE IS ONE WHO BECAME A BISHOP

Rt. Rev. Charles Sumner Burch, for Thirteen Years an Editor, Now One of Joint Commission Directing Na-tion-Wide Campaign. Out of the noise and tension of editorial rooms, newspapermen have gone to positions strangely contrasted to those they left. Here is one who left the editorial desk to achieve a bishop’s robes. For 13 years he was Charles Sumner Burch, newspaper editor of Kansas City and Detroit. Today he is the Right Rev. Charles Sumner Burch, Episcopal Bishop of New York. . Formerly his words went from the-iypewriter to the composing room and so to the columns of the dailies, to help mould public opinion. Now they go out to the members of the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of New York, and beyond, helping to inspire the Church to meet the responsibilities which the day of reconstruction has laid upon it. '. • For when the supreme body of the Church, the tnenniel general convention, met recently in Detroit—the city where the Bishop of New York once turned out “copy” for the press—it appointed him to the Joint Commission which, with the authority of the entire Church behind it, is directing the $42,000,000 Episcopal Nation-Wide Campaign by which the Church plans to expand its work in every field and play its full part in building a new order out of the present chaos. * Bishop Burch saw—pefhaps with the old news sense —the importance of the Nation-Wide Campaign from the first. , . . „ , . "Providence,” said he, in his first pastoral address to the Diocese of New York, following bis elevation to the bishopric, “has furnished us, at the beginning of our new mutual relationship, with a task worthy of our Nation-Wide Campaign is intended to reath and touch the life and purpose of every maa, woman and child connected directly or remotely with the Church’s existence. If the Church of Christ is to hold fast to and conserve the great spiritual values won through the heroic sacrifices willingly offered by our, brave men and boys in the world’s most must awaken in each man a keen sense Of his individual* responsibility for conserving these values.