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                    <text>TAS

RAZZBERRY

ISSUED

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

x
“HE

PROFITS

MOST

WHO

SERVES

BEST”

SEETl. 7, 1oo7

VOL, 3—NO. 13
THE

DISTRICT

ASSEMBLY

The big receni Rotary activity is the District
illac, August 22-24.
The Cadillac Club took the
and

certainly

extended

itself

to

make

it

a

Assembly at Cadoccasion seriously

success.

Red

McKnight

and the Ed and their wives went up Sunday evening and took in the
first day’s session.
The get-toge.her mecting at the Gham
Club Sunday evening
was well workod out and very enjoyable.
The games and
stunts
were interesting and amusing.
The greater part of the crowd was
there that evening, the distance from most clubs being
so
great
that it was
resented by

impractical
to start Monday
morning.
Quincy
was
repElwyn
Bodley and his wife. Bronson was not represent-

ed.
On

Extension

sidered

the

Monday

and

a

Rotary

program

report

territory.

was

Frank

given

Werk

of

has

Barnes

various

been

talked

done

towns
in

about

which

the

past

Rotary

are

year

con-

to-

ward the establishment of clubs in the following towns: Blind River, Ontario; Harbor Springs; Leslie; Lake
View;
Three
Rivers;
Plainwell;

Otsego;

ah;

Nashville;

Some

The
cf

ing,

however,

nace:

ority

Hart

and

Rockford;

Grand

Reed

Ledge;

City;

Cassopolis;

Masovi.

Shelby;

Benzonia;

Fremont;

Newago;

renorts
cn most
of these
places
were
quite
them may
succeed in forming clubs this year

appear

Rotary

in

to

ba

and

this

rather

seems

vicinity

hopeless.

Denny

Clancy

Beul-

St.

Ig-

discouraging.
but the maj-

reports

on

Read-

optimistic
over
the
prospect
of success.
would
be substantially
strengthened
by
a

club ‘there. The Coldwater and Quincy clubs can be of substantial
assistance to Denny and should neglect no o»portunity to help him.
‘Any of the fellows who have friends in Reading should boost.
Stub Bemer, Superintendent of Schools at St. Johns, gave an
especially interes‘ing
practical suggestions

talk
on International
Service.
He
gave
many
for a censcientious effort in each club to fur-

ther the feurth object of Rotary, Some
in the notes which follow this article.

of

them

will

be

mentioned

The most amusing feature of the assembly was the talk of Don
Harringten,
President
of the A\bion club,
on Club
Publications.
He was to be followed by Walter Wood of Niles, Past District Governor, whose subject was tle Rotary Magazine.
Harrington,

however,

had

prepared

his

address

the

ground

before

he

knew

that he was limited to local publications and devoted most of it to
the Rotarian. After he learned about Wood’s talk, he said it was too
late to change his speech. He had prepared it from material furnished

by

R.

I.

and

went

over

same

Walter

intended

to

cover. The result was the latter had nothing left to talk about. He
spent five or ten minutes in a very laughable explanation of hig predicame:t. Harrington himself had talked quite humorously and the
whole incident brought roars of laughter from the crowd.
—-—-—-0--------

Kim
nity

in

Sigler

attaining

Walter

ous vein
speeches

handled
a

Wood’s

the

sustained
talk

in him which no
he ever made.

was

ons

Assembly
interest

well.

He

with

presided

dig-

throughout.

to)

really

had

funny.

It

suspected.

brought

It was

out

one

a

of

humor-

the

best

�THE RAZZBERRY
Assembly

The

and conveniently
Northwood Hotel.

sessions

located

held

were

building.

the

in

Elks

guests

The

splendid

Temple,

a

were

Fred

the

at

housed
;

were

0
Among

the

Past

District

Governors

present

Fred Hill, Frank Barnes, Ray Dresser and Bill
fine talk at the luncheon Monday noon. Both he
attended the convention at Nice this summer.
(0)

Gage,

Otto. Bill made a
and Frank Barnes

Joe Grant,
passioned plea

President of the Battle Creek
for greater Rctary activity in

club, nade an
bringing about

trade

practices,’It

but

laws

and

was

well

received

in

our

imfair

opinion

is based upon a mis-conception of the function of Rotary. If Rotary
were ever to allow itself to enter the legislative field, it werld be
in constant trouble. It could not avoid advocating
controversial
measures which would lead to feeling among its members. Then too
such a precedent would encourage every member who kad a pet
project to undertake to enlist Rotary in the fight for it. Just as much
ill

will

would

‘be

engendered

of

the

International

did do. It is probable
mistaken policy.
One

by

the

what

it

refused

organization

could

to

not

do

CC)
Service

as

by

what

survive
:

suggestions

of

such

Stub

it

a

Bemer

was that a good sized delegation from clubs of this district
visit
some Canadian club as a gesture of good will. That would not be
a difficult thing for Coldwater to do, especially if there happened
to be a ball game at Detroit.
0:

Another
more

foreign

exchange

the

was

suggestion
clubs.

of

letters

i

one

with

or

0

contribute a. dollar
Another was that each member of a club
clubs all over the world
many
as
to
sent
be
each
dollar
a
that
and
dollar would be sent
as there are members of the local club. This
with it represened
purchas
be
trinket
with the request that some
back here.
tative of the industries of the town, and gent
0

accompanied by an artSomeone suggested that such letter be
:
ies.
industr
local
our
of
ve
entati
icle repres
ent present the club
Another suggestion that each Past Presid
would result in quite
this
ter
Coldwa
of
with some flag. In the case
a collection of flags.
——0
Still
sion

of

The

were

agnother—a
Rotary

above

eminently

Incidentally

ful.

might

were

map
be

by

no

practical.
the

trip

the

of
hung

in

world
O

the

all

means

marked
club

the

to

show

the

exten-

which

room.

suggestions,

most

of

was

very

delight-

J SaGi ay, one
with

Red

and

his

wife

0

‘‘Hvery member is a
Someone at the Assembly well said:
machinery the cogs do
most
unlike
but
Wheel
Rotary
the
in
with use’.
wear out but become better

cog
not

�THE

RAZZBERRY
AUGUST

The

month

started

with

ACTIVITIES

the

boat

trip,

which

was

a

fine

Rotary

activity. It served to vary the ordinary picnic idea which has grown
somewhat monotonous. A lake picnic is attended by many members
and their wives from a sense of duty. There must be something
novel about our entertainment to keep it enjoyable. We
have in
mind
from

a scheme
for next
summer
anything we have yet done.

which

will

be

entirely

different

0

'The program at the luncheon that same week was a discussion
of the Youth Movement
which is being undertaken
as a district
activity. If successful it will be a new and distinctive activity in
which.this district will blaze the trail.
The picnic at the shack took the next meeting.
George Vail
said that was his idea of a good time. We have yet to hear of any
member

who

not

to

need

mer:bers

did

be

not

enjoy

changed.

would

enjoy

himself.

It

an

could

This

well

annual

is

be

outing

an

activity

an

annual

when

he

which

event.

was

does

All

the

to

put

free

on his cld clothes and lounge around in the congenial company of
his fellow Rotarians.
iwo weeks ago Paul Winger’s talk on the Miami Injuns was
wonderfully interesting. Paul himself made a hit with the club. He
is a fine, upstanding type of young Rotarian. He took so good naturedly
the
Ed’s
time to give his

club

fell

for

him.

boner
which
talk and had

compelled
him
such a winning

to come
the
second
smile that the whole

Tue las: meeting of the month was devoted to International’
Service. Dr. Foo’s talk was so interesting and instructive that it
rounded
out the month’s
activities
in wonderful
style. His success
as an American
physician illustrates the broad base of similarity in
the whole human
race. The Chinese and Aryans are about as different

as

can

be

imagined,

yet

himself to American customs
in competition with what ws

he

comes

here

and

successfully

adapts

and becomes conspicuously successful
smugly believe advanced race.

-——0
By no means the least important of the month’s activities was
the capable manner in which the club handled the strike situation
at the last meeting.
.
—-—0
Since Dan Hodgman, the third members of the August committee,

their

was

not

share

available,

erate

in

grief

Sonny

Bauer

message

making

with

and

the

Ed

have

had

more

than

five meetings, besides the lake trip.
——0o
The program committee for September is Roy Newberry, Rex
Kiess and Mort Olds.
(6)
The Secretary’s News Letter for last week contains President
Duperrey’s

of

to

Rotary

best efforts to that

end.

the

lt

clus.

better

than
0

is

a

ever

cordial

before

invitation

and

to

a pledge

coop-

of his

;

the 9th
The 35th District is no more. It started as a part of
and was
district, then became the 18th, which became top heavy
to 151.
split into the 28rd and 35th, The number hag been changed
but? the
Just what made the redistricting necessary is not known
Beard of Directors doubtless had adequate reason TOU "It;
Sone
to ee
There are
should function.
committee
membership
The new
belong to Rotary.
several people in the community who ought to
,

�ATE

i|

ASST

THE

eee ae

RAZZBERRY

W now have on our exchange list the Eastern Rotary
‘which is quite a pretentious magazine. It was formerly ‘The
and is the official organ of District
No. ‘ 89, A comprisi
SUrr
prising the
Clubs

of

Ahmedabad

-

Amritsar

-

Bangalore

-

Baroda

-

Wheel,
Chaka’
Rotary

Bombay

-

_Caleutta - Cochin - Colombo - Jamshedpur - Karachi - Lahore Madras - Poona - Rangoon - Sholapur and Thayetmyo, It is published in Bombay.
The Governor of the district is Honorable Sir
Phiroze Sethma.
C—-—_—

The June number contains the speech on ‘Rotary and a Crippled Child’ given at the International Convention at Nice by Paul
King, who is now President of the International Society for Crippled Children.
---——0
The 4H Club Fair is not a Rotary project but any Rotarian
who

is

not

boosting

vice

of some

kind

it

HONORARY
At

with

is not

contrtbutious

fulfilling

the

of

ideal

or

time

Rotary

or

ser-

Service.

MEMBERSHIP

the

1933

(Beston)

Rotary

delegates

from

the

adopted

to the
lows:

money

of

standard

Honorary
first day of

clubs

club

Convention,
an

constitution

the

amendment

reading

as

fol-

membership
shall
terminate
July next after the
date of

on
the
election,

year

thereaft

provided, however, that the Board of Directors in
their discretion may, by resolution, continue such
membership

honorary

er.

Such

by

the

Board

although

to

from

year

the

person

mombership

honorary

may

be

so

continued

has

elected

ceased to reside within or to be definitely associated with the territorial limits of the club.
0
Governor

monthly

Kim’s

first

ever

enjoyed

communication

is

to

it

a

formal

terter written from qa very intimate and friendly standpoint.
to the club presidents:
“T hope this year you will “put something on
the ball’ and make it the best year that Rotary
has

in

See

Club.

your

He

let-

says

that

your programs are good and give your commitsomething to’ do, and remember
tee chairmen
that your job is io be a leader.”’

——

ee (Q——

y noon, August 9th, had
Earnest Giesecke left Honolulu Monda
10th ana
August
Tuesday,
,
rancisco
i
San
in
friends
lunch with
day, August
Wednes
o
Colorad
snver,
De
in
brother
breakfast with his
qth ato OU,
HONOLULU ROTOGRAM
What a small world!
Coldwater

to

is

getting

rise

the

reputation

about

the

inertia

week’s

sit

down

of

being

of
life.

Age

a live
preeds

club.

It

is

inactivity.

task
a number of unusual things
We have been able recently to put over
with it, installation ot
ale
Hillsd
to
trip
the
Show,
el
—-the Minstr
the picnic at the shack,
Red,
King
of
ing
crown
the Quincy Club, the

nosmall

boat

trip,

last

strike.

None

of

these

were

ac-

the
were well worth while.
complished without some resistance but all
It does not break any
club.
the
to
ter
charac
give
they
ned
Combi
be a good club and a
to
esty
immod
t
withou
said
be
ean
record but
ty.’
communi
in-the
useful institution

:

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                    <text>ee,

THE

RAZZBERRY

ISSUED BY THE COLDWATER

Cae

“HE PROFITS MOST

WHO

ROTARY

CLUB

SERVES BEST”

AUG. 3, 1937
RED’S

the office

of President,

and

In Rotary,

as in most

other

what

the

board

just

as

to do.

Club

important,

meetings

are

things,

and
of

more

first

I am

surely

going

members, to consider what
year,
and
to
accomplish

determining

even

the

success of the Rotary Club
to administer the duties of

of directors.

my best, with the assistance of the
hopes
to accomplish
during
the

Our

pratic

Scape

PLATFORM

I realize that the responsibility for the
during the coming year rests in my ability

always

how

difficult,

importance,

the
it.

to do something
than

because

is

determining
we

operate

as a Club. only once a week, at the time of the meeting.
It is, therefore, necessary that these meetings should be interesting, and properly planned in advance.
The chairman of each program committee

should give considerable
time and
thought
to the arranging
of each
meeting.
Once a year you are called on to do your part so that the
members
can be entertained, and leave
the meeting with the feeling

cf time well spent..
In Rotary we are trying to give, not to get.
You
joined the Rotary Club because you felt that it offered you something

you

could

not

get

anywhere

else..

As

a member

you

should

be

ready

to

get behind any project that is proposed by the Club.
In general,
each Rotarian can find time to do the thing he really wants to do, if
he can be convinced he really wants to do it.
Community service can be accomplished by creating acquaintance,
understanding and good-will among our business and professional men.
My hope is that we can accomplish a great deal in community service
during
to do.

the
May

coming
year.
Hach
we all enter into the

so that at the end of the
my part for Rotary.”

year

member
will
spirit of doing

we

ean

all

be
assigned
some
task
something constructive.

truthfully

say,

“I have

done

oO

‘
_

i

VOL a—NO. 12
PRESIDENT

to do
Club

eer

qe

ANOTHER
After the
Vice-president
“Dear
I

am

coronation of King
of the club, received
Prime Minister:
forced

to

abdicate

ABDICATION
Harold, the Red,
the following wire
throne

temporarily.

Charlie Clarke,
from him:
The

robes af state in hot Coldwater forced me to seek
a cooler climate in the north.
Tell the Royal Duke
of Dingleberry Bien to collect the tribute so
I may
make merry at Craig’s Lake when I return.
His
Royal Highness
King
Harold, the Red”
—_—0o-———

An. article in the Shanghai Pagoda is headed,
prove they don‘t know how to add or subtract”.
like a chink paper.

“Dutch and Yinson
Don’t sound much
4

�THE

RAZZBERRY
AMERICAN

VALUES

President Roosevelt’s salary is $75,000 per year.
May West’s income last year was $480,000.
Chief Justice Hughes gets $20,000 per year.
Bing Crosby, the crooner, received $318,000 last year.
Oscar Wilde truly said, ‘We know the price of everything and the
value of nothing’.”
—HONOLULU
ROTOGRAM
——_Oo-————

At the close of his term as Governor, Frank Barnes prepared
circulated
a resume of the activities of each club in the district.
report on Coldwater, Hillsdale and Sturgis was as follows:

and
His

“COLDWATER

The
the

crowning achievement of this club this year was
organization of the Quincy Rotary Club with 25

members.

Coldwater

also

had

an

outstanding

Rotary

minstrel show and raised four hundred and seventy-five
dcllars for the benefit of the High School Band Uniform fund.”
“HILESDALE

This club likewise has a well rounded Rotary program
embracing all phases of Rotary activities.
They do excellent Vocational and Community
Service work and
have
likewise
stressed, through
club programs, the
International

Service

part

of

Rotary.”

“STURGIS
Another club fortunate in having a Past District Governor, Ray Dresser, as a member.
Sturgis
stresses
Community

Service

and

is

doing

a

fine

piece

of

work

in the various activities that go to make up this branch
of Rotary Service.
A real club with able leadership.”
He reported Coldwater as having gained in membership from 48
to 51.
Yearly attendance record 92.14.
Rank in attendance in the
district— 8.
——_o—_—

Sky
Rotary

Marshall
Spirit:

“Have

makes

found

ers.

Learned

Ed

feels

a

the
good

it at

following
way

to

Detroit

suggestion

stop

Rotary

in

long-winded

from

his

St.

Joln’s

speak-

a Birmingham,

Alabama school man,At 1:29
take a slip of paper
and write on it in large letters:
‘Your pants are unbuttoned”, and hand it to the speaker.
He will be
through at 1:30 sharp.
If you see the president handing any speaker a slip of paper—keep
your faces
straight—please!”’
——0
Had last Sunday been a sunshiny day, Judge Jacobs would have
hung something on himself which would take a long time
to live
down.
Abcut ten o’clock he called and asked if we were going to
abandon the trip.
Frank Miller and he and their wives
were all
ready to go and but for the rain would have reported at the pier in
St. Joseph at 1:15.
a

now

back

The

because
the

wrist

of his term as
times its cost.

an

ad

very

watch

good

toward

presented

to

in

District

its

lost and

Governor.

him

Roy

found

The

by

:

Newberry’s
the

column

value

Reporter

promptly

35th

District

of

that

at the

watch

just

brought

ig

close

many

�THE
into
to

There

small

show

vanauda

seems
that

are

to

be

communities.
in

15.6%

towns

of

RAZZBERRY
a difference
the

The

of

Rotary

of less

than

Gpinion

Inu.anapolis
two

--ubs

as

to

Bulletin

in

thousand,

une

and

Rotary

quotes

United

says:

extension

statistics

States

and

“It is plain from an examination of the above that it
is not too late to alter the extension policy on Rotary
International
which
contemplated
increasing
the number of Rotary Clubs in hamlets and villages
just as rapidly as possible.
It has been said that the
small number of 15.6 per cent of the total in towns of
less

than

2,000

is

a

challenge

for

Rotary.

To

many

Rectarians, instead of a challenge, it is an indication
cf the good sense and scund judgement of those who,
in the past, have been
content to recommend
the
chartering of a Rotary
Club only in a community
where its growth and survival is a certainty and not
a conjecture.”
the

The London Rotarian quotes this article
preponderance
of sentiment,
however,

approvingly.
favors
the

Fortunately
small
towns.

Telegram from gon in college to his father:
“NO MON.
NO FUN.
YOUR SON.”
“I'S SAD,
“TOO BAD,
YOUR: DAD:”
—HONOLULU

ROTOGRAM

No doubt the small town club is something of a
creases the number of forfeited charters, but it also
to Rotary
which
is well worth the cost.

SHORT

SAD

problem
adds an

and inelementi

STORY

Judge, I didn’t cut those telephone wires, honest I
didn’t. Bill Frankhauser did it trying to shoot
blackbirds.

�THE
The
Galveston
individual Rotarian
‘The
solely

The

by

RAZZBERRY

“Port Wheel’
jn the following

d¢fines the
language:

success
of the
Rotary
upon the president nor

individual

member

hiding behind

the

cannot

Club
does
its board

escape

the

respopnsibility

“Rotarian”.

ob-

if you should desire it to be so, there is no room
you in the ranks of the “do nothings.”

for

for the year and
called upon to “do

of

not
depend
of directors.

have

jeetives outlined
each one will be

word

responsibility

We

from time to time
something”.
Even

——-0
Charlie Pollock received from a Massachusetts friend a copy of the
Brockton,
.Massachusetts, Rotary
“High
eGar,
in which
an article
from the Razzberry was reproduced.
Since we never before heard
of the

“High

Gear’

we

were

reproduces

an article—but

We

that

quits

that

puffed

is one

up.

The

Honolulu

of our regular

Rotogram

exchanges.

O:

President
formerly

regret

of ‘the

Mac

Bronson

Vice-president,

(Does not refer to
unconstitutional.)

McMahon

now

Club

has

because

reigns

in

Agricultural

his

been

of

ill

obliged

Guy

resign

Act

and

everything

is

not

except .

Insure with us and enjoy our singing.
ee

A cheerful
plaints.

smile

makes

ee

you

ferget

your

com-

Arius Asour Anyrine

MAURICE

as

ilonroe,

stead.

Adjustment

We insure your car against
what happens to it.

to

health.

PAIN.

�</text>
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                    <text>THE

To Have Arrived Is Tragedy:

ISSUED

This Year Must Be Even Better!

RAZZBERRY

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

a

“HE PROFITS MOS? WHO

MAY 19, 1937

s

SERVES

BEST”

|

VOL. 3_NO. 10

CONFERENCE EDITION
FRANK

The

BARNES

King

is

dead.

Long

live

be.

six

weeks

various
District
Governors,
cf him as typifying the song,

spoke
“That

the King. The Rotary crown in the
35th District was transferred just
one day before the
crown of the
British Empire.
Unlike the other.

however,

it will

yet

before the coronation takes effect
Frank Barnes has been a good
Distriet Governor.
He has given to
the
affairs of the district a zeal.
and
energy
seldom
equalled
and
never surpassed.
Someone
at the
conference,
in characterizing
the
Great Big Rotary Smile.”
Kim
Sigler of Hastings,
who
succeeds him, is a man of few words
tut of real caliber.
He is known)

in the profession as one
standing

is

an

time

cf

when

the

enthusiastic

ago,

against

lawyers

him

in

of the out- |

Michigan.

Rotarian.

a

Ed

hotly

was

He

Some

pitted

contested

|

end long drawn out trial in another
are
ig
city, he was missing when court convened after lunch. When he showed
up it was found that he had gone to still another town to make up his
Retary attendance.
It ig that spirit which has made the Hastings attendance record the despair of other clubs im the district.

It certain augurs

well for Rotary

achievements seeks the
enthusiastic cooperation
en

outstanding

one.

office of
of every

when

a man

of his character

Governor.
We bespeak
Rotarian in making his

and

for him the
Rotary year

Xen

There were 585 registrations at the confcrence, 368 men and 167
women.
In addition to this there were 66 advance registrations for
which the fee was not sent and which were not taken.
This is quite
en embarrassment to the host club.
If aynone who has planned to go
to a conference finds it impossible to do so he should at once cancél
his registration.

�THE

RAZZBERRY

THE CONFERENCE AT ST. JOE
This

ference
attend

number

concerns

at St. Joe.

should

read

You

itself

exclusively

carefully.

You

fellows

it

all

who

either

with

lack the
must

the

time

inform

District

Con-

yourself

about

or the

desire

to

Rotary to be a good Rotarian and the highlight of the Rotary year in
the district is the annual conference.
The outstanding event of the confersnce was, of ccurse, the election of a District Governor.
Perhaps
next in importance, so far as
actual achievement is concerned, was the program of the Junior Rotarians.
It is hard to over-estimate the value of the Junior Rotarian
movement, both to Rotary itself and to these lads just budding into
manhood.
The impulse given them toward high standards of personal
conduct and ambition for achievement is incalculable.
The custom also
has a community value. Appointment as a Junior Rotarian is a coveted
honor. It is a concrete object for the better grade of boys in high school]
to

strive

for

in

very

active

and

has

its

influence

in

the

lives

were

one

of

many

boys.

Al McKeown of Detroit, one of the fifteen directors of R. I., was its
representative at the conference.
He spoke at the initial session Monday forenoon and also at the luncheon Tuesday. He described the meetings cf the board which are held at various places in the world three
times a year. They convene on Saturday or Sunday avd spend a week
employed

by

work.

He

Rotary,

representatives,

a

ten

few

said

there

the

eastern

being

in

in

the

hundvred

Zurich

fifty-six

Secretariat,

Secretariat,

and

eleven

the

Chicago. He described the immense vclume cf mail handled
there being an average of 15,147 daily pisces.
The

gain

in

usual.
ported

On May
eleven,

greater

part

Britain
with

number

least

Frank

clubs

and

members

this

year

fizld

balance

at

been

un-

in

Chicago,

has

9th, the total of new clubs
Australia six, Continental

was 257, of which Asia reEurope
twenty-nine,
Great

the

that

seventeen,

at

of

people

of

two

Latin

Barnes

America

balance.

hundred

ninsty

gave

brief

a

twenty-six, and the United

He

predicted

new
x

report

clubs.

the

of district

yeay

activities

States

the

would

close

at

Mor-

the

day forenoon session.
Coldwater was given seventh place in the annual
attendance record, Hastings, Charlotte, Vicksburg, Lowell and Greenvill:

being the first
five clubs in order. I do ret recall the sixth club. Traverse City had the greatest increase in membership during the y:ar
having gained twelve.
Its total membership is now seventy-nine.
:
x
Ray
Dresser
described
the
amendments
to the Constitution
o.
Rotary, which are proposed and will be passed upon at Nice.
One ol
them is designed to put the control of district funds in the hands of
a ccmmitiee composed of the Governor and the two immediate past Governors.

cf

Anther

is

to

allow

credit

for

attendance

at

impromptu

m¢etings

Rotarians away from home.
It frequently happens on a boat trip, fishing or hunting
cr other similar occasions, that a number of Rotarians are
preserve their attendance record without such a gathering.

excursion,
unable to
There are

perhaps

thing

Rotarians

objections

to

of different

it

but

clubs

it

strikes

to gather in

the

Ed

such

ag

a

very

a meeting.

fine

There

for

should,

of course,
be a minimum
limit of attendance
to prevent
abuses but it
certainly igs worth
while to encourage
these meetings.
The Ed hag attended

the

two

lakes

such

and

one

meetings,

on

a

one

on

Caribbean

the

trip,

Michigan

both

of

Bankers

them

fine

excursion

ur

meétings.

�Nae

THE
The

greatest

RAZZBERRY

interest,

however,

officers
elected
in October and
is to give the District Governor

his work and ta make his
so they can get the benefit

length and
expressing

practically
the sense

centered

on

take
office
opportunity

a proposal

to

have

club

in January.
The
purpose
to become acquainted with

visits before the new officers are installed
of his experience. It was discussed at some

every speaker opposed it. A
cf the meeting
against
it.

resolution

was

passed

x:
A

resolution

was

offered

increasing

the

per

capita

contribution

to

the District Governor’s fund so. ag-to avoid the necessity of a registra:
tion fee at the District Conference. , This quéstion is a source of much
discussion
and
some
feeling
every
year.
It would
remove a hardship

and
way

increase attendance if this fee could be eliminated.
No practical
has yet been devised, however, to do so. When the Ed was District

Governor,

he

had

an

enthusiasm

to

avoid

it

and

called

a

meeting

of

fifteen leading Rocarians at Grand Rapids to devise ways and means to
do so.
This committsce spent the whole day in discussion with that
in view but wound up by retaining the registration fee.
At this con-

ference this year the
the Governor appoint

the next

annual

resolution
was
a committee to

tabled and
a motion
carried that
consider the matter and report at

conference.

x

Someone
to

state

handed

officials

in

and

a resolution

legislators

its

calling

upon

approval

of

the district
a

program

to
of

express
adequate

financial support for schools. This resolution was turned down as should,
of course, be done. If Rotary undertook to influence the political policies
of government,
Supreme Court,

the
next step might
be
to advocate or condemn

the

its

to oppose
the
packing
of the
sit-down strikes, to endorse or

oppose labor organizations. It would be but a short time until Rotary
would be transformed from a common meeting ground of widely divergent minds into a hot bed of discord and strife. It would soon pass out of
picture

and

great

influence

be

lost

to

the

world.

x
No

one

resolutions
humor
and
ment.
Fred

and,

an

who

has

never

heard

Fred

Wetmore

give

a

report

of

the

committee
can have
any
conc¢ption
of the possibilities
of
entertainment
contained in so dry and prosaic
an
assignis in a class by himself, He not only has a wide vocabulary

unusual

criminations

in

sense

the

of

use

humor

of

but

also

the

ability

language.

He

kept

the

roar of laughter for nearly a half hour
transaction of serious business.
He hag
of the resolutions
eventually has to

committea
for
take his place.

a

dozen

to

make

conference

nice

dis-

in

up-

an

without detracting
been the standing

from the
chairman

years.

man

Woe

to

the

who

x
Rather
surprisingly
tnig district hag a vote
for
a member
of the
Canadian
Advisory
Committee
of Rotary,
which
consists
of about
six
members
from
different
provinces
of Canada.
The
reason
is that
it
includes
a small
part of Ontario.
Arthur
S. Fitzgerald,
Past
District
Governor
from
Windsor,
was
proposed
and
the
district
unanimously

favored him,
Just now
mcrning

drum

we

hours, encircles
cf England.”

are remizded
beat,

the

following

earth

with

of McCauley’s

boast of an empire,

the

keeping

cne

sun

and

unbroken

strain

company

of

the

“Whose
with

martial

the

airs

�THE

RAZZBERRY

On behalf of the City of Lansing, Bill Otto extended an invitation
to the district to hold its 1938 conference in that city. There being no
ccher invitations, the offer was unanimously
accepted.
The District

Asstmbly

cf the
cf the
ernor

this

year

was

invited

to

Cadillac

by

Leo

Barnes,

President

club, to Albion by Don Harrington, and to St. Joe by a member
club there. Since it is the function of the incoming District Gov-

to determine

the

location

of the

assembly,

no

decision

was

reached.

.¢
Forty
of the forty-one
clubs
were
rew Secottville club being the only

the

repres&lt;nted
at
one left out.

the

conference,

x.
Janice
Porter, the opera star, whoce
programs
were
the highlight
cf the conference
musically
and who flew from Hollywood
to be présent, not only hag a wonderul
voice
but a very
charming
personality.

When she speaks to her audience
to you personally.

she

makes

you

fecl that) she

is talking

Club

were

present.

Donald

Charles

Wheeler

of

x

Seven

members

cf-Bronson;

Bill

of

the

Bronscn

of

Quincy

Johnson

and

Ward

Coldwater,

Junicr Rotariang from their clubs, were all present and had a wonderful
time. Paul Stewart, Jr., son-of-the-chaplain of Ionia State Prison, gave
a wond:rful talk at the Tuesday meeting.
x
Tears streamed down many a check when Emmett Richards, Past
District Governor and Director of R. I., President of the Michigan Socicty for Crippled
Children, introduced Donald
Callender of St. Joe,
who was afflicted with infantile paralysis at the age of eight months,
wag
taken under
the wing
of the Rotary
club at seven
years,
(up to
which
time
he had n:ver
walked)
had six operations
and
Icng
time

treatment,

which

football,

baseball

gratitude

to

was

and

so successful

basketball,

that

has

he

has

worked

attended

school,

in a restaurant

played

where he

was on his feet all day, is now twenty years of age and attending school.
He is a bright boy, uses very good English and displays a warmth of
Rotary

which

is

touching.

&gt;:¢
time

He

Pill

Brown,

is

swell

‘when
a

the

the

St.’

fellow,

ccnference

Joe-Eenton
an

conference, as did all the
ecnference was unusually
The

Chicago

enthusiastic

Rotary

at which
‘the products
of
and
educational
lines are

to 30th at the Hotel

chairman,

Harbor

club

Rotarian

other officials and
well entertained.
x

Club

each

came

year

put

and

to

on

did

Coldwater

at

on2

a fine

at

the

a

program

committee

holds

a

job

for

chairman.

busiress

us.

The

exposition

its members
along
commercial,
professicnal
displayed.
This
year it was held Acril 27th

Sherman.

There

eX

were

twenty-five

thousand

Eggertsville—Snyder, Wahiawa—Waialua, Wuchang,
mas, Navojoa, Doetinchem, Coxackie, and Nancauga are
brand new Rotary clubs.

visiters.

Rouen, Guayall cities with

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                    <text>THE

To Have Arrived Is Tragedy:

ISSUED

T's Year Must Be Even Better!

RAZZBERRY

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

x
“HE PROFITS MOST WHO

MARCH 23, 1937

|

SERVES BEST”

:

VOL. 3—NO. 7

Will R. Manier, Jr.

Rotary has become a great world force, partially because it is soundly based and partially because of the-vrganizing ability of its personnel.
The heart of its organization has always been the Secretariat—that is,
it has been until now. The presidents R. I. has performed’a very ueful funct'on.
He has been the front.
He has inspired Retary gatherings
all over the world.
He has perscnif ed Rotary almcst as a country is
typified by its flag—that is, he has until now.
This year it is different.
Bill Maier has a different conception of

the function of a President.

He is nox spending this year in travel.

He

can be reached almest any time at the Chicago Secretar‘at.
A letter to
him gets an immediate reply.
He is spending: his entire time in building
the Rotary organization.
He is in a class by himself.
There is perhaps no man living who ha3

so wide

a knowledge

and’ so broad

a coneeptioni of Rotary: as~he.

I do

not even except Paul Harris nor-Ches Perry.
In his talk on Rotary Extension last Wednesday, he told-of Jini Davidson's dream’ of trebling the

number of clubs-in R. I. B: I. ‘and on the continent “of: Europe.
I am
convinced that if he could beeome-a. salaried- President and could afford

to spend: his time in Rotary werk; he wou'd- actually. accomplish:-that
objective in five-years time.
He would increase the number of c'ubs from:
four thousand toe ten thousand and 2Imost’ double Rotary member: hip.
Just. what. that would mean to the orld and to Rotary is hard to say
but it certainly wouid be an outstanding contribution to world peace and
understanding—an cbjective of the gravest moment when the war clouds
are darkening the horizon and spreading over the sky with alarming
rapidity.
At the Rotary Institute at Detroit, the Ed became enthused with the
notion of proposing to request Maurice DuPerry and Kurt Belfarge to
pestpone the‘r candidacies for one year and consent to the re-election of
Bill Manier by acclamation.
But when it was broached to him he refused to consider it because he could not afford another year’s time
away from his practice.
There are, however, plenty of lawyers.
If he were permanently out
of the profession, the public would still be adequately served and he
wou'd be little missed.
But in Rotary there is on’y one Bill Manier.
It
seems to me that his field of service is clearly in Rotary.
The balance of

his lifetime should be devoted to it.

It. probably should not be as Pres'dent.
That wou'd. disrupt. the prevailing system tco greatly..
But whatever the title the actual responsibility of Rotary extension and organization should be on him—and at.
an adequate salary.
There need be no hesitation in-edding the salary to the budget.
His
activities would almost certainly resuJt in more than offsetting that burden by increasing Rotary’s financial resources.
Perhaps this dream cannot be realized.
Perhaps he would not eousider it. In my humb'e judement, however, he should.
He would not be
living up to his own-ideal of service if he refused to devote his life to the
werk in which he could be of vastly greater use to the word than in his
choren profession.
We are sending &amp; ccpy cf this number of the Razzberry to each member of the Board of Directors of R. I. in the hope of
chal'enging the board’s attent’on to the preposal.

�THE

-RAZZBERRY
THE

ANNUAL CONVENTION
(And Other Things)

Probably no delegate can be sent from Coldwater to Nice this year.
Charlie Pollock (or rather Ethel Pollock) had an ambition to go.
It is
probable, however, that their prololiged absence this winter will temporarily satisfy their flare for travel..The Ed had some stirrings of the
wanderlust, especially because of his appointment as a delegate to the
International Institute to be held at Montreux, Switzerland, the week
before the convention.
The enthusiasm subsided, however, before doing
any great damage.
The Soo, Ontario Club, is sending six representatives to the convention and offers to have one of its members act as proxy from any club
in the district which is not sending a delegate of its own.
We suggest
that this offer be accepted.so far as Coldwater is concerned.
There are about thirty Rotarign=-and Rotary Anns from, the district
going over.
Governor Barnes, his wife, and daughter, Kay, will head the
party, together with the District Governor Nominee, whoever that may be.
The question is not settled until the conference, cf course, but Kim Sigler
is a good guess.
The nom‘nation was conceded to him until recently when
the Canadian Soo decided to projett Jim Shaw into the race.
The Soo
is entit’ed to great consideration but it is prebable that J'm will be pu'led
this year.
If the Sso C!ub proposes him next year, it will be hard to
turn him down.
Forty-six

members

of the

Atlanta,

Georgia

Club

are

going.

Sixteen United States Senators-and thirty-nine Representatives are
Rotarians—so are President Roosevelt and Vice-President Garner.
x:
The Ed is today in receipt of the following brief note from the Secretary of the Rotary Club of Berlin, in which he extends greetings to the
club. We print both the original-text and the translation.
Lieber

Rotarier

Vielen

Dank

Cowell:

fur

Berlin,

Ihren

freundlichen

Brief

vom

den

8. Marz

1937

18. November

1936.

In der Anlage sender wir Jhnen eine kurze Angabe uber die Entwicklung
Rotarys in Deutschland und einige Schriften uber Deutschland im Allegemeinen.
‘
;
Bitte ubermitte’n Sie Ihrem Prasidenten und allen Ihren Mitgliedern
unsere herzlichsten Grusse.

Mit freundlichen Rotary Grussen

Thr

Heinrich

v. Gleichen
Sekretar

Berlin, March 8, 1937
Rotarian Cowell:
Many thanks fer your friendly letter of 18 November, 1936.
Here-.
with we send you a short account of the development of Rotary in Germany and a few pamphiets about Germany ‘n general.
Please convey to
your President and.all of your members our heart-felt greeting.
With friendly Rotary greetings,
‘
Yours,
Heinrich V. Gleichen
Sekretar.
Dear

The value of such international exchanges is hard to estimate in
these unsettled times.
A world war is“in the offng.
It seems inevitab!&gt;.
Every country in Eurepe is engaging in the most frenzied prevaration
for it. But every international contact tends in the other direction.
If
Rotary principles could be universally disseminated and actually adopted, there would be no war.

�THE

BAZZELZRRY

Having A Big Argument

“Glenn Cowell, editor of the Coldwater Razzberry, and Jawn Caldwell,
secretary of the Honolulu Rotary Club, are having a big argument over
which is the largest city in the world in point of geographical area.
Glenn
says Los Angeles; Jawn says Honolulu.
Jawn seems to be ahead, for he
insists that the City limits of Honolulu-extends from Oahu to Palmyra.
Since some of you may not recall the number of miles between those two
places, let us inform you that said distance is 960 nautical miles.
Now
all you have to do is to find out how far a nautical mile extends.
Glenn
is now cheering the proposal to incorporate the Sahara Desert, so as to
outelass Honolulu.
Such are international relations between Rotarians.”
—Charlotte Rotary Mirror. a
KE

We notice in the Toronto Rotary Voice that pract*cally all the new
members are representatives of industrial. concerns and that practically
all these concerns are limited.
“Harding Carpets, Ltd.”
«Canadian Metal Window &amp; Steel Products, Ist.”
“Sangamo Company, Ltd.”
“Ford Motor Company of Canada, Ltd ”
In the Canadian corporation ccde, ):mited companies seem to have
the advantages that attract industries to that form of crganization.
ee

“A man need not be
speaker in another.”
Honolulu Rotogram.

a Bee

in his

own

club

to

be

the

principal

x—

HELLO!
Two new clubs in the district—all in one week. Manistee is bringing
into being the Scottville Club with eighteen charter members.
Its charter night is Monday, April 5th.
Belding is the proud parent of the.Sparta Club with seventeen charter members.
Its charter night is net arnounced.
At least a letter and
preferably a gift should go from Coldwater to each of these new clubs.
a

THE ROTARY INSTITUTE AT DETROIT
John Hardy and Rex Kiess were there for the bonquet at n’ght. The
Ed was the on'y Co'dwater Rotsrisn who attended the day sessions.
It
really was quite a wonderful institute.
The attendance was composel
almost entirely of men who take Rotary seriously and spend considerable
time in its work.
All of the sessions were addressed by Bill Manier
and were devoted to various denartments of Rotary activity.
It is hard
to realize how the somewhat dry and hackneyed subiect of vocational
service could be made the vehicle of such a wonderful talk as he gave
at the luncheon Wednesday noon.
It is also d'ff'cult to realize that such
a pitch of enthusiasm for Rotary extension cou'd be aroused as was dove
in the afternoon session.
The talk on “Rotary-World Wide” was equally
wonderful.
Jn our judement this institute contributed greatly to the solidarity
of Rotary in the 28rd and 35th Dictricts and its impact on the communities served by them.
Such institutes held in every district would
give Rotary a new birth of enthusiasm.
a

Some people
saw them.

are gnawed

by remorse

and

others

are quite sure nobody

a,

The
now has

old-fashioned girl who used to wa'k to keep the right figure
a Couche who walks because she gives the wrong answer.
e

If we dont
we get more.

enjoy

what

we have

Xe

now,

we

won’t

be a bit happier

*

when

�THE

RAZZBE

RRY

Hastings, First; Coldwater, Fifth
Governor Barnes’ monthly letter shows Coldwater fifth in attendance
record.for the month with a percentage of 94.12.
The four clubs which
are ahead of it are Hastings, Lowell; Charlotte and Vicksburg.
Only
three other clubs are in the:90% bracket, Ludington, Michigan Soo ani
Belding.
The two. clubs below 70%" are Muskegon and Grand Rapids.
The only large club in the 80% bracket is Kalamazoo.
The large clubs
in the.district.in the order of their size are as follows:
GUANA GEA DIAS a=.
fi. esses sisi -estihicim RO
ceoamarooy
8 oo
Sa
ee 98
Lansing
PZ
OGMELAVCLS CagGH
Ui vee. ce ec os
716
Battles@reek 8... ES 104 Mu:kegon
15
The Jackson Club seems. to. have-fallen.in membership as it has only
68 members at present, only one more’than Grand Haven.
There ar2
but thirteen clubs in the district. with fifty or more members, Coldwater
being one of them.
It is noticeable that of the four clubs recent y organized, three, Lowell, Ludington and Belding, are-in the top flight and
Zeelandis just below it. Lowell, by the way, is second this month.
Tae
smalest club in the district is Boyne City with sixteen members.
.

S ee

Sky Marshall, Editor of the St. Johns Rotary Spirit says that Superintendent of Public Instruction Elliott gave a great talk on Horace Mana.
Then he asks, “Who in hell is-horace Mann?” We refer that question
to Bob Sharer.
OQ

The Shanghai Rotary Pagoda has a very interesting page of Rotary
News from other clubs.in the Orient.
It is-worthy of ncte that Japanese

Clubs

are

discussed

as freely

international bitterness

as

in Rotary.

Chinese

clubs.

SHE
‘

seems

to be no
.

=

Jawn Caldwell, who edits the Honolulu ptortary says:
more than a wheel in the lapel of a coat to make a Rotarian.”

“It

takes

Xe

It seems*that Eng‘and is not a unit on the vast program of war preparation which is being projected. under the euphonious title of “National Defence” as the following letter in the London Rotarian wi'l show:
17th February,..1937
Dear.Editor:
You will have noticed that on the day’: when we read in the Wh't2
Paper on Defence that “It would ke imprudent .to ccontemp ate a tot-1l
expenditure on defence during the next five years of much less than.1,500,000,000 pounds,” the members of the London. Rotary Club are privileged
to hear from Sir Kingsley Wood “One ofthe best Sale
of: defence is
a happy and contented people, Y
Sincerely yours,
S. JOHNSON EVANS,
(“Another Liberal. and .Nonconformist.”)
x
ST. JOE-BENTON HARBOR CONFERENCE
Coldwater should send a good delegation to the lake May: 9th, 10th
and 11th.
The.distance. to the Annual Ccnvent:.on
will probably curtail
attendance.and will increase attendance to the District Conference:
Tne
beauty of the lake shore at that season of the year will make it attractive
for the Rotary Anns—to say noth’ng cf the Rotarians.-- Roy Shattucx&lt;
should not find it difficult to organize quite a mob for this occasion:
Tae
new members should make an e*pecial effort.to go. No one quite gets the
vision of Rotary until he attends cone of the conferences.
XS

The

1938 Convention

of R. I..will-be he'd. in San
—————__—

-xX—--—-

Very fittingly the Rotary Club of
sponsored the Rotary Club of Aurora.

—

Francisco.

—

Rising

Sun,

Indiana

has

recently

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                    <text>THE

To Have Arrived Is Tragedy:

ISSUED

This Year Must Be Even Better!

RAZZBERRY

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

x

FEB. 23, 1937

“HE

PROFITS

MOST.

WHO

|

SERVES

BEST”

VOL. 3__NO. 6

The Founder of Rotary

Paul

My

Dear

“Boh”:

H.

Harris
Chicago, - Ill.
February 4, 1937

As you doubtless know, I came to Chicago in 1896 ta practice law.
I
happened to dine with a brother lawyer one night in Edgewater and
after dinner we went to walk about town and dropped in on several .of .
his neighborhood friends who were local shop-keepers ‘but. no two were
in the same line cf trade.
|.
I was at the time, a young lawyer of few clients, and almost no friends
or acquaintances, having been brought up in a small New England town.
I missed my friends very much.
The experience with my brother lawyer impressed me very deep'y;
he had everything I had been longing for.
I, mulled over it for nearly five years and my ideas expanded considerably during that period.
As far as I can remember, Sylvester Schiele,
still a member of the Chicago Club, was the first to whom I spoke of the
movement I had in mind.

�THE

‘RA

ZZABE

REY

The Founder of Rotary—Contd.
The Chicago Club grew very rapidly and its success awakened the
ambition to extend the movement much further and to direct its impetus
of usefulness.
Sincerely yours,
Paul H. Harris.
The above letter was ccntributed by the founder of Rotary, especially
for this anniversary number of the Razzberry, and. as a personal message
from the first President of our great organization to the Coldwater Rotary Club.
It is a recognition which is unique and exemplifies the fraternal spirit
of Rotary, which is the predominating characteristic of Paul Harris.
In this miessage he portrays the very nucleus of the organization and
allows us to fathom the innermost thoughts which led him to seek the
companionship of his fellowmen and thus sowed the tiny seed which has
multiplied by many thousand fold and has spread the beneficent jnfluence ‘of Rotary into the farthermost corners of the earth.
Little did he realize when the grovn of four sat down to that firct
ecnference table on Feb. 23, 1905. exacty thirtv-two vears ago today,
that it was to become one of the greatest organizations of its kind in the
world.
It must warm his heart and cheer h‘s soul to have been spared the
years so that he has the bountiful pleasure and u'timate satisfaction cf
knowing what he has builded: a lasting and enduring edifice: one no‘
made of stone, or brick, or mortar; but from the lives and energies cf
men, through whose influence his human svmpathy and bountiful charity shall be carried far into the future until it shall touch the hearts of
man in every home, every state, and every nation on the face of the earth.
7

“WHAT

ROTARY

MEANS

TO

ME”’—“A

ROTATING

BROWNIE”

R. Stands for Rotary, that you all know.
O. is for Others, unselfish, and so
T. to be ready to help out a Brother.
A. is for and, that means, one Another.
R. for Respect, and that’s understocd.
Yes, a real Rotarian, he has to be good.

Good to himself, and to all mankind.

There

is no

excuse,

for

he

is not

blind.

Tho he turns a deaf ear, whenever he chooses,
But in doing that. he the benefit loses.
As to your own lives, you must be your Master.
If you’re not, your own Craft will sail on to disaster.
Put yourself in the back ground, g0 way back
And smile as you do so, forgetting to frown.

Don’t

act

Remember,

like

a monkey,

there’s

others,

who

can

has

scre

wiggle

news.

their

and

sit down

jaws.

Let’s celebrate Rotary cn Paul Harris’ plan.
Read over its objects, then act like a man.
And say to yourself, were Paul here today.
Would I be his sort of a Friend, wou'd he say.
“T’m proud

of you fellews, you’re doing rieht well

For a bunch of Rotarians, I think you excell.”
--Rotary

Ann

Shattuck.

‘

pes)

‘

�DAE

A
WHY

ZZ

I LIKE

Ry

ROTARY

Really, this is not such an easy subject if I am to be honest about it.
Did you ever ask yourself the question, “Why do I like Rotary” and then
try and write it?
I know well enough the proper thing to say, and should bear down
on all of the spokes and cogs of the Rctary Wheel; everything this symbo! stands for is ideal, but did you ever notice how many cogs there are?
So I believe that if we can each get in gear once in a whi'e, we at least
belong to the wheel and are all a cog in it.
. Now to my subject:
My association with Rotarians has made me
more tolerant with the cther fellow’s viewpoint; there is always the remote

possibility

that

I

might

be

wrong;

to

strive

a

little

harder

to

be

competent and to render the service in my profession that shou!d be
rendered.
I have learned a great deal from the discussions at Rotary meetings,
both from our local members and the various talks and subjects taken up
by outside speakers. Also this Service Motto has induced me to assume at
various times, tasks outside of my regular work, which, had I followed my
inclinations, would have been done by somecne else.
Upon studying this
paragraph, I will add that the examp’e established week after week by
many of the officers, has had a very good influence.
I could continue te ponder and analyze my reacticn to various incidents connected with visits to other clubs, their very fine hospitality, and
the weekly contact w:th our club members, a great many of whom we
would only meet occasional!y and then not get to know them if it were
not for our club.
The above are mainly my reasons for l’:king Rotary.
George

Vail.

The first reason that I would like to give for liking Rotary, is qu:t2
personal.
When I was asked to represent my prcfession in the c’ub, I
felt that a signal privilege had been granted me and in the years that have
passed-since then, that first feeling has been greatly deepened.
During these years I have had the privilege of fellowship and comradeship with my fellow Rotarians from practically all of the busine*s and
professional classification in the community.
Th‘s has meant much to
me and I feel that I have been very distinct'y the winner.
Moreover I
like Rotary for its “Four Lane Highway” of principles, neat'y summed
up in the term cf “Service”.
I like Rotary also for its world-wideness
and, I believe that in proportion as the spirit and works of Rotary prevail, the chances for international good will are greatly increased.
Herb

Hurrell.

x:

OBSERVATIONS

OF A ROTARY

ANN

As a cateress at the Rotary luncheons for several years, I have made
the following observations:
I know that Herb Lee hated corn bread;
that George Branch does not like pumpkin pie; that Si Treat did and
stil may prefer Swiss steak to chicken Melba toast, and that Char’ie Pollock takes green tea when he has a headache; also that Bill Frankhauser
cannot stay in his seat during the time lunch is be:ng served, he roams
around and takes the butter and rolls from any tab’e that has a surp us.
I think the c'ub very wise in backing public projects only at long intervals and in this way it will not become too. commonplace and thus
will mainta:n the interest of the public and secure their support.
I wish to thank the members of the club for the many delightful
ladies’ night entertainments which I have enjoyed and I am sure that this
expresses the sentiments of the entire Rotary Ann membership.
Sincerely,

Rotary

Ann

Mi'nes.

�—————_._

«§s THE

RAZZABERRY

Yost Day Today

The City cf Coldwater honors itself as well as an outstanding citizen
of Michigan in the celebration of Yost Day today.
Fielding H. Yost: is more than a football coach.
He is more than the
director of athletics at a University.
He is a great force among the youth
of Michigan today.
His influence for clean living, clean sportsmanship
and high standards of morals cannot be over-estimated.
In these days of alarming relaxation from the old standards of conduct, the importance of such an influence must not be overlooked.
Mr. Yost commands the respects of all boys for his achievements in
athletics.
He has never stooped to win games by tricks or artifice and
has not approved of low grade physical, moral or ethical practices.
To hold him up as an example to the you‘h cf Coldwater is a deserved compliment to him but it means much more to. this city in furnishing the right kind of idea! for its budd:ng manhood.
Sas

anEnEEEEEnEnnEnees Seinen

WHAT ROTARY HAS MEANT TO ME
Rotary has for eight years been an opportunity to me—a wide oren
door of opportunity.
This open door has made possible for me a fellowship with men of this community which wou'd have been impossible
if the door had been closed.
Rotary has provided me with an open door of opportunity for prac-

tical service.

This

service

has

been

effective

and

practical

because

it

was offered by joint: thought and effort of fifty men to needy causes in
the community.
Rotary has been an open door :n a th'rd sense.
It is easy to get so
concerned in one’s own business that a fe low loses interest in the many
problems of society.
The regular Rotary programs with their varied
subjects provide one with a continuing course in general education, and
in this way Rotary opens .a way of escape fram. the deadening ruts of
daily routine.
Bob. Sharer.

“Often, before having the opportunity of kecoming a Rotarian, I had
the impression that it was just a luncheon club, but, starting from the

time Bob Wade gave me the Principles of Rotary, I have found some
worth while advantage and enjoyment with every meeting.
Now, Rotary appeals to me as an institution offering the means cf
public service to your community; an opportunity to broaden one’s se'f
through intimate contact with an excel‘ent grcup of representative business men.
i
Rotary offers a place for young men to learn to give service in cooperation

with

others

where

they

wll

receive

the

satisfaction

of

ac-

complishment withcut personal glory.
The social part of Rotary is pleasant and entertaining;
its value,
however is personal and acts as a means of keeping the organ‘zation intact.
I sincerely believe that Rutary can take just an ordinary man and
make a good man of him.
M. J .Hungerford.
a

TIMELY SUGGESTIONS FROM BOB KERR
Aren’t there quite a number of fellows in Coldwater who would qualify for some unfilled classification in Rotary?
I believe that without a doubt the greatest sati-fact‘on the most of
our members get from the Rotary club comes from the: contacts and the
associations with a good many fellows that we do not get together with
very often except at Tuesday meetings
This satisfaction perhaps could ke Froadened if some of each of us
could recommend a couple of likely prozpects to our Membership Committee.

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                    <text>To Have Arr:ved Is Tragedy:

ae

ISSUED

This Year Must Be Even Better!

RAZZBERRY_

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

eS
2S

“HE

PROFITS

MOST

WHO

SERVES

BEST”

FEB. 9,-1937

VOlL-3—-ND 5

The Big Show Is Over
The

big

show

is over

and

it went

over

big.

No members of the club can be picked out for special mention.
The
whole club from President Put and Secretary Hugh down to George Vail
has done its part.
If any fellow has been a slacker, he knows it better
than the rest.
The fact, however, that any fellow didn’t take a prominent part or even that he was absent from rehearsals does not necessarily
prove him a siacker.
There
indebted.

Bowermans,

are many outside
Among these Mrs.
the

ual performers

Paynes,

In this connection
Kiess:

_

The

ticket

By

the way,

the

are entitled

sale was

we

the club, however, to whom
Milnes:‘and Karl Hellenberg

Alexanders,

the

Shattucks

to and

have

cannot

resist the temptation

unexpectedly

the Harmonica

our thanks.

—

we are deevly
stand out. The

and

the

to mention

individ-

Flossie

easy

Hounds

should

not. be overlooked.

The financial accounting from the show has not yet been completed.
The gross receipts from ticket sales were approximate y $500.00 and from
the program $175.00.
The whole community kicked in nicely in donating
services, but in spite of that there is considerable expense.
The net reSult, however, will be ample to complete the financ‘ng of the band uniforms, which already have been ordered.
Because of the publicity of the show, there is danger that the club
will be given main credit for the campaign.
That would be unjust to the
Parent Teachers’ Association, which inaugurated it and, with the helo — :
of other societies as well as Rotary. carried it to: a successful conclusion.
In that connection it is well for us to remember that Rotary does not
assume leadership in community enterprises where there is other competent management available.
But every Rotarian is expected to be active in all worthy projects.
In spite of the prevalence of flu and the natural re-action from the
hard work of rehearsals, it now appears we will put on a creditable show
at Hillsdale tenight.
Frank Cook, Harold Stock, Dwight Harwood and
Bill Prideaux, the Hillsdale committee, came to rehearsal Sunday and
courteously offered to release us from the undertaking, but the crowd was
in no mocd to abandon it. There was as much pep in that rehearsal as
in any we have held.

�o

Coy

THE’

RAAZBERRY

The Big Show—Continued
The Hillsdale Club is one of the best clubs in the
no finer group of fellows anywhere.
It is the daddy
Club and does not seem ashamed of its progeny.

district.
"There is
of the Coldwater

We are leaving from the Parish House promptly at 6:30 tonight.
Carl
Vinton is in charge of transportation and has plenty of cars lined up.
We will not attend the dinner (although we were cordially invited) but
they are putting on a lunch and dance for us after the show.

—_——_x

Louis Moinault’s Letter
The Ed has requested Rotarians from several foreign clubs to write
guest editoria’s for the Razzberry.
Be'ow we publish the re:ponse of the
Paris club, written by its President, Louis Moinault.
His French was tco
much for us so we turned it over to Bob Sharer fcr translation.
To our
surprise he ducked the job and paszed the buck to Miss Sieffan‘ak,
who acted as the interpretor.
Mr. Glenn
Coldwater.
My

Dear

Cowell,

December

22,

1935

Comrade:

It is with the greatest ePsaee that I answer the wish expressed in
letter of November 17.
“The International Rotary, our friend G. Nagnel of Gand (Belgium)
to'd. us last February, is a work full of nobility.”
And this work, he defined to us, explained it to us with eloquence, g’orified it to us.
There are in this substantial discourse to which I refer you, ideas
that could be called mother-ideas. or again strength-ideas, because, made
fruitful they are capable of producing comfort, enthusiasm, in a word,
life.
I. will sum them up, by saying that they dispo-e men to hep -each
other and to love each cther, all men w:thcut distinction of class,
of
your

religion

and

of

nationality.

That is good. that is fine, and that comprises a whole program,
You will find it therefore natural that I attach mysef to these high
ideas. and, that I attach myself to them as to a flag and so much more
closely that the times are troubled.
In order to be more exact and more true, I shall have to say that w2
are in the presence cf a state of affairs so really abnormal! that it impos2s on us in the first place, a redoublement of vigilance and of prudence.
-Events, you know, move quickly.
Perhaps they surpass in quickness
the visions of the mest clever and the most subile minds.
A‘l the more
reason to hold available all our energies.
Of course in order that they may be prcductive it is necessary to as‘sign to them an aim.
In my opinion, it is of imnortance. above all tio keep confidenc? and
reascn and to cons'der humanely the human problems fcr whose solution
the world is on the alert.
It is not necessary to repress, a priori, the forces that aim to establish a new order.
It is not neces“ary above all to live anart from movements that we
see and that seem’ to be cn'y the vre‘ude of movements more profund.
For, let us not ferget, the things which happen without us happen
against us.

�SR»

THE

RAZZBERRY

———

Louis Moinault’s Letter—Cont’d
And that is why I invite to our luncheons prominent personalities
of contrary cpinions whose judgment is. certainly valuable.
It is necessary to go ahead and to stay young—I should like that
to be our motto.
It is necessary for the Rotary to have its great windows open on the
even

wer'd

—

cn

the

entire

world;

that

it

show

itself

we!com:ng,

conciliating

and always dispozed to receive the most diverse and audacious suggestions,
free to differ from them, after exam‘nation.
For I do not forget that
I am of the country of Descarte and Pascal.
I should like for it (the Rotary) an increased authority, an authority
shin_ng sce bright, so real that in high places, in any country, one could
not disregard it.
An authority specifically rotarian.
We wil acquire it by continu‘ng to work in peace. in union, elbows
c’ose together and faithful to our ideal which is — I have pleasure to
say it again lcudly — an ideal of beauty, of humanity, an ideal of life
ardent and generous.
While begging you to extend all our wishes to our Comrades of the
Co'dwater Club. I address to you. My Dear Comrade, to you personally
the expres3:on of my very ccngenia! sentiments.
LOUIS

MOINAULT,

President.

“a

Many Important Changes
The Board of Directors of R. I. has. decided to redistrict Rotary in
the United States and has made many important changes.
The Ed wrote
the Secretariat to find whether the 35th District was being changed.
President Bill Manier, Jr. replied personally, saying there was. no change
in the 35th but the 3rd is being split in two.
The northern portion contains the fcllowing clubs.
Ontario (8 clubs)—Aylmer, London, Meaford, Owen Sound, St. Mary’s
Sarnia, Stratford, Woodstock.
Michigan
(22)—-Algonac, Alma, Alpena, Bad Axe, Bay City, Caro,
Cass City, Clio, Croswell, Flint, Harbor Beach, Ithaca, Lapeer, Marine
City, Midland, Mt. Pleasant, Owosso, Pert Huron, Richmond, Saginaw.
St. Clair, Vassar.
The Southern portion contains the following clubs:
Ontario (8 clubs)—Amherstburg, Bienheim, Chatham, Essex, Leamington, Ridgetown, Thamesville, Windsor.
Michigan
(29 clubs)—Adrian,
Ann Arbor,
Birmingham,
Blissfield,
Brighton, Carelton, Center Line, Dearborn, Detroit, East Dearborn, Ferndale, Flat Rock, Hamtramck, Highland Park, Howell, Milan, Monroe, Mt.
Clemens, Northville, Plymouth, Pontiac, Romeo, Roseville, Royal Oak,
Saline, Tecumseh, Utica, Wayne, Ypsilanti.
It would be quite unpleasant tc break up the associations. which we
have formed with the clubs in our district.
Much is to be said for the
change, however because many districts are unwieldy in size and awkIn an early issue we will publish a guest editcrial written
ward in shape.
by Dwight Marvin for “Collartown Sparks”,
which is the bulletin of the
Rotary Club of Troy. New York.
President B‘ll enclosed a copy of this
editorial with his letter.
XX

The Assoc‘ate Editor who
of the Razzberry is Bob Wade.
a

February

-

wi'l have entire
Help!
Help!

charge

cf

the

next

Sea ny

SUGGESTIONS
TO TFHE FEBRUARY
PROGRAM
COMMITTEE
23rd is the anniversary of the founding of

Rotary.

issue

�THE

RAAZZBERRY

Some City!
In a recent issue we pub‘ished a guest editorial by Jawn Caldwell,
Secretary of the Honolulu Club, in which he stated that Honolulu was
the largest city in area in the world.
In a careless moment we challenged that statement and claimed the honor for Los Angeles, in which
city you can travel sixty miles in a straight line without going outside
the city limits. He came right back with a letter, which, with our answer
to it, follows.
Mr. Glenn Cowell,
Editor of the Raspberry,
Coldwater, Michigan
Greetings:
You

are bodaciously

shif’less

when

it comes

to geography.

The

city limits of Honolulu

extend

from

the

Northerly

if you

don’t

of Oahu to the Westerly reef of Palmyra.
The distance is 960 nautical miles, and
way, Swim it with a back stroke. »

reef

believe

of the
that

Is'and

is a long

+

Furthermore,

the

City

and

the

Island

County

of Pal, ayra
of Honolulu?
Sab

If.I could afford it, would "do Ie

ing from the strike, all I can do
tached to the envelope.
ie ~
Aloha

pays

taxes

to the Tax

of

an Atlas but being, as we are, suffer-

uy you a stamp, which

Nui

Assessor

you will find at-

Kakou,

JAWN,
: Jawn

Caldwell,

Secretary.

Thursday
January 28
e953
el,
Jawn

Caldwell,

Secretary, Rotary
P. O. Box 2658,
Honolulu, Hawaii.
My

Dear

Club,

Jawn:

You win. But my noticn
thought it a place where
water and wilderness.

of a city has undergone a change.
I always
people congregate, not a tractless expanse of

Sometime someone will
be hopelessly outclassed.

incorporate

Aloha
W.

Nui Kahou

Glenn

Cowell.

(or something&gt;,

the

Sahara

Desert,

then

you

will

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                    <text>To Have Arrived Is Tragedy:

Sy

THE
‘

ISSUED
“HE

This Year Must Be Even Better!

.RAZZBE
RR Y¥

BY

THE

COLDWATER

say

PROFITS

MOST

WHO

ROTARY

SERVES

JAN. 19, 1937

CLUB

BEST”

}

VOL. 3—NO. 4

Michigan Society for Crippled

Children.

beet

—

Percy Angoor, executive secretary, could tell this story much better
than this week’s assistant editor and that is just what we tried to have
him do. We who heard him at Battle Creek knows how full he is of his
subject and hew well he tells it; so full of it though thet it might take
two Razzberries to carry all his message. But in a four page closely writ* ten letter he outlines the valient features of the work of the society.
As a result of the Rotary Convention in Battle Creek in 1919, this
society was launched and incorporated in 1921, and until 1934 was financed entirely by Rotary. During this time 61 free clinics were held and over
5,000 children were hospitalized. Coldwater was cne of the earlier cities
to avail itself of the privilege of a free clinic, and under the able manage~
ment of Harry Lansing the entire county was combed for possible cases

that

could

be helped.

Over

80 children

were

examined

and

about

fifty

were hospitalized. We have had visual demonstrations of the wonderful
help some of these children received. Again about five years ago a similar
clinic was held, by which a dozen children were enabled to have needed
hospital care.
!
The.Michigen Society of Crippled Children in 1927 sponsored and
created the act establishing the Michigan Crippled Children Commission,
and ever since has been on the alert to protect this law, keep the work
out of politics, and secure the needed appropriations. As.a result of the
activities of the society and the ccmmission 26,959 crippled children have
been reported and on June 30th, last, there were 13,616 cases in the active
file.
In the nine years 13,343 children have been discharged. Discharges of
course, involve different reasons, but of this number 4,251 were actually
cured, and 1,467 received rehabiliation services.
4251 children rescued
from a condition of dependency and care, and placed squarely on their
feet like other children, is certainly a worth-while work, and something
in which we can be thankful to have had a part.
The financing of the work of the Michigan
Society
for
Crippled
Children is accomplished almost entirely through the sale of Easter Seals,
which this year will carry the slogan “Joyous Life for Crippled Children,”
a worthy objective indeed. While it will be some little time before the actual sale of stamps begins it is not tco early to acquaint our members
and the public with the chance they have to help do a lot of kiddies a lot
of good by the simple process of buying liberally of these stamps.
es

THE FORGOTTEN
FIELD OF ROTARY
The so-called “forgotten field cf Rotary—Vocational Service—is th2
one wherein lies the real genius of Rotary. It is high time we re-discovered
that “forgotten field” and reenlisted the efforts of all Rotarians to take
back to their professions, their crafts and their trades, the Rotary ideal
of unselfish service.
Tcday there is a greater need than ever before to
put the ideals of Rotary into business and the professions.
—Manilla Rotary Balita.

�PIE

Aw

Se

hh Y

A Sign of Littleness
So,

A man
and

said:

now

I

“I have

crossed me once,
of my life.”

have

and

my

been

waiting

chance.”

I will

make

ten years

Another

him

to get even

said:

regret

“That

with

fellow

it if it takes

me

So-and-

double-

the

rest

Each of them was really saying, “I am a little man.”
For jf biography
and- history teaches us anything it is that big men almost always vefused to poison their spirits with vindictiveness and hate.
Napoleon was by na means an ideal character, but he had superb :ndifference to personal animosity.
When someone questioned his judgment in appcinting one cf his critics to an important. office, Napoleon
expressed surprise.
“What do I care what he thinks of me,” he demanded, “as long as he can do the work.”
Abraham Lincoln amazed the nation by putting into h’s Cabinet his
foremost political adversaries.
As Secretary of War he chose Stanton,
who had snecerinely characterized him as a clown and a gorilla,
He made
Seward Secretary of State, knowing well that Seward regarded himse’f
as’much the abler man.
Chase, his Secrtary of the Treasury, used his
Cabinet influence to promote his own chances for the Presidential aomination.
It meant nothing to Lincoln co long as Chaze kept the confidence
of the country and did his work well.
When McCle'lan snubbed him
brutally, and Lincoln was urged to replace him, he replied:
“I will hold
McCtellan‘s horse if cnly he will give us v:ctories.”

Disraeli had the same calm superiority to personal resentment.

When

a partisan of more vindictive turn expressed his astonishment at his
meekness, he replied: “I never trouble to be avenged.
When a man injures me, I put his name on a slip cf paper and Jock it up in a drawer. it
is marvelous te see how the men I have thus label‘ed have the knack of
disappearing.”
In the Bible is this sentence: “Vengeance is mine. I will repay, faith
the Lord.”
A certain proportion of men feel that they must help the
Lord in His task cf repayment, that otherwise He will get behind in
His work.
So they nurse personal injuries; they harbour resentment,
and accept every opportunity to denounce and criticize.
These are never big men. , Big men are too busy.—Bruce Barton.

———-—-x
Last week as part of the refreshments fcr the Hi-Y banquet the
‘local organization asked Harold Stock of Hillsdale for
five
hundred
dovghnuts.
Stocks make doughnut flour, have doughnut machines, and
the combination gave the local beys the idea that the mil makes doughnuts just for the fun of it. Harold generously complied and a couple of
days later brought a party of eight or nine over to the Hillsdale-Coldwater
basketba'l game.
Bob Sharer recognized him, unceremoniously passed his
entire party into the game.
;
Harold is usually on the “giving end” of things and was genuinely
pleased

at

this

gesture.

Bob

Sharer’s

a

smoothie.

x

Sometimes we wonder what a Rotary table would say if it could
talk.
Perhaps it would say:
“He always sits here.”; “He eats so fast
he hasn’t time to talk.”; “He sings rather well”; “He doesn’t cing at all”;
“He never brings a guest”; “He’s worried if the speaker gces 2 minute
overtime”; “He has a good time every time.”
What does the table know
about you?
Let us rejoice that the table is dumb.
both

Try listing
things on

all of the things you did for Rotary last
your list in fairness to yourself—Charlotte

year. And
Mirror.

put

�TE

ewe

YY

You Give—T hen Get

No man, can come into Rotary, and expect to get all of the benefits
which the cluk has to offer, without giving something.
He’s got to make
some effort—go to a little trouble now and then—if he is to get what he
CXDECiSs
e
But after all, isn’t that true of life generally?
The rewards come
to those who are willing te dig down beneath the surface of life’s opportunity, to find that which they are seeking after.
“He that seeketh,
zindeth.”
3
Just

look

over

the

crowd

at

the

next

meeting

of

the

club,

and

ob-

serve for yourself those who are getting the most out cf their :nembership in Rotary.
It. will be easy to pick them out.
They are the ones
who are investing their time and effort wholeheartedly.
‘They come
there with a purpose—to give of themselves.
And in giving—they get.
Ther dividend cheques are there every
Tuesday.
The rewards are sure to those who seek after them.
—

Neen

el,

MAKING ROTARIANS
If a man is not already a Rotarian in his viewpoint, temperament
and ideals before he joins the Rotary Club, how much chance is there
that we can make him a good Rotarian after we get him into the Club?
The association with other men of energy, ability and high ideals,
sympathy
and personality, stimulates. those same
qualities in a «ew
member.
Hew much change can be effected in one who does ‘not come
into the Rotary Club with those traits is a matter of argument.
The pr:mary purpose cf Rotary is to create and exnand the fellowship which shculd exist between those upon whom there falls the responsibility for leadership in the community.
By reason of this fel’owship, there is generated a desire to be of greater service to the community.
Do we make Rotarians when we bring new members into the Club
and he’p to cultivate in them the ideals of Rotary, or do we merely ‘liscover men who had those qualities and provide them with an opportunity to display their worth?
Siaeeee Be

THE LATE KING GEORGE’S CODE
The Weekly Letter of the Edmonton Rotary Club
lowing articte about Xing George:
“I

was

reading

over

the

late

King

George’s

code

contains

recently,

the
and

folthere

appears so much in it that it is worth passing on:
‘Teach me to be obedient to the rules of the game.
‘Teach me to distinguish between sentiment and sentimentality, admiring the one and despising the cther.
‘Teach me neither to proffer nor to receive cheap praise.
‘If I am called upon to suffer, let me be a well-bred beast that goes
away to suffer in silence.
‘Teach me to win, if I may; if I may not, teach me to be a- good
loser.
‘Teach me neither to cry for the moon nor to cry over spilled milk.” These are the sentiments of a man, in every sense of the word, and
well worthy of emulation.
+

X-

Mr. Sharer:—Young man, have you
Howard:—yYes sir.
Bob:—- You may stay after schcol.

any

more

stories

like

that?

eter
ee ee

Slogan for Mérshall Hungerford’s office:
“No matter how the land lies, its got ncthing
agent.”

cn

the

real _ estate

�THE

“BA
4 Z.BE-R R-Y

The Minstrel Show

The way the club has buckled into the minstrel show is proof of its
vitality.
Last year the Razzberry began advocating it. Hugh Clark raised the objection that no adequate purpose was in view. The objection was,
of course, good.
People work for a definite concrete object.
The primary
purpose of the propcsal was the impulse such an enterprise would give
to the life of the club itself.
That, however, was too intangible to arouse
the necessary enthusiasm.
This year we renewed the suggestion and Roy Putnam supplied the
objective.
That removed all opposition.
The success of the project seems
assured.
It will accomplish the following very worthwhile purposes:
1. Assure the success cf a worthy Iccal enterprise.
2. Popularize the club in the community.
3. Revitalize the club itself.
MINSTREL

SHOW

NOTES

Raymond

Hitchcock

Hearing Bill Frankhauser dust:ng off the old one about being fully
apparelled with no destination takes us back to the old days of the San
Souci minstreis, when Art Walker made that song famous. Incidentally
The

rule

that

also

sang

al! witty

it.

remarks

at practices

must

emanate

from

leaders is almost causing suffocation to some of the wise-crackers.
Marshall

in the hands

Hungerford

announces

of all Rotarians

that

on Friday

tickets

for

the

big

of this week. Each

show

the

will

ke

member

will

on

lips

receive $5.00 worth and Marshall hopes he sells them for we really want
an audience, but if he fails, it’s just too bad, because they are not return-~
able. Nothing but the five spot goes. A good plan is to pay for them when
you get them.
The dates are Feb. Ist and 2nd; neighboring clubs please note: Worth
the price of admission is the bezoming
of the ladies in the whistling parts.

it.

The

and

lady ends are cutting a fast pace

tantalizing
pes

puckers

for the boys, but they

the

will make

eee

LOOKING BACKWARD
For the benefit of the new, and to refresh the memories of the older
members here are a few facts about our club:
Organized Noy. 1921, sponsored by the Hillsdale Club with 22 charter members of whom eight are members today, viz:
Geo. Branch
Bob Kerr
Neil Carroll
Harry Milnes
Hugh Clarke
Sam Schultz
Bert Fiske
Roy Shattuck
The men who have served us as president are:
Frank Rowe
Herb Lee
Harry Milnes
Bob Wade
Bob Kerr
Bill Frankhauser
Bert Warner
John Hardy
Sig

Wing

Bert Fiske
Glenn Cowell
Clarence Ramsey
In the fifteen
President

Herb

Lee,

Bob

Sharer

Frank Mooney
Roy Putman
years

death

President

has

Frank

claimed

Mooney,

four

from

George

our

Snyder

ranks:
and

Past

Harold

Tribolet.
We will never forget Herb’s “Now take this serious men”, nor
Frank’s Irish wit that took on all comers.
Some of the high lights of the years were Paul Harris’ visit, our
sponsoring and inaugurating the Marshall club, and the picnics at Sig’s
and Hugh’s cottages.

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                    <text>To Have Arrived Is Tragedy:

ou

THE

This Year Must Be Even Better!

RALZBERRY

ISSUED

BY

THE

COLDWATER

ROTARY

CLUB

xX
“HE

PROFITS

MOST

WHO

SERVES

BEST”

JAN. 5, 1937

The year commences with brighter prospects than we have known for
some time.
Business is operating at record speed and, in many cases,
at peak capacity.
Farm prices are good.
Mortgages are being lifted.
A spirit of optimism is everywhere present.
“The picture is not all highlights, however.
The shadows are numerous and deep.
The threat of war, both international and civil, is daily
becoming more imminent.
Whether this country can remain a spectator
is a problem.
If so it will profit temporarily from the woes of the rest
ofthe world.
At any rate, while the next war is in the making, we cre
assured of a few years of abnormal foreign trade by the great rearmament program of Europe.
Even small nat-ons like Switzerland and B:lgium are almost bankrupting thems2lves in a frenzied race for mil-tary
“power.
At home our prosperity is threatened ky the prosyect of industrial
war.
We are still savages.
If we can’t run ourselves in one way we insist on doing it in another.
And with all our prosperity we still have
millions of unemployed.
You can’t find a man to work for you but there
are plenty of mén on relief.
A, dole is like Frankenstein’s monster.
Through it all Rotary is steadily gaining in numbers and inf‘uence.
One hundred, seventy thousand rctarians in four thousand, fifty clubs
scattered over eighty-two countries are contributing their efforts tcward
peace.
: A happy and prosperous and —
—
Year.
Charlie

Pollock

is

editor

of

ions

next

issue

of

the

Razzberry.

He

_. thinks’ is.a_little.out-of
it
sis line but, like a good retarian, he does what
he is told.

We

predict a pecan Smee
oneiene

Rotary Minstrel Minutes

Interloctors:
Harry Milnes (result of long campaign!!!), Alice Frankhauser (no relation to chairman).
End Men:
Female. Florence Kizss, Mildred Payne, Mar:on Fletcher
and Emily Alexander.
End Men:
Male.
John Walker (generously gave up interlocutor job),
Carl Vinton, John Hardy (missed last eaepting), Bill Frankhauser (general chairman!).
Specialty Numbers:
Marjorie Treat, Maurice Payne, Winifred Hardy,
Verald Wilbur, Brownie Shattuck, Carol McKnight.
The Temperamental
Tunesters:
Rol Kerr, Ralph Strong, Red McKnight, Alton Hutchins.
The Ed notices with regret that Bob Kerr is not slated to sing.
Perhaps the others do not like the compe‘ition since he put everyone. else
in the shade at the last minstrel show.
Perhaps they feared an accident.
People laughed so hard at him last time as to be dangercus.

�THE

RAZZBERRY

Rotary In Hawaii
ROTARY

CLUB

OF

HONOLULU

Office of the Secretary
VIA P. A. A. CLIPPER

December 24, 1936
W. Glenn Cowell,
Alleged to be living in Coldwater, Michigan.
Dear Glenn:
In reply to your letter of October 28, I endeavored to pass the buck to
one of our members, who makes his living writing very clever articles
and advertisements but the copy he turned in did not cover the situation;
so, like a good Secretary am) doing the job myself.
Rotary in Hawaii is practically the same as in any other politcal
Subdivision of our great nation except, that the Rotary Club of Honoiulu
‘is the outpost of American Rotary in the Pacific area.
Rotarians from the nations bcrdering on this great basin enjoy the
fellowship of the first American Club they contact when they hit the
beach of Honolulu.
Although, our Club is small, we enjoy a great advantage, and, likewise, serious disadvantages.
The great advantage is that we meet and
enjoy the friendship of Rotarians cf various nat onalit.es
who
pass
through both to and from the Antipodes and the Orient.
We have many

friends and c‘ose contacts with the nationals of all Pacific countries.

enjoy hearing talks by the outstanding men of many nations.
;
In the fellowship of Rotary all barriers are elim:nated and the

ers from other countries take down

.of the subject under discussion.
The people of Hawaii organized

of Pacific Relations, which

We

speak-

the:r hair and give us a true picture
and

brought

has done a great

into

be! ng

deal towards

the

better

Institute

under-

standing between the nations of the world.
The recent conference at
Lake Tahoe confirms this statement.
The Secretariat of the Institute cf
Pacific Relations is located in Honolulu and
the
General
Secretary,
Charlie Loomis, is a member of cur Club.
:
The only disadvantage of our particular location is that we have so
many outside speakers that we do not use enough of our own members
on programs.
The Rotary Club of Honolulu originated and promoted the idea of a
Pacific Rotary Assembly.
The first was held in Hono'ulu, Hawaii, My
25. to 28, 1926—Second: Tokyo, Japan, Oct. 1 to 4, 1928—Third: Sydney,
Australia, March 18 to 26, 190—Fourth: Honolulu, Hawaii; June 12-to- 15,
1932—Fifth: Manila, P. I., Feb. 18°to 20, 1935.
The next one is to be in: Wellington, N. Z., March 1 to 5, 1937.
We make it a practice to send delegations to Pacific Assemblies, and
have in many instances sent members of our Club to New Zealand and
Australia to attend their district conf:rences,
_ Although separated by many naut’cal miles of salt water Rotarians
down below are close friends of those in Hawaii.
The Rotary Club of Hcnolu'u has had many projec’s similiar to other
clubs, but the best work that we have accomplished so far, and are &lt;tili
carrying out, is the eare,ef and operation on infants born with harelip
and..cleft palate.
Rotarian Joe Palma, M. D., Class fication, Pediatric’,
gets, the privileged baby into satisfactory pre-operative condition and
‘Rotarian James A. Morgan, Clas ification, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, a
very skiliful surgeon, cperates.
The medical service costs us nothing but
we maintain at the Kauikeolani Children’s Hospital a Rotary Bed and
pay all expenses for the underprivi’ eged child who is operated on.
in
addition we have purchased a complete outf t of special ‘instruments for
this type of work.
So far 50 cases have been treated.
We hope in the
space of the next year to correct all of the children who have these de-

�THE:

RAZZBERRY

Rotary In Hawaii—Continued

fects.
In the future we will be able to take care of each one as born.
Any Club which has the facilities for carrying out a project of this nature will certainly be doing something for the race which is worth-while.
To appreciate the handicap of having harelip, take a mouthful of
water and try to swallow it with your mouth open.
So this is Rotary in Hawaii Nei.
Aloha Nui Oukou,
Jawn Caldwell

eae

pare

Keoni

(Jawn)

PS—The distance between the easterly and westerly corporate limits
of the City of Honolulu is greater than any municipality under the American Flag.
I challenge the statement in the post script.
You can draw a straight
line sixty. miles in length which will be wholly within the city of Los
Angeles.

We

Anyway

warm

have

it was

nice

a suspicion

welcome

of

that

Jawn

to

write

a traveller

in the Honolulu Club.
et

this

from

full

letter

Coldwater

at

our

would

request.

receive

a

A Classification Display

“The London club holds a classification display. . Possibly the Coldwater club could make a good meeting out of it. Certainly it. could if
the fellows would undertake it in the r.ght spirit.
Be:ow is an article in
the London Rotarian which will give an idea of the way it is handled.
THE CLASSIFICATION DISPLAY
Chairman
.Scott-Worthington sends us prints of photos taken on
December 2nd.
We should like to reproduce them, but economy forbids.
You ought to see Ted Unwin standing in front of himself but apparently
looking at the figure in the background and wondering who it is.
Then Wilfred Smith, looking proudly at a majestic skeleton with
cigarette planted firmly in its jaw—and both obviously doing well.
And Padre Clapham beaming over his eight volumes of sermons with
that stainless Stephen expression.
“All ould sinners are wishful to pray
with you.”
But they’d never forgive him for.the poetic effort boldly
prominent. cn a placard. Did you _o¥serve Dr. Horsford wistfully_regret' ting he had not sent along a bottle of tonsils?
We made him a present
of suitable caption “For your health’s sake put yours with them.” That
ought to be worth a free op. (transferable).
It was a great show!
We have many letters replying to Douglas
Haigh.
We will see what’ can be done next week.
;
As we write, a letter has been handed us addressed The Right Honble.
Hore-Belisha, M. P., Whitehall, super.cribed “Try B. B. C.” and then to
us.
We must deal with this next week.
Obviously the Display caused
some traffic dislocation.

Let’s

begin

planning

on

club

representation’ at

convention of R. I. at Nice next summer.
rotary association adds greatly to the

Bill and Alice Frankhauser.
et

the

international

It will b2 a wonderful trip.:
pleasure of foreign travel...

Kee

‘Tce
Ask

The program
committee for January is ccmposed cf Norm Koh!,
Chairman, Marshall Woodward, A’ton Hutchin=, Carly Vinton.
For February it is Warner Van Aken, Chairman, Russe:l Alexander,
Chas. Keep, Fred Leeder.

‘

�THE

RAZZPETRY

A Word About “Visiting”
:

BY “PUT”

:

During a recent discussion with one of the members of ot club I
learned that he-did not quite understand the rights of a Rotarian to visit
other Rotary Clubs and for the benefit of other members who hesitate to
visit other clubs even when it is convenient I quote Article 6 XVI, Section
2 of the By-laws of Rotary International which reads as follows: “Every
active and past service member of the Rotary’ Club shall have the pr-villege to attend, and whenever possible shall be expected to attend, the

regular meeting

of any

other Rotary

Club.”

:

Please note that this rule not only authorizes all Rotarians to attend the regular meeting of any other club but it goes just a little farther
and says that they are “expected” to attend the meet:ngs of other ciubs
whenever possible.
A short news item on this subject recently appeared in “The News
Letter”, the weekly publication of Rotary International, in which all
Rotarians vere encouraged to visit other clubs.
I am wondering how the
number of “visits” from members of the Csldwater club compare: with
the number of “visits” made by the members of cther clubs of a sim lar
size and location.
Much good can be accomplished by visiting cther clubs and the farther one is from his home club the more imperative his visits become.
The members of*the host’s club benefit by your acquaintance and your
own: club benefits by. the broadening influence cf the vist on yeu as an
individual.
Anything that helps you individually indirectly helps our

club.

—R.

x

E. P.

The Ed has a letter from Colonel Evans, Director of the State Board
of Aeronautics, suggesting that the project of improv:ng the airport w-th
the assistance of federal funds be renewed.
The recent major accident
‘in the air probably makes this an inopportune time to undertake it.
However, the project is sound and cannot be permanently shelved.
I:
will have to be revived sooner or later.
x:

THE
kinds

UTICA

CLUB

There

are

three

Those

who

get behind

Those
Those

who climb aboard and ride;
who ride and drag their feet.

SAYS

of Rotarians:
and

push;

X

Coldwater Boy Makes Good
Merle Bennett, a Coldwater boy, who has made conspicuously good in
Wayne County, has just published ancther book.
The title is “Roadsides, the Front Yard of the Nation,” and is written to. improve the
standard of decoration of the highways with trees, shrubbery and other
plants.
If the value of the work is indicated by its price it must be well
thought of because the price is three dollars per volume. The Razzberry would like information as to other Coldwater boys
who have made good in the world. It would be a worthwhite activity to
give them notice in these pages.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Razzberry was a bi-monthly newsletter, issued by the Coldwater Rotary Club</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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                    <text>_

sophisticated corn

Presented by the COldwater

Rotary

Minstrels

February 22, 23, &amp; 24 - 1973
TIBBITS OPERA HOUSE

�Rotary Club

Appreciates

Sponsorship

CLIMAX

BRANCH

Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

MOLYBDENUM

COUNTY

FEDERAL

ESSEX INTERNATIONAL

OF

FEDERAL-MOGUL

CORP.

DISTRIBUTION

- SKOGMO

FORD

BRANCH

and

‘|
LOAN

INC. Metal Products

BOARD

GAMBLE

CO.

SAVINGS

COLDWATER

PUBLIC

UTILITIES

DIVISION

WAREHOUSE

REALTY

COUNTY

BANK

Projects

pea

Coldwater

�Ae /

sophisticated CORN
‘

|

Rotary

|

Minstrel

Show

February 22, 23, &amp; 24 - 1973

||

eee

1h |
.

|

B. K. Pearce

eee
|

iin Gen

ee

Normand

Moore

.

ORGANIST-ACCOMPANIST_.___

Grace Patterson &amp; Mark

Feller

.

ES

gS

Ee

ee

_____... Bob

a
'

{
|

|

i

4

PROGRAM

i
i

H

ten...

Nagle

&amp; Les Olney

__Hal Sexton, Bill Lymburner

&amp;

Bill Timm

.

(Larry Carrico)

Frank Robertson, Santford Jolley &amp;

ae
eee

|

Fred Anderson

&amp; ADVERTISING...

|

jf

Jim Lyon

Jim Koss &amp; Dick White
oer

Rich Holben

USHERING

Dom

Shorno &amp; Norm Olmsted

|]

og

bio

_ Seton

Bovee &amp; Paul Ruse

| |

John Klein &amp; B.K. Pearce

| |

ESSE

ee

eee

.....
INTER-CLUB

nee

ATTENDANCE.

Jerry

Towns

|

�Coldwater

Rotary Club

Appreciates

Sponsorship

COLDWATER

Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

DAILY

Projects

.

7

REPORTER

BIG BOY RESTAURANT

:

\

Pe

EVANS PRODUCTS DIVISION

| j
|

R. B. &amp; W. POWDERED METAL PRODUCTS INC.
JOHN G. YERINGTON
CONTRACTORS

3

INC.

INSURANCE

DOUGLAS

i i
: -

SCOTT

&amp;

FETZER

i
4

DIVISION
CO.

4

| oe

CADET MOTOR INN
DEAN - TIMM

:

�Coldwater

|
|

Rotary Club

Appreciates

Sponsorship Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

SOUTHERN MICHIGAN NATIONAL BANK

j
|

LAKE ERIE DOOR CO.

MIDWEST

FOUNDRY

G&amp;G

DODGE

CO.

WHITE SUPPLY CO.
|
||

QUALITY SPRING PRODUCTS INC.

}
ASSOCIATED TRUCK LINES INC.

;
FIRST

NATIONAL

BANK

of South Central

Michigan

Projects

�Rotary Club

Appreciates

Sponsorship

Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

Projects

TRI-STATE BROADCASTING
WTVB - WANG

Patterson Company, Printers

So Mi Co

Supply, Inc.

of a friend

PETER

ECKRICH

HUDSON

COMPANY

FOUNDRIES

&amp; SONS

INC.

mE a

COMPANY

te mI

NR

CTE

AL

MATERIALS

er rere em

OIL

I OM

ef

FO

Compliments

RE

Coldwater

Tibbits Theatre, Scholarship Fund and Rotary Park
thank you for your support of this Rotary Club
Program.

�Coldwater

Rotary Club

KASCO

Appreciates Sponsorship Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

ABRASIVES

MIX - GENERAL

KERR

KROGER

EGG

AGENCY,

Projects

INC.

HARDWARE

PLANT

HILL

PISTON

CO.,

INC.
M.

STANDARD OIL DIVISION
AMERICAN OIL COMPANY
FARM CENTER

T.

SHAW,

INC.

L. A. DARLING
Div. of the Marmon Group

eae

sesame

Strat

asm Oe

RE re

W. K. WATERBURY
— SAND &amp; GRAVEL

LEGG

LUMBER

FELPAUSCH

FOOD

CO.

CENTER

COUILLARDS

COLDWATER

RECREATION

�Rotary

Presented by the Coldwater

Minstrels

|

|

|

First Half

OPENING MEDLEY...
BON

|||

Pears te:

LULU ee

RAMBLIN ROSE - RED ROSES FOR A BLUE LADY

|

COTTONFIELDS.... eee
5. eee

SPIRITUAL MEDLEY...

|

|

“BRING

|

DADDY SANG BASS.

|

|Hi)

featuring

||
;

YOU'LL

NEVER

WALK

© WIS

CLES

22

es

oe

FRE FOUR ROSES

ooo

os

ALONE

9.

eee

The Four Roses
Woody

Craig

Entire

Chorus

Entire Chorus

Dennis McCafferty

Entire

Chorus

- Norman

Youtsey

featuring John Milnes
Charles Geishert

|

|)

;

|
-

Moore

Clyde Williams

TURN: YOUR RADIOON. =

|

Richard

Fred Neer

It HAD TO BE YOU...

|

Entire Chorus

|

:

Jerry Towns, Tom Collins
Hal Creal, Ralph LaGro

|

i

|

E

|

:

i

‘

||

EB

�|

sophisticated corn

Presented by the Coldwater

Second

|

| |

||

|

Minstrels

Half

BSE

ews
i

Rotary

ee

88=

Entire Chorus

William Fuerstenau

HELP ME MAKE IT THRU THE NIGHT

a

The

I

Tom

—kichHic

££

Singers

Normandin

Entire Chorus

ee

John Dygert

|

LOOK WHAT THEY’VE DONE TO MY SONG

Kan't Kount Kortet

|

i

sc cinenesterestsmten

| | |
i

eeci

| SI
|

rn

ee

GIRLS —
BOYS

—

a

Duke Davidson

RE eam

OME PeD

Barbara Klimmer,

- Normand Moore

Entire Company

Dick White, Ed Davey, Jim Koss,

Bill Lymburner, Carroll Barnes

THE

SINGERS

Nancy

Forrister,

Mary Hudson,

Wilma

Williams,

Sharon

Whitaker,

Sharon Ward,

Tom

Normandin,

Duke

Davidson,

Ed Davey,

Norm

Youtsey,

Richard Hruska,

Clyde

Williams,

Kathy Tarr,
Bobbie

Hauer

Charles Geishert,
Normand

Moore

�Coldwater

Rotary Club

BUNDY

Appreciates

Sponsorship

WOOD'S

TUBING

MONTGOMERY

WARD

BRANCH COUNTY
AVIATION

OPTICAL

DEL

BUILDER

JACK

REID

&amp;

PRUDENTIAL

DOG

FRED

CO.

NEER

INSURANCE

&amp;

SUDS

SAFETY

TOMSON

Projects

SERVICE

AGENCY

INSURANCE

MAX

COLDWATER

SEAT

Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

SOUTHERN

LARSEN

MICHIGAN

POMFRET’S

REYBURN’S

GLASS

FORD

GROCER

SERVICE

CLOTHING

COLDWATER CONCRETE
PRODUCTS INC.

CO.

�Coldwater

Rotary Club

Appreciates Sponsorship Of The Following Firms To Promote Worthwhile

QUALITY

DALLY

TIRE

FARM
SUPPLY

S PRODUCTS

DAVIS

&amp; SONS,

INC.

WOODWARD’S
WOMENS WORLD OF FASHION

MASTERS

DRESS

HERITAGE

HARDWARE

GAMBY

CANDY

COUNTY

MICHIGAN

GAS

DEES

and

formerly

UTILITIES

AQUARIUM

PET

DEAN

SHOP

WILLIAMS

SHOP

R&amp; A

FARM

HARRIS

PAINT

MOTEL

CO.

REALTY

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Frederick N. Anderson
Mark S. Andrews
Charles R. Bacon
Walton K. Balcom
Carroll L. Barnes
Richard F. Biringer
William W. Bobier
Seton C. Bovee
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R.

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Heinemann

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C.

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ROTARY

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MEMBERS
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William

W.

1973

Luse

Lymburner

James Lyon
Robert M. Man
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Leslie Olney
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John S. Pierson
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Clyde Williams
D.

Warren

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F.

Williams

Wise

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**Denotes

Honorary

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�</text>
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                  <text>Used with permission by the Coldwater Rotary Noon Club</text>
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                <text>Sophisticated Corn Presented by the Coldwater Rotary Minstrels</text>
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  <item itemId="7801" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="129541">
                    <text>The

ROTARY

COLDWATER
MINSTRELS
present

: ae

a

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AS

THEIR

1970

A COMPLETE
New

F

|

|

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NEW

BAG

New Quartets —
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House

May 21-22-23

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{ WZ

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Fred Anderson

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Bernard

Laney

Charles

Bacon

Duane

Davidson

Reo

Ken

Harvey Bent

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Davis

Richard

Dick

John

Craig

Goodwin

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Robert

Loose

Dean

Santford Jolley

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Luce

John

Dygert

John

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Faller

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Kerr

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Collins

Bill Fuerstenau

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McKnight

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Moore

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Fox

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Moore

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Russell

Moore

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James Lyon

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William

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Torg Skabo

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Woodward

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Williams

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Patterson

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:

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THE

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and Personnel

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—

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�Coldwater Rotary Club Appreciates The Sponsorship Of The Following Firms To Promote

BRANCH COUNTY BANK

BRANCH COUNTY FEDERAL SAVINGS &lt; LOAN

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COLDWATER BOARD OF PUBLIC UTILITIES

ESSEX INTERNATIONAL INC. - Metal Products

DISTRIBUTION DIVISION, FEDERAL-MOGUL CORP.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK of South Central Michigan

R B &amp; W POWDERED METAL PRODUCTS, INC.

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Worthwhile Projects

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Petrosoff Printers

Legg

Lumber

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Jack Reid and Fred Neer,
Prudential Insurance

Quality Spring Products, Inc.

Shopper's Guide

Worden Brothers

Southern Michigan Grocer Co.

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                  <text>This collection holds programs and newsletter from the Coldwater Rotary Club, which then became the Coldwater Noon Club in 2021. </text>
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                  <text>Used with permission by the Coldwater Rotary Noon Club</text>
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                <text>The Coldwater Rotary Minstrels Present: "Potpourri"</text>
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                <text>Used with permission by the Coldwater Noon Club</text>
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