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a ee r7 Be De aaa y : B, 23,1920 PAGE FIGHT _ ey cng Teas ween es _&be ‘ i 33 aa asi - — Ta moras Som ate = ‘0 appear like criminals. yl [maintain a ‘“distri¢t percentage af at - RA letters we know that some "at meetings of all clubs tn reine things England is doing in Ire- i t of from 70 to 80 per cent, land could not be surpassed by Ger- ¢ ords for high attendance, ‘per- \ y in Belgium. 4 _|centaves are continually being sort ee Europe ia bankrupt, financlally, \ S quiekly broken by some’ chit; ‘morally and spiritually. 1 claim that acrewiesat The latest achievement} Ireland is the only country that has jhas been by a club on the Pacific Coast | remained true to civilization and =r [with sixty members, whigh has madé | gion, real liberty and real elvilization. [the \rpmarkable, and heretofore Suny “Above all else we want America to heard of record of a 100 per cent, at: recognize the government of Treland SF Te, i (Continued from Page 1) He eovetraemite ‘ : . : . } a y |tendance, or ey member present, (By Associated Press.) while it costs but $65,000,000 to run the; as she has recognized the sors ae , National Organization Old in Deeds and Works Des- ¢t,10- 014 standara of “1.0 brits mont ea avons ieeting whlch oid]. LYNNE MASBs Wen eheroue tn. | ile 1€ conte: but 305,000,000 to tin Color Poland, Finland, and Cz:hoSieva; | 5 oa jEyno. i i eri lie an unusual record in itself—but a} mates of the Lynn Home for Aged |; 00 enough to kia. " \things.” 1 aii, Nife’ became ¢ reland $170,000,000 * * ar waa fought for . pite Fact That History Dates Back Few Years; [Pei aoe tamalioga: nae eeaiae “ot 100 ber cent, attendance at seven ean-/ Women burned to -F in @ fire | run the governments of Bulgaria, Nor 384 Fea baht Seerati natianacoeitie { sare * Mallars, hut medearedl (htaqhe GF (he | Seca oe ae rerio pb Dep dies peal way, Switzerland and Denmark com-/ the wattly Or crea proclaimed, and as { @ i a ie se e world, as A ra cl Ongin of Movement Reviewed by Local feithfal dlatianee at imams highest dure | A Definition of the Rotary ’Club, | Gthers of a score of oceupan bined. ce eer arin bot iaaents el $31 a0 The povelithior aver the! ious definitions of Rotary and de. | thelr way sie pisterereere seco Where the president of the United: the those ge ot eed to. helleve, || M B beak i alan |serintions ofthe Rotary Club have been| PY attendants to ‘escape. States received a salary of $75,000 aj Army and Navy were ted te eine ore than 600 hundred Rotary clubs in the United States} IReatenin inant cise eroh Gala GEaR TS ished frém time: to time. A con- yéar, the Jord lieutenant of Ireland who) Americh must renal Ti "good name, and Canada and throughout the world are observing this week |;),. le harmony Bee test has recently been held throughout | H BA must be English, Protest antl Otherwise the war was fought for a ; with special programs. The oceasion is the fifteenth anniver- and put it action.” Ithe Rotary clubs for the beat definition PORES Ss) I dia ans ‘i ile, and the sacrifice of America: lives ; sary of the bi otary ¢ r * 2 yot “Wha i and every mem- Se eee cpent, for democracy was in vain,’ f Clut i oni ont ae ang ine fOUnC Ing OE the First Rots AYY.| very Member Member. |ber asked to give his definition. Con- the \engarare part of his. time Is sp aa *Trhe Irish loan bonds are in denomina- 4 ub in icago on February 28, 1905. The week has been} ie jotary Which {teats will “alsa. be held at the confer not in Jreland, but in London. {ton or from $10 to $5,000 and will bear a designated by the local Rotary Club as “‘All Rotary Week,” ana jroust not y districts in w His’ ehief secretary re ved $100,000 | rulefences of the Roi ie} lint ner cent six months after. s constitu- | pate. , . Re | world. Is automaticat. | i . { The own, which the Republican gow |WST oon win remain in Casper for being given over entirely to Rotary ed and had asked to become meeting will] bers. Men in other cities had The program of today’ jtion “whe One of the definitions of the Rotary devoted largely to a review of the jot this new club al 1 nd }iys dropped from memb if he!club follows: pelt ane oe ee ee ernment several days and will then go to Raw- Sad ih eines A lies thoy Gouldatt Gresatsenngthels jmisses four meetings in + on. Tol “notary Is more than a name. It is (Ry United Prenn.) |ot.the fepublic in projecta-of- mational |!ins and Cheyenne before going to Den- scien ehh attl ase tat hed lls lTeenasde Syciehi that 1c would | iB rule is attributed one of the rea-leninit and a life, A Rotary Club is} ,, LONDON, Feb. 23.—The British bat- | onstruction suchas the establishment } v He spoke last evening before the Knights of Columbus as the Mullin club | banquet which followed their inith jon ovigin of the program of tary movement, of ‘the Intérnati he hest to wait until tir the ai-|the experiment st tle fleet has arrived off Constantinople. The movement is believed to be con- nected with the critical situation in for the remarkable ef A careful record — of nee is pt by of industrial and technical schools, the! cultivation and reforesting of waste lands, and other such projects. » than an organization. It is asso ion and effort; it is coopera ompepitive, serv it trans- p had proven } giv pssful befor thie Shore ie Sida a at oprelibelinjolhed Acti, Cae a te eaTeeS + kindly desires Into helpful deeds | Turkey. The American quota ‘is $10,000,000, | Ceremonies of yesterday. is work ro or | - Sor death can excuse a member. ri a : ed Rid sega elubi Gon tinued s Conkr r dea : turna dream. Into -nccofnplished lignocka a pool Thing: nor Ta pad | #hd it is Believed that this will be great Di Aa aaioati Se ain. wi com.| ship. Tn. 1908 JAbsence from th 46 nO eNgee at is training school in un-|thing. His city is the best in the coun. | /Y, Oversubscribed, $50,000 ix asked of| One of the most costly books in the Rn Chen eGilin aise ser first: meetin cian |t is a spe whereby a mem ‘selfishness, where — perso gain is} try 1d his country. the best in the] W¥0ming and checks should be made! world is a bible in Hebrew. An offer The | storytor. how “Rotary (originated; | Was ors ed infsan Branciscos Otherfre: may. att of the! subordinate to public. Rotary values|world. He ix an all-w yard-wide| Payable to M. W. Purcell of Casper who) of its weight in gold was once made, — + t club in the « ppens tO m, retary of his home club! yw 1 of this fact, and hey y,¢ Mtendanee just as tat the meeting n for what they are, more than for | Amer 1 for what th an or Canadian, or whatever b can |nationality, He works hard, pl Ro-} square, and gives with a smile. He has andlan eye for a neighbor's need, a hand | “It is proposed to establish banks|‘amounted to $102,000, which was_re- which will Joan n money to the Irish so! fused, and the volurne is still in ‘the ; that they land, reestablish their) library of the Vatican. merchant marine destroyed by Eng: and how the institution) has grown| Clubs followed on the Pacifie Coast and is the an. and it was ascertained that this offer { during the 3 until js {then the movement spread to the Bast } extending to 2 the civilized coun-|@nd then to the South, until sixteen | tries of the clubs had been organized by the end of 1910. No the r welcomes a vision of need, is intensely inter “npr fers vere service as privilege to be 4 ally aux’ reviewed hy? thel These clubs were ay service as a_ privil o trained to help, a foot used to paths|jand, and develo : ibili re roe [sult of seed more or less ac vtally | i fay "i a jsought, not as a ih n to be avohted. lor heipruin mercy and a heart| their country ns the Pee ee ok NOTICE! t a - ‘ is rs ry clubs thus hold an “Rota never sidesteps a responsi ee = a f ij 4 ¥ . far to . Origit - {sown by members who w nthu y clu | }for true men, good women and little loose = Mith’ al by the Rotary idea—and who of Lility or to the other |ehitdren, ation of| Box social at M. Hall to i Rotary, came into 0 million people. Instead she only | night at 9 p. m. for benefit of life is an in “Rotar ad money without thought Clubs with as many | fellow. | may not be a religion, but 4,000,000 and her population oup of four men round a+ ‘ le | heheon table in a Chicago hotel. The} Of personal gain n . 8 high} vestment . that, must dividends | it jas woven into the fabric of its help {creased 50 per cent since 1845. ““'Union Label League. Come \ fulir men were business Unintuncea |, Jt 1910 that the first con-| it of their members pres-|that are better than dollars, and that|¢a) activity, that, without which even “Thru England's control of the en land bring your friends. i Jonal ent meeting after meeting red in terms of comme n-| Rotary districts with) jur wry nal fi rear diction over | y clubs which © not mea >» the Rotari more than pe Hyention was held and the Assoc! * formed. This® s held in Chicago, and gen. )as_many sted, and a coon Hits P. Harris was hone Eo been mes These in- at the dit. {vention ws religion is but as sounding brass and ables and the press, all accounts of what BESSIE McKINNEY, ity }unkling symbol’—'Faith, Hope and #'s actually transpiring in Ire Secretary, ) never | Lovet," being suppressed and the u S in form: ferent membe +s of business, As it happened, each one of the four re asented different. calling—ond al by n to the first presidency a dea a mining operator, | the newly created a jon nd a merchant tailor und the fourth | Chesley | attorne the Ch : Th was the one who firat s responsi! idea of forming a club,|tent for calling together this fi ae. Al te| Sate body of Rotary, was e! et This office he } f WY \)) Io eo i “TODAY great movement. ceting |@Nd continues to hold nee been hon é Some people say aNatiten of {which iit. was ume. Paul Harris has Ce | ‘chat wae hel fored by the conferring upon him. of A HOLIDAY BILL WITHOUT A RIVAL! Be ae rr ne a The Sublime Drama ie wo TODAY The s "sin in 1812, “THE TURN IN THE ROAD” [| Others say it is a gentle LARRY SEMON in His t some time or other the central figure in nearly great movement in history, and! Portland, Ore., convention at Duluth, Minn, in 1912 Fro SEA COO: the] Previous to the Duluth convention a feta prea no) escenan 2 tte| say ht ise organi st Winnine Its in a class by itself. | stimulant, and good for the when anoth fri doof the group ' at the: Mss) be u wt bo 3 i ; nol idrrelereeponniliie erie cngland, askins for “THE TURN IN THE ROAD": : It all depends upon the e e eee liketatl votaeeia leat To make provisions for tl . the A chi “ playin fe Mak Fad ' } kind of tea you drink © MERA voliterentaideas i in ention took ae nging the A realistic storm. with death on rin! “J Pi Fa circulation as to the origin’ of the {oeanization trom a “National to an RY ees eae Common’ tea, with its O-REEL COMEDY. Also Last Day of 5 me “Rotary” as applied to the Ro clubs. One e trate the cha pth ne Vest The rapid growth in number of once noticed a string Of autos deco.| CDS continued, Krom every nook and | corner of the United States and Cana time there! were forty clubs in e¢xist- hence, band the secret. ae . ? 5 oe A eh y-mad tyrant at the mercy large percentage of tannin, Maurice Tourneur’s Special Production of his victims. is harmful to the stomach 13 “fo e BETES REE and his gang } and nerves. The Life Line” mple will serve to ee of the man As. Two teamsters! rated with Rotary banners. One auto ¢ ‘ 4 ‘ became stalled and one of the team.|@ came requests from business mep UA er a Rede Very little tannin in The wave-swept bridge of the ocean Hiner “Saxonin” as the ship . tera oxknilhingathe “eu mb m | who haa heard of this new leaven for pecite*ateaicees | Schilling Tea dnd you.avoid battles its gvay through a terrific storm. A blow that sends her ‘ on the wheel, was overheard to care-|th® community welfare and who want- How a shyster lawyer hires a 2 y' shivering from stem to stern, A seaman rushes up to tell the captain 1 to Mish clubs in their citie 6, the numbe to more than . By of clubs had increased * with approximately 000 members. Two or three more § fully e Rotariang were wagonmakers and} their emblem was the wagon wheel | and the name ry” chosen because |? } clubs had been organized in England plain to the other that the Congenial” secretary. that by not steeping the tea that the ship is on the rocks. nee-hall im the slums of Chi- | too long. Then you get a ADMISSION— 10 and 30c cago. Ad more than 600 clubs in the | world today, While the greater num A big Western thriller ber, by far, are in the United States, where the movement origin call it the this meeting from pl continued for some time until the membership became «so large as to! r the plan i retical. But this custum, although of short di of the in many y Club.” Incidentally, | parchmyn-lined miolsturo-proct At grocers everywhere, ADMISSION—10 and 30¢ a Schilling & Co San Francisc, to place was ‘ nes nae! a : Then CHARLES CHAPLIN at his best a ‘And PATHE NEWS and in the princely tain and Ireland, larger cities of Cuba. Rota Was responsible for that is obse Mn Tic i i iin nt mn Ul ! ved today ‘ been established in the OTE A | | Argentine and Uruguay in So Customers, please ask for your duplicat: ill gi y RPL eG ee aT So SES TERS AE HTC C ae ve NOTICE! credit on renirned goods without the fests sales clips. We wUlziye suo heen adopted in. their busin ine Chinas incase 5 tho TOMORROW—OLIVE THOMAS in - i Club in Honolulu and a club was organized in “OUT YONDER” Islands Manila The Caleutta Rotary Club, in India, is the latest to be org: The next few y how the Rotary idea of se has been applied to their work. wo Unique Ph Ori » of Membership inated. As other members were admitted to sul! — nized in foreign lands rs will » hunar the new club, the prin adherred to of hi sentative from © fession. This would be a and would distinguish the ple “inna pe feeaeurs wth oce nwnre COMING—“THE MYSTERY OF THE — mismo | ars Cha of Pain naw lng YELLOW ROOM” , tannin ub trom : patOEAS gg CRORER REC l aleataneseenaly tit ‘oratin; TOMORR somagan wheel has rotary, mougn:|andeveral mare in canada Tinea | NextA STORY OF THE OIL FIELDS drink, that cheers and rests, sold ta aaa ty Gi < a » mem-j{men in Cuba and in South America | a ie : Saab oririme sata. cluianaesty lactis had. ano) become Inocaate ih a Not unlike a Salt Creek feud Cheer and rest—that is 4 WALLACE REID in sabit of having their me rey (ed y idea and were seeking to or 7 ; 5) eee cece ee ecm eg “ ” Be aged THE LOTTERY MAN the different membe As “Retation sade ese py sed eh There are four Havors of Schilling als Sit ranma aniee eee conn eanal Cs aniaed, making & total of ege ) in Sovni ce MR. and MRS, CARTER DEHAVEN in “MOVING DAY” Asia and Africa, and in hundreds of the smaller cities of the other organizations. Then, also, such AES YS — | a plan wold serve to sustain interest dn gd continent. ) the club, promote attendance, and| This remarkable growth has been en- make a member pl a high, valua-|tirely spontaneous, Never, eh ship. ‘Time has | a8 the organization employed paid or an adaptable to | ®anizers. On the other hand, extreme {care has always been exercised in sur veying cities and towns applying for membership to hat such com munities were ty for a Rotary Club and were of sufficient size from which to secure a membership of representa tive men and still have the membership restricted to one man from each busi- iness or profession. ; The Rotary Creed Is Service. The Rotary creed is fully set forth In the “Rotary Platform,” and in the z Code of Ethic: The lien upon his membe proved it to be a p the smaller cities ag well as to th large GENUINE SWEET—ORR UNION MADE veralls ON SALE AT $2.59 kes proved that there v ny other advantages to such a plan A membership made up of one repre itative from each business or pro sion is truly representative of the community. Such a body of men be- comes an ideal forum for the discus- on -of publie questions and the con eration of matters of concern, both to the public and to the trades and the profess United action by the | sier thangwith a large nh was ado} the or ame membership of sev. |ton in 1911 and is @ concise statement It |of the principles and ethics find actuating all Rotary clubs club is mu nd cumbe eral hundred or several thousand. is impossible for any one profession : allied professions to become numer- |Rotary Club demands fair dealings, ically strong enough to dominate the | honest thods and high standards in icy of the club. The business man |business,”” is the theme of this plat:| benefited for such association tends | form, and the last sentence In the plat-| to Jift him out of the rut of his own | form, “He. profits most who serves | Lusiness routine, giving him a broader | best." has been adopted as the latter} and mor hetic understanding of [Part of the official slogan of Rotary other bus |The completd sloxi “Service New 36-inch Percales and Standard Quality and professions. ee ecris pe ho it mat important ai, has n-| Above Bette rontn” ont Who) Ginghams just arrived. Variety of patterns to hy giving the officials a lever for the | The “Rotary Code of Ethics” was] removal of any “dead timber" from | adopted by the organization in 1915, the membership. The club can insist |and) sets forth the principles and prac-| upon regular attendance and active|tices that should exist, not only be- articipation or the surrender of mem-|tween Rotarians, but all business and rship to someone else in the same! Professional men everywhere. To read line of business. ‘That this rule is rig-|this code of ethics which the Rotarians idly observed is one of; the reasons | have adopted as their ideal, is to realize | why membership in Rotary is consid; {one of the reasons why this relatively ered at so high a premium. jnew movement has gone forward by Fifteen Years Has Seen Marvelous) i bounds during the past five’ Growth. Men had been waiting for this} The new club started out by holding | very thing. It became a “living force” a luneheoh once each week and’ anjin the lives of many men who had evening meeting every month. In a/heen obsessed with the one idea of short time there were nearly half a/making money, transforming them into | hundred members and a considerablejmen who chose for their motto, “he | instei please your fancy at prices surprisingly low. Be Thrifty and make your own house dresses. ._ WEBEL. COMMERCIAL CO. THE BIG BUSY STORE L. LEARNER 164 South Center Street, Casper, Wyo. Phones 13 and 14 —_cccc cose ooMme Roun number of others who had become in-' profits most who. serves be HHH a a eT " aS reer tart FORSTER