MAORIS AND ROTARY
TU THE EDITOR OF THE PRESS.
Sir.—l am always, I ope, umbly grateful for the very elpful ints given to us whose ome is in New Zealand by visitors from Ome, and I was greatly eartened by the truly umane words of Colonel W. B. Clayton, of Duncan, British Columbia, in your issue of today. The colonel thinks that such men as Sir James Carroll and Sir Maui Pomare “sorely reach the qualification necessary to belong to a Rotary dub." This is very andsome of the colonel, because even the umblest of us knows that to be a Rotarian you ave to be a very good and wise man. But is there nothlnk helse? Ido ope some Rotarian will be kind enough to elp me, and satisfy my unger for more hinformatlon. What I want to know is, ow can I elp my boys to be Hotarians when they grow hup? We umble folk ave haspiratlons, and amid the ollow shams of modern life we like to old to igh haims and hideals. It was just eavenly of the colonel to say what he did, but as I am still azy about qualifications, I azard the ope that e or some other Rotarian will not be too augtfty to tell us more.—Yours, etc., URIAH KEEP, JUN. March 6. 1936.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LXXII, Issue 21726, 7 March 1936, Page 25
Word Count
222MAORIS AND ROTARY Press, Volume LXXII, Issue 21726, 7 March 1936, Page 25
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