Bradley,
In 1915, for the 50th Anniversary Club dinner at Merion Cricket Club, former club president Edward Sayres wrote the following;
And with all, fellow members, we have retained amongst us the same old traditions and customs which were in our early environment, and that is, that it is a club of gentlemen who wish to enjoy amateur sport.
This Club was founded by gentlemen and its members have always been, and is composed to-day of gentlemen. Of course I speak in no snobbish sense. And let me beg of you younger men not only in years, but in membership, keep it so in the years to come. That has been in my opinion, the reason of its success. The men who worked in it in the past years kept the amateur spirit to the front. We never won a game of cricket or a game of tennis, or a game of golf, or any other game, except by fair and square and honorable playing, --let no professional element ever creep into our sports, let it be a club in the future as it has been in the past, where our mothers, our wives, our daughters, our sisters and our sweethearts, can always come and enjoy themselves, and let no true Merion man ever do anything at the Club, or for the Club, but what a gentleman would do in his own home.
Keep this always before you—a few years more only and there will be no founders left, but you young men are just as capable, just as loyal as we were in our time, and I doubt not that when some of you are celebrating the centennial anniversary, the same spirit of sport, the same kindliness—which we have always wished to show our competitors, will be shown then as it was in the old days, and as it is now, and so God bless you all.
I think that still works pretty well today.