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Show Lions Elect District Govnor At Ogden E. E. Anderson To Head Utah Clubs For Year Monday and Tuesday in Ogden, the Lions of District 28, comprising compris-ing the Lions Clubs of Utah and Idaho, assembled in annual convention. con-vention. Tuesday's meetings were given over to business affairs and marked the election of a district governor for Utah and the decision was readier whereby Idaho Clubs are to have a governor. E. E. Anderson of Morgan, was the unanimous choice of the convention con-vention for the office of district governor of the Utah Clubs. Charles W. Sandles of Idaho Falls, past district governor of District 28 upon up-on his return to Idaho will contact the clubs of Idaho by letter and take a mail ballot to determine who shall officiate over the Idaho clubs. The reason for the election of two governors was occasioned by the large amount of territory one man has to cover during the year if he contacts the clubs of both states. The act must not be inter- preted to mean, however, that District Dist-rict 28 is to be split. The division in governors is merely to ease the task of visiting the various clubs. The Utah-Idaho district will remain re-main as such with the exception that the governor will officiate as the chief of district 28U and the governor as the head of district 281. Idaho Falls was the choice of the convention for the 1934 convention city. Mr. Anderson, district governor-elect, governor-elect, is a native of Lehi. He has long been associated with Lionism. He has resided in Morgan since 19-14, 19-14, where he has been actively identified in civic affairs, being a teacher in both the grades and high school for a number of years. He left the teaching profession for employment em-ployment with the Utah Packing Corporation, later becoming manager mana-ger of the plant at Morgan. Those from American Fork in attendance at-tendance at the convention for one or both days were: Mr. and Mrs. Roy Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Ben-jamin Moffett, Mr. and Mrs. Dell Singleton, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bate, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Gaisford Jr., Dr. G. S. Richards, Dr. H. H. Ramsay, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shelley and Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Grant. Among the distinguished guests at the convention, who spoke at the sessions, were Charles H. Hat-ton, Hat-ton, of Wichita, Kansas, international internat-ional president of the organization,1 Governor Henry H. Blood, Justice D. W. Moffett of the supreme court, Attorney General Joseph Chez, and Murray B. Allen, of Salt Lake, president of the Utah Association Assoc-iation of the Blind. Eugene Halliday, formerly of this city, is the newly elected president of the Ogden Lions Club. |