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Show the St. Marys club. As president of Kiwanis t , national, he will repre Int-than Int-than 2,800 clubs throS e United States, Canada& and Hawaii, embracing' a aslia bership of 190,000 Unprofessional Un-professional leaders aiW KIWAMS NATIONAL PRESIDENT MAY SPEAK IN VICINITY Officers of the Kiwanis Club of Springville, learned today that J. Belmont Moser, prominent Pennsylvania Penn-sylvania industrialist and recently recent-ly elected president of Kiwanis International, probably .will speak in this section sometime during his one-year administration. John Y. Bearnson, president of the club, said that following his election at Los Angeles the new Kiwanis Chief Executive had indicated in-dicated he would launch his speaking itenerary in late summer. sum-mer. This schedule undoubtedly will carry him into a majority of the 29 Kiwanis districts throughout through-out the United States and Canada, Can-ada, President Bearnson added. Delegates to the largest convention con-vention in history of Kiwanis International In-ternational named Moser to succeed suc-ceed Dr. Charles W. Armstrong, Salisbury, N. C, who served as president of the community service ser-vice organization during the past year. Long active in Eastern industrial indus-trial circles, Mosser is vice president presi-dent and general sales manager of the Speer Carbon Company and vice epresident of the International Internation-al Graphite and Electrode Corp , both at St. Marys, Pa., where he maintains his home. Active in civic affairs for many years, the new Kiwanis president recently was appointed by Governor Gov-ernor Duff of Pennsylvania to the State Committee to Study Education Facilities. Moser was treasurer of Kiwanis Ki-wanis International for the past two years. Prior to that time he served as a member of the International In-ternational board of trustees, International In-ternational committee chairman, governor of the Pennsylvania Kiwanis Ki-wanis District, and president of |