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Show New Officers For Local Lions Club Start On Duties La Mar Outzen, local druggist, formally took office as the new president of the Milford Lions club at the regular luncheon meeting meet-ing of the club Wednesday noon, succeeding 0. C. Koch, local Tel-luride Tel-luride manager, who has held the position for the past year and has been an exceptionally good officer. of-ficer. Newly taking office, along with Lion Outzen, were J. C. Root, first vice-president; R. C. Palmer, second sec-ond vice-president; Dr. R. R. Shannon, third vicepresident; I. Altman, lion tamer; and 0. C. Koch as a new director for the two-year directorship terminating in 1937. L. A. Wynaught is the other director for this term. David S. Williams, as secretary-treasurer; secretary-treasurer; D. E. Stapley as tail-twister; tail-twister; and M. H. Pool as assist-' ant tail-twister, were re-elected to office. Lion L. A. Wynaught, a director in the Associated Civic Clubs of Southern Utah and chairman of the road committee of the associ-, ation, reported the monthly meeting meet-ing of the association held Satur-' day and Sunday at Panguitch, stating that the committee named f by the association to investigate the matter of bringing cheaper Boulder dam electric power into southern Utah, of which H. 'B. Waters was chairman, had reported report-ed that the power could not be made available except at what would probably be a prohibitive cost. The matter of correcting the omission of Milford and western Beaver county from consideration in the subject matter of the advertising ad-vertising pamphlet put out by the association had come up in the directors' meeting and had been discussed for some three hours, according. to Wyanught, with the! (Continued on last page.) o New Lion Officers (Continued from first page.) result that the omission would be corrected in some mysterious "next edition." It has never been made quite clear to The News how many copies of the pamphlet thus incomplete and notoriously inac-urat inac-urat have been given circulation. Some association officials say 200 while others place the figure as high as 10,000. C. Aubrey Tolton, deputy bank examiner, and Lewis Harris of Beaver were present at the luncheon lunch-eon as the guests of J. R. Murdock jr., of whom they they were boyhood boy-hood friends in Beaver. n |