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Show AMESK.o,N LEGION AUXILIARY PRESIDENT TO TALK IN OGDEN ' --,.-1:' viVj- J MRS. IX)WELL T. nORART Mrs. LoweU F. Hobart of Cincinnati to Address Utah Convention Mrs Lowell F Bobart of Cincinnati, first national president of the 4merl-can 4merl-can h pton auxlliar w in address Lhe Utah convention of lhe legkun auxiliary aux-iliary to be held in Ogdcn Juno L"j and 30. The convention sessions w ill he lu Itl at the Elks home. Delegate from all sections of tlie stute are expected to attend -Mrs Hobart Is one of the 1 war mothers," that served In the grtut " second army." When her son Joined the colors and was Btn( to (lump Zachary Taylor. Kentueky, Bhe went with him. There shf- worked dally as a Red Cros supervisor and at nicb: lnstriictod a class In Red Cross work Following her election at the first national convention of the auxiliary ut Kansas City. President Hobart declared de-clared that the first thought of the loglon women would be for the war'.s sick and wounded. "The young men of the legion have been carrying on I h v. ork Practicably unaided. Thi-governmenl Thi-governmenl giv" s the poor boys in hospitals nothing but coldly impersonal, imper-sonal, official attention and little enough en-ough 61 that. V will mother to the lonesome, unhappy service men wherever wher-ever w. i an reach them. In the hospitals hos-pitals and out They were 'our boys,' and "our boys' they will always be." The' American legion auxiliary' has for Its general alms thowe of the legion. leg-ion. During 1922 the organization plan 10 sial.Ush an auxiliary' u"ll for each of the Legion's 11.000 posts As each legion member has an average Of at least two relatives ollglble for the auxillar. the latter organization promises to become numerically stronger than the Legion Itself. Tiie ttrenjrtn. pi the auxiliary at the beginning begin-ning of 1922 was a growth from 3,000 the iverage naembecahlp before it held a national convention |