In Denmcn College, the Women's lnstitutes' College in England, is this Country Housewife murul designed by Constance Howard and presented to the National Federation of Women's Institutes of England and Wales. Most of the country housewite's interests indicated here have to do with her Women's Institute: gardening and raising small fruits, poultry and rabbits, flower shows, singing, drama, cooking, crafts, sewing and some work with home furnishings. Home and Country Abroad ing attention in some farâ€"away places. Some time ago an editor of the New Zealand Women's Institutes' paper, also called “Home and Countryâ€, wrote to ask permission to reproduce in that paper our cover illustra- tion “The House That Health Builtâ€, Summer issue, 1956. Of course we felt honoured that New Zealand should like our cover enough to want to use it. A few months later our picture appeared in the New Zealand paper. In March we received a letter from the Secretary Organizer of Women's Institutes in Malaya saying: “Last December I attended a course on Nutrition run by the Institute of Medical Research here and during that course a copy of New Zealand’s Home and Country arrived with a picture of your magazine’s-cover illus- tration ‘The House That Health Built' in it. I immediately took the opportunity of showing this to the people attending the course and to the instructors and they were all very interâ€" ested and several asked for copies of the pic- ture. We had just been shown the ‘Vegata- bull', Australian~style and Indian-style and this appears to be another excellent way of 0 UR HOME and Country paper is attract~ catching the attention of people who an t. I am afraid, as interested in this impoi subject as they ought to be. I wonder if u could let me have two or three copies at 5 cover and details about how we might us:~ a- idea and adapt it to our local foods.†Of cm ‘- we were happy to comply with this requ t After our last Fall issue "got around" 7 Ontario members will remember that «A cover showed a picture of the house wi. "5 Adelaide Hoodless was born with an inset ' ture of Mrs. Hoodless â€" we had a letter 1: South Africa asking to borrow these phi graphs to use in the Women’s Institute pr: ‘ r of that country. In March we received a c of the February issue of “Hearth and H0: ' or “Huis en Haard†with the picture of IE birthplace of Mrs. Hoodless on the cover J. d a full page reproduction of her own Ph' "' graph on a page inside. “Huis en Haard :5 Published mostly in Dutch but the Chain: H of the Editorial Committee, Mrs. Wyn "76 Schumann, has written a ï¬ne editorial on V}: birth of the Institute movement in Data"‘0 with reference to the sixtieth anniversary, Had this appears on the front page in both EnglJSh and Dutch.