Waters WI Tweedsmuir Community History, Volume 1, [1945] - [2004], p. 2

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- ' â€" mononrol samonpay, rrsnuamy i dose" w 000C _____ ST. GCEORGE, Where, Out Of A Woman‘s Griek Cmy oo e ie e uin o . * o s â€"amaime t n 8 ts i HBRBJ _ 2 . : cce fi@ & Al/ fi f & Jtc ltia i #~#4f k ~A Meo WRA T m/i / . Makl) mWV o IL -‘-‘ fi_? l Ne $AF ) '- _ W / S t lE WV H O W~Z . 9 ww / "J : ) l E" Y e ~ 1 / WO â€" \e & ZA OV 2 A .; e > iA U LC _2 4. Z2 A B * W) aey 1 uns‘ t oonen.onimmnryarln in o se rIEEA THAT TOOK ROOT WORLD OVER" 6t. George â€" Tonight in hundreds of rural an organization which grew from its birthplace _ communities around the world, women are at Stoney Creek to take root all over Canada, the gathering to profit from an idea born of a United States, Great Britain, and eventually to St. George woman‘s grief. produce the world encompassing ASSOCIATED COUNTRY The woman â€" Adelaide Hunter Hoodless WOMEN OF THE WORLD. The idea â€" Women‘s Institutes Mrs. Hoodless was the author of a book on Mrs. Hunterâ€"Hoodless was born in Domestic Science, published in 1898. The book was this village 57 miles west of Toronto in far ahead of its time, with its caloric charts, 1958, and lived to know that her name was chemical analyses, and emphasis on sanitation on the lips of countrywomen everywhere. and nutrition and the importance of meat, fruit Adelaide (known as Addie) was the youngest and fresh vegetables in the diet. of thirteen children. She married John A stone cairn dedicated to the memory of Hoodless, a successful Hamilton businessman, this remarkable woman, stands at the junction of and the couple bad four children, one of Highways 5 and 4 just outside the village of St. when, joiin Herold, died wt the age of 1f George. The Institute there is making plans to months from drinking impure milk,. MFS_ have Mrs. Hunterâ€"Hoodless home preserved as a Hoodless felt responsible and resolved to WHstoric Site. save other mothers the anguish she had suffered by placing homemaking knowledge within the reach of all women. She decided that the best way to do this would be for ’,,:"‘,;fps@, the women to meet regularly, listen to 42. ,"‘x t speakers, and exchange domestic informaâ€" ‘ ” , tion helpful to themselves and their _,,‘: .‘“':.,,%‘:v fenilies. We o ;;_:‘::"*'»..‘ In 1897 Erland Lee, a member of Eis l“\%;‘”? the Farmers‘ Institute of Stoney Creek, a _ \u“h?; K C ie 5 Saar § . . wolime Pfi ~ ~ _ t invited Mrs. Hoodless to address the s holler, "+ sRCo | F”“S;'?‘*,‘q yB wives of his group and the Women}s H‘J,,':'.fv'-;‘ ;.:{ â€" 55 ?U\%}‘:’-fl*‘.â€" Institutes were launched. Prms \§;1\~ litte. ; Mrs. Hoodless became a campaigner jore x &‘5:%2‘ :‘.f;‘?;:".:'-;. heesacces : for the teaching of domestic science in *Cto a ":;"flf"jg ;k.»‘;:' 'f_f schools. Thanks to her considerable powers : : . ,f ‘, / N of persuasion Sir William MacDonald, the [ SPAFC \“f ‘Efi 1€‘ .fi tobacco magnate, established schools of Mess ::'1 _(fi;',‘ '."i;_,_..! ’; ‘ at© ‘\‘ household science at MacDonald Institute, 3 y o ‘ A'E %‘;@“’” Guelph, and in conjunction with the hAltl t' \’- f'\;;,:;f _gs,‘u‘: Agricultural College at Ste. &Anne de Bellevue. ib Y A :"51*‘ i’é,": {5A?_;%“;: es To help mothers w®x® who were beyond school es en y 29 9, 22 ' :’*': attendance she envisioned courses in the E b;- }' ; ;F";V,}:i*.' domestic arts in their own communities. _ m mad "‘\;\9;{&“:; \___ Mere: was born. the woman who‘s ide get > This was the Women‘s Institute, %mfimfi @&ifififii}fi%fiffi'%&, Inet imguite wou 1 Jic tm Hunteoondes. hme. ac..lmmmmmmnnnmmm en anentmnmamennamemmmnmmammmam smm mm uin anieemermemmemmmemermrmr omcs ns omm pomenmmmrmmepropmmmmmmme mm 00020000

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