CE K: . m » f | & B in oh. Colnalr e e ic a eise #20%, hue _ _ +.3 *Ca P ‘f; * fx { _ P "** m i 1~‘ ~ | | § 1 ts % ‘. | (~l a cccl i j 1.‘ l 6 |â€" ® § § ( 52 4 : | | j o o top <. Nes !‘ | k‘r‘fl? cama‘ss nimmmarrnnniiateatntneratemnrommmmmpemer ons s ‘ * "FOREWORD" | j I am so glad to hear that the Women‘s Institutes of | Ontario are going to compile village history books. Events | move very fast nowadays; houses are pulled down, new roads f | are made, and the aspect of the countryside changes comâ€" pletely sometimes in a short time. ! It is a most useful and satisfying task for Women‘s Instiâ€" 6 | tute members to see that nothing valuable is lost or forgotten, | and women should be on the alert always to guard the | traditions of their homes, and to see that water colour sketches | and prints, poems and prose legends should find their way g into these books. The oldest people in the village will tell us fascinating stories of what they remember, which the younger . members can write down, thus making a bridge between them | and events which happened before they were born. After all, | it is the history of humanity which is continually interesting to us, and your village histories will be the basis of accurate | facts much valued by historians of the future. I am proud to { think that you have called them "The Tweedsmuir Village F j Histories". â€"Written by Lady Tweedsmuir. *