Jacob Zerbuh of Tunisia. sponsored by Kingsville- Moplelon Institute in the Save the Children cam- paign. talk on an Imaginary Tour of the Canadian Provinces, with slides and comments on the products of each province both natural and manufactured, the reasons for which each province is best known, and important spots of interest. Kingsmill-Mapleton Institute is sponsoring a Tunisian boy Jacob Zerbah in the Save the Children campaign. Mrs. Eugene Sweet writes that the boy was abandoned by his father who is now dead. His mother has married aunt]: and Jacob lives with her and her new faiinh, who are extremely poor, the mother. Sign. father and two boys all living in one Sliitill room at the Tunis Communal Night Asrtm. They have no income except the earning‘ “f the older boy now serving an appr8nticc~ 1 Jacob is in school and rated a good 5m“ He speaks French, Arabic and Hebrew . , date 349 Ontario Institutes have been i as sponsoring children. Some of thSt‘ carrying on their support for a second 3r ii. '3 «Li =l= * * Ouimet Dorion takes a special litter. the older people of the community. At t’ mas time they send a potted flowering h to each of the older women and packet; homemade candy to the men. On F I, Monday each year they have a tea to it: "oldsters" living in the community and who have moved to the city. The report “Here an afternoon of good fellowshir reminiscing is greatly enjoyed. Ever) they beg us to Continue our Senior Cr Tea with no changes.†7.! A Vision, A Resolution, An Aehievemr t By Emma Bearss , happens to the resolutions prepared by the branches of the Women’s Institute? Some are returned for further information; some are rejected because of existing legisla- tion, and many are forwarded to higher lev- els. For a number of reasons, resolutions may be defeated at several points, but many are presented that bring about needed reform. This is the story of a resolution that at first sccmed doomed but later developed into an outstanding accomplishment. The story began in 1957 when an alert Women‘s Institute member, Mrs. Grover Egerter, submitted a resolution to her home branch of Alianburg. The resolution, which follows. revealed vision and foresight: “WHEREAS there is a great shortage of lawyers. doctors, teachers, engineers and other professional men and Wooten in Canada; and "WHEREAS parents could send more stu~ dents on to university if they lived at home; and I “WHEREAS in a twenty-mile area includâ€" ing Welland. St. Catharines, Niagara Falls and Fenwick there are ten high Schools and two under construction with an enrolment of 8,800 HAVE YOU sometimes wondered what 26 pupils at present, which will greatly in in the next few years; "THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED tE ask the Provincial Government to favo g. consider the placing of a university Sonlk 'e in the centre of the aforementioned . “Welland County is the fifth largest u in population in the Province and it ' ‘n this vicinity that the first free school it 1- ada was established." One of the purposes of the Women "i- stitute is to develop an interest in the a] school in all its phasos and to support t1- tional programs. With this objective in Mi. Mrs. Egerter got her idea for the res: on when she heard an announcement 1h he Federal Government would be making 33 available for the establishment of unive -:s. A quick survey made through the High '01 principals verified the fact that a uni‘ Ily was definitely needed in the Niagara iï¬' sula. This area was experiencing the pr: m5 of the post-war population explosion, 85 d1- ly in the field of education. The resolution from Allanburg Brant. :‘lt- tioning the Provincial Government for i 101' versity in the Niagara Peninsula was ac 716d ri. m HOME AND cov "TRY