YOUNG FARMERS' CLUBS
IT is most gratifying; to note the decision of the loca) Young Farmers' Clubs to maintain their organisations and promote their usual activities in spite of the Avar. The wisdom of such a decision cannot be over-emphasised for when hostilities have ceased New Zealand, providing she is spared the fate of many another country in the path of invasion will be required to supply the devastated countries with new stock strains, strong healthy cereal and seed crops and all the essences of industry and trade which we have preserved unimpaired during -his the second period of world, wide calamity. To the young farmers of to-day will fall a duty which they must c-Avry out for the sake of humanity. Upon their shoulders will devolve a trust which will bequeath to the world anew, something of the agricul-» , tural standards which in Europe, Asia and North will have been in danger of becoming lost for all time.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19420422.2.9.3
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 5, Issue 43, 22 April 1942, Page 4
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159YOUNG FARMERS' CLUBS Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 5, Issue 43, 22 April 1942, Page 4
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