COUNTRY LIFE.
The farmer is free from the burden of wearying, harassing: anxieties which have driven many a city man to his grave, especially if his sons stay on the farm with him, instead of leaving him to depend on such strangers as he can pick npfor help. The idea now ii 5 *, and should be, to educate the man ; and education is valuable wherever true manhood is honoured. E-peciaily should the New Zealand agricultuiist be an educated man. His position in life requires it. He ia not a teaat.t at the mercy of a' lnndloid. He lives in independem c and comfoit on his own domain, and is reaiing and educating a family, and all the education he can obtain will come into play.
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Te Aroha News, Volume VII, Issue 385, 17 July 1889, Page 8
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125COUNTRY LIFE. Te Aroha News, Volume VII, Issue 385, 17 July 1889, Page 8
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