COUNTRY LIFE IN NEW ENGLAND 25 



unto himself. They are learning that under a great call old 

 animosities can be buried and new relationships established. 



I believe that all these results will be permanent not com- 

 pletely, but relatively so. I believe that in every one of the 

 results that I have suggested we shall find after the war closes 

 a permanent addition to our New England farm life as well as 

 a general gain. Nobody can tell what percentage, so to speak, 

 of each of these gains will carry over, but I am certain that it 

 will be high. It means the writing of an entirely new chapter 

 in New England agriculture. 



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