"LOOK AFTER TOUR TREES."
(Pall Mall Gazette.)
The famine in Persia — a calamity which threatens to extinguish the whole nation — is attributed by the " Nation " to the absence of timber, The great States which once filled the valley of the Euphrates have ceased to exist, and ext"n r jtion is a fate which has for centuries been threatening some modern States. Spain, for instance. Man -has stripped tbe soil of trees ; the absence of trees has brought droughts; droughts have slowly diminished the productive powers of the ground, and finally destroyed them, the population in the meantime dwindling in numbers and vitality. Spain had forty millions of people in the time of the Romans, and flowed with milk and honey; it is now an arid region, only half of it is under cultivation, with only sixteen millions of inhabitants, and if modern science had not come to its aid, would probably go the way of Babylon. Persia was one of the most powerful States of antiquity, and even in the fourteenth century was able to support the army of Tamerlane, who marched without commissariat or baggage during a bloody contest. . It is now almost a wilderness, with a population of two millions — about half of them nomads — which is rapidly perishing from famine brought on by three years' drought. The worst of it is that, owing to the absence of either common roads or railroads, it seems to be impossible for the charity of the rest of the world to reach the sufferers, so that there is really a strong prospect of the depopulation of the -country. The moral of this horrible story is — look a p ter your trees. The " Nation " hopes that before long some organ is d attempt will be made in America to deal with this momentous question of forest preservation, which is daily becoming more pressing. Zoroaster, the great Persian legislator, was wiser than he knew when v he put planting a tree among the. .most meritorious of acts,
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Tuapeka Times, Volume III, Issue 219, 11 April 1872, Page 8
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334"LOOK AFTER TOUR TREES." Tuapeka Times, Volume III, Issue 219, 11 April 1872, Page 8
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