The Pennsylvania Forestry Problem An Address by Henry W. Shoemaker (Member of New York Horticultural Society, Etc.) Before the Garden Club, of Williamsport, Pa. September 15, 1920 ^^^ "Pe!iDsylvania's Forests hold the key to her future not less than her farms, her factories and her mines." I —Governor Sproul at Ole Bull's I Castle, July 19, 1920, I I Published by Times Tribune Company Altoona, Pennsylvania Gift Autho" The Pennsylvania Forestry Problem yw^ 11^ were great cities built in such terrible waterless \XJ deserts^ This ([tiery is promulgated many times by trav- ^^K elcrs in Xort'hern Africa, and the an;;\ver \> that in the days when those cities were built they were not in the midst ol' deserts, Init in the heart of fertile an*! flowering regions. In the clays before the Christian era, when the tide of Roman colonization was spreading over the known world, Lpy Valley," J. Horace McFarland, Colonel Lloyd, Charles H. Eldon, and their type, of'the wonders of the Lancaster Road, the Govern- ment Peak, and many other points of interest. The Pennsylva- nia Alpine Club, through its talented Secretary, J. Herbert Walker, has promised to co-operate. The Garden Club should be represented on this pilgrimage to our local '"Alonarch of Moun- tains, " and the .speaker will hope to meet you one and all on that delectable occasion, the date for which will probably be shortly set by Mr. Collins. The North Mountain is surely a garden of gardens, where the rarest of wild flowers, shrubs and trees are found right at the doors of your home city ! LIBRARY OF CONGRESS illlllllllliillllllliliiiiiMiiNiiiir mil li mil mil III 1 1 III mil Hill III I ii:i INI nil I Q00 879 857 6