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Show I ,1 .inwmy.y i THE DESERET KEWS SATURDAY OCTOBER n The Restoration Proposed Mountain Highway .Will Provide Revenue From Something ' . stream to form a pond where the wearer of rich fur Timber Besides Note the chips and the even notches, strewn . RIGHT Branches and around while the Beaver has been fe ling the timber where it will back up the water for his will build his home and multiply. CENTER How the beaver chops down a tree. The woodsman himself could not do a neater job. tree-trun- ks pond-hom- e. t Interested 6 me that atatement to uao for thla tlement from every possible stand- - road from the standpoint of Industry And today furs are being (By J. K. Kmnard) Wo wont them to know that .and commerce. article: and that how f came to reout in every nook and crannv AVE you thought about . that' . I have before me a statement prewo know all about the timber area mark that gomabody had. told of the world If Ltah has a cctinn road through the mountain a road olt,i open up, and ooj pared by an expert In his lino. It t Ofnething indirectly, you aee abounding in beaver and other fur Evan-), to from Kamae, Utah, will Just remind them again about a statement over the signature of D bearing animals is it not worth while of ewSource Revenue. eom-w.Ma'dsen. 111 H in state fish timber , of and game 000,00ft feet to open It up ton. Wyo-- via Beaver creek.) thot During 1020 Mr Madsen again patches contiguous to the road mlasloner for Utah. amt it Is ad- Mountain pass ana ,h. Havden , four we have proposed, and of Its estimated! dressed to Dr. J B- Broaddus. Walker! That a what I have been leading up and up to March 31, 1923 beaver fort of Bear river? lvalue, laid down, of nearly 35.500,000, Bank Bldg. City: addressed to Dr U0 all rbe time And its rather aur- were taken only in such places as Hsve you pictured a drive through 'as railroad ties, mino timbers, pack- - j Broaddus. the man who la unselfishly I prising they were actua'ly doing damage, andthe canyons, high up among the pines,! In boxes and building lumber, as well Interested in this proposition, who has) Mr Madsen says '"In my opinion. becajse of th loose methods of trapas of the vast it would mean! the interests of the slate at heart. woj enough beaver could be raised In the thm during previous years we along the streams and past the lakes? ) to our state. industry In logging, sawmills. never tires of telling of its wonders j Uinta mountains, where they would 'found the supply rather depleted at and wonderful resources; who goesjuo little or no damage, to pay an- - that time Practically all of these out in the open, aces the possibilities nually to the state of Utah romlb.aver were taken from the 1 tnta an In addition tojr.o m tins in which they do no dam- to 260 or, an Impossibility; that It Is even) But that Jl1; mt what j ,UrUd out JJ" ah re ranches and a probability, and that it can and to tell about in this article. 07e he efways has with' film It is my in fart a conidersMe farm will be constructed if we ones to tell the forestry officials hie trusty camera, so that he canhow n f exist in a streapj them may officiaU lhat jmlr dae told me. but othera hat ha ha, ln fact , flowing thrrigh a farming section worth th;.,f,re,,lnr hlnk it wUI interest them, as well, borrowed from him 'I th. d ra famag with in We pointed out to those same of- - for 'they have said that next to the h inT ere" n ot qthand Mr M Kithe enforce- W had timher possibilities of any proposed ' only pictures, but as well for for the !?w of which will permit the ment alabout the sceneiy, something they road through a forest area they con- -, tha Wea ,hat a road through that See- You know what was the foundation taking of Vver at the season of the ready knew, but we wanted them to elder general use to tbs public as a'tton is feasible of thr As or millions You fememhrp r hn tv frs are the most alu- know that we knew It. too after they determining factor in deciding wheth- 1 am to mv subject, reading in historv of the Hudson Bay ab and to kfeo trying taking oni? the surplus, had told us. We want the forestry or not they will build the road from but I find It hard I speak.ng company, of the trading and trapping leaving in all fraction of the Uinta officials In Washington, 1J C. to j their own forest development fund a statement onuun'dln ro vr a sufficient stock prepared by thepots that kept 4n advance of the know that wo have been Slgin In to An d general use to the public, as I In-- ; Btate fish and game commissioner, ward march of civilization on this t n rt' an pnual increase and the this thing, that we are interested ns the value of thelwasl not. JVelLDr terpret it. BroadUua hand-- i ccmuaeat and made possible its set- - n aunurn cr.otnt of skins each year.' Pnt ia , ' ! - ", 1? se ,hdy I - sut 1 Then he gives us some figures, urcs that are really Interesting Madsen Gives Figures, The sale of beaver furs In 1911 amount'd to 12 577 92; In 1919. to 7 .,43 in 1920, to 5 187 2, from jt March lb. 1921, to March It, 1922. H0.212 23 He accounts for ths low figures In previous years by referring to loose methods that existed in trap-Pn- g ping and salts and cites the higher figure of 1921 and 1922 as a possl- blllty of what can be done and what it would man to the state as an His plain inference of a dustry year!) increase leaves ths field open with and it road through that section to make it available it means in future cars wealth and prosperity to the state little dreamed of And so trom the standpoint of gen- n) use to toe public, to which the forrtr department ties next to the timher possibilities of a given area, this question of animals is a gnlflcapt And that s onlv one ang! 11 there is another, one of still iigger posibf1itiecv s hae that road lt drainattst were aaThesis to these men the Rev. Charles sharp, bright and penetrating ssj Kingsley author of Hypatia and These and othera eastward, lo! thorns of a bawlr, there wassSomething Poor Pssrr note' Poor acton hawk-liktoo. about hkhan.is andof w Go Into our great libraries, ritre he clutch which ftheie yoji w. fin4 tons of waste ths manner In the works of dis- by the shoulder when he'vtlshed 3papr rubhi-- h carded dramatista- He words to his attention their hold Reader have vou sometimes thought nlmort stammered with Intensity and of the dramatlat,. nf Massinger and naa he nd be as spoke lFord. of Beaumqnt and Fletcher? esgernsss his ln noise Ben a Of Jonson and je Shakespeare manner of making was quite it,e dramatists with the actors. 1 throat when excited that was I ut he It would have been a most like the bird of prey vre, interesting slaht to liave seen Mo- teUigent, very Intellectual, and InJlto here with the nCors above The same of the lacs merely tell Lop de t Oga, not to mention, among cate the keenness In the nat-r- e of the his the modern plavers Btilwer and the man. There were knobs upon of Dumas The Tlramatist of whom I white forehead a upon thatand 'high French go lli wrltr was of the old school and ft icur writer the n one of his ambitions to make a corresponding Jv nob- in h's thus were too Al there w re knobs TrinU c of; Napoleon in the manner character, There f work his j tthakexeares Henrv V. and also of ln hi perceptions and one e. , 1 i room biiure abeth the Good Queen Bess Of rmier these ambitions ho had accomp- arrived lh the presence-ch- i the 'ihed a part The first part of hia brain. In that he resembled 1sn. and It is alngu- - I ! h ha.l b, n played, and a fore-ja- r, Hrmttt tnls most Is actor of the time had looked brought now (act that too, to the mind this obscure and lost- over the work on Napoleon Remem- the as took Readers, that 8h tkesj.eare never writer of plavs light-o- f of his inam heard the lines of anv woman's part aubject matter of one dramatic efforts the seme material as that he wrote spoken save by some did the famous senten'lous exile of be ird ess youth for boys played the RepilllCin Idol of mens jiarts at the Old t.lobe theatre This forgotten author France, namely the life of th Puritan in London Lord Protected of England Oliver ' heard the lines of his heroine, ln th pert of Eleanor De Vere ' repeated Cromwell. In the of my dreams and Oblivion. Into . , . . remlnlscesicos y R" ac!ress too who Vias not only were several an-- e 1,1 of t Eliza-Fren- -h br Plav-Hous- ,h .zz,,XX- few years earlier, then, perhaps they derful Julia Iean Now the had been more cheerful Ills flnrk Applauded wrltet has too much ln sympathy And another matter too worthy of wtth that of modem cartoon done in shows which note ir. wr.tmg of the Death of ths the style of Holbein and Death upon the stage of Time sweep-- ! Dramatist Is this, our unknown writer . lng into Oblivion th Rubbish of the hid h's plays presented before an aud- that withheld not applause O, World's Play. Was the Iran my - Ject. fartious? Well, even m fan e the rapturous moment to the vanity of an last the To listen to the approbation last be sometimes author shall --.first sometimes be first To the Play-- i whuh hi shall plays received was to him there to have lived And the flowers too, House, the Salt Lake Theatre -cwell as wrote bnu those who men words, tuets which were ame . as those who uttered them. But even acroks the footlights at the close pawed of the the reputations of those who were plav that were received by the toward mired, tbn bc4iut,rul.n omaa.. of ACOi us 1 the n.yt did not the dramatist have a share gulf of oblivion bo whatOfof drv-Jthe- -! also poor, unknown dramatist Perhaps their this fume was m hts being In the hours readers In the t w v hen his marvelous death was near. Let us writer recalls two oire, that of the Hon. Mrs. J'clverton an it hope so And vet Vanltus vanlta- Is that quotation not fitting that of the unfortunate Walter Mi transit, gloria mund.i" aek mv here "Who were they .Jgomery. a and the little vanities as welL readers Well, once they were are wlihout bread' so he now almost forgotten as 1. the v dramatist, We are Of the mnk- - spoke In a terrible whisper, my subject to the without bread, but soon we ire food ers of plays, there came c theatre Dion And as he apokV the f with hts for worms Bouclcault Mildt, in his medieval suit in anti-- 1 dramatist sprang in his passion from sub-en- I fn per-Tnat- le Play-Hou- 7 V Mont-itum- '" I , fam--ou- V 1 BY CYRIL WATKINS. Who Is ths Spanish Jew? . Is he an enthusiastic Zlojilst, or does he sympathize with the Turk with whom he lives In cordial relations? Would be not rather the Turks possessed the Holy Land then see It go over to Jews of other nations. The Spanish Jew In the middle ages, was persecuted iwt terribly. In looking around for a place es an asylum he found only Turkey that held out th hospitality of that country as an asylum for these Jews who had been driven from Spain The early Spanish Jew la more or less a mixed factor of his race Many of the Spanish Jews during their persecution became Christians and it is said, as a rule they have not renounced the religion that wee thrust upon them Some have thought they saw an interest in many of these converted Jews to Join the Polish Jews in their trek to the "land of promise " Between the Spanish Jew and the Greeks of Asia and the Islands of the Mediterranean there exists the utmost hatred Ever since the days of Christ th Greeks have been more or lees anathema to all Jews, and yet wherever you find Jews In any considerable numbers you will find Greeks there to give them battle in competition. With the Jews these Greeks are agreed In only one thing, and that is to he disagreed When the Jews enter In considerable number Into Palestine the Greeks undoubtedly will follow them J7ot because they love them, hut because they love contention. Jt is a mistake that cationsi aspirations always follow peaoeful methods It la neither so with the Greeks Bor with the Jewa If th Greeks torment (he Jewa Aha Jews In their turn torment the Armenians Of all these western Orientals having their origin tn Asia ths Jews are the wealthiest. There will be a strong rivalry between the Jews and others for countries most dea'rable for settlement Syria, for example, is Just north of Palestine, and there Is little doubt that It will be overrun by Jews as soon as they congregate In considerable numbers In their "land of Promise Syria Is really more fertile than Palestine It Is possessed of greater natural resources Indeed, ths Arabs of Syria are ths most progressiva of their race to ba found where in ths Orient Their most anyprogressive city is Beirut Here there is an American oollege that has had a wonderful influence educationally among the Arabs of Syria. Some of these Syrian Arabs are as bright men as you would wish to meet In Syria both the Jew and th Arabs will find th greatest battle grounds for competition in business and for other Just now tbs Jaws a central ground between the occupy Mohammedan and the Christian world -- Fond Illusions Are Gone After One Experience Thar are somft people fn an Francisco who society know Just wht like to be a motion picture extra " Gone are their cherished lllu-- s on of the ease and abundant leisure supposed tn be enjoved by the play-erIt is s. Heartrg thot Director Sam Wood was about to f Im scene liy the Gloria Swanson Paramount picture 'The Mrs Bellew " at a fashionable Fin Francisco country chib ID of the member vohintvered to act as extras It will be hard work I have several big scene. warned Director ' Wood 'That's all right with us" was thi anwcr of the grouji, visioning not more than 45 minutes of an unusual experience The next morn'ng fog came In end it was nearly noon before Mr Wood had finished his ei scenes and foimd it possible to use the society plavers Br JEAt HOB1RT. From then until 5 oclock the society 30 moved hither and thither at the director s commands They waited noc great seaport town of Kaloniki Ded while lights were being fixed Mediterranean Sea d!3 they a conspicuous space in the eagatch will be enlarged and become got UP and sat down they danced a source of Macedonian prosperity It they srfellei on the porch did vtLstor of the Wo-they ar There merg likely that In the future all the other things he asked them to pcTh4js changes tn the Medit will have two im do erranean than In any other waterway the Mediterranean The 45 minutes they had anticipathad wne In pfrtant ports where It ha are ujon which kurope depends Thr tho past, and theae port likely to ed developed Into five hours have been few changes for many double Never again the commerce of thnt sea was the chorus of yean on the Me literranean, either What however make the com- some of them uion hen Africa or southern merce or will of Mediterranean the Bui , The commerce on that sea it, so important I the develop- Spain King and Queen has had a slow but gradual growth make o( Russia ft h hardly likely It is hoped however, and it Is be- - ment Attend Empire Ball regime of the Bol oeved that the Mediterranean waters,,ihat the present h,ylki vijI COflUnue many years, and aspect In the of the rich parts of (Special Correspondence) on of Europe The construe-- i (he Settlement moderv na- j,y progressive BIAPRIT7 sonthme.i r tlon of internal canal, ln southern Frftn , th make of drVeopment gent n kne Europe will greatly increase Mediter-t- h queen of of that country Itallvn.i re,-- , ranean commerce ? At present the tracti f.1 JnTT"! to,? "i?1 tne For ll",gl du p1"l gmh have underway, the construe- - ,rt pounwg Ornmutids nf their Riarr'tz formerly the residence of ran1 ! are 1 Russia and Into Hants obtaining the Empress Eugenie), which reprokat m PUt th prodfrom f that country very valuable re- - duced, in both sses dr ta, Jull O4-and 4he dances, Hnyne. ucis of that fertile nation on the The ar. at )rent 2 0f)a . atmosphere of the Fecnnd Empire, What hn when Biarritz first became Germans In Russia accomplished actress well ,er"'!)8 f Europe There has been a j a fashionable resort ...... v vou, i It jMrtSa "Myit aj by tbf jrehoft 5" through to the labor in the dramatic art At least, Aegean nj thoufght wither upon the tree that population Is the restraint which Heretofore the principal shippingSea.)lg Mukovlte on paid for the bottle of rare wine from! to KU.ia nut unmt a I kinds of Tn, r'ources of thescratched. 11Si Mcd.terr.neAn has been across which he drank. But why go so far) I. e'f ' pef!a11 doubtful if anywhere In the world Our j w"To ' that ocean hi the shortest route to away from our own a I the aUVh,!'.-Un'd to richer gold offer. Sue., most promis.ngfeiture of h of zuTh"' alone but to an assembly know that on.ithas to resource The .theopenlngof Islands of lhe eastern The looked upon as dross Euronettv-i- , of friends. It was on the night lntThi are backward and tolked for)n southern drama-- 1 Mediterranean the was known by '1b entirely rethe wee small hours after the famous j t .h not do the er Va came people the develop while, that the Bol-l- f a)d M after a'There j. j, killed and beautiful actress hd met with the Turkl' is our true sources of these islands to any great ehv,kl hld il" ,h,' geene. rh.,Sj,1 like " success tn his drama What toasts ..i- Mediterranean It Is no said, and he indicated an old extent, although they are capable of Hlon and tt half of thTml Idle da.s wre drank, whati response ,Ilat he Russians demanded made, . fruit .',11 kinds, the bed,- raping beneath trunk d of their what badinage, w!hat raillery what !fah5"" 0r4 ,haU Judge u. by that especially grape, and orangea ' th" h Wr1 on What J haTbeen handicapped Jor ren- -' question of with Tyrkev man. Destiny na! willed it will make this great Inland eea so ...hIT by an unproducive nobllltv t'Z..nw i WWthathilihtlrDaJghw7r',o,f Deluded There another country that may olherwlM, On the night of that h ng Important tn the future is the enor- - whrh was a detriment toll to r the will over MedPerranean Mnemosyne. O History. O Comedy traffic a new life that ti had sat.mous go there d uproarious supper, rtiaf wov it. n rnuntrv U H Tragedy! did you not blush to listen oii tb right hand of the sroud and through the Turkish btraiu and aero , Palatine is tha kev H nfth!a. tka remember But a anrt given rapper, 10 AU Minor It hare the (h honor of a Tr tain ramatiat, hi friend of MaeVtoia The Greek reltr a erv ehort sighted view : f.V.E?:: ; V"!1 . limit f th Not that the trunfr was ,V mffnrf tn ilf nitUh in an were lost his Jewish life to one day commercial world It is raid that magln- - that that dwwctrng'oTthe' hoofwit Of course the beautiful of the empty, it m a the trunk itself thlt wa people would be r huva b 1 and gracious actress preposed a toast Engluif Bard., Q.n his leftpiy UJ arrears nJJ "For rent.' In the , a hand there gone surfy Jn little country not half cooped up But when the trunk landlord Mid a. writer of hvmns hymns Palestine ? Jo! cap17- Zmm-rc- ia ? aVd ethnic rand of coTA7S the waiter re wm found thenU wwb found to bi The lord hav be. been rang by the had vaue worfj man hand As-' The ccnd were oponded in word which placed had j hounnda. Happy trio they empty. airv his and clutrh-- d our shoulder with his hawk-lik- e hands "Food for worms and his eyes of fire looked into ours "Where be your gibes now Tour flashes of merriment, that we-- e wont to set the table in s roar "Not one, only the fever of the rul- -l in lng passion, strong dath the insatiate desire of fame j But of the extinguishing of this dead dramatist, the lamp of hope of his life we wil write more anon. Hopes Deferred. What things of pathos might be told Of wasted literary ambitions, of hopes defei ed, of tantalizing glimpses of success! But the list, like ths beard of Polonius. would be too long Wbat a slave is that man who performs his in a longing for the approbation the applause, of the world' Still, one might welcome succesa We recan a case It was ln souly old London town The aspirant for fame had Indeed there were grown spots of enow that hung over his brow And yet, on a certain night, he sat alone in his London room and drank to his own toast "My Success'' Small indeed, was the sum of money which for hie work he had received. and yet it was, after long yearsof sick-be- d, of the prHEeyea X Ot Palestine V THE WORK OF BEAVER IN THE UINTA MOUNTAINS. In the district which would be made accessible were the forestry department 'to build a road from Kamas to Evanston. LEFT Section of a beaver dam across the THREE SECTION 14 J922 THE NEW GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE I i M -- t life-wo- gray-heade- d. .e R1 " hOTpT.uof Plav-Hou- bxceUx 7' I d'hbd . ln ..i semi-tropic- al ?. , r.ttrn,.t":.I'Tfi'frlendlvth..tenndlernedcrtfl,. tl" Docreo.o4 lAueliny How dlftlcult to climb, how easy to fall! Or s simile how soon one may And himself forsaken end lost in alonsh of sbrnutnt One may find too ignis fatuus' So with our dramatist What matter w hat slough of despond he was tn. the fact Is that it was one to genius to be How unbearable drudge, to "find the wings of their the fetters of with bound Pegasus poverty, or go bare the richest fruit i , .. (Z; Thi RItlre hot It tht 'r! tohl ll't fiaanclul. ,polnl.xifJv'rw.. In sues SMI peper- enllln. nr.ri. t,cb" FTwt: change bi the hwwrss; Theii -- Whst might he S fitHnif symhoI totTnikl7, has snrmitnriin, worm," tv salli-an- l The so population of that country, room has p,, contents of the have cut upon a stone, however u the nosslhilltles of s iBr t dramatist died ' v pretentious to mark the tart resting- -' been given all kind of commercial If d we trunk concern us now not winder he Botshe-- , w'.r,,ow Who knows what they were, those j place of Edward V Tullldge the writ- - f,",vUI lior, of Eope todnare exleld'ngta condemned vikl d unmearured Vere Ip Elbaner terms His of drama trunk er the In the unpublished lesions abnnt the papers H story of the fu- -' hd ot "Napoleon T We for their cruelty of plays, that no doujvt ta of "Cromwell h0,d all we know But what plays, and '.poked but lately on s sunken grave. '' may run something like this. 'of atr Jn my ,h, change ihnt lo sure The uncravlng surrounded by rank grass and! weeds. Russia, by the c,strui4lon of so,.- where are tbOy now ,1. world will never know. In hts later and pondered on the JIRu the triumphs- murh '1'a PbJ atlnn noMeilf perhaps be more Vnmrks- for a nCVr industrial ble than the and despairs of our friend, sn am- prepared Itself;y'hr life, through days of anxiety, through industry which n- life hi we now tl and of hu rertless that behold The ou, indefatigable through days change Win extend toshipnlng days of neglect, millions of craft from Written And here ; worker, yet unfortunate, and at times has been a cruel one but there have the ger, the man had. his of Strait to ths Black Gibraltar cherished plays unwise man of genius. 'been advantages flowing from it," was his reward Sea. oe-Asad dott-reye- j, mrlpt. 'I. -- - V V ,c dF a"1 t wur, --p |