hokfsand Aurthorsa AI;iERtICA AN(D THIE YOUNIG INTEL- SALT LAKE LECTUAL . "By Pierre Benoit I -By Harold Stearns ." (A Revlew by L. E. W.) (A Review by L. A. S.) It is perhaps unfair to expect as The critics of the White-Matthews-. French beast-seller to be superior to' Phelps school have complacently ad- an . American best-seller. Even ina ministered their tut-tut to Harold France a rich cultural tradition is thet Stearns' "America and the Young In- heritage of only a few, and there musta tellectual" (Doran), while the more be scores o? scribblets there as farr liberal critics have, in general, found below Romain Rolland and Anatole1 a good word to say about the bfook. France as our own Harold Bell2 The type reactions of the raderg, it is Wrighters are below Hergesheimer, i easy to imagine, will follow those of yet it is insistently disappointing to the critics. The conservatives will read "Salt Lake," by Pierre Benot, heartily condemn it and, the liberals and to learn that "M. Benoit has be- will recommend it enthusiastically. Ae t comrn, in recent years, the prine fav- any rate, regardless of one's personal orite of French readers, who bought I opinion, one must admit that this vol- oVer 110,000 copies of Salt Lake in ume and one other, "Civilization in a few months."' . the United States" (edited by Mr. The story is laid in America, princi-p Stearns), sum up in a clear and con- pally in Salt Lake City, during the cise fashion the attitude of an increas- reign of Brigham Young. The auth- ingly targe class of intellectuals and or's interelt in Mormonism and his liberal critics in this country. strong antagonism toward it are The first impulse of the .average reminiscent of Zane Grey, as is also reader will be to call Mr. Stearns un- the somewhat theatrical quality of the patriotic. 'Such is the accusation al- tale. Zane Grey, too, might have writ- ways shot at the head of the "destruc- ten of a beautiful and wealthy young tive" critic. In-the case of-the artist,' widow tricked into a Mormon mar- the question of patriotism is beside riage, of her appeals for help when the point; but, as the present author she discovers next day that her hus- makes claim to being ao intellectual band is a Mormon and that she is wife rather than an artist, the question is number two, but just when Zane Grey perhaps pertinent. would have had his superlatively vir- As a. matter of fact, Mr. Stearns tuous heroine fainting with shame is' s'rayed by a patriotism that .goes' and horror, Mr. Benoit tells us calmly: a great deal deeper than that oWthe "Throughout the next day, Saturday, usual nosy hundred percenter. But she stayed thus in her room, dull and his patriotism is not the variety that inert, waiting for her master with blinks at the facts and substitutes a only one fear in her heart-that he tUtopia of Fourth of July orations. He might not cme. sees America as it is, culturally hope- less, and becoming more so with the - persistent spread of standardization, of crowd rule and crowd thought, and of "petty regulations of all kinds." le makes the inevitable comparison to France where "to be 'different' is not to be excommunlcated," ehere the people realise that "there can-be nos t y decent art or decent personal life iny a country that is mnch standardized - or much regimented." Art in this country, as the author XW e belie points out, is considered superfluous' and effeminate. Industrialism, whichO is more in evidence here than in any other land, is deadening the abiliy to feel that art is essentially a part of life. He draws a significant com- parison between the .United . States and other countries. "There are music festivals in Vienna even though the children are starving.. ..For those who seek carnival and the Latin spirit there is still Paris,'though France is face-to face with financial ruin. Those "to wehomn the theatre means everything r'Li Sj "w~a"; ''sti::3:n~stel;"nThis is ji will/ get the stimulation they need , in Berlin and Munich, though Ger- many O many lives under- the treaty of Ver- J7 sallies" June. V Mr. Stearns sadly shakes his head, Culturally, America is certainly lack- mal or n ing. What is more, it offers small op- s portunity for the present and coming will -find generations of young intellectuals and artists. What is this class to do, asks stoc. the author? Is there to be only one ankwer-get out? Evidently he has succeeded in finding no other, for Mr. AS uSua Stearns has himesf recently removed to France. preS ar From an English newspaper corre- spondent, Mr. Hamilton Fyfe, until recently one of the leading lights in 5 the Northcliffe press, comes a novel "The Widow's Cruse," published by" Thomas Seltzer, which bears testimony 604 to a practised hand, Mr. Fyfe is a man of established literary reputation "QUALIT in England, and is the author of what is regarded as the best book on Mex- -- ico. " "Ho lad too muc res ect for thoesiaply must bite the dust befora tag I ormon law. ins o'eloCk had not final fade-out or te- pxesent admln- yet struck whse be knctsked at the ;tration would be called to account. door. W ith a few m ore changes and a com- Come in,'" she msurmaured. plate revision of the conclusion- "He embraces her, whispers tender which is unhappy in every sense of reproaches. His suave recriminations the word-"Salt Lake" might be'made find her defenseless. To tell the truth, int' a scenario sufficiently sappy to she listeus gladly." rival "Way Down East" and "Over the Thiis would, of course, never do, i i:l." As it stands I cannot see why any right-thinking community. Andi as popsular appeal has been so great. worse yet, the smooth villain, is an It seems absurd to suggest that it has apostate Methodist minister, "the Rev- any other appeal. erend Jemini Gsvinett, of Baltimore." TIhe authenticity of the material has He deserts his church and induces been questioned. That is a matter a beautifssl young woman to marry for historical critics to detersmine, but him under false pretences, and his re- the book does not have an air of ac- ward is-not ruin and destruction, tuality. It suggests that it was writ- but success and power. This seems to 'en with the aid of frequent references 4o -evidence of a fatal slip-up in the to a simple history, a geography, a Sunday-school system. There is sum- zoology and a botany or Gene Strat- ly some mistake. Things would have ton Porter. It is overburdened with to be changed a little before the book descriptions of the plants and animaes could be made into a popular .movie of the region, and occasionally there fur an American audience. The brute is a passage such as the following: who ain't done right by our little Nell -"The murmurinsg waters soothed _.I ve you will place your stamp a= - - g )f approval on our new ITFA N ust the outfit you will need on Ccasions between now and hether it be for summer for- ., rerely for e ve n1ng wear, you I the thing you want in our l, the quality is right and the re reasonable. EAST LIBERTY STREET' FI RST - ECONOMY ALWAYS" LM ,H