BSquared -
I
think it's the following:
"Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where Nature may heal and cheer and give us strength to body and soul. This natural beauty-hunger is displayed in poor folk's window-gardens made up of a few geranium slips in broken cups, as well as in the costly lily gardens of the rich, the thousands of spacious city parks and botanical gardens, and in our magnificent National parks...Nevertheless, like everything else worth while, however sacred and precious and well-guarded, they have been subject to attack, mostly by despoiled gain-seekers, mischief-makers of every degree from Satan to supervisors, lumbermen, cattlemen, farmers, eagerly trying to make everything dollarable, often thinly disguised in smiling philanthropy, calling pocket-filling plunder "Utilization of beneficient natural resources, that man and beast may be fed and the dear Nation grow great." Thus long ago a lot of enterprising merchants made part of the Jerusalem temple into a place of business instead of a place of prayer, changing money, buying and selling cattle and sheep and doves"
("The Hetch-Hetchy Valley,"
Sierra Club Bulletin, January 1908, 217; YOS, 256-57. A less adequate version of this appeared two months earlier: "The Tuolomne Yosemite in Danger,"
The Outlook, November 2, 1907, 488"
The only other reference I could find for bread/beauty was:
"One must labor for beauty as for bread here as elsewhere." ("The Yosemite Valley,"
Picturesque California, 63; YOS 28.)
Hope this helps
Rosie