[By the Golden Gate by Joseph Carey]@TWC D-Link book
By the Golden Gate

CHAPTER I
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CHAPTER I.
WESTWARD Choice of Route--The Ticket--Journey Begun--Pan-American Exposition and President McKinley--The Cattle-Dealer and His Story--Horses--Old Friends--The Father of Waters--Two Noted Cities--Rocky Mountains--A City Almost a Mile High--The Dean and His Anti-tariff Window--Love and Revenge--Garden of the Gods--Haunted House--Grand Canon and Royal Gorge--Arkansas River--In Salt Lake City--A Mormon and His Wives--The Lake--Streets--Tabernacle and Temple--In St.Mark's--Salt Lake Theatre--Impressions--Ogden--Time Sections--Last Spike--Piute Indians--El Dorado--On the Sierras--A Promised Land.
The meeting of the General Convention of the Church in San Francisco, in 1901, gave the writer the long-desired opportunity to visit the Pacific coast and see California, which since the early discoveries, has been associated with adventure and romance.

Who is there indeed who would not travel towards the setting sun to feast his eyes on a land so famous for its mineral wealth, its fruits and flowers, and its enchanting scenery from the snowy heights of the Sierras to the waters of the ocean first seen by Balboa in 1513, and navigated successively by Magalhaes and Drake, Dampier and Anson?
The question, debated for weeks before setting out on the journey, was, which route of travel will I take?
It is hard to choose where all are excellent.

I asked myself again and again, which line will afford the greatest entertainment and be most advantageous in the study of the country from a historic standpoint?
The Canadian Pacific route, and also the Northern Pacific, with their grand mountainous scenery and other attractions, had much to commend them; so also other lines of importance like the Santa Fe with its connecting roads; and the only regret was that one could not travel over them all.

But one way had to be selected, and the choice at last fell on the Delaware and Hudson, the Erie, Rock Island, the Denver and Rio Grande, and the Southern Pacific roads.

This route was deemed most feasible, and one that would give a special opportunity to pass through cities and places famous in the history of the Nation, which otherwise could not be visited without great expense and consumption of time.


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