The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, April 26, 1906, Image 1

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/£ /V H Jpl if *C ; ‘'iSETY IN THt—THE STATER VOLUML ONE. NUMVEE TEN. C/I A7 "IT'D A TCm. the personal impressions Kj/UV £ Arl/VLI JL(7. OP AN EASTERN RESIDENT ||i||||B .•''" ~^'’ v '\ i til. RRiit B| x /. mH .?:* ' - lit ■*y..;-’ HH -W. 8 Jar* .. iWmWWI ■IwK jiKw 1 »?SSM *?>^* j ) diFar jrtxw Mb ; whh® l : W «?* • -zfc * aWF .Bw ■3 WWfc w 4Wii bSB iwgWlwgßo'X'-MBwfeiaa SQmfw F? > ? KM' ill $1 w wIMIRWhra ®BI MSl£~Rg r; o I i<! o CHI <: s I - </ziyvrWß^^^imgßlaßf^/5' z iByA ! a ; A |HK ' |> \ . ' f ■ Bl 111 i B JMuMHI. ''l jJWi - Ili A<la; wiBMI I • ? „ ;<t i OM I 1 Moi < Wliß ■few4, '• -i ■■■L_— _J - 1 ‘Like the glory that was Greece, Or the grandeur that was Rome.” Almost intuitively this comparison frames itself in the mind of one who is able to dwell in memory on the “glory” and the “grandeur” of the once fair western city—the pride of the great Pacific Slope, which stood as a marvelous monument to the courage, the strength and the power of its people, but which lies to-day prostrate and destroyed, a prey to fire and famine, ruin and disaster. ATLANTA, GA., APRIL 26, 1906. THE GROWTH OF THIRTY-F1 VE YEARS. It is not given to the chance visitor nor to the omnipresent tourist, and perhaps not even to the resident of San Francisco itself to fully appreciate the many unique phases of the life of that complex American city. But to those who have lived in the more conventional environment of the East or South and who, for any cause whatever, finds himself a ■resident of San Francisco, the mere effort to adjust himself to the unusual conditions there, serves to impress him the more deeply with the characteris tics of the city. For myself, the first impression received of this “great city by the sea” is one which can never be obliterated—l made the trip out from New Or leans via the Southern Pacific—across the fiat w'ide cane and rice fields of lyouisiana, the rich cotton belt of Texas, on through these arid lands into the trackless desert of New Mexico and Arizona—a desert unbroken save by the occasional illusive glimpses of some beautiful mirage, where one seemed to see a gleaming lake with browsing cattle on its banks, or with the towers and minarets of a TWO DOLL AES A YEAE. FIVE CENTS A COPY.