Southern Pacific once had a line to Tillamook on the Oregon Coast. Completed in 1911, it was originally called the Pacific Rail & Navigation Company. Southern Pacific formally took it over in 1915. Someone has written “1915” on this postcard folder, so it may be from that year and certainly isn’t from after that.
click image to download an 8.8-MB PDF of this postcard folder.
There are also many topical pain relief options in the buy cheapest viagra form of pills, oils, creams, patches, lotions and more. Though, it is an effective and useful drug but it cannot offer you guarantee of not being equipped for performing. cheap sildenafil They also offer viagra online store free delivery worldwide and this is really an easy solution and thus appreciated by all. Practicing buy cialis without prescription oral therapy of Caverta increases the rate of blood flow. The folder has eleven images on each side and unfolds to be more than four feet long. One side shows scenes along the route while the other pictures Oregon’s capital building in Salem plus ten photos of structures and parks in the city of Portland (the other end of the Tillamook line).
The route was most recently used by the Port of Tillamook Bay, but a 2007 flood washed out parts of it. A small section is currently used for a tourist train, and some people are hoping to turn it the rest of it into a hiking trail.
It’s interesting that the artists did much less heavy retouching to the nature scenes compared to the city scenes. The ones of Portland seem almost like paintings rather than photos. The on of “Portland by Moonlight” was obviously a photo taken in daylight retouched to show it as if at night. There are no advertising signs lit and not of the buildings show any signs of there being lights in them. Even in 1915, there would have been a lot of signs and lit buildings at night. Te one of the “Oregon Bungalow” was certainly a painting of the kind of house we all want to live in.