Delightful Days in the Pacific Northwest

We’ve previously seen these 11″x17″ sheets folded into a four-page 8-1/2″x11″ brochure, including one for the Pacific Northwest. Union Pacific also made them for Colorado, Yellowstone, and southern Utah parks. But these were all dated 1953 or 1954, while today’s is dated 1941.

Click image to download a 2.4-MB PDF of this brochure.

Testosterone is produced in the testes of a cialis tadalafil canada goat. Myofascial http://robertrobb.com/page/2/ cheap levitra uk Release Techniques Myofascia is the strong connective tissue spread throughout the whole body in a uniform way. An example of the most common PDE5 inhibitor pills is levitra 60 mg that site. This medication is approved by order uk viagra US FDA to treat erectile dysfunction. Although the format is the same (though, strangely, slightly bigger than 17″ wide), this one has a lot less color. The 1953 brochures each have a color photo on the cover and blue, red, yellow, and green tints throughout. This 1941 brochure has only black-and-white photos and just green highlights. While Union Pacific included some color photos in its pre-war travel booklets (such as this one for southern Utah parks) and enthusiastically used color throughout its post-war travel booklets (such as this one for the Pacific Northwest), it was still using exclusively black-and-white for its pre-war brochures and mostly black-and-white photos for its post-war brochures.

Surprisingly, this brochure says very little about the Pacific Northwest, apparently letting pictures speak a thousand words. In addition to the cover photo, there are eight photos on page two accompanied by a single paragraph of fluff that doesn’t say where any of the photos were taken. Page three is exclusively devoted to the various trains people could take to the Pacific Northwest, specifically the City of Portland, Portland Rose, and Pacific Limited. Page four advertises other Union Pacific destinations — Yellowstone, Sun Valley, and Colorado mountain parks — and actually says more about those areas than page 2 says about the Northwest.


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