Telegraph is any apparatus or process to convey messages over long distances with no intermediary messenger.
Telegraph may also refer to:
Enterprise may refer to:
Columbia may refer to:
Welch, Welch's, Welchs or Welches may refer to:
Three Sisters may refer to:
The Pacific Coast Ranges are the series of mountain ranges that stretch along the West Coast of North America from Alaska south to Northern and Central Mexico. Although they are commonly thought to be the westernmost mountain range of the continental United States and Canada, the geologically distinct Insular Mountains of Vancouver Island lie farther west.
Highland is a broad term for areas of higher elevation, such as a mountain range or mountainous plateau.
A rainbow is a meteorological phenomenon that appears as a multicolored arc that forms with the sunlight reflecting off water.
A comet is a small astronomical body which orbits the sun.
North Star is a name of Polaris in its role as northern pole star.
Monte Cristo or Montecristo may refer to:
A monarch is a ruler in a system (monarchy) where succession is hereditary.
Twin Peaks is an American television series, running from 1990 to 1991; and in 2017.
Bonita may refer to:
Dixie is a nickname for the southeastern United States.
A pyramid is a structure with triangular lateral surfaces converging to an apex.
The North American Cordillera, sometimes also called the Western Cordillera of North America, the Western Cordillera or the Pacific Cordillera, is the North American portion of the American Cordillera, the mountain chain system (cordillera) along the western coast of the Americas. The North American Cordillera covers an extensive area of mountain ranges, intermontane basins and plateaus in Western/Northwestern Canada, Western United States and Mexico, including much of the territory west of the Great Plains.
The Coquille River starts in the Siskiyou National Forest and flows hundreds of miles through the Coquille Valley on its way to the Pacific Ocean. Bandon, Oregon, sits at the mouth of the Coquille River on the Pacific Ocean. Before the era of railroads and later, automobiles, the steamboats on the Coquille River were the major mode of transportation from Bandon to Coquille and Myrtle Point in southern Coos County, Oregon, United States.
Myrtle may refer to:
An echo is a reflection of sound.
Dayton was a steamboat which operated on the Willamette and Columbia rivers from 1868 to 1881. Dayton operated on the Willamette from 1868 to 1876, mostly upriver from Willamette Falls, including a route on the Yamhill River to Dayton, Oregon, after which the steamer was named. From 1876 to 1881, Dayton was employed on a run from Portland to Monticello, W.T., which was located on the site of what is now Longview, Washington.