VANCOUVER &■ VICTORIA PILLARS OF A NATION'S GATEWAY THE MOUNTAINEER " MID-DAY Spring Onions 15 QUEEN OLIVES 20 RELISHES MIXED PICKLES 15 Radishes 15 CHOW CHOW 15 Cream of Spinach 25 SOUPS Tomato Bouillon 25 FISH Baked Whitefish au Gratin 65 Broiled or Fried Lake Trout 65 ENTREES, ROASTS, ETC. Individual Chicken Pie 85 Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes 45 Veal Cutlets, Breaded, Tomato Sauce 65 Pineappl Fritters, Fruit Sauce 20 Roast Leg of Lamb, Mint Sauce 85 CHOPS, STEAKS, ETC. Broiled or Fried Chicken (Half) 1.25 (20 Minutes) BACON (THREE) STRIPS 35, (SIX) STRIPS 65 BROILED HAM 65 SIRLOIN STEAK 1.50 LAMB CHOPS (ONE) 45, (TWO) 80 SMALL STEAK 1.00 HAM AND FRIED EGGS 65 BACON AND FRIED EGGS 65 CALF'S LIVER WITH BACON 65 ONE STRIP BACON :WHEN SERVED WHEN SERVED WITH OTHER ORDERS, 15 CENTS INDIVIDUAL BAKED BEANS (HOT OR COLD) 35 EGGS BOILED (ONE) 20; (TWO) 35 SCRAMBLED 35 FRIED (ONE) 20; (TWO) 35 POACHED ON TOAST (ONE) 20, (TWO) 40 OMELETS: PLAIN 45 TOMATO, PARSLEY OR CHEESE 50 JELLY OR SPANISH 60 SLICED CHICKEN 80 COLD MEATS, ETC. IMPORTED SARDINES 60 LAMB, HAM OR TONGUE 75 ROAST VEAL OR BEEF 75 SALMON OR LAKE TROUT, MAYONNAISE 65 WITH POTATO SALAD 15 CENTS EXTRA SALADS WITH FRENCH OR MAYONNAISE DRESSING HEAD LETTUCE 35 LETTUCE AND TOMATO 35 COMBINATION 35 CHICKEN 60 SLICED TOMATOES 35 BEET AND POTATO 35 SLICED CUCUMBERS 35 THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING 10 CENTS 500-8-6-26 " THE MOUNTAINEER " A LA CARTE VEGETABLES Fresh Asparagus, Drawn Butter 45 Spinach 20 French String Beans 20 New Green Peas 20 Buttered Turnips 20 Stewed Tomatoes 20 New Potatoes in Cream 30 BOILED OR MASHED 15 BRITISH COLUMBIA POTATOES HASHED BROWNED OR FRENCH FRIED 25 Cantaloupe (Half) 30 Rhubarb Pie 20 Ice Cream 25 DESSERTS Berries with Cream 35 Baked Okanagan Apple with Cream 25 Apple Pie 20, with Cheese 30 Special Individual Cake Service 20 Sliced Pineapple with Bran Muffins 35 Caramel Custard Pudding 20 PRESERVED FRUITS, MARMALADE, JAMS OR JELLIES 25 (lN INDIVIDUAL JARS) STRAWBERRIES CRABAPPLE JELLY STRAWBERRY JAM PINEAPPLE QUINCE JELLY RASPBERRIES BRAMBLEBERRY JELLY RASPBERRY JAM ORANGE OR GRAPE FRUIT MARMALADE PRESERVED FIGS 35 INDIVIDUAL COMB OR STRAINED HONEY 25 TOAST 15 BREAD AND BUTTER SERVICE PER PERSON WHITE, BROWN AND RAISIN BREAD 10 HOT BRAN OR CORN MUFFINS 15 HOT ROLLS 15 CANADIAN CHEDDAR Swiss Gruyere CHEESE WITH CRACKERS 25 KRAFT MACLAREN'S IMPERIAL French Roquefort TEA, COFFEE, ETC. COFFEE, POT 20 (served with cream or hot milk) COCOA. POT 25 TEA, POT 20 NESTLE'S MILK FOOD 25 HORLICK'S MALTED MILK 20 INSTANT POSTUM 20 INDIVIDUAL SEALED BOTTLE MILK 15 FOR BOTTLED AND OTHER BEVERAGES SEE SPECIAL LIST WAITERS ARE FORBIDDEN TO ACCEPT OR SERVE VERBAL ORDERS PASSENGERS ARE REQUESTED TO INSPECT MEAL CHECK BEFORE MAKING PAYMENT, AND IN CASE OF ANY OVER CHARGE OR UNSATISFACTORY SERVICE REPORT THE MATTER TO THE STEWARD IN CHARGE OF THE CAR OR TO W. A. COOPER, MANAGER, SLEEPING, DINING. PARLOR CARS RESTAURANT AND NEWS SERVICE MONTREAL SOUVENIR COPY OF THIS MENU CARD IN ENVELOPE READY FOR MAILING, MAY BE HAD ON APPLICATION TO THE DINING CAR STEWARD Pillar! of a Nation's Gateway Vancouver and Victoria "Ending Nowhere! "—Forty years ago, the Western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway was only a clearing in the forest—Victoria hardly more than a village. British Columbia was a mining colony of a few thousand people. Wise heads nodded grave concern over those 2,500 miles of rails ending nowhere. Yet the men who built the Canadian Pacific, then the world's longest railroad, saw what all see now—not only a road to Vancouver, but a highway through Canada to the Orient. On this highway, at the Western gateway, two great cities rear their heads. Great they are, and growing greater. They typify the wealth of a wealthy province. But their position on the Pacific links them directly with the nation's commerce, and brings them within the greater circle of world trade. Half a hundred cities and towns have sprung into being since, to turn British Columbia's resources into wealth, but Vancouver and Victoria still remain the largest. Vancouver, on the mainland, with its almost landlocked harbor, is the terminal of the Canadian Pacific rail lines. Victoria, a four hour sail across the Juan de Fuca Strait at the southern end of Vancouver Island, is the provincial capital. Both of them are ports for Canadian Pacific steamship services to China and Japan, and for other services to Australia and New Zealand, Alaska, and the coast of British Columbia. Each is the focal point for enormous lumbering, fishing, mining, agricultural and commercial enterprises. And each, it may be added, is also a pleasant city to live in or to play in, for both have a mild climate, larger bodies of water, and multitudinous opportunities for all those outdoor activities which recreate the body and the mind. Equally in winter as in summer are their charming garden-embowdered surroundings the resort of the tourist.