:-:.''- ■'■ : ■ llirlM ; ■ ' £'£ M«ft ■ -.... . :| mMM-g %\ l.# ft'I* « % .1 s . : >S S « « »^ff# ^/.^^/'^^v^-ftv'-r'.''"'--' ':■';■■,-■-:-\-■'.:■■■■■■■ ;..-:■-■■>■■■ ■:■■■■ K«S|Pi|-: .^^^^ii^fe^^^'r:^-:^:^- ■'■■■: ■:..,.< .■■.:■.■■■.■■■■':■■■■:■■: %*«?" .F A CITY GREAT IN MANUFACTURING. TRADING AND FINANCE CAPITAL OF THE WEALTHY PROVINCE OF ONTARIO AND "QUEEN CITY •' OF CANADA MID - DAY 9 RELISHES OYSTERS ON HALF SHELL (6) 50 CHOW CHOW 15 Spring Onions 15 olives 20 READY TO SERVE MIXED PICKLES 15 Radishes 25 Sliced Tomatoes 45 Okanagan Celery 30 SOUP, PUREE OF DRY GREEN PEAS 30 Grilled Whitefish or Lake Trout, Lemon Butter 70 Boiled Finnan Haddie, Butter Sauce 70 Omelet Creole 60 Oyster Patties 65 Small Steak, C. P. R. Style 1.00 MUSHROOM SAUCE, SARATOGA CHIPS Baked Little Pig Sausage, Mashed Potatoes 75 Roast Spring Chicken, Walnut Dressing 90 Individual Pot Baked Beans (Hot or Cold) 35 Boiled or IVSashed Potatoes 20 French Fried or Hashed Browned Potatoes 25 Big Baked Potato 25 June Peas 20 Stewed Tomatoes 20 Fried Parsnips 20 Spinach 20 Wax Beans 20 Asparagus with Drawn Butter 50 OKANAGAN SPECIAL PLUMS OR RHUBARB IN SYRUP 25 Grapefruit (Half) 25 Peach Pie 20 Hot IVIince Pie 20 Tapioca Pudding 20 English Plum Pudding, Fruit Sauce 30 Ice Cream 25 Special Individual Cake Service 20 English Crumpets, Canadian Maple Syrup 20 COLD MEATS, ETC. SARDINES 60 HAM 75 ROAST CHICKEN 85 BEEF 75 WITH POTATO SALAD 15 CENTS EXTRA ROAST LAMB 75 OX TONGUE 75 SALADS WITH FRENCH OR MAYONNAISE DRESSING CHICKEN 65 BEET AND APPLE 45 COMBINATION 45 HEAD LETTUCE 45 LETTUCE AND TOMATO 45 THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING lO CENTS FRUITS BANANAS, WHOLE (TWO) 25 ORANGES (ONE) 15 GRAPES 25 OKANAGAN EATING APPLES (one) lO, (two) 15 FROM THE GRILL Broiled or Fried Chicken (Half) 1.25 (20 Minutes) Sirloin Steak 1.50 Fried Small Steak 1.00 Lamb Chops (One) 45, (Two) 85 Bacon (Three) Strips 35, (Six) Strips 65 Broiled Ham 65 One Strip Bacon Served with Other Orders 15 EGGS, OMELETS, ETC. BOILED (ONE) 20 (TWO) 35 SCRAMBLED 35 FRIED (ONE) 20 (TWO) 35 POACHED ON TOAST (ONE) 20 (TWO) 40 OMELETS: PLAIN 45 JELLY OR SPANISH 60 HAM AND FRIED EGGS 65 BACON AND FRIED EGGS 65 PRESERVED FRUITS, MARMALADE, JAMS OR JELLIES 25 (IN INDIVIDUAL JARS) PINEAPPLE RASPBERRIES CHERRIES STRAWBERRIES BRAMBLEBERRY JELLY QUINCE JELLY CRABAPPLE JELLY STRAWBERRY JAM RASPBERRY JAM ORANGE OR GRAPEFRUIT MARMALADE PRESERVED FIGS 40 INDIVIDUAL CANADIAN-COMB OR STRAINED HONEY 25 TOAST 15 BREAD AND BUTTER SERVICE PER PERSON HOT ROLLS, BROWN OR WHITE 15 WHITE, BROWN AND RAISIN BREAD 15 RY-KRISP HEALTH BREAD 15 CANADIAN CHEDDAR SWISS "GRUYERE" CHEESE WITH CRACKERS 30 LOAF "MACLAREN'S" IMPERIAL KRAFT PABST-ETT FRENCH ROQUEFORT TEA, COFFEE, ETC. COFFEE, POT 25 (SERVED WITH HOT MILK OR CREAM) TEA, POT 25 INSTANT POSTUM 25 COCOA, POT 25 INDIVIDUAL SEALED BOTTLE MILK 15 "HORLICK'S MALTED MILK" 20 NESTLES' MILK FOOD 25 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 OVERCHARGE OR UNSATISFACTORY SERVICE, REPORT THE MATTER TO THE STEWARD IN CHARGE OF CAR OR TO W. A. COOPER MANAGER Sleeping, Dining, Parlor Cars, Restaurants and News Service, 3 l.e. 3-4 16-3-28-v. montreal SOUVENIR COPY OF THIS MENU CARD IN ENVELOPE READY FOR MAILING MAY BE HAD ON APPLICATION TO DINING CAR STEWARD Toronto Toronto is the focal point, the very heart of the industrial, commercial and financial activities of the Province of Ontario. More than half the manufactured products of Canada, and 26 per cent of Canada's field crops, come from that province. But Toronto is a distributing centre of more than provincial importance. Her commerce extends to all these enormous territories, east and west, reached by Canadian Pacific. The products of her factories go beyond Canada's shores to the markets of the world. Toronto has immense manufacturing establishments, large and small, numbering over three thousand, and some of the largest commercial houses and banks in the Dominion. With its towering sky scrapers and imposing buildings, the city is distinctively North American in the intensity of its activity and energy; through its crowded streets throbs continually a vast hum of business. Its harbor accommodation is on a magnificent scale. Toronto is also a centre of culture and learning. Its universities and other educational institutions are widely known; its charming residential districts, its art galleries, libraries, churches and theatres very effectively support its title of "Queen City". Nor must Toronto's famous "Fair" be omitted from this brief chronicle. Founded towards the end of the eighteenth century, Toronto owed its growth to the immigration of United Empire Loyalists; and it was their sturdy patriotism, and the undaunted tenacity of their descendants, that transformed Ontario from a wilderness into what it is now, the most populous province of Canada. So widespread are her activities that transportation which "Spans the world" has become a vital factor in Toronto's future. There is a bond of common interest linking the activities of the Queen City with the greatest of the world's carriers—the Canadian Pacific