"CONTENTdm"@en . "Travel and tourism on the C.P.R."@en . "Canadian Pacific Railway Company"@en . "Travel"@en . "Tourism"@en . "Tourism--Canada"@en . "Hotels"@en . "Wallace B. Chung and Madeline H. Chung Collection"@en . "Canadian Pacific Railway Company. Canadian Pacific Hotels"@en . "2016-03-07"@en . "[1937?]"@en . "Pamphlet promoting car trips and destinations across Canada."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/chungtext/items/1.0229365/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " QUEBEC-NEW BRUNSWICK\nNOVA SCOTIA-ONTARIO\nMy\n> yy\ny \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 , -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m- <\nS$#l\njgl P\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ft \"'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:..,\nSggggf gawsw*\nA\n4^\nALGONQUIN HOTEL\nSt. Andrews-by-the-\u00C2\u00BBS@a, N.B.\nANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nALGONQUIN\nHOTEL *\nIIIII!\nFine Hotels and Low Rates in\nOld French-Quebec, Toronto,\nSt. Andrews-by-the-Sea, Digby,\nrarmouth, Kentville, Halifax.\n: B The CHATEAU FRONTENAC at OLD QUEBEC\nFamous Hotel Overlooking the St. Lawrence River\nAT the eastern-end of a splendid esplanade known as\n-/x Dufferin Terrace, rises the majestic Chateau\nFrontenac. From its coppered spires, to the great, stone-\nvaulted archway, this hotel is one of the show places of\nthe world and dominates the skyline of old Quebec,\nthe only walled city in America.\nCommanding a delightful vista of the St. Lawrence\nRiver as far as the eye can reach, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 down past the\nHe d'Orleans, and to the north across beautiful St.\nCharles Valley to the purple Laurentian Mountains, the\nChateau Frontenac has a location which, for grandeur\nand diversity of scene, is unsurpassed.\nA medieval-style chateau, whose massive walls, turrets\nand towers carry out the Norman architectural motif of\nthe old Chateau St. Louis occupied by Frontenac, this\nfamous Canadian Pacific hostelry unites the beauty of\n16th century France with the comforts and luxury of\nthe 20th century.\nThere are some 700 guest rooms. For special functions, banquets and receptions there are the magnificent\n\"Jacques Cartier,\" \"Champlain\" and \"St. Lawrence\"\nrooms. A Convention Hall or Ballroom suite accommodates 800 people. Four splendid suites occupy the\nRound Tower, facing Dufferin Terrace\u00E2\u0080\u0094the \"Dutch,\"\n\"Habitant,\" \"Colonial\" and \"Chinese\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094each with a\nlarge sitting room, two double bedrooms and bath.\nThere are also sixteen suites in the Central Tower.\nThe Chateau is famous for its cuisine, and its wine\ncellars cater to the tastes of the most discriminating\nepicure. Perhaps nowhere else have ultra-modern comfort and convenience been so enchantingly intermingled\nwith the romantic atmosphere of Old France.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^H\nI^H^^H\n^H^MH\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0H\nH^^H\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nHOTELS -\n- High\nSTANDARD\nAT\nLOW\nCOST ]\ni^^HBHHHKHHBiHHMHHBHHKHI^^^^HHIHHH^^^HflHI XXx\nMOTOR VACATIONS 'ABROAD7\nIn Your Own Gar>\u00E2\u0080\u0094To Nearby Canadian Resorts\nEnjoy all the thrills that a trip abroad offers\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nright next door in \"foreign\" Canada! Motor up in\nyour own car and delight in the customs of old colonial\nEngland. Hear the gay, lilting language of provincial\nFrance. See quaint, 300-year-old cities and hamlets set\nbeside silvery rivers and lakes . . . You may reach them\nall so quickly and easily over wide, modern highways.\nYou'll delight in the romantic scenes of Acadian\nGrand Pre, home of Longfellow's Evangeline ... of\nancient, sea-faring Yarmouth ... of old French Quebec\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094only walled city in America ... of Toronto, the one\ntime \"Meeting Place\" of Pontiac's proud red warriors.\nYou'll gain 'pep\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094rejuvenate in Canada's untram-\nmeled wilds\u00E2\u0080\u0094even snapshot its big game.\nSports are even more invigorating in Canada's tangy\nNorthern air\u00E2\u0080\u0094whether it's tennis, riding, bathing,\nfishing off Digby in sea-encircled Nova Scotia\u00E2\u0080\u0094playing inspired golf at the New World's own St. Andrews,\nmotoring along Lake Ontario, luring red-speckled\ntrout or bass, or hunting, canoeing, camping.\nYou need no passports. Also, each member of your\nfamily is permitted to bring back $100 worth of goods\nduty-free from among such attractive bargains as\nEnglish tweeds, Irish linen, habitant homespuns,\nHudson Bay blankets and choicest Canadian furs.\nAnd note\u00E2\u0080\u0094to save driving time to or from Canadian points, you may ship your car by rail and travel\non the same train. No crating, no delay. VISIT TORONTO AND ONTARIO\nTORONTO, beautifully situated on the northern\nshores of Lake Ontario but a few miles from the\ninternational border, is the capital of Ontario and the\nsecond largest city in the Dominion of Canada. Being a large and important commercial and industrial\ncenter in no way detracts from its merits as a convention city as well as an all-year-round vacation spot.\nIts beautiful residential section and tree-lined\navenues, scores of parks and playgrounds, lakes and\nislands, bathing beaches, and the palatial Royal York\ncombine to make the city and its environs one of the\nfinest recreational districts in North America.\nCentrally located, so that it overlooks both lake\nfront and city, this magnificent hotel, The Royal York\nHotel, largest in the British Empire, provides for the\ncomfort and convenience of Toronto visitors, offering\n1,200 guest rooms, each with shower, bath and radio\nloud speaker. With its spacious Convention Halls,\nBall Rooms, Lounges and Dining Rooms, it may\nwell be termed \"a city within a city.\" All public\nrooms are air-conditioned. Further cosmopolitan\natmosphere is added by the shops and bazaars featuring\nchic modes, fabrics, toilettes, jewelry and perfumes.\nReal \"old English service\" is a characteristic of The\nRoyal York. Its luxurious suites provide everything\nthe most fastidious could desire. Its moderately priced\nsingle and double rooms, all with bath, meet the requirements of economical vacation budgets. Inexpensive table d'hote and a la carte meals are served in\nthe Imperial Dining Room, the Venetian Cafe and\nthe Sandwich Shop.\nHotel guests have the privileges of The Royal York\nGolf Course, There are 25 other courses within the\nmetropolitan area.\nToronto is the locale of the National Exhibition,\nthe world's largest annual fair. Also of the Annual\nRoyal Winter Fair which includes a famous Horse\nShow under Vice-Regal patronage. Here, too, is old\nFort York, renowned during the War of 1812. And\nin the Royal Ontario Museum is a world-famed collection of oriental art. 4\nThe Province of Ontario, lying to the north of the\nborder states from New Y)rk to Minnesota, is the\nCANADIAN PACIFIC HOTELS -y\nsecond largest, most populous, richest of the Canadian\nProvinces: 412,512 square miles in all. And the\naccessibility of Ontario to U. S. motorists is indicated\nby the fact that the boundary between the Province\nand the United States is crossed by a vehicular tunnel,\n6 highway bridges and 25 ferries. Over 50,000 miles\nof well-paved motor roads lead to almost every nook\nand corner of the Province, and provide access to its\n41,000 square miles of lakes and rivers.\nDelightfully interesting side-trips may be made to\nthe country and orchard districts west of Toronto; or\nto the famous game fishing sections such as Georgian\nBay, Nipissing and Lake Temagami. Good roads to\nthe east of Toronto lead to the Kawarthas, a region\nof 14 magnificent stretches of shimmering lakes,\nwhere disciples of Izaak Walton find the muscalunge,\nor \"muskies,\" the champion fresh water heavyweights,\nalso bass and other varieties of sporting fish. As a\nhunting and fishing center, the Province of Ontario is\nhardly equalled by any other similar locality on the\nAmerican continent.\nThe main highway leading north from Toronto,\npassing through picturesque wooded country and skirting the north channel of French River, brings the\ntourist to the Chalet-Bungalow Camp of that name.\nOr a shorter way is to drive to Parry Sound, store\nyour car at a nominal rate, and go by Canadian Pacific\ntrain to French River. High above the river nestles a\ngroup of bungalows with a central community chalet.\nFor a decade or more, the French River Chalet-\nBungalow Camp has so successfully appealed to\nanglers\u00E2\u0080\u0094expert and novice\u00E2\u0080\u0094that many of its guests\nare annual visitors. A sporty, 9-hole golf course and\ntennis court are close by; and every facility for boating, canoeing and swimming is available at this camp.\nNot far off is Callander, the home of the Dionne Quintuplets.\nBig, hard-fighting game fish afford, naturally, the\nmajor attraction of a sportsman's holiday in Ontario's\nwilds. But fishing is only one angle of the varied\nthrills of out-of-door adventuring that Ontario offers\nthe motor vacationist. No two trips need be quite the\nsame in their experiences, for the country, beautiful,\nrestful and invigorating beyond words, stretches\nbountifully east and west, and north until it reaches\nthe frozen tundras of the Last Frontier.\nIGH STANDARD AT LOW COST THE NEW MERCIER BRIDGE, MONTREAL\nPEACE BRIDGE, BUFFALO\nENTERING CANADA BY AUTOMOBILE\nCustoms Regulations\u00E2\u0080\u0094Provincial Motor Vehicle Laws\nIT IS easier for the United States tourist to enter Canada\nthan any other country; across the longest, friendliest\ninternational boundary in the world. Eastern Canada\noffers the tourist 135,000 miles of motor highways,\n77,500 of which are hard surfaced and well paved. The\n\"formalities\" are brief and simple, for no passports are\nrequired. Canadian customs officials are courteous and\nconsiderate.\nA customs form, covering the tourist's car, is filled out,\none copy being held by the local customs office; two\ncopies are retained by the motorist to be surrendered when\nleaving. Permit form E 50 for tourist's automobile to\nenter Canada will be issued by the Canadian Customs at\nthe boundary, for a period not exceeding six months, no\nbond or deposit being required. The same conveniences\nare afforded the visitor traveling by rail under the new\n\"Passenger-with-Automobile\" plan.\nWearing apparel and articles for personal use are admitted free of duty; also smoking material up to 50 cigars,\n200 cigarettes, and 2 lbs. of tobacco. Hunting dogs or\nanimals imported as pets are admitted duty free; and guns\nor hunting * rifles, fishing tackle, golf clubs, cameras,\ncanoes, tents, camping equipment, radios, musical instruments, etc., if brought into Canada for personal use.\nPlease attach to all copies of folder, \"MOTOR TO CANADA!'\nOLDEST CANADIAN HOUSE, SILLERY\nERRATA\nThe following should be substituted for U. S. Customs\ninfnrrmHnn on n^crp 4jinrlpr th* W^inir\nor more articles exceeding $100.00 in value. Exemptions may be claimed only once in a 30-day period;\nthey do not apply to purchases bought on commission\nor for resale, and are restricted as to the quantity of\nliquor and cigars which may be included.\nLitho'd in U. S A\nof the age of\nany children included in the\nparty. Many\ntourists make\npurchases of\ninteresting values in furs,\nhabitant homespuns, linens and hooked rugs, blankets, Indian beaded\nmoccasins, basketry, semi-precious jewels, maple sugar.\nUnited States paper money and coins are accepted\neverywhere in Canada except the Dominion Post Offices.\nAUTOMOBILE REGULATIONS. Motor vehicle laws in the\nEastern Provinces of Canada are similar to the laws in the United\nStates. Because the average tourist is so intent upon the historical\nvalue or natural beauties of the surrounding territory, he need\nnever speed unnecessarily. The provinces have regulations regarding non-glaring headlights of not more than 21 candle power.\nIn most cases a car on the right has the right of way. Motorists\nmay use their State driver's licenses for a period of 90 days.\nSHORT CUTS BY FERRY AND STEAMER. Between Saint\nJohn, N. B., and Digby, N. S., the Canadian Pacific \"Princess\nHelene\" maintains a ferry service daily except Sunday. Rates for\nmotor cars are made on wheel-base measurements, as follows\n(when accompanied by at least one passenger holding valid transportation ): 115 ins. 115 to 125 ins. Over 12 5 ins.\nOneway $8.00 $10.00 $12.00\nRound trip ... . 14.40 18.00 21.60\nPassenger Fare\u00E2\u0080\u0094One way $2.25 ; Round trip\u00E2\u0080\u0094$4.00\nUpon payment of charge for space used, staterooms may be\noccupied night prior to sailing from Saint John, N. B.\nThe Eastern Steamship Lines maintains a steamship service to\nYarmouth, N. S.; 22 hours from New York; 15 hours from Boston.\nAutomobiles are carried.\nThere is a short cut by ferry from Robbinston, Maine to St.\nAndrews, N. B. Charges for passengers and car are nominal, and\napproximately 30 miles are saved.\n[CE TO ALL PARTS OF CANADA Four hundred years of romantic history lie behind Quebec, oldest and\nlargest of the Canadian Provinces.\nMotor highways from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and New\nYork, in addition to Ontario and New Brunswick adjoining, lead into\nQuebec with its thousands of miles of vacation land, historically the most interesting part of Canada. Unusual interest centers in and around the City of\nQuebec, capital of the Province, founded 330 years ago.\nA SPINNER AT HER WHEEL\nOld French Canada\nat its best is within a\nfew miles' radius of\nQuebec City \u00E2\u0080\u0094 quaint\nprovincial life, dog carts, open air markets, narrow streets.\nThe glorious military history of the city is personified by its\nrock-incased ramparts, loopholed for cannon, and by the\nCitadel atop Cape Diamond.\nNowhere in North America are to be found so well preserved the manners and customs of ancient Normandy\nblended with early Colonial life. Topping the City's sky\nline, rise the Norman towers and spires of the Chateau\nFrontenac, a palatial Canadian Pacific hostelry erected on the\nsite of the ancient Chateau Saint Louis.\nHere stands, as a masterpiece in architectural accomplishment, a 16th century-style chateau endowed with the beauty\nand splendor of that time and the spirit of Old France in a\nNew World\u00E2\u0080\u0094and withal, endowed with all the comfort,\nluxury and conveniences demanded by the 20th century\ntraveler.\nPrincely suites in the great towers command unsurpassed\nviews of the mile-wide St. Lawrence River, while to the\nnorth may be seen the purple-hued mountains of the Lauren-\ntides National Park. To the west lie the Plains of Abraham\nwhere the tide of New World history changed its course, and\nwhere two gallant leaders, Generals Montcalm and Wolfe,\nBELOW: QUEBEC'S FAMOUS SKYLINE\nENTRANCE TO THE OLD SEMINARY (:> .p\nw-\n< ; $'<'\nJ-ir\n%\nJl %\nSH\n.WW *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\nCHATEAU FRONTENAC, QUEBEC\n1*\nS\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0% :$&r\nMONTMORENCY FALLS\nm.\nmet heroic deaths at the head of their respective French\nand English forces.\nBelow nestles the Lower Town of Quebec with its\nscores of narrow winding streets and byways, old\nhouses, open-air markets and busy docks. Here, too,\nin the Lower Town, we find the famous Church of\nNotre Dame des Victoires, a patriotic memento of the\nearly defense of the French against two British naval\nsquadrons.\nIn the Upper Town we find the great Parliament\nBuildings, the Basilica, the Cardinal's Residence, Laval\nUniversity, the splendid monuments to French and English leaders, and above the level of Dufferin Terrace\nrises the Citadel, designed by the Duke of Wellington,\nto be as strong as Gibraltar, for \"the only walled city\nin North America.\"\nSide trips may be made by motor car to ancient Indian\nLorette; or to Ste. Anne de Beaupre, the rival of\nLourdes. Another interesting trip may be made to Kent\nHouse, for golf and tea where Queen Victoria's father\nonce lived. Montmorency Falls close by, 100 feet\nhigher than Niagara, is a major suburban attraction for\nthose visiting Quebec. A new, single-arch bridge offers\na superb view of the Montmorency River as it makes a\n274-foot plunge into the St. Lawrence. A seven-mile\ndrive brings the motorist back to the palatial comforts\nof the Chateau Frontenac.\nNorth of the city stretch the Laurentians; and the\n3,700 square miles of virgin mountains, lakes and rivers\ncomprising the park of that name. Splendid motor\nroads, camps, and plainly marked trails and portages\nmake the region a sports Paradise for fishermen as well\nas lovers of the great out-of-doors.\nThough older than the Rockies\u00E2\u0080\u0094older even than the\nHimalayas, for they were formed when the earth was\nvery, very young, the Laurentians retain a freshness and\ngreenness unsurpassed elsewhere, and it is small wonder that they have come to be known as the \"Switzerland of Eastern Canada.\" This charming section of\nthe Province is but a comparatively short motor ride\nfrom the Chateau Frontenac, in Quebec.\nLovers of athletic sports will find three excellent golf\ncourses within the immediate vicinity of Quebec, and\nits parks and quaint environs will lure the motorist to\nmany a delightful hour.\nThe He d'Orleans, in the St. Lawrence River, just\nbelow Quebec City, affords another interesting side trip.\nROYAL QUEBEC GOLF COURSE\nCANADIAN PACIFIC-WORLD'S First called the Isle of Bacchus, and by the more credulous, the Isle of Sorcerers, it is easily reached by ferry\nand a modern bridge. Here are oxen-drawn ploughs\nand farm vehicles as in the days of Champlain. Here,\ntoo, one finds three-century-old stone houses with walls\nthree feet thick; while in the fields huge stone baking\novens are still in use.\nThe ferry from Quebec lands the visitor at St.\nPetronille, at the southwestern extremity of the island.\nThe distance round the He d'Orleans is 42 miles, and\nthe circuit may be made in comfort over excellent highways, either in private car or by autobus. The visitor\nrides through five parishes, each with its interesting old\nchurch around which are clustered the habitant homes.\nThe He d'Orleans is as famed for its strawberries as\nother parts of the Province of Quebec are for their maple\nsugar and syrup. From the northern reaches of the\nisland a magnificent view of the St. Lawrence shoreline\nand Cape Tourmente may be obtained.\nReturning to Quebec, a 22-mile drive over a picturesque, winding highway, brings the motorist to Ste.\nAnne de Beaupre, a pilgrimage place of world-wide\nrepute and site of the famous miracle shrine.\nFor the angler, Canada's largest Province has much\nto offer. Its lakes, rivers and streams are well stocked\nwith such varieties of game fish as Atlantic salmon,\nblack bass, ouananiche, muscalunge, pike, pickerel, and\nlake or gray, speckled and red trout. The south shore\nand Rimouski, the Saguenay River, the Laurentides,\nGatineau, Pontiac and Kipawa districts are especially\nfavored and that portion of Highway No. 15 which encircles Lake St. John, is 144 miles in length and close\nat all times to good fishing waters.\nQuebec issues a special, non-resident's 7-day fishing\nlicense, good for the tourist, his wife and all children\nunder 18 years of age; costing $5.25.\nA motor tour vacation to and through the Province\nof Quebec may occupy from three days to three weeks\nand at all times prove a source of intriguing enjoyment\nand restful relaxation. Nearly half the size of Europe,\nthrough which flows, for a thousand miles the St. Lawrence, the grandest river in North America, this province\nhas an untold wealth of beauty to offer the tourist.\nFrom Quebec several main highways may be followed\nthrough the Province into Maine or New Brunswick to\nSt. Andrews-by-the-Sea, on Passamaquoddy Bay, an arm\nof the mighty Bay of Fundy.\nGREATEST TRAVEL SYSTEM O N T A R I O\nCobalt\nTimiskaming^\nTimagami\n?fyrt Arthur\n^Sault Ste. Marie\nSudbur\nFRENCH JMYER t^P^s\nTHALET BUNGALO\n/^LfiCAMP\n..,trace\" ^ ~- ^T \"^-^Cy ^t-j?P\u00C2\u00B0'nt au Baril\ngockinaw City ^-O^g* ' ftW\n^Che^oyqan\ngoqers City\nLmlKE\nQUEBEC-*1\nCHATEAU\nFRONTENAC\nRiviere\nduLoup/\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a? ac/^\n/\"\-\nP. E. I.\n. ,Vil>^rA! Cftirlattetown\nR.ch.bucto\^^^g-\n*3Mfc*\nTrois Rivieres,\nBerthier\nJviojsrr^j\nSeigniory Club\nMontebello\n\\n^^^^-Jldmundsron\nMada^ask\n7 ^Z n / ( V^ onTTXT^4rTr*i?> \"V \u00C2\u00B0^%4/r**\nrJeMnede Beaupre Cori\n^^Montmagny V) llBath\n. ^JftWnnd .stock, ffi _y^ J j V V\nHoul%!^l^9w^:>%->v lussaSr y?arrsbow\n^eyJcb Island RHIs/W ^sl^Ll A^AWfl/Z\n^t.6regoire M.nestf Sir.UrUmnn #W,pA^ V* *^HN\nQUEBEC.\nNEW\n\& B RUNSWICK^MoncW\n^. 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Thomas\n(12\nJfTupperL. v\u00E2\u0080\u009E\ngov \u00C2\u00A7-\nBlueji^ Ticonderoga,\n'r9ennes\n*V&lakes KI N6 STOhL^^^exandria\n^7V-4)Peterboro ^^^S^^J^%&\n,;atertowk\nffl^^Tort Hope ~U^^C& >o\i#?Lowv,,,eCL \u00C2\u00A9^ V//White\n^AlderCn Glen5FollspJ*^Beiio\u00C2\u00BB,|5\n.^!^^1W^\n.Brunswick\n/ /\n/\n^Barrington\n/\" /\n/\n|Meredtth j\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BAORTLAND\nbiddeford\nm\nJWROYAL YORK HOTEL^<&\niple\n^SL^\n(3lE\nView\n^pX^^HyTICA 5Pr'r\nBa-i\n^\nfP'ti\nfv^^r^Bienheim ^\nj_ A IV .Connc\nnpton^-'AsMu&yr\nOLEDO ^ ^^\nloVrer* nMerper\nnF^2i5^^rt\u00C2\u00B10UN6ST0WN i\ Milesburqr^T +. . , ^fZ^X^Mhl^ Ml . f^Mff^}\nNapole\t\nI # Marion^A g\u00C2\u00A3\nO #Mar1fsvjil^1^#\n11^ a#*HiT I II\nL-town-^l\u00E2\u0080\u0094 gBfadford PA.\nTN^iH\u00E2\u0080\u0094Awarren 1^r\n1 ,^ta^^J^LaudersporF~''Wensboro\nleadvllliiT i?SS% ^ scrantoh\ntls WILL.AMSPORTfeKES-BAR^\nMillHalJ^oT^L\nI^DuBois {J?T MiP ^^ Stroudsbun\nrj White RJcJl-\n:9r^|Mtea?^\n-.- -. -^^BtVLowel\n\"V\nSaratoqa/rf^ Jjr Brattle\n\bn/n\nr,PlTT5flEirD\n2/\nHorneif\n'Mansfield?\nVjpwanda\n_ ^(HARTFORD(Ur\n6\n1N6HAMT0N' -r\n^. Kinqsto\n,7*- Liberty^ ,\n.20QJ II keel>s*\n3C^\n-bon\n5vee^\nReww.stl^^JxButler\ng\u00C2\u00AB2\n1422\\ng^ >^nQ^frlUw'l sto wnV\n/bo^erfEliverpool\noI3\nHamburg\nS31\n_ -Westerly - ^\n'^vv Lon9orT\nP\"\u00C2\u00BB^^|w^ORK ^\nPORTSMOUTH\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Klewburyport\nc\nf\nt\n*\n0\n3EDFORD\nRIVER\nCHATEAU FRONTENAC\nQUEBEC\nPITTSBURGH\nWashington^\ngensburq burql u^aysbur9 y^^yftincasje^\nOAYTOf\niCambridqel/i i\n\* $Jf$ ^X^pMorqarttewn ^>'\nInionWn\nIMBERLAND^W^jp\nr\u00C2\u00B0rk Oxford\nj[r^ ^^L\"x^/^Ma^erqfoiA/n\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Frederick/\n[RENTOhf\n\"t^ aLakewood\njLADECeHIA\n*MDENrd}\nVILMINGTOb\nrennsvilie ISi\n\\nv\nA\n/ATLANTIC\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*&\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nBATHERS ON THE SANDY BEACH\nW/\ny^\u00E2\u0080\u0094'*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0; \"\nr-:i;j\u00C2\u00A3 f\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2: \">?%\u00C2\u00A3\nBATH CABINS AND PAVILION\nLYING ^between Quebec and Nova Scotia, New Brunswick's\ncoastline is dotted with quaint fishing hamlets. Colorful\nmarshlands, rolling hills and prosperous farms vary the landscape,\nalso trim little villages with fresh painted homes. Beyond these\nare densely wooded lake and forest regions. Summer days are brilliant, the air is tempered by ocean breezes and humidity is unknown.\nThe Province has long been noted as a hunting and game fish\nregion. Its streams and waterways abound with salmon, trout,\nand bass. Of its vacation playgrounds, the best known is that which\ncenters around old St. Andrews and The Algonquin, built in Queen\nElizabeth style. This hotel offers real old English service and an\nunsurpassed cuisine. Here, too, is a golf course, patterned after\nits prototype in Scotland and overlooking Passamaquoddy Bay.\nA 15-minute ride by ferry from Robbinston, Me.,to St. Andrews,\nsaves the motorist some 30 miles of driving. St. Andrews has\nbeen named Canada's \"Newport of the North\" and it is immune\nfrom hay fever. Its out-of-doors sports include tennis, riding,\nyachting, fresh water and deep sea fishing. A sheltered cove with\nsandy beach provides excellent bathing, the average temperature of\nthe water is 65\u00C2\u00B0 and it is unusually safe for children. There are\nattractive bath cabins and an orchestra is in attendance every morning. Golf is a favorite diversion\u00E2\u0080\u0094on either the famous '18\" or\n9-hole course. A Casino provides dancing and varied entertainment, also the latest \"talking pictures.\"\nSt. Andrews' water front is reminiscent of a period when its\nwharves were lined with \"square-riggers\" and its beautiful homes\nhoused famous captains whose ships voyaged through the world's\n\"Seven Seas.\" No one should miss \"the bed of the ocean\" drive\nto Minister's Island or a climb up towering Chamcook Mountain.\nA short journey now brings the motorist to Saint John. Here,\none may take the Canadian Pacific ferry across the Bay of Fundy\nto Digby, Nova Scotia. The \"Princess Helene\" makes a round\ntrip daily except Sundays, transporting passengers and cars. MARITIMES\nand Other Sports\nGOLF\n*\"pHE golfer need never be at loss for a good\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\" sporty game in New Brunswick or Nova Scotia,\nfor in the two Provinces there are 39 excellent\ncourses at his disposal.\nThe best known course in Eastern Canada is the\nfamous '18\" at quaint St. Andrews, N. B., patterned after its namesake in Scotland, and adjacent\nto the Algonquin Hotel. St. Andrews-by-the-Sea\nalso has a sporting 9-hole course. Here, too, within\na sheltered cove, is a small but excellent sandy\nbeach for bathing, with bath houses and pavilions.\nCrossing by Canadian Pacific Ferry from Saint\nJohn, N. B., to Digby, N. S., the golf enthusiast\nfinds the Pines Hotel \"18\" the finest in the Province, and nearby to the hotel. At Yarmouth, an\ninteresting 9-hole course, not far from the Lakeside Inn, commands a superb view of the Atlantic\nOcean and the Bay of Fundy.\nAnnapolis Royal, oldest Canadian town, offers a\n9-hole course attractively situated in the Annapolis\nValley, 19 miles from Digby. Kentville has a\ntricky, 9-hole course, not far from the modern\nCornwallis Inn. Halifax, capital of Nova Scotia,\nboasts two 18-hole courses, also a good 9-hole\ncourse. Devotees of the ancient Scotch game will\nfind that the centrally located Lord Nelson Hotel\nsuits their comfort and convenience.\nThe \"Maritime\" resorts, St. Andrews, Yarmouth,\nDigby, Kentville and Halifax have numerous fine\ntennis courts. Horseback riding is a favorite diversion, as are swimming, fishing and boating.\nIV12 VV\nB R UJSTS WI CK\nGrand ^J\nLake \\n-rederictqn/\nMONCTONi\nPetitcodiac\nSussex\nFuromocfo,\nFrom\nQuebec\nWelsford\nLingley*\n/ AMHERST\nOxford\n-for-\n<&\nGlenholme\nTRURC\nsi\nParrsborcl\nc.BLol^iPoN V Mings\n\\u00C2\u00BB Basin,\nli\nii\ni\nWalton\nKENTV;iLL,El.i\nCORNWALLIS IN ft i\nA KinasTon\nCi\nspreau\n\j\ni\n^Middleton,\nNictaux\nto). Hew Ros^\nGrMnd Pre f*'\n, ^gntsport D/\nWindsor\nfe) 4 halifa:\n3 StyANDBEWS\n<*%!&,* ALGONQUIN HOTEL 4 \\n^vf^fjobbmston Qr\nw /mZS^m\nis\porf\ntf$%ffifcnapo\is Royaf\\nTCIementsportO 0/\nfhiting\nr/7mL; Caledonia\n__ KeagemakoogeeSZ\n, -^ v A L.Rosslgnol\n(\y AChester Basin\nMahone Bay\nLunenburg\nLORD NELSON\nPINES HOT,\nf ///\nty Weymoutra\n/GAME\nSANCTUARY^\n^Corberrie V\n'6\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*p&\nTiverpool\nj\nMeteghanff 7^\nSalmon Rivera^\nPortMaitlandJ\nYABMOUTJ\nLAKESIDE INN^\n%.\n\\nw*\n0\nc\n$\nA\n4\n^Lbckeport X\nShelburne A\n\\nC\nm\nPubnico 1 1 hy\nyyyy.x\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0yyyiyy+yy^yayyy^yxyyyyyyyxx'yyyyyyysyxyy;\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ' .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0... . ': . ..: ,\"''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.... . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ' ft'' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,.. . . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNOVA SCOTIA\nLand of Evangeline\nTJOR one hundred and fifty years the military and naval\nforces of France and England fought bitterly for\npossession of the territory now known as Nova Scotia.\nNo Canadian province is more closely welded to early\nAmerican history than is \"New Scotland.\" The immortal\npoem of \"Evangeline\" from the pen of Henry W.\nLongfellow has cast a halo of interest 'round it and has\nenshrined the land in an almost sacred romanticism of\nhallowed memories.\nNova Scotia is \"Evangeline Land.\"\nFrom the \"French Shore,\" at the southeast, populated almost entirely by the returned Acadian settlers, to Halifax,\ngarrisoned and fortified \"against French designs\" in 1749,\nthe countryside fairly \"breathes\" the story of the Acadian\nsettlers, their triumphs and their tragedy. Interest centers\nchiefly, of course, around the village of Grand Pre where a\nMemorial Park is maintained by the Dominion Atlantic\nRailway, admission to which is free. The original willow\ntrees still grow and the well remains today as it did in the\ndays of Evangeline and Gabriel. An interesting stone\nreplica of the old church stands in the center of the park.\nA few miles away, over excellent motor highways to\nKentville, the tourist finds the new and spacious Cornwallis Inn, a modern, fireproof Canadian Pacific hostelry\nbuilt in Tudoresque style, catering to his every wish and\nwhim. Kentville is the logical center for trips to Evangeline Land; Cape Blomidon where Windsor, with its\n50-foot tides may be seen; the Gaspereau Valley and\napple orchard country, and Parrsboro via the ferry from\nWolfville.\nSixty miles southeast of Kentville lies Annapolis Royal,\nfounded by Champlain, and the oldest settlement in\nAmerica north of St. Augustine, Florida. The fort's museum\ncontains a wonderland of priceless historic treasures.\nMidway between Kentville and Yarmouth lies Digby\non the beautiful Annapolis Basin, at Digby Gut. Indisputably the Pines Hotel at Digby, with its open-air,\nsalt-water swimming pool, is Nova Scotia's premier\nGLASS-ENCLOSED POOL AT THE PINES HOTEL\n;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*&\u00C2\u00A3\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 summer resort. Located most picturesquely, amid the\npines and hardwood trees, and its surrounding bungalows, the hotel commands a marvelous view overlooking the 50 square miles of Digby Basin.\nConvenient to the Pines Hotel is the 18-hole Pines\nHotel Golf Course, the finest in the province and available to summer visitors. Devotees of tennis will find\nexcellent courts nearby the hotel.\nDigby is the terminus of the Canadian Pacific Ferry\noperating between Saint John, N. B., and Nova Scotia.\nThe modern steamer, \"Princess Helene\" makes the\nround trip across the blue Bay of Fundy daily except\nSundays, providing direct connections at the Digby,\nN. S., docks with fast, comfortable Dominion Atlantic\nRailway trains.\nYarmouth, but 240 miles from Boston by Eastern\nSteamship Lines and reminiscent of the days when it\nwas the \"port of wooden ships and iron men,\" is likewise the southern terminus of the Dominion Atlantic\nRailway and a port of call for The Eastern Steamship's\nNew Y)rk service.\nThe attractive Lakeside Inn, facing Milo Lake, offers\ngolf, tennis, fresh and salt-water bathing, yachting,\nfishing, woodland trails. It is near the far-famed tuna\nfishing waters of Wedgeport and Soldier's Rip where\nsome 175 great tuna were taken with rod and reel during the past season. Their average size was around 450\npounds. The hotel management will arrange for comfortable boats and expert guides under the direction of\nCapt. Bill Grey, the noted authority on deep-sea fishing.\nAt some stage of a Nova Scotian motor trip the\ntourist should take in Halifax, capital of the Province,\nvisiting the historic sites, its magnificent park gardens,\nPoint Pleasant and the Citadel, overlooking Halifax's\n\"world's largest harbor.\" And while here, the motorist will enjoy stopping at the Lord Nelson Hotel\n(operated by the Lord Nelson Hotel Co.).\nFORT ANNE -AT ANNAPOLIS\nDEEP-SEA FISHING-OFF YARMOUTH N CANADA - SPORTSMAN'S PARADISE\nTN Eastern Canada, stretching from the Atlantic\nA Ocean to the western boundary of Ontario, there is\noffered to the sportsman and out-of-door enthusiast\nexceptional hunting and fishing attractions.\nIn Nova Scotia, for instance, the forests cover three-\nquarters of its area and wild life\u00E2\u0080\u0094upland game birds\nand waterfowl offer fine sport in season. Nova\nScotia also excels in the quality of its fishing. Its\ninland waters are generously stocked with gamy\nspeckled trout. Its many seaward rivers admit a tremendous run of Atlantic salmon, while unsurpassed\ntuna fishing is afforded in its coastal waters.\nNew Brunswick's well considered and rigidly enforced game laws have been a decidedly important factor in sustaining the excellence of big game hunting\nthere. Deer and bear are numerous according to district and, properly directed, the visitor is assured of\ngood sport. Partridge, woodcock, geese and ducks\nare abundant in season. Salmon fishing is notably\ngood, while speckled trout are freely taken throughout\nthe Province.\nQuebec has been long and favorably known to the\nsportsman. Not only are moose, deer and bear plentiful in many districts but a generous open season allows\noutstanding opportunities for hunting. Partridge,\nwoodcock, geese and duck shooting is good each fall.\nGame fish include Atlantic salmon, ouananiche,\nspeckled trout, black bass, muskies, wall eyes, lake\ntrout and Great Northern pike, and the visiting angler\nis very seldom disappointed.\nOntario has 260,000 square miles of heavily-wooded\nfish and game territory, with 41,000 miles of enticing\nwaterways. Many successful hunters come year after\nyear to take back magnificent trophies of the chase.\nAnglers, too, find unsurpassed fishing for speckled\ntrout, muskies, black bass, wall eyes, lake trout and\nGreat Northern pike.\nEastern Canadian Provinces appeal to anglers and\nhunters not only because of their wonderful sporting\nopportunities, but also by reason of moderate license\nfees, generous open seasons and bag limits. Publications titled \"Fishing Waters and Game Haunts,\"\n\"Open Seasons for Fishing\" and \"Open Seasons for\nHunting\" (the two latter giving a summary of the\nProvincial fish, and game regulations), can be obtained\nfrom your nearest Canadian Pacific agent. HOTEL ACCOMMODATION\nSummer Rates\nONTARIO, QUEBEC, NEW BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA\nROYAL YORK HOTEL, Toronto, Ont.\nEuropean Plan\nSingle Room\u00E2\u0080\u0094$4.00 up\nSuites from\nImperial Room\nClub Breakfast. .$.50 & $ .75\nTable d'Hote Lunch $1.00 up\nTable d'Hote Dinner. . . .$1.50 up\n(Open All Year)\n-$7.00 up\nDouble Room-\n-$12.00 up\nVenetian Room\nClub Breakfast. . . .$.40 & $.65\nTable d'Hote Lunch $.65 up\nTable d'Hote Dinner $.65 up\n(Meals also a la Carte. Also moderately-priced sandwich shop)\nCHATEAU FRONTENAC, Quebec, Que.\nEuropean Plan\n(Open All Year)\nSingle room without bath $3.50 up\nSingle room with bath. . . $5.00up\nDining Room\nClub Breakfast $ .75\nTable d'Hote Lunch .$1.00\nTable d'Hote Dinner $1.50\nDouble room without bath $6.00 up\nDouble room with bath. . $9.00up\nCoffee Shop\nBreakfast a la Carte\nLunch $.75\nDinner $.75\n(Also a la Carte)\nALGONQUIN HOTEL, St. Andrews-by-the-Sea, N. B.\n(June 30 to Sept. 5)\nAmerican Plan\nSingle room and meals, without bath $9.00 up; with bath $10.00 up\nDouble room and meals, without bath .. . .$8.00 up per person\nDouble room and meals, with bath $9.00 up per person\nWeekly and Monthly rates for families on application\nDining Room\u00E2\u0080\u0094Breakfast. .$1.25 Lunch..$1.75 Dinner. .$2.00\nRates for Golf\u00E2\u0080\u0094$2.00 per day. $12 per week. $35 per month.\n$45 per season. $20 per season for juniors.\nTHE PINES HOTEL, Digby, N. S. (June 24 to Sept. 7)\nAmerican Plan\nSingle Room and meals\u00E2\u0080\u0094$9.00 up per person\nDouble Room and meals\u00E2\u0080\u0094$8.00 up per person\nWeekly and Monthly rates for families on application\nIndividual Meal Rates Rates for Golf\nBreakfast $1.00 $1.50 per day. $7.50 per week\nLunch $1.25 $30 per month. $40 per season\nDinner $1.50 $20 per season for juniors\n(Open All Year)\nCORNWALLIS INN, Kentville, N. S.\nAmerican Plan\nJuly and August Sept. 1 to June 30\nSingle Room-meals: $7.00 up Single Room-meals: $6.00 up\nDouble Room-meals: $6.00 up Double Room-meals: $5.00 up\nper person. per person.\nReduced Weekly and Monthly rates for families.\nIndividual Meal Rates:\nBreakfast $1.00 Lunch $1.00 Dinner $1.25\n(June 27 to Sept. 7)\nLAKESIDE INN, Yarmouth, N. S.\nAmerican Plan\nSingle Room and meals\u00E2\u0080\u0094$7.00 up per person\nDouble Room and meals\u00E2\u0080\u0094$6.00 up per person\nWeekly and Monthly rates for families on application\nIndividual Meal Rates\nBreakfast $1.00 Lunch $1.00 Dinner $1.25\nLORD NELSON HOTEL, Halifax, N. S. (Open All Year)\n(operated by the Lord Nelson Hotel Co.)\nEuropean Plan\nSingle Room $3.00 and up Double Room $5.00 and up\nDining Room and Coffee Shop \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Breakfast, lunch and dinner \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nat correspondingly low prices.\nFor reservations apply to Hotel Manager at the above addresses\nor to your nearest Canadian Pacific agent. Dominion and Provincial Auto Tourist Bureaus\nCanadian Travel Bureau .Parliament Buildings, OTTAWA, Ont.\nBureau of Tourist Travel Parliament Bldgs., FREDERICTON, N. B.\nDepartment of Highways Government Offices, HALIFAX, N. S.\nTourist and Publicity Bureau Parliament Bldgs., TORONTO, Ont.\nDept. of Roads Information Bureau, Parliament Bldgs QUEBEC, Que.\nOther Provincial Bureaus\u00E2\u0080\u00941013 Dominion Sq., MONTREAL, Que.;\nHotel General Brock, NIAGARA FALLS, Ont.; also at the\nHotel Norton Palmer, WINDSOR, Ont.\nNOTE\u00E2\u0080\u0094You can obtain itineraries, maps and information from your own\nAutomobile Club; from Travel Bureaus of your Board of Trade or Chamber of\nCommerce; from local Travel Agents; from any Canadian Pacific Agent;\nor from travel information desks in Canadian Pacific Hotels.\nTHE 'PASSENGER-WITH-AUTOMOBILE\" PLAN\nThe \"Passenger.tvith-Automobile\" Plan will enable you to travel in\ncomfort by train and ship your automobile by fast freight service at\nlow cost. This eliminates the necessity of driving to and from the resort\nterritory, and yet gives you the pleasure of your own automobile for touring\nat destination. For further information, fares, schedules, etc., communicate\nwith nearest Canadian Pacific representative.\nOFFICES-AGENTS IN U. S. CITIES INCLUDING-\nAtlanta, Ga W.\nBoston, Mass L.\nBuffalo, N. Y W\nChicago, 111 T.\nCincinnati, O A.\nCleveland, O G.\nDallas, Tex P.\nDetroit, Mich M.\nIndianapolis, Ind. . . D.\nKansas City, Mo. . . R.\nLos Angeles, Cal. . . H.\nMilwaukee, Wis. ... J.\nMinneapolis, Minn..H.\nNew York, N. Y. ... J.\nOmaha, Neb H.\nPhiladelphia, Pa. .. E.\nPittsburgh, Pa W\nPortland, Ore W\nSt. Louis, Mo G.\nSt. Paul, Minn W\nSan Francisco, Cal.. S.\nSeattle, Wash E.\nTacoma, Wash L.\nWashington, D. C. . C.\n, A. Shackelford, 404 C. & S. Nat'l Bank Bldg.\nR. Hart, 405 Boylston St.\n, P. Wass, 22 Court St.\nJ. Wall, 71 E. Jackson Blvd.\nD. Macdonald, 201 Dixie Terminal Bldg.\nH. Griffin, 1010 Chester Ave.\nG. Jefferson, 1212 Kirby Bldg.\nE. Malone, 1231 Washington Blvd.\nW. Allan, Merchants Bank Bldg.\nG. Norris, 201-2 Waldheim Bldg.\nA. Lee, 621 Sq. Grand Ave.\nA. Millington, 1014 Warner Theatre Bldg.\nM. Tait, 611 2nd Ave. So.\nE. Roach, Madison Ave. at 44th St.\nJ. Clark, 803 W. O. W. Bldg.\nA. Kenney, 1500 Locust St.\n. N. McKendry, 444 Seventh Ave.\n. H. Deacon, 626 S. W. Broadway\nP. Carbrey, 418 Locust St.\n. H. Lennon, Fourth and Cedar\nE. Corbin, 152 Geary St.\nL. Sheehan, 1320 Fourth Ave.\nN. Jones, 1113 Pacific Ave.\nE. Phelps, 14th & New York Ave. N. W.\nOFFICES-AGENTS IN CANADIAN CITIES INCLUDING-\n1\nBanff, Alta E.\nCalgary, Alta. ..... J.\nEdmonton, Alta. . . . W.\nFort William, Ont. . H.\nFredericton, N. B. .. F.\nHalifax, N. S .A.\nHamilton, Ont A.\nKingston, Ont J.\nLondon, Ont H.\nMontreal, Que F.\nNorth Bay, Ont. ... R.\nOttawa, Ont J.\nPort Arthur, Ont. .. F.\nQuebec, Que C.\nRegina, Sask J.\nSaint John, N. B. . . C.\nSaskatoon, Sask. .. R.\nSault Ste. Marie, Ont. J.\nSudbury, Ont. ..... J.\nToronto, Ont C.\nVancouver, B. C. .. .F.\nVictoria, B. C. .... J.\nWindsor, Ont W.\nWinnipeg, Man. ... E.\nOfficer, Can. Pac. Station (Summer)\nW. Dawson, Can. Pac. Station\nL. Mitchell, Can. Pac. Bldg.\nLyall Martin, 108 So. May St.\nE. M. Edgecombe, 410 Queen St.\nC. MacDonald, 413 Barrington St.\nCraig, 4 King St., West\nH. Welch, 180 Wellington St.\nJ. McCallum, 417 Richmond St.\nC. Lydon, 201 St. James St. W.\nY. Daniaud, 87 Main St. W.\nA. McGill, 83 Sparks St.\nC. Gibbs, Can. Pac. Station\nA. Langevin, Palais Station\nC. Pike, Can. Pac. Station\nE. Cameron, 40 King St.\nG. West, 115 Second Ave.\nO. Johnston, 529 Queen St.\nCampbell, Elgin and Elm\nB. Andrews, Can. Pac. Building\nH. Daly, 434 Hastings St. W.\nMacfarlane, 1102 Government St.\n, C. Elmer, 196 Ouellette Ave.\nA. McGuinness, Main and Portage ^>vv:v: \m>>>#\u00C2\u00AB&&\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nSKYLINE OF BEAUTIFUL TORONTO SHOWING THE ROYAL YORK IN LEFT CENTER OF PICTURE\nTORONTO, in the old Indian language, meant\n\"Place of Meeting\",\u00E2\u0080\u0094a name applied to the site\nwhere winding forest trails and water routes converged\nat an island-rimmed bay on the north shore of Lake\nOntario. This title adequately describes today the\nmetropolitan area of three-quarters of a million\npeople, in the heart of which stands the palatial Royal\nYork Hotel, largest in the British Empire.\nVisitors from every part of the known world meet\nhere, and from the upper floors of this perfectly\nappointed hotel, an unsurpassed view of the city,\nharbor and lake may be obtained.\nLocated within easy reach of the boardwalk, Lake\nShore Boulevard, and Sunnyside Park, the Royal York\nhas a special appeal to vacationists who desire the opportunity of out-of-doors sport and recreation and at\nthe same time retain all the luxurious comforts a modern hostelry in a great, metropolitan city has to offer.\nMagnificent suites are available to Royal Y)rk guests,\nfurnished to meet the most discriminating tastes.\nAmong these suites are the ''Art Moderne,\" \"Flower,\"\n\"Dutch,\" \"Venetian,\" \"Italian,\" \"Colonial\"; the\n\"Queen Anne,\" \"Tudor,\" \"Louis XVI,\" \"Chinese,\"\n\"Russian,\" \"Spanish,\" \"Georgian,\" \"William and\nMary\"; the Jacobean\" and the \"Vice-Regal\" (the\nlast, comprising two suites in one).\nThere are 1200 guest rooms, each with private bath\nand shower and radio loudspeaker, in this most recent\nof the great coast-to-coast chain of Canadian Pacific\nhotels.\nIn the Venetian Cafe and Imperial Dining Room\neverything from a club breakfast to a full course dinner\nmay be had at popular a la carte or table d'hote prices.\nA modern Sandwich Shop and Soda Fountain is open\nday and night\u00E2\u0080\u0094at reasonable prices. All public\nrooms are air-conditioned.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC TELEGRAPHS, EXPRESS AND TRAVELERS CHEQUES\nPrinted in U. S. A., 1939 RESORTS NEAR AT HAND\nRESORTS NEAR AT HAND\nFINE HOTELS\nAT LOW RATES"@en . "Advertisements"@en . "Pamphlets"@en . "Canada"@en . "CC_TX_198_014_001"@en . "10.14288/1.0229365"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Box 198"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from Rare Books and Special Collections: http://rbsc.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Library. Rare Books and Special Collections. The Chung Collection. CC-TX-198-14-1"@en . "Motor to Canada"@en . "Text"@en .