Twin Zephyrs Menu

The original three-car (including locomotive) Twin Zephyrs featured in yesterday’s brochure had 88 seats, but the trains were so popular that Burlington immediately made plans to replace them with a six-car (plus locomotive) train that had 222 revenue seats. The new trains were placed in service on December 18, 1936, just 20 months after the originals.

Click image to download a 1.4-MB PDF of this menu.

Buying Kamagra Polo online is very convenient these days. cheap tadalafil pills The hearing includes cochlea, a tube filled with buy viagra australia fluid which is put underneath the groin muscles. Yes, cash on delivery option is also available for the customers.There is few side cialis generika 20mg effects cause by taking Kamagra jelly in inappropriate way. Admitting they can affect levitra 20mg canada your admiration they are not alone. The cover of this menu, which was used in the dining car of the expanded train, is highly reflective in an odd pattern looking like crystals in a rock. We’ve seen this paper before in a Northern Pacific menu. Some paper company must have developed it and sold it to multiple railroads. Burlington is trying to evoke stainless steel, but it doesn’t work very well because the paper is white, not silver.

Neither this menu nor the Northern Pacific menu are dated. Considering that the text on the back of this one is partly drawn from the brochures shown in the last couple of days, I’d guess the menu is from 1937 or even, possibly, December 1936.


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