Empress Hotel on Princess Louise Menu

While searching for Canadian Pacific Alaska booklets on the Chung collection web site for yesterday’s post, I found a single Chung file that had 41 different menus in it. They were all for the Princess Louise, the largest of Canadian Pacific’s steamships in Alaska service in the 1930s. All but the one shown below have covers that we’ve already seen.

Click image to download a 2.4-MB PDF of this menu.

Instead there is a restriction of blood flow is created, affecting erection when the person is not able to make successful penetration for enjoyment viagra 20mg in india of intercourse. These alternatives of cialis tadalafil genericoe performing the same as the skin. Generic Ciallis is not an over the counter capsule, it functions promptly if guzzle using water. cialis 20 mg Instead they should openly talk about the issue and should be aware about the disorder so that they can levitra 60 mg cute-n-tiny.com comfortably reach the male reproductive organ with any problem. The menu is undated, but inside is a photo of Otto and Kate Partridge, who opened their home to White Pass steamboat passengers on Lake Atlin in British Columbia. Since Otto died in 1930 and Kate in 1931, it seems like it would be in poor taste to issue the menu much later than that. I do have one undated menu in this series that lists Place Viger, a hotel that closed in 1935, on the back, so both menus must be from the early 1930s.

The cover painting of the Empress Hotel is signed A. C. Leighton for Alfred Crocker Leighton (1901-1965), a British painter whose work for Canadian Pacific we’ve seen at least twice before. In 1928, Leighton was commissioned to do a series of paintings for Canadian Pacific, and eventually he settled in Alberta.


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