Nine double-sided laminated pages. It has articles about local buildings and people and the back is full of advertisements for local businesses. Besides Indian Head and its businesses and institutions, the Canadian Annual contains articles about nearby towns (Sintaluta, Balcarres, Lebret)
The superintendent's residence and grounds at Indian Head's Forest Nursery (Later PFRA Tree Nursery > Shelterbelt Centre > Agroforestry Development Centre)
4 pages (12 cm X 19 cm) of expenditure information - apparently from an officially printed document. The entries all relate to Indian Head. This may be the RM of Indian Head instead of the town.
Professional, high-quality photo. 801 Buxton Street. The church was built in 1907 as St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church and became St. Andrew's United Church after church union with the Methodists in 1925. Roads are dirt but there is an electric street light and a fire hydrant.
A photo taken of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church from the corner of Eden and Buxton Streets. After church union in 1925, it became St. Andrew's United Church.
A 55 cm X 42 cm green tourism brochure folded in four about the Saskatchewan Fish Culture Station at Fort Qu'Appelle by the Department of Tourism and Renewable Resources with statistics about the station and a description about the process used to produce the walleye, northern pike and whitefish fingerlings.
Photograph album of Indian Head and the people that Samuel Sadler associated with during his stay here, working at the Tree Nursery (Forestry Farm) from 1911 to 1913