Saskatchewan Business Directory Diamond Jubilee Edition
- IHM.2020.0029
- Item
- 1965
Part of Book Collection
Large paperback book with information about businesses from 1905 to1965 as well as black and white photos for reference.
Saskatchewan Business Directory Diamond Jubilee Edition
Part of Book Collection
Large paperback book with information about businesses from 1905 to1965 as well as black and white photos for reference.
Saskatchewan Business Directory Diamond Jubilee Edition
Part of Book Collection
Large paperback book with information about Saskatchewan businesses from 1905 to1965 as well as black and white photos for reference. The book is identical to IHM.2020.0029 and is a compilation of articles about Saskatchewan and advertising by Saskatchewan businesses
Saskatchewan Business Directory Golden Jubilee Edition
Part of Book Collection
Large paperback book with information about Saskatchewan businesses from 1905 to1955 as well as black and white photos for reference. The book is a compilation of articles about Saskatchewan and advertising by Saskatchewan businesses. Indian Head is profiled in pp 263-269
Saskatchewan Golden Jubilee Committee
Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute - Official Opening
Unidentified speaker at the opening of the Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute. Crowd in foreground and platform of dignitaries in background. View from behind the crowd looking towards the platform.
Bio/Historical Note: The Saskatchewan Cancer and Medical Research Institute was officially opened on 10 May 1958 by Premier T.C. Douglas. Clad in locally quarried greystone with limestone panels, it was the.last of the buildings that constituted the University’s Medical Complex’s initial phase. Designed by Izumi, Arnott and Sugiyama and completed at a cost of $783,000, the building’s purpose was to provide shared accommodation for both general medical research and cancer specific investigations. Funding came from the federal and provincial governments and the provincial and national branches of the Canadian Cancer Society. A planned third floor was added in 1966. The building was "deconstructed" in 2009, with much of the building's material recycled including the greystone cladding for use with the E Wing that opened in 2013.
Exterior view of Saskatchewan Hall on the campus of the University of Saskatchewan
Exterior view of Saskatchewan Hall on the campus of the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.
Exterior view of Saskatchewan Hall on the campus of the University of Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan Horticultural Societies Convention - Program
Part of Organizations Collection
Two-page typed program. Norman M. Ross, Superintendent of the Forestry Farm (Tree Nursery) was a director of this provincial society
Saskatoon Chief of Police R.E. Dunning
Part of PAHS Archives Collection
R.E. Dunning, Saskatoon Chief of Police
Bio/historical note: Dunning was Chief of Police from 1905-1915
Part of Recreation Collection
Posed photograph of the Saskatoon Gems after a late night game
Saskatoon Gems (Baseball)
Exterior shot of the Saskatoon Public Library building, with snow on the ground.
Part of Saskatoon Sanatorium fonds
Exterior image of the Saskatoon Sanatorium.
Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League
Part of Saskatoon Sanatorium fonds
Exterior image of the Saskatoon Sanatorium.
Saskatoon Sanatorium
Shuttleworth Mathematical Society
Members of the Shuttleworth Mathematical Society.
Bio/Historical Note: The Shuttleworth Mathematical Society was designed to give students interested in mathematics an opportunity to meet in an informal setting, and was open to all students who had completed one math class and were registered in a second. The Society was originally formed in November 1916 as the University Mathematical Society. It was renamed in honour of Roy Eugene Shuttleworth, a brilliant honours student who had been the first president of the organization. Shuttleworth was born in 1896 in Leavenworth, Washington. He studied mathematics and physics at the University of Saskatchewan. He joined the Army in the spring of 1917 and served as a private with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regiment). Shuttleworth died in combat during World War I on 26 August 1918 at Vimy Ridge, France. His name is inscribed on the Vimy Memorial. The society has been inactive for many years.
Shuttleworth Mathematical Society
Members of the Shuttleworth Mathematical Society.
Bio/Historical Note: The Shuttleworth Mathematical Society was designed to give students interested in mathematics an opportunity to meet in an informal setting, and was open to all students who had completed one math class and were registered in a second. The Society was originally formed in November 1916 as the University Mathematical Society. It was renamed in honour of Roy Eugene Shuttleworth, a brilliant honours student who had been the first president of the organization. Shuttleworth was born in 1896 in Leavenworth, Washington. He studied mathematics and physics at the University of Saskatchewan. He joined the Army in the spring of 1917 and served as a private with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regiment). Shuttleworth died in combat during World War I on 26 August 1918 at Vimy Ridge, France. His name is inscribed on the Vimy Memorial. The society has been inactive for many years.