A 28 x 36 cm coil-bound scrapbook with about 40 pages containing news articles glued on them. There is a series of articles from the Regina Daily Star of March and April, 1935 consisting of a "narrative that has been unearthed among privately owned archives and for the first time is being made available to the public."
Newsclippings about Roy McIver upon his retirement after 31 years of service at the Experimental Farm. Mr. McIver was officer-in-charge from 1973 to 1978.
Three newsclippings entitled: a) Indian Head station is marking 75th year (Leader-Post July 21, 1962); b) Experimental farm long established (Leader-Post, date unknown); c) Angus Mackay and the establishment of the Indian Head Experimental Farm (October 17, 1979)
Three newsclippings about the Bell Farm. "The farm that failed" (Leader-Post? - date?); "The Bell Farm: Largest 'bonanza' in the British Empire" (Free Press Weekly, March 4, 1972); "Major Billy's lovely legacy" (Western People, May 3, 1990)
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)
Newsclipping of a contribution by Angus Mackay (Superintendent of the Experimental Farm) with his recollections of the early days of settlement of Indian Head and district.
A folder with about 20 newspaper clippings concerning hockey - mostly the Indian Head Mohawks Tom Thumb team of 1968-1969 which almost won the Centennial Cup in a provincial championship tournament. In many articles, the name of Jamie Hilts, the team's goalie, is underlined.
Newsclipping - the story of hired farm hand Gus Thompson, and how he was left the farm of Dick Copithorn in Mr. Copithorn's will. He received ownership of the farm after a 9-year court battle with Copithorn's relatives, when Thompson was 70 years old. The publication from which the article is clipped is unknown.