A press release from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba with Alderman Walter Crawford regarding confusion caused to taxpayers about the budget meeting by the press.
A press release from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba regarding the mayor attending the official opening of the Snow Carnival in Kenora, Ontario on March 7, 1963.
A press release in draft format from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba regarding the rejection of Federal financial assistance to the Winter Works program for building the new City Hall.
A copy of a press release from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba containing a letter sent to the Winnipeg Enterprises Corporation regarding the possibility of Winnipeg being home to the Canadian Football's Hall of Fame.
A press release from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba in regards to continuing guided public tours of the Civic Centre for as long as interest remains.
A press release from the office of Mayor Stephen Juba containing a personal statement in regards to a letter addressed to the by several lawyers in regards to the Board of Police Commissioners.
File pertaining to the General Strike of 1919, including records from various origins sent to or from the Mayor's office relating either to the strike itself or its fallout. Included are letters from citizens commending or condemning the City's actions during the strike.
A letter from the Mayor Fred E. Osborne of Calgary to Mayor Daniel McLean of Winnipeg, requesting information about the Winnipeg Police during the General Strike to assist with "controversy" in Calgary related to police unionization.
A letter from Alex Freeman, a graduate student at Columbia University in New York, and a former student of the University of Manitoba, asking Mayor Gray for sources on the General Strike to assist him in writing his thesis.
A letter to Mayor Gray from W.G.W. Fortune, General Secretary of the Peoples' Prohibition Association of British Columbia, asking the Mayor to sign a statement that prohibition limited violence during the General Strike.
A letter from Geo. A. Watson, Commissioner of Manitoba Government Telephones, to Mayor Gray regarding John Burton Harding, a returned soldier and Special Constable, who had been injured during the General Strike.
A report submitted for Major R.H. Bingham, Officer in Charge of the Special Police that were active during the General Strike. The report lists numbers of Special Constables, the companies they were divided into, where said companies were placed, and who led them.
A letter from Arthur Brown on behalf of Major R.H. Bingham, Officer in Charge of Special Constables, to Mayor Gray, informing him that B. Hardy, a Special Constable, was injured during the violence on June 10.
A letter from William Hurst of Hurst Engineering and Construction Company, Limited, to Mayor Gray, asking that those strikers who returned to work after the City issued them an ultimatum be treated differently than those who did not.
A report compiled by the City Clerk's Office, combining reports of individual departments into a single list of employees who were displaced by the strike.
A letter from L.W. Donley, Assessment Commissioner, to C.J. Brown, City Clerk, in response to a request from Council, stating that no employees in his department were displaced by the General Strike.