A letter from Alderman J.K. Sparling, Chair of the Committee on Fire, Water, Light, and Power, to Frank R. Morris regarding his request for compensation for his work as a volunteer firefighter during the strike.
Job applications to various City departments, many of which were submitted during the General Strike and feature the Slave Pact that required City employees to agree not to take strike action.
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.
A chemical and bacterial analysis of spoiled milk received from the City's emergency distribution program, written by the City Bacteriologist and submitted to A.J. Douglas, Medical Health Officer.
A handwritten draft of 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. This version is only one page long, incomplete, and written in pencil.
A letter from G.F. Richards, Secretary to the Board of Police Commissioners, to M. Peterson, Secretary of the Committee on Finance, enclosing a letter he (Richards) sent to the City Comptroller regarding the settlement payment of $5000 to ex Police Chief Donald MacPherson.
By-law number 10589, It amending By-law number 10020 (pensions of civic employees) to provide those who participated in the General Strike credit for their employment prior to the strike, rather than having to start over as new employees.
A letter from the Canadian Labor Press to Alderman Fowler, chairman of the Finance Committee, attempting to sell the City on advertising in their publication to improve its image regarding labour.
A letter from C.H. Burgess, a railway worker, explaining to the Mayor and Council that the blame for the strike should be assigned to the owners of Vulcan Iron Works and the Manitoba Iron Workers.
A letter from C.H. Burgess, a railway worker, explaining to the Mayor and Council that the blame for the strike should be assigned to the owners of Vulcan Iron Works and the Manitoba Iron Workers.
A report from J.H. Pearson, Chief Health Inspector, to F.O. Fowler, Acting Mayor, regarding the quantity and value of food stuffs destroyed during the General Strike and the month that followed. A report on the same from May 15 to June 31, 1918 is included for comparison.
A letter from the City Clerk's Office to Alderman J. Blumberg, informing him that Council appointed him to the Social Welfare Commission during the absence of Aldermen A.A. Heaps and John Queen.