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Present predicaments

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at a University of Maine convocation ceremony on June 10, 1935.

President's address : Rotary Club

Item is a typed copy of Carleton Stanley's address to the Rotary Club at a luncheon at the Lord Nelson Hotel on January 21, 1936. His subject was "that forgotten man — the Englishman."

Problems of the law : [manuscript]

Item is a typed and annotated manuscript of an address that begins: "There are many reasons why citizens should be willing to listen to a discussion of matters relating to the law and its problems."

Professors and governors

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at a dinner held on October 28, 1936 to professors and governors of Dalhousie University. The focus of his speech is the events and tendencies of the university during the previous five years and a glimpse into the possibilities of the next fifty.

Recent legislation in reference to the public health and sanitoria / A.P. Reid : [facsimile]

Item consists of a facsimile of an article submitted by A.P. Reid to the November 1900 issue of Maritime Medical News (Vol. XII, No. 11; the "Original Communications" section), titled "Recent Legislation in Reference to the Public Health and Sanatoria". The article was also read before a meeting of the Medical Society of Nova Scotia, held in Amherst on July 6th, 1900.

Refresher course, 1934

Item is a manuscript copy of a welcoming address made by Carleton Stanley to a group of physicians taking a refresher course at Dalhousie University.

Retrospect and prospect

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at the Canadian Club in Saint John, New Brunswick, on June 13, 1938.

Sample of short hand notes by President Thomas McCulloch

Item is a single sheet of paper, folded to form four pages, excerpted from a diary or journal. The excerpt is a sample of shorthand notes taken by Thomas McCulloch relating to sermons. Language on the page is most likely Latin, except for the dates that McCulloch was recording.
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