Letter to Henry Barton Jacobs from Edward Revere Osler, 'A' Battery, 59th Field Artillery Brigade. Revere's battery has been in action on the battlefield for months, and now they are resting only to prepare to return to the front. He hopes to soon be able to spend a few days at home after the past four nightmarish months. His father has been sending him book catalogues, as well as sale catalogues from Sotheby's, from which Revere has ordered some books.
Form letter: "The Tudor and Stuart Club takes pleasure in sending you a proof of the book-plate of The Club and reprints of the poem read by Dr. Wight at the first regular meeting, January 16, 1922, and of the address delivered by Professor Schelling at the first open meeting, May 11, 1923." Includes reproduction of book-plate.
Cushing's handwritten manuscript notes: "Impossible not to work Revere into the Biography." Includes a list of important matters and events relating to Revere to be touched upon in Cushing's book.
"Memorandum on the Louvain Committee." After the burning of the Library of the University of Louvain, August 25, 1914, an International Committee was organized by the Institut de France, with additional help from the John Ryland's Library and the British Academy. It is possible that Osler was involved in the project through either the British Academy or the John Ryland's Library.
Letter to Helen MacMurchy from Hon. Justice Featherston Osler, 80, Crescent Road, Rosedale, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Featherston thanks MacMurchy for her letter of sympathy upon the death of his brother, William Osler.
Pamphlet: "Annual Report and Transaction No. 21 of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Toronto." Hon. Mr. Justice [Featherston] Osler's name appears among the list of honorary members of the Society. Includes article by Mrs. W.T. Hallam entitled "Notes on the Life of Canon Featherstone Lake Osler, and his wife, Ellen Free Pickton," p. 26.