Past presidents of the Mesquite Club. (See Mesquite Club Scrapbooks for identification). Georgia Butterfield is standing in the group of three women on the left in the white dress.
Lili St. Cyr hands money from a bag to Spencer Butterfield. The bag reads: "Please do not cut bag when opening. This bag should be returned to Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco."
Alma Moore (left) and Nadine Garlin (right) put campaign signs on lawns in Pahrump. They're campaigning for Vail Pittman for Governor, Walter Baring for Congress, and Alan Bible for Senator.
Virginia Cott (left), Senator Howard Cannon (center), and Dorothy Dorothy (right) at the Campaign Conference for Democratic Women, Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington D.C. The conference lasted from May 20th-22nd, 1962. Inscription with image reads: "National Committee on 'Operation Support' mission for Jack Kennedy, 1962; White House."
Four women stand for a photo at a "Luncheon honoring Mrs. Alan Bible". Identified from left to right: 1. Ellen Albright 2. Bette Sawyer 3. Lucille Bible, 4. Dorothy Cannon [identified by Dorothy Dorothy in 1984]
Dorothy Dorothy (right) and Margaret Moore (left) planning the 17th annual Powder Puff Derby for the flying organization, the 99's, July 1963. The folders say that the event lasts from July 13th-17th.
Meeting of the International Social Executives for the West Coast. Dorothy Dorothy, fifth on far right side, sits wearing a white net hat. The other women (unidentified) dine on what looks like chicken and pasta. (white hat).
Women sit around a table at the International Social Executives meeting in Houston, Texas. Dorothy Varnum is second from left, wearing a black hat. The table is littered iwth pamphlets, cards, brochures, gloves, and ashtrays. Photograph credit: Borden, Houston, Texas.
Two women stand in front of the old Bannack Capitol Building, when Bannack was briefly the capital of the territory of Montana in 1862 before it was moved to Virginia City. Inscription with photo reads: "1953 Bannack, Montana, Capitol Building, 1862 in background; Ethel McCullough watches Leslie reading plaque (sic)."