There was an inscription on the image. "The burro was the principal form of transportation used by prospectors in central Nevada at the turn of the century. The prospectors had a love-hate relationship with the animals, which were dependable and well adapted to the desert region, although they could be stubborn and cunning. As the automobile became the accepted mode of transportation, the burros were turned loose and roamed the streets and local trash dumps of the area's towns. They were one of the principal forms of entertainment for local children until they gradually disappeared from the metropolitan areas in the 1920s. The burros that roam Death Valley and the Marietta area of central Nevada today are descendants of those left behind by the prospectors."
First mail flight from Los Angeles to Las Vegas. Front left: Maury Graham, pilot; At scales: Harris M. "Pop" Hanshue, founder of Western Air Express, later called Western Airlines. Los Angeles postmaster is weighing mail sacks.
Black and white image of the Fremont Theatre marquee advertising "Attila." The marquee reads: "A. Quinn, S. Loren "Attila" technicolor; Free Parking 4 HRS 3RD & Carson." Another sign reads: "'Attila' starrring Anthony Quinn and Sophia Loren." There are several posters advertising "Attila." Site Name: Fremont Theatre (Las Vegas, Nev.)
Unveiling the Western Airlines plaque at the corner of Sahara and Paradise Road, the site of first airport in Las Vegas. L-R: Commissioner P. J. Christensen; Commissioner Ron Lurie; Jubilee coordinator John F. Cahlan; Western Airlines board Chairman Arthur "Art" Kelly.
Women in costume stand on a float from Wilbur Clark's Desert Inn, titled "The Old Master Painter." The float was designed by Bill Willard. The women were Donn Arden dancers who had opened at the Desert Inn the month before. The float won 3rd prize in the Helldorado Parade. City Drugs and the Sprouse & Reitz variety store are seen behind the crowd.
An aerial view taken from inside a U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds plane, showing other Thunderbirds planes. Photograph possibly taken over Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.
An aerial view taken from inside a U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds plane, showing another Thunderbirds plane. Photograph probably taken over Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada.