Carrie Chapman Catt (1859 – 1947) was an American women's suffrage leader who campaigned for the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which gave U.S. women the right to vote in 1920. Catt served as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association and was the founder of the League of Women Voters and the International Alliance of Women. She "led an army of voteless women in 1919 to pressure Congress to pass the constitutional amendment giving them the right to vote and convinced state legislatures to ratify it in 1920" and "was one of the best-known women in the United States in the first half of the twentieth century and was on all lists of famous American women".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Chapman_Catt
Nettie Rogers Shuler (1865 - 1935) was an American suffagist.
By 1916,Shuler established a reputation as an organizer
by leading the western New York campaign for the state suffrage
party, a two-year campaign that led in 1915 to a referendum.
The referendum was lost, but in 1917 Shuler was chosen by NAWSA president Carrie Chapman Catt to replace Hannah Jane Patterson of Pennsylvania as the association's corresponding secretary. Along with Catt, she spent many evenings addressing mass meetings and many days holding conferences with field workers. After the Nineteenth Amendment was passed in August 1920, Shuler and Catt continued to work together. Their coauthored book, Woman Suffrage and Politics, published in 1923, is a short narrative history of the suffrage campaign beginning with the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848.
http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h-women&month=0506&week=b&msg=BcwrMtSHNcHRIlKwGbsMow&user=&pw=
This first edition is limited to one thousand copies...this is copy 250