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Mrs. Pennybacker, whose life-work has been teaching, is at the head of one of the most far-reaching educational enterprises in the world to-day. It is an enterprise of steadily growing power, too, for women are enrolling in clubs in greater numbers year by year. In their organized capacity they have been aptly styled "an army whose presence is in itself a guarantee of a happy future for the land in which we dwell." As general-in-chief of this vast army of peace Anna J. H. Pen- nybacker has shown herself fully equal to the situation, with a keen and comprehensive grasp of the ends in view, a firm confidence in the character and integrity of the hosts behind her, and an unshakable faith in the ultimate success of the campaign in which they are engaged.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS History of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. By Mary I. Wood, pp. 161, 186, 216, 218, 223, 288, 290.
PERIODICALS
Leaders of Women. By Rose Toung. Good Housekeeping Magazine 57 :634.
Letters to Club Women. By Anna J. H. Pennybacker. General Federation Magazine 1913, 1914.
Miracle of Faithfulness. By Peter Molyneaux. Texas Club Woman July, 1914.
Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker—a Tribute. By Bride Neill Taylor. General Federation Magazine June, 1914.
Tribute to Mrs. Pennybacker (poem). By Pearl Randall Waason. General Federation Magazine December, 1913.
What the Woman's Club Has Done. By Mary I. Wood. Ladies' Home Journal 31:26.