rt ', --ti i-f- 'T"T-wiyi1im mm yr - V my - SsrapS?wSJ2 W" 2iP (Pictorial Section) " EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1917 WOMAN'S MANIFOLD ACTIVITIES ENGAGE THE ATTENTION OF THE WATCHFUL CAMERA MAN . - i A GOOD THY FOR A HIGH ONE Miss Marguerite Ragatz plays an aggrcssivo Ramo on the base ball nine of the Girls High School FUTURE SCHOOL MARMS BECOME FARM MAIDS Students of the Philadelphia Normal School arc tilling tho soil at "Little Wakefield," the estate of Mrs. Redwood Wright at Gcrmantown. A LESSON IN PRACTICAL PAINTING Left to riht, the Misses Mary P. Rcecs and Helen Moore, students of the Philadelphia Normal School, and Miss D. Welsh, a furniture decorator, who is demonstrating tho use of the paint brush at "Littlo Wakefield." mmmm :- -c,! izjite -- jl Lwm JBrnmOL . mm y1 mm uahi.rBBtak '!z j. -vuC..jS.: .. "' " i iNF3iJ.iv v i t - , jj, r - r bbbbbbbb. r s T MVfaBBaw RED CROSS CLASS IN BANDAGE MAKING AT THE WEST PHILADELPHIA HIGH SCHOOL, FOR GIRLS Elizabeth G, Hlckey and Esther JT. Briegel. Left to rfght, Jessie BrighthlU, Id Dodgson, Florence JBraker, Gertrude Evea, Marfan Dvh, Hel E. Baje, E HIOII KPHnni. oinr o ,,., . f tta l.tLrtWMi pW,,lidpWa and other high schools are tno latest recruits for Red Cross work in ti fn. at West adelphla High, and Miss Mabel Cheynay, who is assisting her in instructing the glrU. I J .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers