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Solve the Puzzles, Fill Cut the Coupon :nd Send It to 1ke Puzzle Editor, tunday Call, S.F. To Puzzle Editor, Sunday Call, San Fraacisco: Below in their prope: num- please find my solution of the Name of an Article Seen in a Toy Store represented in this week's neme puzzles: seemssscssasacem 10 .. ! i August 16, 1903. | Name ..ccevesen sssssssass veaee | | ' | Street or B. @.....t0u... et ity . Btara .. .ieevicnnaes sessessssees | (Bes List of Prizes) S § < THE SUNDAY CALL. I i r’ 24 —— Rach of These Ten Pictirgs Represints the Namg of an. Ariicle Seen 1n 2 Toy Storg---Can Yyeou Gugss Them and Win a Frzz 2. - % H, CHILDREN, NOW FOR THE FUN! THIS IS THE LAST PUZZLE CONTEST OF THE FOURTH | SERIES. | TO-DAY THE THIRTEEN WEEKS ARE UP. AND NOW HANDS UP—ALL THOSE | WHO THINK THEY HAVE WON ONE OF THOSE SPECIAL $5 AND $10 PRIZES. | However, not too fast. This week has to be included in the Fourth Series before the Puzzle Editor can begin his arduous work of figuring out the highest percentages of the whole Thirteen | Weeks. And so, in the meantime, you can test your faculty for close and keen observation by solving the ten little pictures on this page. Is there a boy or girl among you who does not know all about. toys? You've all been in toy stores—or at least have looked in through the window at the beautiful | things on display there—the beautiful things that always cost just a‘little more money than you have to spend. Therefore you ought to be able to guess what these pictures represent at the very first glance. Try No. 1, for instance. But that is too easy. Why, the name is wriiten all over .the pictl{re. Any child who has ever seen one of those funny little toys could tell it ‘was. a jack-in-the-box, even if there was no reading on the picture at all. And—but try the rest yourself. . Remember, each of the ten pictures in this, the Thirteenth and Last Set in the FOURTH SERIES of the Sunday Call’s great puzzle contests, represents the name of an Article Seen in a"Toy Store. Can you guess them? Try and see; if you are successful—well, read the list below for the rich reward that will come to you. REMEMBER—You may send in as many answers in your name as you wish, provided only that you have a ccupon to accompany each aunswer, and—REMELRBER—there is Lo age limit and young and old may compete. THE NAMES OF THY LUCKY WIFNERS WILL BE PUBLISEED IN THE SUNDAY CALL TWO WEEKS FROM TO-DAY, August 30. Now here are the importaat points for you t~ remember: The First Forty Boys and Girls who gend in correct solutions to these ten pictures before noon next Friday will win a prize. Don’t forget that point, because it is very importan.. ALL LNSWERS MUST R£ACH THIS OFFICE BY FRIDAY NCON. This gives all those in the country an equal chance to compets. Read everything on this page, to be sure that you overlook nothing that will belp you to win a prize. This is what you must do to win one of tfwse forty prizes: IFind the name of an Axrticle Seen in a Toy Store represented in each of the ten puzzle pictures and write it out in full in the space oppo- site the proper corresponding number provided for the purpose in the coupon on this page as per its di- I rections; fill in your name and address and the prize you desire—if you win—and mail the coupon to the Puzzle Editor, Sunday Call, San Francisco. FOLLOW THE RULES OR Y2U WILL BE DEBARRED. 1 This puzzle contest of the FOURTH SERIES closes to-day, but if you ave still persistent, indus- trious and clever you may still have a chance at that special prize of $10 and a seeond prize of $5 which is to be awarded for the highest percentage of correct answers in the whole series of thirteen weeks, These are the TWENTY-FIVE NEW PRIZES from which you may select if you solve all the puzzles correctly: Fishing rod, knapsach, belt buckle, pocket-knife, boy’s nickel chain, wrist purss, fish- ing line, hoox and sinkers; bathing suit (for boys not over 14 years old), tennis racquet, catcher’s baseball mitt, ping pong set, basebali, letter seal, postage-stamp album, set silver beauty pins, baseball mask, naval war game, silver bracelet, gold-filled horseshoe brooch, silver stickpin, silver hatpin, wooden writing desk, nail-file, hair comb, doll. Those who won prizes in the Eleventh Set—the Names of Dickens’ Stories—published in the Sun- day Call of August 6, will find their names in the announcement printed in another column. —_—m winners in Qontest of Aus. 2. ELOW is given the list of prise winners in the puzzle contesd of August 2. This was the Eleventh Set—the Names of Dickens’ Stories—in the Fourth Series of Name Puzzles, begun on May 24. See if you are one of the lucky forty winners: Myrtle Mynkel, El Verano, silves beauty pins; Lenora Bauer, Stockton, ping pong set; Bonnie Hite, Freeport, naval war game; Ruth Dewey, San Rafael, nail file; Mrs. Rosenberg, 309 California sco, writing desk; Mary Peckham, San Jose, tennis racquet; Belle Radcliffe, street, San Fra Watsonville, ping pong set; Mar- guerite Ballantyne, Oakland, writing desk; Leora Moore, 1114A Filbert street, San Francisco, brooch; Ethel Connelly, Berkeley, silver bracelet; Mary Billingslea, 336 Turk street, San Francisco, tennis racquet; Alma Jones, 910 Minnesota street, San Francisco, writing desk; Isabel McCarthy, Alameda, ping p set; Ruth McCabe, Modesto, ver bracelet; B. Simpson, Monson, writing desk; Statia Ward, Mare Isl- and, writing desk; Ella McBride, Pa- cific Grove, ping pong set; Estells Clark, Vallejo, ping pong set; Ber- hett Hanna, San Jose, silver bracelet; Oscar Schwendt, Selma, naval war game; Stuart Rugg, Oakland, stamp album; Jack Wallace, San Jose, catcher’s mitt; R. C. Anthony, Los Angeles, naval war game; Everett Marshall, Comptche, knife; Russell Ashton, Calistoga, tennis racquet; Ed Pendleton, Santa Cruz, nail file; Victor Doyle, Berkeley, catcher’s mitt; George Howell, Presidio, San Francisco, catcher's mask; Willle Duncan, 04 McAllister street, San Francisco, bathing suit; W. B. Moz~ ris, 441 Gough street, San Frane cisco, knife; Herbert Hiestaul, Los Gatos, bathing suit; Irving Bock, 1473 O'Farrell street, San Francisco, Enife; Philip Fisher, Oakland, fish- ing rod; Calvert Judjins, Goldem Gate, catcher’s mitt; C. W. Pau, 963 Twenty-sixth avenue, East Oakland, ping pong set; David Cleveland, Elm- hurst, knife; Otto Pape, San Lean- dro, ping pong set; Eddie Fontenau, Stockton, brooch; Burnette Yount, 72 Hartford street, San Francisco, knife; Reta Caler, 3739 Seventeenth street, San Francisco, wrist purse. 3 This Papar not to be taken fr