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THESE ARE THE SIXTY PRIZE IDINNERS OF OCT. 25. ————— HESE are” the names of the sixty lucky children who wom prizes in the puzzle contest— the Names of the Longest Rivers in the World—published in The Sunday Call of October 28: Flores Pattee, Campo Seco; Laura Boe, Ross Sation; Jack Neall, 602 Past Twenty-first street, Oakland; Hildred Okell, 1075 Union street, San Francisco; Mabel Graham, Elmhurst; Mildred Claybourne, 989 Howard street, San Francisco; Buth Crellin, Plessanton; Blmo Pinkerton, 2037 Howsrd street, San Francisco; Charles Martin, 735 Laurel avenue, Ban Francisco; Eddie Fonteneau, Stockton; Marguerite Lingenfelser, 122 Erie street, San Francisco; Ralph Hencke, 1108 Vallejo street, San Francisco; George Barry, Angels) Madon Kerr, 16 Capp street, Oakland; Viola Up 927 Wood street, Oak- land; Bay Lovett, Palo Alto; Frank Eelly, Vallejo; Eenneth Hawley, Centerville; Idly Shannon, 510 Clay- ton street, San Francisco; J. Ech- baum, 714 Cole street, Sen Francis- co; Elaine Standish, 1275 Waller street, San Francisco; Juanita Water- man, 1117 Devisadero street, San Francisco; Cacilia Biel, San Jose; Dorothy Beck, Woodland; Dorothy Laws, 1735 Green street, San Fran- cisco; Genevieve Boardman, Box 47, Nevada; Ruth Davis, 2014 Van Ness avenue, San Francisco; Jack Gibson, Menlo Park; A Ridenhour, Hilton; May Rogers, 1004 Van Ness avenue, San Francisco; Blanche Pennycock, 922 Florida street, San Francisco; W. A. Wiendenbeck, Bakersfield; Vivian Tyler, 3751 Army street, San Fran- cisco; Ruth Wiles, Tulare; H. Hood, Fruitvale; Adele Badarous, 104 Baker street, San Francisco; Lillian Butner, Hopland; J. B. Frazier, Goat Island, Cal.; Clarence Potter, 1500 Vallejo street, Ban Francisco; Agnes Hardwick, 670 Twenty-fifth street, Osakland; Ethel Osborne, 823 O’Far- zell street, San Francisco; Effie Bquire, 1281 Waller street, San Fran- cisco; Harold Henry, Livermore; Ber- nice Ryan, Redding; Kathryn Met- calf, 2319 Central avenue, San Fran- cisco; Bethell Hanna, San Jose; Helen Lawrence, Golden Gate; Lloyd Evans, 1635 Page street, San Francisco; George Morgan, Virginia City, Ne- vad E. I. Horton, 478 Edward street, Oakland; Percy Dunlap, Stock- ton; WViolet Everson, 319 Vallejo street, San Francisco; A. Huber, 1308 Polk street, San Francisco; Berthe Enell, 15 Willow avenue, San Fran- cisco; Howard Hoyt, Berkeley; Irving Martin, Stockton; Rudolph Trautner, 2540 McAllister street, San Francis- co; Genevieve McEvoy, Menlo Park; Carroll Wentz, Gilroy; Ward Grant, San Rafael. - Solve the Puzzles, and Send It to the Fuzzle Editor, Sunday Call, S.F. San Francisco: Below in their proper num- bers please find my solution of the names of Nine Games at Home represented in this week’s Name Puzzles. IR S e L L B sevecrrrssrrsssosormneennamm T ssnesssvmarssseorsasnnrennan 8 serercrssrrsrcrsersarerecenee November 8, 1903, CIty secsvossscssssascssssnccen L e e ) 7/ VEEZA (Ses Ligt of Prives) 1055 LANDIVE i - at Home---Namz Them and Win a Priza. HILDREN, have you noticed the pictures on the new books that you have been getting since the last new list of prizes was published two weeks ago? Ah, you have. Well, aren’t they perfectly beautiful? Yes, they are the New Landscape Series, a special edition, designed particularly for a Christmas book, and every picture is a work of art in itself. And best of all, every book has & dit- ferent cover—some are winter Scenes, some are summer landscapes—some show & bit of old Hal- ‘land quaintness, others reveal glimpses of famous places the world over. These new prizes are indoed a distinct novelty, something that you will find the most expensive article in the way of books for chil- dren when you come to make your Christmas gifts this year. Nothing was said about it before, because the Puzzle Editor wanted each of the prize winners to see the surprise for themselves first. But what is really the most interesting feature of all these new books is that they make the most beautiful col- lection, when taken as a whole series. They are worth winning more than ome prize. So now is your chance. So remember this: You will all have a chance not only to win a prize, but to get your picture published as well. The Puzzle Editor wants all prize winners from now on to send in their pictures—the whole sixty every week if possible. Begin right now. Don’t wait. The more the merrier. There can’t be too many. But remember only the prize winners can have their pictures published. Each of the Nine pictures in this, the eleventh contest of the FIFTH SERIES of Name Puzzles, represents a game at home. Can you guessP Ah! There is rich reward for you if you can. Now is your chance. Remember there will be a SPECIAL $5 and $10 prize for the highest percent- age of the whole thirteen weeks of the Fifth Series. . And now listen carefully: THERE ARE SIXTY PRIZES, and this is what you must do to win ene of them: Find the name of nine games at home represented by the Small Puzzls Pictures on this page, and write them out in full in the space opposite the proper corresponding number provided for the purpose in the coupon on this page, as per directions; fill in the coupon with your name and ad- dress and the prize you desire—if you win—and send the picture, with the coupon attached, to the EDI- TOR OF THE NAME PUZZLE PAGE, Sunday Call, San Francisco, Cal. REMEMBER—To the FIRST SIXTY BOYS AND GIRLS who solve the Nine Name Puzzles cor- rectly, one of these SIXTY BEAUTIFUL PRIZES will be awarded. And don’t forget this next point, because it is very important: ALL ANSWERS MUST REACH THIS OFFICE BY FRIDAY NOON. This gives all thoss in the country an equal chance to compete. Read everything on this page, to be sure that you overlook nothing that will help you to win a prize. THE NAMES OF THE LUCKY WINNERS WILL BE PUBLISHED IN THE SUNDAY CALL TWO WEEKS FROM TO-DAY, November 22. . These are the TWENTY BEAUTIFUL BOOKS from which you may select if you solve all the puzzles correctly: A Wonder Book, by Hawthorne; Evangeline, by Longfellow; The Fairy Land of Science, by Buckley; Greek Heroes, by Kingsley; Alice’s Adventures in Woncerland, by Carroll; Old Christmas, by Irving; The Water Babies, by Kingsley; A Child’s Garden of Verses, by Stevenson; Jes- sica’s First Prayer, by Stretton; Christie’s Old Organ, by Walton; The Sketch Book, by Irving; Kava- nagh, by Longfellow; Cranford, by Gaskell; The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Bunyan; vhe Cricket on the Hearth, by Dickens; The Tales from Shakespears, by Lamb; Treasure Island, by Stevenson; Adventures of & Brownle, by Mulock; Laddie and Miss Toosey’s Mission and The Magic Nuts by Molesworth, ©B A BOX OF SUPERFINE FRENCE PAINTA ¥ Fill Qut the Cougon e These Pictures Represent the Namges of Ning Gamgs [ e ———— e ————————————ee sl