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16 THE SUNDAY CALL._ Solve the Puzzies, Fill Cut the Coupon znd Send It to te Fuzzle Editor, 7 solution of esented in December 13, 1803. ne Different | o} 3 [ zZ]es 7S g EARLE. WOHLER. TommN SAN ik o FRANCISCO HESE are the names of the sixty lucky children who wom prizes in the puzzle contest— the Names from Mother Goose— published in The Sunday Call of November 20: Hugo Kaiser, Melrose; Bennie Knight, 32 Church street, Santa Cruz; Relph Stanley, 17481 Market street, Oakland; Julia Fast, Santa Cruz; Dorothy Stevens, 278 Ninth street, Oakland; Loomis Steiny, 329 East Magnolia street, Stockton; Thelma Whitehurst, Gilroy; Ethel Berkhout, 169 Corbett avenue, San Francisco; Waldo Bacon, 1106 Bush street, San Francisco; Ray Miller, 20 Pearl street, San Francisco; Ruth THESE ARE THE SIXTY PRIZE WINNERS OF NOUD. 29. + - + Chrisman, Clements; Sidney Cluett, 1521 Benton street, Alameda; Beril Gardiner, 124 Frederick street, San Francisco; Gladys Sitton, 606 M Street, Sacramento; Rosalind Rosen- berg, 36 Maple court, San Francisco; Budd Rosenberg, 36 Maple court, San Francisco; Alonza Fisher, Lath- rop; B. Rimmer, 622 N. Union street, Stockton; Darlene Benson, East Au- burn; Preston Snock, 402 Plymouth avenue, Oakland; Olive Bennett, An- gels; Melbourne Gilbert, 3366 Nine- teenth street, San Francisco; Rolon Orislo, Placerville; Marjory Fisher, San Jose; Bessie Cantley, 1370 Green street, San Francisco; Naonie Gensen, 2313 Howard street, San Francisco; Adele Lesser, 1217 Geary street, San Francisco; Dora Elson, Benicia; Fred Leek, San Jose; Frank Ogburn, Hil- ton; Edna Hill, 2626 J street, Sacra- mento; Esther Clifford, South Val- lejo; Laura Forster, 628 Shotwell street, San Francisco; Roscoe Watts, 410 McAllister street, San Francisco; Ralph Brown, Hilton; Emily Watkin- son, Corning; Reine Martin, 905 Six- ty-third street, Oakland; Grace Snow, Dimond; Zella Hodgkins, Marysville; M. McMan, 1611 Alcatraz avenue, Berkeley; John Paclina, Stockton; Josephine McNeil, 260 Lexingt avenue, San Francisco; C. Allendo: 227 Hartford street, San Francisco; Willie Sutherland, Virginia City, Nev.; L. Santini, Stockton; Della Fre- richa, Tracy; Ed Wilcox, 263 Third street, Oakland; James Gold 3 CGold Hill, Nev.; Adrian ay, Larkspur; Jennie Andrews, €64 Va- lencia street, San Francisco; Dorothea Allan, 632 North Third street, San Jose; Harold Youcham, 2629 Folsom street, San Francisco; Harold Akers, 1656 Bush street, San Francisco; Ruth Johnson, Tiburon; Anna Lad- dish, Benicia; Gladys Johnson, Santa Cruz; Mert Wilson, Vallejo; Mary John, San Pablo; Bessie Margey, 132614 Natoma street, San Francisco; Charles Forster, 2516 Folsom street, San Francisco. SEND IN YOUR PICTURES. The Best Change Ever Offered the Bright Qhildren Watch for the Beautiful Pictures in The Call’'s Big Christmas Number Next Sunday. Whe Qan solve These Puzzles. NE EUNDRED AND FIFTY PRIZES. JUST THINK OF THAT, CHILDREN. FROM XNOW ON EVERYBODY WILL HAVE A CHANCE TO WIN. Wasn't it a big surprise—A really Remarkable offer—and you didn’t expect it, did you? Of course not. From Sixty to One Hundred and Fifty Prizes is a tremendous big jump, isn’t it? Butitis just these sorts of surprises that keeps the interest in this page at fever heat. You don’t have time to get tired of one thing before something new happens. The excitement of trying to guess what will happen next is quite as thrilling as the fun of solving the puzzles themselves. And those puzzles were never worth solving more than they are to-day. Just think of it again. ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PRIZES. And the prizes themselves? Well—JUST READ THAT NEW LIST BELOW. Why you never were given such an excellent incentive to work, and work hard, as now. Every one of those books has a landscape cover in multiple colors. They are the most expensive Christmas book of this edition that you can buy. Indeed they are a special edition secured expressly for the lucky winners in these contests. Just think of that, will you? And then there are thoss Superfine French Paints. Just think of the Christmas presents you can make with those. And besides all this there is the Honorary Gallery of Prize Winners. So remember this: You will all have a chancs not only to win one of those 150 prizes, 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 150 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 Second contest of the Sixth Series, represents a different Kind of Bird. Can you guess? Ah! There is rich reward for you if you can. And now lsten carefully: THERE ARE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PRIZES, and this is what you must do to win one of them: Find the names of Nine Different Kind of Birds represented by the Small Puzzle Pictures on this page, and write them out jp 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 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY BOYS AND GIEL3 who solve the Nine Name Puzzles correctly, one of thesse ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY 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 those 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 BIG CHRISTMAS EDITION OF THE SUNDAY CALL TWO WEEKS FROM TO-DAY, December 27. These are the TWENTY BEAUTIFUL BOOKS from which you may select if you solve all the puzzles correctly: A Dog of Flanders, by Ouida; The Chimes, by Dickens; Black Beauty, by Sewell; In His Steps, by Sheldon; Tom Brown’s School Days, by Hughes; Rab and His Friends, by Brown; Knicker- bockers’ History of New York, by Irving; The Blithedale Romance, by Hawthorne; Paul and Virginia, by Saint Pierre; The Prince of the House of David, by Ingraham; A Christmas Carol, by Dickens; J. Cole, by Gellebrand; Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, by Carroll; Old Christmas, by Irving; A Child’s Garden of Verses, by Stevenson; Jessica’s First Prayer, by Stretton; Christie’s Old Organ, by Wal- ton; The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Bunyan; The Cricket on the Hearth, by Dickens; Laddie and Miss Too- sey’s Mission. OR A 30X OF SUPERFINE FRENCH PAINTS. ] -