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THE SAN FRANCISCO. SUNDAY CALL. e THESE ARE THE PRIZE WINNERS OF MARCH 20. ————— Hyde Alde San F Castre street 1616 H 2540 WcAllster : Helen Supple, Vallejc 1211 Jackson street, Sen Francisco; Agnes McClos- key. 46% Larkin street, San Francisco: Hazel Danforth, 467 Shotwell Street, San Francisco; Julie Simmons, 640 Grove street, San Francisco; Lygla Johmsen, 2139 Railroad avenu Ala- meda; Lilas Ada: 706 Larkin street, San Francisco; John Hara, Menlo Park; J. Cabrera, Nenlo Park; L. Menlo Park: Harlan Frost, 9 Eagie avenue, Alameda; Teddy Smith, #7 East Fourteenth street, Oaklahd; Guy Smith, Saratoga; May Shattuck, 8 Eleventh street, Oakland; J. 'H. O’Brien, 131 Main street, San Francis- co: Hazel Mann, 654 Seventh street, Oakland: Jessie Compton, 132 McAflis- son, ter street, San Francisco; . Jednie Nathan, 1610 McAllister strest, - San Francisco; Ethel Hilton, . 2¢ ' Dame stréet, San Francisco; Edith O'Brien, 477 Shotwell street, San Francisco; Ellsworth Truloen, . Mountain View; Edna Senf, Sacramento; Hazel McAl- lister, 3716 Twentieth street, San ¥Fran- cisco; C. B. Heniz, Sacramento; Olive Nicholson, 1% Guerrero street, San Francisco; Florence Nickelburg, 1811 Sacramento street, San Francisco; Barle Peeler, 711 Capp street, San Francisco; Marion Richards, 981 Sut- ter street, San Francisco; Edwin Amark, 1 Clarence Court, San Fran- cisco; K. Graves, 826 Sixteenth street, Oakland; Imelda Parlin, 519 Bryant street, San Francisco; Heien Lawrence, Golden Gate; Reta Rideout, 866 Dolores street, San Francisco; Joe Chadbourne, Sulsun; Louise Waugh, 204 Chatta- nooga street, San Francisco; G, W. Farnlacher, 2701 Sutter street, San Francisco; Clarisse Buteau, 385, Wash- ington street, Oakland; F. T. Coburn, 1515 Pacific avenue, Alameda; E. B. Hussey, Vallejo; Willie Fuller, Agnew; Fred McKenzie, Agnew; Orville Adams, Berkeley; Harry Curtis, 518 Ellis street, San Francisco; Budge Rosenberg, 36 Maple Court, San Francisco; Rosalind Rosenberg, 3 Maple Court, San Fran- cisco; Ruth Crellin, Pleasanton; Albert Kilm, Alameda; Max Gans, 566 McAl- Uster street, San Francisco; Lucy Hu- T ¥ bert, 428 East Fourteenth street, Oak- land; Ruth Wiles, Tulare; Jeannette Inglis, 1320 Masonic avenue, SangFran- co; Charles Young, 442 Fourteenth t, San Francisco;. Frank Radford, San = Francisco; 2553 Folsom street, Maudie Marcus, 934 Geary street, San Francisco; Ray Upton, 927 Wood street, San Francisco; George Wilkens, 421 Erie street, San Francisco; Martha Huffaker, Allendale; John Murray, San Quentin; Ben Dunphy, Menlo Park; J. Cabrera, Menlo Park; W. Wood, Menlo Park; Anna Paul, Suisun; Edpa Lund, Suisun; Mabel Lund, Suisun; Fred Berriesford, Sacramento; Alyce Boger, 622 Fillmore street, San Francisco; Grace Porter, Modesto; Annie Curtis, Pacific Grove; Violette Jones, Merced; Elmer Short, 124A” Silver street, San Francisco; Mildred Smith, 1514 Devisa- dero street, San Francisco; Mildred Goetz, 422 Francisco street, San Fran- cisco; Mildred Tade, 2217 Dwight way, Berkeley; Katharine Inglis, 1320 Ma- sonic avenue, San Francisco; Warren Early, Petaluma; Genevieve Farrell, B eautiful Priiégf:;fifie cisco; Vernon Hodgkins, Marysville; lda Snider, Fall River Mill; Paul Dunckhorst; ‘Sacramengo; Lloyd Locke, . 8acramento; Ruthella Bollard, Vallejo; Elma Koster, Alameda; Leta Berries- ford, Sacramento; L‘arfn Braese, 2622 Folsom street, San Francisco; Lilllan Grogen, 525 Thirteenth street, Oakland; Violet White, 1264 Twelfth avenue, East Oakland; Jane Brown, Vallejo; Pearl Van Meter, Lafayette; Verna Worth- ington, Tuolumne; Margaret Baker, Tuolumne; Meade Bissell, Alameda; Letitia Sartori, Petaluma; Loris Walk- er, 1030 East Sixteenth street, Oakland; Leslie Crouch, Calistoga; George Pari- sen, 85 Cumberland street, San Fran- cisco; Nina Devany, 104 Guerrero street, San Francisco; Mae Detrick, 1709 Eddy street, San Francisco; Irene Warnecke, 707 Clayton street, San Francisco; Wal- ter Farnlachen, 2701 Sutter street, San Francisco. OPD INSECTS TO-DAY Hungred and Eifky of Them--- For Those Who Can Guess These Puzzies. ‘ Petaluma;. George Oeltjen, Petaluma; Ella Kndwland,{ Paso Robles; Ethelyn Riebling, 121 Olive avenue, San Fran- cisco; Harold Williams, Berkeley; Eli- nor*Brown, San Rafael; Albert Margo, 2409 Pacific avenue, San Francisco; Ger- trude Hood, Fruitvale; Jeannette Chase, Lodi; ‘Rica Carney, Stockton; Walter Jarvis, Fresno; Marcia Benson, Petaluma; Carolina Greene, Vallejo; Lester Vandres, Vallejo; Dorothy Feder, 762 Harrison street, San Fran- cisco; Willard Sullivan, South San Francisco; Irene Wissing, 240 Four- ‘teenth street, San Francisco; Ruth Dunckhorst, Sacramento; C. E. Thomp- son, 822 East Fifteenth street, Oakland; Mollie Welter, -Vallejo; Opal Davison, 844 - Fifty-eighth street, Oal Thomas O’Connell, 4042° Twenty-fo 1301 Larkin street, San . Fran Stella Utzerath, Templeton; ., Ingham, Gilroy; Harry Kolb, Palo Abble Trade, 1792 Fifteenth street, Francisco; Ruth Brandon, Watsonyille; Harry Curtls, 812 Oak street, San H, children, were you surprised at the odd puzzles last week? Weren’t they exciting? Three differ- ent kinds of puzzles in one to gicss. Perhaps you did not like them as well as the single set. Well, the Puzzle Editor has gone back to that sort this week. The puzzle pictures on this page all rep- resent Insects—all kinds of insects. Of course you know all about insects. You surely do if you have any_power of observation; coupled with a keen memory of what you see and read and hear. Yor instance, have you ever scen a weevil. Isn't that a funny name—WEEVIL? Well, it is a very funny insect. And do any:of you know what an earwig is like?’ Have you ever secn oné? :Ur an ant lion or a dragon fly or a dadgy long legs or. a—hut.of course you_have all seen a daddy long legs. - Well, even if you haven’t you can go to your library and find a book on this subject just full of pic- tures of all sorts of imsects. Armed with th;fi_vou will have no difficulty whatever in solving these puzzles, but, however, -if you;-are as clever as the Puzzle fitor thinks you are you will know all about these-in- sects without having to look them up. They are easy. Just try and see. Don’t forget, there is a beau- tful prize' and:your picture in the Gallery of Hono¥ if youswin. PLEASE DON'T SEND IN ANY TINTYPE PICTURES’OR PROOFS THAT ARE UNTONED—which means that they will fade as soon ag they are exposed to the sun, and don’t forget to write your name and address on the back of cach and ‘every photograph. And_ by all means be sure that you are a prize win- ner before you send in any picture at all. - woed s And remember this: You,will all have a chance not only to win one of those prizes, your picture published ns"a,welll.,,:"l‘he Puzzle Kditor wants all the prize winners to send in their plctures —the whole 150 every weck if possible. Begin right now.~ Don’t wait. The more the merrier. There Cah't" be too many. But remember, onlyithe.prize winners can have their pictures published. ¥ .THERE ARE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY I(’RI(ZES. and this is what you must do to win one of them: ¥ 1 esr L X Find the”naniés of Ten Different Insects represented in the small puzzie pictures on this page and write them outyin ‘the space opposite the proper corresponding number provided for the.purpose in tha coupon- on thig: page, as'per directions; fill in the coupon with your name and address and the prize you desire—if you send the coupon to the EDITOR OF THE NAME PUZZLE PAGE, Sunday Call, aw; mnm{mm—a\: o mnmb AND BOYS AND GIRLS w;o solve the twelve s ED FIFTY N e Name Puzziés :)fi'ecdy. :: om%unlfi m;‘m AND FIFTY BEAUTIFUL PRIZES will be awarded. And don’t fe this next point, becase it is very important: ALL ANSWERS MUST REACH THIS OFFICE BY )AY NOON. . This gives all those in the country an cqual chance to compete. Read ev: f on this page, t6 be surd that you overlook nothing that will help you to win a prize. * THE N, OF.THE LUCKY WINNERS WILL BE PUBLISHED IN THE SUNDAY CALL TWO WEEKS FROM TO-DAY, April 24.1 3 P These gre the, TWENTY BEAUT/FUL BOOKS from which you may choose it you solve all the puz- zles Tk low: Fairy Land. of . by ‘Buckley; . Greek Heroes, by Kingsley; The Song of Hiawatha, by Long- I‘elhwi;‘..’elsu‘k:ed; by mfifllfli Lucile, by Meredith; Mine Own People, by Kipling; Mosses From an Old Manse, by Hawthorne: Dog of Flanders, by Oulda; Paradise Regained, by Milton: The Phantom Rickshaw, By JKipling; Plutarch’s Lives; Prue and I, by Curtis; Tanglewood Tales, by Hawthorne; Ten Nights in a Barroom, by Arthur; Through the Looking Glass, by Carroll: The Water Babies, by Kingsley; Window in Thrams, by Barrie. Blithedate Ramance, by Hawthorie; Chrfstle’s Old Organ, by Walton; Evangeliné, by Longfel- +——.————'_"—__+ Solve the Puzzles, Fill Out the Coupon and Send It to the Fuzzle Editor, Sfunday Call, S.F. To Puzzle Editor, Sunday Cal. San Francisco: Below in their proper num- bers please find my solution of the Ten Different Insects rep- resented in this week's Name Puzzles: 1 cecoccssssseso.mesnssosenes 3 aeenees .,...,.............I E e S L 4 cicscescsssessssssssrarenes 5 acsvcenemssenesscepsagernss L L L T TR T secescscsssssasssgesnssanes April 10, 1904, Name ..cocvsccsccscnsnsnnnnne Street OF P.*Ouccervcsconcencee L e i e e T T rem— State seesverrexesmermessonann Unique Comfim i - -9 Many improvements have been made in Lord Kelvin's compass and sound- ing machine, acording to reports re- ceived at the State Department. In the newest form of the compass the ilumination is effected from below and either oil lamps or electric light may be used. The bottom of the com- pass bowl is in the form of a strong, thick lens, through which the light is refracted on the card. The intensity of the light may be varied at the pleasure of the observer, and this is found to be exceedingly useful in taking the bearing of stars or other faint lights. A new' anti- vibrational suspension has been de- signed, which insures great steadiness in the card, and a new form of heimet, with rifle sights, facilitates the work of taking bearings. ‘With the new helmet navigators are able to take bearings of lights and stars by night with the same ease and convenience as bearings of the sun are now taken by day. The new form of sounding machine has been constructed of a height which has been found from practical experi- ence to be the most suitable for the work of winding in the line. In addi- tion to this great advantage the new machine has an improved form of brake action and a further advantage is that the working parts of the ma- chine are all In sight and can be easily n- -}—%—___—_—_———-—————?—*————-—’ removed if necessary.