. St. Nicholas [serial] . Noiseless Sorosis A shoe for children, built on Sorosis lines, makes the child sure-footed, develops thegrowing foot along proper lines, and, what is also most important, spares the nervesof the elders. Grandpa can doze in his chair while the children play—for their stepsare noiseless. For sale at all SOROSIS STORES AND DEPARTMENTS : Boston: 20 Temple Place and 176 Boylston StreetDenver: 626 Sixteenth StreetSan Francisco : 216 Post Street New York : James McCreery & Co., 23d Street Brooklyn: Corner Fulton and Hoyt Streets Philadelphia: 1314 Chestnut Street Baltimore:


. St. Nicholas [serial] . Noiseless Sorosis A shoe for children, built on Sorosis lines, makes the child sure-footed, develops thegrowing foot along proper lines, and, what is also most important, spares the nervesof the elders. Grandpa can doze in his chair while the children play—for their stepsare noiseless. For sale at all SOROSIS STORES AND DEPARTMENTS : Boston: 20 Temple Place and 176 Boylston StreetDenver: 626 Sixteenth StreetSan Francisco : 216 Post Street New York : James McCreery & Co., 23d Street Brooklyn: Corner Fulton and Hoyt Streets Philadelphia: 1314 Chestnut Street Baltimore: iq Lexington Street, West (Regent House, Regent Street Chicago: 34 Washington Street, Venetian Building London <? 19 VVestbourne Grove Pittsburg: Penn. Avenue and 5th Street and 214 Sixth Street £83 Brompton Road AND ALL OTHER LARGE CITIES. r 1?ICHARD50N- QUEEN ZIXI GREETED BUD AND HIS SISTER AND AUNTWITH GREAT KINDNESS. ST. NICHOLAS. Vol. XXXII. AUGUST, 1905. No. 10. THE COMMODORES CUP. By William B. MCormick. Lon Marshall stood in the post-office, star-ing wistfully at the notice, tacked up on thebulletin-board, of the forthcoming annual re-gatta of the Squam Yacht Club. The particu-lar thing that caught his eye was the secondmoney prize of fifteen dollars for sailing-dories,offered by the commodore. There were otherprizes, of course : the much-coveted silver cup,called the Commodores Cup, for knock-abouts, pennants for the raceabouts and half-raters, and a first money prize of twenty-fivedollars for the fishermens sloops. But the one he stared at so longingly wasthat second prize. For he felt certain that theWanderer, his sailing-dory, could beat anythingin the Cove or up Squam River. The troublewas to get the entrance fee of two dollars. Thecommodore was a very generous man, as everyone in Squam knew; but he believed


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Keywords: ., bookauthordodgemar, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1873