ANAGRAMS.
In the following sentence, the words printed in capitals are anagrams of the words that should occupy the same places, so as to make sense. Thus: battle-screens is a compound-word that takes the place of another to be formed of the same letters arranged differently; the right word, in this example, being "center-table;" but each of the other collections of capitals is an anagram of but a single word.
I saw tent suds by the battle-screens, puzzling over the mica mats, and perplexed about many roots.
C.T.