LETTER ANAGRAMS.
Write a line in each case describing the position of the letters toward each other, and transpose the letters used in this description to make a word which will answer the definition given. Thus:
R. } A part of the day. Ans. R. on M. (transposed) Morn.M. }
1. { L. } A kind of bird. { P. }2. S. R. Parts of a house.3. S. T. A piece of furniture.4. { L. } To pillage. { P. }5. { Et. } Not rhythmical. { Ic. }
H. H. D.
HIDDEN DRESS GOODS.
1. Seizing the rascal I compelled him to give up the money. 2. Aunt Nell is fond of singing Hamburg. 3. Belle Prescott only failed once last year. 4. Eveline never learned to control herself. 5. Where is Towser, Gertie? 6. I met Homer in Oregon. 7. Where did you find such a queer fossil, Kenneth? 8. Tom Thumb is a tiny specimen of humanity. 9. Did Erasmus Lincoln lose all his property by the fire?
PICTORIAL, PROVERB-ACROSTIC.
Arrange the words represented by the numbered pictures in their order. The initials and finals (reading down the former and continuing down the latter) form a familiar proverb, the sentiment of which is suggested by the central picture.