St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 4, February 1878 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 4, February 1878.

St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 4, February 1878 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 4, February 1878.

The initials and finals, read downward, form the names of two kinds of trees.

1.  The width of a vessel. 2.  A mountain of Crete. 3.  A Tom-boy. 4.  An inclosure. 5.  To harbor.

WILLIE PETTINOS.

SQUARE-WORD.

1.  A governor. 2.  To join. 3.  Flexible. 4.  A girl’s name. 5.  Quick dances.

L.

NUMERICAL PUZZLE.

I am a word of five letters, the sum of which is 512.

  My 1 x my 3 = 1/20 of my 5;
  My 2 x my 4 = 1/5 of my 3;
  My 5 / my 1 = my 3 x 20.

SEDGWICK.

HIDDEN ACROSTIC.

  At the top of a mountain,
    Within a clear light;
  In the midst of a fountain,
    At edge of the night;
  In field and in meadow,
  In sunshine and shadow,
    On land and on sea,
  At the end of the earth,
    Or in air, we may be.

  Now put us together,
    And, if you guess right,
  You’ll discover a water-fall
    Sparkling and bright.

W.P.D.

EASY DECAPITATIONS.

1.  Behead a kind of sword, and leave a fluid for burning. 2.  Behead a sharp-pointed weapon, and leave a fruit. 3.  Behead to touch, and leave a kind of fish. 4.  Behead a vehicle used in winter, and leave a shelf 5.  Behead a kind of deer, and leave a game that boys play. 6.  Behead an ancient war implement, and leave a unit. 7.  Behead animals of a common kind, and leave a sort of grain. 8.  Behead to pull, and leave sore. 9.  Behead the name of a vessel, and leave a narrow passage.

WALTER A.

TRANSPOSITIONS.

1.  Change artful into a confusion. 2.  Change a Persian king into a mixture. 3.  Change a cutter into listeners. 4.  Change a cheat into musicians. 5.  Change repaired into healed. 6.  Change a drink into a class embracing many species.

CYRIL DEANE.

CHARADE.

In war, and in council, my first oft appears. 
My second is that which my first often wears. 
Very strong is my last; ’tis a bark, not a bite;
That from which it is taken is solid, not light. 
Three joined in one, if my whole you should find,
An island well known it would bring to your mind.

M.D.

GEOGRAPHICAL PUZZLE.

(Composed by Mary V. and Willie K., each aged thirteen.)

An island west of British Columbia (1) went to the lightest city (2) in the world to attend a ball.  She there met a peak in Oregon (3) named as follows:  A city in Egypt (4), a city in Maine (5), and a city in Australia (6), in whom she was much interested.

Her dress was a valley among the Himalaya Mountains (7), and though elegantly trimmed with a city in Belgium (8), it was, unfortunately, two cities in France (9).  As she felt a country in South America (10), she wore around her shoulders a city in Scotland (11) shawl.  Her jewelry was exclusively a peak in Oregon (12).  Her shoes were of a country in Africa (13), and her handkerchief was perfumed with a city in Prussia (14).

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St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 4, February 1878 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.