Edited by Frank S. Finn. 
-:o:- 
All communications for this department 
thould he addressed to Frank 8. Finn , Box 
60, Bryant's Pond, Maine. 
Answers to August Garnerings. 
q 7. CANkER Worms and Potato Bugs. 
58. 
A 
ERR 
E S C O T 
archaic 
R C A S T 
TIT 
C 
60. WATER MELON. 
61. 
MEDLEY 
E L A I N 
DACE 
LIE 
E N 
Y 
59. 
Z O R I L 
OZONE 
R O S E T 
INERT 
L E T T Y 
62. 
SLOPE 
OPERA 
EARLY 
TOTAL 
ROMAN 
63. 1. Heliotropes. 2. Verbenas. 3. Begonias. 
4. Carnations. 5. Geraniums. 6. Chrysanthe¬ 
mums. 
64. FROSTWEED 
BICAMERAL 
M A N G O TREE 
NASEBERRY 
OPHIRI OU S 
O BSECRAT E 
*1) I VULG ATE 
DISALLOWS 
L.ACERTI AN 
OCTOBER GARNERINGS. 
No. 73. Numerical Enigma. 
The whole of 7 letters is tillable land. (O. E. Law). 
1, 2, 3, 4 is honest and respectable. 6, 6, 7 is a period 
of time. Maude. 
No 74. Anagram. 
From dewy bed 
I raise my head, 
And sweetness spread 
That none forget. 
To scent the air 
My only care 
As, moist and fair, 
I RAISE ALL WHT. 
Byrnehc. 
: 
No. 75. Rhomboid. 
Across—1. Sheepfolds. 2. Mansions. 8. Mourn¬ 
ful. 4. Even with the surface. 5. Part of a for - 
tress. . . .. 
Down—1. A consonant. 2. A bone. 3. To spread. 
4. A nobleman. 5. To guide. 6. To preserve. 7. 
A color. 8. A note in music. 9. A consonant. 
Nellie Thoman. 
No. 76. A Diamond. 
1. A consonant. 2. To free. 3. Severe. 4. A mi 
ser. 5. An account of daily events. 6. Arid. 7. A 
consonant. Plexus. 
No. 77. Word Syncopations. 
1. Take a sort of meat from a small sail and leave 
the chloride of sodium. 
2. Take a color from a Peruvian plant and leave 
a fish. 
3. Take to follow closely from a room for refining 
sugar and leave to prize. 
4. Take to pull away from a kind of dried sau¬ 
sage and leave a kind of sauce. 
5. Take a romping girl from to stand without 
flowing and leave renewed. 
6. Take an English gold coin of the reign of James 
I, from punishing and leave full of small interstices. 
Maude. 
No. 78. Half-Square. 
1. A kind of coat. 2. Worships. 3. The name of 
an Indian chief. 4. Epochs. 5. A number. 6. A 
bone. 7. A consonant. 
Lackawanna Lad. 
No. 79. A Square. 
1. Ensigns of authority. 2. A deputy. 3. To dis¬ 
continue. 4. To follow. 5. To guide. 
Dan Shannon. 
No. 80. Drop Letter Axiom. 
A-t-o-s-p-a-l-u-e-t-a-w-r-s. 
Sunbeam. 
Answers in December Garnerings. 
Prizes: For best list of answers to this month’s 
Garnerings we offer People’s Etiquette Book. 
For second best list of answers, we will awa rd. 
Popular Prose Readings. 
Lists close on November 10. 
Answers to August Garnerings were received from 
Lackawanna Lad, Anna Condor, Dan Shannon, 
Byrnehc, L. A. Forest, Sunbeam, Charley Armitage, 
Kismet, Maude, Alice Bennett, Farmer’s Boy, Roll¬ 
ing Rover, Kittie Clover, A Beginner, Dan Burton 
and Climax. 
Prizes for best lists of answers were awarded to 
Byrnehc and Maude. 
Our Cozy Corner. 
We heartily welcome .back our favorite contrib¬ 
utor, Byrnehc, who presents a beautiful Anagram 
in this issue. The article is very poetically ex¬ 
pressed and is an anagram in its truest sense, as the 
transposition is a good definition to the answer. More 
of this gentleman’s fine contributions are in hand 
and will grace future numbers.— Plexus's puzzles are 
good and the prizes, which he wished to offer for 
