4:66 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, 
[December, 
[copyright secured.] 
A DREAM OF FAIRY LAND . —Drawn ana Engraved for the American Agriculturist. 
HOUR-GLASS PUZZLE. 
1. Purity. 2. Something very welcome of a summer 
evening. 3. A fruit. 4. A pronoun. 5. A vowel. 6. A 
metal. 7. Steep acclivities. 8. An architect. 9. A 
flower. The center letters, read.downwards, will give a 
word which means without fail. Alice 13. P. 
GEOGRAPHICAL OPPOSITES. 
1. Old shanty. 
2. She’s off. 
3 Peace file. 
4. Land whist. 
5. Genuine saw. 
6 . How do you do ? 
7. Don’t marry Alice. . 
8 . Martin’s orchard. 
9. Cow hat land rise. 
A. M. Nagel. 
ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN THE OCTOBER NUMBER. 
Numerical Enigma. —Steam. 
Cro3S-Word. —Richmond. 
1. PANG 
AQUA 
NULL 
GALL 
SQUARE WORDS. 
2. LAMB 
ALOE 
MOSS 
BEST 
3. C A G E 
AGUE 
GULL 
EELS 
Transpositions.—1. Dismayed. 2. Wide-spread. 3. 
Embodiment. 4. Heartaches. 5. Heavenward. 6. Neu¬ 
ralgia. 
pi. 
Patience is a virtue. 
Possess it if you can; 
’Tis seldom seen in woman, 
Less often seen in man. 
ALPHABETICAL ARITHMETIC. 
347)92058(265 
6 9 4 
2 2 G 5 
2 0 8 2 
18 3 8 
17 3 5 
10 3 (Key: Uncle Smith.) 
Anagrams. —1. Interminable. 2. Perpendicular. 3. 
Overpowered. 4. Congratulations. 5. Participated. 6. 
Plagiarist. 7. Rc-appeared. 8. Solicitude. 9. Convul¬ 
sions. 10. Prerogative. 
All contributions for the Puzzle-Box may be sent to 
Aunt Sue, Box 111, P. 0., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Jeainy’s Dream. 
Jenny had many good friends who sent her Christmas 
presents. Most of them, knowing her to be fond of 
reading, sent her story-books, and these, together with 
the books given by her parents, made a nice child’s- 
library. How pleased was Jenny, and how she did read 1 
No sooner had she finished one story than she began an¬ 
other-. She could hardly leave her books long enough to 
take her meals, but she read on and on until she was so 
tired she fell asleep. It was a very wrong thing for Jenny 
to do, but the books were so pretty, and the stories were 
so fine, that she thought she could not read them half 
fast enough. She had filled her head with so many 
fancies that when she fell asleep she dreamed and saw in 
her dreams all the things she had been reading about. 
Our artist has pictured the things Jenny saw in her 
dream. There are poor Cinderella and—but we will 
not tell you, because we wish you to have the fun of 
picking out the characters in the picture yourselves, 
and then you will know what Jenny had been reading. 
