[[1]]
THE CROSS WORD
PUZZLE BOOK [[3]]
THE CROSS WORD PUZZLE BOOK
An Anthology of Fifty Cross Word Puzzles Selected as the Best of the Thousands That Have Been Submitted to the New York World Published Here Exclusively for the First Time and Edited
By
PROSPER BURANELLI
F. GREGORY HARTSWICK
MARGARET PETHERBRIDGE
THE PLAZA PUBLISHING COMPANY
New York :: 1924
[[4]]
Copyright, 1924, by
THE PLAZA PUBLISHING COMPANY
37 West 57th Street
New York, N.Y.
Printed by The Van Rees Press
Bound by H. Wolff & Co.
New York [[5]]
THE CROSS WORD PUZZLE
By Newman Levy
For many years we’ve lived as man and wife,
As happy now as on the day we wed.
“We’re more like sweethearts,” I have always said.
No cloud has dimmed the sunshine of our life,
Though now and then I’ll seize a rolling pin
And playfully I’ll clout her on the dome
Just to preserve domestic discipline
And demonstrate who’s master in our home.
At times she’ll hurl with well-directed aim
A platter or an iron at my bean.
These slight attentions keep romances green
And keep alive the hymeneal flame.
On Sunday, when the evening lamp is lit
And peace and calm contentment fill our house,
With pipe and well-loved book at ease I sit,
And at my side, in earnest thought, my spouse,
Then fade the cares and troubles of the day;
With Conrad and Lord Jim I sail the sea,
When suddenly I hear my wife’s voice say,
“What word for ‘female child’ begins with G?”
“The word is ‘Girl’,” I growl. Again I try
To catch the shattered magic of my tale.
I find my place. Again with Jim I sail
Upon the tropic sea. My wife says “My,
What pronoun in three letters starts with Y?”
[[6]]
Calmly I rise and search about the place
To find a weapon of sufficient weight.
Aha! Upon our wall an ancient mace,
Studded with knobs of steel. The very thing.
I seize it, and with easy, graceful swing
Wallop my darling wife upon the pate,
The sconce or bean, or dome, or what you will.
Silent she tumbles headlong in the grate.
I take my book and leisurely resume
My tale, and peace and quiet fill the room.
From F.P.A.’s Conning Tower
in The New York World [[7]]
THE CROSS WORD
PUZZLE BOOK
[[9]]
CONFESSIONS OF A CROSS WORD PUZZLE EDITOR
When I was first made unwilling Cross Word Puzzle Editor some two years ago, the procedure in deciding what puzzle would be run was limited to picking out a good-looking one from among the bunch and sending it upstairs to be set. I saw no reason to change this splendid system. At that time, I had never taken the trouble to do a puzzle and the letters of anathema and condemnation that came in by the dozens had small effect on my conscience. They were evidently from cranks and couldn’t be avoided.
I must admit that the dawning of conscience began with the arrival of F.P.A., who came to work in the next room. When he discovered that I was responsible for the cross words, he formed the atrocious habit of stalking in every Monday morning bright and early (about eleven o’clock) to point out to me in sarcastic tones just what was wrong with yesterday’s. Well, to make a long story short, in order to avoid the moronish feeling that usually followed such a lecture, I decided to reform and find out what a really decent puzzle was like.
I began by trying to do one the next Sunday, and thus experienced the throes of acute agony that come to all solvers of puzzles on discovering definitions left out, numbers wrong, hideously warped definitions, words not to be found inside of any known dictionary, foreign words—very foreign[[10]]—and words that had no right to be dragged out of their native obscurity. Then and there, with my left hand reposing on a dictionary and my right raised in air, I took an oath to edit the cross words to the essence of perfection. From then on, I instituted the procedure of doing the puzzles myself on the page proof—sort of trying it on the dog—applying the principle,
“If it be not fair to me,
What care I how fair it be!”
Since that momentous day, F.P.A.’s visits have grown less frequent—in fact, he has to make up excuses to come in and converse on other matters—and the cross words even came in for an occasional bouquet in Sam Pepys’s diary. So now you all know whom to thank for the perfection (more or less) of the cross word puzzle found each Sunday on the World Magazine’s Ingenuities Page.
Margaret Petherbridge [[11]]
HOW TO SOLVE THEM
Solving a cross word puzzle offers numerous enjoyments of which the uninitiated are ignorant. There is the pure esthetic stimulation of looking at the pattern with its neat black and white squares, like a floor in a cathedral or a hotel bathroom; there is the challenge of the definitions, titillating the combative ganglion that lurks in all of us; there is the tantalizing elusiveness of the one little word that will satisfactorily fill a space and give clues to others that we know not of; and there is the thrill of triumph as the right word is found, fitted, and its attendant branches and roots spring into being. No better illustration could be used than a recent brilliant construction of Mr. Gelett Burgess, published in the Sunday World Magazine.
Consider the solver as he faces his problem. The numbers in the squares, he knows, refer to the definitions; in the system of numbering used in this book, the first letters only are indicated by numbers. Thus 1 horizontal means a word that will fill the space following the figure up to the next black square.
Horizontal
- 1 Lowest form of life
- 12 Product of coal or pine
- 18 Opponent
Vertical
- 1 Gustated
- 2 Divine nourishment
- 3 Before
- 4 Indefinite number
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | ||
| 12 | |||||
| 18 | 20 | ||||
| 30 | 32 | 33 | |||
[[12]]
The solver, then, looks the puzzle over. Aha! a friend. 12 horizontal, three letters long—“product of coal or pine.” Triumphantly the solver writes TAR in the spaces and proceeds with this clue. 2 Vertical is defined as “Divine Nourishment.” It links with TAR at the second letter. A moment of thought and MANNA appears as the only possible solution. He turns to 1 vertical, the second letter of which is the first of 12 horizontal—T. The definition is “gustated,” and the word is of three letters. Why hesitate? ATE goes into the space. “A cinch!” reflects the solver, and joyously writes ENEMY in 18 horizontal, defined as “Opponent.” 3 vertical is defined as “Before,” and with -RE staring him in the face he would be dull indeed who did not write ERE. And now 1 horizontal stands revealed. “Lowest form of life,” eh? AMEBA goes down. 4 vertical is “Indefinite number.” Well, A-Y cannot be anything but ANY—and there is the corner complete, with three clues to the words in other sections.
| 1 A | 2 M | 3 E | B | 4 A | |
| 12 T | A | R | N | ||
| 18 E | N | E | 20 M | Y | |
| N | |||||
| 30 | A | 32 | 33 | ||
So far the sailing has been fairly easy. But trouble waits just around the corner. There are other definitions which [[13]]are not so simple as “product of coal or pine.” In the far reaches of the puzzle to which the above corner belongs may be found such definitions as “Vexation (Provincial British),” “Humorous figure of speech,” “One-sided headaches” and “Droning dung-beetles.” Is the solver prepared to state that he can fill the spaces represented by those words without the assistance of the linked horizontals or verticals?
It is here that one of the greatest charms of the crossword puzzle lies: the discovery of new words by the process of building them, though entirely ignorant of their actual spelling. Consider another portion of Mr. Burgess’ puzzle. The construction of the provincial form of “Vexation” and “Humorous figure of speech” fortunately come in juxtaposition; they illustrate at once the vocabulary-building feature of the cross word puzzle and a constructional weakness which may lead to non-solution.
The definitions surrounding this precious pair are as follows: Horizontal, “Series of games,” “Self,” “Means of sustenance,” and “Surface of fibres”; Vertical, “Drinking vessel” and “Body of cavalry.” When these words are solved one finds:
| S | E | T | ||||||
| T | U | R | ||||||
| E | G | O | ||||||
| A | L | I | M | O | N | Y | ||
| N | A | P |
[[14]]
Now the unfortunate part of it is that the section is completed; there are no more clues, and if one does not know what the humorous figure of speech is and what the British provincialism is, there is no way of discovering them aside from the use of deduction. A little thinking will show that the first letter of the provincialism is more likely to be “S” than any other letter, and a short search in the dictionary will give “Sturm” as the answer; while as for -EUGMA, a brief running through the alphabet will so limit the possibilities that a very short search will reveal ZEUGMA as correct.
It is extremely difficult, in the construction of cross word puzzles, to avoid the use of such “unkeyed” letters, and effort has been used to ensure the presence of common words where more than one letter is unkeyed; but the exigencies of construction will not always allow this. Nor should it always be done; allowance must be made for erudition on the part of the solver. When such a construction appears as S-ALE-E, defined as “Unequal sided and angled” and with all clues exhausted, it is with a warm sensation of culture that one triumphantly fills the blanks with “C” and “N.” And the same thrill is present when “One-sided headaches,” standing clueless with M-GRI-S, is properly filled in to become MEGRIMS.
Thus is the solution achieved; in part by the science of deduction, in part by mother-wit, in part by erudition; appeals to as many as possible of the lobes of the brain. There is no nobler satisfaction than the fitting in of the last word that makes the pattern complete; one rises to lyric heights in the contemplation of the evolution of such a word as one enthusiastic constructor included in his design, the definition of [[15]]which was “Parallel pairs of simulacra in echinoideans.” The cross-constructions showed BIVIA as the necessary filler and the vocabularies of the solvers were enriched by an addition of high esthetic value and utter incomprehensibility, to be used as occasion demands.
The cross word solver becomes a collector, a connoisseur of words. They lose, to him, their mundane purpose of a suitable medium for the exchange of thoughts, and take on an esoteric significance, akin to the appeal of slip-ware to the collector of pottery or the three-cornered Mauritius to the philatelist. He and Hamlet are one. “Words, words, words”—except that he has the advantage of the melancholy one. Hamlet’s words ran in decorous file, one after the other; the solver’s twine and intertwine, each leading to others, resulting in a harmonious whole unapproached by any except the masterpieces of classic literature.
* * *
It is generally conceded that as a form of amusement, cross words are very instructive, and that as a form of instruction, they are very amusing. The first thing that strikes the eye is the pattern in which the words are intermingled. Our experience teaches that an all-over interlock is an absolute necessity, and except in a few cases you will find that the puzzles in this book possess this quality. The advantages are obvious; when all the words interlock, you can check up the horizontal by the vertical, and vice versa.
Occasional stunt patterns are interesting, but as a general thing they are apt to detract from the value of a puzzle as a thing to be solved.
The numbering system used to be quite intricate and took [[16]]up a lot of precious space. It required two numbers to each definition. On July 22, 1923, at the suggestion of an ardent puzzler who calls himself “Radical,” we offered the new system of numbering, which calls for only one number to a definition. It is quite simple to read either horizontally or vertically from one number, and forms a decided improvement over the old style. “Radical” deserves a special vote of thanks. All the puzzles in this book use the new system of numbering.
As for the words that find their way into cross words, strange as it may seem with the whole of the dictionary to choose from, the same old favorites have a way of recurring ceaselessly. Of course, all the two letter words are overworked, and many have to compromise on abbreviations. Our sole objection to abbreviations is that they cannot be defined without practically telling what they are. Parts of the verb “to be”; prepositions; the Egyptian Sun God, Ra; Pi, em, ma, pa, i.e., e.g., so, to, go, do, are to be found in almost every cross word puzzle, and the solver gets heartily tired of them. So the better patterns avoid these two word spaces. The three letters words contain some old favorites, too. Eel, emu and gnu are among the most popular. It seems that almost nine-tenths of the puzzles we look at have a “snake-like fish” wriggling in them somewhere. And who hasn’t found err, sin, and erg; cam, moa, tar; pal, ode, née, ace, e’er, o’er, sac; lee and lea; ape and pea; ego, ago and age; era and eon; Eli and spa; and all the notes of the scale from do to do. Truly, all these words are to the puzzler as buttons are to a shirt.
Among the longer words, the rule seems to hold that words [[17]]with alternating consonants and vowels can be used more frequently than others. It is evident that a word containing three consecutive consonants, for instance, may have to take, in the word just below it, three consecutive vowels—and who hasn’t heard the cross-word constructor asking plaintively for a seven-letter word beginning with e-a-o and ending with u? Among the much-used words, you’ll surely find opera, onus, tenor, estop, used, ameer, renal, depot, emit, cabal, item, sere, lunar, nacre, neve, apse and the rest.
F. Gregory Hartswick [[18]]
THE SCIENCE AND LORE OF CROSS WORD PUZZLES
Everyone knows the classic Riddle of the Sphinx: what is it that walks on four legs in the morning, on two at noon and on three in the evening? the answer being man, who goes on hands and knees in infancy, with bipedal locomotion in after years, and in old age with a cane.
The posing of such riddles was an important affair with ancient peoples. It was a tradition of the archaic Scandinavians, among whom it shows clear literary relations. Thus, the riddle—what is the name of the horse that flies with upright wings across the sea, the answer being ship—becomes the metaphor, of a type common in the Sagas—the upright-winged horse of the sea.
Old forms of writing take on puzzle forms. In the Maya hieroglyphics of Central America is found an element similar to the mechanism of the rebus. It is as though the symbol meaning “hair” in juxtaposition with the one meaning “ring,” might mean “hair and ring” or it might mean herring. This makes the decipherment of the Maya writing so very difficult for modern scholars. The old fashioned charade has rebus-like elements. Cryptography, of course, must have begun in the earliest times when a literate man had a secret message to convey. The most recondite systems of hidden writing have been devised both for practical use and literary fantasy, remembering only Poe’s ingenious speculations. Much of [[19]]the “Baconian Theory” has revolved around supposed cryptography in Shakespeare.
Ancient and medieval folk were much given to anagrams; that is, to phrases of related meanings and made up of the same letters—as the masterpiece, “They see,” answer “The eyes,” or “Honor est a Nilo,” answer “Horatio Nelson.” Into theological controversy came such damnations as this: The Calvinistic opponents of Jacobus Arminius rearranged the letters of his name to spell, “vani orbis amicus,”—“friend of the false world.”
A recent “Baconian” argument based itself on an anagrammatical treatment of the long dedication of the sonnets. The author rearranged the letters of the dedication to form a statement that it was Lord Bacon who had written the verse. An experienced puzzler might object that he could rearrange the numerous letters to spell out a statement of almost anything, that he would rearrange the letters that make up Aristotle’s Poetics into a treatise proving that when the Democrats are in office hard times come. Similar to the anagram in principle is the transposition, in which you fill blanks in a text with words that are made up of the same letters; for instance, angered, enraged, derange.
Of ancient glory, too, is the palindrome, which is properly not a puzzle at all, but an ingenuity. A palindrome reads the same backward and forward, as in the familiar “Madam, I’m Adam,” and “Able was I ere I saw Elba.” Perhaps the most charming of antique palindromes is the Roman legal maxim, “Si nummi immunis,”—“if you pay you go free.”
But perhaps the most fascinating of all word puzzles are [[20]]the types in which words are to be guessed from definitions. There is the well-known acrostic, where with definitions as clues you arrive at a set of words of which the initial letters, or finals or second letters or third, as may have been determined, will spell another or other words. During the struggle for Italian freedom an acrostic was seen in the shibboleth, Vittorio Emmanuele Re D’Italia, giving the name of the composer, Verdi. Most august of all is the fish symbol for Christ, which was held in much mystic veneration in the early Christian centuries. The Greek word for fish, Ichthys (Ιχθυς) was seen to be composed of the first letters of the sacred phrase, Iesous Christos Theou Huios Soter (Ἰησοῦς Χριστὸς Θεοῦ Υἱὸς Σῷτήρ), meaning “Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior.”
It is the feature of determining words from definitions that has made “word forms” the most popular genus of puzzle. A word form is a set of words arranged one under the other so that their letters may be read across and down to give sensible readings, sometimes the same readings across and down and sometimes different readings. They may be of many geometric configurations, as square, pyramid, octagon, etc. Their origin is lost in the mists of time.
Word forms, especially squares, have a considerable following of very skillful adepts, most of them members of the National Puzzlers’ League, who construct and solve them with the same sort of devotion that a chess player demonstrates toward chess. Among such the forms take the most learned guise and consist of the most unusual sort of words. With the adepts any word that has ever been printed in an English book is allowable, and thus there is a great selection [[21]]of exotic words in various spellings from old gazetteers, books of travel, etc. The adept delights in words that no one has ever heard of before. Here are several examples of recondite ingenuities.
By Mentor, in The Enigma
| M | A | L | E | G | A | G | E | S |
| A | D | E | N | O | C | E | L | E |
| L | E | U | C | A | E | M | I | C |
| E | N | C | O | R | T | I | N | E |
| G | O | A | R | L | I | N | G | S |
| A | C | E | T | I | F | I | E | S |
| G | E | M | I | N | I | A | N | I |
| E | L | I | N | G | E | N | I | O |
| S | E | C | E | S | S | I | O | N |
By Gemini, in The Enigma
| V | ||||||||||
| R | E | S | ||||||||
| I | O | N | S | |||||||
| I | N | S | E | R | T | S | ||||
| R | O | S | E | T | R | E | E | S | ||
| V | E | N | E | T | I | A | N | R | E | D |
| S | E | R | R | A | T | I | O | N | ||
| S | T | E | N | I | O | N | ||||
| S | E | R | O | N | ||||||
| S | E | N | ||||||||
| D |
By Neophyte, in the Sunday Magazine, New York World
| Z | I | K | R | H | O | O | D | ||
| I | X | I | A | O | L | L | A | ||
| K | I | W | I | O | L | I | D | ||
| R | A | I | D | Y | A | D | A | D | O |
| Y | U | G | A | ||||||
| A | G | N | I | ||||||
| L | E | W | D | A | I | S | U | S | U |
| E | R | I | A | U | N | I | T | ||
| W | I | L | L | S | I | V | A | ||
| D | A | L | I | U | T | A | S |
[[22]]
By Alec Sander, in The Enigma
| T | ||||||||||||||||
| C | A | L | ||||||||||||||
| K | A | R | A | T | ||||||||||||
| R | A | S | E | T | E | S | ||||||||||
| B | A | L | A | N | I | S | M | S | ||||||||
| C | O | M | M | U | T | A | T | I | N | G | ||||||
| C | O | N | T | A | B | U | L | A | T | I | O | N | ||||
| G | A | S | T | E | R | O | L | I | C | H | E | N | E | S | ||
| P | E | N | T | A | G | O | N | A | S | T | E | R | I | D | A | E |
The great public following goes to the Cross Word Puzzle, which is an expanded word form in which, commonly, only dictionary words are allowed. It is this simplicity of words, together with its larger and more elaborate construction, that makes it irresistible to the casual puzzler. A cross word square, or other geometric figure, is a logical modern development of the ancient word square. The insertion of black spaces permits it to be made of any size and gives an interesting variety of inner construction.
The cross word puzzle began its career only a few decades back. It was run for many years in the Sunday Magazine of the New York World and has held a considerable and steady group of followers. Recently it has come into a sudden great vogue and is being printed by many newspapers and magazines throughout the country. Cross word puzzles are now published for the first time in book form.
Prosper Buranelli [[23]]
DO’S AND DON’T’S FOR SOLVERS
Don’t get scared if you can’t guess the first horizontal word. Go through the list till you find a definition that you’re sure of. That is the simplest method of beginning the solution. When you have written in all the words you are sure of you will have plenty of clues for the unknowns.
Don’t spend too much time with the long words unless you are sure of them. They will appear when the short ones have been solved. Of course, not all the short ones are easy, but they are generally more readily attended to than the long ones. Also, there are more of them, increasing the chances of finding familiar faces among the definitions.
If you think a word is right, pencil it in lightly till you are sure. This saves erosion of paper and temper. But never hesitate to try a word that may be right. The trial and error method holds in puzzling as it does in life.
Remember that the horizontals furnish a sure check on the verticals, and vice versa.
If you are hopelessly stuck, try another puzzle. Inspiration sometimes waits for a return engagement.
A pleasant feeling of something attempted, something done accompanies the solution of a cross word puzzle. It’s good for the inferiority complex. [[25]]
Puzzle No. 1
A SOFT BEGINNING
By Gregorian
The two long central words, if solved at once, will give sufficient clues to permit of rapid solution. But should these prove elusive, surely such definitions as 9 horizontal and 29 vertical offer no difficulties. Three-letter words meaning respectively “aged” and “sorrowful” should hold few terrors for the beginner.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |||
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |||||||
| 13 | 14 | 15 | ||||||||
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | ||||||
| 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | |||||||
| 25 | ||||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | ||||||||
| 29 | 30 | |||||||||
| 31 | 32 | 33 | ||||||||
| 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | ||||||
| 39 | 40 | 41 |
[[24]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Pronoun 3 Albumin from castor-oil bean 7 Exist 9 Aged 11 Negative 12 Incite, hasten 13 Remote 15 Obstruction 17 Bivalves 21 Father 23 Tree 24 River in Italy 25 Owners | 26 Printer’s measure 27 Tree 28 Personal pronoun 29 Legislative bodies 31 Compact mass 32 Moved rapidly 34 Walk about 35 Toss 37 Small child 39 Upon 40 Small openings 41 Act |
- 1 Pronoun
- 3 Albumin from castor-oil bean
- 7 Exist
- 9 Aged
- 11 Negative
- 12 Incite, hasten
- 13 Remote
- 15 Obstruction
- 17 Bivalves
- 21 Father
- 23 Tree
- 24 River in Italy
- 25 Owners
- 26 Printer’s measure
- 27 Tree
- 28 Personal pronoun
- 29 Legislative bodies
- 31 Compact mass
- 32 Moved rapidly
- 34 Walk about
- 35 Toss
- 37 Small child
- 39 Upon
- 40 Small openings
- 41 Act
VERTICAL
| 1 Exclamation 2 Fairy 4 Preposition 5 Plotter 6 Pronoun 7 Express generally 8 Pronoun 10 Obstruct 12 Owns 14 Disarranged 15 Voluble talkativeness 16 Above 18 The bow of Vishnu | 19 Choose 20 Assumed an attitude 22 Limb 24 Peer 29 Sorrowful 30 Rested 31 Pale 33 Incline the head 34 Move 35 Behold 36 Exist 38 Preposition |
- 1 Exclamation
- 2 Fairy
- 4 Preposition
- 5 Plotter
- 6 Pronoun
- 7 Express generally
- 8 Pronoun
- 10 Obstruct
- 12 Owns
- 14 Disarranged
- 15 Voluble talkativeness
- 16 Above
- 18 The bow of Vishnu
- 19 Choose
- 20 Assumed an attitude
- 22 Limb
- 24 Peer
- 29 Sorrowful
- 30 Rested
- 31 Pale
- 33 Incline the head
- 34 Move
- 35 Behold
- 36 Exist
- 38 Preposition
[[27]]
Puzzle No. 2
TRY AND DO IT
By W. W. Foster
This enigma comes from New London, where they specialize in regattas, which is the one unusual word omitted from Mr. Foster’s contraption.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |||
| 11 | 12 | |||||||||||
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | ||||||||
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | |||||||||
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | |||||||||
| 30 | 31 | |||||||||||
| 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | |||||||
| 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | |||||||||
| 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | |||||||||
| 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | |||||||||
| 50 | 51 | 52 | ||||||||||
| 53 | 54 |
[[26]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Choose 6 Pores 11 Herb used in soup 12 Rent 13 Egyptian god 15 Serious 17 Either, else 18 Colloquial Irish exclamation 20 Coffins 21 Fifty-six 22 Pertaining to the mouth 24 Bog 25 Viewed 26 Oriental dish of meat and rice 28 Egyptian goddess 30 Unclose | 31 As you say 32 Machine 35 They go off or out 38 Digits 39 Supply with strength 41 Arguments in favor of 42 Barbarian 43 Nunnery 45 Sooner than 46 Within 47 Wise sayings 49 By 50 The dye indigo 51 Quietude 53 Scoundrel, pest 54 Seek laboriously or blindly |
- 1 Choose
- 6 Pores
- 11 Herb used in soup
- 12 Rent
- 13 Egyptian god
- 15 Serious
- 17 Either, else
- 18 Colloquial Irish exclamation
- 20 Coffins
- 21 Fifty-six
- 22 Pertaining to the mouth
- 24 Bog
- 25 Viewed
- 26 Oriental dish of meat and rice
- 28 Egyptian goddess
- 30 Unclose
- 31 As you say
- 32 Machine
- 35 They go off or out
- 38 Digits
- 39 Supply with strength
- 41 Arguments in favor of
- 42 Barbarian
- 43 Nunnery
- 45 Sooner than
- 46 Within
- 47 Wise sayings
- 49 By
- 50 The dye indigo
- 51 Quietude
- 53 Scoundrel, pest
- 54 Seek laboriously or blindly
VERTICAL
| 1 Harsh sound 2 Behold 3 Likewise, also 4 Sour 5 Duty 6 After ends 7 Agitate 8 A worthless leaving 9 Personal pronoun 10 Reed-pipe 14 Town in Italy 16 Born 17 Used for baking 19 Chemical group 21 Spare time 23 Stone | 25 Domestic animal 27 Bog 29 Sacred vessel 32 Moral science 33 Part of speech 34 Preserve 35 Administered extreme unction to 36 Character in Ibsen play 37 Bloodsucking fly 40 Primer 43 Covering of a seed 44 Period of time 47 Unit 48 Point of compass 50 Exclamation 52 Editor (abbr.) |
- 1 Harsh sound
- 2 Behold
- 3 Likewise, also
- 4 Sour
- 5 Duty
- 6 After ends
- 7 Agitate
- 8 A worthless leaving
- 9 Personal pronoun
- 10 Reed-pipe
- 14 Town in Italy
- 16 Born
- 17 Used for baking
- 19 Chemical group
- 21 Spare time
- 23 Stone
- 25 Domestic animal
- 27 Bog
- 29 Sacred vessel
- 32 Moral science
- 33 Part of speech
- 34 Preserve
- 35 Administered extreme unction to
- 36 Character in Ibsen play
- 37 Bloodsucking fly
- 40 Primer
- 43 Covering of a seed
- 44 Period of time
- 47 Unit
- 48 Point of compass
- 50 Exclamation
- 52 Editor (abbr.)
[[29]]
Puzzle No. 3
A SIMPLICITY
By Isidore Edelstein
Some abbreviations may be treated as words, such as “i.e.,” “A.D.,” points of the compass and so on. It is not the purest usage, but may be passed to get over a difficult spot. This construction has an abbreviation or two beyond these, but it is a simple, easy design for a not too energetic moment.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |||
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | |||||||||||
| 17 | 18 | |||||||||||||
| 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | |||||||||||
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | |||||||||
| 29 | 30 | |||||||||||||
| 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | ||||||||
| 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | |||||||||||
| 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | |||||||||
| 48 | 49 | |||||||||||||
| 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | ||||||||
| 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 | |||||||||||
| 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | |||||||||||
| 65 | 66 | 67 | 68 | |||||||||||
| 69 | 70 | 71 |
[[28]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Banquet 5 Lout 8 Willow for making baskets 13 Formerly 14 Domesticated 16 Genus of African plant 17 Lockjaw 18 Flowing 19 For example 20 Ethiopian 22 French for “of the” 23 Funeral hymn 26 Chinese sauce 27 Asiatic animal 29 Large Australian bird 30 Sick 31 Musical drama 33 An enclosure 35 Questioner 38 Bird 39 And not | 40 A vase 41 Congealed water 42 An injection 44 There 46 Class 48 And so forth 49 Fen 50 Level 52 Short for a physician 54 Thick cords 57 Baby’s first word 58 Order 60 Initials of the Rough Rider 61 Obscurity 63 Leaves 65 Impel 66 Consumed 68 Stupefy with a blow 69 Prophets 70 Back (French) 71 To correct |
- 1 Banquet
- 5 Lout
- 8 Willow for making baskets
- 13 Formerly
- 14 Domesticated
- 16 Genus of African plant
- 17 Lockjaw
- 18 Flowing
- 19 For example
- 20 Ethiopian
- 22 French for “of the”
- 23 Funeral hymn
- 26 Chinese sauce
- 27 Asiatic animal
- 29 Large Australian bird
- 30 Sick
- 31 Musical drama
- 33 An enclosure
- 35 Questioner
- 38 Bird
- 39 And not
- 40 A vase
- 41 Congealed water
- 42 An injection
- 44 There
- 46 Class
- 48 And so forth
- 49 Fen
- 50 Level
- 52 Short for a physician
- 54 Thick cords
- 57 Baby’s first word
- 58 Order
- 60 Initials of the Rough Rider
- 61 Obscurity
- 63 Leaves
- 65 Impel
- 66 Consumed
- 68 Stupefy with a blow
- 69 Prophets
- 70 Back (French)
- 71 To correct
VERTICAL
| 1 Noisome 2 Before 3 A flower 4 Reel 5 Fertile spot in desert 6 Part of “to be” 7 Broad boat 9 Foot coverings 10 Troy 11 An eternity 12 Royal 14 Fermenting vat 15 Two 21 Blood 24 To enroll as for jury duty 25 To flow forth 27 Clamor 28 Accomplish 31 Lyric poem | 32 Female sheep 33 To scrutinize 34 Woman living in a convent 36 Relation 37 Things 43 Threatener 45 Aroma 47 Self conceit 50 Religious 51 Proverb 52 Nymph 53 Eating places 55 To gibber 56 To squander 58 Devoured 59 In the distance 62 Before, prefix 64 Weapon 67 Towards |
- 1 Noisome
- 2 Before
- 3 A flower
- 4 Reel
- 5 Fertile spot in desert
- 6 Part of “to be”
- 7 Broad boat
- 9 Foot coverings
- 10 Troy
- 11 An eternity
- 12 Royal
- 14 Fermenting vat
- 15 Two
- 21 Blood
- 24 To enroll as for jury duty
- 25 To flow forth
- 27 Clamor
- 28 Accomplish
- 31 Lyric poem
- 32 Female sheep
- 33 To scrutinize
- 34 Woman living in a convent
- 36 Relation
- 37 Things
- 43 Threatener
- 45 Aroma
- 47 Self conceit
- 50 Religious
- 51 Proverb
- 52 Nymph
- 53 Eating places
- 55 To gibber
- 56 To squander
- 58 Devoured
- 59 In the distance
- 62 Before, prefix
- 64 Weapon
- 67 Towards
[[31]]
Puzzle No. 4
TETRACRUCIFORM
By Charles W. Snizek
A mystical design combined with everyday words shorter than the name it it bears.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |||||
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |||||||||||
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | |||||||||
| 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | ||||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | ||||||||||
| 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | ||||||||||
| 36 | 37 | 38 | ||||||||||||
| 39 | ||||||||||||||
| 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | ||||||
| 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | |||||||||
| 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | ||||||||||
| 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | ||||||||||
| 65 | 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | ||||||||||
| 70 | 71 | 72 | ||||||||||||
| 73 | 74 |
[[30]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Unsteady 6 Appoint 12 Remotely 13 Besides 15 Upon 17 Worry 19 Bang 20 Fourth tone of musical scale 21 A bark or yelp 23 Pooh! 24 Climbing plant 25 Purpose 26 Poisonous sap of Malaysian trees 28 Toward 29 Perform 30 Hireling or serf 31 A drink made of wine, water, and lemon-juice, sweetened 33 Employ 35 Made of oak 36 Black 38 Practical application of knowledge (plural) 39 Without life | 41 Temporary quarters 44 Gain 49 Foolish 51 Priest’s vestment 53 Heaths (Scot.) 55 Faithful 56 Either 57 Advertisement (abbreviation) 59 Province of Greece 60 A small deer 61 Energy 62 Bony rod attached to the spine 64 A bird 65 One, or any 66 Ornamental plant 67 Used to allure a fish 69 Unit of printer’s measure 70 Poison 71 To invade suddenly 73 Desist 74 Medicinal herb |
- 1 Unsteady
- 6 Appoint
- 12 Remotely
- 13 Besides
- 15 Upon
- 17 Worry
- 19 Bang
- 20 Fourth tone of musical scale
- 21 A bark or yelp
- 23 Pooh!
- 24 Climbing plant
- 25 Purpose
- 26 Poisonous sap of Malaysian trees
- 28 Toward
- 29 Perform
- 30 Hireling or serf
- 31 A drink made of wine, water, and lemon-juice, sweetened
- 33 Employ
- 35 Made of oak
- 36 Black
- 38 Practical application of knowledge (plural)
- 39 Without life
- 41 Temporary quarters
- 44 Gain
- 49 Foolish
- 51 Priest’s vestment
- 53 Heaths (Scot.)
- 55 Faithful
- 56 Either
- 57 Advertisement (abbreviation)
- 59 Province of Greece
- 60 A small deer
- 61 Energy
- 62 Bony rod attached to the spine
- 64 A bird
- 65 One, or any
- 66 Ornamental plant
- 67 Used to allure a fish
- 69 Unit of printer’s measure
- 70 Poison
- 71 To invade suddenly
- 73 Desist
- 74 Medicinal herb
VERTICAL
| 2 God of midday sun 3 Aside from a main track 4 Complete dress 5 Vast 7 Proviso 8 Put to death 9 Doctrine or system 10 Depart 11 A large serpent of America 14 Mourn 16 Back of the neck 18 Familiar pronoun 19 Lateral 20 Elegant 22 Male servant 25 Inquires 27 Total 30 Consume 32 Therefore 34 Shallow 35 Else 37 Surface of fibres | 38 Consumed 40 Pertaining to stars 41 Guide 42 Beverage 43 Possessive pronoun 45 Part of “be” 46 Grieve 47 African river 48 Take 50 Common metal 51 Host 52 Sharp point 54 Element of poetry 56 Anointed 58 Record of daily events 61 Slender plant 63 Prejudice 66 Resinous substance 68 It is 70 Happen 72 Execute |
- 2 God of midday sun
- 3 Aside from a main track
- 4 Complete dress
- 5 Vast
- 7 Proviso
- 8 Put to death
- 9 Doctrine or system
- 10 Depart
- 11 A large serpent of America
- 14 Mourn
- 16 Back of the neck
- 18 Familiar pronoun
- 19 Lateral
- 20 Elegant
- 22 Male servant
- 25 Inquires
- 27 Total
- 30 Consume
- 32 Therefore
- 34 Shallow
- 35 Else
- 37 Surface of fibres
- 38 Consumed
- 40 Pertaining to stars
- 41 Guide
- 42 Beverage
- 43 Possessive pronoun
- 45 Part of “be”
- 46 Grieve
- 47 African river
- 48 Take
- 50 Common metal
- 51 Host
- 52 Sharp point
- 54 Element of poetry
- 56 Anointed
- 58 Record of daily events
- 61 Slender plant
- 63 Prejudice
- 66 Resinous substance
- 68 It is
- 70 Happen
- 72 Execute
[[33]]
Puzzle No. 5
WELL BALANCED
By Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Waller
This is a nice study in words of medium length, as was dictated by the two-ply “X” construction. The solver will observe that the central interlock is of the good, familiar “L” joint sort.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | ||||||||
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | ||||||||||
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | |||||||||
| 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | ||||||||||
| 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | |||||||||||
| 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | |||||||||||
| 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | |||||||||||
| 36 | 37 | |||||||||||||
| 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | |||||||||||
| 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | ||||||||||
| 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | ||||||||||
| 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | |||||||||||
| 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 | ||||||||||
| 61 | 62 | 63 | ||||||||||||
| 64 | 65 |
[[32]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Tumult 5 Part of harness 9 Thin metal strip 11 Seldom 13 Preposition 15 Small drink 17 Expression 18 Behold 19 Salt (chem.) 21 Proposition to be proved 23 Fabulous bird 24 Sustain 26 Not of the city 27 Spanish dry wine 28 Burlesque 30 Work with thin steel instrument 31 Engrave 32 Old-womanish 34 Miner’s hand-cart 36 Birth | 37 Gone 38 Song 40 Organ pipes 42 Small hollows 43 Organ of sight 45 The other 47 Recent 48 Drudge 50 Pertaining to the Celts 52 Time 53 Pertaining to earth disturbances 55 Parent 56 Pronoun 57 A luminary 58 Dull 60 Concerning 61 Ire 62 Issue 64 Large book 65 Indivisible particle of matter |
- 1 Tumult
- 5 Part of harness
- 9 Thin metal strip
- 11 Seldom
- 13 Preposition
- 15 Small drink
- 17 Expression
- 18 Behold
- 19 Salt (chem.)
- 21 Proposition to be proved
- 23 Fabulous bird
- 24 Sustain
- 26 Not of the city
- 27 Spanish dry wine
- 28 Burlesque
- 30 Work with thin steel instrument
- 31 Engrave
- 32 Old-womanish
- 34 Miner’s hand-cart
- 36 Birth
- 37 Gone
- 38 Song
- 40 Organ pipes
- 42 Small hollows
- 43 Organ of sight
- 45 The other
- 47 Recent
- 48 Drudge
- 50 Pertaining to the Celts
- 52 Time
- 53 Pertaining to earth disturbances
- 55 Parent
- 56 Pronoun
- 57 A luminary
- 58 Dull
- 60 Concerning
- 61 Ire
- 62 Issue
- 64 Large book
- 65 Indivisible particle of matter
VERTICAL
| 2 Part of “to be” 3 Long practiced 4 Keen 5 Injury 6 Bodily member 7 Pronoun 8 File 10 Wild goat 11 Dance 12 Counterfeit 14 Sailors 16 World war battle 17 Net 18 Body of water (Scotch) 20 Division of Hindu philosophy 22 Metal as mined 23 Piquant 25 Feather-shaped 27 First of two stanzas 29 Rows | 31 Fungus 33 Constellation 35 Cereal 38 Quote 39 American Pioneer 40 Scars 41 Carnelian 42 Sheet, usually paper 44 Opposed to No 46 Sovereign 47 Oil-burning vessel 48 Slave 49 Door of Masonic Lodge 51 Paradise 53 Sound 54 Insensibility 57 Silent 59 Humor 61 Stop 63 Preposition |
- 2 Part of “to be”
- 3 Long practiced
- 4 Keen
- 5 Injury
- 6 Bodily member
- 7 Pronoun
- 8 File
- 10 Wild goat
- 11 Dance
- 12 Counterfeit
- 14 Sailors
- 16 World war battle
- 17 Net
- 18 Body of water (Scotch)
- 20 Division of Hindu philosophy
- 22 Metal as mined
- 23 Piquant
- 25 Feather-shaped
- 27 First of two stanzas
- 29 Rows
- 31 Fungus
- 33 Constellation
- 35 Cereal
- 38 Quote
- 39 American Pioneer
- 40 Scars
- 41 Carnelian
- 42 Sheet, usually paper
- 44 Opposed to No
- 46 Sovereign
- 47 Oil-burning vessel
- 48 Slave
- 49 Door of Masonic Lodge
- 51 Paradise
- 53 Sound
- 54 Insensibility
- 57 Silent
- 59 Humor
- 61 Stop
- 63 Preposition
[[35]]
Puzzle No. 6
BABY GRAND MODEL
By Helen V. Christ
Only two long words. This should be pie for the hard-boiled solvers and a pleasant exercise for the beginner.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | ||||
| 8 | 9 | 10 | ||||||||
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |||||||
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | |||||||
| 19 | 20 | 21 | ||||||||
| 22 | ||||||||||
| 23 | 24 | |||||||||
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | ||||||
| 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | |||||||
| 34 | 35 | |||||||||
| 36 | 37 |
[[34]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 To praise 5 A storm 8 Part of mouth (Pl.) 11 A conjunction 13 Coarse material 14 Regarding 15 Pin 17 The exertion of power 18 To spread loosely for drying, as newly mown grass 19 To gain 21 The young of various carnivora 22 Put through evolutions; intrigued | 23 A ram or male sheep 24 Girl’s name 25 Possessive pronoun 26 A spasm 28 A pen for swine 30 The sixth tone of the diatonic scale 31 Cardium 33 To such a degree 34 Rabbits 36 Fatty tissues 37 Bird |
- 1 To praise
- 5 A storm
- 8 Part of mouth (Pl.)
- 11 A conjunction
- 13 Coarse material
- 14 Regarding
- 15 Pin
- 17 The exertion of power
- 18 To spread loosely for drying, as newly mown grass
- 19 To gain
- 21 The young of various carnivora
- 22 Put through evolutions; intrigued
- 23 A ram or male sheep
- 24 Girl’s name
- 25 Possessive pronoun
- 26 A spasm
- 28 A pen for swine
- 30 The sixth tone of the diatonic scale
- 31 Cardium
- 33 To such a degree
- 34 Rabbits
- 36 Fatty tissues
- 37 Bird
VERTICAL
| 1 Closed curve 2 Above 3 Papa 4 Inhabitants of a north-east division of China 5 Precious stone 6 So 7 Increased till barely sufficient 9 A grassy field 10 One of various small birds 12 A boat race, or a series of such races 14 Experiences sorrow for sin 16 A group or class embracing subordinate classes or species | 18 Becomes sour, or spoiled, as milk; takes a new direction 20 That which is first or highest in rank or degree 21 Vegetable 25 Ailments; worries 26 Swamp 27 Prefix; three; three times; thrice 29 To bring into bondage; enslave 31 Mean dwelling 32 To spread loosely for drying 34 To have existence 35 Provided that; on condition that |
- 1 Closed curve
- 2 Above
- 3 Papa
- 4 Inhabitants of a north-east division of China
- 5 Precious stone
- 6 So
- 7 Increased till barely sufficient
- 9 A grassy field
- 10 One of various small birds
- 12 A boat race, or a series of such races
- 14 Experiences sorrow for sin
- 16 A group or class embracing subordinate classes or species
- 18 Becomes sour, or spoiled, as milk; takes a new direction
- 20 That which is first or highest in rank or degree
- 21 Vegetable
- 25 Ailments; worries
- 26 Swamp
- 27 Prefix; three; three times; thrice
- 29 To bring into bondage; enslave
- 31 Mean dwelling
- 32 To spread loosely for drying
- 34 To have existence
- 35 Provided that; on condition that
[[37]]
Puzzle No. 7
A FOUR PETALED ROSE
By M. Francis Cavallon, Jr.
Mostly short words, and not difficult. Good corner masses. Mr. Cavallon is probably our youngest contributor, boasting as he does only fourteen summers.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ||||||
| 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | |||||||||||
| 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | |||||||||
| 20 | 21 | 22 | ||||||||||||
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | |||||||||||
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | ||||||||
| 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | |||||||||
| 40 | 41 | |||||||||||||
| 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | |||||||||
| 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | |||||||||
| 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | |||||||||
| 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | |||||||||||
| 64 | 65 | 66 | 67 | |||||||||||
| 68 | 69 | 70 | ||||||||||||
| 71 | 72 | 73 |
[[36]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Turkish coin 4 Country in Asia 7 Number 10 Black 12 Possessive pronoun 14 Cereal plant 16 Equality 18 Tears 20 Resinous substances 21 Wearied 22 Bird 23 South American bird 25 Optic 26 Italian province, famous for wine 27 Trouble 28 Thus 30 Front of an army 32 Sensory organ 34 Pronoun 36 Rhythm 39 Behold 40 Greek letter | 41 Coarse file 42 Not at all 44 Small tropical tree 47 Note of musical scale 48 Quadruped 50 Enclosure 51 Biblical character 53 Number 54 Diseases 56 To immerse 58 Blow 60 Pipe 61 Be deserving of 62 Thing 64 Poker term 66 To clear 67 Extreme 68 God of love 70 Precious stone 71 Her own 72 Different 73 Unit of living organism |
- 1 Turkish coin
- 4 Country in Asia
- 7 Number
- 10 Black
- 12 Possessive pronoun
- 14 Cereal plant
- 16 Equality
- 18 Tears
- 20 Resinous substances
- 21 Wearied
- 22 Bird
- 23 South American bird
- 25 Optic
- 26 Italian province, famous for wine
- 27 Trouble
- 28 Thus
- 30 Front of an army
- 32 Sensory organ
- 34 Pronoun
- 36 Rhythm
- 39 Behold
- 40 Greek letter
- 41 Coarse file
- 42 Not at all
- 44 Small tropical tree
- 47 Note of musical scale
- 48 Quadruped
- 50 Enclosure
- 51 Biblical character
- 53 Number
- 54 Diseases
- 56 To immerse
- 58 Blow
- 60 Pipe
- 61 Be deserving of
- 62 Thing
- 64 Poker term
- 66 To clear
- 67 Extreme
- 68 God of love
- 70 Precious stone
- 71 Her own
- 72 Different
- 73 Unit of living organism
VERTICAL
| 1 Bar which falls into the teeth of a ratchet-wheel 2 To reverberate 3 To humble 4 Preposition 5 Record 6 Yes 7 Combustibles 8 Richly embellished 9 Chance 11 Old Testament 13 Conjunction 15 Bold 16 Fragment 17 Female of the ruff 19 Test 24 Because 26 Article 27 Mingled with 29 Picture drawn by fancy 31 Hangings in woven figures 33 An ancient imperial people | 35 Marsh 37 Beverage 38 Large tree of the olive family 43 Much used as an article of food 45 Prefix denoting insufficiency 46 Dead, spiritless 47 Possessing a cutaneous disease 49 Article of apparel 50 Postscript 52 Adverb 53 Reveal a secret 55 Looks meaningly 57 Native of European country 59 Delightfully scented shrub 60 Owneth 63 Calcareous earth used as fertilizer 65 Thus 67 Erect 69 Such being the case 70 An alternative |
- 1 Bar which falls into the teeth of a ratchet-wheel
- 2 To reverberate
- 3 To humble
- 4 Preposition
- 5 Record
- 6 Yes
- 7 Combustibles
- 8 Richly embellished
- 9 Chance
- 11 Old Testament
- 13 Conjunction
- 15 Bold
- 16 Fragment
- 17 Female of the ruff
- 19 Test
- 24 Because
- 26 Article
- 27 Mingled with
- 29 Picture drawn by fancy
- 31 Hangings in woven figures
- 33 An ancient imperial people
- 35 Marsh
- 37 Beverage
- 38 Large tree of the olive family
- 43 Much used as an article of food
- 45 Prefix denoting insufficiency
- 46 Dead, spiritless
- 47 Possessing a cutaneous disease
- 49 Article of apparel
- 50 Postscript
- 52 Adverb
- 53 Reveal a secret
- 55 Looks meaningly
- 57 Native of European country
- 59 Delightfully scented shrub
- 60 Owneth
- 63 Calcareous earth used as fertilizer
- 65 Thus
- 67 Erect
- 69 Such being the case
- 70 An alternative
[[39]]
Puzzle No. 8
A SPOTTED BORDER
By E. Pinkerton
This puzzle possesses the merit of an interesting double central interlock. Good interlock, be it observed, is the soul of cross word puzzling.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | ||||||||
| 12 | 13 | 14 | ||||||||||||||||
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | |||||||||||||
| 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | ||||||||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | ||||||||||||||
| 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | |||||||||||
| 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | |||||||||||||||
| 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | |||||||||||||||
| 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | |||||||||||
| 55 | 56 | 57 | ||||||||||||||||
| 58 | 59 | 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | |||||||||||
| 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | |||||||||||||||
| 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | |||||||||||||||
| 74 | 75 | 76 | 77 | |||||||||||||||
| 78 | 79 | 80 | 81 | 82 | 83 | 84 | ||||||||||||
| 85 | 86 | 87 | 88 | 89 | 90 | 91 | 92 | |||||||||||
| 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | |||||||||||||||
| 97 | 98 | 99 | ||||||||||||||||
| 100 | 101 | 102 | 103 |
[[38]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Church dignitary 4 Trouble 7 Part of church 9 Irritate 12 Primary color 13 Sister 14 Energy 15 Falsehoods 17 Growth on the head 18 Clotted blood 19 Move by bounds 21 Excite 23 Make ill 25 Dry stretches of land 26 A collection 28 Seizes with the teeth 30 Beam of light 33 Written slander 35 A base (math.) 39 Noting grief 40 Law profession 41 Witty saying 42 Natty 43 Small depressions 45 Lavished fondness 47 Church holiday 50 Animal’s dens 52 Obsolete reed instruments 55 Upon 56 Ripple against | 57 Else 58 Unorthodoxy 61 Regions 63 Changes 66 Intent 68 Domestic animal 70 Strip of wood 71 A rodent 72 Inflamed 73 Part of a clarinet 74 Lazy person 76 Is dull 79 Call for assistance 80 Variety of flower (Pl.) 82 Set free 85 That girl from Troy 88 Abraham’s nephew 90 Pertaining to N. Pole 93 A precious stone 94 Breathing organ of fish 95 Sour 96 Recently deceased 97 Same 98 Unit of measure 99 Fabulous bird 100 Part of the head (Pl.) 101 Variety of fruit 102 Weaver’s reed 103 Periodical payment |
- 1 Church dignitary
- 4 Trouble
- 7 Part of church
- 9 Irritate
- 12 Primary color
- 13 Sister
- 14 Energy
- 15 Falsehoods
- 17 Growth on the head
- 18 Clotted blood
- 19 Move by bounds
- 21 Excite
- 23 Make ill
- 25 Dry stretches of land
- 26 A collection
- 28 Seizes with the teeth
- 30 Beam of light
- 33 Written slander
- 35 A base (math.)
- 39 Noting grief
- 40 Law profession
- 41 Witty saying
- 42 Natty
- 43 Small depressions
- 45 Lavished fondness
- 47 Church holiday
- 50 Animal’s dens
- 52 Obsolete reed instruments
- 55 Upon
- 56 Ripple against
- 57 Else
- 58 Unorthodoxy
- 61 Regions
- 63 Changes
- 66 Intent
- 68 Domestic animal
- 70 Strip of wood
- 71 A rodent
- 72 Inflamed
- 73 Part of a clarinet
- 74 Lazy person
- 76 Is dull
- 79 Call for assistance
- 80 Variety of flower (Pl.)
- 82 Set free
- 85 That girl from Troy
- 88 Abraham’s nephew
- 90 Pertaining to N. Pole
- 93 A precious stone
- 94 Breathing organ of fish
- 95 Sour
- 96 Recently deceased
- 97 Same
- 98 Unit of measure
- 99 Fabulous bird
- 100 Part of the head (Pl.)
- 101 Variety of fruit
- 102 Weaver’s reed
- 103 Periodical payment
VERTICAL
| 1 Give out 2 Open space 3 Cozy residence (Pl.) 5 Desert-dweller 6 To enclose 7 Fisherman 8 Variety of carnelian 9 Fresh set of horses 10 Generous 11 Borders of the mouth 16 Not well 20 Trouble 22 An elongated fish 24 Pronoun 25 Slate-cutters’ hammer 27 Italian river 28 A bunk 29 Island in Aegean Sea 30 Religious acts 31 Yawn 32 A planet 34 To bar 36 Small point 37 Oriental vessel 38 Frozen confections 43 Stupid 44 Pertaining to the sun 45 Profoundness 46 Wild dog 48 A mimic | 49 Part of the foot 51 Etruscan god 53 Dexterity 54 To damage 58 Aid 59 A price 60 Unit of length (Pl.) 61 One of the twelve apostles 62 Performances alone 63 Variety of flower 64 Revise 65 Mentally sound 67 Girl 69 Saw lengthwise 74 Product of electrical decomposition. 75 Cylindrical device 76 Elementary substances 77 Absorb slowly 78 Corded fabric 79 Vends 81 In this manner 83 Anguish 84 Obese 85 Fine whetstone 86 Den 87 Small quantity 89 Bird of prey 91 Ornamental fabric 92 Cessation from motion |
- 1 Give out
- 2 Open space
- 3 Cozy residence (Pl.)
- 5 Desert-dweller
- 6 To enclose
- 7 Fisherman
- 8 Variety of carnelian
- 9 Fresh set of horses
- 10 Generous
- 11 Borders of the mouth
- 16 Not well
- 20 Trouble
- 22 An elongated fish
- 24 Pronoun
- 25 Slate-cutters’ hammer
- 27 Italian river
- 28 A bunk
- 29 Island in Aegean Sea
- 30 Religious acts
- 31 Yawn
- 32 A planet
- 34 To bar
- 36 Small point
- 37 Oriental vessel
- 38 Frozen confections
- 43 Stupid
- 44 Pertaining to the sun
- 45 Profoundness
- 46 Wild dog
- 48 A mimic
- 49 Part of the foot
- 51 Etruscan god
- 53 Dexterity
- 54 To damage
- 58 Aid
- 59 A price
- 60 Unit of length (Pl.)
- 61 One of the twelve apostles
- 62 Performances alone
- 63 Variety of flower
- 64 Revise
- 65 Mentally sound
- 67 Girl
- 69 Saw lengthwise
- 74 Product of electrical decomposition.
- 75 Cylindrical device
- 76 Elementary substances
- 77 Absorb slowly
- 78 Corded fabric
- 79 Vends
- 81 In this manner
- 83 Anguish
- 84 Obese
- 85 Fine whetstone
- 86 Den
- 87 Small quantity
- 89 Bird of prey
- 91 Ornamental fabric
- 92 Cessation from motion
[[41]]
Puzzle No. 9
A CHECKERED CAREER
By S. Czurles
Odd words and even. But good practice for the tough ones coming later on.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | ||||||||
| 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | |||||||||||||
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | |||||||||||||
| 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | ||||||||||||
| 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | ||||||||||||
| 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | ||||||||||||||
| 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | |||||||||||||||
| 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | ||||||||||
| 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 | 61 | |||||||||||||
| 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | |||||||||||||||
| 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | |||||||||||
| 74 | 75 | 76 | 77 | 78 | ||||||||||||||
| 79 | 80 | 81 | 82 | 83 | ||||||||||||||
| 84 | 85 | 86 | 87 | 88 | 89 | 90 | 91 | 92 | ||||||||||
| 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | ||||||||||||||
| 98 | 99 | 100 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104 | ||||||||||||
| 105 | 106 | 107 | 108 | 109 | ||||||||||||||
| 110 | 111 | 112 | 113 | 114 | ||||||||||||||
| 115 | 116 | 117 |
[[40]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 Instrument of defense 5 Morsel 8 African animal 13 Metal 14 Pertaining to tone 16 Prefix-not 18 Boy 19 Slang for girl 20 Seize 22 Highest part 24 Produce 26 A slight coloring 27 Chew 29 Lack 31 Limbs 32 Heavenly body 33 Day before event 35 Perceive 37 River (Sp.) 38 Limbs 40 Made 41 Member of senate 43 To have 46 A seed vessel 47 Heavenly body 49 Soaked 53 Need 56 To coin 57 Relating to Danes 58 An exclamation 60 Water ditch 62 Beast of burden 63 Bell | 64 Growl (archaic) 65 Pronoun 66 Stakes 69 Relate 71 Perished 72 Demeanor 74 Destruction 76 Renders palatable 78 Incline 80 Tough timber 82 Fashion 84 Boat riding 88 Wicked 90 Recover 93 Tavern 94 Expire 95 Grain 96 Noah’s ship 97 A male human being 98 Transaction 100 Narrow fillet 102 Glory 104 Burrows 105 Pure 107 A line 108 To tear 109 Small amount 110 Short sleep 112 Propel 114 Honey gatherer 115 Disclose 116 Not moist 117 Necessary |
- 1 Instrument of defense
- 5 Morsel
- 8 African animal
- 13 Metal
- 14 Pertaining to tone
- 16 Prefix-not
- 18 Boy
- 19 Slang for girl
- 20 Seize
- 22 Highest part
- 24 Produce
- 26 A slight coloring
- 27 Chew
- 29 Lack
- 31 Limbs
- 32 Heavenly body
- 33 Day before event
- 35 Perceive
- 37 River (Sp.)
- 38 Limbs
- 40 Made
- 41 Member of senate
- 43 To have
- 46 A seed vessel
- 47 Heavenly body
- 49 Soaked
- 53 Need
- 56 To coin
- 57 Relating to Danes
- 58 An exclamation
- 60 Water ditch
- 62 Beast of burden
- 63 Bell
- 64 Growl (archaic)
- 65 Pronoun
- 66 Stakes
- 69 Relate
- 71 Perished
- 72 Demeanor
- 74 Destruction
- 76 Renders palatable
- 78 Incline
- 80 Tough timber
- 82 Fashion
- 84 Boat riding
- 88 Wicked
- 90 Recover
- 93 Tavern
- 94 Expire
- 95 Grain
- 96 Noah’s ship
- 97 A male human being
- 98 Transaction
- 100 Narrow fillet
- 102 Glory
- 104 Burrows
- 105 Pure
- 107 A line
- 108 To tear
- 109 Small amount
- 110 Short sleep
- 112 Propel
- 114 Honey gatherer
- 115 Disclose
- 116 Not moist
- 117 Necessary
VERTICAL
| 2 Particle 3 Fasten 4 Upon 5 Shackled 6 Inside 7 Stained 9 Upon 10 Negative 11 Recognize 12 Before winter 14 A color 15 Preserve 17 To transfer 18 Appear 19 Cotton seed separators 21 Deep tone 23 Separate 25 Suffix signifying a native 26 Revolve 28 Cry 30 Greek island 32 Fastened with thread 34 A clinging plant 36 Enough 39 Footwear 42 The first man 44 Tears 45 Entreating 47 Entangled 48 Over 49 Decreases 50 Toward 51 Prefix again 52 Danish people 54 Negative | 55 Domesticated 56 A crowd 57 Small mark 59 Father 61 Half score 67 Toward 68 Carbon 70 Syllable of the scale 71 Perform 72 Encounter 73 Within 75 Female servant 77 Remain 78 Protruding tooth 79 Stands by 81 Draw together 82 In this place 83 Feels 85 A unit 86 At once 87 Auto appliance 88 Fermented 89 Expend 90 To rage 91 Leave out 92 An old cloth 99 Fasting season 101 A soft drink 103 To trouble 104 Perished 106 Roof covering 109 Honey gatherer 111 Father 113 Doctor (abbr.) 114 To live |
- 2 Particle
- 3 Fasten
- 4 Upon
- 5 Shackled
- 6 Inside
- 7 Stained
- 9 Upon
- 10 Negative
- 11 Recognize
- 12 Before winter
- 14 A color
- 15 Preserve
- 17 To transfer
- 18 Appear
- 19 Cotton seed separators
- 21 Deep tone
- 23 Separate
- 25 Suffix signifying a native
- 26 Revolve
- 28 Cry
- 30 Greek island
- 32 Fastened with thread
- 34 A clinging plant
- 36 Enough
- 39 Footwear
- 42 The first man
- 44 Tears
- 45 Entreating
- 47 Entangled
- 48 Over
- 49 Decreases
- 50 Toward
- 51 Prefix again
- 52 Danish people
- 54 Negative
- 55 Domesticated
- 56 A crowd
- 57 Small mark
- 59 Father
- 61 Half score
- 67 Toward
- 68 Carbon
- 70 Syllable of the scale
- 71 Perform
- 72 Encounter
- 73 Within
- 75 Female servant
- 77 Remain
- 78 Protruding tooth
- 79 Stands by
- 81 Draw together
- 82 In this place
- 83 Feels
- 85 A unit
- 86 At once
- 87 Auto appliance
- 88 Fermented
- 89 Expend
- 90 To rage
- 91 Leave out
- 92 An old cloth
- 99 Fasting season
- 101 A soft drink
- 103 To trouble
- 104 Perished
- 106 Roof covering
- 109 Honey gatherer
- 111 Father
- 113 Doctor (abbr.)
- 114 To live
[[43]]
Puzzle No. 10
SMALL BUT NEAT
By Joseph E. Austrian
Eight unkeyed letters, but on the whole a very good design. Excellent corner interlock.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |||
| 11 | 12 | 13 | ||||||||||
| 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | |||||||||
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | |||||||||
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | |||||||
| 32 | 33 | |||||||||||
| 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | ||||||
| 41 | 42 | 43 | ||||||||||
| 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | ||||||
| 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | |||||||||
| 55 | 56 | 57 | ||||||||||
| 58 | 59 |
[[42]]
HORIZONTAL
| 1 European nation 6 Importance 11 Uncouth 12 Front 13 Reed instrument 14 Conjure 16 Textile material 18 Right for oxen 19 Musical instrument 21 Consumed 22 Debased coin 24 High priest of Israel 26 Fruit 28 Stupid person 30 The son of Seth 32 Softened bread | 33 Violin with three strings 34 River flowing through Florence 36 Attempt 38 Military command 41 Expand 43 Pronoun 44 Make lace 46 Episcopal headdress 49 Rumor (French) 51 Temper 53 Inalienable inheritance 55 Variety of palm 56 Product of electrical decomposition 57 Bank 58 Mixes 59 First-born |
- 1 European nation
- 6 Importance
- 11 Uncouth
- 12 Front
- 13 Reed instrument
- 14 Conjure
- 16 Textile material
- 18 Right for oxen
- 19 Musical instrument
- 21 Consumed
- 22 Debased coin
- 24 High priest of Israel
- 26 Fruit
- 28 Stupid person
- 30 The son of Seth
- 32 Softened bread
- 33 Violin with three strings
- 34 River flowing through Florence
- 36 Attempt
- 38 Military command
- 41 Expand
- 43 Pronoun
- 44 Make lace
- 46 Episcopal headdress
- 49 Rumor (French)
- 51 Temper
- 53 Inalienable inheritance
- 55 Variety of palm
- 56 Product of electrical decomposition
- 57 Bank
- 58 Mixes
- 59 First-born
VERTICAL
| 1 Formal and forbidding 2 Norse writing 3 Allude 4 Recent (prefix) 5 Always 6 Peruvian prince 7 Vessel 8 Secure 9 Source 10 Beliefs 15 Hill 17 Unit 20 Elastic fluid 23 Fabulist 25 Water of forgetfulness 27 Oxygen and nitrogen | 28 Skillful 29 Empyrean 31 Unctuous liquid 34 Assault 35 Observe 37 Made of curled hair 39 Roofed street 40 Lavatory 42 Large bird 43 Female bird 45 Soon 47 Egyptian goddess 48 Where marriages are unmade 50 Costumes 52 Australian bird 54 Spread loosely |
- 1 Formal and forbidding
- 2 Norse writing
- 3 Allude
- 4 Recent (prefix)
- 5 Always
- 6 Peruvian prince
- 7 Vessel
- 8 Secure
- 9 Source
- 10 Beliefs
- 15 Hill
- 17 Unit
- 20 Elastic fluid
- 23 Fabulist
- 25 Water of forgetfulness
- 27 Oxygen and nitrogen
- 28 Skillful
- 29 Empyrean
- 31 Unctuous liquid
- 34 Assault
- 35 Observe
- 37 Made of curled hair
- 39 Roofed street
- 40 Lavatory
- 42 Large bird
- 43 Female bird
- 45 Soon
- 47 Egyptian goddess
- 48 Where marriages are unmade
- 50 Costumes
- 52 Australian bird
- 54 Spread loosely
[[45]]
Puzzle No. 11
KEYS AND CROSSES
By Harold McKay
The design of this bath mat is much more cryptic than the words you will be called upon to fill in.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |||||||
| 11 | 12 | |||||||||||||||
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | ||||||||||
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |||||||||||
| 26 | 27 | 28 | ||||||||||||||
| 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | ||||||||||||
| 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | |||||||||||||
| 38 | 39 | |||||||||||||||
| 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | |||||||||||
| 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | |||||||||||
| 52 | 53 | 54 | ||||||||||||||
| 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 | |||||||||||
| 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | 66 | |||||||||||
| 67 | 68 | |||||||||||||||
| 69 | 70 |
[[44]]
HORIZONTAL
| 2 Small boat 6 Answer 11 Anger 12 A lament 13 Conjunction 15 Rock 17 Eligible jurors 19 Note in musical scale 20 Heavy woolen fabric 22 Imitate 24 A surgeon’s cylindrical saw 26 An image 27 Misdeed 28 Quintessence 29 Glide 31 Reason 33 Web-footed birds 34 Wonder 36 Lamentation 38 Fabricated | 39 Give 41 Mesial plane 42 Came out 46 Make amends 48 Turret 50 Pleased expression 52 Debate 53 Wager 54 Open space 55 School master 58 Before 59 Large nails 61 Part of “to be” 62 Truck 64 Second cutting of hay 66 Provided that 67 Period of time 68 Strife 69 Drive back 70 Shelters |
- 2 Small boat
- 6 Answer
- 11 Anger
- 12 A lament
- 13 Conjunction
- 15 Rock
- 17 Eligible jurors
- 19 Note in musical scale
- 20 Heavy woolen fabric
- 22 Imitate
- 24 A surgeon’s cylindrical saw
- 26 An image
- 27 Misdeed
- 28 Quintessence
- 29 Glide
- 31 Reason
- 33 Web-footed birds
- 34 Wonder
- 36 Lamentation
- 38 Fabricated
- 39 Give
- 41 Mesial plane
- 42 Came out
- 46 Make amends
- 48 Turret
- 50 Pleased expression
- 52 Debate
- 53 Wager
- 54 Open space
- 55 School master
- 58 Before
- 59 Large nails
- 61 Part of “to be”
- 62 Truck
- 64 Second cutting of hay
- 66 Provided that
- 67 Period of time
- 68 Strife
- 69 Drive back
- 70 Shelters
VERTICAL
| 1 Assure 3 A bird 4 A metal 5 Marsh 7 Period of time 8 Flat bottomed boat 9 Lewd smile 10 One who prints 14 Stone 15 Emotional 16 Artist’s stand 17 Enclosures 18 Sleight of hand 19 Religious ceremony 21 Wander 23 A tree 25 Pastries 30 Efface 31 Odor | 32 An anesthetic 33 Groups 35 Confusion 37 Part of head 40 A stopper 41 Fancy 42 Pitcher 43 Measure of length 44 Dagger 45 Motives 47 Digits 49 To comply 51 Sediment 56 Knob 57 To ensnare 59 Web-footed bird 60 Saucy 63 A grain 65 Be indebted |
- 1 Assure
- 3 A bird
- 4 A metal
- 5 Marsh
- 7 Period of time
- 8 Flat bottomed boat
- 9 Lewd smile
- 10 One who prints
- 14 Stone
- 15 Emotional
- 16 Artist’s stand
- 17 Enclosures
- 18 Sleight of hand
- 19 Religious ceremony
- 21 Wander
- 23 A tree
- 25 Pastries
- 30 Efface
- 31 Odor
- 32 An anesthetic
- 33 Groups
- 35 Confusion
- 37 Part of head
- 40 A stopper
- 41 Fancy
- 42 Pitcher
- 43 Measure of length
- 44 Dagger
- 45 Motives
- 47 Digits
- 49 To comply
- 51 Sediment
- 56 Knob
- 57 To ensnare
- 59 Web-footed bird
- 60 Saucy
- 63 A grain
- 65 Be indebted
[[47]]