[[Contents]]

[[Contents]]

THE CROSS WORD
PUZZLE BOOK

Third Series

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Answers

If you wish a copy of The Book of the Correct Answers for The Cross Word Puzzle Book—Third Series, sent with our compliments, use the enclosed postal.

Should you lose the postal, ten cents in stamps, sent to Simon and Schuster (The Plaza Publishing Company), 37 West 57th Street, New York City, will bring a copy of the answers by return mail.

A recent questionnaire shows that the overwhelming majority of cross word puzzle fans prefer to get the answers on application rather than with the book. This makes the solving of the puzzles more entertaining and more instructive.

Please turn to pages 114–121 of this book for announcements of importance to all interested in Cross Word Puzzles.

[[Contents]]

THE CROSS WORD PUZZLE BOOK

Third Series

A Third Anthology of Fifty New Cross Word Puzzles Selected as the Best of the Thousands Submitted to the New York World, Published Here Exclusively for the First Time, and Edited

By
PROSPER BURANELLI
F. GREGORY HARTSWICK
MARGARET PETHERBRIDGE
with a
BALLADE OF CROSS WORDS
by
Ruth Franc von Phul
Cross Word Puzzle Champion of the World

SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
THE PLAZA PUBLISHING COMPANY
New York ⸬ 1924

[[Contents]]

The Cross Word Puzzle Books

Printed by the Select Printing Company, New York

Bound by the H. Wolff Company, New York

Third Series (PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 7, 1924)
First Edition 40,000 copies
Second Edition 25,000 copies
Total Third Series To-date 65,000 copies
Second Series (PUBLISHED AUGUST 10, 1924)
First Edition 10,000 copies
Second Edition 10,000 copies
Third Edition 15,000 copies
Fourth Edition 25,000 copies
Fifth Edition 25,000 copies
Sixth Edition 25,000 copies
Seventh Edition 25,000 copies
Total Second Series To-date 135,000 copies
First Series (PUBLISHED APRIL 18, 1924)
First Edition 3,600 copies
Second Edition 3,600 copies
Third Edition 5,000 copies
Fourth Edition 5,000 copies
Fifth Edition 6,000 copies
Sixth Edition 10,000 copies
Seventh Edition 15,000 copies
Eighth Edition 25,000 copies
Ninth Edition 25,000 copies
Tenth Edition 25,000 copies
Eleventh Edition 25,000 copies
Total First Series To-date 148,200 copies
TOTAL TO-DATE 348,200 copies

Copyright, 1924, and All Rights Reserved by
SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
THE PLAZA PUBLISHING COMPANY
37 West 57th Street
New York, N. Y.

[[Contents]]

Acknowledgement

The publishers and editors of the Cross Word Puzzle Books wish to record the debt of all Cross Word fans to The New York World for its pioneer work in the field. Cross Word Puzzles have been run in the Sunday World for over twenty years and their present nation-wide vogue had its origin in and received its greatest impetus from the Puzzle Page of the Sunday World Magazine. The fifty cross word puzzles in this book are all entirely new and have never been printed before in any publication.

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Official Endorsement

The original Cross Word Puzzle Books, published by Simon and Schuster, are the only ones officially endorsed by the Amateur Cross Word Puzzle League of America and edited in conformity with the rules of cross word puzzle construction promulgated by the League and printed on page 9 of this book. [[1]]

[[Contents]]

PREFACE

Controversy, which is the breath of life to any of the arts or sciences, has reared its head among the ranks of Cross Word solvers. The air is filled with ’tis and ’tain’t. The clan is divided into schools, which is well for the vitality of puzzling. It is undoubtedly true that a house divided against itself cannot stand; but it is also veritable that an art divided against itself flourisheth exceedingly.

The schism that is causing all the noise, reduced to its simplest terms, is stated in the question, “Shall the Cross Word Puzzle be made hard or easy?”

On the one hand stand the pundits, with thesaurus and dictionary armed. They crave queer words and exotic definitions. They thrill to the cross-clue unravelling of some strange combination of vowels and consonants resembling nothing ever uttered by human tongue, but which their reference-books declare is a genuine word, with meanings and inflections and everything. They delight in extracting a simple word from its definition of secondary or tertiary meaning: when “express generally” is solved as “air” they greet the word so often defined as “mixture of gases” with cries of delight; “introduce as an antagonist” is found to be “pit,” and tears of joy are shed over the relief from the common “hole” or “depression.”

Thus the solvers who revel in the recondite. Opposed to them stand the serried ranks of those whose pleasure lies in the accomplishment; who do not wish their onward march to [[2]]victory delayed by forests of Javanese shrubs or oceans full of rajidae with enlarged pectoral fins. Nor do they wish words torn far from their daily, or at least semi-weekly, use. A Leer by the river’s brim a simple Sly Glance is to them, and not an Annealing-furnace.

A third element enters the lists at this point—the constructors. When a man has a superb puzzle almost finished, with complete interlock and no abbreviations or unkeyed letters, he frequently finds a space left into which nothing will go except a particularly rare combination of letters—let us say, for example, TIL. The constructor runs hastily through his vocabulary and finds no TIL; he has a vague recollection of such a word somewhere in his poetic remembrances; but the familiar abbreviation of “until” is “till,” and the constructor has no wish to add the damning parenthesis-enclosed “poet. contr.” after his definition. He tries all the combinations possible; none will fit. Torn between despair and hope he seeks Webster’s Unabridged. Trembling finger runs down the columns. Ah! Between “tikur” and “tilbury,” in small type, as though ashamed of existence, he finds what he seeks. “Til—Sesame.” Into the construction goes the word, and the puzzle is finished. Observe that the constructor had no desire to introduce this exotic syllable; he did not even know that there was such a word in any language. If he could have written “tic,” or “tie,” or “tin,” or “tip,” or “tis,” or “tit,” he would have done so. But “til” was his sole refuge, and the Unabridged bore him nobly out. Thus, says the constructor, why should the solver rage when he discovers “sesame” among the definitions? Let him try to make one himself, etc., etc.

Returning a moment to the pundits’ side of the argument, observe a fact. If any solver had been asked, before he took [[3]]up cross words, to give offhand the name of Egypt’s sun-god, a three-letter word meaning island, a four-letter word for handbag, the name of a large Australian bird, or the sash affected by the ladies of cherry-blossom land, it is odds but that he would have been reduced to stammering evasions. But even a tyro at the glorious game can now rattle off by rote the words Ra, Uit, Etui, Moa, Obi. In running down the definitions of a new puzzle it is not the household words that set him scribbling frantically, but such old friends as the above. So, contend the punditti, a word that may be a nameless horror at the moment becomes through association a friend in time of trouble.

True enough, answer the believers in the simplicities, but the introduction of such words is evidence of laziness on the part of the constructor. Moreover, their constant use tends to eliminate them, their places to be taken by other literal monstrosities. And there is much in this contention. Where now are the Emu and the Eel? Time was, and not so long ago, that every other construction was the combined aviary and aquarium necessary to harbor these two; today they are one with Nineveh and Tyre. And so it may well be with Ra and Uit and Etui. They will march one by one into the shades where lurk the other gallant words that died of over-work. And the strange combinations that take their places will also abide their little hour, and go their way.

Once again the constructor beats on the table and demands to be heard. “Where,” he asks, “do I get off? Am I to be barred from including words that finish my design because a group of you insist that no word not included in everyday vocabularies appear in the little white squares? Or am I to suffer under the lash of scorn because a few of you mock my brilliant construction wherein no exotic letter-combination [[4]]rears its head?—a construction that cost me more time than if I had allowed a few oddities, I may add. What am I to do?”

“Go as far as you like!” cry the Recondites.

“Stick to the common words!” insist the Champions of the Plain.

Of course, these admonitions do not help the constructor in the least. He is the ham in the verbal sandwich—necessary, but spread rather thin and squashed flat. It is in the nature of things that this should be so. No creator has had a different experience. You can please some of the people, and the rest of it. It is part of the penalty of the builder to receive criticism. Scarce have the birth-pangs passed when the child is the storm-center of a tempest of contradictory comment.

It is, of course, an indeterminable debate. The Simplicities have their case, as have the Abstrusities. In the meantime, short of erasure and complete rebirth, the constructor’s pattern remains. For better, for worse, for easier, for harder, in the pocket edition or the Unabridged, his words cross and twine all among the blacks and the whites.

In the meantime, the schism remains. What is to come of it, we know not. Whatever the decision may be, the constructor will not change his status. Once a constructor, always between the millstones.

Prosper Buranelli
F. Gregory Hartswick
Margaret Petherbridge [[5]]

[[Contents]]

BALLADE OF CROSS WORDS

By

Ruth Franc von Phul

(Cross Word Puzzle Champion of the World)[1]

Once from the world I sought surcease

Between a novel’s covers pressed;

No longer there I look for peace;

Of anodynes I’ve found the best.

So, when the sun sinks in the west

Sunk, too, are husband, friends and cook—

Where do I find my treasure chest?

All in the leaves of the Cross Word Book.

If from ennui you seek release

Purchase this book; don’t beg; invest!

Madame, she will love ze fine service

A caller intrudes? Hein? Kill ze pest!

Oh, Noah Webster, you are blest

When for a clue in your works I look—

Where is all life from “less” to “crest”?

All in the leaves of the Cross Word Book.

What galleon sought the Golden Fleece?

What is the Welsh for “eagle’s nest”?

What is a Flemish tartan crease?

Who was it asked the Erse for “breast”?

Who can define a Baltic jest?

Who ever called it a six-pronged hook!

You will discern them, mixed and messed,

All in the leaves of the Cross Word Book.

L’envoi

Prince: if from affairs your soul craves rest,

Hie you to some abandoned nook.

There for your mind seek a gayer test

All in the leaves of the Cross Word Book.

[[6]]


[1] Winner of the Woman’s Singles and of Challenge Round, First National All-Comers Cross Word Puzzle Tournament, held at the Wanamaker Auditorium, September 26th–27th, 1924. [↑]

[[Contents]]

VOCABULARY ENRICHMENT IN THE SUBURBS DUE TO THE CROSS WORD PUZZLE INFLUENCE

(Two neighbors, Mrs. Wordsworth and Mrs. Frazee, are spending a warm summer afternoon together on the former’s front porch. They are sewing.)

Mrs. W.—What is that you are working at, my dear?

Mrs. F.—I’m tatting Joe’s initials on his moreen vest. Are you making that ebon garment for yourself?

Mrs. W.—Yea. Just a black dress for every day. Henry says I look rather naif in black.

Mrs. F.—Well, perhaps; but it’s a bit too anile for me. Give me something in indigo or, say, ecru.

Mrs. W.—Quite right. There is really no neb in such solemn investments.

Mrs. F.—Stet.

Mrs. W.—By the way, didn’t I hear that your little Junior met with an accident?

Mrs. F.—Yes. The little oaf fell from an apse and fractured his artus.

Mrs. W.—Egad!

Mrs. F.—And to make matters worse Dr. Bloop botched it so that we had to trek into town to a specialist. How Dr. Bloop makes his sal is a rebus to me.

Mrs. W.—The zany.

Mrs. F.—Joe’s ire was so aroused that he told Dr. Bloop [[7]]right to his visage that he was a dolt and an ort. Is your offspring well?

Mrs. W.—Not entirely. He was abed yester with a severe megrim, dark arcs neath his orbs and as pale as talc.

Mrs. F.—Renal?

Mrs. W.—That is moot. You see, Dicky is so active.

Mrs. F.—A perfect icon of his pater; restless as a little emu.

Mrs. W.—He took a canoe out on the tarn and paddled over to the ait. There he stepped into a fen and got his feet roric.

Mrs. F.—Boys have such an elan for the eau.

Mrs. W.—Why can’t they play on the muirs and in the wald nearby? I gave him a drachm of ricin and thank goodness he was better this morn.

Mrs. F.—I’m so glad. This torrid weather is very trying. One’s vitality reaches its nadir in this heat, and to add to the discomfort I have an incompetent serf to contend with.

Mrs. W.—Oh, this esne problem. The last one I had was such a schelm I had to let her go. Would you drink a nice cold beaker of negus? I’m so sere.

Mrs. F.—Don’t trouble yourself, my dear.

Mrs. W.—Not at all. It’s Henry’s favorite quaff and he insists upon it being on the ice at all times. He gets quite roiled if it isn’t.

Mrs. F.—Well, we must humor our sires. I hate to hear them gnar.

(They are interrupted by piercing juvenile shrieks growing rapidly louder and nearer. Junior and Dicky, ages six [[8]]and seven, burst into view around the corner of the house. They take final kicks at each other before smothering their sobs in the laps of their respective mothers.)

Mrs. F.—Why, Junior, what is this?

Mrs. W.—Come, come, Dicky, aren’t you ashamed of such——

Dicky (Howling)—W-well, it’s h-his fault. He said I was a five-letter word meaning a human being with inferior intelligence and wit!

Junior—And he called me a four-letter word meaning an invisible particle of matter!

Dicky—And that’s what you are.

(They mix it up once more and are disentangled with difficulty.)

Mrs. F.—I think we had better be going, Mrs. Wordsworth. I’m so sorry.

Mrs. W.—Male progeny will be male progeny, you know.

(Mrs. F. drags Junior away.)

Dicky—(Yelling after him with much feeling)—ATOM!!

Junior—(Not too gently)—MORON!!!

N. D. Plume+Jean

Reprinted by permission from F. P. A.’s Conning Tower, The N. Y. World. [[9]]

[[Contents]]

RULES FOR CONSTRUCTION OF CROSS WORD PUZZLES

Reported by the Committee on Rules, and adopted by The Amateur Cross Word Puzzle League of America at its meeting, September 27, 1924, in The Wanamaker Auditorium, New York City.

1. Pattern

2. Words

3. Definitions

[[10]]

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HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS WORD PUZZLE

There are two essential points that must be remembered by initiates into the cross word puzzlers’ fraternity. First, the numbers in the squares refer to the definitions; secondly, there should be but one letter to each white square.

Figure 1 shows a cross word puzzle challenging each and every one of us to solve it. Looking the puzzle over we find that 1 horizontal calls for a seven letter word meaning “disparage.” That is not so easy, so we leave it temporarily. We go on to the next one, which is a three letter word meaning “a cereal grass.” What else could it be but OAT? Therefore we ink in OAT in the proper squares. “Vice Admiral.” That most assuredly must be VA. We place that into position. The ninth, tenth and eleventh do not come to our minds immediately, so we pass them up. We will catch them on the cross check. Twelve is familiar, however, and with a little thought we place LO in the vacant squares. The rest do not come to us, so we leave them also, and turn to the verticals.

EXAMPLE

1 2 3 4 5
6
7 8 9
10 11
12 1314
15 16
17

Fig. 1

DEFINITIONS

Horizontal

1 Disparage 6 Cereal grass 7 Abbr. Vice Admiral 9 An edge-tool 10 Urge 11 Skill 12 Behold 14 Prefix: good 15 Impair 17 Agreement

Vertical

1 Evolve 2 Toward 3 A rodent 4 Near 5 A web 8 Gone by 9 A land measure 13 A male sheep 15 Indeed 16 Disordered type

[[11]]

Looking over the diagram (See Figure 2) we find that one vertical calls for a seven letter word whose third and fifth letters are V and L respectively and which is defined as “evolve.” The V and the L give us the clue. The word is DEVELOP. We place it in the diagram. Two, three and four are easy, for we have three clues to work on and we find the proper words without much difficulty. The next one is beyond us, so we go on to the one numbered 8. We find that a three letter word—starting with A—meaning “gone by,” is needed. The clues of A and O enable us to get that without much trouble, and we place AGO in the square. We pass by nine, but thirteen is easy. “A male sheep?” Why, of course, the word is RAM.

1 2 3 4 5
6 OAT
7 V8 A 9
10 11
12 LO13 14
15 16
17

Fig. 2

1 D 2 T3 R4 A 5
E6 OAT
7 V8 AT 9
10 EG 11
12 LO13 R14
O15 A16
17 P M

Fig. 3

From now on the going is easy. We have plenty of clues to the words that we do not know. (See Figure 3.) Rechecking the horizontals, we find that we have the first, third, fourth and fifth letters of “disparage,” and with their aid we easily see that the word is DETRACT. Looking for a two letter word meaning “an edge-tool,” we soon find that there is but one word that will fit. We place AX in position. With nine vertical beginning with an A it is easy to find that ARE is the proper word. Ten horizontal [[12]]proves to be EGG and eleven becomes ART. We say to ourselves that if we could only get five vertical we would have the puzzle solved. Well, why not? Is the second letter an a, e, i, o, or u? The definition gives it as “a web.” What word will fit but TEXTURE? We place that into position. Now, we find that we have the puzzle almost completed. Fifteen horizontal needs a three letter word meaning “impair.” Its middle letter must be an A. With the A to guide us that is simple. The word is “SAP.” Fifteen and sixteen being two letter words are easily found, and we place SO and PI into position. We now find that we have the puzzle completed with one exception. Seventeen horizontal has to be found. Its first, third, fourth, fifth and seventh letters are P OMI E. A consonant is needed for the second letter, and R seems to be the most logical choice. That gives us the word, which is defined as “agreement.” (See Figure 4.)

1 DE2 T3 R4 AC5 T
E6 OATE
7 V8 AT9 AX
10 EGG11 ART
12 LO13 R14 EU
O15 SA16 PR
17 PROMISE

Fig. 4

We settle back into our chair with a sigh of content at the thought of a job well done. But that is not the finish. Rather it is but the start. Now that we have tasted the pleasures of cross word puzzling, we are loath to give our time to anything else. What other amusement offers the pleasure, instruction and satisfaction that is to be found in Cross Word Puzzles? There is but one answer to that question, and—foregoing the movies—we settle down to the elusive task of tracking words to their lairs. [[13]]

[[Contents]]

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. [[15]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 101

A CHRISTMAS TREE

By Moby Dick

This Christmas tree is a tour de force in consecutive two-letter words. Even the veriest beginner should finish it in a half hour, for the words are all fair and should come to mind immediately. This is a case where the rule on ratio of black squares to white is purposely violated for appropriateness of design.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 1516
17 18
1920 2122
23 24
25 26
27282930 31323334
35 36

[[14]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Lover of wisdom 9 Exclamation 10 Conjunction 11 Negative 12 Pronoun 13 Portent 15 Deposited 17 Tailless amphibian 18 Preposition 19 Girl’s name 21 Seize in arrest 23 Printer’s measure 24 Pronoun 25 Toward 26 Sun god 27 Dental filling 31 Warble 35 Garment 36 Italian city

VERTICAL

1 Pertaining to measurement of light intensity 2 Man 3 Material part of the earth 4 Bone 5 Preposition 6 Outdoor sport 7 Send out 8 Formidable 14 Simple 16 Presently 20 Latin for I love 22 Atmosphere 28 Not 29 Note of scale 30 Near 32 Conjunction 33 Perform 34 Printer’s measure

[[17]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 102

CHILDSPLAY

By Hugo Kladeviko and James McIntyre

These contributors have made one for the tots. Likewise it is a good one for beginners at cross word puzzling. Warm up on this one for the holy terrors that later on will beset you.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11
121314 1516 17
18 1920 21 22
23 2425 26
27 28 2930
31 32
3334 3536 3738
3940 4142 43 44
45 46 4748
49 50 51 5253
54 55 56
57 58

[[16]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Form of literary expression 5 Speculation 10 Constellation 11 To be mistaken 12 Thus 14 Consumed 16 Character in “Peer Gynt” 17 Upon 18 Tool for cutting threads 20 Be 22 Humped beast of burden 23 Spoken 25 Colored fluid 26 Cook in oven 27 Droop 29 Appear 31 Behold 32 Adverb and conjunction 34 Minute particle 36 Support 39 Undermines 41 Be in debt 43 Unit of linear measure 45 Fasten 46 Trapped, cornered (colloq.) 48 Caress 49 Expression of hesitancy 50 Unit of weight 51 Jurisprudence 53 Preposition, toward 54 Utensil 55 Used in ancient warfare 57 Poor in quality 58 Irritate

VERTICAL

1 Church dignitary 2 Elevated R. R. 3 Leaves of a shrub of China 4 Repetition 6 Request (poet) 7 Before 8 Either 9 Citizen of New England 13 Propeller 15 Place for egress 16 Solicits 17 Hard wood 19 Foot 21 Into 22 Tuber 24 Sings with spirit 26 A broom 28 A card game 30 Attention 33 Regard 34 Mimic 35 A.M. 36 Skin 37 Speck 38 Long seat with back 40 Vent 42 You and I 44 Pasture 46 Sound 47 Mend 50 Label 52 Contest between countries 54 Father 56 Mother

[[19]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 103

LADIES FIRST

By Albert Buran

Here is the puzzle that Mrs. Ruth von Phul did in four minutes and twenty seconds, thereby winning the Ladies’ Championship, at the tournament held in Wanamaker’s Auditorium in September. See if you can clip a second off that record.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14
1516 17 1819
20 21 22
23
24 25 26
27 28 2930
3132 33
343536 37
38 39

[[18]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Boat hoisting contrivance 5 Prosecuting judicially 9 A pronoun 10 Pertaining to the nose 12 A conjunction 13 A thin oval board used by an artist 15 A pasture 17 The first flapper 18 A color 20 A brownish red stone 22 Mentally sound 23 Savant 24 Notice 25 Saucy 27 Completely 28 Social beginner (slang) 30 A cereal grass 31 Shelters 34 An expression of inquiry 36 A parent’s sister 37 Bone 38 Kingdom 39 To give out

VERTICAL

1 Face of a timepiece (pl.) 2 Near 3 A feminine suffix 4 Narrative 5 Glut 6 Ultimo (abbr.) 7 A negation 8 To class or sort 11 XVII 13 Packages 14 Obliterators 16 A wooden frame 19 A vestibule 21 Achieved 22 A slight taste 24 A personal enemy 26 Rigid 28 Sound rhythmically 29 Stupid (Fr.) 32 Presidential nickname 33 Goddess of night (myth.) 35 A pronoun 37 An alleged force

[[21]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 104

THE LAZY MAN’S DELIGHT

By B. Benas

After you have struggled with a terror and want to rest your weary brain, here’s the puzzle for you. Nice and easy and well put together.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910
11 1213
14 1516 17
18 19 2021
22 23 24 2526
2728 29 30
31 32
33 34353637 38
39 40 41 4243
44 4546 47 48
49 5051 52
53 54 5556
57 58

[[20]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Eyelashes 6 Foundation 11 Decrees 13 Occupant 14 Titled person 15 Through 17 Used in games of chance 18 Before 19 Purport 21 Female deer 22 Selenium 23 Meadow 24 Not within 26 Degree given physicians 27 Clip 29 Plural of vegetable 31 That thing 32 Regarding 33 Character of a people 36 Fragment 39 Article 40 Epoch 41 Course 42 Behold 44 Obstruct 46 Urchin 48 Wager 49 Among 51 Brownish color 52 Make feverish 53 European cuttlefish 55 Oily matter 57 Dirge 58 Come into

VERTICAL

1 Resigns 2 Accustoms 3 Body of water 4 Frozen dessert 5 Near 6 Exist 7 Conjunction 8 Reported 9 Annual receipts 10 Horse 12 Weapon 13 Soldiers collectively 16 Printer’s measure 19 A drink 20 Regret 23 Mythological stream 25 Linger 28 To reach exactly 30 Ocean 33 Hard coating 34 Metal bearing rock 35 Seasonings 36 Oscillate 37 Be able 38 Give pleasure to 39 Humble 43 Animal 45 Mature 47 Note of scale 48 Cudgel 50 Excavate 52 Female bird 54 Forever 56 Note of scale

[[23]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 105

NEAT SYMMETRY

By Frank A. Ford

An unusual disposition of blacks and a pretty symmetry. Decorative patterns give an esthetic charm to cross word puzzling. Before you finish you will have brought home the bacon.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9101112
13 14 1516
17 18 19 20
21 2223 24 25
26 2728 29
3031 32 3334 35
36 37 3839 40 41
42 43 44
45 46 47 48
49 5051
5253 5455 56 5758
5960 61 6263 64
65 66 67 68
69 7071 72 73
74 75 76

[[22]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Salted smoked pig’s hip 5 An adult swine 8 Demesne estate 13 Sincere 14 Pertaining to a wall 16 Back of the neck 17 Color in spectrum 18 To deface 19 A small dram 20 A receptacle 21 Woodsmen’s implements 23 Arrogance 25 Famous French writer 26 Night moisture 28 Devoured 29 Yankee Jack tar 31 Curved structural member 33 Bay or chestnut 36 Dobbin’s headpiece 39 Slumbers 42 A lyric song 43 Quite a few 44 A pasture 45 Folds in cloth 47 Played golf 49 To interdict 51 Large Siberian river 53 Accomplished 54 To regret 56 An honorable title 59 Senile 61 Concerning the pope 63 To serve 65 Genus homo 66 Racket 67 Early man’s abode 68 Late man’s consolation 69 Every man’s foe 71 Pelted with hen fruit 73 Fermented malt liquors 74 Citrous fruit 75 An indeterminate age 76 Without active properties

VERTICAL

1 Borate of sodium 2 Top of pyramid 3 Surrendered 4 Surmounting 5 A shout of triumph 6 Alternative 7 Mr. Goose 9 Indefinite article 10 An Indian viceroy 11 A precious form of silica 12 Kingly 14 Representation of earth’s surface 15 To deceive 22 A place to rest 24 Pronoun 25 A parcel post district 27 Yanked 29 Liquid measures 30 To dip up 32 The peak 34 A species of orange wood 35 Celerity 36 A twining moraceous vine 37 Opposite the wind 38 A physiological distinction 40 A mythical sprite 41 Affected with grief 46 Greedy 48 Deposited by a hen 50 Large globose fruit 51 Dull gray 52 Ship of the desert 53 Coarse cotton drilling 55 Ascending 57 A light firearm 58 Box for valuables 60 Donated 61 American dessert 62 Conducted 64 An observer 70 Behold! 72 Proceed 73 One or any

[[25]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 106

THE DARLING OF THE GODS

By Ambrosian

This puzzle was used in the All Comers Contest, held at Wanamaker’s Auditorium in September. The time of the winner, W. F. Hunter of Sound Beach, Conn. was 6 minutes, 40⅕ seconds.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10
111213 14
151617 18
19 20 21 22
23
24 25
26 27 2829
30 31 323334
35 36
37 38 39

[[24]]

HORIZONTAL

1 French coin 3 At a latter time 6 High mountain 8 Pole-star 11 Form of “to be” 13 Pedigrees 14 Prefix meaning two 15 Impersonal pronoun 17 Pen 18 Parent 19 Position-proud person 21 Island 23 Words parallel to this 24 Orient 25 Narrow groove 26 Negative 27 Part of anatomy 29 Mountain (abbr.) 30 Like 31 Girl’s name 33 Therefore 35 Spanish dances 37 Perceive 38 Fly 39 Possessive pronoun

VERTICAL

1 Large body of water 2 Ascent 3 Exclamation 4 Splits up into parties 5 Playing card 6 Like 7 Greek letter 9 Alternative 10 Exists 12 Pertaining to ancient Greek culture (plural) 14 Votes 16 Trunk 18 Religious song 19 Personal pronoun 20 Morsel 21 Possessive pronoun 22 Founded (abbr.) 27 Stop 28 Father (French) 30 Beast of burden 31 Exclamation 32 Behold 34 Used in boat 35 Exist 36 Therefore

[[27]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 107

RIBS OF THREE-LETTER WORDS

By Leonard J. Brightman

Over sixty three-letter words here!

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

[[26]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Branch of medical practice 7 Quiet 14 Gracious 16 Book formed by doubled pages 18 Commonly used 19 Wrath 21 Excluded 22 Born 23 Mean fellow 25 Boy’s nickname 26 Unit 27 Shade of brown 28 Cut 30 Female of swine 32 Before 33 Pinnacle 35 Name (Fr.) 37 Knock 39 Part of verb “to be” 40 Fasten 41 Old soldier (abbr.) 43 Crow-like bird 45 Negation 46 Short hairs on surface of cloth 47 Coffins 49 Flap 51 Heavenly body 53 Fireworks 55 Decorate 57 Attack 58 Prepare the way for 59 A precious stone 60 Tropical fruit-eating bird (pl.) 62 Dissolute man 64 Rent 66 Holy person 67 A color 68 Whether 70 Bark 72 Exclamations 73 Concealed 74 Unassorted printing type 75 Small child 77 Species of fish 79 Earthen vessel 80 Procured 81 To notch 83 Affirmative 85 Wooden tank 86 Solution containing alkali 88 Decay 90 Small headless nail 92 Obstruct 94 Long narrow sword 96 Sensory organ 97 End 98 Plant of the lily family 100 Sacred cantata 101 Insect resembling dragon-fly 102 Enforced

VERTICAL

2 Interest 3 Coin of British India 4 Small aromatic shrub 5 First woman 6 A note in music 8 Provided that 9 Lout 10 Ardor 11 Baseball teams 12 South American bird 13 Employment 15 Present tense plural of “to be” 17 Song 19 Hostelry 20 Attention 23 Devitalize 24 Relation 26 Fortify 27 2000 lbs. 29 Shell for seeds 31 Pale 32 Masticates 33 Point 34 Steam 36 Entangle 38 Composition in verse 40 Garden vegetable 41 Food 42 Surgical instrument 44 Irrigated 46 Pertaining to nose 47 Filipino weapons 48 Limit 50 Livelihood 52 Strike gently 53 Wagon track 54 Call of distress 56 Weary 59 Overlook 61 The soft palate (rare) 63 Departure 65 Sailor 67 Accoutre 69 Confusion 71 Recompense 73 Hovel 74 An American author 76 A large fish 78 Opposed to “no” 79 Tooth 80 Revolve 82 Aim 84 Mimic 85 Contend 86 Narrow roads 87 Vase 89 Linden tree 91 Cereal plant 92 Fragments 93 Spout 95 King (Fr.) 97 Enemy 99 Opposed to “yes” 100 Mister

[[29]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 108

THE WHIFFENPOOF

By W. C. Brooks

Introduce this animal to your menagerie. He has a spotted coat which may give him a terrible aspect. But you’ll find him gentle and kindly most all the time.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 11
12 1314
1516 17 18 19 2021
22 23 24 252627
28 29 30 31323334
35 36 3738
3940 41 42
43 44
4546 47 4849 50 51
5253 54 5556
57 5859 60 61
62 63646566 67 68
69 707172 73 74
7576 77 78
79 80

[[28]]

HORIZONTAL

1 Atone 6 Legendary origin of all evil 12 Combining form, air 14 Instrument of transmission 15 Vessel 17 Wander 20 Incite 22 The poor Indian 23 Possessive pronoun 24 Etruscan title 25 Forward! 27 Greek diphthong 28 Unexciting 30 Adverb 31 The same (abbr.) 33 Ellipse 35 Before 36 Having oceans 38 Arabic title 39 Remains 41 South African pen 43 Query 44 Render waterproof 46 Biographies 49 City in Germany 52 Mound 54 One who steps 55 Signal 57 Other 59 Year (abbr.) 60 Part of “to be” 61 Pins 62 Note of diatonic scale 63 First column in baseball box score 65 Us two (obs.) 67 Preposition 68 Army officer (abbr.) 69 Those in power 71 Heir 74 Inspect 75 Olfactory experience 77 Shakespearian character 79 Basic 80 Well

VERTICAL

1 Rejoiced 2 Wood god 3 That is 4 Great number 5 Step up to 7 American humorist 8 Latin incendiary 9 Concerning (Latin) 10 Poem 11 Seraphic 13 Literary bits 16 Vociferate 18 Bitter herbs 19 Liquor 21 End 23 Personal pronoun 26 None 29 Disease 30 Background 32 Scans 34 Upper curtain 36 Exclamation 37 Obsolete variant of “daw” 40 Snowshoe 42 Goddess of mischief 45 Workshop 47 New England state (abbr.) 48 Biblical name 49 Decree 50 Senior (abbr.) 51 Occidental 53 Dash 56 Disagreeable 58 Babylonian deity 61 River in Italy 64 Political unit 66 Surface of fibres 67 Poises 70 Turf 72 Period of time 73 Yale 74 Before 76 Greek prefix—two 78 Preposition

[[31]]

[[Contents]]

Puzzle No. 109

MIXED DOUBLES

By Gregorian

This puzzle was used in the mixed doubles contest held in Wanamaker’s Auditorium in September, when Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stern II successfully defended their title. Their time was 6 minutes, 15 seconds.