Four people (Pamela, Y.C., Ken, and Harriett) with last names Tavarez, Jones, Usaber, and Forsberg, each sold a number of flowers.
Each person was of a different occupation: postal worker, engineer, optometrist, and accountant.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of flowers, (2, 21, 17, and 22) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many flowers each person sold?
The accountant isn't Harriett or the person who sold 21 flowers.
Forsberg and Pamela aren't the person who sold 22 flowers.
Harriett, Tavarez, and the person who sold 21 flowers each had different dinners last night.
Pamela, Usaber, and the person who sold 17 flowers each had different dinners last night.
The person who sold 17 flowers lives in the same building as Tavarez and Y.C..
The person who sold 21 flowers, Usaber and Harriett all went to the Usaber wasn't the person who sold 2 flowers. Neither did Y.C. nor the postal worker.
Usaber wasn't the person who sold 2 flowers. Neither did Y.C. nor the postal worker.
Ken is not the person who sold 17 flowers, nor has the last name Tavarez.
The engineer, the person who sold 2 flowers, didn't want a copy of Forsberg's book.
Y.C. is not the person who sold 17 flowers, nor has the last name Usaber.
Ken, who is not Forsberg, is the optometrist's cousin.
Tav
Jon
Usa
For
pos
eng
opt
acc
2
21
17
22
Pam
Y.C
Ken
Har
2
21
17
22
pos
eng
opt
acc
Place a N in any square that is a definite "no" and a Y in any square that is a definite "yes". I give up!