Four people (Harriett, Q.T., Pamela, and Bill) with last names Smith, Clemens, Borris, and Wallace, each sold a number of ice cream cones.
Each person was of a different occupation: salesman, mathematician, yuppie, and graphic artist.
If each person sold one of the following amounts of ice cream cones, (23, 13, 0, and 7) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many ice cream cones each person sold?
The person who sold 23 ice cream cones is not named Pamela or Borris.
Q.T., Clemens, and the person who sold 0 ice cream cones each had different dinners last night.
The person who sold 13 ice cream cones, Clemens, and the mathematician have known each other for years.
The person who sold 7 ice cream cones, Clemens, and the yuppie have known each other for years.
The yuppie, who sold 13 ice cream cones, isn't Borris.
Borris sold more ice cream cones than the salesman, and less than Harriett.
Smith wasn't the person who sold 23 ice cream cones. Neither did Pamela nor the mathematician.
The mathematician isn't Bill or the person who sold 23 ice cream cones.
Pamela and Borris once dated the graphic artist.
Q.T. is not the person who sold 13 ice cream cones, nor has the last name Smith.
Q.T. and Clemens once dated the salesman.
Bill, Wallace, and Harriett were not the person who sold 7 ice cream cones.
The graphic artist, who sold 23 ice cream cones, isn't Borris.
The salesman isn't Harriett Clemens.
The graphic artist, whose first name is Harriett, wasn't the person who sold 13 ice cream cones.
Smi
Cle
Bor
Wal
sal
mat
yup
gra
23
13
0
7
Har
Q.T
Pam
Bil
23
13
0
7
sal
mat
yup
gra
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!