Four people (Q.T., Fran, Ursula, and Jesse) with last names Jones, Lindros, Ewing, and Appleman, each owned a number of puzzles.
Each person was of a different occupation: florist, postal worker, horse trainer, and lawyer.
If each person owned one of the following amounts of puzzles, (10, 23, 9, and 21) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many puzzles each person owned?
The florist, the person who owned 9 puzzles, didn't want a copy of Appleman's book.
The person who owned 9 puzzles is not named Ursula or Appleman.
Ursula, Jones, and Fran were not the person who owned 10 puzzles.
The lawyer, who owned 10 puzzles, isn't Lindros.
The horse trainer isn't Jesse or the person who owned 9 puzzles.
The horse trainer, the person who owned 23 puzzles, didn't want a copy of Ewing's book.
Q.T. and Appleman once dated the postal worker.
The person who owned 23 puzzles is not named Jesse or Ewing.
Ursula went with Appleman to the amusement park one day.
The person who was the florist. All four people are mentioned in this clue.
The person who owned 23 puzzles is not named Jesse or Jones.
The person who owned 23 puzzles, Q.T., and the lawyer went to the movies together.
Ursula, the person who owned 9 puzzles, and the postal worker go shopping together on Saturdays.
The florist, whose first name is Q.T., wasn't the person who owned 10 puzzles.
The lawyer isn't Q.T. Jones.
Jon
Lin
Ewi
App
flo
pos
hor
law
10
23
9
21
Q.T
Fra
Urs
Jes
10
23
9
21
flo
pos
hor
law
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!