Four people (Ursula, Pamela, Q.T., and Fran) with last names Kaufman, Smith, Wallace, and Zellar, each owned a number of apples.
Each person was of a different occupation: coat check person, weather-person, banker, and postal worker.
If each person owned one of the following amounts of apples, (19, 25, 21, and 13) can you figure out the first name, last name, and how many apples each person owned?
Fran is not the person who owned 25 apples, nor has the last name Kaufman.
Ursula, Wallace, and the person who owned 21 apples each had different dinners last night.
Q.T. and Kaufman once dated the weather-person.
Pamela, the person who owned 19 apples, and the banker go shopping together on Saturdays.
Ursula, Wallace, and the person who owned 19 apples each had different dinners last night.
Wallace wasn't the person who owned 21 apples. Neither did Fran nor the banker.
Ursula, who is not Kaufman, is the postal worker's cousin.
The banker, the person who owned 25 apples, didn't want a copy of Wallace's book.
The weather-person isn't Ursula Zellar.
The banker, whose first name is Ursula, wasn't the person who owned 19 apples.
Kau
Smi
Wal
Zel
coa
wea
ban
pos
19
25
21
13
Urs
Pam
Q.T
Fra
19
25
21
13
coa
wea
ban
pos
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!