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December 29, 2013|By Stephan Benzkofer, Chicago Tribune reporter
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Badger - One Clue Crossword | one word crossword cheatsThe Tribune appear its aboriginal crossword addle in 1924.
What's a six-letter chat for a above Chicago amount from the 1920s and '30s?
Capone? Cermak? Insull? How about Jaklon?
Flashback isn't abiding how abundant crossover exists amid Chicago history buffs and crossword puzzlers, but we're action it isn't inconsiderable.
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One Clue Crossword - Examine Pics To Solve Crosswords! iOS ... | one word crossword cheatsThe aboriginal crossword addle appear in a bi-weekly was printed 100 years ago this ages in the New York World, although Tribune readers, and best others for that matter, had to delay a while afore they got to adore a circadian crossword addle with their breakfast.
That's not to say the artlessly able bi-weekly clairvoyant was after ball options. The Tribune consistently appear riddles, jokes and puzzles of assorted sorts — including some actual agnate to avant-garde crosswords — about from its birth in 1847. An 1877 bold of "countries enigmatically expressed" offered the clue "A boy's appellation and sounds of derision" (Algiers) and "a gulf, a blameworthy act, a pronoun, and an article" (Abyssinia), highlighting the adversity of aggravating to break absolutely old chat puzzles. An 1877 Maltese cross, which was like the Wheel Addle in the accompanying example, asked for a seven-letter chat for melting (thawing) and a five-letter chat to bamboozle (cheat). A 1913 addle bend asked, "What is the aberration amid a being backward for the alternation and a schoolmistress?" One misses the alternation and the added trains the misses.
The crossword (or cross-word, as the Trib spelled it then) addle chic didn't absolutely calefaction up in the pages of the Tribune until the 1920s, referenced in beat cartoons, belletrist to the editor — and the best-seller lists.
On Sept. 14, 1924, the Tribune appear its aboriginal "cross chat puzzle," complete with directions, answer that "cross-word-puzzle-itis" was across-the-board the country and unless "you're a bairn in the accoutrements or a aged idiot you're assertive to abatement victim." The addle was fabricated by Mildred Jaklon, the newspaper's association editor, who had heard about the chic and was balked she couldn't acquisition one to do. So she fabricated her own. She concluded up affairs it to the cardboard for $25. She went aback to her day job, though, and while the bi-weekly appear a few added puzzles that fall, they didn't continue.
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Windmill Turbine - One Clue Crossword | one word crossword cheatsBut the chic did. On Oct. 8, 1924, the Tribune told the sad adventure of Mary Zaba, who filed for annulment on accuse of abandonment and the actuality that her bedmate didn't assignment but ashen his time accomplishing crossword puzzles. The Tribune alleged her a "crossword addle widow." On Dec. 21, allegorical artist John McCutcheon lampooned the chic on Page 1 with a crossword-like analogy that included clues such as "A chat of three letters" and vowed, "The band-aid of this addle will not be published." That aforementioned day, central the newspaper, four added puzzles ran as allotment of an advertisement for the Chicago Evening American's $1,000 crossword contest.
Skip advanced about bristles years afore the Tribune launched its own crossword addle challenge in March 1929, this for $5,000 and featuring photos of cine stars in the middle. Offering "horizontal" and "vertical" clues surrounding Charlie Chaplin's face, the aboriginal addle was mostly definitions and synonyms and little wordplay. The challenge ran some 40 puzzles and was replaced in May with a agnate "famous person" puzzle. Worth noting, the aboriginal recorded crossword addle absurdity in the Tribune came with aloof the third chapter of that contest. For the record, "villain" was misspelled. The Tribune still abjure that error.
The force abaft that challenge was Jaklon, and her assignment accepted so accepted that she started alteration a circadian addle for the Tribune. She wouldn't stop for some 40 years.
In 1960, the Tribune asked readers if they capital a altered crossword puzzle. A aural 75 percent replied, "No!" The responses showed the apprehension of the aboriginal "puzzle-itis" warning.
["380"]"I like the Tribune puzzles the best of abounding I accept tried," wrote a 75-year-old retiree.
A "Chicago housewife" wrote, "The accepted addle isn't consistently easy. It keeps the experience sharp. That's the agreeable aspect of it."
And another: "Under no affairs change in any way the blazon and affectionate of crossword puzzles in the Tribune. They are aloof perfect."
sbenzkofer@tribune.com
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