536 Puzzles and Curious Problems

(Elliott) #1
398 Answers

should have had merely to exchange that rrussmg number with a blank
wherever found. There would thus have been no puzzle. But in the circum-
stances it is impossible to avail oneself of such a simple maneuver.
[For more domino problems of this type, known as quadrilles, see Edouard
Lucas, Recreations Mathematiques, Vol. 2, pp. 52-63, and Wade E. Philpott,
"Quadrilles," in Recreational Mathematics Magazine, No. 14, January-
February 1964, pp. 5-11.-M. G.]


  1. DOMINO FRAMES


· ,







  • • •



  • • •

  • • r-------,---'--i

    • I. '···1·· •••••








  • f--• •





  • f-;-; • •
    · • •.






• •• • · • • I. •• ~I· • I



  • I ,-...

    • .'



  • -• •••• • •





  • • •

  • • ~


  • f--• • --



  • • •




  • • I • -. • :1-. I -•


The three diagrams show a solution. The sum of all the pips is 132. One-
third of this is 44. First divide the dominoes into any three groups of 44 pips
each. Then, if we decide to try 12 for the sum of the sides, 4 times 12 being 4
more than 44, we must arrange in every case that the four corners in a frame
shall sum to 4. The rest is done by trial and exchanges from one group
to another of dominoes containing an equal number of pips.

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