Are you a GENIUS?   Find out with a few of the most fiendish brain-teasers ever

Book by Robert Streeter and Robert Hoehn republished from 1930s
Originally designed to discover clever people by posing hard questions

What the nation needs is more geniuses.   So said Robert Streeter and Robert Hoehn, two self-styled intelligence experts in the Thirties, who set out to discover clever people by publishing a book posing devilishly difficult brain-teasers for members of the general public.   Now their book has been republished and here we offer you a selection of its tortuous tests — so you can discover if YOU are a genius...

A book designed to discover clever people in the 1930s has been republished and is full of tricky questions and brain-teasers.   The answers can be found at the bottom of the page.

1.   Rearrange the following letters so as to make the name of a living creature:
B R I N O

2.   Four men can build four boats in four days.   How long will it take one man to build one boat?

3.   Test your memory on this passage: Three men and their wives and a widower left by car at noon one day for a picnic.   After they had gone three miles, they saw two men and a child in another car that had broken down.   ‘That is tough luck,’ said one of the picnickers.   At 1 pm they arrived at the picnic grounds, where they saw only the old one-armed caretaker and his son.   They immediately started to eat their luncheon of sandwiches, fruit and cake.  
Question: How many people have been mentioned?

4.   Which is heavier, milk or cream?

5.   What one word means both ‘dodge’ and ‘immerse’?

6.   Rearrange the letters in the word ‘sleuth’ to make another word.

7.   What word meaning ‘ship’ would mean ‘small collections of water’ if the letters were read backwards?

8.   If a clock is stopped for a minute every ten minutes, how long will it take the minute hand to complete a revolution?

9.   What adjective which means ‘pertaining to citizenship’ spells the same from right to left as it does from left to right?

10.   When seen in a mirror, which of the following words printed in capital letters will look the same as when viewed directly?
MAN TOOT DEED

11.   There is a monosyllable which, if you add to it a single letter, becomes a word of three syllables.   What is it?

12.   A man lived in a house that could be entered by only one door and five windows.   Making certain that there was no one in the house one day, he went out for the afternoon.   Upon his return, although the windows were still locked and unbroken and the door had not been forced, he discovered a thief in his house robbing it.   If the thief did not use a skeleton key, or pick any of the locks, how did he get into the house?

13.   If a hen and a half lays an egg and a half in a day and a half, how many eggs will seven hens lay in six days?

14.   The first two syllables of the name of one of the States of the United States is suggested by a girl’s name.   The third syllable is suggested by a word meaning ‘debark’.   What is the name of the State?

15.   How will the following sentence, attributed to Napoleon, read if you start with the last word and read all the letters and words backwards? ‘Able was I ere I saw Elba.’

16.   In the following word, eliminate the second letter and every alternate letter thereafter.   What word do the remaining letters form?
GLEAM

17.   Rearrange the following letters so that they make the name of an article of furniture:
C H O C U

18.   My father is the brother of your sister.   What relative am I of yours? Cousin, nephew, son, uncle, son-in-law?

19.   By eliminating one letter in each of four words in the following sentence, a new sentence of an entirely different meaning will remain.  
They heard meat was stewed.

20.   What two four-letter words pronounced the same but spelled differently mean ‘valley’ and ‘curtain’?

21.   Which two of the following words are composed of the same letters?
AGATE, AGITATE, GATES, STAGS, STAGE, GRATE

22.   Write the following on your answer sheet and, by inserting two full-stops and a question mark, make the meaning clear.
That that is is that that is not is not is that not so

23.   The first part of the name of a certain make of American car is suggested by a word meaning ‘call’; the second, by a word meaning ‘insinuation’.  
What is the make of the car?

24.   There were three horses running in a race.   Their names were Tally-ho, Sonny Boy, and Juanita.
Their owners were Mr Lewis, Mr Bailey and Mr Smith, although not necessarily in that sequence.
Tally-ho unfortunately broke his ankle at the start of the race.   Mr Smith owned a brown and white three-year old.   Sonny Boy had previous winnings of £20,000.   Mr Bailey lost heavily although his horse almost won.  
The horse that won was black.   This race was the first race that the horse owned by Mr Lewis had run.  

What was the name of the horse that won?