On puzzle on pro. layton village.

Puzzle 1: 34
Hint 3: You need to double the amount of combonations you get because the clock is 12 hour.
Hint 1: Did you include combos like 10:00?
Hint 2: 12:22 is another combo. Did you think about combos like 11:12 and combos above that time?

Puzzle 2: 50 dollars
Hint 3: The money is divided according to how much work each did. Work is how many acres each seeded. Read the puzzle again.
Hint 1: Time isn't a factor in the payment.
Hint 2: Roland and Alfred have been assigned a 10-acre plot of land and split it in half. Think about this sentance.

Puzzle 3: T
Hint 2: Z is not the letter.
Hint 1: The letter after P isn't Q. Its H.
HInt 3: Look at the bold word.

Puzzle 4: 13 people
Hint 3: In two minutes the raft can make two trips. Where is the boat after two trips?
Hint 1: It takes 18 minutes to take two trips. There is only 2 minutes left so since the raft is at the boat it can pick up another load of passengers. Yes it can take three trips.
Hint 2: Not every passanger will make it.

Puzzle 5: 3 candles
Hint 1: Read the puzzle again. Notice the phrase "how many candles do you have left in the end?".
Hint 3: The wind blows out 2 candles and later one more. So how many candles are blown out. The candles not blown out continue to burn. What will happen to the candles if they continue to burn?
Hint 2: Think about what "have left in the end really means" It menas an item continues to exist. So what happens to a burning candle not blown out?

Puzzle 6: 8 pills
Hint 3: The number of pills he needs to write on is less then ten. Think how can he accomplist this?
Hint 2: If you have two visually indentical items you need to only mark one of them. Therefore you don't need to mark each pill to tell them apart.
Hint 1: The man has to take his pills today. He is going to take the pill right in front of him. If thats so does he really need to mark the one he's going to take today?

Puzzle 7: 59 minutes
Hint 2: The germs double each minute.
Hint 1: Starting with one germ how many will you have in one minute? Read the puzzle carefully.
Hint 3: Your answer is how long it takes for two germs to fill the jar. If it takes a minute for a germ to turn into two how much additional time is needed to fill the jar.

Puzzle 8: 1 suspect
Hint 3: This puzzle is really simple. Take E, for example who says everyone is lying. If she actually is telling the truth then her statement becomes a lie, so she is ruled out. E's a liar for sure.
Hint 1: Lets's rule out another couple of suspects. If A's statement is true, then three other people should be saying the same thing as A. This is not the case, so A is a liar. If B is telling the truth, two other suspects should say the same thing as B. Once again this is not the case, so B must be lying.
Hint 2: We've proven that A, B, and E are lying. Let's examine the last two suspects. If three people are lying, the other two supspects should have the same statements, but everyone's statement is different. So if four out of the five are lying...

Puzzle 9: 1 minute
Hint 2: You might come to the conclusion that you need to find the lowest common multipule between the three numbers. Read the problem again to see if you can figure it out.
Hint 3: The horses run at different speeds. To measure the speed of each, the problem tells you how many laps each can do in one minute. The horses all run laps per minute, so at least you don't have to deal with strange speeds.
Hint 1: One horse runs two laps in one minute, one runs three in one minute, and one runs four laps in one minute. Where will they be one minute after they start running?

Puzzle 10: 100%
Hint 1: Each of the 10 jars has 50 peices of candy, so there is in total 500 peices. You've taken all this candy and divided it into 20 bags. If you made it that far read the puzzle again.
Hint 3: What exactly is the puzzle asking you? You need to figure out the precentage likelihood that there will be an average of 25 peices of candy per bag. That's a bit different isn't it?
Hint 2: Ten jars of 50 peices of candy each means you have 500 peices of candy. If you divide 500 peices into 20 bags you get 25 peices...now think what that number signifies.

Puzzle 11: The match.
Hint 2: Does the order in which you light the items matter? Of course it does! Think about the item you have to light first.
Hint 1: Your answer should be the one, that with it you can perform your other tasks. Without lighting it you can not accomplish these tasks.
Hint 3: Just think about the situation logically and the answer will be right in front of you.

Puzzle 12: 1 mouse
Hint 3: You might be thinking that there is going to be a lot of math involved. But none is neccasary to solve this problem.
Reread the problem again carefully.
Hint 1: Do you remember how many mice you started with? Have you considered how many mice you can expect based on that number?
Hint 2: Ok, let me make it a bit simpilier, you need your mouse to get pregnant first, to have babies. What does the mouse need to become pregnant?

Puzzle 13: Both are six.
Hint 2: When you take the two years from the brother's age and give them to the big sister's she become's twice his age.
Also, when you take three years off the brother's age and give them to the sister, she becomes three times his age.
Hint 1: You could try to solve this with an equation but that's not the way to solve this! Move two years from the brother's age and the differance between the two becomes four years. Move three years and the difference widens to six years.
Hint 3: The brother and sister were born in the same year.

Puzzle 14: The father is 44 years old.
Hint 3: Look at what is presented.
"I'm as old as your age plus half my age."
This means if you take away the father's age, then you have the age of the son.
Hint 2: What the father is saying is that if you add half his age to the son's age, you'll get the father's age.
If that's so then the age of the son must be half the age of the father.
Hint 3: Half the father's age is equal to the son's age, so the father's age is two times that of his son.

Puzzle 15: 0% chance
Hint 1: Don't forget what is being asked. Remember you are not being asked what the precentage likelihood is that you will grab your umbrella out of the three.
Hint 2: If two people have their umbrellas then who does the last one belong to?
Hint 3: Three umbrellas sit in a bin. Two people come by and take their own umbrellas by chance, but the third person fails to do so...is that even possible?