| Jar |
| Builder |
| Jar type |
| Burr role |
| Wall maker |
| Bricklayer |
| Hod carrier |
| Trowel user |
| Dixon line? |
| Hod worker? |
| ESG's Perry |
| Mortar user |
| Stonecutter |
| Type of jar |
| Wall worker |
| Stoneworker |
| Kind of jar |
| Wall builder |
| Lodge member |
| Man of stone |
| Stone carver |
| Brick placer |
| Cement layer |
| Stonewaller? |
| Street boss? |
| Gardner hero |
| Stone-worker |
| Brick worker |
| Brick artisan |
| Brick dresser |
| Grate builder |
| Mortar expert |
| Mortar master |
| Canning brand |
| Layer of rock |
| Stone builder |
| Street's boss |
| Mozart was one |
| Man in a lodge |
| Burr portrayal |
| Dixon's friend |
| Gardner lawyer |
| Jackie of jest |
| Perry in court |
| Perry or James |
| Trowel-wielder |
| James or Perry |
| Mozart, for one |
| Dave of Traffic |
| Fictional Perry |
| Gardner's Perry |
| James or Marsha |
| Layer of cement |
| Layer of stones |
| Marsha or James |
| Marsha or Perry |
| Pamela or Perry |
| Perry of TV law |
| James or Jackie |
| Layer of bricks |
| Worker in stone |
| Fraternal fellow |
| Certain jar type |
| Dixon's partner. |
| Foundation layer |
| Half a U.S. line |
| Perry of fiction |
| Street director? |
| Surveyor Charles |
| Bricklayer, e.g. |
| Gardner's lawyer |
| Setter in stone? |
| Mortarboard user |
| Actor Burr's role |
| Artisan of a sort |
| Dixon's colleague |
| Dresser of stones |
| Never-lose lawyer |
| Third little pig? |
| Worker with stone |
| Raymond Burr role |
| Building craftsman |
| Gardner's attorney |
| Grand Lodge member |
| Nick of Pink Floyd |
| Worker with blocks |
| Bricklaying expert |
| Burr's TV attorney |
| Worker with bricks |
| Construction worker |
| Actress Marsha ____ |
| Building contractor |
| Comedian Jackie ___ |
| Gardner created him |
| Secret order member |
| Line drawer of 1767 |
| Worker with a trowel |
| The man with the hod |
| Lolita" co-star, 1962 |
| Actor in "Odd Man Out |
| George ___ University |
| One who dresses stone |
| Worker who lays bricks |
| Building subcontractor |
| Fictional lawyer Perry |
| Dixon's partner in line |
| Perry who's on the case |
| Member of a secret order |
| Bricks-and-mortar worker |
| One with concrete ideas? |
| ''The Goodbye Girl'' girl |
| Dixon's geography partner |
| One who works with bricks |
| Person who dresses stones |
| Person with a mortarboard |
| Specialist among builders |
| George Washington, for one |
| Craftsman working in stone |
| Sotomayor's TV inspiration |
| Type of jar used in canning |
| Gardner's fictional attorney |
| Perry ___ (fictional lawyer) |
| Raymond Burr's early TV role |
| Dixon's line-drawing partner |
| Feelin' Alright?" writer Dave |
| It's after James or before jar |
| Offerer of concrete solutions? |
| Perry ___ (fictional attorney) |
| Attorney played by Raymond Burr |
| Classical Gas" composer Williams |
| Brick-and-mortar business worker? |
| Comedian Jackie or actress Marsha |
| Garland's "A Star Is Born" costar |
| One who may cast the first stone? |
| Member of a secret fraternal order |
| New Yorker for whom a jar was named |
| Perry with a phenomenal success rate |
| Erle Stanley Gardner's lawyer-sleuth. |
| Worker often found on hands and knees |
| Perry whose secretary was Della Street |
| Burger's court opponent, in legal fiction |
| Craftsman — English film actor, d. 1984 |
| Perry who lost only one case in his career |
| Member of an organization in many conspiracy theories |
| Comic who had the one-man show "The World According to Me |
| Craftsperson who's skilled in building with brick or stone |
| Virginian statesman George nicknamed "The Father of the Bill of Rights |