Showing posts sorted by relevance for query five. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query five. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2016

Way Len Gin Inn's To Remind Choose That Mark of 10


The Five Satins

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Five Satins
FredParris1.jpg
Fred Parris in 2007
Background information
OriginNew Haven, ConnecticutUnited States
GenresDoo-wop
Years active1954–present
MembersFred Parris
Richie Freeman
Eugene Dobbs
Bonita Brooks
Pat Marafiote
James Moore
Gregory Borino
Jerry Langley
Past membersLou Peebles
Larry DiSalvi
Stanley Dortch
Ed Martin
Jim Freeman
Al Denby
Tommy Killebrew
Jessie Murphy
Bill Baker
Sylvester Hopkins
Wes Forbes
Corky Rogers
Jimmy Curtis
Nate Marshall
Nadina Perry
The Five Satins are an American doo-wop group, best known for their 1956 million-selling song, "In the Still of the Night."

Career[edit]

The group, formed in New Haven, Connecticut, consisted of leader Fred Parris, Lou Peebles, Stanley Dortch, Ed Martin and Jim Freeman and Nat Mosley in 1954. With little success, the group reorganized, with Dortch and Peebles leaving, and new member Al Denby entering. The group then recorded "In the Still of the Night", a very big hit in the United States which was originally released as the B-side to the single, "The Jones Girl". The single was initially issued on the tiny local "Standord" label (45 stock # 200) and after some local Connecticut sales, it was released the following year on the New York label Ember (45 stock # 1005), and "In The Still Of The Night" ended up charting at number three on the R&B chart and number 25 on the pop charts. Two singles later, the follow-up track "Pretty Baby (That's Why I Sing)" (Ember 1025) got weeks of airplay on powerful CHUM in Toronto, in November of 1957. An August 1958 release, "A Night To Remember" (Ember 1038), got some Boston airplay. During late 1959 (in San Francisco, CA) and early 1960 (in both San Antonio, TX and Rochester, NY), their classic 45 side garnered renewed current airplay, becoming a Top 10 hit in all three listed markets. "In The Still of the Night" became an even bigger hit when it appeared as the lead track on Original Sound Records' OLDIES BUT GOODIES Vol.1. The series eventually ran to 15 volumes. The series has been in continual print in one form or another since that first volume was released in 1959. In total, their signature track sold over one million copies and was awarded a gold disc.[1] A case of painfully bad timing affected the group's lead singer. Uncle Sam had come calling, and Parris entered the Army very soon after the huge success of "In The Still Of The Night", forcing the group to reorganize again, with Martin, Freeman, Tommy Killebrew, Jessie Murphy and new lead Bill Baker. Baker quickly proved to be a highly capable replacement, however, as this lineup immediately hit big with another timeless, very successful effort, Billy Dawn Smith's "To the Aisle" (Ember 1019), in September 1957.
Upon Parris' return from the Army, a new lineup was assembled, consisting of Parris, Lou Peebles (who was in a previous incarnation of the Five Satins), Sylvester Hopkins, Richie Freeman and Wes Forbes. The group would be briefly known as "Fred Parris and the Scarlets", until the Baker-led group split up. At this point, they reverted to the Five Satins name. According to old radio survey repository ARSA, the following 45 sides charted in some markets: "I'll Be Seeing You" (Ember 1061), 3/60; "Your Memory" (Cub 9071), 7/1960; "The Time" (Ember 1066), 10/60; "These Fooling Things/A Beggar With A Dream" (Cub 9077), 12/60; "Till The End" (United Artists 368), 11/61; "The Masquerade Is Over" (Chancellor 1110), 7/62; "Remember Me" (Warner Brothers 5367), 8/63; and "Ain't Gonna Dance" (aka "Ain't Gonna Cry", Roulette 4563), 7/64. In total, the group appeared on an unusually high number of record labels, even for their era, when such label-hopping was far more of a common practice.
In 1965, Parris retooled his band, and started a three-year run of getting substantial airplay almost exclusively inside his home state of Connecticut, as Fred Parris and the Restless Hearts. Songs included "No Use In Crying" (Checker 1108), 5/65; "Blushing Bride/Giving My Love To You" (Green-Sea 106), 8/66; "Bring It Home To Daddy" (Atco 6439), which hit #1 locally in 10/66; "I'll Be Hangin On" (Green-Sea 107); a #11 local hit in 4/67; and ending this career phase with an updated version of their classic hit, "(I'll Remember) In The Still Of The Night "67"" (Mama Sadie 1001), in 8/67.
By the early 1970s the group was Parris, Peebles, Richie Freeman, Jimmy Curtis and Corky Rogers. "Dark At The Top Of My Heart" (RCA 0478), 6/71, had garnered them still more Connecticut airplay. With the smash hit 1973 film American Graffiti and its nostalgic soundtrack sparking a renewed interest in both old hits and old groups, music mogul Don Kirshner sought to capitalize by signing Parris and his group to his own Kirshner label. He restored the group's moniker back to Five Satins, and released two 45s: "Very Precious Oldies/Your Are Love" (Kirshner 4251), 1973; and "Two Different Worlds/Love Is Such A Beautiful Thing" (Kirshner 4252), 1974. Both singles flopped, however.
They continued recording into the 1980s, with Parris, Richie Freeman, Curtis and Nate Marshall. In 1981, a "Medley Craze" had suddenly engulfed Top 40 radio, led by the Beatle hit-laden Stars on 45 medley, performed by some Dutch studio sound-alike musicians. The track hit #1 in the U.S. In response, Capitol had quickly spliced up and issued "genuine" old hit medleys, for both The Beatles and The Beach Boys. Both of these medleys only narrowly missed reaching the national Top 10. Noticing this new trend, however, longtime Connecticut music producer Marty Markiewicz (who'd known Parris personally for many years), knew that he was still singing/performing at a very high level. Markiewicz also happened to be working for Elektra Records (as a local music rep) at the time. He got an idea. He both asked for and was given permission by his employer to bring Parris and company in, on each's own time, to record/produce a medley of classic '50s hits. Just to see what would come out of it. The plan was to use the Satins' own classic hit as the medley's final song. The result was "Memories Of Days Gone By" (Elektra 47411), which became the group's first new entry on the Billboard Hot 100 since 1960. And although it only peaked at #71 in early 1982, it did again reach the Top 10 at New Haven's WKCI (KC101) and Hartford's and WDRC. The latter was especially satisfying, as airplay for Parris in the Hartford market had always been tough to come by, even during the '60s days of huge downstate radio play. In response to their successful medley, Elektra requested a full LP. For this release, the "Five" was dropped, and the album was issued as by "Fred Parris And The Satins." Two more singles were released from it. The first, a remake of the Delfonics' 1970 hit "Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)" (Elektra 69888), again got solid airplay in New Haven, in November of 1982. Meanwhile, Bill Baker had started his own Five Satins group around this same time, with former Satin Sylvester Hopkins and Hopkins' brothers Arthur "Count" Hopkins, Sr. and Frank. By the late 1980s, this group consisted of Baker, Harvey Potts, Jr., Anthony Hofler and Octavio DeLeon. In 1990, the group was joined by Jimmie Wilson stepping into the first tenor position for Don Simpson.
Fred Parris and Richie Freeman continue to perform. Bill Baker died in 1994.[2]

Awards and recognition[edit]

In 2003, the Five Satins were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.

Present day[edit]

Richie Freeman, Nadina Perry and Eugene Dobbs.
Satins - Freeman, Perry and Dobbs.
One of the original members of the Five Satins now works in the cafeteria at the University of New Haven. Jim Freeman lives in Norwalk, Iowa and owns a pest control company. Wes Forbes is a psychologist in the State of California, currently employed with Alliant International University as a Training Director. Richie Freeman is the house sound engineer at NY's famed Iridium Jazz Club.
Fred Parris and Richie Freeman are still actively performing occasionally with the Five Satins. The lineup now also includes Eugene Dobbs, originally the lead singer and founder of Nu-Cullers[3] and Nadina Perry.
They are supported by musicians Pat Marafiote (keyboards and MD), Greg Borino (guitar), Jerry Langley (bass) and James Moore (drums).
The group performs regularly throughout the Northeast and they continue to actively record new material.

Hit singles[edit]

YearTitleChart positions
USUS R&B
1956"In the Still of the Night"243
1957"To the Aisle"255
1959"Shadows"8727
1960"I'll Be Seeing You"2214
1961"In the Still of the Night/I'll Remember"99
1982"Memories of Days Gone By"A71
  • A"Memories of Days Gone By" Also Peaked at #32 on Adult Contemporary Singles.

Monday, June 27, 2016

Stock Pay.Per II Of Ore Off Port Said??

Note to Self: This post was originally copied and posted on my google blog 'The Secret of the Universe is Choice; Know Decision by I, Karen Anastasia Placek and held  drafted within the google holdings on this blog on the 2nd of June, 2016.  'Published June 27th, 2016'. At and for my reference to the many more posts in 'the hold' google time stamp on my acer laptop computer running Windows to say the time is 

11:19 AM to date and state Published Now!!

http://digital.library.okstate.edu/kappler/vol2/treaties/osa0878.htm

INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES

Vol. II, Treaties    
Compiled and edited by Charles J. Kappler. Washington : Government Printing Office, 1904.


TREATY WITH THE OSAGE, 1865.

Sept. 29, 1865. | 14 Stat., 687. | Ratified June 26, 1866. | Proclaimed, Jan. 21, 1867.

Page Images: 878 | 879 | 880 | 881 | 882 | 883

Margin Notes
Sale of lands to the United States.
Boundaries.
Proviso.
Payment for lands purchased, and in what.
Lands to be surveyed and sold.
Proceeds.
Cession of other lands to the United States to be held in trust.
Proceeds of the sale thereof; how to be executed.
Proviso.
School fund.
One section granted to John Shoenmaker, in trust, and with privileges, etc.
Certain loyal persons, heads of families, etc., may buy a quarter section each at, etc.
James N. Coffey and A. B. Canville to be paid their claims.
Proviso.
Heirs of Charles Mograin may select a section of land, etc.
$500 to be paid to the chiefs annually.
One section of land to be selected, etc., for purposes of education.
Proviso.
Patents to issue to Darius Rogers for 160 acres, and he may purchase other land at, etc.
Dependence on the United States acknowledged.
Right of way through reservations for high ways and railroads.
Indians to remove from cede lands, etc.
United States to advance expenses of survey and sale; to be reimbursed.
Patents to issue to half-breeds for 80 acres, including their improvements.
Heirs of Joseph Swiss.
Osage may unite with other Indians, and receive portion of annuities.
If Indians remove from Kansas, their diminished reservation to be sold, and proceeds, how applied.
Rejection of some articles not to affect others, etc.
Articles of treaty and convention, made and concluded at Canville Trading Post, Osage Nation, within the boundary of the State of Kansas, on the twenty-ninth day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, by and between D. N. Cooley, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and Elijah Sells, superintendent of Indian Affairs for the southern superintendency, commissioners on the part of the United States, and the chiefs of the tribe of Great and Little Osage Indians, the said chiefs being duly authorized to negotiate and treat by said tribes.
ARTICLE 1.
The tribe of the Great and Little Osage Indians, having now more lands than are necessary for their occupation, and all payments from the Government to them under former treaties having ceased, leaving them greatly impoverished, and being desirous of improving their condition by disposing of their surplus lands, do hereby grant and sell to the United States the lands contained within the following boundaries, that is to say: Beginning at the southeast corner of their present reservation, and running thence north with the eastern boundary thereof fifty miles to the northeast corner; thence west with the northern line thirty miles; thence south fifty miles, to the southern boundary of said reservation; and thence east with said southern boundary to the place of beginning: Provided, That the western boundary of said land herein ceded shall not extend further westward than upon a line commencing at a point on the southern boundary of said Osage country one mile east of the place where the Verdigris River crosses the southern boundary of the State of Kansas. And, in consideration of the grant and sale to them of the above-described lands, the United States agree to pay the sum of three hundred thousand dollars, which sum shall be placed to the credit of said tribe of Indians in the Treasury of the United States, and interest thereon at the rate of five per centum per annum shall be paid to said tribes semi-annually, in money, clothing, provisions, or such articles of utility as the Secretary of the Interior may, from time to time, direct. Said lands shall be surveyed and sold, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, on the most advantageous terms, for cash, as public lands are surveyed and sold under existing laws, including any act granting lands to the State of Kansas in aid of the construction of a railroad through said lands; but no preemption claim or homestead settlement shall be recognized: and after re-imbursing the United States the cost of said survey and sale, and the said sum of three hundred thousand dollars placed to the credit of
said Indians, the remaining proceeds of sales shall be placed in the Treasury of the United States to the credit of the “civilization fund,” to be used, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, for the education and civilization of Indian tribes residing within the limits of the United States.
ARTICLE 2.
The said tribe of Indians also hereby cede to the United States a tract of land twenty miles in width from north to south, off the north side of the remainder of their present reservation, and extending its entire length from east to west; which land is to be held in trust for said Indians, and to be surveyed and sold for their benefit under the direction of the Commissioner of the General Land-Office, at a price not less than one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, as other lands are surveyed and sold, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior shall from time to time prescribe. The proceeds of such sales, as they accrue, after deducting all expenses incident to the proper execution of the trust, shall be placed in the Treasury of the United States to the credit of said tribe of Indians; and the interest thereon, at the rate of five per centum per annum, shall be expended annually for building houses, purchasing agricultural implements and stock animals, and for the employment of a physician and mechanics, and for providing such other necessary aid as will enable said Indians to commence agricultural pursuits under favorable circumstances: Provided, That twenty-five per centum of the net proceeds arising from the sale of said trust lands, until said percentage shall amount to the sum of eighty thousand dollars, shall be placed to the credit of the school fund of said Indians; and the interest thereon, at the rate of five per centum per annum, shall be expended semi-annually for the boarding, clothing, and education of the children of said tribe.
ARTICLE 3.
The Osage Indians, being sensible of the great benefits they have received from the Catholic mission, situate in that portion of their reservation herein granted and sold to the United States, do hereby stipulate that one section of said land, to be selected by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs so as to include the improvements of said mission, shall be granted in fee-simple to John Shoenmaker, in trust, for the use and benefit of the society sustaining said mission, with the privilege to said Shoenmaker, on the payment of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, of selecting and purchasing two sections of land adjoining the section above granted; the said selection to be held in trust for said society, and to be selected in legal subdivisions of surveys, and subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
ARTICLE 4.
All loyal persons, being heads of families and citizens of the United States, or members of any tribe at peace with the United States, having made settlements and improvements as provided by the pre-emption laws of the United States, and now residing on the lands provided to be sold by the United States, in trust for said tribe, as well as upon the said lands herein granted and sold to the United States, shall have the privilege, at any time within one year after the ratification of this treaty, of buying a quarter section each, at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre; such quarter section to be selected according to the legal subdivisions of surveys, and to include, as far as practicable, the improvements of the settler.
ARTICLE 5.
The Osages being desirous of paying their just debts to James N. Coffey and A. B. Canville, for advances in provisions, clothing, and other necessaries of life, hereby agree that the superintendent of Indian affairs for the southern superintendency and the agent of the tribe shall examine all claims against said tribe, and submit the same to the tribe for approval or disapproval, and report the same to the Secretary of the Interior, with the proofs in each case, for his concurrence or rejection; and the Secretary may issue to the claimants
scrip for the claims thus allowed, which shall be receivable as cash in payment for any of the lands sold in trust for said tribe: Provided, The aggregate amount thus allowed by the Secretary of the Interior shall not exceed five thousand dollars.
ARTICLE 6.
In consideration of the long and faithful services rendered by Charles Mograin, one of the principal chiefs of the Great Osages, to the people, and in consideration of improvements made and owned by him on the land by this treaty sold to the United States, and in lieu of the provision made in article fourteen for the half-breed Indians, the heirs of the said Charles Mograin, dec[ease]d, may select one section of land, including his improvements, from the north half of said land, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, and upon his approval of such selection it shall be patented to the heirs of the said Mograin, dec[ease]d, in fee-simple.
ARTICLE 7.
It is agreed between the parties hereto that the sum of five hundred dollars shall be set apart each year from the moneys of said tribe, and paid by the agent to the chiefs.
ARTICLE 8.
The Osage Indians being anxious that a school should be established in their new home, at their request it is agreed and provided that John Shoenmaker may select one section of land within their diminished reservation, and upon the approval of such selection by the Secretary of the Interior, such section of land shall be set apart to the said Shoenmaker and his successors, upon condition that the same shall be used, improved, and occupied for the support and education of the children of said Indians during the occupancy of said reservation by said tribe: Provided, That said lands shall not be patented, and upon the discontinuance of said school shall revert to said tribe and to the United States as other Indian lands.
ARTICLE 9.
It is further agreed that, in consideration of the services of Darius Rogers to the Osage Indians, a patent shall be issued to him for one hundred and sixty acres of land, to include his mill and improvements, on paying one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre; and said Rogers shall also have the privilege of purchasing, at the rate of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, one quarter section of land adjoining the tract above mentioned, which shall be patented to him in like manner; said lands to be selected subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
ARTICLE 10.
The Osages acknowledge their dependence on the Government of the United States, and invoke its protection and care; they desire peace, and promise to abstain from war, and commit no depredations on either citizens or Indians; and they further agree to use their best efforts to suppress the introduction and use of ardent spirits in their country.
ARTICLE 11.
It is agreed that all roads and highways laid out by the State or General Government shall have right of way through the remaining lands of said Indians, on the same terms as are provided by law, when made through lands of citizens of the United States; and railroad companies, when the lines of their roads necessarily pass through the lands of said Indians, shall have right of way upon the payment of fair compensation therefor.
ARTICLE 12.
Within six months after the ratification of this treaty the Osage Indians shall remove from the lands sold and ceded in trust, and settle upon their diminished reservation.
ARTICLE 13.
The Osage Indians having no annuities from which it is possible for them to pay any of the expenses of carrying this treaty into effect, it is agreed that the United States shall appropriate twenty thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, for the purpose of defraying the expense of survey and sale of the lands hereby ceded in trust, which amount so expended shall be re-imbursed to the
Treasury of the United States from the proceeds of the first sales of said lands.
ARTICLE 14.
The half-breeds of the Osage tribe of Indians, not to exceed twenty-five in number, who have improvements on the north half of the lands sold to the United States, shall have a patent issued to them, in fee-simple, for eighty acres each, to include, as far as practicable, their improvements, said half-breeds to be designated by the chiefs and head-men of the tribe; and the heirs of Joseph Swiss, a half-breed, and a former interpreter of said tribe, shall, in lieu of the above provision, receive a title, in fee-simple, to a half section of land, including his house and improvements, if practicable, and also to a half section of the trust lands; all of said lands to be selected by the parties, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
ARTICLE 15.
It is also agreed by the United States that said Osage Indians may unite with any tribe of Indians at peace with the United States, residing in said Indian Territory, and thence afterwards receive an equitable proportion, according to their numbers, of all moneys, annuities, or property payable by the United States to said Indian tribe with which the agreement may be made; and in turn granting to said Indians, in proportion to their numbers, an equitable proportion of all moneys, annuities, and property payable by the United States to said Osages.
ARTICLE 16.
It is also agreed by said contracting parties, that if said Indians should agree to remove from the State of Kansas, and settle on lands to be provided for them by the United States in the Indian Territory on such terms as may be agreed on between the United States and the Indian tribes now residing in said Territory or any of them, then the diminished reservation shall be disposed of by the United States in the same manner and for the same purposes as hereinbefore provided in relation to said trust lands, except that 50 per cent. of the proceeds of the sale of said diminished reserve may be used by the United States in the purchase of lands for a suitable home for said Indians in said Indian Territory.
ARTICLE 17.
Should the Senate reject or amend any of the above articles, such rejection or amendment shall not affect the other provisions of this treaty, but the same shall go into effect when ratified by the Senate and approved by the President.
D. N. Cooley, Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Elijah Sells, Superintendent Indian Affairs Southern Superintendency, and Commissioner.
Me-tso-shin-ca, (Little Bear.) his x mark, Chief Little Osages.
No-pa-wah-la, his x mark, Second Chief to Little Bear.
Pa-tha-hun-kah, his x mark, Little Chief L. B. Band.
White Hair, his x mark, Principal Chief Osage Nation.
Ta-wah-she-he, his x mark, Chief Big Hill Band.
Beaver, his x mark, Second Chief White Hair's Band.
Clermont, his x mark, Chief Clermont Band.
O-po-ton-koh, his x mark.
Wa-she-pe-she, his x mark, Little Chief W. H. Band.
Witnesses:
Ma-sho-hun-ca, counsellor Little Bear Band, his x mark.
Wa-sha-pa-wa-ta-ne-ca, his x mark.
Wa-du-ha-ka, his x mark.
Shin-ka-wa-ta-ne-kah, his x mark.
She-weh-teh, his x mark.
Gra-ma, his x mark.
Hu-la-wah-sho-sha, his x mark.
Na-ta-ton-ca-wa-ki, his x mark.
Num-pa-wah-cu, his x mark.
Ha-ska-mon-ne, his x mark.
Attest:
G. C. Snow, U. S. Neosho Indian agent.
Milton W. Reynolds, acting clerk.
Theodore C. Wilson, phonographic reporter.
Alexander Beyett, interpreter Osage Nation.
Witnesses, Little Bear's Band:
Ka-wah-ho-tza, his x mark.
O-ke-pa-hola, his x mark.
Me-he-tha, his x mark.
White Hair's band of witnesses:
Shin-ka-wa-sha, councillor of White Hair's, his x mark.
Wa-sha-wa, his x mark.
Ka-he-ka-stza-jeh, his x mark.
Ka-he-ka-wa-shin-pe-she, his x mark.
Saw-pe-ka-la, his x mark.
Wa-tza-shim-ka, his x mark.
Wa-no-pa-she, his x mark.
Shin-be-ka-shi, his x mark.
Ne-koo-le-blo, his x mark.
O-ke-pa-ka-loh, his x mark.
Ke-nu-in-ca, his x mark.
Pa-su-mo-na, his x mark.
We the undersigned, chiefs and headmen of the Clermont and Black Dog Band of the Great Osage nation, in council at Fort Smith, Ark., have had the foregoing treaty read and explained in full by our interpreter, L. P. Chouteau, and fully approve the provisions of said treaty made by our brothers the Osages, and by this signing make it our act and deed.
Clermont, chief of Clermont Band, his x mark.
Palley, second chief of Clermont Band, his x mark.
Hah-ti-in-gah, (Dry Feather,) counsellor, his x mark.
Kah-ha-che-la-ton, brave, his x mark.
Do-tah-cah-she, brave, his x mark.
Black Dog, chief Black Dog Band, his x mark.
William Penn, second chief Black Dog Band, his x mark.
Broke Arm, counsellor, his x mark.
Ne-kah-ke-pon-nah, brave, his x mark.
Ne-kah-gah-hee, brave, his x mark.
Witnesses:
Wah-skon-mon-ney, his x mark.
Wah-kon-che-la, his x mark.
Wah-sha-sha-wah-ti-in-gah, his x mark.
Pah-cha-hun-gah, his x mark.
Long Bow, his x mark.
Wah-she-wah-la, his x mark.
War Eagle, his x mark.
Pon-hon-gle-gah-ton, his x mark.
Sun Down, his x mark.
Ton-won-ge-hi, his x mark.
Wah-cha-o-nau-she, his x mark.


Produced by the Oklahoma State University Library
URL: http://digital.library.okstate.edu/kappler/

Comments to: lib-dig@okstate.edu

Monday, February 1, 2016

Air^Pole^*Loo^Shin The Joint Of App.^Sole^Loo^Shin??



Should the Hooters be Play EAN on-Line Game bull Lean than Watts Hour Scrabble,
split the Screen flash the Bulb skull the Hatch It and Ham Whisper the Words??,
nigh the Men New Chute to Smoke Ken,
The kneel Syn Knee^EAN on the Morse lit to Work the got Chew??,
tow back Oh!! owe Wit to that Field??,
knot A call to Time Mean is the Out Turned Wreath of Heavy Ivy League,
Wall street Thugs to Tug Gen the Hem in shoe Oles to Cleats of slate on Chalk??,
the Tree Sun for Sun drive on A signed seat Ding winks the Paw per the downs on the In sure Hints.

Trade on that bounce to the big deep Rein,
Ice sleet Hale are Min. toll Sole jures to Course the bough of Air Owe to E!^Race^Err's bean??,
Mill lure to Baits mow Tell.

Should the Teak on the Oak birch with the Sneak is Peats Cough fee a Fee^Male??,
shoulder by Block the Ref or Reed,
flutes on the We Saul to glad E! ate Tore kNights??,
round that Fount Tin to change Booth touch lake,
pea for the Tea and branch Hot jog for Out??,
ewe or Knoll basis too back the Base ick Stride??,
whys a line on the Char Tore to beak Con of the brights??,
read Car pet to Tar Mack the stroke of Clock cue as Have time to sec.^Cont. shite??,
fill in the blank is the Word crude to Owe^ill??,
be that Volcanic and know this Meet tee Or banks skit.

Preview with Stagger sway to the Weeds??,
garden of E! den made Took to the beast,
growl on the thunder than light Hoarse min. to Talk,
radio gone ef IM now balance that there Can!!

Thorough truth compass North buy North debt??,
what is the Fact tore in the Cards of Tunk breadth,
is Poker face a Blackjack Table is Roo let the Pouch??,
how is the slot Machine should the dry go Poe leased.

Digs or the Haight is the Ash berry Brown,
pass Tell on dot Com awe to Operatic deep Wreath??,
is that Read Would on For Rest so Jack it to sheet that the Notes are on Walrus to Tusk tin Sole deeped.

Pedestrian found Day shin with a bit Sweet tour Keys,
floor a duh gone to that Try Angle dish Played??,
cache for the rock It and Pops for the steed,
why is the Saddle a girth to be Keeps??.

*loo1
noun
BRITISHinformal
  1. a bathroom or toilet.
  2. Origin
    1940s: many theories have been put forward about the word's origin: one suggests the source is Waterloo, a trade name for iron cisterns in the early part of the century; the evidence remains inconclusive.
    loo2
    noun
    1. a gambling card game, popular from the 17th to the 19th centuries, in which a player who fails to win a trick must pay a sum to a pool.

*Loo | Define Loo at Dictionary.com

dictionary.reference.com/browse/loo

Dictionary.com
Loo definition, a card game in which forfeits are paid into a pool. See more.

*Loo | Definition of Loo by Merriam-Webster

www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/loo

Merriam‑Webster
1 : an old card game in which the winner of each trick or a majority of tricks takes a portion of the pool while losing players are obligated to contribute to the next ...

*Lanterloo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lanterloo
The Game of Pam
Euchre.jpg
"Mouche" - Four of a suit plus Pam ♣
OriginFrance
Alternative namesLoo
TypeTrick-taking
Players3 to 8 (5 to 7 best)
Cards52
DeckFrench
PlayClockwise
Card rank (highest to lowest)J♣ A K Q 10...
Related games
EuchreRams
Lanterloo or Loo is a 17th-century trick taking game of the Trump family of which many varieties are recorded. It belongs to a line of card games whose members include NapEuchreRamsMaoHombre, and Spoil Five. It is considered a modification of the game of "All Fours", another English game possibly of Dutch origin, in which the players replenish their hands after each round by drawing each fresh new card from the pack.

History[edit]

Under various spellings, like the French forms LenterneLenturluLooterlu, (meaning "fiddlesticks", a meaningless word equivalent to "Lullay", or "Lulloo", used in Lullabies), the game is supposed to have reached England from France most probably with the restoration of the monarchy in 1660. Also called Langtrillo[1] in its prime form and later simply Loo (also termed Lant in the north of England by 1860,[2] most possibly for having evolved into a more elaborate form of play by the addition of new rules, it may also have been brought to England from Holland.[3] Whichever way it may have been, by the turn of the eighteenth century it was already England's most popular card game. It was considered a great pastime by the idle rich of that time, but it got a very bad reputation as a potentially vicious "tavern" gambling game during the nineteenth century.

Etymology[edit]

Oxford English Dictionary quotes a 1685 reference to "Pam at Lanterloo", and Chatto quotes a Dutch political pamphlet of about 1648 entitled Het herstelde Verkeer-bert verbetert in een Lanterluy-spel,[4][5] containing a dialogue equating the game Labate (hence French Triomphe became La Bête, "The Beast", in Cotton's Complete Gamester) with Lanterluy. This was the very first mentioning of the game.[1]
The name "Pam", denoting the J♣ in its full capacity as permanent top trump in Five-Card Loo, represents an old medieval comic-erotic character called Pamphilus (Latin for a Greek word, meaning "beloved of all"[6]) or "Pamphile", in French, described as "an old bawd" by the New Zealand-born English lexicographer Eric Partridge.

Description[edit]

The game is played by 3 to 8 players using a 52-card pack. The players bet and play for tricks, and in each round they may pass, play, or "miss" (exchange from an extra hand). The main forms of the game are Three-Card Loo, Five-Card Loo,and Irish Loo, which is Five-Card Loo played with only three cards.
The turn to deal and play passes always to the left.

Objective[edit]

The basic idea is that a pool is formed by each player's contribution of three chips or counters (or five in Five-Card Loo). Then the players are dealt three cards each (if five play, then five cards are dealt) and the next turned for trump. Everyone's aim is to win at least one trick, under penalty of increasing the pool. For this purpose cards basically rank A K Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2, but the J♣, or "Pam", beats all the other cards, including the Ace of trumps.
The players, having seen their hands, can either abandon them free of charge or elect to play, thereby undertaking to win at least one trick for one third (or one fifth) of the pool. Any player failing to do so is "looed", and adds five more chips to the pool. Each player must have the same number of deals, but if there is a "loo" (the sum forfeited by a player who plays, but does not win a trick) in the last deal of a round, the game continues till there is a hand [7] without a loo .

Declarations[edit]

  • Before play, each in turn announces whether he will play or throw his hand in.
  • Any player offering to play may then exchange his hand for "miss", but may not drop out or change it back. Only the first player to claim this privilege may exercise it.
  • If all pass, the dealer wins the pool.
  • If one player exchanges and the others all pass, the exchanger then wins the pool.
  • If just one player before the dealer plays without exchanging, the dealer may not pass but has a choice of play. He may either play for himself (exchanging or not), or pay for "miss". In this case he still plays, but neither wins nor loses anything. Only the other player wins from or loses to the pool, whichever result it comes to be.

Play[edit]

If any player holds a flush (five cards of the same suit or four of a suit plus Pam), whether dealt initially or obtained by drawing cards, he wins the deal outright, there being no pay. If more than one has a flush, the best is a flush with Pam; failing that, a flush in trumps; failing that, the flush containing the highest top card (or cards if equal). The holder of the winning flush wins the stakes of all the other players, including those who dropped, but excluding those holding either Pam or a lower flush.[8]
Elder leads to the first trick. If he is in the possession of the trump Ace (or King if the Ace is the turn-up card), he must lead it. If not, he must lead any other trump, and it must be his highest trump, specially if there is only one opponent. If the Trump Ace is led and its player says "Pam, be civil", it may not be played to the same trick, unless its holder has no other trump in hand.
Subsequent players must then follow suit if possible, heading the trick, or trump if unable to follow. The trick is taken by the highest card of the suit led or by the highest trump if any are played. The winner of each trick leads to the next, trumping if possible.

Variations[edit]

Division Loo[edit]

One card is dealt to each player, and the player receiving the lowest card is entitled to deal. At the commencement of the game the dealer puts three chips, or counters, in the pool. The value of which already been agreed upon by the players. It is necessary to make the pool a number that can be exactly divided by three, say 3, 6, 9 chips. After the cards are shuffled and cut, the dealer gives three cards (one at a time) to each player, beginning at the eldest hand, and going round to the left. An extra hand called Dumby, or Miss, is dealt in the center of the table and the next turned up for trumps.
In the first hand, and whenever the pool consists of only three chips deposited by the dealer, it is called a Bold Stand, or Force, and each player is compelled to play his hand, except the eldest hand, who, if he prefers it, is entitled to the Dumby and may exchange it for his own. Bold Stand is played for the purpose of getting a larger pool; thus, if eight are playing, and five lose, they will be looed the amount of the pool, raising the total of chips to eighteen. The deal passes to the left, and the dealer must on all occasions pay in the pool three counters for the deal. When the pool consists of more than the original three chips deposited by the dealer it becomes optional to play or not, and before looking at his own cards, the dealer asks all the payers, beginning at the eldest hand, whether they play their own hand, take the Dumby, or decline playing for that round. If the eldest declines to the Dumby, the next in turn has this option, and so on.
Whenever a player declines playing, he must give his cards to the dealer who will place them under the pack. No one can retract after declaring his intention to stand or not. When all players have declared their intention, the first in hand of those who play, if he holds two trumps, must head the trick. At the end of the game, the pool is divided into three portions. If one player takes three tricks, he wins the whole pool; if he takes two, he wins two thirds; if one, only one third. All those who have failed to win a trick are looed the original amount deposited by the dealer and when only two players stand, the last player before the dealer must either play he hand, or the Dumby, or give up the pool to the dealer.

Unlimited Loo[edit]

Each player is looed the whole amount in the pool until the occurrence of a bold stand, which can only happen when three players stand the game, and each win a trick, or when two play, and one takes two chips and the other only one. The dealer being last in hand has always the advantage of knowing how many are to play before he decides. It likewise sometimes happen, when a large sum is in the pool, that none of the players consider it safe to stand, in which case the dealer takes the whole pool. This variation, also known as Loo the Board, forces those who lose the game to double the amount of chips in the pool, making it grow faster than in other forms of Loo.
Terminology
TermDefinition
Bold StandA method of playing the game, in which it is a rule, that whenever there is only the deal to be played for, every person is obliged to stand in order to make a loo for the next hand. As often this happens, it is a bold stand.
DumbyThe spare hand, which must be dealt in the regular order, either first or last but one, and not according to the dealer's whim
ForceThe same as Bold Stand
Heading the TrickPlaying a better card of the suit led, or not having any of the suit, trumping it
LooThe sum put up by any one that is looed, and is either limited or unlimited; when unlimited, a person is looed for the whole amount of the pool; if limited, he is looed by no more than a certain sum, previously agreed upon, generally the price of the deal
LooedA person playing is looed when he does not take a trick, or when he breaks any of the laws of the game
MissThe same as Dumby
MisdealWhen the dealer gives any of the players more or less than three cards, or deals out of regular order, or shows a card in dealing
MoucheA four-card flush with Pam.
Paying for the DealAt each new deal, the dealer puts into the pool three counters, or whatever it may be agreed upon by the party to play for; this is called the price of the deal
PoolThe pool consists of counters which are paid for the deals, and of the sums forfeited by those who were looed the preceding hand.
RevokeWhen a person who has suit does not play it