All Fours
ALL FOURS, a card game (known also in America as
Seven Up, Old Sledge or High-Low-Jack) usually played by two players,
though four may play. A full pack is used and each player receives
seven counters. Four points can be scored, one each for high, the
highest trump out, for low, the lowest trump dealt, for Jack, the knave
of trumps, and for game, the majority of pips in the cards of the tricks
that a player has won. Ace counts 4, King 3, Queen 2, Knave 1, and ten
10 points. Low is scored by the person to whom it is dealt; High of
course wins a trick;
Jack is scored by the player who finally has it
among his tricks. If Jack is turned up the dealer scores the point.
A player who plays a high or low trump is entitled
to ask if they are High or Low. The game is 10 or 11 points. Six cards
are dealt to each, the thirteenth being turned up for trumps. The
non-dealer may propose or beg if he does not like his hand. If the
dealer refuses the elder hand scores a point; if he consents he gives
and takes three more cards, the seventh being turned up for trumps,
which must be of a different suit from the original trump card;
otherwise six more cards are dealt out, and so on till a fresh trump
suit appears. The non-dealer then leads; the other must trump or follow
suit, or forfeit a point. Jack may be played to any trick. Each pair of
cards is a trick, and is collected by the winner. A fresh deal may be
claimed if the dealer exposes one of his adversary’s cards, or if he
gives himself or his adversary too few or too many. In that case the
error must be discovered before a card is played.
Source: From an article found in a 1911
encyclopedia. |










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