Hi again, Out of curiousity, I did a search on-line for "One, Two, Three, O'Leary," and found out there is a children's book with that title. This is the description of the book: Rhythmic text based on traditional rhymes tells how their father and mother try to put the ten bouncy O'Leary children to bed. The O'Leary children are full of energy at bedtime, and jump up and down on the bed to a variety of simple rhythmic British Isles verses based on rope skipping or ball bouncing ("Icker backer,/ Soda cracker,/ Icker backer boo./ Number two O'Leary--/ OUT goes you!"). Their beleaguered father vainly tries to calm his kids down as he prepares to leave for work on the night shift. Will Hillenbrand's colorful watercolors capture the motion of the tumbling tots as they cavort together and bounce out of bed. Betty (near Lowell, MA, USA) (Gratefully, I didn't have to raise 10 children as a single-parent (I know some people have). But, I had 2 boys of my own and helped to raise 2 nephews, all of the same age. I always insisted on "bedtime," and the nephews didn't have a set "bedtime" at their home. So, it was always a big challenge - to get all 4 boys QUIET at 8 pm.) (A year ago people on one List were talking about the nickname, Minnie. I accidentally found a fun children's book involving Aunt Minnie. This is the description: When Aunt Minnie McGranahan inherits nine orphaned nephews and nieces, the neighbors think it will never work. Aunt Minnie is small and tidy, and she lives alone in a neat little house. She has a neat little garden and a neat little barn, and she has a system for everything. Certainly there's no place in her life for children. But Aunt Minnie is a problem solver, and she surprises everyone by bringing home all nine children and coming up with clever new systems to accommodate her expanded family. It turns out Aunt Minnie likes children after all! This funny, fresh story, told in verse and accompanied by whimsical watercolors, is based on the life of the real Aunt Minnie, a member of the author's family who adopted nine children in 1920.)