The New International Encyclopædia/Jack-Straws
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JACK-STRAWS. A game played with from
20 to 100 little sticks of ivory or wood, of
uniform size and between 4 and 6 inches in length,
carved (with the exception of a few Jack-straws
which are left perfectly plain) to resemble weapons,
implements, tools, etc. The game consists
in letting the sticks fall together in a loose heap,
each player in turn extricating as many straws
as possible (one at a time) without moving
preerceptibly any other straw. The decision is in favor
of the player with the most straws. Originally
the name of the game was jerk-straws, and in
England it is also called spillikins. In Germany
it is known as Federspiel, and in France as
Jonchets or Honchets (from joncher, to strew).