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The Daughter of the Chieftain : the Story of an Indian Girl by Edward S. (Edward Sylvester) Ellis
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The Daughter of the Chieftain
The Story of an Indian Girl
by Edward S. Ellis.


CHAPTER ONE: OMAS, ALICE, AND LINNA

I don't suppose there is any use in trying to find out when the game
of "Jack Stones" was first played. No one can tell. It certainly
is a good many hundred years old.

All boys and girls know how to play it. There is the little rubber
ball, which you toss in the air, catch up one of the odd iron prongs,
without touching another, and while the ball is aloft; then you do
the same with another, and again with another, until none is left.
After that you seize a couple at a time, until all have been used;
then three, and four, and so on, with other variations, to the end
of the game.

Doubtless your fathers and mothers, if they watch you during the
progress of the play, will think it easy and simple. If they do,
persuade them to try it. You will soon laugh at their failure.

Now, when we older folks were young like you, we did not have the
regular, scraggly bits of iron and dainty rubber ball. We played
with pieces of stones. I suspect more deftness was needed in handling
them than in using the new fashioned pieces. Certainly, in trials
than I can remember, I never played the game through without a
break; but then I was never half so handy as you are at such things:
that, no doubt, accounts for it.
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