Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans.

Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans.

The father said, “You cannot do it, Daniel.  You have not money enough.”

“I can do it,” said Daniel; “and I will do it before Monday evening.”

When Monday evening came round, the father’s debts were all paid.

When Daniel became a famous man, it made Ezekiel very happy.  But Ezekiel died first.  When Daniel Web-ster made his greatest speech, all the people praised him.

But Web-ster said, “I wish that my poor brother had lived to this time.  It would have made him very happy.”

WEBSTER AND THE POOR WOMAN.

When Daniel Webster was a young lawyer, he was going home one night.  There was snow on the ground.  It was very cold.  It was late, and there was nobody to be seen.

But after a while he saw a poor woman.  She was ahead of him.  He wondered what had brought her out on so cold a night.

Sometimes she stopped and looked around.  Then she would stand and listen.  Then she would go on again. [Illustration:  Webster and the Poor Woman]

Webster kept out of her sight.  But he watched her.  After looking around, she turned down the street in which Webster lived.  She stopped in front of Webster’s house.  She looked around and listened.

Webster had put down some loose boards to walk on.  They reached from the gate to the door of his house.  After standing still a minute, the woman took one of the boards, and went off quickly.

Webster followed her.  But he kept out of her sight.  She went to a distant part of the town.  She went into a poor little house.

Webster went home without saying anything to the woman.  He knew that she had stolen the board for fire-wood.

The next day the poor woman got a present It was a nice load of wood.

Can you guess who sent it to her?

THE INDIA-RUBBER MAN.

Many years ago a strange-looking man was sometimes seen in the streets of New York.  His cap was made of In-di-a rubber.  So was his coat.  He wore a rubber waist-coat.  Even his cravat was of In-di-a rubber.  He wore rubber shoes in dry weather.  People called this man “The In-di-a-rubber man.”

His name was Charles Good-year.  He was very poor.  He was trying to find out how to make India rubber useful.

India-rubber trees grow in South America.  The juice of these trees is something like milk or cream.  By drying this juice, India rubber is made.

The Indians in Bra-zil have no glass to make bottles with.  A long time ago they learned to make bottles out of rubber.  More than a hundred years ago some of these rubber bottles were brought to this country.  The people in this country had never seen India rubber before.  They thought the bottles made out of it by the Indians very cu-ri-ous.

In this country, rubber was used only to rub out pencil marks.  That is why we call it rubber.  People in South America learned to make a kind of heavy shoe out of it.  But these shoes were hard to make.  They cost a great deal when they were sold in this country.

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Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.