The Story of Glass

Sara Ware Bassett
The Story of Glass, by Sara Ware
Bassett

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Title: The Story of Glass
Author: Sara Ware Bassett
Illustrator: C.P. Gray
Release Date: February 27, 2007 [EBook #20698]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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STORY OF GLASS ***

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[Illustration: THE THRONG OF MOVING WORKMEN]

THE STORY OF GLASS

By
SARA WARE BASSETT
Author of
"The Story of Lumber" "The Story of Wool" "The Story of Leather"
"The Story of Sugar" etc.

ILLUSTRATED BY
C. P. GRAY

THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA 1917
COPYRIGHT 1916 BY THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY

To G. C.
a patient listener and a helpful critic I inscribe this book as a reminder
of many happy hours which we spent together in the Old World
S. W. B.

Contents
I. A FRIENDLY FEUD 9

II. JEAN HAS A SURPRISE AND GIVES ONE 27
III. GIUSIPPE TELLS A STORY 50
IV. UNCLE BOB ENLARGES HIS PARTY 66
V. GIUSIPPE ENCOUNTERS AN OLD FRIEND 83
VI. UNCLE BOB AS STORY TELLER 99
VII. AMERICA ONCE MORE 121
VIII. JEAN THREATENS TO STEAL GIUSIPPE'S TRADE 140
IX. A REUNION 163
X. TWO UNCLES AND A NEW HOME 182
XI. JEAN'S TELEGRAM AND WHAT IT SAID 208
XII. JEAN AND GIUSIPPE EACH FIND A NICHE IN LIFE 220

Illustrations
Page
THE THRONG OF MOVING WORKMEN Frontispiece
"EVERY ONE KNOWS ME AT THE GLASS WORKS" 47
"I KNEW HER IN VENICE" 95
"IT IS SHAPED TO THE FORM REQUIRED" 160
"THE MELT IS POURED OUT ON AN IRON TABLE" 202
"I WANT THESE ORDERS FILLED" 223

THE STORY OF GLASS
CHAPTER I
A FRIENDLY FEUD
Jean Cabot "lived around." She did not live around because nobody
wanted her, however; on the contrary, she lived around because so
many people wanted her. Both her father and mother had died when
Jean was a baby and so until she was twelve years old she had been
brought up by a cousin of her mother's. Then the cousin had married a
missionary and had gone to teach the children in China, and China, as
you will agree, was no place for an American girl to go to school.
Therefore Jean was sent to Boston and put in charge of her uncle, Mr.
Robert Cabot. Uncle Bob was delighted with the arrangement, for they
were great friends, Jean and this boy-uncle of hers.
But no sooner did she arrive in Boston and settle down to live on
Beacon Hill than up rose Uncle Tom Curtis, Jean's other uncle, who
lived in Pittsburgh. He made a dreadful fuss because Jean had gone to
Uncle Bob's to live. He wanted her out in Pittsburgh, and he wrote that
Fräulein Decker, who was his housekeeper, and had been governess to
Jean's own mother, wanted her too.
That started Hannah, Uncle Bob's housekeeper.
"The very idea," she said, "of that German woman thinking they want
Jean in Pittsburgh as much as we want her here in Boston. Didn't I
bring up Jean's father, I'd like to know; and her Uncle Bob as well? I
guess I can be trusted to bring up another Cabot. It's ridiculous--that's
what it is--perfectly ree-diculous!" That was Hannah's favorite
expression--"Ree-diculous!" "I'd like my job," went on Hannah,
"sending that precious child to Pittsburgh where her white dresses
would get all grimed up with coal soot."
But Hannah's scorn of Pittsburgh did not settle the matter.

Instead Mr. Carleton, Uncle Tom Curtis's lawyer, came to Boston as
fast as he could get there and one afternoon presented himself at Uncle
Bob's house on Beacon Hill. Uncle Bob was in the library when he
arrived and the two men sat down before the fire, for it was a chilly day
in early spring. After they had said a few pleasant things about the
weather, and Uncle Bob had inquired for Uncle Tom, they really got
started on what they wanted to say and my--how they did talk! It was
all good-natured talk, for Uncle Bob liked Uncle Tom Curtis very much;
nevertheless Uncle Bob and Uncle Tom's lawyer did talk pretty hard
and pretty fast, for they had lots of things to say.
At last Uncle Bob Cabot rose from his leather chair and going to the
fireplace gave the blazing logs a vicious little poke.
He was becoming nettled. Anybody could
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