The Association Review, Volume 10

Front Cover
American Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf., 1908 - Deaf
 

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Page 340 - The Volta Bureau for the Increase and Diffusion of Knowledge Relating to the Deaf.
Page 22 - The middle ear contains three small bones of the auditory ossicles: the malleus, or hammer; the incus, or anvil; and the stapes, or stirrup.
Page 347 - Office a caveat setting forth the design thereof and of its distinguishing characteristics and praying protection of his right until he shall have matured his invention. Such caveat shall be filed in the confidential archives of the office and preserved in secrecy...
Page 490 - For whosoever hath, to him shall be given, and he shall have more abundance : but whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken away even that he hath.
Page 123 - In a pending application for Letters Patent, filed in the United States Patent Office February 25, 1875, I have described two ways of producing the intermittent current — the one by actual make and break of contact, the other by alternately increasing and diminishing the intensity of the current without actually breaking the circuit. The current produced by the latter method I shall term, for distinction sake, a pulsatory current.
Page 446 - ... at and before the ensealing and delivery of these presents the receipt whereof is...
Page 545 - That for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar cash in hand paid by the party of the second part...
Page 546 - ... by the employment of an agent or agents, who shall, by the collection and publication of statistics and papers relating to the subject, and by conference with teachers and others, disseminate information concerning methods of teaching speech and speech-reading, and by using all such other means as may be deemed expedient to the end that no deaf child in America shall be allowed to grow up "deaf and dumb
Page 546 - To aid schools for the Deaf in their efforts to teach speech and speech-reading; "By providing schools for the training of articulation teachers; by the employment of an agent or agents who shall...
Page 187 - ... inform, admonish, and amuse. With my three trusty guides, touch, smell, and taste, I make many excursions into the borderland of experience which is in sight of the city of Light. Nature accommodates itself to every man's necessity. If the eye is maimed, so that it does not see the beauteous face of day, the touch becomes more poignant and discriminating. Nature proceeds through practice to strengthen and augment the remaining senses. For this reason the blind often hear with greater ease and...

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