v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4

Newsletter of the North Dakota School for the Deaf. THE NORTH DAKOTA ZBAAHSTISrEIES. A Dog Asks For Help. In East Boston lives a remarkable bog, which is a mixture of Newfoundland and mastiff, His name is Nero, and his master believes he can understand every word spoken to him. Not long ago Nero ent...

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Main Author: Devils Lake (N.D.)
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: North Dakota School for the Deaf Library 1894
Subjects:
Uis
Online Access:http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll12/id/5037
id ftnorthdakotastu:oai:cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org:p16921coll12/5037
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection North Dakota State University (NDSU): Digital Horizons
op_collection_id ftnorthdakotastu
language English
topic Education
Politics & Government
Deaf -- Periodicals
Newsletters
United States
North Dakota
Ramsey County (N.D.)
Devils Lake (N.D.)
spellingShingle Education
Politics & Government
Deaf -- Periodicals
Newsletters
United States
North Dakota
Ramsey County (N.D.)
Devils Lake (N.D.)
Devils Lake (N.D.)
v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
topic_facet Education
Politics & Government
Deaf -- Periodicals
Newsletters
United States
North Dakota
Ramsey County (N.D.)
Devils Lake (N.D.)
description Newsletter of the North Dakota School for the Deaf. THE NORTH DAKOTA ZBAAHSTISrEIES. A Dog Asks For Help. In East Boston lives a remarkable bog, which is a mixture of Newfoundland and mastiff, His name is Nero, and his master believes he can understand every word spoken to him. Not long ago Nero entered a lumber year where be was not known, and limping up .to one of the workmen held up an injured 1 aw. Nero is not so handsome and gentle in appearance as he is intelligent, and the man ordered him out. Nero walked as far as over to the door, turned around, and came back, and held up his wounded paw, The man stopped his work, and gently taking hold of the paw, found a safety pin imbedded deep in the flesh. He extracted the p n, and the dog wincing at the pain, and when the little opera­tion in surgery was over, the dog licked his paw\ and then thanked his benefactor as plainly as a dog could, afterwards running away as if nothing had hap­pened. A Story of Two Monks. Two monks, one a Dominican, and the other a Franciscan, travelling to­gether, were stopped by a river. The Dominican told the Franciscan that, as he went bare foot, he was forced by the rule of his order to carry him across; that if he refused he would commit a great sin. The Franciscan yielded to this observation, and took the other on his shoulders. When they were in the middle of the ford the Franciscan ask­ed the other if he had any money about him. “Yes,” replied the latter, "I have two reals.” “1 ask you a thousand pardons, brother,” rejoined the disciple of Saint Francis, “but my order forbids me carrying money.” And with these words he plumped his man into the river. Bug Horses In China. Can any boy or girl guess what this means? May Delwood knows, for she has had a letter from her cousin Amabel, w'ho is living in China now. As soon as the letter had been read, May cried out; “Oh, mamma! the Magazine cdildren must hear all about it. It is so very strange!” So my little readers may all tahnk thoughtful May. “Chinese mammas give the children white thread or silk for reins and har­ness, and when laid carefully over the gauzy w'ings it does not hurt the bug pony, and keeps him from flying off, carriage and all. “You would never guess the price of such a toy, so I will tell you that for one penny of our money ten such tiny turnouts could be bought. “Chinese children have many pretty toys made of paper and bits of wood. In a little grist mill that Aunt Ella bought the stone was going round and round, as though all the neighbors had brought corn to be ground. We did not at first see what made it move so brisky. Looking carefully, we found inside a small paper box, in which, with a string fastened to him, w'as a lively little bug. The insect was rush­ing rounding and round, his work never done. The hole of escape, for which the bright eyes were searching, was never found. On and on he trudged, on his tedious circuit.”—Our Little Ones. A Shocked Indian. “Tis nought but show that ignorance estesms; The thing possessed is not the thing it seems.” Poor “Lo,” in the following incident, is not a solitary example of similar amusing mistakes in optics. The case is certainly not one of those in which “ignorance is bliss.” A young Indian chief was so delight­ed by a tintype of himself taken by a wandering artist at the agency that he wanted a picture of his squaw, who was placed in posit,on before the camera. Just as everyth.ng was about ready to take the picture, the chief wanted to see how his better-half would look. He put his head under the cloth of the camera, and, to his horror, saw she was standing on her head. He instant­ly jerked his head out from under the curtain, but saw her standing on her feet. Thinking he might have been mis­taken, the Indian took another peep, and saw she was again standing on her head. He remonstrated with her, say­ing she could not expect a picture to look like her if she persisted in stand­ing on her head. The squaw denied any such acrobatic performance. Upon taking one more look, Mr. Indian flew into a rage, grabbed his squaw by the shoulders, shook .her violently, and dragged her out of the place, saying she was bewitched, and should not have a picture until she learned to stand on her feet.—Youths Companion. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? _ prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to ill UIS N tfc CO., who have had nearly fifty years-experience in the patent business. Communica­tions strictly confidential. A Ham!hook of In­formation concerning Patents and how to ob­tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan­ical and scientific hooks sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and Cats are brought widely before the public with­out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific worlc in the world. ^3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, US cents. Every number contains beau­tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling 1 nilders to show the latest designs and secure cor acts. Address 34UNN & CO. Nuw York. tiGI Broadway. The Atlantic for 1894 Will contain, among other attractions, Philip anti Ills Wife, » Serial Story, by Margaret Delaml. Short Stories, By Miss Jewett, Mrs. Catherwood, Joel Chandler [arris, Mrs. Wiggin and others. History and Biography Will be very effectively represented by papers from Capt. Mahan, Professor Me Master, the historian, Hon. J. C. Bancroft Davis. Professor Mendenhall, and others. Literary History and Criticism Will be made attractive by letters of Coleridge and Thoreau, and by papers on engaging themes from Sir Edward Strachey, Professor Kittredge of Harvard, Professor Tyrrell of Dublin, and other very competent writers. N a bure. Delightful sketches on the seasons and the aspects of Nature in Florida, Utah, and Canada, are promised by Miss Thomas, Bradford Torrey, Frank Bolles, and Olive Thorne Miller. Educational Topics Will be treated with the care and thought due to their importance. This is regarded as one of the most useful parts of the work of the Allantic. TERMS: $4.00 a year in advance, postage free; 35 cents a number. Houghton, Mifflin & Company, 4 Park St., Boston Mass If you have hitherto been unable to obtain HE COSMOPOLITAN WORLD'S FAIR NUMBER, of your Newsdealer, you can find it there now, as the sec­ond edition has brought the total up to •100,000 copies—Double that of any other magazine in the world. WITH NEARLY 200 ILLUSTRATIONS. SUBSCRIBE NOW {$1.50 a Year.) Single copies 15 cents. THE COSMOPOLITAN PUB. CO., 6th Ane. and 11th St. New York. The Review The Review * of Reviews. of Reviews is the one magazine which the world has agreed is Indispensable. It will be more brilliant than over during 1894 The readers of The Review of Re­views say that it would keep them well informed if it were the only lit­erature printed. It is especially valu­able to clergymen, professional men, farmers, and to all those who can take but one monthly. SUBSCRIPITON BATES. Per Year. - - $2-50 Trial Subscription. 6 months 1-00 Sample Copy, - 10 Gents. Review of Reviews, 13 Astor Place, Now York City. —Commend us to a man who holds his faith, whatever it be, with manly grip, and dares to defend it in a manly way—"speaking the truth in love.” —A man ought to keep his friendships in constant repair. I look upon a clay as lost in which I do not make a new acquaintance.—Dr. Johnson.
format Text
author Devils Lake (N.D.)
author_facet Devils Lake (N.D.)
author_sort Devils Lake (N.D.)
title v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
title_short v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
title_full v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
title_fullStr v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
title_full_unstemmed v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
title_sort v.4, no.4 (oct. 13, 1894) pg.4
publisher North Dakota School for the Deaf Library
publishDate 1894
url http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll12/id/5037
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ENVELOPE(-59.682,-59.682,-64.490,-64.490)
ENVELOPE(-107.884,-107.884,56.717,56.717)
ENVELOPE(-140.067,-140.067,-85.533,-85.533)
ENVELOPE(159.833,159.833,-71.200,-71.200)
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ENVELOPE(-69.512,-69.512,-69.634,-69.634)
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geographic Astor
Bancroft
Bates
Canada
Chandler
Devils Lake
Indian
Mahan
Nero
Thorne
Tyrrell
Uis
geographic_facet Astor
Bancroft
Bates
Canada
Chandler
Devils Lake
Indian
Mahan
Nero
Thorne
Tyrrell
Uis
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source North Dakota School for the Deaf
op_relation DeafNDBanner1894-1895; http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll12/id/5037
op_rights North Dakota School for the Deaf Banner Collection, North Dakota State Library.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/
To request a copy or to inquire about permissions and/or duplication services, contact the Digital Initiatives department of the North Dakota State Library by phone at 701-328-4622, by email at ndsl-digital@nd.gov, or by visiting http://library.nd.gov
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spelling ftnorthdakotastu:oai:cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org:p16921coll12/5037 2023-05-15T17:23:12+02:00 v.4, no.4 (Oct. 13, 1894) pg.4 Devils Lake (N.D.) 1890-1899; 1894 application/pdf; 892204 Bytes http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll12/id/5037 eng eng North Dakota School for the Deaf Library North Dakota State Library DeafNDBanner1894-1895; http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll12/id/5037 North Dakota School for the Deaf Banner Collection, North Dakota State Library. http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ To request a copy or to inquire about permissions and/or duplication services, contact the Digital Initiatives department of the North Dakota State Library by phone at 701-328-4622, by email at ndsl-digital@nd.gov, or by visiting http://library.nd.gov North Dakota School for the Deaf Education Politics & Government Deaf -- Periodicals Newsletters United States North Dakota Ramsey County (N.D.) Devils Lake (N.D.) Text 1894 ftnorthdakotastu 2018-02-15T11:06:49Z Newsletter of the North Dakota School for the Deaf. THE NORTH DAKOTA ZBAAHSTISrEIES. A Dog Asks For Help. In East Boston lives a remarkable bog, which is a mixture of Newfoundland and mastiff, His name is Nero, and his master believes he can understand every word spoken to him. Not long ago Nero entered a lumber year where be was not known, and limping up .to one of the workmen held up an injured 1 aw. Nero is not so handsome and gentle in appearance as he is intelligent, and the man ordered him out. Nero walked as far as over to the door, turned around, and came back, and held up his wounded paw, The man stopped his work, and gently taking hold of the paw, found a safety pin imbedded deep in the flesh. He extracted the p n, and the dog wincing at the pain, and when the little opera­tion in surgery was over, the dog licked his paw\ and then thanked his benefactor as plainly as a dog could, afterwards running away as if nothing had hap­pened. A Story of Two Monks. Two monks, one a Dominican, and the other a Franciscan, travelling to­gether, were stopped by a river. The Dominican told the Franciscan that, as he went bare foot, he was forced by the rule of his order to carry him across; that if he refused he would commit a great sin. The Franciscan yielded to this observation, and took the other on his shoulders. When they were in the middle of the ford the Franciscan ask­ed the other if he had any money about him. “Yes,” replied the latter, "I have two reals.” “1 ask you a thousand pardons, brother,” rejoined the disciple of Saint Francis, “but my order forbids me carrying money.” And with these words he plumped his man into the river. Bug Horses In China. Can any boy or girl guess what this means? May Delwood knows, for she has had a letter from her cousin Amabel, w'ho is living in China now. As soon as the letter had been read, May cried out; “Oh, mamma! the Magazine cdildren must hear all about it. It is so very strange!” So my little readers may all tahnk thoughtful May. “Chinese mammas give the children white thread or silk for reins and har­ness, and when laid carefully over the gauzy w'ings it does not hurt the bug pony, and keeps him from flying off, carriage and all. “You would never guess the price of such a toy, so I will tell you that for one penny of our money ten such tiny turnouts could be bought. “Chinese children have many pretty toys made of paper and bits of wood. In a little grist mill that Aunt Ella bought the stone was going round and round, as though all the neighbors had brought corn to be ground. We did not at first see what made it move so brisky. Looking carefully, we found inside a small paper box, in which, with a string fastened to him, w'as a lively little bug. The insect was rush­ing rounding and round, his work never done. The hole of escape, for which the bright eyes were searching, was never found. On and on he trudged, on his tedious circuit.”—Our Little Ones. A Shocked Indian. “Tis nought but show that ignorance estesms; The thing possessed is not the thing it seems.” Poor “Lo,” in the following incident, is not a solitary example of similar amusing mistakes in optics. The case is certainly not one of those in which “ignorance is bliss.” A young Indian chief was so delight­ed by a tintype of himself taken by a wandering artist at the agency that he wanted a picture of his squaw, who was placed in posit,on before the camera. Just as everyth.ng was about ready to take the picture, the chief wanted to see how his better-half would look. He put his head under the cloth of the camera, and, to his horror, saw she was standing on her head. He instant­ly jerked his head out from under the curtain, but saw her standing on her feet. Thinking he might have been mis­taken, the Indian took another peep, and saw she was again standing on her head. He remonstrated with her, say­ing she could not expect a picture to look like her if she persisted in stand­ing on her head. The squaw denied any such acrobatic performance. Upon taking one more look, Mr. Indian flew into a rage, grabbed his squaw by the shoulders, shook .her violently, and dragged her out of the place, saying she was bewitched, and should not have a picture until she learned to stand on her feet.—Youths Companion. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? _ prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to ill UIS N tfc CO., who have had nearly fifty years-experience in the patent business. Communica­tions strictly confidential. A Ham!hook of In­formation concerning Patents and how to ob­tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan­ical and scientific hooks sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and Cats are brought widely before the public with­out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific worlc in the world. ^3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, US cents. Every number contains beau­tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling 1 nilders to show the latest designs and secure cor acts. Address 34UNN & CO. Nuw York. tiGI Broadway. The Atlantic for 1894 Will contain, among other attractions, Philip anti Ills Wife, » Serial Story, by Margaret Delaml. Short Stories, By Miss Jewett, Mrs. Catherwood, Joel Chandler [arris, Mrs. Wiggin and others. History and Biography Will be very effectively represented by papers from Capt. Mahan, Professor Me Master, the historian, Hon. J. C. Bancroft Davis. Professor Mendenhall, and others. Literary History and Criticism Will be made attractive by letters of Coleridge and Thoreau, and by papers on engaging themes from Sir Edward Strachey, Professor Kittredge of Harvard, Professor Tyrrell of Dublin, and other very competent writers. N a bure. Delightful sketches on the seasons and the aspects of Nature in Florida, Utah, and Canada, are promised by Miss Thomas, Bradford Torrey, Frank Bolles, and Olive Thorne Miller. Educational Topics Will be treated with the care and thought due to their importance. This is regarded as one of the most useful parts of the work of the Allantic. TERMS: $4.00 a year in advance, postage free; 35 cents a number. Houghton, Mifflin & Company, 4 Park St., Boston Mass If you have hitherto been unable to obtain HE COSMOPOLITAN WORLD'S FAIR NUMBER, of your Newsdealer, you can find it there now, as the sec­ond edition has brought the total up to •100,000 copies—Double that of any other magazine in the world. WITH NEARLY 200 ILLUSTRATIONS. SUBSCRIBE NOW {$1.50 a Year.) Single copies 15 cents. THE COSMOPOLITAN PUB. CO., 6th Ane. and 11th St. New York. The Review The Review * of Reviews. of Reviews is the one magazine which the world has agreed is Indispensable. It will be more brilliant than over during 1894 The readers of The Review of Re­views say that it would keep them well informed if it were the only lit­erature printed. It is especially valu­able to clergymen, professional men, farmers, and to all those who can take but one monthly. SUBSCRIPITON BATES. Per Year. - - $2-50 Trial Subscription. 6 months 1-00 Sample Copy, - 10 Gents. Review of Reviews, 13 Astor Place, Now York City. —Commend us to a man who holds his faith, whatever it be, with manly grip, and dares to defend it in a manly way—"speaking the truth in love.” —A man ought to keep his friendships in constant repair. I look upon a clay as lost in which I do not make a new acquaintance.—Dr. Johnson. Text Newfoundland North Dakota State University (NDSU): Digital Horizons Astor ENVELOPE(-61.171,-61.171,-62.640,-62.640) Bancroft ENVELOPE(-61.860,-61.860,-64.566,-64.566) Bates ENVELOPE(-65.631,-65.631,-65.821,-65.821) Canada Chandler ENVELOPE(-59.682,-59.682,-64.490,-64.490) Devils Lake ENVELOPE(-107.884,-107.884,56.717,56.717) Indian Mahan ENVELOPE(-140.067,-140.067,-85.533,-85.533) Nero ENVELOPE(159.833,159.833,-71.200,-71.200) Thorne ENVELOPE(-60.700,-60.700,-62.933,-62.933) Tyrrell ENVELOPE(-69.512,-69.512,-69.634,-69.634) Uis ENVELOPE(141.975,141.975,60.184,60.184)