. Blind Deaf . / regard the picture of Mrs. Town- The send listening to Mrs. E. S. Jones, Blind-Deaf matron of the Ohio Home for Agedand Infirm Deaf which appears onthe opposite page, as the very bestpicture of talking to and hearingby the blind-deaf that I have everseen. Not only is the expression ofiyitent liste?ii?ig on Mrs. Townsendsface most characteristic, but the atti-tude and expression of Mrs. Jones isvery life-like. It is evident that, from Mrs. Town-send having lost her sight quite re-cently, she has ?iot yet developed thevery delicate sense of touch the blind-deaf ordinarily have,


. Blind Deaf . / regard the picture of Mrs. Town- The send listening to Mrs. E. S. Jones, Blind-Deaf matron of the Ohio Home for Agedand Infirm Deaf which appears onthe opposite page, as the very bestpicture of talking to and hearingby the blind-deaf that I have everseen. Not only is the expression ofiyitent liste?ii?ig on Mrs. Townsendsface most characteristic, but the atti-tude and expression of Mrs. Jones isvery life-like. It is evident that, from Mrs. Town-send having lost her sight quite re-cently, she has ?iot yet developed thevery delicate sense of touch the blind-deaf ordinarily have, and her handbears too heavily on the is also the case with StanleyRobinson and Clarence Selby, whilethe hands of Helen Keller, LinnieHaguewood, Katie McGirr, Made-line Wallace, Leslie Oren, Eva Hal-liday and many others rest as lightas a feather on the talkers hand. 49. EDUCATION OF THE BLIND-DEAF The Blind-Deaf It having been suggested to me that this mono-graph may have some value to those making re-searches on the blind-deaf (for want of somethingbetter, I must conclude), and that professionalsmay want some of the professional side of the mat-ter presented, I have obtained the various papersthat follow, and desire to express my thanks toEnoch Henry Currier, M. A., Principal of the NewYork Institution for the Instruction of the Deaf andDumb ; M. Anagnos, Esq., Director of the PerkinsInstitution for the Blind; Miss Dora Donald andMiss Ada Lyon for their valuable service, thusrendered, and to F. W. Booth, Esq., the editor ofThe Association Review, for kind permission to re-publish the valuable paper of Miss Donald on Lin-nie Haguewoods development published in hisjournal. THE EDUCATION OF BLIND-DEAF CHILDREN IN THENEW YORK INSTITUTION FOR THE INSTRUC-TION OF THE DEAF AND DUMB. [The following was prepared by Principal Enoch HenryCurrier, of the New Yo


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