-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 7
/
r.typ
1176 lines (1001 loc) · 39.7 KB
/
r.typ
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
# GNU Typist - improved typing tutor program for UNIX systems
# Copyright (C) 1998 Simon Baldwin ([email protected])
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Series R
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G:_R_MENU
*:_R_NO_MENU
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R1
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R1
*:_R_S_R1
B: Lesson R1
*:_R_R_L0
T:
:In the R series lessons we work on speed and accuracy.
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L1
D:Up to date I can not see that the thing is as good as this one.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L2
D:uch pos oug ept ing ope hic ati sch cou get ice con goo ght
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L3
D:Nan is cute. She can sing and dance. She can tap a piano.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L4
D:Tonight Nan opens the piano. She sings such good songs and
:soon dashes into a dance. Nan can dance. The noise stops.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L5
D:Nan gets us going. The dance is on. Ted pounds the piano
:as Ann stops to go to the phone. She has to get the gang.
:This chance scene passes too soon. I hope it happens again.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L6
D:At eight papa said that he ought to put out his good pipe
:and then get a good nap. Soon papa is snug in a deep nap.
:At eight ten I guess the dance gets going. At ten it stops.
:As papa put it, such singing upsets him enough for one night.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L7
D:Get the gang. Catch this sign. Get going. Go up this high
:post and put a sign on top. Put these copies on each post.
:I guess no one intends to stop us. The cast is set. Each
:scene is set. Each act can open in good shape. I hope that
:enough cash is paid in so the cast need not stand the costs.
*:_R_R_L8
T: SPEED EXERCISES
:
:From now on, I will be mixing speed exercises in with the lessons. In the
:drills that you have been doing, I make you keep practicing a line until
:you get it right. In a speed exercise, I will only display the text once.
:
:What will be different is that I will be timing you. From the time you type
:the first letter of the line until you hit the final carriage return, my
:stopwatch will be running. When you finish, I will calculate your typing speed
:and convert it to words per minute (WPM). I will also count each of the
:mistakes you make and display the total number of errors.
:
:If you make a mistake, I will beep at you and light up the letter that you
:should have typed in inverse video (a black letter on a white background).
:Just keep going and try to make as few errors as possible.
I:(8) Pointer Paragraph (o e)
*:_R_R_L9
S:Only too well do we know about your house. Mother told
:me you hope to be settled there quite soon. Of course she
:would enjoy seeing the whole house next week. Before then
:please write her a letter to let her know how to get there
:from here. We know you have moved to a very cozy new home.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L10
S:The High dance opens at eight and the gang is going.
:So Ted shuts the piano and stops at the phone to catch Ann.
:I ought to post Ted that he pounds the piano as I once did.
:I guess he is upset. He has to catch Dad to get the cash.
:He has to see Ann to each dance. This is not a noisy night.
:His auto is a cheap one and no good on a night such as this.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L11
D:The gang can use the piano and good songs to open the dance.
G:_R_E_R1
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R2
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R2
*:_R_S_R2
B: Lesson R2
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L12
D:It is a good thing to use good habits each time you practice.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L13
D:thr pre rec ear ers ure urn gre art ore her are ter ere tru
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L14
D:Dad and his son, Dan, are to go east on a great auto trip.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L15
D:The phone rings. Dan hopes the rain has not upset the trip.
:Soon the pair share a snug rug and start out in our red car.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L16
D:On a poor, rough road, Dan dares to rush in the rain. Soon
:he sees a horse ahead. He tries hard to stop. The car hits
:and then turns around. The horse runs east at a great rate.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L17
D:In order to raise a poor grade one tries to use good sense.
:An error is a sure sign not to do the thing that one did.
:An error seen once does not hurt. As soon as an error is
:seen or heard again, note its sort and end it right there.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L18
D:Her error is a sign that this thing or that has upset her.
:Does she care? Is it a hard part? She has to get used to
:the letters that she has to print. Is this order upset?
:Is she tired? Then she needs a short rest. Is it the rate?
:She need not raise her rate too high. Has she a good touch?
#
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (t h)
*:_R_R_L19
S:Hugh thought he ought to start that night although the
:weather might hurt his health. Hal thought they ought to go
:to Arizona together the thirtieth of June. Both hastened
:through the streets to their very high hotel. Hal hesitated
:to start north without warm clothes. Although he hated to
:hurt his health, Hugh started north quickly on the sixteenth.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L20
S:Dad and his son are to start on a trip in our red car.
:House cares are the sort that upset Dad and he is so tired
:that he tries a nap in order to rest. It rains at a great
:rate. Dan is too sure. He has heard this road is poor in
:parts. It is a great error, Dan, to rush a short turn on a
:grade. The car turns out and ends on its side. Hurt? No.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L21
D:Dad had a short rest in order to start on the hard car trip.
G:_R_E_R2
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R3
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R3
*:_R_S_R3
B: Lesson R3
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L22
D:As a rule call earlier on all orders as long as this one.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L23
D:als ple gla ulo clo ile ill oul all eas onl ion tle lea ndl
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L24
D:As a rule it is the real line drill that helps one to learn.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L25
D:It helps to read a line as soon as one can. It helps to see
:its sense. This, indeed, helps to hold each line until done.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L26
D:As soon as one hits a hard place then one plans to drill on
:this part. Later one can drill this hard part again. In
:order to end an error one can drill all the old line again.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L27
D:Learn the sound as one uses loose hands to type out a line.
:As one types his usual rate he ought to learn its sound until
:at this rate all the line has the usual, clean, clear sound.
:As soon as the usual rate is lost one can hear it as a slip.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L28
D:Total lines that one turns out tell all that one is young.
:In order that this class also can print a large line total,
:it still helps to spell; it also helps to print all the line
:as one line, and it helps less and less to drill single
:letters. Each one in the class can tell his total lines.
I:(8) One- to three-letter words (a to l)
*:_R_R_L29
S:Dear Ted,
:
:A day ago Ann got a bad cut on her arm and a few by her
:eye and ear. It is an act of God she did not die. Her car
:did the job. It is the end of her car. She has no use for a
:car. The fee is to be big. She is in bed, but she can not
:eat. She can not eat a bit of egg. It is no fun at all.
:
:It is hot. It is too hot for her fur hat, but I can buy
:a box for it. I am due any day. I can cut a day if I fly.
:It is not far if I go by air. If I go by car, I add a day.
:
:How is Dan? Did he get his job? Dan had to beg for it
:if he did. He is big and fat but not bad. The boy can do
:it if he can act to fit his age. Ask him not to act as a kid.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L30
S:To tell this class all there is to learn is not a real
:help later. Let the class plan the loose ease that can hold
:each hand in place, or plan to end this or that poor slip,
:or plan to do its total lines in less hours. As a rule, to
:plan and to do are also to learn. The class plans to drop
:the old action to clear the road. Those old slips are lost.
:The class has large plans; gains in hours and less slips.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L31
D:To learn to read or spell a rule helps less than to drill.
G:_R_E_R3
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R4
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R4
*:_R_S_R4
B: Lesson R4
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L32
D:After that date I believe he can not say that it is not a fact.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L33
D:any for efo fte day fin you ful ery nly hey afk ays fro say
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L34
D:I feel sorry to say I can not send a full order on that day.
:Forty-odd pounds is all that I can spare at this early date.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L35
D:All loose lots are sent on fast local lines at a half rate,
:so there is close to no delay and you also do not lose any.
:It is fine, fresh stuff and our first fancy fruit this year.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L36
D:This offer is only for fancy fresh fruit to be used as gifts.
:Try these and candy to suit the young lady. They are dandy.
:You can feel safe. Sales are easy and final. They go fast.
:After at least four days you can order daily or on Friday.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L37
S:Dear Ted,
:
:After I read your dandy note I felt sorry for the lady.
:Here is plenty of cash if you young people agree to spend it
:sanely. Is it for a natty sail or only for golf? Did you and
:Dan play or fight? Dan said he felt as if a full load of
:coal hit his head. Is that fact or fancy?
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(7) Pointed Paragraph (a s)
*:_R_R_L38
S:Sadness possesses her as she stands against the panes
:that the sash separates. She is sad because the same dress
:is not washed and in shape; and so she says it is useless to
:save it. She is sad also because she has to stay in Alabama
:next season. She says to plan to sail across the seas to
:Alaska or Asia or Spain is useless. So in June she amuses
:herself by drawing five or six quaint, small-sized maps.
I:(8) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L39
S:They say this fruit is the finest. It is full and good.
:Dr. Ted feels the first fruit is too green for young or old.
:After one eats any of it he is sorry. In fact, if I try it,
:that night in fancy I sail the South Seas for eight hours.
:The air is fine and clear; on the ship are only fruit and I.
:To a lady in those seas I gladly offer all fruit and candy.
:There is no reply. Only the seas run high and I feel ill.
I:(9) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L40
D:The young lady often has pounds of fruit and candy each day.
G:_R_E_R4
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R5
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R5
*:_R_S_R5
B: Lesson R5
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L41
D:In any case there is only one order that is long past due.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L42
D:est ace ric ity red per der pro sel par ish ial ing eal let
I:(3) Continuous Copy--Review
*:_R_R_L43
D:To learn to type, first get a nice rate going, then hold it.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L44
D:If you read copy set your eyes on that copy and stay on it.
:If you hear copy then use your eyes to hit sure and fast.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L45
D:Do not hurry. Set a nice rate. Yet hit each letter fast.
:To strike letters start easily and fast and use a light touch.
:You can not type lightly and faster if you start to pound.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L46
D:It is a slip if you do not use a letter in its right order,
:since in line after line each has its place on the paper.
:You soon learn the usual order for all letters that you type
:and learn to print the letters in any necessary order.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L47
D:It is easy at first to make errors by losing this usual order.
:If you read, hold the eyes on copy to help get this order.
:If you do hit this or that letter out of order, it is not
:that you fail to spell. You can spell and yet not type;
:this fine class drill is to help the type fly in fair order.
I:(8) One- to three-letter words (m to z)
*:_R_R_L48
S:Dear Tom,
:
:Mr. May has one new car. It has a low red top. The top
:is so low you can not see the sun if you sit in the car. Mr.
:May has not let his own son use it. I saw his son try to put
:the top up. I ran and met him. Why not be men and run the car
:out? We did. We set out to run it at six. We two ran it off
:to an old lot by the sea.
:
:Did his pa see us? Yes, sir, who but Pa was at No. Ten
:as we ran by in the car--and Ma, too. Oh, it was war--his pa
:had a lot to say. Let me lay out the law to you. You may not
:use the car as you did not pay for it. You are not yet a man.
:Son did not lie nor did he win his way.
:
:How are you all? Now if you get a new car, let me run it.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(9) Pointed Paragraph (t c)
*:_R_R_L49
S:Is it quite certain that the citizens could continue the
:old conditions if they voted a straight ticket? If we accept
:as accurate the picture of recent conditions, we can not crave
:to continue them. We lack the tact to get the citizens to
:vote a split ticket. Tax collectors try to collect taxes on
:vacant lots. A discount for cash increases collections.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L50
D:In order to type fast you hit lightly after each short delay.
G:_R_E_R5
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R6
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R6
*:_R_S_R6
B: Lesson R6
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L51
D:It seems to me that we want to know what was said just now.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L52
D:ent ake mon mak tim kin orm omp rom ork mys kno com ome Mr.
:ant may was way now job wit toi wri jus wil jul whi wou whe
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L53
D:Let me have a horse where the wide West still runs wild.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L54
D:I must see the warm colors, and feel the wind on that land.
:I want to see a few cows among great rocks and sage brush.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L55
D:I like to hear a horse stamp. I like the sweat on a horse.
:I want to keep a camp, close to water, miles from any crowd.
:At night, I want to enjoy a moon that shines on all the land.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L56
D:Yet I am in this city room to type news items for the paper.
:I know the ins and outs of my city--its mayor, judge, jail.
:I know how some men keep in power, and some get only kicks.
:I am sick of dark ways to make money, of bribery and fraud.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L57
D:I want to hear the talk of folks who know hot sun and stock.
:I like to join in jokes with men whose names I do not ask.
:So had I just an old motor car and some gas to make it jump,
:I would come at forty miles an hour, past fields of wheat,
:till the grade grows high and rough, in keen air out West.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (p y)
*:_R_R_L58
S:Please report the people who study typing. You may
:truly say that money paid for this study is happily spent.
:Today typing plays a very practical part in acquiring a
:paying position. We can use plenty of these days for exact
:work in typing: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
:and Saturday. Have you this sized type to print your copy?
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L59
S:Were you the judge in a case like this, could you do the
:just thing? An old woman who keeps rooms hides her money
:under a clock. A man using one of the rooms motors rapidly
:away. The old woman says her money is gone. We join in a
:hunt for the man who is found in the West. We take from him
:the same sum of money. We try to make him sweat and talk.
:I use my power to set his term at ten years. After he is put
:in jail, the old woman finds her money still under the clock.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L60
D:How do we know which way so wild a horse will kick or jump?
G:_R_E_R6
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R7
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R7
*:_R_S_R7
B: Lesson R7
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L61
D:With that end in view I may soon have to put this question.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L62
D:ave hav eve ver ove quo not ive giv qui vis que ved eiv tha
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L63
D:At our new villa a very novel event was given for the navy.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L64
D:Covers were laid in the unique ivory room. Even the king
:and queen were there with a quota of fair and lovely ladies.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L65
D:The queen was ready to quaff when her glass fell. At once
:all was quiet. Every one, save one alone, quit the dance.
:In all their lives, to quote, was never a thing more grave.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L66
D:Who was the lady with the vivid hair in the dress of heavy
:gold? Who was this queer one who dared so treat the queen?
:Each guest did quail. Could such quiet nerve ever avail?
:With a move quite free and easy the lady let fall her glass.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L67
D:The queen put this query in a quick voice to quell them all:
:Why does the whole world love a lover? Why do we value you?
:All did laugh. The queen asked that, as a favor, you give us
:those who have nerve, for they can love and serve. Quite as
:one who gave an equal favor, the queen sang over the radio.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (l s)
*:_R_R_L68
S:The earliest possible sales lessen the total losses.
:Please enclose the latest details in those lists yourself.
:On almost all calls I could save six dollars, especially in
:July. Tell the girls all the usual questions asked will be
:useful shortly. Use a small-sized envelope to post letters.
:Last but not least, all else should still go on as usual.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L69
S:In our queen city I used to value two covers set every
:day. At these I used to serve a young man and a girl. I did
:love to see her quiet dress and quick smile favor her so.
:I have never quite seen her equal, or a girl so very alive.
:After I had given over this work, I went there to see them.
:One night I saw a query form on her lips until she gave it
:up and took leave. The way she quit the boy was very queer
:even if the papers did quote his prison term as five years.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L70
D:Even her very quick smile never makes us quite at our ease.
G:_R_E_R7
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R8
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R8
*:_R_S_R8
B: Lesson R8
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L71
D:I don't know why he can't have a large-sized order for you.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L72
D:sen aze hen ose hat ous had ize tte see hin oze to- zoo n't
:e'l e's u'l h's d's n's s's e'r a's t's y's r's n't m's es'
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L73
D:I'd never call Dan lazy; still, I can't say he wins prizes.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L74
D:Doesn't Dan know how to make an exclamation point? He'll
:have to hold down the spacer and hit the apostrophe and period.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L75
D:Owing to Dan's zeal, he'll get the point; he'll realize it's
:faster. He'll use it when amazed, as: Whiz! He'll use it
:when he feels real zest, as: Zip! Let's go! It's a fire!
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L76
D:A dozen small-sized craft frozen in the ice are afire under
:a cold azure sky. It's near zero in the fire zone; and over
:the ships now razed to the water's edge, a light haze hangs.
:I'm dazed as I gaze at my own ship; I'd never recognize that
:crazy maze of still fizzing ruins as a deck. What a fizzle!
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L77
D:Isn't there a lot of zip and zest to your work on a paper of
:this size? Don't you like to seize some amazing news item
:that's good for the first page? If Tom's hazy fire story is
:a fizzle, why won't you squeeze it to a dozen lines? Isn't
:that easy for you? I've wanted to see my name in print; I
:guess I'll sail in a zeppelin to see if you'll print that.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (r n)
*:_R_R_L78
S:A note from Ann says her friend prefers to change her
:return to Arizona from next February to November. The reason
:is an error of the owner of the ranch who will not refund
:her rent. The janitor is running some errand, for he has
:worked in the rain near the northern entrance during dinner.
:I hear that now neither her friends from North Carolina nor
:Virginia can remain an afternoon and refrain from a quarrel.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L79
S:I'll admit I seize a chance to go with these dozen
:people. We left under an azure sky, yet today it's rainy
:and hazy. That Dr. Tedd is odd; he won't play; he's doing
:a report on how to zone cities of any size; so he won't let
:us dance to radio jazz. Tonight we're to try a play that
:hasn't any zest or zip. Its prize is Tom's money, and he'll
:not stay; he feels it's a fizzle. My zeal for gazing on the
:crowd is at zero. They don't and can't pass any play quiz.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L80
D:It's crazy for me to type news items on paper of this size!
G:_R_E_R8
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R9
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R9
*:_R_S_R9
B: Lesson R9
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L81
D:To some extent he has been able to do the next best thing.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L82
D:abo bet bee ble bou bef ext ber six sib nex abl aby mbe box
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L83
D:Dad just about broke down at the bad news. Bill has no job.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L84
D:Dad was vexed. He said that he might as well burn his bonds
:next. He has sixty bonds but the prices sent all below par.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L85
D:Dad talks about a jinx. He says that maybe their bank will
:close so he cannot pay up taxes and bills before Christmas.
:Dad says they all may have to exist on home-grown wax beans.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L86
D:Dad adds that boys ought to be busy and maybe play ball or
:box at the club. Bill excels, but says he cannot box on
:wax beans alone. Beef must be back on the board. Bill has
:boxed as an extra at a bazaar. He is big, and able to box.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L87
D:Bill begs Dad not to be blue, and his text is this: We
:are all in the same boat. No one can buy. No one can build.
:Labor is hard hit, too. I, for one, would like to toss the
:cards on the table and start a new deal. When exact codes
:are fixed, as best for all, every person must do his bit.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (f y)
*:_R_R_L88
S:Satisfy yourself that it will be funny, but perfectly
:satisfactory, for forty or fifty of the faculty to fly from
:Buffalo to New York on the first Friday in February. If
:they prefer, we will offer them waffles, jelly, and coffee
:before they fly or get dizzy. Sixty flyers can qualify
:confidently to face any difficulty. A friendly inquiry
:from any family will be very cheerfully and fully answered.
I:(8a) Pointed Paragraph (i d)
*:_R_R_L89
S:Children find being quizzed in division, addition, and
:reading difficult. They studied daily during their third
:period and tried to be confident. I think they did include
:Florida and Rhode Island in their wide reading; and have
:just decided to dispose of Detroit, Grand Rapids, Richmond,
:Providence, and Philadelphia next week.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L90
S:By using the new banks of keys on the new keyboard, you
:are able to learn or excel with less labor. These new banks
:have been based on an exact table of words used. You begin
:at once on the best bank. On the old keyboard you have to
:type most of the text on the next bank above and on the bank
:below. Because of this fact your fingers bound back and
:forth between the upper and lower banks of keys. But those
:extra jumps necessary on the old keyboard do not exist on the
:new keyboard. Nor is your left hand taxed with extra labor.
:The keys are fixed to keep both hands busy and in balance.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L91
D:Those boxes of books for New Mexico may be ready next week.
G:_R_E_R9
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R10
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R10
*:_R_S_R10
B: Lesson R10
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L92
D:Next time we must ask to have you make them just as he does.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L93
D:ite ith ine nce tio she hou how ime ibl ece muc out oth our
:ate and een ind oon und one thi lix his ise wer jun ett exp
I:(3) Continuous Copy--Review
*:_R_R_L94
D:I am going to be lazy this weekend and do just what I want.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L95
D:Today I quit being vexed with the old job. I must seize
:one extra bit of zest and join the exit from the big city.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L96
D:To begin with, the same old auto will bear us to the beach
:where a good-sized boat floats easily in the blue water.
:Our boat is build for room. Her cabin has a busy table.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L97
D:I know Nan will come if Bill does, and Ted likes to be with
:Ann. I would never quite have the nerve to keep my good
:board back when our club navy moves out into the quiet water.
:We leave at an early hour when the sun is still under cover.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L98
D:All day will be warm and novel. The far banks will slide by
:while we gaze. She is an out-and-out able boat, heavy but
:never gives trouble. She is never taxed in quick water. I
:feel the water jump and break. Queer how I feel the bond
:that exists between me and my boat. She is a prize I value.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (m w)
*:_R_R_L99
S:Some women swim in the spring. Some women swim in
:the warm water of summer. Women in Brazil may swim even in
:November. Some women from Japan will swim tomorrow. We want
:to show the women from New Mexico and Wyoming how to swim in
:winter. We will work with them for a few weeks. When they
:go home we wonder if they will write from time to time.
I:(8A) Pointed Paragraph (i o)
*:_R_R_L100
S:I'm going to obtain oil options tonight and to file my
:copies without noise, or outside notice. I am anxious to
:avoid an action. If I voice an official opinion, I will omit
:serious points. Knowing conditions, I am hoping that I'll
:be enjoying a glorious addition to my income. I am going to
:join society and be social with juniors and seniors alike.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L101
S:Bound for some place where the sun sets in the west,
:soon it is the night that I favor. Next to the night and
:boat and water, maybe I judge our sail by its excellent bill
:of fare. Here I am very exact, as I never set a poor table.
:I stock an up-to-date table, set out under the first dozen
:stars. I enjoy having every boy able to quaff his quota of
:soup and boast or sing with zeal and make any queer joke.
:With a moon, I can name no event to equal a boat and water.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L102
D:It is good drill to keep going in even time for ten minutes.
G:_R_E_R10
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R11
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R11
*:_R_S_R11
B: Lesson R11
*:_R_R_L103
T:
:In this lesson we start on the top row, which has the numerals and
:a lot of the special characters. Note that the F-finger presses the
:4-key and the 5-key; the J-finger presses the 7-key and the 8-key.
:Either the F-finger or the J-finger may press the 6-key.
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L104
D:She can tell us all there is to say on her side and what to do.
I:(2) Rhythm and Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L105
D:ki9 de3 ju8 fr4 ju7 fr5 jy6 ft6 lo0 sw2 ju7 fr5 jy6 ft6 ;p-
:k9 d3 j8 f4 j7 f5 f6 l0 s2 j8 f4 j7 f5 j6 f6 k9 d3 ;- s2
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L106
D:To buy an air-mail stamp I save 1, 2, 4, and at last 6 cents.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L107
D:In two years my dollar earns 1, 3, 5, 7, and perhaps 8 cents.
:Buy at once: 4 candy balls, 9 bars, 6 or 8 of gum, 2 cakes.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L108
D:2 and 2 are 4; 3 and 3 are 6; 4 and 4 are 8; 5 and 0 are 5.
:3 and 4 are 7; 5 and 4 are 9; 2 and 6 are 8; 7 and 0 are 7.
:1 and 1 are 2; 3 and 1 are 4; 5 and 1 are 6; 7 and 1 are 8.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L109
D:I have finished Grade 9B. In my first weeks of typing in
:Grade 10A, I learned to use all the keys in Lessons 3 and 4.
:In Lessons 1 and 2, and in part of No.5, I tried my hands on
:the home row. Both Lessons 6 and 7 were in the bank above.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L110
D:Typing is clerical work. Twenty years ago less than 5 per
:cent of all those at work had clerical jobs; today, about 8
:per cent have such jobs. Does it interest you that of all
:paid typists only 3 per cent are more than 44 years of age?
:Most of the 810,000 typists in the last census are young.
I:(8-9)
*:_R_R_L111
S:To throw a carriage do you take 6 or 7 times--or to shift for
:a capital, 2 or 3 times--as long as to hit one letter? And
:do you know the common keys? One common pair of letters is used
:for every 3 or 4 other pairs, even though there are more than
:600 other pairs. The digits are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
:You will spell these out more often than you will type them.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L112
D:I am vexed if my prize went to my old address, 55 Fifth Avenue.
G:_R_E_R11
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R12
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R12
*:_R_S_R12
B: Lesson R12
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L113
D:I should like to arrange to have you see me here next week.
I:(2) Rhythm and Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L114
D:k9 d3 j8 f4 j7 f5 f6 j6 10 s2 j8 f4 j7 f5 f6 j6 k9 d3 ;- s2
:k98 d34 j87 f45 109 s23 k93 d39 j84 f48 j75 f57 j76 f56 102
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L115
D:10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L116
D:As soon as you can type at 12 words a minute, jump to 24;
:later to 30, 36, 42, 48, or other rate that seems to fit.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L117
D:On one day in June the heat ran to 106, 103, 98, 95, 92, in
:some cities, but only to 40, 43, 47, 50, 51, 52, 60 in other
:cities. Rain fell from .00 or .04 to .40 or to .68 inches.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L118
D:The next step in better typing is to learn to graph a curve.
:If your test score each week rises from 22 to 28, 32, 37,
:40, 44, 48, 51, 53, and 55 words a minute, put these on a
:chart. See this curve grow higher each week. Or use bars.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L119
D:The usual test scores point to waste in many a class. After
:all the work of a first term, girls may reach only 25 words
:a minute, boys only 22 words. At the end of 34 weeks these
:usual scores might be 29 or 31 or 34. Indeed, 25 to 33 per
:cent of the students may type less than 20 words per minute.
I:(8) Pointed Paragraph (n v)
*:_R_R_L120
S:Eleven invitations for Thanksgiving vacation arrived in
:advance of November. In vain have a dozen relatives invited
:me to visit Vermont, Virginia, and Nevada. I love being
:invited and I believe in never avoiding an invitation to any
:Thanksgiving banquet. I even plan to have the sixth to the
:seventeenth of November for varied ventures and to visit
:that novel Denver University on my vacation.
I:(9) Test Paragraph
*:_R_R_L121
S:How much do you weigh? A young boy who is 5 feet tall
:may weigh 112 pounds; with an extra inch, 115 pounds. Add 3
:pounds for any inch added. Thus if 5 feet and 4 inches, he
:may weigh 124. If taller, add 4 pounds for each added inch.
:If 5 feet and 7 inches, he may weigh 136; if 5 feet and 9
:inches, 144; if 5 feet and 10 inches, he may weigh 148. Now
:add 5 pounds for each added inch. Thus to stand 6 feet tall
:may mean 158 pounds. It is better to be a little over-weight.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_R_R_L122
D:In order to park on Sixth at 11:05 we have to beat 135 cars!
G:_R_E_R12
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson R13
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:R13
*:_R_S_R13
B: Lesson R13
*:_R_R_L123
T:
:In this lesson we will learn the rest of the special characters
:on the keyboard.
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_R_R_L124
D:If you do not hear soon, I want you to write again and again.
I:(2) Rhythm and Keyboard Drill
*:_R_R_L125
D:k9( d3# j8* f4$ j7& f5% f6^ j6^ l0) s2@ ;-_ ;[] ;`~ d3# ;/?
:k( d# j* f$ j& f% j^ f^ l) s@ ;_ s@ ;{ d# ;@ f% ;? f^ j^ s@
:"A "S "O "W "E "C "P "F "I "M "E "B e5" t4" u3" h2" u1' n6'
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_R_R_L126
D:Send at once: Form #93* @ $18.50 per dozen, 12% discount.
I:(4)
*:_R_R_L127
D:Sold to Smith & Sons, terms 1%, 10 days; 8 doz. 3" screws @
:5.25 cents, 42 cents; 16 files @ 5-3/8 cents, 86 cents; 3 #9 drills
:@ 75 cents, $2.75.
I:(5)
*:_R_R_L128
D:Arrange to have A. C. Whitman & Co. deliver to our Seattle
:office, Wednesday, October, 26: 30 reams white paper, #99,
:@ 75 cents, $22.50; 4 files, Style 6**, @ $9 each, $26.....$58.50.
I:(6)
*:_R_R_L129
D:In his speech on "Can a Business Man Be Honest?" he proved:
:
:(1) There are many ways, some hardly honest, to make money.
:(2) It may pay to treat fairly a business rival or employee.
:(3) Saving time and material often leads to a large profit.
:(4) The most desirable kinds of success are gained honestly.
I:(7)
*:_R_R_L130
D:The common stock has paid from 8% to 27% cash before 1929.
:Both the common and the "B" stocks have received 12% this
:year, or $3 per share. The class "B" stock has made a new
:record, the range in price being 38.5 high and 32.25 low. As
:the market improves the common and "B" stocks may pay 15%.
I:(8)
*:_R_R_L131
S:A. C. White & Company
:Idaho Falls, Idaho
:
:Gentlemen:
: