'TJtX <• 
A r agents make money, a 
05 to 810 per day. Rolling our »S 4 || 
Tt EXTENSION KEKLAifD SWIFTS, tv 
lor winding Yarns, 8tlks, Worsteds, Ac. Winds full 
sized sheln, measures knot* or cuts, and Is light, cheap 
and durably 
Agents wanted. Terms very liberal. 
Address H. L. STOHKE A CO., Auburn, N. Y. 
Delivered before the N. Y. State Editorial 
Convention, Itbacu, N. Y., June 134,1809. 
BY A. A. nOPKlNH, 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA.—No. 25 
I greet you, O knights of the Scissors and quill 1 
With a right hearty greeting,—a hand of good will! 
’Tis pleasant to know that we leave, for a day, 
The scissors and pen In a lazy-like way; 
That the cry of “ the devil," who vexes us sore, 
** More copy ! more copy!” we hear now no more, 
And at once from his bondage we find a release,— 
That we feel a sweet answer to “Let ns have peace!” 
We’ve hart visions while sitting with pan full of Ink 
To be spread In a u leader,” sweet visions, I think, 
(For our fancy Is quicker Ilian ever our thought 
And will run with us far ere In hand It U brought,) 
We’ve had visions, I say, of a beautiful time. 
With the days all lu rhythm, tile nights all tn rhvme, 
When our lire should be only * glad paragraph,— 
Just a ’Take" from tlin years to ho “set” with a laugh. 
Full of music. maybe, with a memory in it. 
Like an echo of Kong* of the robin or linnet: 
When ’’delinquents'’ should give us u pleasant sur¬ 
prise 
By rewarding our labors In making them wise ; 
But the printer's ralllenliftn Ungers afar. 
With its tight as yet only the gleam of a star. 
And our visions tint partial tultlllment may find 
Till the angels make brighter this home of mankind. 
So the nearest approach of our tender Ideal 
To a happy nud even a glorious real, 
Is a day when our “forms'’ are put idly aside, 
(Suving that of the long-wedded wife, or the bride’) 
Wlien we don a •’ new dress ” (In Itself tv rare tiling I) 
And by rail or by steamer i with passes) take wing ! 
When the world !» u beauty, bedecked for our sight, 
And our heart Is u-thriJI with the keenest delight, 
And the click of the types but u faint echo seems 
Of a something that haunted our yesterday's dreams! 
There are beautiful words In onrfirammar of Life,— 
“Home,” “sister" and “heaven,” “love,” “sweet- 
heurt” and “ wife*:" 
And the mention of"home”brlngeth up yet another 
That we whisper with reverent tenderness —“moth¬ 
er!” 
There are words full of melody, rippling with sweet¬ 
ness. 
That are sweet a* the pleasure* we mourn in their 
lieetness! 
There are word.*'full of hope, that have rainbow 
tints in them. 
As they tell of the Joys that are bright —till we win 
them ; 
There are words that breathe putlenoe, nnd syllable 
prayer; 
There are words full of sorrow, that sadden the tvir ; 
There are words of sweet promise, that gladden (lie 
ear. 
And that lift all the clouds till the sunlight appear; 
There are words full of pain, that are echoes of sigli- 
And tivat touch us to grief liko the tears of the 
dying; 
There are words full of tremulous, wlllowv motion, 
That seem born of the ripples afloat on the ocean ; .. ...„„„ 
There tire words full of action, proplietie, sublime, t> or the pathway that Empire lights Willi its star, 
That arc grand with the fullness and meaning of »> bile his shriek wakes the echoes In canon and p] 
_ timo: I hat the hills of New England re-echo ugaln ! 
There arc words that of meaningless sound tire the 
dower, O, yo mountain tops Miff your heads nrondlvto-d 
And that make up In volume tholr lack of all power; Speed the stoam-courner'on o'er your summits 
There are words thut with luughter outgushing are gray ! 
ringing, . .. . . Speed him on, as from ocean to ocean he flies. 
I am composed of 45 letters. 
My 38, 40. 30, 38, 37, 41 Is one of the planets. 
My 7, 5, 30 means to delve. 
My 0, 10, 45, 36 is a wise man. 
My 13, 10, 37, 36, 15, 14, 31, 37 is ono of the poets. 
My 21, 17, 0 was Noah’s son. 
My 43, 42, 22, 1ft is a short poem. 
My 34, 24, 2, 35 ts to want. 
My 12, 33, 6. 39 is fine particles of dirt. 
My 4, 14. 28, 23 is the limb of a fowl. 
My 25, 31, 3, 37, 40, 29, 8, 11 is a figure of four 
angles. 
My 1, 18, 33, 32 is to cloy. 
My 41, 17, 45 Is a horse. 
My whole is solemn advice to the young. 
New Hackensatk, N. Y. Josie W. 
\ST "Answer in two weeks. 
l twa’wwx) 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS-No. 19, 
ehtvilren came, nnd In sorrow interred 
a the jSeasuzi* garden the poor dead bird; 
t- crave they planted a rose-bush, too. 
Whereat) the sweetest of buds soon grew; 
And there sal the children many a day, 
.For they loved the spot where their favorite lay, 
Foor little bird, there you’re lying dead— 
You can seek no more for u crumb of bread 
Your bright eye no longer can look on me, 
You can’t *tt on my shoulder, gleefully: 
Aud never more from your throat will ring 
The Joyous song you were wont to sing. 
r PHE S IT C GENS or THE DODGE 
J. SELF BAKKIt tiTring the past season has been 
beyond all precedent. Its superior ments have been 
fully established by the uniform satisfaction It, has 
given, and by the enthusiastic report!* of the thou¬ 
sand* of purchasers. The groat advantage of this 
Raker over all others is, that It requires no adjust¬ 
ment, but is always ready for work in ally kind of 
crop, short or long, lodged or otherwise, and the 
driver can m-kc gavels with either of the Rakes, 
and whenever ho choose*, in perfect order for bind¬ 
ing. The Mac) Ine also u splendid Mower. For 
further information, please write lor a pamphlet. 
In 0 <W lingo, indeed, for a son of the sun. 
And tire ivorstof all lingoes to mvstlfv one ; 
Yet we soon understand it, and truly, to be,— 
X am John Chinaman ! Do you want any tea ?” 
Ahi wo know you, JonN CHINAMAN—know you of 
We linvn drunk your elixir, you’ve tasted our gold ; 
ton wore never much given to coining the news, 
But you xOnlously minded your po und vour curs ! 
Brother Jonathan greets you, at length, o’er the 
waters! 
Here'* health to his son* nnd your small-footed 
daughters 1 
You and he can strike hands now, nud do as you 
please. 
For you furnish the world with its “ crackers and 
It is full of sweet fancies, glad hopings nnd fond, 
As it. tells of a something far richer beyond. 
And It »pells out a dream of rare beauty and bright 
As the fancy-lit gleam of some tender delight! 
And the next? It ts briefer.but set double-leaded, 
And speedily unto the former 'll* wadded. 
It is ever, 1 think, put in " Diamond” or •• Pearl," 
Whether “ sot'' by a kid, or a rosy-cheeked girl. 
And the story It breathes, like the note of a dove. 
Is most touclilDgly sweet,— they have headed it 
“ Lavs!” 
There is mull am in pawn of happiness tn It, 
For tin' thrills of u lifetime it gives in a mlnuto; 
Then * a word about ” moot)light,” another of 
“ bliss,” 
And a circle elliptical,— meaning a kiss ! 
There’s a name fall of music, no matter, I fancy, 
Whether ” J.L'LL’ " or “Ichauod,” “ PETER ’’ or 
" Nancy-,” 
There's a question or two, a»d of course some re¬ 
plies, 
And t here follow, at once, other circles—or sighs ; 
Then ;i hurry of typos as they fall Into line,— 
Each holding within it a picture divine.— 
Till thev spell out a wondronsly beautiful morning, 
With u tunny fan bands a rare mutden udorning : 
Then a tableau Is neon — with a word or two spoken — 
And ivhut non hath now Joined shall by man be un¬ 
broken ! 
And the story's rc-tolrt in a sub-paragraph, 
When the ’’ Nonpareil” letters seem fairly to laugh,— 
’Tin a paragraph t hat to the printer's first Carried, 
With uu " I” or a 'V,”lct us hope, aud called “ Mar¬ 
ried.” 
(If n “ second edition” of Being appears,— 
As there should, by all rueanB, In a very few years !— 
It Is bound well In muslin, or while flannel, maybe, 
To he handled with cure,—and 'tis known as “The 
Baby I”) 
To ttie “setting" of “Manhood” we go with good 
cheer. 
And w it spell it tn“caps” of the largest "Brevier?” 
’Tis u proud paragraph, with a hope and u will. 
And each line has u promise the next must fulfill; 
Yet tis sati ning to know that the Imping and willing 
To tip' end do not tlnd their perfected fulfilling! 
And the letter* seem hardened for aye with a sigh, 
■ By-aud- 
PR0BLEM.—No. 19 
Suppose a body to have fallen through fifty 
feet, when a second body Begin* to fall just one 
hundred feet- below It. How far will the latter 
body fall before it is overtaken by the former? 
New London. x. 
Answer in two weeks. 
/CHURCH 
PARLOR 
AND 
ANAGRAM.,-No. 13 
Ai.msl cversei si rute sievecr helwi ti stals; 
Fo sendfir whoreov bletnliu, nreos ton noe. 
Hct sdyai, yb teh sdwooh litat t.) tcass, 
Seporttc cbt niggerlln wed dpor rmof hto nus. 
D. J. Tompkins. 
X3T" Answer in two weeks. 
PUZZLER ANSWERS 
Charade No. 15.—Nightingale. 
MrseRM, aneo ot Enigma No. 23.—Speak the truth 
at all times, 
Problem No. 17.—Ten calves, twenty hogs, five 
sheep, and one hundred und sixty-five lambs. 
Geographical Enigma .no. 2.—Markham, Gorm- 
ley's Corner, York county. Ontario. 
Cuoss-Woun enigma No. 9.—Washington. 
MELODEONS 
"Tis the pronouns that win, as I think you'll confess, 
Though f.hu verbs furnUh being and doing, nut bless; 
Yet I sometime* have thought that according to 
Murray. 
Who was once for ti* nil a perpetual worry,— 
The pronoun* were verbs , for yen know he defined 
“ To be,” “ do” und “ suffer” as, all. of verb kind, 
And 'tis plain as the words that in Murray wu read, 
V uu” and “ 1” uro to be, do, and sutler, indeed ! 
•> 
No, the verbs haven't all of the doing, I claim, 
For the doing Is more than a mere verbal name; 
’Tis embodied in tmnn -live being, that thrills 
With a sense of new life as It labors and wills — 
Such a being a* bides, as no one can deny. 
In the pronounslimuortul, the proud” You”and” I!” 
“ Yon” and “ I!” What a wonderful power they hold! 
How the world aud mankind they have ever con¬ 
trolled r 
And mankind, did 1 sny? It were rashly said, then, 
I'or the power mo*t potent, to-tlay, among men,— 
Thu great moving Inlluonoe,— ull will agree, 
Aluy be found lu the pronoun so feminine — ” SHE 1” 
She blesses the days, nnd she brings all the blisses 
That gladdoa our life, wit h her smiles and her kisses; 
Stic lesson* our sorrows. Inuresses our joys,— 
One girl it may be, atid u lialf dozen boys! 
She beautifieshome, and she make* living dearer, 
She purifies oatth, and trite brings heaven nearer I 
She stirs many hearts to tlic noblest endeavor. 
And seems to Karo really tlin A ret) I mode lever 
To move the whole wore, and as onward it rolls 
She I* changing live Imsc, ami tali lift at the pules! 
It Is true that a nice little trifle she cost,— 
Original sin anil a Paradise lost; 
But as to tile loss —1 confess I’m a doubter, 
For what wore a Paradise, even, without 'er? 
“She,” (first) “You” und ”1!’’ There is power in 
WE HAVE M A fftPA PTC RED 
’ * Melodeons and Organs twenty-two years,and 
will not risk our well-earned reputation by making 
cheap instruments. 
We hare not made a great reduction In prices, and 
cannot, until a reduction tn the price of labor and 
material will warrant us lu doing bo. Organa nre ad¬ 
vertised at f-50, Gold Watches sit $C>, etc., etc*. Sensi¬ 
ble people can Judge of their value. 
Instrument* of our own make (twenty years old) 
are now valued by their owners as highly as the day 
they were bought, and It Hour intention to sustain 
our old reputation. 
Illustrated Catalogues and Price I.ista sent freo 
to any adOt'ess. A liberal discount to Churches and 
Clergymen. 
GEO. A. PRINCE & CO. 
Agent In New York.S. T. GORDON. 
Ageutin Philadelphia.JAMES BELLA 1C. 
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS 
breath the retrain of each line 
pOKTABLE STEAM ENGINES, 
For FArm, Minins, or 
iflCCHA^ilCAL PUHFONES. 
These Machine* require no hrlck work; mounted 
on legs, they nre especially adapted for use in Mills, 
8hops, Foundries, or Printing Rooms; or mounted 
on wheels, they are adapted for uut-Uour work. 
Threshing, Wood-sawing, etc. 
Circulars, with description und prlees.furnlshed on 
application to A. N. WOOD A CO., 
1001-l.'lt Eaton, Madison couiity, N. Y, 
jtiuis mnrK»?ii qu i a i»;iih for the prioild coming man. 
Who is coining f rum China, mayhap, or Japun! 
We wait the Coming Man ! Away 
Beyond the twilight ot ui-day, 
Beyond the mountain • Tom(tsgray 
That hide the bright To-morrow's beauty, 
tie wait*, luifiiit ,lf M| ,)| our needs, 
Unmindful ol a world thut pleads 
For nobler word* iinrl grander deeds, 
Unmindful of hlsnucred duty! 
Some kindly gleams of hope are sent 
Across the clouded firmament, 
To lighten up our discontent 
While we his coming are awaiting— 
Some promises of greater good. 
Hut dimly heard, half understood,— , 
Like summer rustling* ill the wood,— 
Ui»duy of ud vent ante-dating! i 
There rises here and there a soul i. 
That, us the moment* onward roll. 
Speeds others lnr ward to i heir goal • 
With actions eloquent of tooling. 
Suoli noble soul*, with purpose true. 
Go bearing, nil their iifn-long through, 
Some glud'nlng thing l'or me and you 
I he years are putioutly revealing I 
Give thanks, O grateful heart*, for these, 
Whose names are borne on every breeee. 
In every land, fur o’er the sens ! 
Who cheer the world with light tuUlenial I 
Who stand a* on some lofty height, 
Illumining earth's dusky night; 
Who soatter flowers of being bright. 
To bloom forevermore perennial 1 
lie honors God who blcssos men ! 
’Tis doubly true. It follows, then, 
He honors most who blesses when 
Itis blessings multiply In number; 
And he who gives n wider reach 
To thought and doing, life and speech, 
Uplifts uncounted ones In each. 
To bless, in turn, when ho shall slumber 1 
Then hnll! all hail' the noble ones 
Who, blessing us, shall bless our sons 
so long us living onward runs, 
Through countless coming generations I 
Whose monument* that proudly rise 
Beneath the sweetly smiling skies, 
Shull make mom generous anil wise 
The boundless rulure of the nations 1 
I twine no laurel wreath for kings; 
To them my muse no peun sings; 
A simple crown of rhyme It brings 
To deck gome beads by nature royal 1 
Their names 1 have no need to tell, — 
We hold them dear, Got) marks them well! 
And uone is brighter than Cornell, 
Or to mankiud more truly loyal! 
All hall, the few, the only great I 
Who, granted by soma klmll v fute,' 
Stake earth the happier while we wait 
The thousand years of life elvsian 1 
But speed the day, O laggard Time ! 
When manhood, grown fo golden prime. 
And In Its glory ull sublime, 
On every hand shall meet our vision! 
Speed on the Coming Man! O, Earth 
\\ ould chant an anthem at his birth ! 
For bides within him wondrous worth,— 
Something as near divine as human I 
Aye, speed him on, nor longer wait! 
Here shall lie first mat riculate, 
And Number One shall graduate, 
Aud then may wed the Coming Woman ! 
Tims much as h brief parenthetic relapse, 
1 h»vs r °n!y name mentioned set proudly In caps! 
“ By-and-By!” ** By-and-By I” 'Tis a sigh and a 
song: 
’Tis u prophecy sweet, to ba proven, ere long, 
'Tis the whisper <*f Hope, as she loads us afar 
Toward the glimmering gloam of some cloud-fretted 
star; 
’Tis a vision Of beauty, gtoorrow of rest, 
That if waiting to orlgmnto the sky of the blest! 
How I ho lines we are setting pass quickly nwar, 
Till the sunset approaches of life's weary day, 
When we pick up the Proa, with eyes grieving dim, 
And thru syllable slowly a soft vesper liyuni, 
As the last paragraph, at the close of earth’s page. 
That Is read thro’ our spectacles dimly, Old Age I” 
’Tis a para urn | ili soberly tender and quaint, 
With a deal of thanksgiving, a touch ot compliant. 
With a sigh of regret for the beautiful Past, 
And iidicux to Ilio lovers that are vanishing fasti 
And It ends with a prayer that the paragraphs all 
May tie ’proved” und “correct" when the Muster 
sHntl call, 
While the prayer, for “amen,” echoes sweetly and 
clear 
The ref min that so often has greeted the enr. 
And that now. us it seems on the breezes to die. 
ts a whisper of peace evermore—" liy-and-liu !’’ 
They will "lock up’’lhe "form” when the pugo Is 
complete, 
With a High nr two then • for our being Is sweet 
To some loving ones’ hearts, who will tenderly weep 
As they bid us " good-night,” when we sink to our 
sleep! 
They will “ look up” the “ form I " and some brother 
will" set” 
In his Agate, or Pearl, one more paragraph yet. 
Where cacti one of the types bus a tear on its face 
As he speedIIv ranges them Into their place, 
Where they picture a grave, and a pall, and a bier, 
As they spell out the day, aud the month, aud the 
year; 
Yet 'tis pleasant to know, though they'll say we have 
“Died,” 
That our “ form” will have gone but to bo “justified!’’ 
The Challenge Suit 
In answer to the applications we are constant!*- re¬ 
ceiving, requesting us to exchange our Organs for 
tfie cheap orpins so extensively advertised, wu must 
say positively that wo cannot make such exchange on 
any terms. Our advice ts, buy a good instrument, or 
none. 
GEO. A. PRINCE A CO. 
M any among the several 
hundred thousand readers of the Rural New- 
Youker must have often seen the advertisement of 
the celebrated WALTHAM WATCHES. Many, as 
every mall informs us, are anxious tn own one. We 
now invite every ono who reads this arliolJVto send 
to us for an ILLUSTRATED AND DESCRIPTIVE 
PRICE LIST of these Justly celebrated watches. 
This list affords a full description of the ilifferent 
grades of movements, the weight and quality of the 
cases, aud the prices of each. It also explains our 
plan of sending single watches by express to any 
part of the ceiintry, however remote, at less than 
the wholesale prices, giving the customer the privi¬ 
lege of examining the watch before paying. Send 
us your name, town, county and State, legibly writ¬ 
ten. You need not inclose stamps or money for 
postage, as we will pay that Be particular to state 
that you saw this In the Rural New-Yorker, Juno 
12. Address in full, 
HOWARD & CO., Jewelers and Silversmiths, 
No. GUO Broadway, New York City. 
FOli THE MONEY. 
YOU CAN GET THEM AT 
TRAPHAGEN, HUNTER & CO.’S, 
398, 400 «fc 402 Bowery, 
Opposite Sixth Street, New York. 
T., H. & CO. -ARID JSTOW 
CLOSING OUT THEIR SPRING AND 
SUMMER GOODS, 
untor 
GLIMPSES OP GENIUS, 
AND OFFER 
Cassimere Suits 
“ Father," said a lad. “ I often read of people 
being'‘poor but honest;’ why don’t they bouic- 
times say ‘rich but honest?’—“Tut, tut, my 
son,” replied the lather; “ nobody would believe 
them." 
A carpenter being asked for a riddle, pro¬ 
pounded the following“I picked It up; I 
couldn't find It; I put it down, and went uloog 
with it." No o(jbcould guess it. It was a splinter 
of wood in his foot. 
“Reprbsent me," said a gentleman to his 
ardst, “ with a book in my hand and reading 
aloud. Paint m.v servant also in one corner, 
where ho cannot be seen, but in such a manner 
that he may hear when I call him.” 
Dorm .as Jkrrolo having been invited to a 
large dinner party at the house of his friend Mr. 
Pepper, observed, upon entering the room, with 
a cordial shake of the hand, " My dear Mr. Pep¬ 
per, how delighted you must be to see so many 
devoted friends mustered,” 
“You murder time," said the leader of the 
band at Drury Lane to Mr. Kemble, who 
was rehearsing a song in Richard Camr dc 
Linn. “ Well, if I do," replied the tragedian, 
“lam more merciful than yon, who are con¬ 
tinually beutiug him." 
Swift was one day In company with n young 
coxcomb, who, rising from his chair, said, with a 
confident and conceited air;—“I would have you 
know, Mr. Dean, I set up for a wit." " Do you 
indeed?" replied the dean: “then take tny ad¬ 
vice. and sit down again." 
A non no mother of a waggish boy having 
bottled a lot of nice preserves labeled them, 
“Put. up by Mrs. D—Johnny, hating dis¬ 
covered them, soon ate the contents of the 
bottle, and wrote on the bottom of the label, 
“ Put down by Johnny D— 
WHICH ARE 
SUPERIOR TO ANY OFFERED 
A recent discovery that steel when made to rotate 
upon glass and similar substances will cut will) more 
rapidity and ease, and la 
CHEAPER, BETTER AND MORE DURABLE 
than the 
ON THE MARKET FOR THE MONEY, 
Jonathan's mettle 
v. ,/» w VS, l,«JI u VlllU YJIUII 5 LUVU.1V ,- 
All this, and a deal that I've not lime to mention, 
That is worthy perusal and Careful attention, 
Is the regulai fare we are gracefully able 
To serve up to our readers—per favor the Cable 1 
We linve echoed the cry or Improvement so tong 
That it seems now t he burthen of all of our song. 
From the mule Plymouth Rock, with a story its own. 
O’er tile lakes with their music It swiftly has flown ; 
And the far-reaohing plains of the bountiful West 
Have luughod out a reply from their blossoming 
breast I 
In the rust le of gold-tipped gram It Is heard. 
As the harvest by manifold reapers is stirred ; 
And forevtjr an eloquent answer is given 
By the numi-erless spires pointing upward to heaven I 
All the air is a-tiirill. from the rocks or old Maine 
To the Hue of the sunset, far over the plain, 
With tile chorus sublime that is heard in reply 
To the watohworti of Prog less.—oar rullylng cry I 
“To the West! to the West! Ho ! a Nation ahoy I” 
Thus is ringing the shout of our bold Yankee boy, 
As he stand* on the look-out. two oceans between. 
And before film Is spreading Pacific’s bright sheen. 
“Ho 1 a nation ahoy.' Wc uro nearing luff fast! 
She's a queer flguro-hend. and a stump of a mast; 
She is lying hoeulmcd In the mildest of sens, 
It corrodes the lining of the stomach ! 
IIOltSFORD’S SELF-RAISING 
BREAD PREPARATION, 
Prepared by Prof. E. N, HOltSFORD of Harvard 
University, contains no Suleralus. Bread. Biscuit, 
Muffins, Ac., made with this Preparation, can be 
eaten hot by Invalids and Dyspeptics. 
Send for the printed opinions of Baron LIEBIG 
of Germany, Prof- DOREMU8 of New York, Dr. C 
T. JACKSON, Mass. State Chemist. 
WILSON, LOCKWOOD, EVERETT Sc CO., 
201 Fulton St„ New York, General Agents. 
INVALUABLE TO EVERY FAMILY. 
\0 TOOL-CHEST COMPLETE WITII0LT IT. 
Sent free by mail on receipt of price, $2 each. 
Agents wanted. 
J. RUSSELL 6 l CO., 
GREEN RIVER CUTLERY WORKS, 
S3 Beckman Sr., New York City. 
Are tno ones pare:it(l)helioul, quite at our ease, 
lo be taken—or not—vary much as you pleasel 
At;d again I have fancied all earth-life to bo 
A parenthesis, merely, for you und for mo, 
SYWxo AtiiKpr set kindly within 
On i thick book of Existence,^ft chapter on sin, 
With k picture of sorrow and suffering sad, 
Just to make us, by contrast-, forever mure glad, 
t hro ttic pages unending the ages slmll turn. 
As eternity «, glurtes we finally learu ! 
Parenthetic or not. ’tis a chapter of vears, 
With Its measure of pleasure, of doublings nnd fears; 
t is a ’’ take from the “copy” of Being to "set,” 
Till our type-sticking fingers their cunning forget. 
And the moments are types, thut we “set” one bv 
nno J 
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-v A PERFECTLY safe illuminating oil, 
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