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THE ACITATOR.

You will know him when you see him, and you see him every day; ho is scattering hope and knowledge, always working without pay. He's persistent, lie's insistent, and his campaign never wanes; with his pockets full of papers and his top-piece full of brains. You will find him agitating in the factory and the mine, on the ship, upon the ocean, on the farm and railway line. He's umusing, ho'a enthusing, and he has good cause to smile, for the country's full of converts, and the vote grows all the while. He's gathering subs, to papers, and he's making millions think by his ready wit and logic, and through the power of printer's ink. He's deductive, he's instructive, and he's breaking slavery's chains, with his pockets full of papers and his top-piece full of brains.—"Appeal to Reason."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MW19120906.2.55

Bibliographic details

Maoriland Worker, Volume 3, Issue 78, 6 September 1912, Page 7

Word Count
140

THE ACITATOR. Maoriland Worker, Volume 3, Issue 78, 6 September 1912, Page 7

THE ACITATOR. Maoriland Worker, Volume 3, Issue 78, 6 September 1912, Page 7

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