Chapter
1 I| table on which the form of type was~placed in readiness
2 I| gentlemen in picking out the type from the hundred and fifty-two~
3 I| per~sheet in every kind of type. He proved to unlettered
4 I| unlettered customers that~large type costs more to move; or,
5 I| more to move; or, if small type was under discussion,~that
6 I| handle. The setting-up of the type was~the one part of his
7 I| compositor, picking out type from the hundred and~fifty-two
8 I| language, the masses of set-up type, were~washed. Inky streams
9 I| machinery,~that wears out the type. You in Paris have been
10 I| together, and maul your type to pieces, because there
11 I| Stanhope is the death of the type. Those three~presses will
12 I| thousand pounds weight of type from~M. Vaflard's foundry----' "
13 I| twelve years of wear, that type is as good as new.~That
14 I| printer to the Emperor! And~type that costs six francs a
15 I| taking up an unused pica type.~ ~David saw that there
16 I| sensitive and affectionate type that shrinks from a dispute,
17 I| would have put her to~set up type into the bargain.~ ~ ~ ~
18 I| trade circular, the old type was still unchanged, and~
19 I| business would have bought new type and new machinery, and made
20 I| Still we have a very pretty type which might suit it," put
21 V| to the different sizes of type, names that bear the~impress
22 V| Saint-Augustine, and Canon type, because they were first
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