Bellefonte Democratic Watchman. ItY P. GRAY NIEEK. JOE W. FLIIIEY, ASSOCIATE EDITCH Ink Slings —IIOR ‘CE OREELEY wrote, 'ANNIE Pit t ooot4 was spouting last night on Jon IF Arc.' .fhe treacherous type m ode it teat!, 'Many a Dutchman was M oving the last night in Noah's Arc.' —They have caught a Ku-klux away up in Michigan, but being a cullud eas y, lie ain't worth a picayune, and seerr lias decided to lot, him elide. Ice‘t ! —BROWN, in his speech the other night at the Editor's Supper, in thun der tones asked, "Am I the good Sit. warden?" We say no,. BROWN-AT phatically no/ r actions 'speak loud er than words' you cannot choir the remotest entity to him. —BRAINERD Bari the reason he run the other day, when pelted with stones by HARRIS, was that it never occurred to him at the time that he too could throw atones 1 How coon some people will lose their presence of mind I The Coming State Eleotion. The Democracy of Pennsylvania have girded on their armor, and are ready for another contest. They have elected their standard-bearers and are prepared to flglit again for truth arid the right. Nothing daunted by past reverses, they are stronger to-day than ever before ; and just in proportion as they feel their strength their enemies feel their weakness. They see the hand writing on the wall. They have been weighed in the balance and found wanting. Nemesia though of slow pace, is sure to come. Justice though of tardy step will surely overtake the guilty. As firmly as we believe that, there is truth in 'leaven, we believe that Radicalism, not only in Pennsyl vania, but throughout the country, is doomed to a speedy downfall. To ac complish this much desired result we look to the people—not only to Demo crats—but to the honest men of all po litical creeds. From present appear. VICE'S we believe that there are twenty thAsand Republican voters at least in this State, who are anxiously waiting an opportunity to thrust the op .'lse from their necks, and to I the ch.llllA of tyranny) ere they become riveted, and their hinds man acled beyond the hope of release. The masses of the Republican par ty cannot htelp but see, and they do see that they have been duped by their leaders, and unwittingly goaded on by the party jaali uptil forbearance has ceased to be a virtue. All that the Democracy had predicted—yea infinite ly more—of misrule and corruption, of wickedness in high places, of shame tul abuse of power to obtain selfish ends, of lavish expenditure of public funds, of the basest and most flagrant violations of the constitution to perpet uate their power—yea everything which is calculated to mar and retard the prosperity of a nation, arid render it debased in the eyes of the world,han been witnessed by the American pen rile during the ascendency of Radical isin. Will not the people. of thin boast ed free government lie free to see that the remedy for these evils lies in their power? Hate they forgotten that the graind bulwark of our political sir lIC- , turr is that all power is given by and through the eminent of the governed-- that they are not the passive /11119 , 1 - 111 of regal authority, but that it their rulers prove faithless to their trust they have a s peedy remedy at the polls? We believe not. We reiter ate our firm belief that thounandn of fitment Republicans are an aiously wait • ing to administer a severe rebuke to (1141 NT and his policy--to teach bun severely that the American people,not withstanding his Ku• Klux bills and army pirnpm,have still a power on elec tion day which they refuse to surren der into the hands of an ignorant and unprincipled usurper, and with that power they will make anti unmake, create and destroy. Arouse then, Democrats, and go to work. Think not of the dark pant,btit look forward to a bright future. lt not muse with folded arms upon furiti• er defeats, but remember that the long est lane has its turning point. 'The night is long that never sees the day.' We have victory within our grasp. Our State ticket is an excellent one, and one that commands universal favor Oen. Ma:Ariness and Capt. COOPER are both soldiers of high renown and citizens of unimpeachable character. There is not a single stain to mar their past record. Let us rally around them then, and give theta] our hearty sup port and success will surely crown our efforts. . 4 0ttitarf\[,1, VOL. 16 `•Change." After the A mefican Republic had enjoyed, under the policy and adminis tration of the Democratic party; a ca reer of pence, growth arid propriety tin• equaled, the restless spirit of the 'peo ple clamored fbr a change. In the campaigns which resulted in Demo cratic defeat in 1860, the cry every where was 'a change, we must have a change.' At that time the Federal Coverninent laid its arms eo gently up on the citizen that it inflicted not the slightest burden, while it rendered ample protection against foreign pow• ere arid nurtured the expanding pro.. gress of the whole country. As one by one, infant Commonwealthe were brought into being, it diirtit interfere in the least with the liberty of the hum blest citizen ; the rights of the respec tive States were sacredly respected,And all local and domestic questions were left to State Superintendence and State Legislature. The revenues of the general, government were all derived from foreign imports, and the country was kept free from debt, without taxa tion. There were no stamp acts, no income taxes, no natural army of Rev enue Assessors and Collectors to bur den and annoy the people, and con sume their substance. At least ten Iron manufacturing establishments were in entire and successful operation, utilizing the native wealth of our county and giving employment to hun dreds of workmen. But, the 'change' came. The peo ple in their undistnrbed enjoyment of every blessing which a good govern ment can possibly give, listened to the false theories of aspiring and aw hi two(' demagogues, and voted the party of the forefathers out of power. The party which promised to bless the peo ple with untold blessings, and to re form every abuse that has been in pow er nearly eleven years. A debt of three thousand millions is grinding the industry and labor of the nation to the earth, a new and vast ar ray of federal officers are posted in every part of the land taxation ie shift ed from the shoulders of the rich and saddled upon the poor. The President is armed with the power of an abso lute monarch, and the dignity and sovereignty of the States is completely overshadowed, and made PI/ bser‘i,iit to the ilictaten of the Federal adininis tration, the great writ of htibeas cm pus in placed at the command of the Military Dictator and so tar an legisla Lion can accomplish it the freedom of the citizen in utterly taken away, but three of the ten !roil manufactories in Centre county arc in operation, and every branch of indueitry to fearfully laiigui Citizens Freemen of Centre coun ty, and ot the old Iliiystoile State, look upon the contract, and as you retain the slightest love lor our Republican instuutions, or cherish the memory of a glorious past, resolve that there shall be another leliangel—and with thia de termination rl,l nut Mild the false and corml t piii I tht.ve ha , 1[1..111 1/1 . , Up I. hurled 11,0 iii poor. Radicalism the Friend of Labor Thp editor of the llyubliran is en gaged nl a. !.. , 1 i ii labored essays, en titled 'The Republican party the friend of the laboring man.' IVe do not pro. poiie a review of theme articles, nor a refutation it them in detail. Ta ewer the heading will he to answer all that can be written under it, if the Se. ries should 'Ens. nil swum( r.' The best refutation of any such al• legation is to be Mond nl the' record of that loot), wlurl ii„s had entire con trol ut the government (hiring the last ten years, arid the condition of the la boring classed a 8 contracted with their co idition at the beginning of the Re publican nos rule—every laboring man has this answer at hand—it is within the purview of his own sensibilities and his owlf consciousness, and futon may blather against it until his news paper °stabil Shill en t in consumed by die taxes imposed upon it by hia Radi cal party, for the relief of aristocratic monopolists and lor dl y bondholders. While the active labor and capital or the country ban to bear all the bur den of taxation, and thoee who are rich enough to retire front busitie - its and in vest their capital ni goi eminent bonds "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, .1 UNE 16, 1871. are exempt, it is bold presumption to claim that the party responsible for such leg l islation to assume to he any thing but the enemy of the industry and labor of the county. A poor man cannot even borrow money by mort gaging what little possessions he may have, because the lender would be compelled to pay tax on the loan as money at interest, which can all be saved by putting his money into Uni ted States bonds. For this very reit eon the business :nen and laboring men of the county are compelled to pay ten and twelve per cent. for borrowed mon ey, instead of six, in order that the margin may cover the taxes, and make the investment as good as government bonds. Only those who are rich enough to retire their capital arid themselves front the producing indus try of the country, can invest their money so as to free it front taxation. It only takes half an eye, then to see how the Republican party is the friend of the laboring man—Just as the wolf is the friend of the lamb--that may make a meal of it I Our silent forges, rolling mills and furnaces might also be appealed to as an all sufficient refutation-of all the twaddle of Republican uniters and speakers on the vaunted protection policy of that party. Laboring,men, may well say, 'De liver us from all such friends!' Its Dilemma Never, since its organization, has the Radical party occupied a position before the people identical with the one in which it finds itself to-day. Hitherto it has had an extensive avail. able capital on hand, made up princi pally of 'war issues' and the blunders committed by the Democracy ; the at. ter being in reality much more formid able than the former. In the present campaign, however, there is an ab sence of the conditiotor and surround ings of former campaigns arid what is still better, the only available point upon which the Democracy can be .... e.t. tacked, the seeming inconsistency of the ninth plank of the platform with the hitherto clearly expressed and well known views of the party upon the matters involved in the assumed adop tion of the three last said to be amend merits to the Federal congitution, will cost the assailants lunch more than any possible damage they can inflict upon the Democracy'. Tires lact the shrewd ones among the Radical poll iticians have nut 4en blow to compre hend, although, 4yet, they have been unable to point out any escape from the unpleasantly awkward dilemma in which they have been so unpleasantly hitched. There are a good many Dem ocrats, ourselves among the number, who do not go into ecstacies over the atttempted committal of the Democrat ic party to an endorsement of the three last, 80 called amendments to the con stitution, and consequent adoption of the negro into our political family, but what help can it. afford Radicalient to scold ai,d chatter over the matter ? Were th It. Lent I .hr, sincere and honest in their desire to secure equali ty to the negro, why Amid,' they make so many and such stupidly quarrel some objections to the action of the re- cent Democratic convention upon this matter? The essence of the matter is simply this: The ninth resolution clumsily worded and meaningless as it is, when carefully considered, neither in its substance nor its composition worthy the place it occupies, will serve ae a bridge, over which a few thousand home sick, heart-sick, disgusted Re publicans, who were lormerly mein bers of the Democratic part), can re cross to the party and the principles they abandoned years ugo. l'llol.lB ands are already on the march and more are falling into line, and because of these things and for the further reit son that the entire Radical press and the party at its back is in a fever of anxiety and worried by a pettish dis appointment and chagrin over the fact that the Democracy for the nonce has determined uponrysticcess, we are willing, inasmuch we were una ble to prevent and had no hand in its adoption, to insist upon oar Radical brethren swallowing this pudding of their own cooking and we will do our best to see that the table is well served. —Over f 2,500 have boon contributed to the relief of the Pittston sufferers. „To support the administration in one thing. To advocate the renomination of ,its head is another. We support the administration.r— Greeley in Tri brine, June 7. Damning with faint praise,”: is sonietimeit the nin , t etlectice way to dispose of MI 0171111.41 t, at least the philosopher or the ii ibnne eidently thinks so, For H.llle time it has been reported. but until (vote lately not credited, that the I INtinglii-ilied philos opher, theologian and agriculturalist, of the Tribune hail Ills e) e on the next Radical Presidential nomination. Mr. GREELEY'S recent letter to a friend in Kansas upon die subject of the nett Presidency, in which lie expressed his anxiety that the country should return to the old Whig practice of nominating Ct , ditlates who believed in a single pr idential terin,backed up and supple mented by the article from which the above paragraph is taken, would seem to indicate pretty strongly that a line of demarkation was being or has al. ready been drawn between the Tribune and GRZELEY On one side, and GRANT and his retainers on the other. Quite significant words are these, and capa ble of but one construction. The syl logism if not ingenious is at least re markably plain; and the conclusion as logical as logic can make it. Unitises supports the administration but does not advocate the nomination of its representative head. Mr. G RANT, ob tuse as lie is, and preoccupied as lie may be with guzzling whisky-cocktails and racing horses at 1.0i.g ltrancli,can hardly fail to understand and compre- hend this plain and explicit statement of GazaLLY's. Will he propitiate the angry deity of the Tribune and by proper sacrifices appease and stay the spirits invoked to crush him, or will he defy the bolts of 'll. G.' and in turn compel him to repentance arid penance? Time will determine and meantime 'the war goes bravely' on.' —The little ship Ragusa, a miniature craft only fifteen feet in length, has again set sail for Europe. Her crew is OHO man, who is also captaim—no tau tiny anticipated—her passengers, one dog—her cargo, five hundred hrickv4. "It will be reinembered,"mays the Chi cago Repub/ican, "that this vessel lett Lit.erpool last summer, was upset on the very coast, but started again, and, alter A stormy voyage of III) 1a s,maile Boston the was Ellen manned by two foolhardy men, and a Newfoundland d o g whiLli died on the Banks. It in imsoble that the cock le.heil nay again safely reach her destination If she does, —rut bun° r No new or valuable principle in ship building will have been establishedoni result advantageous na /111) manner or degree, either to hit inanity or the individual, will have been attained, if we except the gruff., cation of an itching desire for notoriety to a longing after reckless adventure. It she should be lost, his will not even be the miserable consolation of a cur oiler's inquest. 'here it, of course, in this land of freedom, no enactment pre venting a loan from taking salt water with his suicide. lift citizen neat' nut die when he pleases and as he chooses, our revolutionary forelat hers have in deed bled in vain. We can have no po able objection to the captain's going 1111 , % II hhe a .41/11e ni the mighty waters, but a. hionanilanalls we object to the stanktbiler of the dog, w ho has no coin passionate Horace to plead los cause, and, fie•mie,, what waste of bricks !" /At ( y Democrat. Coal. 1. 111 K N T A) , Y. —OllO stormy, in blusterg night, a ve dant couple pre seated Iheniselses tit, le residence of a ce rtai ii 1 orlol h clergyman, requesting to lie married. Alter the ceremony was performed, the happy groom, pocket-book in hand, asked : 'Wall, Squire, what's to pay ?' Tlitrtstonielt-- ed and expectant reverend inydestly re plied that he never named his price for any such service, but accepted whatever any one was pleased to give Lino. The money %Rs returned to the capacious pocket book with a grin and a bow. 'Wall, I'm obleeged to ye,l de dare; I'll do as much lur you some tinie."Yes,' chimed In the blumhing bride, with an astonishing courtesy, 'much obliged to ye, as fur as I'm con named. II it hadn't, a stormed, we Amnia have gone to 'Dedham.' "Steam," said Dr. Lardner, is the great annihilator—it annihilates time and space." "Yes," said a listner, "and mulitudes of passengers too." For one woman who gets a husband by means of showy dress and oostly jewels, nine fail get busbanus because of the costless of their attire and the disposition d taste it indi cates AcconniNo to Arteinne Ward,there are two things for which we are never quite prepared, namely—twine. if Horace vs. Ulyses — N?" ' : f / / 'sP Can History Teach Us ? Colbredge denied the power of man to profit by experience of man ; it was, he said, no more than the lantern over the vesseles' stern, that threw light upon the course we had gone, but left ed free gOvernment begin to sec that the course still to be run tin darkness. Our neighbor's misadventure gives us no clue by which to anticipate and provide against our own ; the iterfuel of political mistakes in one hemisphere has no influence in averting those mistakes in another. Philosophers may warn, but passions still rage, and prejudice and impulses sweep us away madly as ever. yet, It may ii pen, in the pro gress of education and the advancement of intelligence, that the proofs of polo tics as a science—proofs by the one Hullicient teat of predictions—may have weight to make societies pause in the contemplation ofeincidal Ras. Certain• ly we should have been well mati•ifled, even while confident it would have profited nothing,to commend the atten tion of Congaess, during the debates upon the Ku-klux 1011, a precedent from the If (story of the ancient Repub. tic of Florence. This is narrated in the deliciously garrulous pages of that paragon of arrogance and skill, of on puke and genius, Benvento Cell tut. Alessandro Medici, the Duke of Flor ence, had just been assassinated, and certain patriotic citizens were rejoic ing to Cellint that his successor, Cos. rno—he who finally obliterated the lib• erties of that State—bad been elected upon conditions that would prevent bun from being arbitrary, and Indulg ing his own capricious fancies. 'Centro laughed, and answered thus mentor& bly : 'The citizens of Florence have put a young man on a mettlesome horse; they have fitted him with spurs, left the bridle to his guidance, and set hint at liberty upon the fine plain, in which are flowers, fruits, and all things that can please and delight the senses and imagination After this, they direct him not to go beyond certain limits as signed. Now, pray tell me, who has the power to prevent loin, when he has an inclination to paes them ? Lairs cannot be prescribed to hots who is rims ter of the law." The Radical faction might as well have fancied, after they passed the act remodeling the Supreme Court, that Grant would not pack the Bench to the national disgrace and dishonor, a 8 to suppose that he will not make use of the illicit power conferred on him by the Ku k lux bill (or his own selfish ends and immediate personal aggrand izement. They have mounted him ; they will have but themselvs to blame, if he rides them and the State &Jun.-- Washington Daily Patriot. Which is the Beet—Liberty or Pro- teo tion We all desire Protection, if 618 means an increase in the price of that which we sell, just as we all. desire to enjoy, without the trouble and fatigue of producing, the things from which we dense our enjoyment. But can this universal desire be gratified 7 It one is entitled to Protection, all are equally entitled to it. But when Con Kress imposes taxes on every body for the benefit of every body, will any body be really benefited by such Pro tection? Would nut all then be, in re ality. in the same position as if no one were protected by the government, ex cept the very one won have to contrib ute, out of leis canon i lfisshare of the expense of the worse than useless guy eriilllCllL officials, who, under the'lltit of Protection, collect taxes from eery body for the real benefit of nobody ? Universal protection results in all be ing, burdened, and dem nig less lienelit (ruin Protection than the burdens int posed on them to tileet the expense of this Protection. Are not all then better oil. when each protects himself under the beneficial sway of liberty ? This, which seem to be the providential eye teni, leaves each in the same re lative position to all others as if all were protected by government, while it relieves all of the heavy burden of maintaining the numerous useless gov eminent officials who superintend and enforce the protective system, which in nothing but an obstacle to the ex Change of commodities with foreign countries—exchanges which benefit every producer in the United States, and injure no one. Here, as in every other case, a careful analysis shown that oature's processes are iiivitri• ably preferable to those of man, being more just, effective, inbre siniple, and therefore more beneficial.— Tax Payer. The Erie Observer says: "It doesn't need that the democratic press should into •tn the people that the party has abandoned "dead issues," and corn. menced the campaign upon the living questions of the day. The republican paper's are advertising the tact so IA oI I that we owe them a vote of thanks for their courtesy." We are gratified to.learn that R. A. McConnell, Esq., has been renominat ed for member of the House by the democracy of Green county. There was no opposition. In the last House Mr. McConnell took a prominent purl in the proceedings, and made a record of which himself and his constituents may be prowd name as Mrs. Frank. lied it not been! warning signal, the train would hr thoilled Into the rook, and genus the train. not to the paneangers, ,Astor 1 been the consequence, Spawls from the Keystone. —The 011 City poopki nro crying aloud for a big hotel. —The totthrnelto hirnneen In Read log and nre marling llp again. —Allentown has a Ind platoon years old who k lokv ll e beam It 2:0 pounds. —Atrneeting h.r forming 11State labor union In called at Danville on the 27th of June. —The xhirnene of lumber from Lock liween by venal the other week wan 1,834,200 feet. --Mijleraville, Dauphin county, is Sixty-fire yenrs old. It nun laid out by Daniel Miller. —The authoritioe of Titusville have appro priated 11,000 for lirewortas for the glorious Fou rt It NO. 24 —A man namod Keel In In jail at Carlisle, on a elmrge of poisoning his wire, who tiled very suddenly a fow days ago. —Ground le being cleared for the erection of the new depot of the Union & Titusville railroad, in Titußvlde. -Tho 1111 title were celled out In Lincoln Pc, to stop thew hipping of the sehookeeeb. er by it pupil's TIMITIMR. —Faitnund EngMO, Esq., in now announced for renomination for Annembly. That county and Elk now compose a Legislative cilitrint. —Mrs June Collins, aged eighty-five years, who wits born in endurable, Lancaster coun ty, WllOll but !Wee houses were there, has des ceased. —A Mr. r4iyzAinm, female physician, has t ettinmistest to Jail at Erie for abortion nod murder.' tier alleged victim was Marla MEM —Tho Stain 'Nowhere' Association will meet thie 30 ar nl Witherneport, Aug Bth. Ample will be made for all who may ERZ! —llarrieburg her a Juvenile band of thieves •ailed 1110 "SI x teen 1113wdere ' But it la not he only thieving a.taolAtion the State Capital •an board of. —Two Allegheny county commlagdoners, JOU/1011M NeeieY and William McGee, bars Pled guilty , to receiving bribes for appllcontas fur liven•n It, cell liquor.. —A ince ling of the corporator' of the new Rorke county Railroad, hay resolved that the took subscription books he opened at Read ng, P., on the '26th Inst. —The citizens of Rewardll are diseusslng he adoption of soilhe means to suppress the ransposition of nitro-glycerine, and other iangerons explosives, through their street. —on the night of the Bth inst., Dr. A. F. Stnyrnan, of Carllse, died at a hotel In Tyrone from the enacts of opium and chloroform II le brother is a professor In Inekison College —The new Mittel works of the Cambria Iron Company, at Johnstown, are feet approaching completion. When they are put in operation, tbey will employ 5,1)W men, in addition to the 4,00 n now working there. —John lleidler, au old citizen of Cliester county, resided near Lionville, who Is ninety two years of age, has voted at every election sine. by was twenty-one years old at one pole Slid at the /41111110 wtuduw In Lionville. I he follow mg Is the petroleum report for the month of May l'rothn (lon, 471,77.5 bar. , r. Is, daily a% ersae, 15,21 S barrels, total 5.0ck5,1,1,{1 , 1, heti - elm, number of wells pru ,lociog, number of wells drilling, 295. - r 1,1%4111,1 Livittantou, sun of Daniel Ltrtea.lett, decoaeed, of Cori/rine,'lle, Clear field ,ointy, ban been appointed Aseennor of DA. tor that dietrlet to fill the vacate y OW death of his father —At 11 ppeclal election for • member of City t COIIIIOII, 111 Harrisburg, on Wednesday last, Fitzgerald, IN,ll.oerat, war, chosen by eleven inaii.rity I hir ay. a gain, as 1.11. , seventh wont, u 1 1.1111.11 took place is a 14.41.110111 ward —The charter of tire Ivrough of Kennett, Square•, Chester e.rlllll.y. upon the petition of r two ihinis nil the tan payers, has been so amended by Is decree of tile court, as to inake unlawful forever In that place the tale of in totteattnK liquors. Uunng the ending April the JOIN, there ere nuuwlactured Intell city of Phi[Adel di in, barrel.. of lager Leer, which re wired the uee of CAti, 01.1 blithe!, of rniet. twee fee, afford a rise subject fore prattler' emperance lecture —Jett Intvis,tholigh a poor man,saye that he •a ill acre pt nosh log " Ile a ill out even accept the eitiottion, Grant, on the other hand, itceopte everything that Is offered him, In cluding brown Moue fronts, Minute., bull pupa yueht and lam hories —A shooting affair occurrod in • lager beer saloon in Columbia, un tho 10th inst , m which a man named Philip Lehr wan badly wounded by a pistol shot iu the left side fired by a man named Wolf. Wod hics been arrested and la now In Lancaster fall. —lion Charles W Pitman,shertlf of lichuyl. kill el/lInt) 4110.1 muitteoly on Tburpday Th. (fovea/14.41 wua a republican whoa., pupdlarity ele,tutl luni I, the oitice he held by a large niajurity ui a 1141111.1r1,1 tle county lie VI WS IL repremenl.6tiro It Cungrean ninny years ago —lion Asa Packer line signed an agreement to take charge of the New Jeriley West Line railroad and complete it whim. eight Triunity and settle its indebtedness. its has beau chosen president of the board of directors, with Robert N. Sayre, of the Lehigh Valley railroad, as vice president and others of the same road as directors --(in Fr'iley !nit the body of a man, Ger na. found hanging to a tree In Mead: 'rude. From the appearance of the clothes upon the body there In little doubt-that lie had find been in thu water, and there are strong miimiciona that lie had been murdered and then hung to the tree. There la great •zeh maid In Meadville over the affair. .-From the Greensburg Argos: On Thurs day afternoon of last week, ail the exprons train on the ‘Vestern Pennsylvania railroad was proceeding eastward, and rounding IV curve about midway between Leeohburg and Appolo, the engineer observed a woman on the track, waiving her apron violently in the air. The first thought was of danger, and he im tnedlatety applied his Lifelike and got the train stopped Just in time to prevent a ter rible accident, as a mass of rock; weighing about fifteen tons, had :Allen upon the hack a few rods from *here the woman hail given the signal. When the train stopped the pas sengers ware nut long In ascertaining the cause, and appreciating the conduct of the poor country woman, to whose preserves of mind they owed their rescue from a shocking casualty, Colonel Hicks, the conductor of the train, at once consulted with some of the pa' sengers and in a shott time a purse of $2O r made up and presented to her. Se gave
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