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i $4 | THE OMAHA DAILY BEE TWOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER, = VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Propriets}._“ BEB BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTHENTH, .m At Omaha postoffice as second-class matter, TERMS OF flUBHCRlPTIflV By carrier per month Bbe By madil per year. venees 98,00 and Sunday ly without Bu) and Sunday without Bun vening without Sunda only.. ally and Sunday in advi . notice of rhu-n of address or irregul Bee, Circulation Dej e REMITTAN! Remit by draft, express or - order. Only twos ;om Mamps received in payment of small accounts, n-onn checks, :‘xum on Omaha and eastern ox~ acce FICES, Bu B'}:WM ncfl B m—u i) street. Hnmln—A Little Buil Mfin. Chicago—§18 Peoples huildin N w M—Aoom 1108, mgh -w:m W 8-606 New Bank of Commerce, gton—T% Fourteenth strest, N. W, __——-—_._* m communications relating to CORREAPONDENCE, MAROCH CIRCULATION, 56,628 Daily—Sunday 50 628 b it wnuuu elroulation mansger -.uy boln. luly nvorn u . Ihll uu r.'z-s:fg SR . o Hfil? ILLLA 8, Circulation Manager. ‘and aworn to before me lOI“T HUNTER, Notary Publie, Bubscribers leaving the city temporarily shoulu have The Bee malled to them, Ad- dress will be changed ns often us requested. e — Ireland, though slightly disfigured, is still fu the ring. — Those Rotariens of Omaba are raising some dust! SEm— The speeding babit must not be permitted to &row with growing Omaha, S—— Justice Hughes' silence is an #source of worry to the nolse-makers, FETe————— Bpring poets mean well, but their ideals lack the support of the weather bureau, E—— A report on the condition of Nebraska's two vice presidential booms would not be out Increasing Ready to joln the short ballot movement? Or do you need a few more demonstrationy of its necessity? — Despite the war cost exhibit of $90,000,000, & day, deluded theorists insist war makes for prosperity and thrift, —— And it 1s worth noting that 8ir Roger Case- ment Is & native-born son of the United King- dom and not a “byphenated” Britisher, ——— Btatistics showing three unmarried criminals to one married crook in New York still further emphasizes the restraining influences of a m rimonial hobble, — Looking over the sworn statements of can- didates’ expenses In the primary campalign, the inevitable conclusion Is that somebody is do- ing some tall lying. m——— Another insistent note has gone out from the Btate department. Colonel Bryan's famous recipe of a year of conversation is altogether too short for an Insistent administration, The most rampant of Britishers, if capable of appreciating a news scoop, must feel some- what grateful to Germany for the details of sea and alr ralds which a censorious government denles to the home reporter, — OChalk Hall county up as the banner county for intelligent voting in the recent republican primary. In Hall county the written-in vote for Hughes outstrips the votes for candidates whose names were printed on the ballot. The democratic World-Herald is already be coming alarmed lest the “smut-mills” may be brought into action in the Nebraska campaign. Heretofore that paper has claimed monopoly of the “smut-mill' business, which it evidently wants to protect against infringement In the latest officlal summary, Nebraska Is put down as the third corn-producing state, 1111 nols leading the column. But Nebraska has a vast acreage yet to be brought under cultivation while Illinois is practically up to its mit. Ne- braska will pass lllinols some of these days Government reports show that the price of meat animals advanced 4.4 per cont in & month and 10,1 per cent during the twelve months ending April 15, A few weeks ago stockmen and packers told a commitiee of o ons that they were not getting thelr dus, Who got CXeeny money ! the Thirty Years Ago (This Day in Oma. Oompliod from I- LY A otrong wind boke olf OF Max Mayer s store and broks & show case ln fros OF O A Wingers siare Bt wolves ware Miled bach of the M b n o Lewis | wha ieosived B4 beunty fer wahip Weir M Thomas B Wiliame of Kansas Oy the SO of M asd Mes M. K Basith My Beith being e beniher of Mes Williame The Masssle Tomplooraft of Omaha has N Wahind o antlon befure Judge MeOwllaeh 19 seoure | PRGN 8¢ the stere Buiiding at B) Nasth Sisteenih SN, now bwlng wecupied by Beaith Keanedy com TORE, 08 & gronry sl Masager Pl of the Prement, Kikhorn ix Villey bas removed A famity from Mis Teaching Treason. You do solemnly swear that you will support the conatitution of the United States and that you abwo- lutely and entirely renounce and abjure all alleglance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state or soverelgnty, and particularly (by name) the prince, potentate, state or sovereignty of which yon were before a citizen or subject; that you will support and defend the constitution and laws of the United Ktates against all enemies, forelgn and domestic, and bear true faith and mllegiance to the same. S0 help you, God After hearing this oath recited, which he, himself, had administered the naturalized citizens who were the Rotary club’s special guests for the occasion, a judge of our district court, called on to make some observations about naturalization, sald in so many words to “If, by chance, our country should have war and you should be called to arms and have (o fight against the country from which you came, If you should find yourselves opposite your former countrymen and should aim high so as to be sure not to hit any of them, T would not blame you-I say, | would not blame you, if you should fire in the air)’ Whether or not Judge Sears realized what bhe was saying to the class of new American citizens, he was teaching them a lesson In treason, and if they were to act on his insidious suggestion under such circumstances, they would be inviting court-martial and summary punighment, Kvidently Judge Sears does not, or did not, realize that In war time fallure of one company-—yes, of one man—to do his full duty might mean the loss of the battle and the defeat of the cause for which the nation is warring. This I8 not a quibble of words or a differ ence in politics, It I8 a question of what is the espence of patriotism-—for a judge of a court of law surely must know that when the citizen Ia enlisted as a soldier it Is for him to fight ‘or his flag against any and every enemy country on earth, If this judge were holding judicial office In Germany, or Great Britain, or France, or any of the warring nationg of Europe, and pub- liely declared that he would not blame the sol- diers for firing In the air, if their line hap- pened to fall opposite to a company made up of former friends or neighbors, we do not belleve ba would long sit on the bench, In our own clvil to go 10 war it was often family against family and brother agalnst brother and the bonds of blood had to be severed when the uniform was donned, No man who deliberately “aimed high” when the command was given to fire could excuse himself by any such lpec‘oul pleading. That doctrine {s the doctrine of treason and nothing else, The Bee {s as anxious as any to keep this country at peace with all the world and to help our newly naturalized citizens work out their salvation and ours in this land of freedom which they have adopted, But they muet, as they really do, place America first, come what may, and it is not for any of us to plant in their minds the seeds of treason and disloyalty. Crux in the Submarine Warfare, Secretary Lansing has clearly restated the American position on submarine warfare. He omphasizes the point that warning must be ¥lven by a submarine warship to a merchant vessel under all conditions, He does not admit the right of a belligerent to sink a neutral ves- sel under any circumstances, This reverts back to the case of the Frye, the first of the war, which ‘has been somewhat overshadowed by the more aggravated Instances of submarine activ- ity. Secretary Lansing also lays great stress on the absolute right of the ship's company to safety at all times, The status of armed mer- chantmen is glven more full consideration and explanation, so that our attitude on this point fs now unnilstakable, and the privilege of flight and the right to resist is insisted upon. The sending of the note to all embassies and legations Iy Intended officially to notify the world of the American position on the question, It should be possible to conduct the submarine campaign effectively along human lines; If not, it must be abandoned, and this is the attitude of the United States. Democratic Split on the Philippines. The house caucus of democrats has been unable to agree on the Philippine bill as it cume from the senate, and a lively {ssue has Leen raised behind the closed doors, where the work of congress Is secretly mapped out, Many members of the majority party balk at the pro- posed pertidy of the measure the president drove through the senate. These men realize the ob- ligation of the United States to the islanders, the more binding because it is moral rather than lcgal, and they understand the dangers of fol- lowing the plan proposed by Messrs, Wilson and Hiteheoek. Opponents of this iniquitous meas- ure will at least have a hearing before it is dra- gooned through the lower house by the party caucus A powerful lobby of mestizo politiclans s only at Washington, but throughout seeking support for the Hiteheoek in the its busy, not the country bill islands, Ihese will become the ruling clas should the United States withdraw and will permitted to the exploitation of the full-blood Their of protectorate he themselves natives on a scale never practiced before in the “independence koen interest having the natives set up s quite comprehensible. More material interests of the United States are involved (n the matt For example, all the Fillping money now In cireulation rests on the eredit eatablished by the presence of our governien An Issue of $20,000.000 of ¥ no bonds ix entire whed this country blefly by savings banks, and (hese becow worthiess (he moment we haul dow e flag at Manila. American capital employed the ilands will be lost, and Americans residont | there, all at the lnvitation Kovernment, will be exposed Lo conditions Iar 10 those on 4 In Mext . Batn gives up his protecioraiy From o scial and political p e the Wilson-Hitoheoek bl bs & stupendous bit A Vallag 1 Omaba sl 0 sovupring & sale of wfiflhm B Parmaien has robuined from & monih s (p 19 e Peeiihe ooani Charive Kimary has lof (50 an Lipoarta 0y 5 saiorn lawa e of folly . from & moral viewpoint i & Wiserable cowardive. et e New York Olp's Aftrorear bonds, 1o the | amount of 140,000,000, beariug 1l per cont interest And marketed last week, brought the Bigheat prive of the season, 1000 An | ahundanes of woney all ever the country In Mires & Blah and rendy writh.a markst for good W to devote | Garrett P. Serviss. HERBP is no known instance of the sudden or in- stantaneous disappearance of a star. In fact, with the exception of the vanishing of stars which had firet been seen to make their appearance, i. e.. “new stars,” there ls no certain record to prove that any recognized member of the starry host has ever disappeared A considerable number, however, have faded, while others have brightened because they belong to the large class of the variable stars. The star Megrez, at the Junction of the handle and bowl of the “Great Dipper,” for instance, was once, on the authority of Tycho Brahe, as bright as the other six stars con- stituting the dipper figure, but at present, as you may #ee any clear night, it is relatively faint The interesting legend of the “Lost Pleiad” is, no doubt, based upon another instance of a gradually fading star, which was once plainly visible to the naked eye, but has now become too faint to be no- ticed without eptical ald, There is uncertainty, how- over, as to just which of the Pleiads it is that for- merly shone more brilliantly. Some think it s Plelone, otherd Asterops, and still others Celasno, But no one of these three atars Is invisible, under fa- vorable cireumstances, to a keen eye, ‘The brilllant topaz star Betelgeuse, in the shoulder of Orfon, although ordinarily of more than the first mugnitude, has occasionally sunk considerably below that magnigude, Tn 182 it was the brightest star in the northern hemisphere, and in 15894 it again blazed up with great brilliancy. It is probably hundreds of times greater than our sun, but Secchi thought, from the charncter of Iita spectrum and its eccentrio changes of brightness, that it is approaching extine- tion The Inhabitants of the planets that Betelgsuse rules are to be pitied! Their sun may last for milllons | of years yet, since the agony of a star is vastly pro- longed, but already its raddation has become so vari- able that their seasons must be in fearful disorder. But there iu a far worse case than that of Bertel- goune, | refer to Mira “the wonderful,” in the con- stellation of the Whale (Cetus), Tn a perfod of about 231 days this nstonishing star changes a thousandfold in brightness, belng at one time far below the range of the naked eye, and not brighter than the ninth magnitude, and at another time rising to a degree of brightness but a single step below the first rank. An It fadey it turns red, and when it brightens agaln It {8 lke n ruby flaming Into a dlamond. A flerce outburst of white light marks the eulmination of esch struggle of that hopelessly dying sun, and then It fades and sinks again into a state of ex- haustion Its planets. If it ever had any, must long since have perished, their death-stricken forms perfodically illu- minated by the fitful glare, like stiffened victims of a massacre, left near thelr expiring camp-fire, While no long known and recognized star has, as far as records show, ever guddenly disappeared, new stars have suddenly burst Into wight, and afterward faded rapidly away. In 1001 an amazingly brilliant ar made its appearance almost In the twinkling of an eye, far as naked-eye observation was con. cerned, at the border of the Milky Way, In the con- stellation Perseus, For a little while it was nearly, or quite, as bright as Sirfus. It soon began to fade, and in a few months it had changed, wholly or par- tially, Into a nebula, invisible to the naked eye, and it still exi This marvellous phenomenon is generally belleved by astronomers to have been caused by a collision n open space between two previously invisible stars, whose invisibility may have been due either to their ® remoteness or to their slight brightness. We know that the stars are all in motion with velooities wufficlent to cause an Immense outburst of heat and light If they should run against one another, and the fact that at least fifteen new stars have been ro- corded since the sclentific observation of the heavens began makes it seem probable that collisions do occa~ slonally oceur Even the near approach, without collision, of two great stars would suffice to produce a similar catas- trophe through the effects of thelr tidal strain upon each other, In 1672, in the timeof Tycho Bral & new star, even more brilliant than that of 1801, burst out, also at the edge of the Milky Way, in the constellation Cassiopein, There were no telescopes and no spectroscopes thon, and when the star faded beyond the reach of the naked eye the precise place that it had occupled was loat; but Tycho, with his imperfeot instruments, made measures of its place which today serve to tell us ap- proximately its location. There is no visible star there today. Baltimore's Goodby to Billy Baltimore American, For two months has Rev. Willlam A. Bunday con- ducted revival services at the York Road tabernacle, He has kept every appointment, has not missed a sin- gle wervice, but with unflagging energy, with seal and with wonderful rnestness has called on sinners to quit their sin, to lead upright, decent lives, to make better r ds on earth and to prepare for the here- after. Thousands upon thousands have hit the trial, have promised to he good and it remains for them to keep their promises and to prove that the lessons learned at the tabernacle are golng to have a per- manent effect Mr. Sunday and members of his party have entered into the social life of the city and have held religious services in the homes of some of the leaders of Balti- more soclety. In these homes he has been treated with the utmost consideration, shown every courtesy and has aroused among these peopls a true interest in the work he is doing. Not a few of those who heard him In these homes have made frequent visits to his tabernacle and some have jfoined in the hitting of the trail To the crities of his language and his methods Mr, Sunday has made no replies. In this he is wise. No one who knows him, no one who has come in close contact with him, can have a doubt of his sincerity, He s, without a doubt, the greatest evangelist in the world today and no man living could have done the work he has done in Haltimore in the last two months In his letter to the American Mr. Sunday thanks the people of Baltimore for their hospitality, for thelr enthusiasm, for their liberality, for thelr encourage- ment, for thelr loyal support. [t has been & Kreat time for Wim and who shall say It has not been a great and good time Paltime His work will | prove itself. 1f it be of man it will coms to naught, | Baltimore say s godap to Mr. Sunday and to all | his party. May their campalgms fn other oities be witended with the same success that has marked their ampaign 'n Haltimore Twice Told Tales teed of Publiei ne | ate publivity like the young Detroit man e was drossed in & HEhtOthing sult of the Atest And hia w - wlue W s dream t sartorial refinement And he waas plainly embareassed when he sntered the sditer's offiee L owan intensely ahovked 1o read & notios tn your | PAPEr OF My engnmement.’ he began. | cannot tell v ar e chagrined. We were Al ahagrined Misplaved Srmpaih . he Ay duwniown » A Mawart ema A & Withe ohi he hand A madherly OMIRE YOURg Wolan pavsed befure them for & e el Then o & eiies hural of srmamihy. she et ver (e ohib and Niased hor Toar bl Bhe looss M oal and starveh ine and aha basn t been waahed L] . ek Sotem falha canmel be trvated whin | drem, wiched erusl things (hey are. Whare &0 you T g —-— Pind 1he (AN waman® saorted the polioeman angrtly. 1 ABCL nd her Al a1l BBe'e my ewn Wi | ~Terente Glabe Industry and Persistence, COUNCIL BLUFPFS, la, April %.-To the Kditor of The Bee: 1 recelved your check today for the amount of the ond prize awarded in the Shakespeare puzzle. In thanking you for this, I also wish to say that I enjoyed working on it, despite the fact that I went over the entire list four times, a rather tiresome task, As it {s the first time I have ever #ent in an answer, I was greatly sur prised and pleased at getting a prize when they are always so many answers. PHYLLIS B. WHERLER Whoe Wrote Shakespeare? OMAHA, April 21~To the Fditor of The Bee: The Chicago court the other day that decided that Bacon wrote the plays and sonnets of Shakespeare had all the evidence on that side. Other than that Willlam Shakespears was a wander. ing actor in London in the time of Queen Elizabeth and that there are six of his slgnatures extant (besides those found lately by Prof. Barnett and his wife of the University of Nebraska) to ordinary documents on court records relating to property, there ls nothing to show that he wrote the greatest of all literature and much to the contrary It geems that in 1507 (Shakespeare dled in 1616) Shakespeare was glven a thou- sand pounds and sent from d.ondon to Btratford on the Avon, which was a long, long way In those days. This was done in order to induce him to incur the risks entailed by allowing his name to appear upon the plays. For had Queen Miiza beth known that Sir Francls Bacon, aft erwards Viscount St, Alban's, had writ ten them, she would have cut off his head, since she was determined to pun ish the author of “Richard 11" and she I8 reported to have said, “Seest thou not that I am ‘Richard 11" There is no evidence that ever earned as much as ten shillin shakespeare n any week while ne lLived mn London, Of the three likenesses oxtant of Hhsk speare, known as the Stratford Lust, the D'Avonant bust and the wood cut In the first edition of the works In 142 known as the Droehout print, not one of them can be called authentic 1t seems almost incredible,” says Laurence “that people with eyes to see wshould have looked on this so-called portralt for 300 years without percelving that it consists of a ridiculous putty-faced mask fixed ywith a stuffed dummy, clothed in a trick coat.”” It one will notice, it will be seen that the coat is impossible, be cause the front and back are composed of the same left arm, and the right-hand #ide of the forepart im obviously the left hand side of the back part, giving a harlequin appearance to the figure Bacon's sclentific works are under his own name, and they are De Augmentis and Novum Organum. The first 18 about better advanced teaching, and the second refers to the new loglc of sclence; that is, the inductive method, as an ad dition to the book of Aristotle, called the Organum, which treats of specu- lative or deductive or old formal logic On the title page of “De Augmentis,” published in 1645, and as the frontisplece to the play of “King Henry VII" in the Latin edition, published in Holland in 1642, the same wood cut appears, In both we see that ridiculous coat on one of the figures of the dummy Shake speare, To the left Sir Francis Bacon stands himself in the garb of a philoso- pher and with grand Rosecrucian rosets upon his shoes to prove it. On the right wo see'him again, but this time dreseed in the boots of the actor and in his left hand he shakes a aspear. The (urning wheel in the center of the picture shows the emblems of many bf the plays. Wil llam Shakespeare could not even write his own name and the clerk had to do it for him. 1t generally appears as “Wilm Shxpr’ and then Shakespe puts his mark as/an “x"' or a biot Some twenty years ago the people thought Ignatius Donnelly of Minnesota crazy when he said he had found the Kkey to decipher Shakespeare and claim ing the authorship for Bacon. But was right, for Bacon slgns the pluys In cipher often and in very many ways Not only by secret numbers, as secret letters, llke “‘hic,” “hig, hoc “hog,” or take this from “King Henry IV': “I have a Gammon of Bacon fo be delivered as far as Charing Cross There are hundreds of these ciphers that show that Bacon meant that the people should know that he wrote the plays and sonnets when the time came that it would not be dangerous to his person GRORGE P. WILKINSON Editorial Snapshots New York World oted in tavor of total abstinence from Bryan fam. Houston Post way In which Nebraska acted last day, we would be glad for the dear little state to come down and take dinner with us next Sunday Loulsville Courfer-lournal: The tional father dislikes the suitors for Nebraska ha Recalling the beautiful Mues fie his daughter's heart and hand and Kkicks them down the front steps. The real life daddy wonders which of them | adoquately prepared to relieve him of the of Mabel Plain Dealer: A Pittsburgh player held two straight within thirty minutes, and died v & few minutes later, This expense Cleveland flushea poker ountry lan't what It once was' In former times he | would have passed out much sooner | 8t Touts Republic: 1t Colonel Mooss velt contemplates the number of people In Nobraska who wrote Justice Hughe | name on their ballots In the presidentis | primary ¢ Jon mAY e vonsid erably more slncers in s & Aln " that he is nat & candidat Weago Herald t the tr ay | Mex nEer CRrransa w PN . . erament N A A N that has bot \ ] nia 6f & oo . acan akeapen . playe dlanapol) army | hoalth wee o ' | expeutations of the tariens and | hymionista They have always led s te | heltave that if o allowed | | wanage ' Ninda | ot sk oft e map and Baie 1 | suhar Ninds under sueh pocty Al ey would be o | Andk warsly ey are allewed e | things s e wrey slide for sece The cosk wants to borrow ething from the library. Shall I let have e sma r was indust t? troning her @ es when her Certainly, 1f she gets interested in a|entered. P story she may stay until ghe finishes | t's wrong to work on Sunda Give her one of those long English novels in four volumes. you.” 8o comes VK City Journal Phmuisrtandiin 4 e see me, he knows perfectly well thi Vill you dance this dance with me? |ls cold."—Judge. Mothe b o ce th - ther has forbidden me to dance wi Siniot. T 4. eianigs A NOWR But she is out of the room. \i- t ‘mgul ean't find my way mulan e any T, Vnen, ¢ | “Rettor settle right nere. ms Loulsville Courfer-Journal med_vl;n”"v.rmvv]«v . "You coul Where's your little brother?" $EI8 P SO Pus He hurt himself,"” e “Senator, I wish yo How?' We were seeing who could lean out of the window the fartheat, and he Boston Transcript & light was one much neded, especially LINES TO A SMIL robe when bt sn't work. And if the young man for oftice won,''— him."” — That's all right. T don't ‘The ordinance for all vehicles to carry | him to get any office. Bul he marry my daughter, and If he anything shady in the past I'd lhv roads m I deem ench style a great succe No matter what its shape may I h that women folk wre fre —— To wear the styles the wish to wea Willis—The new cook is a fewel, deny There's just one thing fron Mrs, WilliseYen, but I'm afraid that I flee must Ascharge her, Bustles are more than I can bear Willls—What's the matter? - Mrs, Willle-T'm wispicious of her, t|TIght garments canse me no di went ‘to the library this afternoon and [ Nor slits which whow the rounded apent three hours in the reference room | I, |nwenecked gowns 1 acaulonco, und couldn't find any of hers.—udge g LR B AL i Such things make women xee He~1 supposs you women will now faly have to have all sorts of military touches | But one thing fills me with enr ubout your new spring costumes Busties ure more than I can hear Bhe~Well, why not? Don't we wives have to fight to get them?—Baltimore |The styles which seme would fulr American. proms, - 1 view with approbutive glee I understand your hushand has [ | Iike the lncy gowns, and-ye equipped hin factory with a pulmotor, | 1 like the shortest ones I mee Mrs, Nurich." Nor do | eare to what degree ‘Woll, T supnose he had to; they han- | A skirt may swirl or cling or dle 0 much heavy freight, don't you | “But hear. oh hear my firm decree know."~Buffalo Express Bustles are more than 1 can bear “Parents often disagres about raising ENVOY children.’ My love, I'd go upon a spree Yen. A mother likes a boy who hould ever, ever dare wouldn't ‘get u spock of dust on hix bustle-dovotee lothes. And a father 1ikes one who | Bustles are more than I can bear! BAKING POWDER They are not enough lit 1 1 But a good many of the apeeders are Haltimore Amer have facts brought out Courfer-Journal DEAR MR KADIBBLE, oty ' Alcrionie? " smuw A GIRL CHASE APER | | wiile o new word comen fnito e A MAN 1/.L}"‘\|~':,r'rf sl Then what i» IR A POETIC KICK. m-m IFWS m% K. L. ll'v.!wnm in Judge Your way! No carping critio, T, of dress Absolutely Pure No Alum—No Phosphate TheFineFlavor that YouWorit Forget Eat a piece of broiled Supreme Ham, and you'll never forget its delicious flavor. There’s mildness, and goodness that can’t be described. You'll just have to taste this toothsome slice to know how good ham can really be. It'sof the same quality as all SUPREME Food Products There's Supreme Boiled Ham, and Su- preme Bacon cured and smoked with every care, Supreme Lard, Supreme Butter and Supreme Eggs, and Supreme Poultry. Supreme Canned Meats, Su- preme Cheese, Supreme Peanut Butter all good as good can be. A Supreme dealer knows that his customers will be pleased with any Supreme Food Product. “It’s always safe to say Supreme’’ Morris ’&élompm\y 1309 Leavenworth, Omaha, Neb B, 1008 Owming, Omaks, Neb affer, 5. 8. 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