II II II , il iTeitir vs. to‘. Nintriag extract .Co Tait cation in the. Conntryl , Gen ean, /its i 0 c 1 in a proper .light the p ' of entering young men in b usiness in iti l es instead of them putting them farms. on. It hotild attract I/ I ti ' the .1 attention of all. /pato W ere the writer's advice followed, W,e would have ' la fewerc aTI aterAhr povertyJl grog shops, und!the Penitentiary: -- 1 '.- - i ill • lam w i city merchant,: h g coriuneno-i ed my l eareeri as any adveiterer from the farm; sslifY of. $BO Perr and having yea . ,.. passed tgrough half a year ofj incessant toil to'reach.the point where, dependencies and "dinner ahead " 'begins. - .I filled a clerk shilain several first-cliss - mereantile houses, anilwas associated with a .'r ry considers • bin number of saleemen, etas, and Oasis gederally. IsliiirlY thirty years have passed !mice my citylclerkship began, and the retroipect has developed! Pie following result: Ii -; 1 1 I 1 All th e . mercantile houses; by which I 1- .; . was lemployea have since failed. One an -eminently, creditable '-. c areer of fifteen year's was. carried intti hopel cy by outside epeculationk an another, af terl thirtylfiveiears of nub° :ded success and Credit, was a few! month einee in in extricable' difficultici-the resu lt of a single dash of the ppn—and has ,fever closed its 1.3 .mereantile existence. Of all the clerks with whom I have bum assoCia s ted, net one gals achiefedi inanent succe ' equal to the value Of a stocked oneLlitindred. acre fart, while m the' Most brilliant of their itt, numbsi; ;Ilie nitentiary; the the trutikarcils grave, have claimed their vie finis! Sonic embarked in business with lof ty seticipatiims of suceess, b u t e soon passed away in disaster, and I the ca . c heer of not a fewwould fill thrillingly illustrated chapters, in • die unwritten hiltory of merchant's 'alerke. i I l h 11 1 S4n2d 1 sanguine you nry ask. where the .as aft min originate?, I t l i tanslier, they • are nevi one hundred of those who em= bar in ih siness, aid lin seveYal hundred of thoseall seek c lerkships witlantieipations of fortune in ,prospect. , Pirso4llY, by a rare combination of fa vorahle ;circumstances—those iiwonderlow ere,l that blopn but l ace in a lifetitrie-•• lam meeting what called succes4.—* The 'way , t o it was pd by years of inces sant labor l 'of -sixteen o' eighteen boars per, day; and I l iinch days and nights toil as. no - farmer'sboy !that I have met with lir ever . dreamed'4l in rural labors; d which if t applied to the cultivation of a H undred acre farm, w4uldl have'deeeloped ,hidden trees uresluot ' reamed pf by the r uttant plow tires! - wan i , 1 . 1 • ) '' * ' Bat os il years piss, arid develope, along With the,. varieties o life, the . gray hairs which are stealing ii - pei - me, liny thought! often reVert!to the home seances of my childhood in the couny,! and I feel tempt ed to shake off thisart ificial life, and seek _for My' declining ye rs, the ; • repose and quiet wh eh II imago might be found in rural life' among an in telligent and !von beartjo al ed.l ; pulatien devoted to agriculture, sad 'rectie my - Unity; those.health-giving influencels both mental and physical, which ,'cheerful country life inst_eufply to genial al-mindelt I - - i , j, - f 13110" I r EfIIAT A PiI,OPIT LE CROP. 1 41 1 17 4 I , : ). I ) ;tiekwheat has_ been con 'Aired by a 4 many respecEible farm as an uncer tain icroiland poor.ki d of ' sin to raise, . .1%. t and onSequrtly the havd not town . it. UV. less heyllhave a piece f land t t at they could not . et herwise subdue. Now think from . i my . Own l',experience i raisin this kind of 4 , o 1, that it's the mostpro fitable crop win lican:beraised.- t will ow upon any kind of landland do :ter thawany other grain. 1 'eareraise 60 bushe .of buckwheat on an acre of land .that wit not produce -) mot than 20 bushele of oath, or even 10 - , of arley. ,;Buckwhat.generally, brings _, froui 3to 4 shillingii per babel, making E i ebout $ net profit' aboveriiiits or barley Per cr 1_ As to, its . propertieslfoi feeding, it is still more profitable. Alllkind 'of cat tle o much i better upon the Fame number ofi usltla of buckwheat, grOittid into meal, thenany other kind of feeding grain. Coda %viupon will give much more nitlk than they will if fed upon oats ter corn.. pancakes also makes u a g o od fed for flour, and made . ofbuckwheat flour add much to our:living, especially when potatoes are sperce. '. - 1 con- Side itr a very healthl kind afi bread: To f • secure al l gtx,xl crop of i Lbdowheat the ground - ehoAld be Wog ed the pre vious , fall, if swa•d; if old land, it ,should be ploughed aboit the time of sowint, — ind Sown on im mediately. 1 If hind has been d worked i for a aerie's 1 1 1 . .f. years, *pant two bushels of pl aster and ash- ea. ihoidd be put upon an . acre;--should be sown bahedn the 20th _ and oth ' of June, andlnot before or after. Cold or drouth, 1 i• -by .tbo late or too earlysowid,g,l injures the I blowingmaterially. li t should* cut as it .sis going nut of the RA set' q blows. It blows at thtee seperata time s , lor there are r ab out ihree'seperate buds uPlon eaoh stalk. It Shottld ba set up immediately after out- ' 'ting and kept in field : till petTelitly dry and tbei threshed and chiatied up Sod put into' 1i I f • a good.dry granery. I The i piabtioo of let tin ni g ittiosin among °bat tii - al bad ono, as It ejures,the flavorimaterisillY—especially ~ if let bb until it sprouts. -A. Peck of seed per acre is enough, it good ground; more if poor ground. Try, 'one'crop Snd remove ye r piejudices. 1 it 1 . ILIT FARM ina FlUotr 1.1•VIt TOR.— Th rola something: 'moral I iving for be ! .ids mbney. That is very good but not all. W th the rest,. let ii raise a good crop of ~ ._. , lide s ' ',, While you- lite far era, remember re -1 that you are mop; with diities and re -1 spensibilities. Live,' down i el old , brutal itl h noitoul that a farmer:, most be uncouth, un edneatild'and unthinking.li. _ '. Me r 0 toward a better Wel Make your - fai'm apiece that ye!ir sons Iland daughters eauotaielP loving. :1 Cultivitelthe trees— , they are God's messengers. !! Ji. .1 , i s , _ 1. - Ntnt3 FOR THE BENnetls-t-The daily paperaimention a ._nw invention ,for ex traeting teeth by telegrop—ino-, not ex.! ii treeing; tut_a • veryl ingenuous process for; benutabing the - gum by tE4 application of " But, the nextl l ,step - will most probably bo to pulp an old aching tooth right ili-traight out by telegraph, and the be hailed., as a triumph of art of ; a tti' os,k desirable descriptiki; IVVe go To? tlm litlegraphic Meth-extraoiion detail*. II ~ • L OOIIITITNG -LION, OF ITESIIVIITIL 1; - 7 , --- 1 I 1. lAraples, May „ 3lst, 1858. , , In my 1 la tter I mentioned that there issued fro Ith great basin of fu4 in the Attie a si glestream of 'la*: which, after a tortuous Coarie, was descending' the de clivity of Ike mountain. - This stream has continued ta c e, varying in breadth ac cording tobe identr of the groubd, and seems now to d I itself to a point betwee n Portici en T e del Greco.; In the after ,. Coons of Seth y aid Sunday, two tither streams o e f u j e laraibroke out of the great ba sin, and desce nding the mountain to Karts the ne i g hbo rhood of Portiei: 1 These streams seen' follow the direction of ravines, which a nearly' , parallel to, the ridge . on Ihiel4 the Observatory lend the Hermitage staid. These buildings have been hithertosav ed from submersiOn by thit lava by th it g at elevatiorq the fluid na turallyl° followin .the direction of the lower ground at eithe side of them. ', ; , ''Lesknieit t e epectacio was peculiarly grand and im sing. The was pour ed in inereased entity along each' of the streams althsidy established; and being in a high state of ineaudenscence, presented a peculiary seendid appearance. : At about 8 o'clock a liunii+se torrent of lava broke over the rider., lnch confines the basin of craters, in - the di rection of iSomna as an immense t n liquid fire, - with such eitritordintt iza i ity that in ess than an i re hour it had d ' d escen ded through ° a considera, ble portron* t . e. mountain. Its progess was then retard '. , partly by the diminiak ed steepness o f ' e ground, and pertly by traverse ravines which must be filled.before the fluid can adiVitece. Nothing could ei ceed the snder of thi s torrent of, liquid fire, formi ngthilfourth,prineiple stream of lava; out t e most -extraordinary burst of splendor uhichilatis been prevented sines. the comm cni e tini 'of the eruption, took !place am left ; 8 o'clook,'lwheri ''lall tbe mouthsseemed be stinantaneously called ante violenlacti i , and to vomit fourth such , torrents of Java that the entire mountain seemed onti,blaXe of fire; the varied color's prodecod in different parte; owing probably in part toeflection, presented a beautiful and striki ng appearance. -- The lurid light diffused from this - enormous burning mass rendered visible the subjacent country, the towns, the Ceiii4. end ~1 the bay. On each Bight several thermal:Ps of persons of all ranks, from thelpeerl i to the peasant, urged by curiosity, re air to the merle of this ex traordinary sp ectacle. i 1 !' ' ,Part . of the extraordinary splendor of the spectaclesn Sunday night . wls due to the burning fo este; over which the lavaptiosed. The ' tams *tas congratulate thehasslves p i on the circumstance of the lave having - been directed froth so many' different. , streams; lotif, as in fdrmer eruptions, had it all beeni thrown into the; channel,' ; the'de atruction Which . must have ensued' would have been I tremendomi. : ' 1 , June I.—Tha eruption is splendid!- 1 There are! thre. streams of lava, which 'just beghilhetwCen Vesuviui and Somna; we -vent as near es possible; we elinthed'eo the top of 'ti ridge.of lava, which bad begun' to cool, but it required all the carefulness of our guides t prevent our burning our feet off. - On o ur way down we went to the toper the Obe rvatory, whence .the view of the lava era splendid; the middle was flowing aa fast as water; there was a ray ed refiectien,in the smoke which-- --= ' said, just like t e • aurora-borealis in Scot land. • The ern don began last WeiloesdaY night; the' lava begius.where it did' in '55. . There .vr th usa 'on the mountain; , nds ef- people 1 it as an extraordinary scene. At the en of cue of the streams of laT4; that on the Caiistellamare side of the Her mitage, there Was a ceremony; I suppose to stop the 14Va, IThete was a saint and some priests intattendance.—Coi, of the Louden Times. ir ' 1 ni a oommuni exltibi' 1 I- ELI 11L ... ' A Chung Crop 'dewy. I 111 ' I From the liblt County News, JUntll2tir. From all pats of the eenatry we bear • the most the ring news of, thn erops.4— The wheat is_ aid. to look ferylfice and the Corn ' s in a_Most flourishing condition. I From the:lteokok Gate City, Juno 15th. We a r il assured by several farmers, who are well posted,ithat there Lover was,a bet ter prospect for crops in lowa than the present limo. L'Wheat, Oats and grass are , doing first rate and , although- lite shows nery aprearance of coming out well. Such being the facts, the iquestron,ariik% altout thq result., of the present advance in breadstuff's. While we'are glad to see the prosperiit of the farmers,i we think the speculate s will!probably suffer gut they can, take'care of themselveS. ; 'I .From he Peoria Union, Jone.l6th. II ,Wo understand 7 that there are about ten thousanbushels of wheat lying in storent Liverpo on the Illinois river, waiting for a purehisci.. r,Some days since during the gloomy 'weather it could bare been bought for sixty cents, a bushel. ,Since the open ing of the fine 'weather, however,'_end the prospect of ,its continuance . the proba bility is that sixty five ,vents :per bushel would now be. demanded for it.l. There is a large am ount of old wheat lying idle in this region of canary,. that will find its way to market as soon as the farmers shall have found time .to bring it in.'' The prospeetlat present is that Wheat 'both old kid new, will! be very plenty at l an early day, and of course very cheap. ~ I wriAT , os ff PENNSYLVANIA. The, burn of preparatio t for the October, election, thcingk not yet -mid summer, is already- LINO lin every Congressional district in this State. ,This betokens an animated and ;ex ,eited CarnpaiT; Every hour will add to the intensity f the struggle, and every iutp takenl,by those who have charge of thiUgs at WsishingtoW seems to be. taken with a diklit(ctl view lo increase the ,bitterness which 'so widely prevails. The !feet hat the flagrant attempt upon the regUlar nom juitions of th t e Democratic party ,initiated and stimulated by the otee-hohices ,of the Federal Government, has not been , disavOwed, proves that everything 'to give .! way to Lecomptonism.--Foraey's Prese, June• ' • • . i It lie a pleasant thing to be a clergymen in Ceniecticitt. The Rey. Spring, of East 'Harter& .'.ot all. his property r ecently by the linitiiog of his dwelling, but his friends i got together and made up a purse of $l,- 300 - for him , ree t iCed his wardrobe and that of hie family, sent him new furniture, and er a wronging It/ b u ild a new bottsfX r . , r OFFICI 'UNITED Swy Meit= Presidexit4ailio Vico Prbiet4o) Secrets iof Si Elecrotar of Triitt, Seero3.7 of I riot Sect of Na ir—lel Secretark of Virzi -40 Postail'l4er Geii t era r-- ` I- _ :on' VI .Brawl, Attoriey Geneltl-Jel s einiah - S. Black, ConamtrlPensio' sL•Ge lie C. Whiting, Comner s iPatentii-, T. Ilolt. 1 II U. 131' enators4Sim ' i Camer on , Win. I, Bigler.ll : 1 . 1 1 1 1 1_ , E . •.- , STATE ' ,OF gElti3. . i ; I .___. - Governor-Wmi P. P cker, 11 Secretary of Co .-W Mani M Hieste, Dep. See. - Coni.: 1 11 L Dieffentaeb, 't Attorhey Geneml4o nl, C. Knox, I ' SupliCoMprn :Sehoo s- 1. C. Hickok Auditor G-enerall-jac b ''rY, - I I SurveStor Gener'FilliJo n Rowe, ii State Treasurrtillenr S. Magraw, [ Canal' 1 CommissfOne .14rnold .Plan George Scott , Nini Oil trickland, _ Suprente Judgoi4Wi H Lowrie, G Woodwifrd4 W A (mho; lamesiThomr William Strong. I t 1 1 .1 1 i • 1 'T-r -- 1, DISTRITI;OFI tt_ President ;Judg Dan Member of Cedg ess-i Setrater4Tobnlll4 Hai Repretertives-re P. Sharvi ' 1 I 1 '' 1 _ J .. . • 1 pouNTT OF Associate Judge -4o Cairns. 11 : ] !'. v Prothnnetary-51 ttlie't Sheriff-Williaml W. Ir Deputy Sheriff-iSain'l Distribt A ttorney-Mos Reg'il& Ilecorder4San Clerk •. of ICourts-iAltre' - TreasUier-Wiiiiini i II Commis ioners-Olill , 1 ni Su l i therltn3 Abner Mor Cler.)cl io t Cowin' si r Ai Su itori-Jas NV Pti I 1 1 Whim I C Hunter . I: 1 Sur e r fro i r-Azariab,W Cor erlNattsan 'P ;Cr Cott ti C iier-Wi]lian Janittlef Court Ilm. Poor Buse Dit get Or s 4 mes Sterling. , Trust e s of Aculelnk, Dicksoni, os. ii. I Vilso Cunningham, M T Ken Abner? cock. 1 4i) '' • ' I 174:7- .1 1 pOR QUO 21 OF InsticeilPeace4.l 1. „ i 4urge4A l --Joieptt Sfi High I Pinstable-1-4a piunejlHJaine . sl All i. Daniel irieksi i ngor, li l ighl C. wileldiJ I i 1 , I 1 iltree4; , Commie inners - David liamsey. , I I 1 *uteri:nen-0 Connie In School Directeri-Ind'. J C wits 6, W if_ if K. DleCreay, Washington aof anti. C O 1 , DISTRCT Bearer-r2d 'No day; f dtiYJune;) gd Mon ay S p , day Noielmber. . [ , . .4(l:ci•cit i ie-2(1 -: Mon .i la i blonday, ay; Ist Mori a MniatiaY Deeembe . 1 '1 • i i ilAr4+2d lo Any 4ar day, M aro b; 4th Ford a Mebday Decombe ; I i 1 _ l l ' 4-- 1 _ BEAVLII. P. O. „c1.0.,...P - A'astern , blail at 6 1 , o'," Dick Sou Weterit' Nail 71 •the 1 r 1 . mail via tt ? ' ' eiri ,, tcin -II erryi i . o t.. i o ...loos, M. . ' 'l 1 1 Isle* Lisbon r.i : BL Friday . 'i S A m.i I .. * . Zolicnl4le, on atn , 1 I y 1 I P XLVitti i XL Vit t S. MFR ATV , , _. fER.3'd * 2 j I 1 • j IPITTS URI I , i 1 1, ieued in I ISL 0; ink :0 o Peensylvenii, i I ! 'MARDI Or 21 Don. JAN* Bucita?.ai, P. Statee,, 1 :1, li er ' lion. 14 14. AM R A IL a s, lion. M 1 .1, •3 Ilampt4m, H on. !War, ER li. ' Lawam lion.lCiale. an NAy - 4oti, Gen. i .7.1 it.l Medanan, P. D FP', (with r4f I eantile Mi Steamb : t! BO withla i it ti,perititeti l d pt; an) era of oek-keepin , 'an( and lec S. DUNCAN, erers: ~ I I J.i, 1 the Cot try, (authi and Ornamental i'ei J 1 maul Muff' system I,of by the erican I merce Of Now ror bnelneds men of Ith ecunpreheneivo and now in liege, and a practiesi cipplieatio near, Oyer I four fill its sumidrity, (ti mente for teaching years' I experienee graduate in about er colleges, raving . Upwards of 4 ' minimon since fo ticula i r k i or. the Coll and t eh e tir pamph, et circular Mr. Duncan's writ 1 . Duel; itookeei editioi Price $7 'Du I s. Steamt• DOFF' CO • I 1 Ebtab gislgure postage; 9 cents. Duncan's punin , l ship; crown quirt splendid work' itnd recently been AR A t SILVZII MSDALI feet thit their brn subjects now in no An elegantly be multi:kip is presen .after graduatesiin Ihm i can's Copy hers, 24 quartoi per, with the autil the inost_thorongbij tion publishedj l i t fibersl diseount on epplisittion to 1 Pittibt Arpin end i the ;pen. I I I I tit is Alto (eetriii t , 1 Ell ORY. ~' ,PricEus 1 . ' TES . Bub a l C. I e- ii Alan, i. Ceainridgo &lien:Cobb, acob Thompsoi Touce'y, to • it. Floyd, . i .ICEns: StewaT intat Imbrio, G , . I , 1 IC ERS. 1 . 1 n Scott., Willi i quah . i, Poiret, 1 Bj Welsh, del B Wilson, 1 McCreary,j 'orb • 1 ICoo'per, Thigh I ' d R Moore,l JOhuß Eakin; :r°dP 6 3 Jobn Gibson. ' obert Potter, W. f I McGill, John )Inrrayi Moorhetd, I MI 11 ----- 9rooi A.Gormlf. i 1 , ,es ll,Dnn g fm. li eon IL I', Bober s, Aiaderson, Joreph .anittel Pim!l; to, Reisinger, asie;A l lt i r o e n dT: Eaton, M. W iy , i r • a r r B cll; let i , naber; ad Dl n t • Ff.' broary; 4th &Oember,,ast 1 usil; 4th )1,6n -1 September; , 1 I orMAILS.} 10 , P I . M. I'l cIC,I A -M. i M41114'6 1 5 , , Smit's 40min, lo: ) aV - - I ck I Hawk, •ttc., ion I r, rto - A AIOE - R, P. M Ata.3i6i COLLEGE ARKE - STS 1)1. forrioratt.d by the :Le j i • 1 5 7 11 BP•• 'reOfdeott! of th• United 1: • 1 , I 1 1 1 . • ,'s System of ter- I t teeenng) . President file assistant tench- Seven other teachers ,nell ~:1 i or; the cost penmen in irlof the (gems of Business maks hip,) Professor of Pon- . ILI ill lifloo keeping is sanchened kitut 'f rail . Cluunber of Cent 'p in i mam of the leading East a nd West, ad the Most prime efilieystSm of aceeents ' r fro ten to fifteen years et i i PrifiCiples to busi ',tired e dents have atteeted 1 ' ular 10.) AU the arrange . . Srfected by nearly, 20 ofj tliePliticipal, students elf the ; t ime required !ninth ,!ls or $OO in board. 111, ' . i i•; 1 , students have entered the 1 nde4:4 1 To obtain fult ',Par . ; pate trainiing , for business • the inattention, Bend (Or its • i f po ' sites, with samples of •g w i46jore mailed free. 'tug, Seper"ii new enlarged i l i 60, p stage '4O cents. I 'trito kkeeping. pricCsl; I , j i l 1 1 1! 1 u Ise ; , &Mental . , Peninan -115, 16, -mailed 'ust paid. [ !This. d - Dutltd DooTkeeping,' hare tridecl Flinn:x . lST PREillUld n ; D 'Ouse; attesting the 1 ' the best treatises upon these. 1 I i ; , • 11 'nd copy of Duncan's iert led to. every stndent who here. he ketitition. Aut, 44m I i:plitto in six num iges esetti onl fine Detny pit. linen directions for teaching, mate* !for r i h sc u hool instru th a e. I centstmtre3e trade; postage 17 cents, 0. purishers, W. G. Joints tgit. _I , i e Mr.. In-- tuncan 'pe7forra 111 janlB'§B. IMBRIE jt Gam, I TEtt, PENN; . 06 . 4 the 1 ! ~,~e ~~; Eli 1 . he Great Mi . 4 .E PS bury : 1 disco stare 1 p)dmiil , 1 bumOr foul S. mon pi , . , 10. ' 1 or 110 1 1 - -es, a. us. (bo , thni. Ids po- „ sion 4) It. vitt ~ ad 1 -Dr. Sinor?ur, 0 l ike Of our &ink= at cures ever y orofula downto Ho has tried it iled excePtlin ti or.) lie his no hundred ceificati twenty mil es Of E Two bottles'are re inoutli.l One tti three bo f Pimples . on th Two or three b iles. . , Two bottles aro ankefin the :no Three 1 to ,pyo be worst cases of One teiwo - bott: humor iis , tlie Eye Two bottles are : ted tnieure the ears ' and 'bloc elf! . ong the hair. are Four •to sit .bo ties are w te d . corrupt and .ran i g'n (Ars, ' I ~ I One bottle . Will e s caly , tuPbi,oi l Abs.". iji '. II 1 1 i ' lrfsn 1 Two or three little are warranted the worst case of n orm. ,I ! , • i i i Two to three ottl s are warrants e moist deSperat iis of rhepinstis Two or three tle are warranted .[ - i f the salt rhetun. I, 1 1, ' Five to eight bo ties wi ll cure the it of Scrofula.l 1 ' I' „.' 1 A heni fi t is Own l e orienci! from j Lottle, and a perfect ere is arran tae above ittautitT iAlt ken. 1 ,I ' • Reader I peddled o er a thausand this in the vicinit of oston. 1 kno feet of it in every , ease .So sa*e as extinguish are, s. 's will thin, t ure 1 aever sold IS bottl of 't but the, sold fter'trial it , ilw y' l elks fotlitsel a a two thingSa. ut t is herb th tap srprising; first t . at it grows in'4urp 11 ; p s me' Oases quite . len ifill, an.yet its never been klici ~ until I disc vered - second, thit it -It nci cure I kin ,1 , mor. II I 1 I 111 In order to gii• leo idea o the su and great por 1•, de ty f e disc. very,ll that in April,llB 4,! eddled eltnd s s x bottles!per,d, Aprill4;•l one thousand iot, les p r day t .fi t. 'Some of the hoe le . I , ggista been iri i , bns.ness t enty and hirty; that nothing in i. e nils of .Otent was ever like;it. T Cie is a u.ive it s from all qUnrt . 1 11 1 1 , 1 In my own Pro ti eV.; alms) , kept for humors4ut in e,its int . ..nctio eral ' family I me. iei l e,l great and virtues hiivo'bee .fo ncl in it ..t I a p6eted. .I 2 I 11 . 1 Several cases o ' a desc was !always icons i tile, h cured by a fe* bo ainere , peeve effectiiiii in de awl there s een t , seen t than I bavg. ; I know of sevel 1. r" T 1 1 ,tic fits. I incur: . 0, what cases of it who have c op of opsy, II t. To the: VA 'ic 'ad cho, 1 , ' h Pain i t i the 4 n particularly'i the