L -araVRE,' - r: -, ixin There ty•ften,exitit, 911 the mule farm, niaterlalg entirely 'Biliaraie from each otter,.whichrlf, miNed together, We'd add,;tireatlyAo,ilic;ieitillty of the Jand. A neighboring farmer . bad_ seven or eight' , Aier.es 'excellent black muck of peat i 'averagingseveial feet deep, which ilajgtitThave: been underdrained _at . - a tpodepffe expense, and rendered a fer tile field; lint-which the owner suffered to He idle and nieleis : Tear ,after year. Much of -lits. 044644 rfixtri .deatilsted of (Hy ; ridges and litialli . „ out 61-Which the vegetable inatter„hodriisorly or entirely . , disappeared?-i.y.htnh:haiglit have been - Enuelc bexielited le this Muck. . The work:42(ll,dd liaiid been' done in winter atAlittle' ex - penia—but there,. for half , allfetinia, lay the great muck bed an- der - water, and - tile dry ridges t arching hi, the tniiihnor t+uttt Alf that was nee ded wiii4'ini:eing the - ,flifferent materials of the- faim. Buk-solls are Aravinently quite different in character from the workxl 'iiell ' abeve:, AV,ii.:cince saw a strit i ig Hittstratiatiof - t &is' difference. ' An o en ditch, some two feet deep and man rods hi length, had been dug to drabs a small. pond. The earth' taken i Prom W his (ell was thrown by the shoV el am -scattered bask a ~od or more on each 410 over the surface of the field, which was a fterwafeb3 town with wheat. The succeeding stmamer was nnfavor ablb to this ,crop ; and while the rest did not avvrage,a, product of more than five,lnishelk per acre, the portion which had been dressed with sub-soil, yielded, by estimate, at the rate of twenty bui4h els.— fileperimental Farm, Journal. . . GARDENINU AS 'OMAN'S WORK. — This has long seemed to me au employ inent in which woman not only gain health and strength, but in Which the , most modest and retiring might find a' congenial occupation,,and the products of which are never del:ire - elated because raised by a . woman. A. pet*. of peas has a certain market ralhe, not depend ent upon the hands which raised them. A woman who_ works. at mating pants receives fifty cents a day, not on - ae-., mutt of the amount or quality of her wolik , hut because eh°. is a )1 7 oal titn . A man engaged upon the Swam garments receives a Sini — day, net beottrise of the amonut - OriptiilitY - Or his Work, but becanne lie is a man. It is doubtless true that. in vary mitnr.eaSesa the man does his 'Work better thus "then woman ; but it is ne less true,that, hi a majority of eases, Ale dlillfrettice in price grows out (a theiouutienge in wc. Sarno of the sehooi. A natio teacher receives 31,000 t year, not because hip moral in fluence is bettor, not beeauflb the pupils learn. nave, bet beeatise he is a man. A wnnian teacher a similar school, and receives $4OO, not because or the inferi ority of her moral Influence in the school, nit beeau.se the pupils learn le , s, bui beea.a. , e she laa woman. Now, happily ; all this is avoided in .garden- Mg. A man who Would sell a beat is mit obliged ti - i put on a label, "raised by a mail, ten cents:J* l and upon an other, "rai , ed by avotnan, four cents," but the Ill'i'lrit, brings its• -et value. This is his is a areal' ativan ' -end one i atter(' ing a special gratification to women of saint. Besides, gardening Is alit “Cellp:li ion requiring very little capitai,st ni, except in the fancy do p trtnieVi :,, comparatively little train-' ii g. Near any of the cities a woman" 1' 11 call! more upon, a half acre of land, with four month's work, than she can earn by sowing twelve months, saying nothing of t lie healthfulness of garden ins', and the unhealthfulness of sew t ug.---("fo