No. 1. TToV TO TllAVKIi CHKAl'I.Y IN EuilOIMC. 2fli h i f 0 i & w r IVi' . Ami wo lire prone to ejaculate, how did any one over happen to think or nil that! Hut presently wo remember thnt in nil this vast array, there are but six simple mnehines dill'ercnl from each other which the skill and ingenuity of man combine to produce these great results, enabling u man to accomplish twenty times as much work as he could do without them. And it is only by a gradual growth that they have reached the present. slate of perfection The locomotive thai we sec lumbering along between Manchester and Liverpool, fifty years ago, at the rate of twelve miles tin hour, was a different thing from the one that a year ago leaped over the iron rail from New York to Chicago at the rate of a mile and a quarter per minute. An hundred and fifty joars ago a woman must stand at the wheel or loom, spinning or weaving a single thread; now with greater ease she handles from twenty to thirty times as many. When McOormick tried his experiment of reaping by horse l power, be had a bungling mncbinorequir. ing six horses to draw it, and a man to remove the grain; now two hor.cs draw an elegant machine, from which the grain falls securely bound. And equally great are the changes in nearly all industrial pursuits. The gradual development of these labor saving machines, with its of feet, upon the growth of a nation, is an in teresting study. It has been said to mark the progress of civilization; but not so much in the true sense of the term, does it show the degree of a nation's eivilizu. tion, as her strength, and power. Why could England so long boast of her su premneyV Because her fncilitle.- in man ufacture enabled her to dictate prices (o the whole world. While her rulers were demanding unreasonable taxes from the Colonies, four humble mechanics were perfecting their inventions of the loom which should give to England more than she would lose by the Delaration of Indo pendence. But just how far these great inventions are conducive to the prosperity of a re publican nation, tending as thoy (In, to the formation of monopolies; and when in their devolnpment they cease in be ser vnnts and become masters, are quest ir its which our statesmen will bo called upon to answer, at no distant day. The steam railway enterprise, that, fifly years ago was smiled at, as a "splendid theory," In-day with its network of iron rails grasps the throat of democracy, with a threatening hand. II. W. II. HOW TO TRAVEL CHEAPLY TN EUliOPE. Coil of a Tien IVnri' Cottrat fii Utr- man fntrrrr--"frf-r Cltib" Prtnriplt Pmrtlrnllif Many young men of slender means, but ambitious and eager to widen their intel lectual horizon, and enlarge their experi ence by foreign travel, and hundreds of graduates front our Colleges and Univer sities who would welcome with joy the opportunity of rounding up and giving symmetry to their preparatory culture, in the schools of Europe, arc deterred from thinking seriously of it by the supposed impracticability of the undertaking. To many, who are abundantly able, the idea never occurs that the execution of ttich a scheme, really lies within lhe com pass of Ihtir means. The tour of Rurope is no longer a serious or imposing under taking. A foreign education, including all traveling expenses, may bo obtained at much less expense than a home education. Not that the former should lake the place of the latter it should only supplement uk' perfect it. Those parents who send their children to Germany or France, "to grow up with tins languages," are guilty of a serious error. Besides becoming in a great measure de-naturalized, they will forfeit a much greater prize than l hey win a thorough command of their omi lan guage. And among our "speech, making" people that loss is deeply significant. y H" wsbesbmuaiM JMMMMMMP' inMirf-"" '"i