THE WEST SHORE. 105 THE TRADE IN MODERN ANTIQUITIES. ONE of tlie chief delights of Continental travel, as every person of experience will admit, is the un limited opportunities it nffords for buying antiquities. The statuary, the coins and the pictures that may he pur iino,1 in Ttalv are a source of never-failing intorest to ti'"A - i t English travelers and of never-failing profit to Italian dealers. ' Andalusia, again, is a huge curiosity shop. Being once upon a time in Seville we came across a ro uA Rrit.iah trmoer or tailor, or something of that kind. IHlOVt Ai""" P ' who had just purchased a "Madonna and Child "-unhappily unsigned which he had picked up for a few nnnmk in ft dincrv back street He was going to send it to the Exhibition of Old Masters, and if he ever did so nrnbablv found that it was worth only a pound or Uiirl-.v sliillincrs at the outside. It is the same, indeed, vj -' o fiirnnfrhmit Snain. The altar cloths, the broken fans, the inlaid tables and cabinets, as resplendent aB anything in tliA Annvent of the Cartufle at Granda, the wonderful chairs and the still more extraordinary scraps of ancient limn virion which all who have ever traveled in Spain have spent much money these abound from Malaga to Trim nml imtnrnllv one is inclined to speculate a little ou J-v) - the odd circumstance that the supply is more abundant fi.n,, vAr. nltliouffh the demand is fairly brisk. Tangiors hotbed of modern antiquities, and ID) " V 0"u -J - even Mr. Chamberlain bought some of them when he was r.vor tVmrn 11 vear or so aco. He ought to have known something about this class of goods, being a Birmingham man, but the child-like faith of the President of the uni f TVnrlA in nil thinus ancient is notorious. ,llv enough, has taken to tliis business o manufacturing the antique Dutch cabinots that, with lrnn'a mmnln. rlinPV and marked with the cracks of ficti tious centuries, are turned out every day from Chicago furniture stores, and for some purposes they aie quite as useful as if they had indeed bolongod to some departed burgher in the dead cities of the Zuyder-Zoe. New York 0v,.fa in tliia unrt of forfforv make a specialty of Queen Anne chairs and tables, and the imitation is so perfect as f,t ,lnnmvA nil llllt. til OHO who have studied such things minutely in Europe. The explorer of furniture stores may come upon magnificent specimens ol JMignsn uihuh, chamber pieces, or ancient looking Chippendale and Sheraton chairs, which might have belonged to Queen Elizabeth but for the fact that they did not It must be t flrat n liocovor in New York shops stamped leather chairs of the time of Louis Treize, plentifully ornamented with brass nails, whose heads are fully an inoh in diameter, nnd the citizens of that enterprising city are invited to become the happy possessors of as many of these treasures as they liko on ridiculously low terms. If. however, the explorer is inquisitive, and the f.,ru, n,1ora nrA iii ii tolerably candid mood, the visitor may le conducted into ome back yard where these geihs of high art are produced A Queen Anne's chair Im nnnnliod with worm holes JUHI( llllllin villi, ll'l liin"'"l by the simple process of tilting it bottom side up and firing a eharg of pigeon shot into the Utorn and front of the seat Old armor, too, is a good lino in this busi ness, the drawings required for the purpose being made from the collection in the Grand Opera House, in Tnris. II is said Unit Birmingham knows something about this brnnch of the trado, and that helmets, shields, casques, breast plutos and complete suits of mail are reguiany manufactured for the gratification of crodulons oil spocu- lators and retired pill manufacturers, it ft man Biuri lot of ancostors ho likes to have dummies of them in his linll rigged in their modiieval ironmongery. If lSirmmg linm did nut lmitifv him Germany would. It is astonish ing how many tons of antiquities are annually sold along the Rhine, and it is even asserted that in Castle Colburg, where Martin Luther threw his inkstand at the devil - and, unhappily, missed him - the original splash was cut up and sold ling ago; but that, as tho timber is massive, the place is carefully remkod every night lor ino pur poses of salo next day. Wo cannot say how much truth or falsoluxxl thoro may bo m this particular story, i nero might havo been somo excitement in seeing the original transaction if both tho distinguished parties w u woi present There can bo noiio m gazing on a paten oi uik. The trade in modern antiquities, howovor, is a minium reality, as real as the sale of old clothes or lomnsum.m. AT WASHINGTON. on A V TTATTl i T A lMiMl uriumt. IlllxloUS l(Hk UPlMMirB Oil llitlfl Ollt A of every ten countenances you meet Why it is I do not know. Terhaps the life hero has something to do with it Many of the women-the majority of thorn-are away from home and family. Many of them have no homes. For living in a Warding house or hotel is not living at homo, and it may 1m this lm ol homo m u shows itself in their faces. Teople here get old before their time, and notably so those people connect wuu the Government employ. Damocles, although dying with hunger, lost his appetite when, witn n im ,...,,. .... i ...r liiu 1 1 nml. hniiirins l)V table Iietore mm, n " j"" - a hair, a sharp, two-edged sword, loung won.,, ., ladi.'s, dependent on their situations for their bread, can not live peacefully nor sleep soundly when they know that the next movement of the Government capr.ee may turn them from its employ. It in thm uncertainty ol office tenure which makes young lames i vwu.ujr-m have the wrinkles of forty, which putM tho anxious lot.k into their eyes and silvers the black hair twenty year before its time. There nro more young men and women in Washington with gray hair than in any c, ,., ever visited. This is a fact always noted by observant strangers. Faces Tresli ana moon.... . t ' locks of silver, and the gray-uairwi v art tho finest looking of itu population. A bevutifclly execnte.1 picture of Dnrtholdi'a (jront stduo of "Lilrty Enlightening the W.rl hns Iwrn presents to us by the Travelers' Insurance U.npany o Iartfonl Cnm who havo leen among the buih lljeJ . .. . i.. Vn...l Tl.n ii ctnro. which is 2lxJ0 inches in size, gives an excellent idea ol the Buperb work of art which is to H.L,rn the Wbor of w YorK.