346 OPENING OF AN ANCIENT BARROW 
OAKS. 
There are now ten oaks on the top of Castle 
hill: they may be 300 years old; and, they, pro- 
bably, were planted by the Langtons, when they 
were barons of Newton. And, when the oaks 
were planted, a search would, probably, be made 
for antiquities, and the urns might then be found. 
WHITE LADY OF CASTLE HILL. 
It is scarcely necessary to add, that Castle hill 
is said to be haunted by a White Lady, who flits 
and glides, but never walks; who is sometimes 
seen at midnight, but never talks. She was, 
probably, like Sir Walter Scott’s White Lady of 
Avenel, ‘‘when there stood the figure of a female 
clothed in white, within three steps of Halbert 
Glendinning.” 
“I guess, t’was frightful there to see 
A lady richly clad as she— 
Beautiful exceedingly.” 
Waverley Novels.—The Monastery. 
COPPER COIN. 
We were not a little puzzled by the trick of an 
artful boy, from Newton, who contrived to thrust 
