MALLERY.] INSIGNIA ON ROCKS. 427 
near their several roots was also printed from one of the Kejimkoojik 
rocks. It became intelligible to the present writer after examination of a 
silver disk in the possession of Mrs. W. Wallace Brown, of Calais, Maine, 
which, not long before, had been owned by the head chief of the Passa- 
maquoddy tribe, whose title had been modernized into “ governor.” 
Fic. 551.—Insignia traced on rocks, Nova Scotia. 
The disk, which is copied in the upper left-hand corner, was probably 
not of Indian workmanship, but appeared to have been ordered from a 
silversmith to be made from a Passamaquoddy design. . It was known 
to represent the three superior officers of the tribe mentioned and had 
been worn by a former governor as a prized sign of hisrank. The mid- 
