XXXUl 



Dr. Barham subsequently called attention to several of the 

 following objects exhibited :— 



Flint Implements, and Implement Forgeries, collected by Mr, 

 Whitley at Le Grand Pressigny and elsewhere in France. 



Examples of " Flint Jack's " Forgeries ; from Mr. W. J. Hen- 

 wood, F.R.S. 



Fragments of Cinerary Urns found in Barrows on St. Breoke 

 Downs ; from Sir Paul W. Molesworth, Bart. 



Cast of an ancient Inscribed Stone, formerly at the Castle at 

 Liskeard. 



A Volume of Travels, date 1623; from Colonel Browne, Tre- 

 haverne. 



Specimen of Tin Ore ; from Mr. T. Cornish. 



Stone from Magara and from the Giant's Causeway; from 

 Mr. Angove. 



A work on British Mosp<is ; by and from Miss Tripp, of Altar- 

 nun. 



The Stannary Laws of Cornwall, published in the 2nd year of 

 Queen Anne ; from Mr. W. G. Dix. 



Copy of Inscription on a Stone at Camborne ; from Mr. N, 

 Hare, Liskeard. 



Rubbing, by Dr. Alford, Dean of Canterbury, of the Sill Stone 

 under an Early-English Doorway at Tresco Abbey Church, Scilly; 

 from Rev. Dr. Bannister. 



Drawmgs, by Mr. H. M. Whitley, of Inscribed Stone, at Caer- 

 wynen Cromlech, Cornwall ; with Inscription on a Cromlech, at 

 Macroom, Cork ; Plan of St. Uliane's Chapel, Tintagel Castle ; a 

 Cross at Tintagel ; a Cross at Treslothan, Camborne ; and Dia- 

 gram of the Transit of Mercury on the 5tli of November, as 

 observed by Mr. H. M. AVhitley, by projection on a screen in a 

 darkened room. 



Dr. Barham mentioned that Mr. Whitley considered the 

 collection of Flint Flakes in the Museum of this Institution to 

 be now as complete as any west of Salisbury. Concerning the 

 Inscribed Stone a,t Liskeard, Dr. Barham remarked that the in- 

 scription was in raised letters, and therefore, on the authority of 

 Mr. Westropp, who stated that no Grecian, Tuscan, or Roman 

 inscription had been cut in relief, the opinion that this inscription 

 was Roman must be given up. There was no doubt that the inscrip- 

 tion was in Latin ; and probably it referred to some ancient story or 

 legend connected withr Liskeard. — Another inscription, seemingly 

 of Saxon character, taken from a sort of altar -stone now in the. 

 grounds of Pendarves, and similar to the Leuitt stone at Camborne, 



