142 Notes. 



Implement." The arrowheads which are illustrated are Dorset specimens 

 in the possession of Mr.H. J. G. Hole, who also owns the knife dagger. This 

 is an unusually small blade, flat, with two large rivet holes, the sides 

 worn concave with use, the point very narrow and broken off. It weighs 

 just over Joz. and measures lg in. X lin. 



Papal Bulla found at Swindon, A well-preserved leaden bulla 

 of Pope Innocent VI., who reigned from 1352 to 1362, found recently at 

 Swindon, is in the collection of Mr. A. D. Passmore. On the obverse it 

 bears the heads of SS. Paul and Peter with the inscription SPASPE = 

 S{anctus) T?a.(ulus) S(anctus) Pe(trus). On the reverse it bears the in- 

 scription INNOCETIUS PP VI. For similar bulla of Boniface VIII. 

 found at Warminster see Wilts Arch. Mag., xvii., 44. 



Teffoilt EviaS In making trenches for a water pipe at the farm and 

 cottages west of Teffont quarry last winter (1908) the contractor says that 

 two or three distinct coffins were cut through. The boards were rotten, 

 but showed the shape plainly when the soil fell away from them : he was 

 not sure if bones were found, as the interments were near the surface, 

 with rock beneath : but he noticed some worked flints. I visited the 

 place but failed to see anything. Burials have been found near by before, 

 as noted in the last Magazine. C. V. Goddaed. 



Lord Clarendon and his Trowbridge Ancestry, a 



paper under this title is published in Wilts Arch. Mag., ix., 282—290. 

 The family of Langford was connected with Trowbridge from the earliest 

 times. In 1544 Alexander Langford senior, and Alexander Langford, 

 junior, purchase two water mills, no doubt for clothmaking purposes. 

 In his will, dated 1552, Edward Langford, clothier, speaks of his cousins, 

 William Horton, of Iford, and Harrie Long of Trowbridge, both well 

 known clothiers. In 1565 Alexander Langford is rated at £22. Now 

 Leland, in 1540, in his Itinerary, Wilts Arch. Mag., vol. i., p. 151, 

 writing about Trowbridge, says : — " One Alexandre is now a great clothier 

 in the town." My suggestion is that Leland has given the Christian 

 name and omitted the surname. We hear of no clothiers named 

 Alexander, but we do know that Alexander Langford was a wealthy 

 clothier, and that the Christian name was as common in the family as 

 Anthony in that of the family of Bogers. F. Harrison. 



Marlborough Tokens. Mr. J. W. Brooke notes two unpublished 

 seventeenth century Marlborough Tokens now in his collection : — 

 WILL : CRABB . GROCER=Grocers' arms. 

 IN MALBOROVGH 1664 = C.W.M. 



SIMON PIRE OF = Grocers' Arms. 

 MARLEBOROUGH 1667. P.S.A. 

 Found in Marlborough, July, 1908. 



Cross Base from Winterbourne Stoke Down, Many 



years ago, I think in the thirties or early forties, when a piece of down 



