' 1
-w-jl HOFFMAN,
tOTART TV",
OONVEYANOER
U.S. Circuit Court CommlssleHcr
For the District of Oregon.
" BH..UII.B Mo..
ftMSSi" r H!t2 Entries Pre
fcH'. ".' ni Ancrilflt 4. lBttU.
jCKMiim'IP' -"-
ciiTTON & HYDE,
jM2Ma-wrX'mmm -m
LYON'S KATHAUiu,
LYON'S KX'CT GINGER,
LYON'S ELEA POWDER,
jtAOZVOLXA WAT11.
rjftckionvlllo.Sept. 20,lBG0-tf
"AMERICAN EXCHANGE,
Corner of Washington and Front Btreeta,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
L. P. W- "Q"U IMBY,
(uii: rnormtTon or tub " Wmtkiin Horn,")
H
AVING TAKEN THE AHOVE nOUSE,
.ndSntlrely REFITTED AND REFURNISH-
d,t hl friend, and former patron, and ho
tiers, travelling public. For wfotv In Ibo
Jtrnl or lira, nnd tfio coiivcnlaiico at guest,
iWOXI) I'ASS.W i:h been opened to the
SLMI'im Al'ARTMENS, which iirucommo
I'm) and cunrtslat arranged for the Mcommoda.
tiMofrumilU WARM ""J COLD
BATHS attaclu'il to thehouMi.
fkU Iioum U loeatnl lirnrrr the Htmbol
LsiiiIIiik llmnKoy otlitrln
Portland,
THE HOTEL COACH
will bo lii attendance at the several Landing
to convoy giiftnd their baggugi' found from
tlio houre FKKB OF CIIAttGi:. Tliu liou.e Jim
alaigeFire-Proof Bale lor valuable. The
l'roptlotor will undertake tint nothing thall I
left umlaut (orciKler iila liuuio attractive, and
gueU comfortable. octutr
K. DCUiK.
J. U. WILL.
DUCAN &WAL.L,
JOEWARDING AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
SrlolK. 33illcllxa.s
,'nruer of Front and F Streets,
ORESCENT CITY.
TIIEV WILL ATT END TO THE KKCI.IV
lug nnd lorwnrdlug orllgundi.iilruitt-il In
their cure, with primiiitnoii mid dlipatch. Thoy
bare titled up Uo lurgti building for storing
pood, and huvo nmd) nrriuiiroriH-nl so tlml
mrchnt doing luilnea through tlicm will
nntutTT by any overcharge, or lone ouy Jul
eUlm for good' lni.
pir Cniilgnmiit iollelted. Mrrchnndl'c
received mi Mnraue. Im-'idlv "
P. B. COFFIN,
HOUSE PAINTER,
18 NOW IN POSSESSION OF THE ENTIUE
J ttock of material nnd InoU formerly l'
louulng to fii'lullo Si Coffln. Mr. Cu-lcllo
luvlug ullhdiawn. 1'. II. Collin will continue
tbu liiinlum, and can bo found at hU ihop,
Corner of C nnd Tluid Streets,
prqmted to dn work In a Morknunllku manner
and at reasonable isles,
Jacksonville, Oct. 15, 1607. octlOlf
EL DORADO,
I , E. Cor. Cat. ii Ogn. HU. JaekNlt villa, O.
S. M. FARREN.
CHRISTMAS BALL!
AT
ROCK 3?OI3STTf
DECEMBER 26th, 1867.
THE UNDEHSIONED HEREBY ANNOUN
ce tlut he will give a publio ball at bin
nnuio, at Hock Point, on Wednesday uvenlng,
December 25tb. 1867. Great oxertlooa will bo
made to give entire tatlifactlon to bli gueita.
All are cordially Invited to attend.
L. J. WHITE. Proprietor.
Rock Point, Nov. 22d, 1867. nov23-
PAY BPMPIJKfiLE!
TIIOSE INDEBTED TO SUTTON HYDE
Mereipeolfolly Invited to come forward and
elite their bill. ' They do not make any pe
elal rererenoe to oUcara, but Ibey MUST have
money to meet tbelr own liabilities.
Mutton TML-ytXm.
Jackonvllle,Bept.7, 18d7. if
Xatice.
ALL PBRHON8 INDEBTED TO U8 MU8T
poiltlvely pay by tuelritdayor January
7n. A. Uleraeot or note Is not what we
want, we want the money due ui, and per
tout owing us mutt poiltlvely pay up.
'n . , , GLENK, DRUM & CO.
.Nor. 31d, 1867. nor23-w
X'lm
ttgm
VOL. XII.
BUSINESS NOTICES.
Peter Britt,
Photographic Artist,
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON.
Aabrotypei,
Photographs,
Cartes deVislte
DONE IN THE FINEST STVLE OF ART.
Pictures RedHced
OR ENLARGED TO LIFE SIZE.
DR. A. B. OVERBECK
Physician & Surgeon,
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON.
Office at lilt reldonco, la the Old Overbeck
HoiplUl, ou Oregon Street.
E.II. HEENMAK,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
OFPIOE-Cornor of California and Fifth
Street, Jacksonville, Ogn.
Ho will nractlco In Jackron and adjacent
cnuutlei, and attend promptly to prufoulonat
cum. icuztr
DR, A. B. OVERBECK'S
BATHEOOMS,
Zn the Orerbeck Hospital,
YARM,COLD & SHOWER BATHS,
SUNDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS.
SI'KOIAL NOTICES.
DR.
SWISS
TRY
IT!
TRY
IT!
HUPELAND'S
CKUJIIUTKI)
STOMACH -BITTERS!
Tl Ul futln.rof th. Dluodl
A I'ltaunt Tonic I
A rj- Agrtnll brink!
UiKurpiuaMt for Mlln( iurilr bat nlljr on
Hi Ktfllon. f III klilntjri, IwwtU,
itauiwli rl ItTor I
yor itl t til whalowU nJ null liquor,
Jruj nJ ,rocry tlgrti.
NOBODY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT 1
J.O. Fm.Cfl, I'ronrUlir.
TA VLOII A DEXDKf., 81 A(r.tt,
y.l toU Attnli,
413, CUr 81. Sa rnncUco.
JtS-lr ii no.
Warren Lodge No, 10, A. F. & A. M
A HOLDtbuIr regular communication
VV on ,,,u Wctliienluy Eronlugi' or priced-
fr lug the lull moon, In jackionvii.i.k. ou-
K,,x. A.ilAUTlN.W.M.
C. W. Savaok, Sec'y.
ThelJeM Kituedy for Purifying
the Illood, Strenglhenlng the Nervei, Rertorlug
Iho 1.04t Appetite. Ii
FltESU'S IIAMUURG TEA.
It l the Iwit pre'rviitlro agalimlAl moit any
Ickue. If "ed timely- Compnwd ol lierb
only, It can lw given ml'ely to liiltiuti hulldl.
recllon In EiiglMi. Krelich, Ppifn and Ger
man, with every packuge. Tll IT I
Tor mild Ht all the wbolc.alo and rttall drug
itoret nnd grncerlei.
EMIL FIIESE. Wholer.nle DruggUt,
Sole Agent, 41U ijmv nrwi,
-JuyHyl
8au KrancUco.
BOOT AND SHOE MAKERS.
NOTICE. Having disponed or our Fac
tory, wo are now prepared to give our whole
attention toou' Leather and Undlng bmlneM.
Ou band, direct Irom France, Oair h.i.
Domeillo Leather, Hoot I.fg. etc.
JoiimG. Hkix. L.Favkk, I John-Brat,
New York. Prl. Ban FruncWco.
Addrew. IIF.IN k BRAY, San Franoltco.
416 Battery Street
Plows ! Plows !
tir cases of teH each or set up.
Ha"fioCn" Cumvalon., Farm Mill- (all k Indj).
Cider Ullli Hay Cutter, (all lre) haniilng
M II. nil lUei? CORN SHELLUttS . (douM.
snd ilngle hand and horw power). Kn?;
Carl, with a Isrwsnd ItoH w$M&&$
klndi of AGIUUULTURAL IMl'LLMbNTS.
all which will be sold nt greatly reduced prices
at wboletule or retail.
J. 1). ARTHUR SON,
Corner or Da-U and California "
octl2m3 !"U rwMM-
LIME! LIME!
'i . ii isr Ann OreuO
op-ab-
?"!Ui.Vu;'i BreuUno'. T store. In my
K Mr. Ate Jtaril" " " UPB eu,t0m'
era.
STONE CUTTINGS
SteMasoWrk
done on term, to suit the time.. Order, from
Ike country will receive prompt '!V
Jacksonville, April 86, 1867.
w .
sP27
Special Notice.
been brevetted Major I or " ,M,on j ,m
Having seen bis j PJ lZoj him.
iatl.flcd,to oik my 'oabANISS, M. D.
Jscksoavllle, Nov. JOtb, 1867. tf
w-mr rPR5 AND OTHERS WHO DESIRE
a and Tbira,
JACKSONVILLE, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1807.
TUB OREGON SENTINEL.
runusiiKD
Every Saturday MornUK by
. F. DOWZ1XL,
1 I
OFFICE, CORNER ? k THIRD STREETS
TERMS OF BL'MCniFTIOttl
For Ono year. In adtanee. Four Dollar, j If
paid within the flrt ilx month, of tho year, hve
dolar, : If not paid until the expiration or tb
year, ilx dollar,.
TERMS OFAnVF.UTimOi
One wiuaro (10 line or le). Hnt ln,cr
tlon, Three Dnllnr, j each mitaqucnt lncr
Iiiii. One Dollar. A dlconnt of fifty percent
will be md to lhno who advcrtlK by the year.
" Lgl TcnJn rtltfj at enrrent rlt.
m m
The Mother's New Year Gift to
Her Son.
tut hook or the uw,
Hemember, love, who gave thee tbli,
When other day, thall come
Wbrn iho whn had tho tarlleit klu,
Sleep In her narrow home,
Remember, 'twai a mother gare,
The gift of ono ihe'd die to aare.
That mother noucbt a plfdjo of lore,
The holleit for her mo ;
And from tho gift of God abort
She chore a goodly one j
Sbo cboio for her beloved boy
The tource of life, and light, and joy j
And bade hlra keep the gift that when
The parting hour ihould come,
Thiy might bare bopo to meet again
In the eternal borne;
She paid hit faith In that would bo
Sweet Income to ber memory.
And ihould the icolTcr, In bti prldo,
Laugh that fond girt to rcorn,
And bid blm cant that pledge aildo
That he from youtb bad borne,
She bade blm pauro and aik bli breast
U be or the had loved blm belt t
A parent' blentng on her ion
Govt with bli holy thing ;
The lore tb'at would detain the on
Mint to the other cling;
Remember, 'tl no Idle toy,
A mother'' gift remember, boy.
The Slistletoe-lls History
and
Mystery.
Tlie mistk'loc, itn cmlilvin ol friend
hliiji nml social liiijiiiicss, is employed
ut Cliristiiins tiino to minouiit-o to nil
wliom it may concern tliat ntiiinonitics
nro nt nu end, nnd tlmt pence nnd good
will with nil the world are to uglier in
the new year. The custom of "kinf
ing under the mistletoe" is very nn
eient, nnd is founded on tho legend of
Haider, the I'hosliit Apollo of Scandi
navian mythology.
The tale Bays that Haider once
drenmpt n dream, a dreadful dream.
He dieamjit that he was going to die,
and was so frightened, that lie started
from his bed, mounted tho swiftest
cloud-steed, and rode full gallop to his
mother. Ills mother's name was Fri
gn, the Venice of YullmUn, very beau
liful, and brimful of tho milk of love.
When Friga heard the dream, she
was no less nlarmed than her son, nnd
instantly told her husband, tho great
god Odin, tho Jovo of Northern dei-
"ties. What was to bo tumor viiw
evidently thought that tho dreams ol
gods did not nrise from indigestion,
but wcro sent by tho Fates, us hints
and warnings of what they were going
to weave in 'the web of destiny. So,
Odin issued his royal ukase or procla
mation, commanding "everything that
springs from fire, nir, or earth, and wa
ter,"to appear without delay before
his Serene .Majesty of Vanhalla.
Every tree and river, every btono nnd
star, every beast and bird, the nir that
stirs up the gales, the clouds that
launch forth lightning, the firo that
burns, the sea that wrecks, and nil the
host of Heaven obeyed tho summons.
Tho mighty Odin sat ou his cloud,
throne, under tho shade of the mighty
ash, tho branches of which, as every
.. uw. cover the whole universe.
The River of Wisdom and the River
of Foreknowledge floweu at u iwh,
a n 1,1. shoulders sat the raven and
the dovo to whisper in his ear, when
over his godship halted in know edge.
It was nn awful moment and, no doubt,
every living thing trembled as the
king of gods commanded the assembly,
on nin of immortal vengeance, to do
um to a sinele hair of his beloved
..n raider. Loko was there, tho Spir-
u Wickedness, whoso was the era
..ire of the earth, and old Blind Hodor,
. -j -fTwh and Darkness. They
tnogouv. - --
JvliJlJlliJvil-
heard tho injunction, nnd dared not
disobey ; but Loke, who hated Raider,
cast upon him a most malignant eye,
nnd resolved to evade the injuntiou if
it could possibly bo done.
It seems that a cart and horse enn
bo driven through a divine Act of
Parliament as well as through n hu
man one, soon found a flaw in Odin's
prohibition. Tho mistletoe springs not
" from fire, nor yet from nir, nor yet
from earth, nor yet from water;" it is a
purnaitc, and grows on tho oak or ap.
plc-trec, but its roots never touch the
earth. So, tho mistletoo was not called
to tho " storthing," and know nothing
ol the injunction.
The envious Loke, having ripped
from an old oak n branch of the epi
phyte, carried it to his cave and cut it
into an arrow. He dried it hard in
the fire of Fate, aud tipped it with the
poison of his own spittle; then going
to tho blind god, asked him to make u
trial of his new weapon.
Hodcr, all.unsuspcctiug ns he wns,
felt tho new "quarrel," and Loke,
placing him so as to face his enemy,
told him to set it to his bow-string.
He drew tho bow as only gods can
draw, and shot. Twang 1 went the
string, and whiz I went the arrow,
swifter than thought; it struck the
Peace god, who instantly fell dead on
the pavement of Valhalla. Tho black
ncss of darkness now covered the whole
world. Peace was kitlcd by the god
of Wnr and Death. Peace was killed
through the instigation ot Wickedness.
Peace in Heaven was no more. Peace
would be seen on earth no more. Hai
der was dead, and Loke hud out-wilted
Odin.
Frign wns inconsolate, the gods nnd
goddesics moved about Valhalla like
N'iobe, nil tears; the trees wept gall,
the stars in their courses wept; Ileav
en and earth would have been drowned
in tears if Haider could not havo been
restored to lifo. Rut with tho gods
nothing is impossible, and the spirit of
vitality was breathed oucc moic into
his nostrils.
Tho mii-tletoo wns now given in
chargo to Friga, nnd wns never to pass
from her nower "till it touched the
earth thu empiro olW.oki'." No won
der. then, tho Druids tiathereil it m)
carefully; nnd you will readily sco
why it is suspended on our ceilings to
place it beyond the region of Loke.
thu enemy of love and good-will.
Odin now a mado n demo that n
bunch of the mistletoe should bo hung
in Valhalla and that whenever any of
the god or goddesses passed under it,
a deity of tho opposite sex should give
the kiss of peace ; and this is how tho
custom of kissing under thu mistletoe
had its origin.
This pretty fable is nn allegory. At
tho lull of the year Haider dies that
is, tho beauty of vegetation dies nnd
the sun goes downward to thu lower
regions of the world. Loke, tho spirit
of Wickedness, induced Hodcr the god
of Death, to kill tho year. All naturo
mourns tho loss; but tho gods rovivo
tho dead year, tho sun is brought back
in his strength, and heaven nnd earth
clap their hands for joy.
Tho mistletoe was tho arrow that
killed Haider, for tho mistletoe is alivo
when all other plants are dend with
their winter bleep. But tho mistletoe,
being tnken from tho hands of tho god
of Mischief, nnd placed under the care
of tho goddess of Love, is hung on high,
m romind lis not to look down, or back.
or on tho earth, if wo would live in
love nnd friendship, for Loko hag do
minion there ; but forward and upward,
where tho gods reside, and where a
hopeful future is placed beforo us in
the commencement of a now year.
Rev. Dit. Gutiiiiie is tho author of
theso beautiful bcntiincnts: "They
say I am growing old becauso my
hnir is silvered, nnd there are crows'
feot upon my forehead, and my step is
not so firm und elastic ns of yore.
But they are mistaken. That is not
me. Tho knees are weak, but tho
knees are not me. Tho brow is wrin
kled, but tho brow is not me. This is
tho houso in which I live. But I am
young ; younger than I was beforo."
A privato dispatch received at
Washinc-ton. announces that frauds
have been discovered in the canvass of
tho votes in five ol tho wards in rnii
adolphia, through which three thousand
illegal Democratic totes were polled,
NO. 48
. ,-.!.
War The
Penalty of
Crime.
National
At length the full-orbed sun of Free
dom aud Enlightenment hnsrisou upon
the New World. Tho trailing shad
ows of tho darker nges have gono
down to tho deep abyss ol oblivion.
Wo tcad it by tho cloctilo light that
courses tho desert. Wo feel it burn
ing on tho altars of 6ur hearts. Wo
trauslato it from tho shining alphabet
of thu stars. Aud now wo look back
with amazement, wondering how we
could hnvo'live so long in a condition
of so great natlonnl gloom. During
three-quarters ol a century, wo have
been resisting tho decrees ol manifest
lesttny, deaf to tho appeals of humntf
ity, blind to the example of religion,
uscusiblo to tho progress of civiliza
tion, nnd forgetful thnt in the dark
places of tho land, millions of our fellow-creatures
were crying mightily to
God, with the rude eloquence of tho
barbarian which in the nuditorium
of Heaven, and having been uttered
in thu eaue ol Justice, is mighty ns
the declamation of St. Paul, or tenderly
moving as the pleading of St. John.
Wo were given tip to the idolatry of
Mammon. At the North, great ships
witli strained ImlN nnd bellied sails,
crowded our harbors with the richest
commerce ol tho world. In the Knt,
wo wcro continually enriched by the
driving wheels of manufactures. From
tho mighty West, tho gentle Ceres
came, with her snowy shoulders laden
with full-cured corn. From the South,
millions of swarthy creatures brought
their burthens of tho imperial fabric.
When the sun rose on our national
splendors, thousands of stately church
es cant their long tapering shadows
over tho land. Tho institution of Char
ity stood everywhere. Adventurous
ships bore away our missionaries to
distant islands of paganism; nnd when
thu wail of starving Ireland enmo
across tho ocean, our hearts warmed
with sympathy nnd our eyes overflow'
ed with tears.
All tho while wo had forgotten that
wu wero ourselves oppressors, Irom
whom humanity recoiled in horror;
that wo were pointed nt by tho ncctisn
tory finger of civilization; that relig
ion crossed herself when our inhuman
ity was named; that four millions of
God's people wero held by us in bond,
age, in comparison with which the
worst despotism of civilization were
tho fullest freedom. Under tho sano
tion of liiw-M which had become vener
able through their very antiquity, we
took the child from tho mother, the
husband from tho wife, tho father from
tho family, nnd sold them to strangers;
and when tho poor creatines complain
ed or tried to run nwny, we tied them
to tho whipping pout; branded them
with hot irons; rivited their shrinking
limbs together; took tho price ol their
blood nnd Mifloriinj nnd despair, and
drove them nwny. find forgive us I
But wo havo dono all theso wicked
things, under tho authority of n free
constitution and in tho j.rcseucu of n
haughty Hag to which the oppressed ol
other nations wero stretching their im
ploring hands.
" If there is a God nnd that theru
i, all naturo cries nlotid In all her
works ho must delight in justice." If
tho lonely, friendless sparrow fallcth
not to the ground without tho consent
of its Maker, why should millions per
ish, with souls immortal, with all tho
faculties for moral sulk-ring, wltli llv
in" hearts to create and tongues to ut
ter tho most impulsive cniotious of
prayer? Wo tnunt ncknowledgo It.
Wo must either deny that n living and
truo God controls tho affairs of thu uni
verse, or admit that tho disaster of
civil war has justly followed our na
tional crimes. If suoh oppression
could not, in tho course of a century,
invoke from Heaven somo stern rebuke,
tho spiritual state wcro n soulless des
ert, and God himself a creaturo of tho
inia'dnation. deaf as tho Htatuto of
Dagon, and insensible to justice as tho
sacred monsters that swim tho Ganges.
American UnionUt,
i
A young I.!- at school, engaged
in tho study of grammar, was asked if
kiss' was a common or proper noun.
Tho girl blushed deeply, as sho replied :
It is both proper aud common,'
Peach aad lloaey. .
Old Judgo Cote, of Texas, was char
aotorized by his attaohmoul to tho so
ductlve drink called " peaoh and boa
ey," and by his hatred of whisky ahd
whisky drinkers. White holding court
nt Austin, two men wcro brought up
on a chargo of a drunken affray. It
wns n plain caso; tho row hail iooo.uf-f
red in tho open street in open day, and
there woro fifty witnesses to thb wholo
transaction. So tho two dolinquunti
plead guilty by tho ndvico of tho
counsel, and threw themselves on tu
mercy of tho court.
"You nro guilty of. an affray V
growled tho Judgo.
" Yes your Honor," whined' Ibo of
fender thoroughly frightoucd.
"Drunk, I suppose,' grunted the
Judge.
" Yes, your Honor," murmured thi
prisoner, with some faint hopo that hav
ing been driiuk would mitlgatu the
punishment.
" Drunk ou ryo whisky, too, I'll war
rant?" roatcd tho Judgo In a voloo o!
thunder.
"Yes, your Honor, drunk on rye
whisky."
"Mr. Clerk, record a fino of 030
against this man," cried thu Judgo.
"Send him tojail for sixty days. I shall
fino the next man who is guilty under
such circumstances $100 und scud hitu
tojail for six months."
Thi was poor comfort for tho tiufor
tunnto fellow who was waiting his
turn who came forward with fear nml
trembling. As he passed along by hit
lawyer, that thoughtful gcntlumtm
whispered in his ear: "When tho
Judgo nsks you what you got druuk
on, tell him on peach and honey."
lie took the stand.
" You, too, aro up hero for an afTray,"
growled the Judge, gnashing hlstee'.h
as if he would like to blta tho prisoner
at tho bar.
" Yes, your Honor."
" Druuk, too, I suppose?"
" Yes, your Honor, sorry to lay It;
drunk, very drunk,"
Drunk on ryo whiskey, too I sup
poso?"
"Oh, no, your Honor, I never driuk
whisky, 1 got drunk ou poach aud hon
ey." Tho Judgu's fenrs relaxed in an in
stant. Leaning forward and raising
his spectacles, ho contemplated tho of
fender with interest and addrcsicd him
with something HLo tenderness.
"Ah I sir," said tho Judge, blandly,
" pench nnd honey, eh I That's a gen
tlemau's driuk nir. Thu court sympa
thises with you, sir, und does not re
gard your olleiicu ns very serious."
"Mr. Clerk," he continued in a soften
ing tune, "enter a finu of (I aguiust
this gentleman, nnd dlschargo hlui ou
payment of costs."
Iitisu A.vrKjumws. "As I was
passing a place called Lavuy Strand
on tho road from Cavan to Dublin,"
says u correspondent of tho Ctrpn
ttr1 Chronicle, "I observed tho bot
tom of un unciunt cauoo lying on tho
chore of tho hike closu to thu road. I
immediately went to examine it, and
heard that it had been raised about a
year ago from tho bottom of tho lako.
When discovered, there wasagnuwulo
aboo a foot in height ulong tho shies
which, when I saw it, was entirely
broken nwny. It wns of very rudo
manufacture, hollowed out of tho stem
of an oak trie. Thu dimensions nro
gignntio. Tho bottom is four feet
three inches across at ono end, and
about tli no feet at thu other; tho
length is forty feet. The diameter of
the trie could not potsibly havo bean
less than soveu feet and a half nt thu
root, and ut least fuo und a half at tho
height of forty feet. This would al
low only a very modcrato bulgo for
tho canoe. What could havo been tho
uso ol so largo w c-uuoe, mado with
great toil, on so stno.ll a piece of wa
ter (not containing 200 acres), I cannot
conjecture. Theru are two Manila id
thu lake, which wero found to bo arti
ficial when the proprietor was planting
them about ten years ago. Tlio earth
is supported by a frame work of enor
mous oak beams, morticed into each
other, nnd this is supported on piles
driven into tho bottom of tlio lako,
Somu brass Celtic hatchets, ring mon
ey, and four braao awords, woro found
nbovo tho I'ramo-work; and there U
another canoo of smaller dimensions
lying partly exposed and portly in tho
mud, near whero tho largo onu wa
found. Tho modorn oak of this part
of Ireland is not at all remarkablo for
its blze."
.... .I i . . i 1 1
A million of dollars, in gold, wolgha
4,470 pounds, or wlthiu a fraction
of 2J tons.