Notices to Correspondents.

A. J. N. (Birmingham). Will this Correspondent let us see the papers respecting John Henderson?

J. C. K. The coin is a penny of Henry III., struck in London.

Mr. Pinkerton's letter has been forwarded to Eirionnach.

F. C. J. We cannot discover that James Murray, the second and last Earl of Annandale, was executed. The Earl joined Montrose after the battle of Kilsyth, and upon that heroic chieftain's defeat retired to England, where he died in 1658. At his death the titles of Annandale, Annand, and Murray of Lochmaben, became extinct, and those of Stormont and Scoon devolved on David, second Lord Balvaird, who married the Earl's widow. See the Earldom of Mansfield in Burke's Peerage.

Sander's History of Shenstone.—Will any reader of "N. & Q." oblige me by lending me a copy of Sander's History of Shenstone? Of course I would pay the carriage and expenses. A letter would find me directed, Cid, Post Office, Stourbridge, Worcestershire.

B. H. A. For the derivation of Czar, see our last Volume, pp. 150. 226. 422.

T. H. On the Lord Mayor being a Privy Councillor, see our Fourth Volume passim.

S. C. (Norwich). The line

"When Greeks joined Greeks then was the tug of war"