,J817.] Hertford and Bedfordshire— Northdmptonshire,8fe. .. 575 



'M At Loveliill-house, Miss Harriet Scurlap. pike road between Reading, Watlinston, 



At Taplow, 72, Abraham Kobarts, esq. and Trtswortli, to facilitate coiiimuuica- 



■M. P. for Worcester. tion between Reading, the north of Ox- 



AtWividioi, 4ii,Capt. John Kirkpatrick, fordsliire, and vale of Aylesbury, aild at 



of the East-India Company's ship, tlie the same time to give employment to the 



Henry Addington. Endeared as lie was 

 to a nnmevous class of respe ctable friends, 

 by his liberal and generous sentinieuts, it 

 will be soothing and gratifying to their 

 feelinijs that liis memory should be record- 

 ed witii the notice it merits. He was de- 

 scended from a collateral branch of the 

 Kirkpatricks of Closeburn, Dumfriesshire. 

 Left early in life an orphan, lie received, 

 ironi a noble-minded friend of his de- 

 ceased father, the tenderness of a parent, 

 united with tlie services of the warmest 

 patronage. From his nautical skill in the 

 line he was engaged in, his intellectnal 

 endowments, and his spirited conduct un- 

 der emergencies, there is little doubt that, 



labouring poor. 



MarrUd.] Mr. Wm. Dnnkiey, lo Miss 

 Harris, botli of Northampton.— Mr. J. D. 

 Flecknoe, of Dav»"ntry, to Miss Wihon, of 

 Fox-hill-honse.— Ml. Jos. Goodman, -to 

 Miss Mary Heusou, bntli of Slaptou. — Mr. 

 Geo. Spolies, of Westou Favell, to Miss 

 Ann Underwood, of Pitsford. 



Died.] At Northampton, o.'3, Mr. Benj. 

 Alliston.— 39, Mr. Liqnell: 77, Mrs. 

 Linnell. 



At Wellingborough, Mr. Harley.— Win. 

 Corrit-, esq. 



At Kettering, 66, Mrs. Mary Gibbon. 



CAMBRinGE AND HUKTS. 



The lU::hop and Dean and Chapter of 



if he had pursued his fortune in the British Ely, have subscribed iOOl. to l>e applied 



jiavy, he might have arisen U> the first ho- in relief of the indigent, by employing 



nours of the profession; but his fate or- them upon some works of public utility, 

 dained him to acquire independence in Murried.] The Rev. Johu Cricket liiake, 



.another way, and he used the advantages fellow of King's Colle?;e, to MiSs Elizabeth 



of it, on occasions where his friendship or Tate, both of Cambiidge. — Mr. Janjes 



Jiis charity was called upon, with unbound- Pool, to Miss Mary Peachey, botk «f 



ed liberality. He boif. a long and severe 

 illness with patience and foititude, and 

 supported himself under the most acute 

 suti'ering with a resignation and subuiis< 

 sion 10 the Divine Dispensations that weie 

 truly exemplary. He was constantly at- 

 tended with atfectioiiate solicitude by one 

 brother of his friends ; and, although he 

 ihad not one near family-conneciion, he 

 was never left a day without some valua- 

 ble character about him among those who 

 regarded him. On his side, no sickness or 

 eutt'ering made him ever lose sight of that- 

 accommodation he felt due to those who 

 attended him, and which had marked his 

 character through life. He constantly 



Hurwell. 



Died.] At Cambridge, Mr. M. Bishopr 



At Wisbech, Ml. J. Smith. 

 At West W ratting, §o, Mr. Wm. Cowle, 

 greatly respected. 



NORFOLK. 



At a numerous meeting of the inhabi. 

 tants of Lynn, convened by the Mayor, 

 and held at the Guiidhall, '' to take iuto 

 consideration the propriety of petitioning 

 the legislature for the greaiest possible re- 

 trenchment of the publ'c expeuditurc, au.d 

 for a reform of t!ie (;onimons House of 

 Parliament," Robert Green, esq. the 

 Mayor, was called to the ciiair, wlicn the 

 following Resolutions were agreed to.; 



preserved through his illness the sentiments That the present system of govtrmuenj* 



of liberality, feeling, generosity, and gra 

 titnde, which had particularly distinguish- 

 ed his dawn of lite, and seemed to beam 

 forth with increased fervour to the very 

 .close of his existence. 



HERTS AND BE«S. 



Married.] Thi; Rev. G. 1 hackeray, D.D. 

 to Miss Mary Ann Cottin, of Cheveialls. — 

 The Rev. T. Pngh, of Kensworth, to Miss 

 Bayly, of Redbourn 



supported by a taialiou which no oijitg 

 coiiiitiy ever did, and which, in the ojiji 

 nion of this meeting, this country can nn 

 longer sustain, has reduced ihoiisauiis froiH 

 affluence lo meudiciiy, and, if coiitiuued, 

 threatens to pauperise the middle claso. of 

 society; thus maUiug but two classes, thp 

 rich and the poor. — That this unnatnnil 

 condition of society has its principal 

 source in the corrupt slate of our repr(^ 



Died.] At Bishop's Stortford, 30, Mrs. sentaticn, which has enabled the goveifl- 



Siisanna Machiu, justly regretted 



At Watford, Mrs. Steward, wife of H. 

 S. esq. 



At Ampthill, 76, John Morris, esq. — At 

 Temple Dunsley, 41, J. Daiton, esq.— At 

 Woodwicks, 62, Mr. Wiu. Sedgwick, de- 

 servedly lamented. 



NORTHAMPTONSiriRB. 



Tlie inhabitants of Peterborough, headed 

 by Earl Fitzwilliam, Jiave opeiieda sub- 

 scription for the relief of the poor. 



nient to involve us in uunecetsary anj 

 ruinous wais, uud to pursue an une>L. 

 ampled conr.'C of natioual extravag^uce. 

 — That we do therefore iilaini for om<- 

 selves, individually and colleciivily,- that 

 every man, paying taxes, shall be i|i P^r.- 

 liament, cither by himself or byhisn-pie- 

 sentative— That representation shall lie- 



co-extensive with taxation — 'I hat Dioney 



shall not be taken oiit of olii pockets in tiie 



sbape of taxes, without our consent, or 



J,t it in ^pntemplatiou to make a turn, tlie wnsciJt et our represeiitatives— That 



inefficient 



