At West. Grinsted, Mrs. Ward, wife of 
James W: esq. 25. 3 
At Herstmonceux, Mr. Edward Alfree, 
schoolmaster. 
At Rottin.dean, Mrs. Beard, wife of Mr. 
Thomas B. 
At Portslade. Mrs. Newman. 52. 
At Lewes, Mrs Chapman, 67. 
HAMPSHIRE. 
Married.] At Romsey, Mr, Grist, to Miss 
Tease. 
At Portsmouth, Mr. L.. Smith, to Mrs. 
BMoore.—Mr. John Smither, of the Custom 
Bouse, to Miss Oughton, of Wickham. 
Died] At Andover, Mr. Thomass Lang- 
stalf, druggist, 69. 
At Bramdean, Mrs. Gomm, wife of the 
Rev. William G. ‘ector of that place. 
At Southampton, Mrs. Raicliffe, wire of 
the Rev. Mr. R. of Salisbury. —Miss Dow 
ling, eldest daughter o. Capt. D of the South 
Hants mil tia. 
At Portsmouth, Mrs. Brown.—Mrs. At- 
field, 70.—-Mrs. Ellis, 70. 
WILTSHIRE. 
Several barrows in the neighbo: rhoed_ of 
Stonehenge were lately opened, und r the ai- 
rection of Sir Riehard Hoare, bart. whe found 
asumber o! cur ous remains of Ce'tic orna 
ents, such as beads, huck’es, and brooches 
m amber, wood and yold; one of which, for 
its elegance and appropriate form, is at once a 
proof of the nobility of the person or whom 
the barrow was raised, end the elegance of the 
arts at the period of the interment about 
three thousand years irom the present period 
The shape of this curious article is conical, 
and the exact form of the barrow itseif, which 
It was most probably intended to figure. C p- 
ceive a pece of wood, imbricated in layers, 
one over the other, to the summit of the cune, 
and covered wich thin plates of pure gould, 
and adorned with circles round the middle, 
and near the bottom, with 4 triangular fes- 
toon about the lower edge, in which are two 
holes ‘ora thread or wire to suspend it. 
Marriéd.) “At Dinton, Mr William Dou- 
ty, to Miss Mary Croome. 
At Salisbury, Mr. W. F. Perry, of Ford, 
to MissS Cusse. 
At Wilton, Mr. Hooper, of Marlborough, 
attorney, to Miss Pumphrey. : 
Died.} At Crodwell, Mary Ann, third 
daughter of the Rev. Joon Wiggett, 13. 
At Devizes, Mr. Philip Bull, of the White 
Lion.—Mr. Jefferies. —Mr. Whitford, a mem- 
ber of the corporation. 
At Lacock, Mrs. Brindley, wife of the 
Rev. Mr. B. 
At Landford, Mr. James Andrews, 28. 
At Salisbury, Mr. Richards, attorney, late 
of Portsmouth. 
BERKSHIRE. 
Married.] At Hurley, Henry Warren, 
esq. to Susanna, eldest daughter of the late 
Robert Mangles, esy. 
190, Hampshire—Wiltshire—Berkshire—Somersetshire. [Sept. 1,, 
At Fainborough, T J. Harrison, esq of 
MWearde House, Cornwall, eaptein inthe roy 
al artillery, to Miss Sareh Wlizuieth Main- 
waring, youngest daughter of thelateC.H M, 
esy 
The Rev. Dr. Charles Batson Coxe, rector 
of East Shetford, to Miss Butler, niece to 
Francis Loveiock, esq. of Aving'our. 
At Caokham, John Kufsell, esq. student 
of Christ church, Oxford, to Mary Augus- 
ta, eldest daughter uf the Rev. Evsebius 
Llovd. 
Died] AtLambourn, Mr John Sheppard. 
At Bensom, Mrs. Culhom 
At Froxfield, Mr. No whery. 
At Reading, Mrs Wijlats.—Mrs. F. Man- 
ley.— “ir john Bi ling, 20.—S phia, wife of 
J..Gs Micklethwaite, esg. of Warbrook House, 
Hants, and dvrchier o Edward Stracey, esq. 
of Rack Meath Holi, Nortoik —Mis. Clee 
men’s, 63. : 
At Newbury, Miss Tuc kwell: 
At’ Wokingham, Miss Broome, daughter 
of the Rev. Thomas B .o. East Rourne, 
Sussex. 
-A; Southcote, “ount Hector, late governor 
of Brest, and licucenunt geweralorthe French 
mattue, 86. 
SOMERSETSHIRE. 
At the late Anniversiry of the Wool Marty 
estib ised by the Bath an& West of England 
A;ricultural Society, held at their Exhibi- 
ticn yard im that city, a large quantity of 
Anglo Merino wool was depositeu for sile—a 
moye abiindant supply tian lase year A quan- 
tity exceeding the «xpectations of the Society, 
and of the growers, was disposed of, end at 
pices, for the most part, adequate to the de- 
mands of the owners. The extreme fineness 
of some lots was a great temptation to ma- 
nufacturers, who were the chief purchasers 5 
and the mode recommendeiand put in prac- 
tice by Mr Joyce, of sorting and scom ering the 
improved wool of the Spanish crosses (with 
the process of which many woolstaplers are 
not well acquainzed}, greatly tended to in-~ 
crease the business of the day. ‘This institu- 
tion, as yet in its infancy, bids fair to justify” 
the patriotic intention of the Society in its 
establishment, by promoting the “growth of, 
and giving pubiicity to, the Anglo;Merino 
wool, the excelience of which they have been 
the first to appreciate, by the frequent premi- 
ums they lave given to the manufacturers, 
as well as the growers of improved British 
wool. 
Morried.} At Bath, Vice Admiral Sir 
Thomas Graves, K.B. to Miss Blacknall, of, 
Parham, Suffolk.—-Mr. D. Hopkins, te Miss 
M. Elford, only daughter of J. E. esq. of Ply- 
mouth.--Charles Semple, esq. to Miss Rey 
nolds, daughter of Edmund R. esq. 
At Bristol, the Rev. Godfrey Fausset, Fel- 
low of Magdalen College, Oxford, to Misse 
Bridges, eldest daughter ef Edward B. pi 
-! « - °. 
wt 
= ‘ 
