1822.) _ 
such perfect fidelity, and with such accu- 
racy and obliging attention to the wishes 
of the subscribers, that the loss of her as 
a librarian is still a source of great regret. 
After relinquishing the situation of libra- 
rian, she for some time kept a circulating 
library of her own ; but, in the end of the 
year 1816, finding her health declining, she 
gave it up, and withdrew on avery narrow 
income to a private situation. But in her 
retirement she was not forgotten by her 
numerous friends, who justly appreciated 
her excellence. Her understanding and 
knowledge were perhaps her least recom: 
mendations. Few persons ever possessed 
so generous and humane a disposition, 
more delicacy of feeling, or elevation of 
mind ; through a lingering illness, she 
continued to experience to the last mo- 
ment of her life, the constant, kind atten- 
lion of her friends, a proof how highly true 
virtue, unaided by the slightest adventi- 
tious circumstance, may command friend- 
ship and reverence! 
CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORELAND. 
The operative weavers of Carlisle are in 
great distress from want of employment; 
two bodies lately left the city to emigrate 
to America. 
At a recent meeting of the Abbey Holm 
Agricultural Society, the following reso- 
lutions were unanimously agreed to :— 
“That it is highly expedient that a peti- 
tion should. be presented to Parliament, 
setting forth the depressed state of agri- 
culture, and the indispensable necessity of 
further mitigation of, or exemption from, 
those taxes which press most heavily on 
the landed interest. 
“As dividends of the funded property 
are acknowledged liable to the maintenance 
of the poor, and only exempted therefrom 
from the locality of their issue,—that the 
Said dividends ought to contribute their 
fair and due proportion in aid of the said 
maintenance.” 
Married.) Mr. J. Morland, to Miss C. 
Mc. Dowell; Mr. R. White, to Miss A. 
Skales; Mr. J. Harrington, to Miss Cowen; 
Mr. G. Thompson, to Miss M. Lowther; 
Mr, J. Burnes, to Miss J. Steel; Mr. J. 
Baty, to Miss 8. Atkin: all of Carlisle. 
—Mr. J. Winskell, to Miss E. Gregg ; Mr. 
F. Winder, to Miss 8. Pearson; Mr. N. 
Mc. Neel, to Miss S. Hodgson; Mr. T. 
Winter, to Miss A. Goodburn: all of . 
Penrith—Mr, €. Elliott, of Clifton, to 
Miss J. Irving, of Penrith.—Mr. R. 
‘Bellman, to Miss A. Hadwen; Mr. R. 
Rennison, to Miss S. Garnett: all of 
Kendal. 
Died,| At Carlisle, Mrs. M. Goulding. 
—44, Mr. James Wilson. — 90, Mr. W. 
Johnstone.—51, Mr. Joseph Wilson.—In 
Lowther-street, 34, Mrs. J. Ramney.—In 
Scotch-street, 90, Mr. W. Jolinstone. 
At Penrith, 84, Mrs. J. Bainbridge, — 
Montury Maa. No, 372. 
Cumberland and Westmoreland—Yorkshire. 
185 
35, Mr. J. Morrison; 56, Mr. W. 
Patrickson.—At Cockermouth, 83, Mrs. 
Ashbridge. — At Kendall, 38, Mr. J. 
Simpson. — 35, Mrs, L. Hoggarth, of 
Kirkland. 
At Holme-house, Wetheral, 49, Mr. J. 
Wannop, deservedly resretted.—At Gil- 
crux, 72, Mr. P. Paterson, much and 
justly respected.—At Forest-hill, near 
Brampton, 58, Mr. R. Hutchinson, 
YORKSHIRE, 
At the late Yorkshire assizes there 
were thirty-four prisoners for trial: fifteen 
were capitally convicted, but reprieved. 
An inquest was lately held at York on 
the body of John Furnel, a private in the 
second, or Queen’s regiment, who had re- 
ceived three hundred lashes for stealing 
a silver spoon from the officer’s mess. One 
of the jury represented that’ “the bones 
of the back were as bare of flesh as if they 
had been scraped with a knife.” ‘The 
commander-in-chief has ordered inquity 
into this affair. 
A public meeting of the reformers of 
Leeds was lately held there, Mr. Samuel 
Meede in the chair, when an address of 
congratulation to Mr. Woolef, on his 
liberation from Warwick gaol, was una- 
nimously agreed to. ? 
Married.] Mr. E. Brownbill, to Miss 
M. Poynton; Mr. Taylor, to Miss J. 
Hargreave; Mr. James Driver, to Miss 
E. Dodsworth; Mr. J. Garbutt, to Miss 
Bickerdike; Mr. J. Brownridge, jun. to 
Miss M. Rothery: all of Leeds.—Mr. J. 
Thackrah, of Leeds, to Miss A. Whitaker, 
of Halifax.—Mr. W. Lockwood, of Leeds, 
to Miss .E. M. Mangles, of Hawkwell.— 
Mr. F. Scott, to Miss S. H. Wood, both 
of Halifax.—Mr. B. Walker, to Miss M. 
Nowell; Mr. J, Walton, to Miss C. F. M. 
Ridley: all of Wakefield.—Mr. R. Usher- 
wood, to Miss M. Marwood, both of 
Whitby.—Mr. J. Weddall, of Kuaresbo- 
rough, to Miss A. Baines, of Plumpton. 
—Samuel Routh, of Draycott, to Miss R. 
Clark, of Doncaster, both of the Society 
of Friends.—John Brooks, esq. of North- 
gate-house, to Miss J. Laycock, of 
Appleton.— Henry Dowker, esq. of Lais- 
thorpe Lodge, to Miss J. Ware, of Stock- 
ton-house.—Mr. T. Brayshaw, of Chappel 
Allerton, to Miss S. Rowland, of Pot- 
ternewton. 
Died.) At York, in Trafalgar-street, 
Mrs. Kittlewell.—49, Mrs. Lea, deser- 
vedly regretted. —34,-Mrs. M. Stead, 
‘much respected. 
At Hull, 80, Mr. G. Mells.—59, the 
Rev. James Griswood, of the Unitarian 
Baptist Chapel.—50, Chas. Herley, esq. 
of Layender-hill, near London. 
At Leeds, Mrs. A. Meggeson.—74, Mr. 
T. Watson, suddenly.—Mrs, J. Sunderland. 
—In Park-square, 53, Mrs. M. Tatham, 
deservedly regretted.—In Park-row, 65, 
Bb Mrs, 
