384. 
—28, Mit. M..Reeve.—Miss C, Horseley. 
—Mr. H. Nicholas. : 
At Carmarthen, 29, Catherine, wife of 
James Thomas, esq. of Caeglas, near 
Llandillo, deservedly esteemed. 
At Haverfordwest, 72,1. Tucker, esq. 
At Bangor, Mrs. Horton, widow of 
Abraham V. H. esq. of Dublin. 
‘At St. Clear’s, Carmarthenshire, Jane, 
widow of the Rev. W. Hamilton. 
SCOTLANDs 
Deserved honour has een paid at 
Berwick, Montrose, and other places, since 
our last, to Mr. Hume, member for Aber- 
deen, for his patriotic exertions in Par- 
liament. 
A John M‘Lachlin, formerly teacher of 
Mathematics in Glasgow, has recently be- 
queathed the residue of his fortime, sup- 
posed to be 20,0001. for the establishment 
of I’'ree Schools in Glasgow, for the educa- 
tion of children of poor Highlanders re- 
siding in and about that city, and supply- 
ing books and stationery to those wnable 
to purchase them. 
Married.| J. Mennons, esq. of Greciuock, 
to Catherine, daughter of M. A. Mills, esq. 
—-Capt..d. Donald, late of the 40th regt. 
to Miss Ann Grahame, of Whitehill, G las- 
gow.—C. S, Allan, esq. of Hay, to Ann, 
daughter of the late Right Hon. J. Beves- 
ford, m.p.—Sir J. Douglas, bart. of Sprivig- 
wood-park, Roxburghshire, to Hannah 
Charlotte, daughter of Henry Scott, esq. 
of Belford. 
Dicd.] At Dundee, William Smalls, esq. 
town-clerk. 
At Scone, the Rev. Dr. Markham, dean 
of York, and rector of Stokesley. 
IRELAND, 
A respectable meeting was lately held at 
Dublin, when it was resolved to petition 
Parliament for a repeal of the Union. 
At a late guild of merchants at Dublin, 
the following resolution was passed :—. 
“Phat, as Roman Catholics are by the law 
of the land eligible to be members of this 
guild, and as there is no rule or by-law on 
our books to exclude them, we therefore, 
in order to demonstrate our loyalty to the 
King, our respect for the laws, and our 
esteem and friendship for our. feilow-eili- 
zens, do heréby declare our intention to 
support, with our votes and. interest, the 
admission of such respectable merchants of, 
this city as may ofler thenyselves, without 
religious distinction.” : 
In the county of CorJ<,a meeting has 
Scotland—Ireland— Deaths Abroad. 
lately been held, to take measutes for pro- 
moting the growth of hemp and flax, and 
thereby give employment to the poor. 
Marricd.} Mr. L. Flanigan, of Sackville- 
street, to Miss J. Burney, of Blackhall- 
row; W. Watts, esq. to Miss L. C. Day: all 
of Dublin.—W. Leckey, esq. of Monaghan, 
to Catherine, daughter of the Rey. Alex. 
Hall.—O. Herbert, esq. of Carrick, to 
Maria Mills, of Ballylinch. 
Died.] At Cork, Mrs, O'Connell, wife 
of Thomas O’C, esq. 
At Ennis, T. Davies, esq. 
At Maryborough, Sarah, widow of H. 
Gray, esq. of Ferinoy. ; 
At Philpotstown, county of Meath, 76, 
J. Young, esqg..~At Loughrea, G. Carter, 
esq. a magistrate of the county of Galway. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Paris, 72, M. Delambre, one of the 
most distinguished astronomers and mathe- 
maticians of his time (of whom full Me- 
moirs will be given in an carly Number). 
At Paris, after a long and painful ill- 
ness, Madame Condorcet, niece to 
Grouchy, and widow of the illustrious 
Condorcet. ‘This lady was esteemed one 
of the finest women of the age, and in 
France none possessed more sprighitliness 
or esprit. Madame Condorcet was like- 
wise no less amiable for her domestic 
virtues, 
Off the south-west coast of Ireland, in 
the Albion packet from New York to 
London, which there foundered with her 
crew and passengers, aged 46, General Le 
Febre Desnouettes, one of the military he- 
roes of the reign of Napoleon le Grand, 
whose exploits in the various theatres of 
the defensive wars in which France was 
engaged, are recorded in the immortal 
bulletins of those times. He declared for 
Napoleon on his returm from Elba, when 
opposition would have been useless; buat, 
being afterwards proscribed by the Bour- 
bons, sailed for America, where he made 
an unsuccessful attempt to establish a 
colony in New-Mexico. ~He was coming 
to Europe under a travelling name, when 
he met with his gloomy end. 
At Drontheim, in Norway, M. Noe! de 
la Moriniére, Inspector-General of the 
Maritime Fisheries of France, and member 
of several French and foreign learned aca- 
demies. He had undertaken various voy- 
ages, by order of the French government, 
and the result of his labours has been of 
utility to the public. 
TO CORRESPONDENTS. 
A Correspondent in Lincolnshire has disappointed us in regard to his promised 
Drawing of Newton's House at Woolstrope. 
Another Correspondent wishes to be referred to the best description of Monteor- 
FIER’s Water-ram, and to the cheapest and most simple mode of ventilating sleeping- 
rooms in Workhouses, and other crowded establishments. 
ERRATUM,Page 346, line 17, for renders read render, in the notice of New Cyclopedia. 
