1823.] 
Dicd.| At Norwich, 63, Mary, wife of 
Capt. Hays, deservedly lamented.—In St. 
Lawrence, 48, Mrs. T. Knight, regretted. 
—In st. Stephen’s, Mr. Williams, —In the 
Castle Ditch, 56, Mr. Royal. 
At Yarmouth, 24, Miss E. Crowther.— 
72, Mrs, A. Martin.—61, Mrs. S. Webster. 
—35, Mr. J. Townsend.—42, Mrs. M. 
Farman. 
At Lynn, 71, Mrs. Lindsay.—Mrs. 
Winder, of South Lynn.—64, Mr, Money. 
—Capt. Flegg. 
At Thetford, 25, Mrs. E. Gates, es- 
teemed and regretted.—Mr. W. Burrell. 
At East Dereham, Mrs. M. Cooper.— 
83, Mrs. E. Blomfield.—At Arminglkall, 
23, Miss 8. Waters.—At Hales-hall, 53, 
Mrs. George, deservedly lamented.—At 
Cotton, Mary, widow of Jeremiah Ives 
Harvey, «8q.—At Soham, Mrs. S. A. 
Hardy. 
SUFFOLK. 
‘A numerous meeting of land-owners and 
occupiers was lately held at Ipswich, when 
the following excellent petition to both 
houses of parliament was unanimously 
agreed to :—‘‘ That from the year 1814 to 
‘the present time, indeed ever since the 
communication with the continent has 
been open, the agriculture of the United 
Kingdom has been declining. That its in- 
creased and increasing depression, during 
the last three years, has produced many 
hundred petitions, in the last three ses- 
sions, to both Houses of Parliament, fiom 
a very large portion cf the occupiers of 
the soil, for adequate protecting duties on 
all the productions of our soil, as the only 
remedy for such depression, by diminishing 
the import and restraining the consump- 
tion of our population to the productions of 
our own soil.—‘ That in the last sessions 
of parliament, this honourable House did 
not only recognize, but adopt the principle 
of protecting duties on the import of grain, 
but on so inadequate a scale, as to restore 
neither validity to agricultural produce, 
nor confidence to the cultivator; and the 
consequence has been, that the deprecia- 
tion, gravitating under its own pressure, 
has since increased to such an alarming 
degree as to threaten the subversion, if not 
the utter ruin, of our agriculture.—* That 
as every tax, whether of excise, customs, 
assessed taxes, poor rates, or stamp duties, 
and parochial charges payable in this coun- 
try, is an ingredient in the cost of produc- 
tion, and of an occupation and residence in 
it, the cultivators ot the soil experience a 
most unequal pressure of all.these bur- 
thens, and must continue to do so, as long 
as they shall be compelled to sell their 
productions in their own markets, at an 
mnequal competition with the productions 
of other countries not subject to such 
taxes, or to any countervailing duties in 
lieu thereof.—‘* Wherefore the petitioners 
niost humbly pray, as the taxation of the 
a 
Si uffol Ie ° 
573 
country cannot be reduced to the stand- 
ard of 1793, consistently with national 
solvency, although the prices of their pro- 
ductions are reduced to the standard of 
that year, by means of foreign import, duty 
free, or at inadequate duties, that all the 
productions of the soil of the United 
Kingdom may be protected from the une- 
qual competition, by such adequate duties 
on the import of all the productions of our 
soil, as shall protect and secure to your 
petitioners such prices for their produc- 
tions in their own markets, as the existing 
internal taxation has created, without 
which the cultivators of the soil must not 
only labour in vain, but generally be ruined 
and undone; and the cultivation of the 
United Kingdom be superseded, in as 
much as present prices, with present 
incumbrances, leave neither rent to the 
owner, nor profit to the occupier.” 
Married.) Mr. J, Maulden, to Miss A. 
Christie; Mr. I. Brown, to Miss M, 
Riches; Mr, J. B. Danneley, to Miss G. 
Louth: all of Ipswich.—Henry Robert 
Gooch, esq. to Miss Wayth, both of South. 
wold.—Mr, J. Wells, jun. of Needham, to 
Miss F. Barker, of Monk Soham-place.— 
Mr. F. Cracknell, to Miss Muskett, both of 
Fressingfield.—Mr. J. Baldry, to Miss M. 
Elvin, of Stradbrook.—Mr, R. Wiseman, 
of Rickinghall, to S. Pymer, of West Har- 
ling. 
Died.] At Bury, 72, Mr. Sibsey.—Mr. 
Petit.—Mrs. King.—Mrs. Beeton. 
At Ipswich, 46, Mr. W. Manning.— 
Mr. H. Howdeli.—58, Mrs. Stow.—Mr, 
W. Oliver.—735, Mrs. Denham. 
At Saxmundham, 60, Mr. J. Knight,— 
28, Mrs. Haxell. ; 
At Framlingham, 39, Mrs. Benington. 
At Thiberton, Mary ‘lodd, one of the 
Society of Friends, much respected —At 
Hintlesham, Mrs, Morgan, respected.— 
At Wrentham, Mrs. E. Primrose.—At 
Levington, 64, Mrs. R. Cook.—At East 
Bergholt, Mr. 3. Barnard. 
At Witnesham, aged 84, the Rev. 
Joln King, rector. Mr. King was born 
at Richmond, in Yorkshire, on the 28th of 
April, 1758, and received the rudiments 
of his education at the Free Grammar 
School in that town, under the tuitien 
of that classical scholar and liberal di- 
vine, the Rev. Anthony ‘'emple, A.M. vi- 
car of Easby. From Richmond he re- 
moved to Cambridge; and, on the recom- 
mendation of the Rev. Francis Black- 
burne, a.m. archdeacon of Cleveland, an 
intimate friend of Dr. Law, then Master 
of St. Peter's College, and afterwards 
Bishop of Carlisle, he was entered of that 
Society. Here he proceeded to the de- 
gree of A.B. in 1760; and, from the honour 
which he obtained on that occasion (being 
the seventh Wrangler on the Tripos,) he 
was elected Fellow. He soou, however, 
relinquished residence in college, wa ip 
ecu 
