480 
CORNWALL. i 
The Cornwall! Geological Society lately 
assembled, when it was resolved to encou- 
rage miners in the discovery of rare and 
useful miuerals, 
Married.| Mr. M. H. Eade, of Redruth, 
to Miss E. W. Cosy, of the Terrace, 
Falmouth.—Frederick Rogers, esq. R.N. 
of Penrose, to Miss C. G. B. Willyams, 
daughter of the Rev. H. W.—At Laun- 
ceston, Mr. Jos. Spettigue, of Lawhitton, 
to Miss S. Baker.—Mr. Jno. Spettigue, to 
Miss Folley. 
Died.| At Truro, Mr, Rd. Brown, 
At Bodmin, 26, Miss M. Hambly. 
At Fowey, 84, Lieut. J. Fife, ron. 
At Lanarth, Mary Buchanan, daughter 
of Col. Sandys.—At Menhenniott, at an 
advanced age, Mrs. Pollard.—At Hol- 
wood, Mrs. Bate, late of Trennick. 
WALES. 
Married.] John Morris, esq. of Pant- 
yrathro, to Miss Eliza Timmins, of Car- 
marthen.—J. Couch, esq. to Miss L. 
Allen, both of Pembroke,-—Thomas Roch 
Garrett, esq. to Miss Sarah Warlow, both 
of Haverfordwest.— The Rev. William 
Herbert, of Lianbadarnfawr, to Miss E, 
Morrice, of Carrog, Cardiganshire. 
Died} At Swansea, 21, Mrs. E. 
Starbuck.—71, Mrs. A. Rowe, greatly 
respected.—1i7, Miss S. Bowen. 
At Aberystwith, Ann, wife of Thomas 
Powell, esq.—79, Mrs. E. Griffiths. —47, 
Mr. L. Jones. 
The Rev. D. H. Sanders, A.M. rector of 
Ambleston, Pembrokeshire.—At Garthe, 
Carmarthenshire, Joseph Waters, esq.— 
At Talacre, Flintshire, 74, Sir Pyers 
Mostyn, bart. 
SCOTLAND, 
Married.] The Rev. G. Almond, of 
Glasgow, to Christiana Georgiana,daughter 
of the Hon. Mrs. Smith, of Stroud. 
Died.| At Edinburgh, Matthew Ross, 
esq. dean of the faculty of Advocates. 
At Glasgow, the Rev. Alex. Jameison, 
of the Scotch episcopal chapel. 
At Dundee, 21, Anne, daughter of the 
Rev. H. Horsley, and grand-daughter of 
Bishop Horsley. 
At Oxendon Castle, Lady Dalrymple, 
wife of Lieut.-general Sir J. H. D. bart. 
IRELAND. 
A meeting of the Catholic Association 
lately took place at Dublin, when Mr. 
O'Connell gave notice of a motion to ap- 
point a committee to collect facts for as- 
sisting Lord Grey in the representation of 
the mode of administering justice in Ire- 
land. Notice of a motion for a repeal 
of the Tithe-Bill, 
Married.] Thomas Edw. Beatty, esq. 
to Margaret, daughter of Judge Mayne; 
Edward Hatton Manders, esq. to Ann, 
daughter of the late Alderman Manders : 
all of Dublin.—Daniel Hautenville, esq. 
Cornwall—Wales —Scotland-—Ireland— Deaths Abroad. 
of Dublin, to Mary Maria, daughter of 
the late Joseph Hynson, esq, R.N. 
Died.] In Fitzwilliam-square, Dublin, 
T. P. Gaskell, esq. of Shannegarry, county 
of Cork, a descendant of the celebrated 
Penn. 
D. N. Donellan, esq. of Ravendale, 
county of Kildare. , 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Bordentown, New Jersey, General 
Lallemand. His death was occasioned by 
a disease of the stomach, under which he 
had laboured for some time. He held the 
rank of Gen. of artillery under Napoleon, 
and was always respected for his in- 
telligence and bravery. His ‘‘ Treatise 
on Artillery,’ translated by Professor 
Renwick, of New York, will always re- 
main a valuable monument of his thorough 
acquaintance with military science. 
At St. Petersburgh, the celebrated 
composer Steibelt. He was the author of 
a great number of musical compositions, 
among which is the fine opera of ** Romeo 
and Juliet.” He had resided for fifteen 
years in St. Petersburgh, and acquired a 
large fortune. i 
At Bohringendorf, where he performed 
the duties of parish priest, in his y4th year, 
Prince Meinrad, of Hohenzollern-Heckin-. 
gen, canon of the former chapters of Co-_ 
logne and Constance. 
. Thore, a distinguished naturalist and 
” 
physician, was born near Bourdeaux, - 
where he studied medicine, and acquired a 
taste for botany. He fixed his residence 
at Dax, and, during a course of thirty 
years, made frequent excursions into the 
different parts of Gascony, traversing the 
vast forests of Morensia, and the coast from 
La Teste to St. Jean de Luz. Here he dis- 
covered a number of alpine plants, which, 
though indigenous, were unknown to bo- 
tanists ; mingled with others that were 
thought peculiar to Portugal. In’ his 
“Chloris des Landes,” a Flora, which he 
published, he forcibly inculcates the ne- 
cessity of experiments, to ascertain the 
nature of various herbs, as adapted to me- 
dical purposes. Thore was in intimate 
correspondence with naturalists in every 
part of Europe ; and, in concert with M. 
de Borda and Grateloupe, he explored 
in the bowels of the earth, and in the 
deeper parts of the waters, a multi- 
tude of new species of cetaceous animals, 
fishes, and molusce. In 1809, Thore 
published his promenades into the “ Lan- 
des, and on the Coasts, &c.;” a work which 
contains statistic details, in relation to 
the culture of the country, with many 
curious facts, observations, &c., in Natural 
History. He was suddenly struck with 
an apoplexy, and died without any symp- 
toms of pain, on the 27th of April, 
1823. 
—<P 
