416 
the said Arthur lord yiscount Kil- 
warden, together with his nephew, 
the rev. Richard Wolfe, clerk, from 
his said carriage, and did therebasely, 
and inhumanly murder the said Ar- 
thur lord viscount Kilwarden and 
‘Richard Wolfe, by stabbing them 
respectively with pikes in various 
parts of their bodies, of which 
wounds they both soon after died ;” 
and offering, ‘‘in order to bring 
such enormous offenders to condign 
punishment, that if any person or 
persons shall, within six calendar 
‘months from the date hereof, dis- 
cover any of the person or persons 
who committed the said inhuman 
murders, or either of them, or who 
aided and assisted therein, or who 
advised, . encouraged, _ instigated, 
moved, stimulated, or meited the 
persons concerned therein to com- 
mit the same, such person or per- 
sons so discovering shall receive as a 
reward the sum of one thousand 
pounds sterling for each and every 
of the first three persons who shall 
be apprehended and _ convicted 
thereof.” 
30th. The following account of 
deaths by small-pox, extracted from 
the weekly bills of mortality, evinces 
a great decrease of deaths in the me- 
tropolis, since the institution of the 
Royal Jennerian Society : 
Weekly deaths. 
1802, November 2 72 
' 9 74 
16 «Gl 
Q 65 
3 88 
December 
Om NI O Co 
_— 
© 
] 
1 2 
21:50 
28 48 
1803, January 4 49 
1 es 1!) 
18..\37 
25 56 
ANNUAL!) REGISTER, 1803: 
. 
1803, February 1 
St 
~8. 30 
s 1dy eel 
92. uZo 
Mareh 1 25 
8 20 
; Loi Vbyf 
99.422 
29 13° 
April 5 16 
12 19 
19 14 
126; 
. May 3 15 
10) «h3 
LZ. lO 
24. 13 
31, 18 
June 7 10 
14. 16 
2). AO 
28 Lil. 
July 5 13 
123.40 
pits Peg 2 
26, a5 
A contribution of 8,000,000 livres 
has been imposed on the electorate. 
of Hanover. Of this.sum there has 
been already paid 2,500,000 in rea- 
dy money (110,000]. st.) besides 
the pay for the armies, furniture, 
horses, provisions, ammunition, &c. 
&c. The timber in the forests of 
Hanover, which is fit for ship-build, 
ing, is to be immediately felled, by 
order of the French government. 
The interior of Hanover has, 
since the French conquest, been as 
little known to the rest of Enrope, 
as that of Japan. <A few. letters, 
however, have escaped from that 
place, from which the following 
statement has been extracted. Eyer 
since the conquest, the whole electo- 
rate has been a scene of pillage and 
butchery, which is said to yield only 
to the state of Switzerland in the 
Spring of 1798. ‘The French sol- 
dicrs 
