s& 
Scotland—Irelana—Monthly Commercial Report. [Augut 1, 
as a mufician, both vocal and inftrumental. 29th of May, Margaret his daughter; and on 
This fair flower of female beauty, and chafte 
model of .female imitation, fell a facrifice to 
a fevere and confuming indifpofitin, of tedi- 
us Continuance. 
SCOTLAND. 
Married.| At the Lord Advocate’s, at Gran- 
ton, T. Kirkpatrick, efq. eldeft fon of Sir 
James Kirkpatrick, bart. te Mifs Jane Sharpe, 
daughter of Charles Sharpe, efq. of Hoddom. 
Died.| At Edinburgh, Robert Corbett, efq. 
of Corbet-hall, co. Wexford, in Ireland, and 
captain in the Aberdeemfhire militia. 
At Edinburgh, Mr. Henry Patterfon, ftu- 
dent of philofophy, fon of Mr. Patterfon, of 
Parliament-fquare. His brother, Lieutenant 
ohn Petterfon, of the goth foot, died there 
in Otober laft, a promifing young officer, 
who diftinguifhed himfelf at the battle near 
Alexandria, March 13, 1801. 
At Southfod, in Scotland, in his 28th year, 
Mr. William Stenhoufe, eldeft fon of John 
Stenhoufe, efq. of Southfod. 
At Stirling, in his 78th year, Robert 
Banks, efq. of Craighead. 
At Capnenoch, Sir James Kirkpatrick, bart. 
At Stirling, in his 79th year, W. Cock, 
efq. colleftor of the excife. His fon, R. 
Cock, efq. Britifh vice-conful, at Madeira, 
died on the 8th of April laf, aged 56. 
At Eadyburn, in the parifh of Gal fton, Scot- 
land, in childbed, Mrs. Helen Nifbet, fpoufe 
of Mr. W. Wardrope, of that place, On the 
the rft of June, Nefeit, his infant fons 
IRELAND. 
Died.] At Baltinglats, county of Wicklowy 
Captais Corry of the militia. In the month 
of September lait, in his 23d year, Captain 
Corry went out rebel-hunting there, and had 
with him a cafe of fcrew~barrel fteel piftols. 
One of them he loft, which after fome time 
was found, but in fo rufty a fate that it could 
not be unfcrewed, and the powder very damp. 
However, it was thought due precaution had 
been taken, by picking the touch-hole; and 
from that time it became a ftanding jeft to 
{nap the piftol at different perfons without 
effet. Aa enfign in the regiment, fon of 
the commander, and an intimate friend of 
Captain Corry having taken up the piftol 
prefented it at him, when it went off, and 
lodged the contents in the lungs of the cap- 
tain, who languifhed till the next day and 
then died in great torture, univerially Ja- 
mented. 
In Dublin, aged 115 years and ro months, 
William Mitchell, a revenue officer, born in 
Londonderry. He had been formerly for fome 
time in America, and was one of thofe loy- 
alifts who loft his property by the war; on 
which account he was recommended to an 
employment in the revenue by Lord Townf- 
end. 
In Dublin, Francis-Henry Forfter, efq. 
At Dungannon, aged 66, Colonel Lindfay, 
late of the 22d foot, 
MONTHLY COMMERCIAL REPORT. 
HE whole revenue to be, this yeat, levied for the public expenditure is, by Mr. Pitt's 
calculation, 71,498,451/.; by another eftimate, 77,846,179/—The public funded debt 
of Great Britain is 480,572,476; the public unfunded debt of Great Britain is 
16,305,607—The produce of the permanent taxes for the quarter, ending January 
5, 1804, was 14,900,000/—-The produce of the finking fund for the reduétion 
of the national debt, was, for 1803, 6,311,626/.; for 1804, 6,851 192/.; or, for 1807, 
equal to one feventy-feventh ; for 1804, to one feventy-third part of the whole debt.—The 
official value of the imports into Great Britain was, for the year ending January 5, 1804; 
27 ,441,874/.—The official value of the Britifh manufactures exported in the year ending 
January 5, 1804, was 40,100,870/.—The official value of the foreign merchandize exported 
that fame year from Great Britain was 11,537,148 -The number of the Britith fhips which 
entered inwards the fame year, was 11,396; their tonnage, 1,614,365 ; navigated by 
93,004 feamen.—The number of the Britifh fhips which cleared outward was 11,072; their 
tonnage, 1,44,849 ; the men navigating them, 92,940.—The number of the foreign fhips 
which entered inwards the fame year, was4,252; their tonnage, 538,034 ; the men, 33,660. 
The foreign fhips which cleared outward in the fame period were 3,662; their tonnage, 
574,542.—In 1803, the number of the Britith fhips regiftered was 21,445 ; their tonnage, 
2,233,249 ; the number of the men navigating them, 155,445. 
Of the manufaétures exported from Great Britain, Cotton ranks No.1; Woollen Cloth 2 ; 
Refined Sugar 3; Iron, caft and in bars, 4; Brafs and Copper 5.—Of Leather, Stationary, 
Glafs, &c. &c. there are in all thirty diftinét articles, of which we fhali give a lift on fome 
future day. 2 6 iB. 
The Britith importation of iron from Russia has, within thefe few years, been very muck 
diminifhed. The produce of the iron-mines of Wales is exceedingly increated ; and Britith 
iron is now employed for moft of thofe ufes to which we were accuftowed to put only the 
old and new fable of Ruflia. One of. the principal iron-mafters uaports into London juft 
pow about 200 tons of iron a week, from his own minds in Wales. . 3 
"oe The 
