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At Hill, near Southampton, the wife of - Capt. Oakley.

Herefordshire. At Ledbury, aged 23, Jasper, second son of the late Rev. Congreve Selwyn, rector of Pixhill, and vicar of Yorkhill, co. Hereford.

Aged 82, Rev. Thomas Proctor, vicar of Orleton.

At Weobley, aged 70, Frances, relict of H. Gough, esq.

Hunts. At her mother's, near Kimbolton, Miss Martyn, grand-daughter of Professor Martyn.

Kent.-At Maidstone, aged 60, John Stone, esq.

At Maidstone, aged 79, Mr. James -Doyes, a superannuated master of the royal navy, and formerly a merchant of considerable eminence. The vicissitudes experienced by this gentleman, both of a public and private nature, are singularly interesting. His acquaintance with, and participation in, the actions of many great characters of the age, form no inconsiderable part of the events of his life. His former affluence, when he was possessed of property in England, Holland, and the East Indies, and the comparative indigence of his latter days, form a contrast at once humiliating and distressing. He received the rudiments of his education at the same school with the celebrated Garrick, with whom, during the life of the latter, he ever maintained a friendly intimacy; as he did also with the Bard at Twickenham, to whom he was distantly related. He was thrice married, and has left a widow and several children by different wives. Two of his sons are officers in the navy.

At Tunbridge Wells, Richard Patrick Satterley, M.D. physician to the MiddleBex and Foundling Hospitals.

At Hythe, aged 84, J. Fuller, esq. At the Rectory, Cheriton, Harriet, wife of Rev. J.-D. Brockman.

Lancashire.-At Manchester, D. Leech,

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of Little Budworth; a lady of extraordi nary beneficence, being a contributor to almost every Institution calculated to benefit mankind.

At Preston, aged 19, Lieut. James Buck, 21st light dragoons, 'youngest son of the late Rev. Mr. Buck, of Kirkham; whose brother Lieut. Buck, $3d regt. fell at the battle of Waterloo, io is 28th year.

At Ince, aged 63, Miss Gerard, only surviving daughter of the late Sir T. Gerard.

Rev. J. Baldwin, LL. B. vicar of Bowden, and perpetual curate of St. Peter's, Chester.

Leicestershire-At Loughborough, aged 78, Thomas Palmer, gent.

Elizabeth, only daughter of the late John Cooper, esq. of Lutterworth. Lincolnshire. At Scatterthorpe, aged

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65, Thomas Hill, esq. chief constable. At Moulton, of a puerperal fever, aged 28, Frances, wife of Rev. Maurice Johnson. At Scartho, Rev. A. Jones, rector of that parish, and formerly fellow of Jesus college.

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At Middle Hendon, Sarah, youngest daughter of the late Ralph Robinson, esq. Salop.-Sarah, daughter of William Coupland, esq. of Shrewsbury.

At Shrewsbury, Mrs. Jeffreys, relict of Robert Jeffreys, esq.

At Ludlow, Richard Nash, esq.

At Whitley-lodge, near Hales Owen, aged. 52, William Barton, esq. many years a medical practitioner in London.

The wife of N. Cooper, esq. of Dinthill. Somerset.-At Bath, William Scott, esq. brother of Tho. Scott, esq. of Rock House. At Bath, Solomon Watson, esq.

At Bath, Mrs. Lysons, relict of Daniel Lysons, esq.

At Clifton, Mrs. Powell, relict of the late John Powell, esq. collector of the Customs at Bris'ol.

At Charlton Horethorne, aged 76, John Young, esq.

At Minehead, John Chappell, esq. At Chilcompton, aged 42, Miss Annesley, daughter of the late Rev. Dr. A. vicar of Chewton Mendip.

The wife of Samuel Norman, esq. of Shepton Mallet.

Staffordshire.-In his 73d year, Charles Forster, esq. of Walsall, banker, and senior member of the corporation.

At Longdon, T. Shaw, esq.

Suffolk

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Rose Edwards, many years housekeeper to Mrs. Newton, of Southover. She died in consequence of taking an infusion of hemlock for the purpose of repelling a scorbutic complaint, and which she had before been occasionally in the habit of doing, but, it may be presumed, in doses Jess potent.

Warwickshire. At Henley in Arden, Janet, widow of Rev. James Graham, author of "The Sabbath," and other Poems.

At Edgbaston, aged 17, CatherineMary, daughter of John Ketland, esq. formerly of Philadelphia, N. America.

Wilts. Rev. Mr. Nairn, of Amesbury. At Connock, near Devizes, aged 95, Mrs. Warriner, relict of Gifford Warriner, esq. and aunt of A. G. Long, esq. M. P. for Wilts.

Aged 67, James Selfe, esq. of Trowbridge.

At Trowbridge, Mrs. Marshman, relict of Rev. Robert M. many years pastor of the Baptist congregation at Westbury Leigh.

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Worcestershire. · At Droitwich, aged 72, Rev. Dr. Thorpe, formerly of Buxton.

At Malvern, where he went for the recovery of his health, Robert Kingston, esq. late of Demarara.

At the Breach, near Stourbridge, Catherine, last surviving sister of the late Rev. Mr. Tristam, of Brookfield-house.

Yorkshire. At York, aged 74, the wife of John Lund, esq.

At York, Mrs. Irwin, sister to the late J. Harrison, esq. and aunt to Lady Cholmeley, of Norton-place.

At Leeds, aged 75, William Thompson, esq. of the firm of Thompson and Co. bankers, Burlington.

At Burlington, in her 84th year, Mrs. Heblethwayte, relict of J. H. esq. late of Norton, co. York, mother to the late Dowager Lady Boynton, whose death is recorded in Part I. p. 568.

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At Builth, co. Brecon, in his 75th year, Mr. Wathen, of Harley-court, co. Hereford.

At Guernsey, in his 93d year, E. Le Maistre, esq.

IRELAND.

- At Massy Park, Limerick, at an advanced age, Hon. John Massy. At Barrowmount, Kilkenny, the wife of Col. Gore. ABROAD. Drowned in the Canal at Ghent, while going from a small boat to a larger one, Capt. De Backer, Royal Waggon Train.

At Gibraltar, Lewis Marcell Cotman, esq. youngest son of Rev. Johu C. of Bury St, Edmund's.

At Sea, Capt. Halliburton, of the East India Company's ship Glatton.

At Sea, Capt. Mansell, of the extra ship Coldstream.

At Goree, on the windward coast of Africa, in his 23d year, T. A. Cummins, second son of the late W. C. esq. of Streatham, Surrey.

Shot in the street at Charleston, South Carolina, by an insane person named Linen (who conceived that the Doctor's evidence as to his sanity had occasioned his being deprived of liber y), Dr. Ram. say, author of the "Life of Gen. Washington." The Doctor survived only a few days: he was about finishing several lite rary works, one of which has occupied him the last 40 years.

At Bengal, J. Branston, esq. a supercargo in the East India Company's ser vice, third son of T. Branston, esq. formerly M. P. for Essex.

At Berhampore, East Indies, Wm. Hanson, esq. quarter-master of the 53d foot.

At the storming of the fortress of Kalunga, in the Nepaul country, Bengal, Lieut. R. H. Gosling, 27th reg. N. I.

Sept. 1. In Lincoln's-inn fields, in her 820 year, Mrs. Exley.

In Conduit-street, in bis 26th year, Capt. Wm. Matthews, R. N. second son of Geo. Matthews, esq. of Spring-vale, co. Down.

At Ensham, Oxon, in his 60th year, Mr. J. Wastie, an eminent farmer.

At Bathampton, Mrs. Morgan, relict of William Morgan, esq. (son of Thomas Morgan, esq. of Ruperra, co. Glamorgan, who was lord lieutenant of Monmouth and Brecon, and M. P. for Monmouthshire.)

At Chichester, the wife of Henry Paget, esq. late of Bridgnorth,

At Ramsgate, Margaret, youngest dau. of James-H. Byles, esq. Shiplake-house, Oxon.

Sept. 2. At Charing-cross, aged 76, Mr. D. Pollock, many years sadler to his majesty and the royal family.

In his 80th year, Thomas Tatlock, esq. East-hill, Wandsworth.

Aged 75, Mary, wife of Richard Hirst, esq. Winchmore Hill.

At

At Stinsford House, near Dorchester, William O'Brien, esq. This gentleman, descended from an antient and respectable Irish family, appeared early in life at Drury-lane Theatre, where he was distinguished as the most perfect representative of the Man of Fashion that had ever been seen on the stage. His ease, elegance, and good sense, rendered him a great favourite with the publick; and he has ever since been held out as a model of the polished gentleman to those who have attempted the same line of character. In 1764, Mr. O'Brien retired from the stage, having married Lady Susan Strangeways, eldest daughter of the first Earl of Ilchester. Her ladyship, though very far advanced in age, survives. Mr. O'Brien long held the situation of receiver-general of the county of Dorset. He was author of the farce of 66 Cross Purposes," which contains some happy touches of genuine humour, and many strokes of satire, justly levelled at the follies of the times; and a play called "The Duel."

At Bath, Mary-Anne, wife of John Benjafield, esq. of Bury St. Edmund's, Suffolk.

At Mark Hall, Cleveland, co. York, in his 9th year, William, third son of Hon. Laurence Dundas.

Sept. 3. At Bath, universally beloved and lamented, the amiable wife of Sir John Aubrey, bart. M. P. of Dorton House, Oxon, one of the most charitable, most benign, and the best-informed ladies of the age; to the rich she was an example, to the poor a friend. The shock in her neighbourhood is indescribable, the loss irreparable. A friend owes her ladyship's memory this inadequate tribute of justice and gratitude. She was only child and heiress of the late G. R. Carter, esq. of Chilton, in the same county.

Aged 67, (45 of which he had been in the Council-house,) Wintour Harris, esq. chamberlain of Bristol. He had risen, and was partly dressed, when his servant found him a corpse at the bed side. If parental and conjugal kindness, if sincerity and promptitude in friendship, if integrity, zeal, and ability in his profession, endear a man to his family, his friends, and the publick, this gentleman will be long remembered and regretted.

Sept. 4. At Eastbourne, Sussex, in a fit of apoplexy, which terminated his life in a few hours, in his 60th year, Joseph Palmer, esq. F.S A. of West Molesey, Surrey, Rush, near Dublin, and Palmerstown, Mayo. Of this truly excellent gentleman and exemplary Christian, we hope to be favoured with further particulars. (See p. 254.)

At Missenden, Bucks, aged 70. Rev. T. Lloyd, of Peterley house, Bucks, rector of Aston Sub Edge, co. Gloucester.

In his 29th year, Lieut. J. Rudge, 35th foot, second son of Rev. Archdeacon

Rudge. On account of ill health, occasioned by a residence in the Grecian Is lands, he was ordered home by the Medical Board to try the effects of his native air; but, with a constitution impaired by the climate, he sunk under the fatigues of a long and boisterous voyage, two days after he reached Gloucester.

At Heron Court, Southampton, aged 39, Viscountess Fitzharris. Her ladyship was the Hon. Miss Dashwood, niece of the Earl of Effingham, and married to the Viscount June 17 1806.

Sept. 10 At R. T. G ›rdon's, esq. Leweston, near Sherborne, Susannah-SophiaSelina Lady Metcalfe, widow of the late Sir Thomas Theophilus Metcalfe, bart. of Portland-place, and Foruhill, Berks. She was the daughter of John Debonaire, esq. of the Cape of Good Hope; married, first, Major John Smith; and secondly, in 1782, the late Sir T.-T. Metcalfe.

Sept. 13. At Tunbridge Wells, in bis 47th year, Henry Otway, esq. of Castle Otway, Ireland, and of Stanford Hall, co. Leicester.

At Pisiton House, Somerset, in her 12th year, Hon. Lady Theresa Herbert, youngest daughter of the Earl of Caruar

von.

At Guildford, Surrey, the wife of T. Henry Milles, esq. surgeon, Upper Berkeley-street, Portman-square.

Sept. 15. At Deal, in his 41st year, Mr. William Duncan, eldest surviving son of of the Rev. James Duncan, perpetual curate of West Worldham, Han's He was a near relation of Professor Duncan, of Aberdeen, whose death, on July 31, is recorded in p. 278. He was on his return from St. Domingo, as supercargo of a merchant-vessel, but was taken so ill at sea, that he got himself put on-shore at Deal. He has left a young widow, but no issue. His eldest brother (Capt. James Duncan) died in the East Indies in 1804, and his death is recorded in our Obituary for that year, p. 1241.

Sept 16. At Islington, in his 80th year, Joseph Stanfield, esq. formerly an eminent ironmonger in Foster-lane.

Sept. 17. At Exmouth, Devon, in his 59th year. Mr. Thomas Leventhorp, of the firm of Messrs. Jones and Leventhorp, wholesale stationers, London. His courteous and polished manners, and ingenuous and manly mind, whilst they claimed the most sincere regard, rendered him one of the most pleasant and probably successful men in trade that the metropolis can produce. A painful disease, however, of three years' continuance terminated that life which, it may not be inappropriate to say, was an ornamen to the branch of society in which Providence had placed it, He has left a widow and three young children.

TABLE

Receipts.

If £.2 and under

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Above 2000, ditto

..2000... 7 6 ..3000...10

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0 .15 0

Promissory (or Bankers) Notes re-issuable.
For any sum not exceeding £.1. 1s. 0 5
Above £1. 1s. not exceeding 2. 2...0 10

2. 2 ditto

....5. 5...1 3

5. 5 ditto

.10......1 9

10 ditto....

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20

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30

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50

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Bonds given as Security for Payment of

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5. d.

Money.

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Sums not exceeding

.........£.50...£1.

1

6... 2 0

Exceeding

Above 20

Above 30
Above 50

Above 100
Above 200
Above 300
Above 500

and not exceeding

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£.50, and not exceeding ......100...SOs.

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100, ditto.....

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200, ditto.........

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300, ditto.

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500, ditto

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1000, ditto

.......200...£.2

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.2000......6

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3000 ...15

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4000, ditto

25

0...50 0

5000, ditto

.................5000......9 ...10,000... 19

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Foreign Bills of Exchange, drawn in Sets,
according to the custom of Merchants: for
every Bill of each Set,
S. d.

If the sum shall not exceed.£.100... 1 6

Above £.20, and under
Above 50, and under
Above 100, and under

Above 200, and under

Mortgages, same as Bonds, with a progressive Duty of 11. for every 1080 words.

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Above 300, and under 450 Of 2000/. and upwards the Duties are increased.-Probates of Wills, where the property is under 20007. value, remain as before; those above that value are increased.

METEOROLOGICAL TABLE for September, 1815. By W. CARY, Strand. Height of Fahrenheit's Thermometer.

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BILL OF MORTALITY, from August 27, to September 25, 1815.

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Females 11072245 Females 842 1699

Whereof have died under 2 years old
Aug. 29, Peck Loaf, 3s. 10d.
Salt £1. per bushel; 44. per pound.

446

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AVERAGE PRICES of CORN, from the Returns ending September 16.

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Salop
69 749 400 029
Hereford 65 244 333 630
Worcester 66 339 436 1030
Warwick 64 500 034 1128 441 1 Flint

100 0 Westmor. 77
938 8 Lancaster 73

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238 4 Chester 64

900

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Wilts

Berks

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69 54 400 031 625 1037 4 Denbigh 68 600 59 250 031 129 535 5 Anglesea 62 Oxford 56. 900 031 223 035 3 Carnarvon 72 Bucks 58 400 033 627 1035 Brecon 84 857 639 528 800 Montgom. 68 740 032 025 1000 Radnor 73 200 0132 930 400

800

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Glainorg. 70 1100 Average of England and Wales, per quarter.Gloucest. 64 500 64 0139 6132 4125 9136 2Somerset 62 1000 Average of Scotland, per quarter: Monmouth72 900 00 0,00 0,00 0,00 0,00 0|| Devon 70 600 031 11 29 Aggregate. Average Prices of the Twelve Ma-Cornwall 74 200 032 726 ritime Districts of England and Wales, by Dorset 200 032 025 640 0 which Exportation and Bounty are to be Hants 300 032 426 036 0 regulated in Great Britain..... 00 0:00 000 oloo oloo

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PRICE OF FLOUR, per Sack, September 25: 55s. to 60s.
OATMEAL, per Boll of 140lbs. Avoirdupois, August 16, 31s. 7d..
AVERAGE PRICE of SUGAR, September 20, 64s. 8d.

PRICE OF HOPS, IN THE BOROUGH MARKET, September 25 :
7. 10s. to 12. Os. Kent Pockets
61.
..........
Os. to 10. Os.
6. 10s. to 11. Os.
Sussex Ditto............
54, 12s. to 81. Os.

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Essex Ditto......... 104. Os. to 114. 11s. | Farnham Ditto..........00%. Os. to 001. Os.

AVERAGE PRICE OF HAY AND STRAW, September 25:

St. James's, Hay 41. Os. Straw 1. 11s. 6d.-Whitechapel, Hay 4l. 10s. Od. Straw 17. 16s.
Clover 64. Os. Od.-Smithfield, Hay 47. 15s. Od. Straw 11. 12s. Od. Clover 5l. 15s. 6d.

SMITHFIELD, September 25. To sink the Offal-per Stone of 8lbs.
.................................................................4s. Od. to 5s. Od. | Lamb........

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COALS, September 25: Newcastle 45s. 3d. to 49s. Od. Sunderland 48s. 6d.-00 i. Od. SOAP, Yellow, 86s. Mottled 96s. Curd 100s. CANDLES, 12%. Od. per Doz. Moulds 13s. 6d. TALLOW, per Stone, 8lb. St. James's 4s. Id. Clare Market 4s. Od. Whitechapel is. Or,

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