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3 At Dareham, Norfolk, the mother of the Rev. Edward Glover, of Norwich.

John Entwistle, efq. major of rft battalion of Manchester and Salford volunteers. 4. By the breaking of a blood-veffel, Mr. Long, attorney, Gray's-inn-road.

5. At Richmond, Surrey, Lady Mufgrave, relict of the late Sir Wm. M. bart. 6. At Auchterarder, Wm. Kemp, B. D. of Emanuel college, Cambridge.

7. At Calais, on her way from Verfailles, where the had been for the recovery of her health, the wife of the Rev. W. R. Wake, vicar of Beckwell, co. Some fet, and rector of Great Bromley, Effex.

8. Of a confumpt on, under which he had lingered many years, aged 57, Mr. Thomas Wapthott, of Tutton-street, Weftminster, bunder, refpectable in is profeffion, having repaired the parish church of St. Paul, Covent garden, 1789, and rebuilt it after the dreadful conflagration of Sept. 17, 1795, with fuch nea nefs and imple elegance as at once attract the notice of every spectator; together with Paddington church, South Lambeth chapel, and many other public edifices.

he heard the advice of the experienced cultural knowledge and experimental huffarmer, he inquired of the philofophical bandry. His Grace was tall, well formed, fpeculator, and his immenfe fortune ferved elegant in his pe fun, and polithed in his to mdgamate theory with practice. The manners. In his exterior it has been Woburn sheep-fhearing was a fond of rural thought there was too much of what is delight enjoyed by the old and the young. called Ariftocracy; but, on clofer comIn union with feveral others of the firit, and munication with him, this was found to be we may add the beft, perfons in England, merely in appearance. No man could be he affired to fute the Ancu tural more urb ne or ampable in company; or Society. To improve the breed of cattle, knew better than himfelf, that greatness is to improve hat of sheep, to make a faving in reality exal ed, not lowered, by gracein the feed while the crop is augment 6, ful condefcenfion. form the outline of their plon In the puriut of thefe the Duke of Bedford food forward; he ben fitte his country indeed, but it perfonally cut him 20,000 a year. He might in time base partaken the benefits with his countrymen; bor he is now no more! his cou try reaps the benefits of his toils; it will praife his memory, while it laments his premature death. As a neighbour, he was kind and obliging; as a mafter, indulgent and generous. politicks he was the devoted friend of that great itatem,n Mr. Fox; in his good withes towards his country he was molt fincere. H's agricultural pursuits were followed with ardour; and if the man, who makes two blices of grafs grow where one did before, be entitled to his country's praife, the Duke of Bedford will long live in the hearts of Englishmen. As a man, his Grace was univer ally refpected and beloved. He was the leader in every beneficial inftitution for the encouragement of those arts which moft immediately conduce to the comfort of others. In the management of his vaft property he gave an example in every he neficial improvement; and in carrying his plans into effect, he supplied employment to the induftry of many thousands of the Labouring claffes. The great and uteful works which he himself planned difplayed the foundet judgment; and hs conducted them with a method, exactnofs, and propriety, that proved how well he was qualified for fuch affairs. His eftates, both in the country and in town, fhow how well he understood beneficial improvement and the just application of great wealth. He was the best friend of induftry, because he gave employment to it. The example of a perfon of his rank thus applying his time and fortune was of infinite advantage to the community. But the influence of his virtues will not die with him. The only confolation that his friends, that his neigh bours and tenants, that his country can indulge, is, that the warm and affectionate intimacy in which he lived with his brother Lord John has made him the full heir of his opinions, his purfaits, and his friendfhips, as well as of his fortunes. Lord John, with a congenial fpirit, and animated by that wum affection which fo tenderly united all the brothers, entered into all his views for the promotion of agri.

9. At Welcroft-house, near Hereford, in his 69th year, Wm. Leslie, efq.

10. Mr. james Dalton, of Cheifea, ale brewer. On the 8th, after dining with a friend in Clerkenwell, intlead of returning to his wife and family, he took a bed at a refpectable hotel in the Weft end of the town; and his friends, alarmed by his abfence, advertised him in the public papers. On the morning of the 9th, when he role, he called for a large bafon of tea, and pen, ink, and paper; upon which he wrote a full statement of his affairs, addreffed to his attorney, and put it in his pocket. He topped in the hotel all day, and excited fui prife by his having nothing to eat. was observed that he looked very ill and feverith. Next morning, on entering his room, he was found dead in bed, with much foam coming from his mouth, as if he had died in a fit, which fince appears to have been the cafe.

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II. In her 65th year, Mrs. Lydia Stone, wite of Edward S. efq. of Blewitt's-buildings, Fetter-lane. She was an affectionate wife, a tender mother, and fincere fr end.

12. At her house, the corner of South Audley-freet, Grofvenor fquare, Mits

Wilkes, the daughter of the celebrated John Wilkes, efq.

14. Aged S4. Patrick Mack glashan, efy. furgeon, of Moorfields.

16. In Greville street, Thomas Archibald Murray, M. D. of the Royal College of Phyficians, London. Dr. M. was inJehted for the first part of his education to the Rev. Jofeph Hepworth, at the grammar-school of North Waltham, Norfolk. He was afterwards, for a confiderable time, under the tuition of his own father *, who was phyfician to the Norfolk and Norwich hofpital: he then refided three years in the univerfity of Edinburgh, and there received his doctor's degree, Julv, 1796. During the winter of 1796-7 Dr. Murray availed himself of the opportunities of acquiring medical knowledge and experience in the metropolis. In July, 1797, he fettled in the city of Norwich; but by the perfuafion of feveral of his friends, who thought his talents adapted for a more enlarged fphere of action, he removed to London in January 1800, and was foon after appointed phyfician to the publick difpenfary; the year following he was alío nominated phyfician to the institution for the prevention and cure of contagious fevers in the metropolis, which he had been inftrumental in forming under the aufpices of the fociety for bettering the condition of the poor. His premature death, at the age of 28 years, was referred, by the phyficians who attended him, more to his inceffant exertions in profeffional duty, than to the efects of cont›g on. Had his couftitution been fufficienty hardy to bear the first fatigues and anxieties which a young physician in London neceffarily undergoes, Dr. M. would, probably, in a few years, have taken a high ftation among his medical brethren. He could not, indeed, have failed, if a highdy cultivated mind, a folid judgment, a correct tafte, an even temper, united with po

actual ftate of a diforder, without taking a bias from collateral circumftances, or adding to the cafe what imagination fome times too actively fuggefts. Among the poor in the district of London his active benevolence mutt be long remembered.

In her 86th year, Mrs. Maty, relict of Dr. M. formerly principal librarian of the British Maseum.

18. In White Hart-lane, Tottenham, aged 75, Mr. Thomas Horne, one of the people called Quakers.

19. Aged 92, Mrs. Baghaw, of Parli ment-freet, Weftimintter.

20 On Maze fall, Greenwich, the wife of Dr. Buxton, only furviving daughter of the late Mr. John Chandler, apothecary, of Cheapfide.

21. In Somers-town, in his 44th year, Mr. Wm. Natter, hiftoric engraver.

22. At Pentonville, aged 35, Mr. Docker, attorney, of the Lord Mayor's Court-office, Royal Exchange. He married the only daughter of Mr. Griffiths, of Enfield.

23. Aged 68, Fe ix Calvert, efq. the eminent London brewer. He came to Don Saltero's coffee-hou ́e, in Cheyne-walk, Chelfea, in the afternoon, and dined. At fix o'clock he paid his bill; and, about a quarter of an hour afterwards, the report of a pocket-pistol brought the waiter into the room: he found Mr. Calvert dead. Mr. Morrifon, the furgeon who attended, declared it to be his decided opinion, that a ball bad perforated the jugular vein. Col. Bulkeky, a gentleman accidentally in the houfe, fearched the pockets of the deceased, and found therein a loaded piftol, &c. &c. with a letter addreffed to a very near rela

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are the means to enfure advancement or refpect; and, notwithstanding the occafional encouragement of hold pretenders, certain it is that the habitants of London are ever ready to call forth and fupport real merit wherever it can be found. Dr. M. poffeffed the most valuable endowment of a medical practitioner-that degree of genius or penetration which fees, at once, the

* Dr. John Murray: for an account of this eminent and philanthropic physician, by the late Dr. Enfield, fce GENT. MAG. Vol. LXII. p. 951.

LEXANDER MackenFeb 10. zie, efq. knighted. Queen's boufe, Feb. 25. Sir John Davie, of Cready, bart. to be fenff of Devon.

Queen's blufe, Mar. 3. John Pares, of the Newarke, efq. to be thenff of Leicesterfhire, and Tho. Harries, of Crackton, efq. to be theritt of Stropihire, vice Fetricay,

St. James's, Mar. 10. Gwyllim Lloyd Wardie, of Ceton Coch, efq. to be theriff of Anglefey, vite Hughes; and Thomas Jones, of Llanlothian, efq. to be sent of Montgomeryshe, vice Price Jones Robert Wynne, fheriff of Carnarvonshire, to be Robert-William Wynne,

BILL of MORTALITY, from Feb, 23, to March 23, 1802.

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AVERAGE PRICES of CORN, from the Returns ending March 20, 1802. [387

INLAND COUNTIES.

Wheat Rye Barley Oats Beans

MARITIME COUNTIES.

Wheat Rye Barley Oats Beans. d. s. ds.

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AVERAGE PRICES, by which Exportation and Bounty are to be regulated.

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FRICES OF FLOUR,

oes. to gos. Horfe Pollard 245. od. to os.

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PRICE OF HAY AND STRAW, Mar. 27.

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Average Price of SUGAR, computed from the returns made in the week ending Mar. 24, 1802, is 375 51 per cwt, exclufive of the duty of Customs paid or payable thereon on the importation thereof into Great-Britain.

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55. 4. to 6s. 8' os. od. to os about 2000. Sheep and Lambs 600 6. cd. to 75. od. Beafts, 1 TALLOW, Mar. 22, per ftone of 81b. 4s. 1d. os. ol. Sunderland, oos. od. to oos. od. Newcle 425. od. to SOAP, Yellow, oos.-Mottled, oux-Curd, cos.

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[Printed by NICHOLS and SON, Red-Lion-Paffage, Fleet Street.]

1. BRANSCOMB and Co. Stock-Brokers, at the Lucky Lottery Office, N°11, Holborn.

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EACH

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