Yarborou;;-h Wapeotake. Robinson Mrs Ann, farmer Towries John, ahopkeeper & carrier Willis Mrs

Bose Matth6W 1 farmer Walker William, joiner aud builder CARBIERs-To ,Jno. Towries Short Thomas, bricklayer & farmer Westoby William, farmer on Friday ; Chas. Bell and Geo. Smithson Robert, victualler, Yar- Williamson Mrs Ann, farmer Carter, to Barton on Monday, borough Commercial Inn and Williamson George, farmer Hull on Tuesday, and Grimsby on posting house, Ulceby Junction Williamson Geo. Ruddiforth, farmer, . Friday ; to 1 Charles Bell on Tong Joseph, victualler, Cross Keys Chase hill Thursday

• KIRMINGTON. - KIRMINGTON, a pleasant village in a fertile vale between two ranges of the Wolds, 7 miles N. oi and E. by N. of Brigg, and 3 E. of Barnetby railway station, has in its 419 souls, and about 1815 acres of laud, including Kirmington Vale, a large farm, 1-! mile S. of the village. The owns most of the soil, and is lord of the manor, impropriator, and patron of the living. The Church (St. Helen), is an ancient structure, with. a large tower containing one bell and a clock, crowned by a lofty spire of wood, covered with copper, and erected in 1838, by the first Earl of Yar­ borough. The chancel was restored, in 1860, by the present Earl, the north aisle by William Hudson. Esq., the south aisle by John Frankish, Esq., and the clock was given to the parishioners by Mrs. Barnard, The vicarage, valued in K.B. at £4. l8s. 4d., wa~ consolidated with the rectory of Brocklesby in 1858, and the joint benefice, now worth £450 per annum, is in the incumbency of the Rev. John Henry John­ son, B.A., who has 170 acres of glebe, and a good Recto1·y house, built in 1846, at a cost of £1500. The Wesleyan and Primitive Methodists have chapels here ; and in the village is an Infant School, erected by the late Earl of Yarborough, in 1855. The pal'ish is noted for its fine beds of clay, gravel and chalk. - Letters via Ulceby, which is the nearest Money Order Office. Barnaby Mr William Frankish William John, farmer, Sansome Miss Sarab, day school Beverley Thomas, bricklayer Kirmington house Smith William John, farmer Blanchard Joseph, tailor & draper Havercroft Mrs Martha, shopkeeper Spalding Richard, market gardenel! Cartwright George, farmer Havercroft William, wheelwright Wilkinson Oliver, shoemaker Catley Mrs Sarah, shopkeeper Hudson Wm. farmer, Kirmington vl Wilson William, saddler Croft Mr George J ackson John, shoemaker Wray Thomas, wheelwright Dale Henry, blacksmith Johnson Rev John Henry, B..A. vicar Young Thomas, shoemaker Dale William, tailor & parish clerk Lanca17ter William, farmer Frankish Martin, shopkeeper, carrier Nelson Henry, farmer CARRIER-Martin Frankish, to Brigg, 11nd vict. Marrow Bone & Cleaver Ransom Joseph, shopkeeper Thursday i H1~ll~ 'J,'uesday

LIMBER (GREAT). LIMBER (GREAT), or Limber Magna, is a neat and pleasant village, 10 miles E. of Brigg and W. of Grimsby, and 2 miles from Brocklesby railway station, near the Mausoleum and south lodge of Brock· lesby Park, both of which stand in this parish, which contains 541 souls, and about 5180 acres of land, including extensive plantations, and nearly all belonging to the Earl of Yarborough, the lord of the manor. Here was an alien priory, under the abbey of Aveny, in Normandy, but afterwards appropriated to the Carthusian abbe~ of St. Anne, near Coventry. At the dissolution it was granted to John Bellow and others. The Church (St. Peter) is an ancient fabric, consisting of nave, chancel, north and south aisles, south porch and square western tower, with three bells. The beautiful new east window was in~ serted in 1855, and filled with stained glass, in memory of the late George Nelson, Esq., and his wife, at the expense of their surviving children. The vicarage, valued in K.B. at £9. 18s. 4d., and now at £644, has 58A, 20P. of glebe, and a yearly modus in lieu of tithes. The Lord Chancellor is patron, and the Rev. Thomas Ffoster Chamberlain, M.A., surrogate and h.on. canon of Manchester is the incumbent, and has a neat vicarage house, built in 1829. A Wesleyan Chapel was erected here in 1841. The poor parishioners have 16 acres of land, at Cadney-cum-Housham, let for £20 a year, and purchased with . £100, left by Robert Smith, in 1626. In this parish are Brocklesby Park Schools, built by the Earl of Yarborough, in 1849, for this and the of Brocklesby, , Kirmington and . They are attended by 160 children ; and have a good Library of 300 volumes for the working classes, supported by the gentry, farmers, and tradesmen of the parish and neighbourhood, and established in 1854. This is the head-quarte1·s of the 1st Light Horse Volunteers, constituting a squadron numbering 70 members. The Earl of Yarborough is captain-commandant; William Thorold, Esq., lieut(Jnant; Messrs. W. Richardson and G. ·w. Golton, trumpeters .i and Sergeant T. W, Smith, drill instructor. - PosT OFFICE at Mr. John Dann's, where letters arrive at 10.30 a.m., and ·are despatched at 3.0 p.m., via Ulceby, which is the nearest Money Order Office. Anderson Mrs Jane, butcher and Crow Robert, shopkeeper and carrier Elphick William, farmer and vict. agricultural seed dealer Cutting J ames, shoemaker New Inn (commercial & posting) Chamberlain Rev Thomas Ffoster, Da.nn John, grocer and draper and Grimbleby Francis, blacksmith M.A. vicar postmaster Hedley William, farmer . Coover Henry, tailor Frankish Wm. farmer, Limber hill Hopkins T,4omasl farmer, Grange_ •