590 WAL TO~ -ON·THE-WOLDS. . [KELLY'S Payne Edmunds, of Peterborough, mother of the late Daniel Hensan, John Taylor, Charles R AndersoD and rector's wife: the church was restored in 1877 at a the rector. The soil is partly strong loam and gratel; cost of £1,050, and affords 120 sittings. The register subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, dates from the ~'ear 1566. The living is a rectory, net barley, beans and roots. The area is 1,545 acres of land Jearly value £380, derived from 289 acres of glebe, with and 5 of water; rateable value, £1,961; the population J'E'sidence, in the gift of George Bertie B~rd esq. and 1ll 1901 was 192. held sin~e 1894 by the Rev. Montague Bertie Bird B.A. Parish Clerk, William Dunsmore. ()f Queen's College, Oxford: the late Vice-Adm. the Hon. Post Office.-Mrs. Mary Ann Phipps, sub-postmistress. .A ugustus Charles Hobart-Hampden (Hobart Pasha) was Letters from arrive at 7.30 a.m. & are born at the rectory I April, 1822, his father, the 6th dispatched at 6.20 p.m.; no delivery on sunday. Earl of Buckinghamshire, being then rector of the Barrow-on-Soar, 2 miles distant, is the nearest tele- parish; the Pasha dipd 19 June, 1886. There is a graph & money order office charity of 18s. a year for the poor, derived froul Blunt's The school room is the property of the rector & let to charity of Leicester. Here is a Primitive Methodist the managers of the school chapel. George Bertie Bird esq. is lord of the manor. Public Elementary School, for 35 children; average The principal landowners are tobe Duke of Somerset, attendance, 30; Miss Williams, mistress .Tohn Davys Cradock esq. of Quorn Court, Messrs. Carriers to Loughborough.-George Goodson, thurs • :Bird Rev. Montague Bertie RA. Brown William, Anchor inn "Mason Joseph, farmer Rectory Clarke John, farmer Phipps ""Villiam Haniable, shopkeeper, Daft William, grazier Post office COMMERCIAL. Goodson George, carrier Stevenson John, farmer, Middle farm 'Barnes William, grazier H'lmes Joseph, farmer Stonehouse Brothers, traction engine Barnett Albert, grazier Harrad Edy (Mrs.), farmer &; threshing- machine owners :Bassford George, blacksmith Henson Daniel, farmer &, landowner, Towle Samuel, farmer :Berrid,ge James, farmer Manor farm Tuckwood Joseph, grazier :Bramley Joseph Ellis, farmer Henson William, farmer, Top farm Whitcroft John, grazier W ANLIP is a township, village and parish on the affords 100 SittillgS. The register dates from the year west bank of the Soar, 1~ miles west from sta- 1561 and is in excellent condition. The living is a tion on the main line of the Midland railway, 2i south- rectory, net yearly value £229, including 21 acres of east from station on the London extension of glebe and residence, in the gift of Lady Augusta the Great Central railway and 41 north from Leicester, Palmer, and held since 1908 by the Rev. Arthur Oswel in the Eastern division of the county, West Goscote 'James M.A. of Lincoln College, .Oxford. The Rev. hundred, Barrow-upon-Soar union, Leicester petty William Spencer D.D. rector of Thurnscoe, in the county sessional division and county court district, rural deanery of York, in 1714, left £5, to be paid yearly to the poor of Goscote (second portion), archdeaconry of Leicester of the parish for ever; WaIter Spencer, of Wanlip, in and diocese of Peterborough. The church of St. Nicho- 1710, left Ss. to be given away yearly in bread at las, erected at the close of the 14th century, consists Christmas and Easter. Wanlip Hall, a mansion of brick of chancel, nave, south aisle and porch, erected in stuccoed, standing in a small but well-wooded park, is 19°3-4, and an embattled western tower containing 3 the seat of Lady Augusta Palmpr, lady of the manor bells: on the floor of the chancel is a fine brass, dated and principal landowner. The soil is sand, gravel and 1393, with effigies to the founders, "Thomas Walsh, of clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats Wanlip, and Dame Katherine, his wife, which in their and turnips. The arpa is 969 acres of land and 8 of time made the kirk of Wanlip and hallowed the kirk water; rateable value, £1,31I; the population in 1901 yard to the worship of God, and in honour of Our was I la. Lady and St. Nicholas;" the figure of the knight is in Lett"r Box cleared at 7.50 a.m. &, 6.40 p.m. & 9 a.m. full plate armour, with sword and open helmet, and sundays. Letters by foot post from Leicester, via that of his lady in the costume of the period: there S h P I f'l d d 6 yston, arrive at 7·45 a.m. & 6 p.m.; sundays, 8 a.m. are mura1 t ablets to tea mer amI y, ate I 73, Box cleared at 9 a.m. The nearest money order & 1692 , 1695 and 1822, and the church plate was presented telegraph office is at Syston, 2 miles distant in 1632 by Archdale Palmer esq. sometime M.P. for Leicester, d. 1634: the organ was erected in 1881 by Public Elementary School, built by the late Lady Palmer the Rev. W. H. Palmer, rector 1875-1908, and in 1903-4 (d. 1871) in 1839, for 25 children; average attendance, the church was restored at a cost of about £1,700, and 15; Miss Platts, mistress Palmer Lady Augusta, Wanlip hall COMMERCIAL. Gascoigne William Henry, head gar- James Rev. Arthur Oswel M.A. Brooks Waiter, gamekeeper to Lady dener to Lady Augusta Palmer (rector), Rectory Aug-usta Palmer Hopkinson Edwd. frmr.The Hall frm Chamberlain Stephen Norman, farmr Nelson Anthony, farmer Chamberlain Thomas, Manor farm Soar George Henry, cycle repairer WARTNA:BY is a to"Wnship and parish formed out for the relief of the poor, amounting to £8 per year. of the parish of Rothley, 1~ miles north-east from Wartnaby Hall, a mansion of brick, partly covered with Grimston station on the Melton Mowbray and Notting- ivy and surrounded by extensive pleasure grounds, is ham section of the Midland railway, 4 north-west from the residence of George Carter Oliver esq. J.P. Melton Mowbray and 112 from London by rail, in the Frederick Mertens esq. of Rothley Temple, is lord of Eastern division of the county, hundred, the manor. The Bingham trustees are the principal Melton Mowbray petty sessional division, union and landowners. The soil is partly clay; subsoil, Tocky.