Saturday 11 Jan 1845 (p. 3, col. 6-7) Deaths. At Holm Hill, near this city, on the 5th inst., Mary, the wife of T. SALKELD, Esq., aged 19 years. At Cavendish Place, on Thursday morning, after a painful illness of five years, Robert, son of Mr. Thomas NANSON, of this city, aged 7 years. On Monday the 6th instant, aged 82 years, Mr. Thomas HILL, who for upwards of half a century fulfilled the duties of organist in Carlisle Cathedral. In John Street, on the 6th inst., Henry ATKINSON, aged 14 years; and on the following day, in Shaddongate, Mr. John ATKINSON, dyer, grandfather of the above, aged 85 years. In Broad Guards, on the 7th inst., Mrs. Rachel WAUGH, aged 81 years; in Backhouses Walk, on the 29th ult., Mr. Alexander STEWART, aged 60 years; at Graystone Buildings, Botchergate, on the 3rd inst., Mr. Robert EWART, aged 68; in Botchergate, on the 3rd, Isabella, the wife of Mr. John BACKHOUSE, joiner, aged 30; same place, on the 7th, Mrs. Mary WILLIAMSON, aged 49 years; in John Street, on the 4th, Mr. Jonathan PORTHOUSE, aged 75 years. At Longburgh, Burgh-by-Sands, on the 30th ult., after a lingering illness, Ann, wife of William BAXTER, aged 67 years. At Great Orton, lately, Miss Mary STOREY, aged 87 years. At Low Hesket, on the 19th Dec., Mr. Thomas GRAVES, aged 88 years. At Oulton, in the parish of Wigton, on the 3rd inst., Margaret, youngest daughter of Joseph HARDSON [HARDON according to FreeBMD], aged 4 years. At Wigton, on the 3rd inst., Elizabeth, youngest daughter of John WAITE, aged 4 years; same place, on the 6th, Mr. William SHEFFIELD, aged 22 years. At Oulton, in the prime of life, lately, Mr. HOWE, schoolmaster, after a lingering illness, borne with christian fortitude and patient resignation. He was an industrious, zealous, and successful teacher. At Wheyrigg, on the 22nd Dec., Mr. Joseph CARRICK, aged 62 years,-highly esteemed for his endearing disposition and inoffensive manners. At Blaithwaite, on Sunday last, Mr. John BARNES, aged 43 years, after a long and painful illness; regretted by his friends and acquaintances. At Brampton, at his son-in-law's, Jos. LITTLE, on the 5th inst., Mr. Robert ARMSTRONG, horse dealer, aged 76 years; and on the 6th inst., Elizabeth, widow of the late Mr. John HODGSON, joiner, aged 65: by her death the poor have lost one of their best friends. At Renwick, on the 4th inst., Mr. Jos. LOWTHIAN, aged 69. At Fordsyke, in the parish of Scaleby, Mr. John STANWIX, in the 81st year of his age. At Laversdale, on Tuesday last, Mr. Richard MULCASTER, yeoman, aged 76 years. At Allonby, on Sunday week, Mr. William GRAHAM, weaver, aged 67 years; same place, on Saturday last, Mr. John BEEBY, one of the Society of Friends, aged 60 years. At Penrith, on the 8th inst., Catharine BARNES, widow, aged 74. At Stainton, near Penrith, on the 5th inst., Ann, the wife of Mr. George DENNISON, aged 26 years,-much and deservedly respected. At Glasgow, on the 1st inst., Mrs. Ann BAIRD, the daughter of Edmund DENNISON, late of Thomas Close, aged 39 years. At Spencycroft, Alston, on the 2nd inst., aged 63 years, Mr. Thomas DICKINSON, Moor Master for the Commissioners of Greenwich Hospital, in the Manor of Alston. At Workington, on the 27th Dec., Mr. Isaac HUTCHINSON, in the 58th year of his age. At Godferhead, in Loweswater, Mr. Joseph HETHERINGTON, aged 40 years,-much and deseervedly [sic] respected. At Newport, Salop, on the 1st inst., aged 23 years, (in child-bed,) Sarah H., the affectionate and beloved wife of Mr. T. E. ATKINSON, draper, and daughter of Mr. Edward CROSS, builder, Uttoxeter. Her end was peaceful and happy. She was esteemed and beloved by all who knew her,-long will her memory be endeared; and her loss is keenly felt and deeply lamented by her family, and a large circle of friends. At his house, in Roper Street, Whitehaven, on the 1st instant, Daniel BIRD, Esq., in his 69th year. At the house of Edward ATTWOOD, Esq., Sunderland, on the 29th ult., Mrs. Ann ELLIOT, of Whitehaven, aged 76. In College Street, Whitehaven, on Thursday week, aged 84 years, Mr. Jeremiah GUEST, formerly and for several years a celebrated auctioneer in that place. At Workington, on Sunday last, Mary, daughter of Mr. David HARDY, aged 22 years. At Fitz Toll Bar, near Cockermouth, on the 24th Dec., Jane, relict of the late Mr. George THURLOW, formerly of West Newton, aged 88 years. At Cockermouth, on Saturday last, Sarah, the wife of Mr. R. KERRUISH, pawnbroker, after a long lingering illness, aged 48; and on Tuesday, the 31st ult., at the Union Workhouse, Thomas DRAPER, currier, recently of London, aged 40 years. At the house of her brother-in law (Mr. WATSON, a surveyor), Keswick, on Wednesday last, Miss Mary CHISMAN, late of London, aged 47 years; at Keswick, on Sunday night last, Mr. John KNOX, formerly an eminent artist in Glasgow, in the 64th year of his age; same place, on Wednesday last, Nancy, the wife of Mr. Thomas LITTLEDALE, woollen weaver, aged 60 years. At Leeds, on Saturday last, aged 71, George MOODY, Esq., formerly a surgeon at Longtown. At Netherfield, on the 1st inst., in her 27th year, Susan, the wife of Mr. John WILSON, and third daughter of the late E. H. GRANT, Esq., of Kendal. In Kendal, on Thursday, William SATTERTHWAITE, Esq., aged 67, formerly in the bank of Messrs. WAKEFIELD and Sons; on Monday morning last, Mr. William DIXON, of the Crown Inn, Kendal, aged 45 years. At his residence in Queen-square, Newcastle, on the 3rd inst., after a short illness, in the prime of life, Henry SHIELD, Esq., wine and spirit merchant, and a member of the Town Council of that Borough. SUDDEN DEATH OF MR. BREBNER.-We sincerely regret to announce the death of Mr. BREBNER, Governor of the Glasgow Prisons, and Superintendant of the Prisons of Lanarkshire. It took place in Edinburgh on Monday, and was strikingly sudden. An Edinburgh paper of Tuesday says-"He had come from Glasgow to Edinburgh yesterday morning, on business connected with the General Prison Board, and while waiting at the office of the Board in George Street, he fell down, apparently in a fit. Medical assistance was called, and Professor LIZARS was with him immediately after, but his services were of no avail, Mr. BREBNER's death having been instantaneous. >From the absence of all symptoms, Professor LIZARS presumed that death had resulted from the rupture of an aneurism of one of the large blood vessels of the chest or abdomen. DEATH OF SOLOMON HEINE.-At Hamburgh, on the 23rd of December, died Mr. Solomon HEINE, the wealthy banker. Mr. HEINE, who was in the seventy-eighth year of his age, had long been drooping, and his death will be severely felt in Hamburgh. It is reported that he leaves property to the extent of one million sterling. It is well known that he was of the Jewish persuasion, and he remained true to his faith to the hour of his death; but he was by no means bigoted, as his splendid contributions towards the erection or repair of Christian edifices must testify. He was a man of very humble origin, and upon his earliest visit to Hamburgh from the place of his birth (an obscure village in the kingdom of Hanover), he had to struggle with difficulties which extended even to his means of obtaining the first necessaries of life. His education had been entirely neglected, even to the mere rudiments, but he had the natural gift of a clear head and strong mind. Having struggled on for many years during the war, first in a subordinate capacity, and subsequently as banker, he was in a position at its close to participate in all those large loans which were negociated by the different continental governments, and the vastness of his fortune may be dated from that period.