Saturday 06 Jul 1844 (p. 2, col. 4-5) ODD FELLOW'S FUNERAL, BRAMPTON.-On Saturday afternoon last, the Loyal Brampton Lodge of Odd-Fellows accompanied the remains of their deceased brother, Mr. John MODLIN, hatter, Brampton, to the grave. The members met in their Lodge Room, at Mr. ARMSTRONG's, White Lion Inn, and at a quarter to five formed themselves in procession, and proceeded to the deceased's house, thence to the church-yard, and in the same order returned to the Lodge Room. Upwards of 50 members formed the procession, each wearing a pair of white gloves, and a white rosette on the left breast, with a small piece of crape inserted in the middle. The deceased, who was not quite 24 years of age, was much respected in Brampton; and a very large concourse of people attended his funeral. He had been, till within about a month past, employed in a hat establishment in Manchester, and attributed his death from his having slept in a damp bed in that place. DISTRESSING ACCIDENT ON LANCASTER SANDS.-On Saturday last, a labouring man of the name of James FRYERS met with his death under the following painful circumstances. He was proceeding to Kent's Bank, on the opposite side of the river, to commence work for Mr. FOX, plasterer, of this town, from whom he had just obtained employment; and on reaching one of the numerous channels with which these sands are intersected, declined the offer of a "lift" that was made him by a carter who was crossing the sands at the same time, preferring to wade across. The result of this rash determination was, that when he had attained the centre of the stream, he was swept off his feet by the violence of the current, and carried seaward with great rapidity. Some fishermen who had witnessed the occurrence, immediately pushed off to his assistance, and had got close to him when the unfortunate man made an unsuccessful grasp at the boat, and then disappeared beneath its stern. On Wednesday evening the body "washed up" at Silverdale, a distance of five miles from the spot. There is, we regret to state, every probability that FRYERS was intoxicated at the time this melancholy accident took place, as he had been drinking rather freely at the Hest Bank Hotel previous to adventuring that passage across the sands which he was fated never to accomplish. He has left a wife and two children to mourn his loss.-Lancaster Guardian. The funeral of the Poet CAMPBELL took place yesterday, in Westminster Abbey. Mr. CAMPBELL's grave was dug in the centre of the Poet's Corner, and among the assembled mourners were Lord BROUGHAM, CAMPBELL, and Aberdeen, Sir Robert PEEL, and many other individuals of note in the political world.