I!GS Shropshire — Worcesier* [Dec. 1 ^ 
Mr, William Bollsonnade, to Miss Ann Car¬ 
penter, of Coventry. 
Mr. W. Drew, of Tenbury, to Miss Be- 
van, of the Hill Kali. 
Mr. Herbert, to Mrs. Radbourn, of Co¬ 
ventry. 
Mr. James Mallett, to Miss Elizabeth 
Birch, both of Coleshill. 
Mr. Robert Latham, to Miss Hannah Car¬ 
ter, both of Birmingham.—-Mr. E. Robbins, 
to Anne, eldest daughter of Mr. Wm. Pool- 
ton, of Birmingham, 
Mr. Macknight, of ShifFnal, to Mrs. Mack- 
t^iight, of West Bromwich. 
Died.^ At Birmingham, Mr. James Had¬ 
ley, nail manufacturer, 36.—Mr. Thomas 
Frost, eldest son of Mr. J. Frost, of Summer 
- Hill, :25 — Mr. T. Simcox, broker, of Navi¬ 
gation-street.—Mr. Benjamin Faulkner, of 
the Bali’s Head Tavern, Whittall-street, 45. 
—Mrs. Bartleet, wife of Mr. B. of Great 
Charles-street, 37.—After a lingering illness, 
JJr. William Jones, late of Aslited, 22.— 
Mary Ann, daughter of Mr. Copewell, of 
Birmingham Heath.—-Mr. James Bedford, of 
Boroesley, 32.*—Mrs. Morgan, wife of Mr. 
Rees M. of Eordesley-street, 59.—Mr. Ro¬ 
bert Lloyd, bookseller, printer and proprietor 
of Aris’s Birmingham Gazette, third son of 
Charles L. esq. banker, aged 32. The cir¬ 
cumstances attending this decease have deeply 
interested the feelings of the numerous 
branches of this lamiiy. In the short space 
of littie more than one month, two brothers 
and one most amiable sister have fallen, in 
the prime of life, the victims of di*.e3£e. In 
the two recent instances, it may be said, they 
were hurried by the impulse of affection into 
the arms of danger; for, on the illness of their 
brother, Mr. Thomas Lloyd, who was at¬ 
tacked with a violent fever, they hew to at¬ 
tend him with an assiduity that proved fatil 
to tiiemseives * Never was affectionate soli¬ 
citude more forcibly displayed, and seldom 
have its efforts proved so unavailing and its 
effects £0 calamitous. Miss Lloyd v^’as lovely, 
sensible, and accomplished, and her memory 
will ever be united with recollecrions in¬ 
teresting although m.elancholy. Of this af¬ 
fectionate band it may be truly said, that 
they w'^ere loveiy in their lives, and in their 
deaths they were not divided h' 
jane Spittle, wife of Samuel S. gunsmith, 
54, 
I\Ir. W. Serjeant, of Wyken, near Co¬ 
ventry., 
Mrs. Buswell, of Little Park-streer, Co¬ 
ventry.—Suddenly, Mrs. Elliott, wife of Lfr. 
William E.of Spon-street, Coventry. 
SiiROrSHiR E. 
A very alarming fire lately broke out in 
the fiax-dressers’ room at the linen factory, 
belonging to Messrs. Marshall, Hutton, and 
Co! pear this town, and in about half an hour 
the toof fell in ; and the builc^mg, which is 
forty or fifty yards in extent, exhibited the 
appearance of an immense furnace of fiaraicc 
The factory was lighted with gas, and It was 
said that the fire was occasioned by the burst¬ 
ing of one of the feeders of the gas-lights; 
but it appears that the cause of the confla¬ 
gration was not the bursting or any gas-pipe, 
or feeder, as it was improperly called; the 
pipes never being in any danger of bursting ; 
nor can any just conclusion be drawn from it 
injurious to the general safety of gas lights. 
Marricd.l At West Felton, Mr. E. 
Croxon, of Oswestry, to Miss Hurhton, of 
Sutton. 
Mr. J. Wilkes, to Mrs. Ferney, both of 
Wellington. 
At Madeley, Mr. T. Rogers', oS. Coalbrook-. 
dale, to Mrs. Powell, of Dawley. 
Mr. T. Fennell, to Miss Aston, both of 
Coalport. 
Mr. Shuker, of Gretton, to Ann, the 
youngest daughter of Mr. Robinson, of Sad- 
dlewmrth. 
Mr. Purcell, of Shrewsbury, to Miss S» 
Baker, of Whitchurch. 
Mr. R. Parker, of Ellesmere, to Miss 
Price, of Hanmer. 
Mr. Macknight, of Shiffnal, to Mrs, Mack*? 
night, of West 6ronqv;ich 
IMr. S. Rose, cf Dawley Magna, to Miss 
Rowland. 
Mr. Richard Evans, of Rhayader, to Miss 
Ann Stephens; of Presteign. 
Dkd.'\ Mrs; P’ckstock, of Preston Boats, 
near Atcham. 
jMr. T. Ford, timber merchant, Wel¬ 
lington. 
At Jackfield, near Broseley, Mr. Go 
Licyd. 
Mr. J. Lee, of the Three Horse-Shoes, 
Made)y.—Mr F. Hatton, Madely Wood. 
At Oswestry, Mrs. Lloyd, relict of the late 
F. L. esq- of Berghill, 88.—R* Bickerton, esq. 
senior alderman of the corporation of Oswes¬ 
try.—Mrs. Earp, of Betton Abbots, 86. 
At Meole Brace, near Shrewsbury, Mrs. 
Slaney, relict of the late Plowden S. esq. of 
Hattoi;, near Shiffnal, 
At Brockton, Mrs, Farmer, of the New-# 
House. 
Mr..T. Bradburne, Frankvmil, 55. 
Mr. R. A. Charlton, of Charlton, leaving 
a wife and 12 children. 
Mrs. Farmer, widow of the late Wm. F. 
esq, of Brockton, 77, 
Mr. Thomas Evans, gardener, of Orle*. 
ton, 61. 
At Leebotwood, Mr. T. Hotclikiss, 87. 
WORCESTE.SStlllKE. 
A man who was lately employed in getting 
stone out of a quarry at Cleeve Prior, near 
Evesham, discovered two large earthen pots, 
which contained a considerable quantity of 
coin. They proved to be goid and silver 
coins of several Roman emperois. The gold 
coins those of Valerian, one of the Valen- 
tians, Gratian, and Theodosius, in an exct;l- 
lent ffate of preservation ; counterfeits were 
also discovered among .them, executed in a 
r.ic's? 
