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VALUABLE FREEHOLD HOUSES AT MIDDLESBROUGH.

LARGEST CIRCULATION

OF ANY NEWSPAPER

IN THE

NORTH OF ENGLAND.

ESTABLISHED 1764.

THE

NEWCASTLE WEEKLY

CHRONICLE

PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY.

PRICE TWOPENCE.

TO BE SOLD, BY PRIVATE CONTRACT,

THE FOLLOWING

DESIRABLE FREEHOLD PROPERTY,

CONSISTING OF

ELEVEN MESSUAGES

OR DWELLING HOUSES,

SITUATE IN THE MUNICIPAL AND PARLIAMENTARY BOROUGH
OF MIDDLESBROUGH, VIZ.:

FIVE Four-roomed DWELLING-HOUSES, with sculleries, coal-houses, privies, and GARDENS behind the same, situate on the west side of Church-street.

Also, SIX Three-roomed COTTAGES, with sculleries, coalhouses, privies, and Gardens behind the same, situate on the west side of Fleetham-street.

All the above houses are of recent erection, are well supplied with water, and let to good tenants; and from their wellchosen situations in the rapidly increasing capital of the Cleve land Iron Trade are likely to increase considerably in value in a few years.

A Portion of the Purchase Money can remain on Mortgage. Further particulars may be known on application to GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL, Stokesley.

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As the Directory, when completed, will be presented to each Subscriber to the Middlesbrough Miscellany under two arrangements—the one Alphabetical, and the other according to Trades or Professions-the Publishers will be glad to have any errors they may have fallen into pointed out to them, or to be informed of any Omissions or Changes that may have taken place, in order that theirs may be the most Complete and Correct Directory of Middlesbrough now issued; and in each re-issue they will endeavour to keep it so.

Having closed their Middlesbrough Branch Shop in Linthorpe Road, Tweddell and Sons will feel obliged by all communications for them being addressed to the Cleveland Printing and Publishing Offices, Stokesley.

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Maria Appleby, schoolmistress.

William Weatherill, cashier (Robt. Lloyd & Co.)

Arthur Henry Whipham, engineer.

Robert Todd, builder.

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David Sharpe, foreman, (Backhouse & Dixon)
Jonathan Hall, beerhouse keeper.

John Jordison, printer and postmaster, (and Exchange- Frederick Newsted, metal broker, &c.,

buildings.)

John Ellerton, surgeon.

Emile Wattean, bolt and nut manufacturer.

John Walsh, clerk.

John R. Forbock, clerk.

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NEWPORT ROAD-continued.

James Gregory, accountant.
William Young, surgeon.
Christopher Maxwell, pork butcher.
Lister and Walton, baby linen warehouse.
William Lawton, auctioneer and valuer.
Misses Hanson, confectioners.
Isabella Hogan, baby linen warehouse.
James Haw, undertaker and joiner.
John Metcalf, picture frame maker.
Montague Joseph, tailor and draper.
Mary Ann Meek, lodging house keeper.
William Ketchen, surgeon.

William Young Veitch, surgeon.

Thomas Chapman, marine store dealer and china warehouse.

William Hinton, bookseller and schoolmaster.

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John Thompson, manager, (Bell Bros., Port Clarence.)

Stephen Fishburn, photographic artist.

NEWPORT ROAD-continued.

George Blackburn, confectioner.

John Hicks, foreman, (Hopkins, Gilkes, and Co.)
Love Brothers, spirit merchants.
George Mann, bookseller.

Ramsey Smith, grocer and wine merchant.
Thomas Knott, beerhouse keeper, (Vine Inn.)
Jane Dreghellen, lodging-house keeper.
John Ed. Kilburn, surgeon.

Peak and Co., tea merchants.

Henry Walbran Cooper, fent warehouse.

John Mankin, greengrocer and poulterer.
William Wake, butcher.

Archibald Linklater, gentleman.

George Hearse, innkeeper (Palmerston Hotel.)
Frederick Caswell, beerhouse-keeper.

William Love, shoemaker.

John Lee, shipping and coal merchant.
Richard Potter, builder.

Isaac Tucker, pork butcher.

William Bainbridge, fruiterer and greengrocer.
Henry Lyon, butcher.

North Acklam Co-Operative Society, grocery store, (W.

Barker, secretary.)

Frederick Wm. Thorpe, grocer.

Edward Todd, butcher.

Charles Wardle, chemist and druggist.
William Dale, grocer.

James Livsey, painter and decorator.

Emma Arnold, toy warehouse, &c.

Robert Sweeting, joiner, &c.

John Wm. Brown, fish dealer.

Thomas Hatfield, greengrocer.

William Bragg, grocer and provision merchant.

John Carter, photographic artist.

Thomas Francis Dobby, butcher.

Joseph Rozer, confectioner.

Charles Willman, auctioneer and valuer, Cleveland Hall Sale William Mason, Berlin wool warehouse and draper.

Rooms.

John S. Calvert, schoolmaster, (and Park-st.)

Franz Greoning, music warehouse, (and Linthorpe-rd.)

Thomas Kershaw, plumber and glazier.

Robert Andrews, painter and grainer.

Jonathan Dickinson, surgeon.

John Crossley, terra cotta, &c.

Punch Brothers, cabinet makers.

W. S. Morton, grocer.

Henry Edwards, printer and stationer.

Henry Mason, hair dresser, (and Commercial-st.)

John Joseph Wilson, bread baker and confectioner.

Charles Wrightson, butcher.

Middlesbro' Free Reading Room, open daily.

Ralph H. Pomfret, dyer.

Sylvester Darbyshire, grocer.
Stephenson Bowron, draper, &c.

George Farndale, chemist, druggist, and grocer.
William Todd, butcher.

Richard Ord, innkeeper, (Princess Alice Hotel)
William Crauston, boot and shoemaker.

William Byre, pork butcher.

Robert Davis, confectioner and bread baker.

Benjamin Daniels, fruiterer, (and Linthorpe-rd)

Harriet Hall, boot and shoemaker.

John Wesley Drake, draper.

Caddick and Bowen, grocers.

Emanuel Easton, greengrocer.

Robert Robinson, butcher.

George Ebenezer Shepherdson, watchmaker.

John Rush Bennett, second-hand furniture dealer.

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John Wake, tobacco merchant, (and Branch Post Office.) John Alcock Jones, ironmaster.

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MOTHER'S ADVICE TO DICK.

A Rhyme to illustrate the North York Dialect. BY FLORENCE CLEVELAND.

Come, Dick, lad, get out o' thi bed!

Ah's be fooarst te set t' spell up an end: Thou 's eeghteen year awd, an' Ah think 'At it's tahme thou was macking some fend.

Be up, mon, an' werk whaile te 's yabble!
Thi fayder 's werk'd hard all his days:
He's strovven fer us all like a man,

An' he 's vext when he sees ahdel ways.

He sed te me nobbut last neet,

"Ah doubt we 've deean wrang wiv our Dick:

Clevver chaps offens gets aboon wark,

An' Ah's flay'd he 'll get grahm'd wi' t' seeame stick."

What nonsense! says Ah-nivver fear!

A vast o' fooaks can't understand

That sum's hard at wark wiv ther heeads,
Whahle udders is werking wi' t' hand.

An' Dick's larning is better ner gold,
Fer a Langkisher chap use te say,

It was t' best thing a boddy kud hev,-
T' bumbailivs kuddent tak it away.

An' Ah sed 'at Loyyer Jones had sent wod
Thou kud start at his office te-day;
An' Ah thowt thou 'd get on varry weel:
An' he sed that he wish'd thou mud stay.

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An' bowldly stand up fer what's reet;

An' deea t' seeam when thou 's left te theesel' As if t' maister was awlus i' seet.

Trust i' God, an' try hard te be good,

An' nivver deea wrang te neea creeater : Te be greeat is a fine thing, neea doubt

Te be gud, ther 's neea doubt, is far greeater.

An' deea n't think it's thi addlings we want,—
We 's put them i' t' bank, lad, for thee:
Fer if thou dis weel fer theesel',
Thou 'll deea weel fer thi fayder an' me.

PRICE ONE SHILLING.

GRAVE AND GAY,

A Monthly Magazine of Literature, Art, etc.

"The contents are of a varied and interesting character. The stories are simply told, with a freshness and novelty about them."-Exeter Flying Post.

"We cordially recommend 'Grave and Gay.' It contains many papers of more than ordinary interest."-DrawingRoom Gazette.

"No. 2 augurs well for its success. There is a considerable amount of light reading, besides articles on various topics."Wakefield Express.

"It combines both amusement and instruction."-Nottingham Daily Guardian.

"Quite equal to the monthlies of older date. The list of contributors is very promising, and far above the average. It is one of those Magazines which being once read will always find a place on our table. For light and instructive reading our readers cannot do better than try 'Grave and Gay."-Banbury Advertiser.

"It is a capital shilling's worth."-Berwick Warder.

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"Grave and Gay' has several papers of more than ordinary merit."-Standard.

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