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MIDDLESBROUGH MISCELLANY

OF LITERATURE AND ADVERTISEMENTS.

No. 4.

To be completed in Eighteen Numbers.

Price 1d.

MIDDLESBROUGH STREET DIRECTORY.
(Continued from page 26.)

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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COMMERCIAL STREET.

William Laws, builder.
Scrafton Stonehouse, miller.
William Dowey, innkeeper.

Barnabus Rutter, blacksmith.

J. W. Easson and Co., timber merchants.
Matthew Dunn, innkeeper.

Richard West, engine and blacksmith.
John Ingram, builder.

Herbert Pearson, butcher.

Elliott Baxter, sailmaker.

George Moffitt, innkeeper.

John Wing, butcher.

William Hoggett, innkeeper.

Henry Mason, hairdresser.

Andrew Thompson, tailor and draper.

James Wooley, lodging-house keeper and second-hand clothes

dealer.

Philip Franklin, leather cutter.

Isabella Cummings, grocer.

Robert Dobbing, blacksmith.

Richard Carter, joiner and undertaker.

George Henderson, tailor and draper.

Charles Newton, innkeeper.

David Harrison, grocer.

Marmaduke Pickering, hairdresser.

David Chadwick, clogger.

William Spencer, confectioner.

Henry Murray, shoemaker.

Thomas Rudd, eating-house keeper.

William Mc Leod, shipping agent.

Thomas Hallam, timber merchant.

Robert Gargett, buyer of old iron, dealer in firewood, &e..
Thomas Sanderson, slater

LOWER COMMERCIAL STREET.

Middlesbrough Gas Company; Thomas C. Close, manager,
Henry Charles Harrison, innkeeper.
Samuel Allman, boot and shoe maker.
Johnson Flounders, hairdresser.

Andrew Brown and Co., brass founders.

James Thirkell, watchmaker, dealer in ship charts, &c.

Andrew Brown, jun., iron founder.

Elizabeth Rymer, beer-house keeper.

John Wooding, beer-house keeper.

William Wheeler, tinsmith.

Thomas Huddart, sailmaker, dealer in ship stores.

William Caswell, tinsmith, dealer in ship stores.

John A. Manners, colliery agent.

Hogg and Henderson, coal merchants.

Pauls and Co., ship brokers and coal agents.
Harrison Groves, ship broker and coal agent.

John Joseph Smith, ship broker and coal agent.
Thomas Robinson, butcher.

Rachael Mitchell, innkeeper.

Thomas Price, ship broker.

Thomas White, blacking manufacturer.

Henry Grey, colliery agent.

Warley Pickering, ship chandler.

William Rayner, ship broker.

John Morritt Lennard, ship broker.
Schmidborn and Co., ship brokers.
William Simpson, shoemaker.

James Edwards, grocer and marine store dealer.
Thomas Spence, pot and china warehouse.
William Burdon, pot and china warehouse.
Thomas Charlton, metal broker.

James Arnett, cement warehouse.

Alfred Wild, grocer,

George Atkinson, grocer.

Robert Wild, grocer.

Thomas Greathead, butcher.

Henry Wilson, blacksmith.

Cleveland Bolt and Nut Works; Emile Watteau, manager.

Hopkins, Gilkes, and Co., Tees Engine Works.

Isaac Wilson and Co., pottery; Thomas Lincoln, manager.

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James Taylor, wharfinger, steamers to London twice a week.

Hogg and Henderson, coal merchants' yard.

Robert Craggs and Sons, timber merchants' yard.

DOCK ENTRANCE.

William Evamy, shipwright.

William Burrell, boat builder.

Thomas Scott Campbell, block and mast maker. John Shutt, shipwright.

Henry Douthwaite, block and mast maker.

Robert Hammond, dock-master.

Dock Offices; William Fallows, manager.

CURE FOR TIC DOLOREUX, OR

PAIN IN THE TEETH, FACE, AND HEAD,

NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, AND PAIN

IN THE LIMBS.

ARLOW'S CELEBRATED POWDERS quickly remove They contain nothing injurious,

Bthese painfui affections.

but are, in every respect, conducive to health. They are invigorating, and go alone to the cause of the complaint. Testimonials from many well-known philanthropists, medical men, Clergy, Wesleyan, Baptist, and other ministers, who have given extensive destribution to this sterling remedy, shall be sent FREE on application; and, in submitting these to notice, I distinctly state that every attestation is genuine; the whole of them furnish evidence which will bear the strictest investigation.

The Powders are sent post paid to all parts of the Kingdom, on receipt of letter stamps by the sole Proprietor, SAMUEL BARLOW, Chemist, Darlington; and sold by most Chemists, in Packets at 2s. 9d. and in Half-packets at 1s. 6d. each.

See that S. BARLOW's name is on the Packet, and do not be persuaded to take any other.

"I consider them to be worth double the money they are sold for."-Thomas Bowes, Easthorpe Hall, Malton.

"These powders work wonders in my neighbourhood.”Rev. Kennet C. Bayley, Copford Rectory, Colchester. "I have great pleasure in recommending Mr. Barlow's capital powders."-The Honourable Mrs. F. Grimston, Wakes Colne, Halstead.

Hundreds of such Testimonials sent Free.

C. BELL,

GENERAL DRAPER,

No. 1, SUSSEX STREET,

MIDDLESBROUGH.

RICHARD RUTTER,

26, ALBERT ROAD, MIDDLESBROUGH,

LICENSED TO LET

Bolckow, Vaughan, and Co., iron works; Edward Williams, HORSES, CABS, DOG-CARTS, &c.

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EPIGRAM.

Curst be the man* that could believe

Women debarr'd from Heaven!

A wretch like him we must condemn
As ne'er to be forgiven.

Born of a woman was the wretch?
Man I should not have call'd him :

Women! if he was now alive,

Would you not like to maul him?

PETER PROLETARIUS.

• A doctrine generally, but erroneously, attributed, in this country, at least, to Mahammed or Mahomet, the founder of the Mussulman religion, who has quite enough to answer for without making him worse than he was.

MIDDLESBRO' AND ALBERT PARK 'BUS.

TIME TABLE.

The 'Bus will run daily as follows until further notice.

LEAVE MIDDLESBRO'.-8'0 a.m., 9:45, 10:45, 10 p.m., 20, 30, 4·0, 5·0, 6·0, 7·0, 8·0, 90.

LEAVE LINTHORPE.-8.50 a.m., 10:30, 12:30, 1:30 p.m., 2:30, 3:30, 4·30, 5·30, 6·30, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30.

FARE 2d. Each Way. CHILDREN 1d.

On Sundays the 'Bus commences to run at 2 o'clock according to the
Time Table.

WEEKLY TICKETS BY ARRANGEMENT.

OLIVER'S 'BUS.

MIDDLESBROUGH AND GROVE HILL.

Leave the DOCKS--12 45 pm., 5'45.
Leave the EXCHANGE-80 a.m., 10 p.m, 6 0.
Leave GROVE HILL-8:45 a.m., 20 p.m., 7.0.

FARE 3d. each way. CHILDREN 2d.

MIDDLESBROUGH AND NORTH ORMESBY. Leave the RAILWAY CROSSING-10 0 2.m., 30 p.m., 40, 7:45, 8:30, 915.

Leave NORTH ORMESBY—10 30 a.m., 3·30 p.m., 4·30, 8·0, 8:45, 9:30.

CAPITAL PUNISHMENTS.-The opinion-founded upon the truest analogies-has been recently gaining acceptance, that crimes are merely the symptoms of moral disease; that criminals are only patients; and it is equally true-though not yet practically recognised-that a reverse of fortune, or the failure of an honest speculation, is merely a calamity calling for sympathy and help, and not a crime deserving punishment. With reference to the first of these theories, there are but three motives that can, by any possibility, be supposed to dictate the violent death of any criminal-revenge, prevention, and reformation. The first no Christian government will of course recognise; the second involves an impossibility respecting the special crime for which the punishment is inflicted; and it is clear that capital punishment, alone of all penalties, renders the third equally unattainable. Besides, and independently of the principle that man, being fallible and shortsighted, should do as little as possible that is irreversible, there is a sanctity about human life that should render its destruction too heavy and solemn a responsibility. In cases where men are convicted of crimes of which they are innocent, if the punishment be any other than death, the victim of the mistake may be, to some extent, indemnified; but if his life be taken, it will be but slight recompense to apologize for the error. We cannot undo the shame, the agony, the vain and maddening indignation that he has suffered in that horrible and ignominious death. From the history and statistics of the question we learn, that, among those ancient nations in which the lives of citizens were sacred, except in cases of politi cal treason, the crimes, for which modern laws inflict capital punishment, where scarcely ever heard of; and an executioner was regarded as being altogether outside the pale of humanity. Men did not, in those days, commit murder because they were safe from the axe and the noose, nor would All kinds of Frames made, Re-Gilt, or Repaired, on they now, so frequently as they do, if the more formidable and less demoralizing, but reversible, sentence of perpetual imprisonment were substituted for death. Terror and danger have really much less power over the will than is generally supposed; and accordingly, it is an ascertained fact, that, in proportion as penalties are mitigated, and the more generous feelings of our nature called into action, many forms of crime decrease very perceptibly.--DR. OwGAN.

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EDMUND

CARVER

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HOP WOOD,
AND GILDER, PRINTSELLER,
AND PICTURE FRAME MAKER,

(WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,)
LINTHORPE

MIDDLESBROUGH.

ROAD,

the Premises, on the Shortest Notice. Experienced Workmen sent out to Re-Gild, &c., at Gentlemen's own Residences.

HYMNS ANCIENT AND MODERN,

WITH INTROITS AND ANTHEMS

FOR USE IN THE SERVICES OF THE CHURCH, From One Penny to Fifteen Shillings a Copy; BIBLES, PRAYER BOOKS, AND CHURCH SERVICES,

IN GREAT VARIETY. MAY BE HAD AT

Tweddell and Sons, Booksellers, Stokesley.

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Letters, &c., for any Mail can be registered at the counter for the ordinary fee of 4d. up to 30 minutes before the closing of the Letter Box for that Mail, or up to the actual time of closing the Letter Box for an extra fee of 4d.

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On Sunday, Christmas Day, and Good Friday, there is only One Delivery by Letter Carriers, and Letters are delivered at the Office Counter from 8 a.m. until 10 a.m. only.

MONEY ORDERS, SAVINGS BANK, GOVERNMENT INSURANCES & ANNUITIES.

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No Money Order, Savings Bank, Insurance, or Annuity Business is transacted on a Sunday, Christmas Day, or Good Friday.

POSTAL TELEGRAPHS.

Messages received and forwarded from 7 a.m. till 8 p.m. on Week-days, and from 8 a.m. till 10 a. m. on Sundays.

HOURS OF ATTENDANCE.

This Office is, on Week-days, opened to the Public for Ordinary Business from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
On Sundays the Office is open only from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.

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THE FREEMASON'S MAGAZINE AND

MASONIC MIRROR,

A Journal of Literature, Science, and Masonry, is now published every Saturday Morning. The following are the Terms of Subscription :-One year paid in advance, 13/-; Six Months, 6/- 6d. ; Single Copies by Post, 34d.

OFFICE: 19, Salisbury Street, Strand, London, W.C.
Offices in Scotland, 33, Renfield Street, Glasgow.

то ADVERTISERS. FREEMASON'S MAGAZINE AND MASONIC

In a Country such as Britain, full of running streams, Bridges form an essential part of every system of roads, connecting the various districts of the Kingdom with each other. * · * The great conveniences of Bridges gradully led to their erection along many of the principal routes through the country. In the first place, they superseded Fords; and when the art of Bridge Building had become more advanced, they superseded Ferries-always an inconvenient, and often a dangerous, method of crossing rapid rivers. nection with those on the opposite bank of the river flowing between them, The Bridge brought the inhabitants of certain districts into immediate con

and enabled them freely to hold intercourse and exchange produce with each other."-DR. SMILES'S Lives of the Engineers.

"It describes, in terse and racy language, how there 'once lived on the banks of the River Tees (and does yet) an old-fashioned, petted boy called Stockton,' and goes on to remark on his contradictory spirit towards his young brother Middy, and his efforts on all occasions to thwart the latter in his schemes and plans. Middy do nothing that pleases his bilions brother, who, on every octhat as often as not he endeavours to thwart plans which, in the end, are a blessing and a benefit to himself as well as to Middy. When Middy asks for 'a bridge across the Tees, Stockton goes fairly wild about it."-Middlesbrough Exchange.

TMIRROR, published Weekly, Price 3d., from its Exten-casion, no bind tot ply out, You shant, and is so short-sighted

sive Circulation amongst the Craft, in all parts of the Globe, by whom it is preserved as a work of daily reference, offers special advantages as an Advertising Medium. The Terms for Advertisements are very moderate. Displayed Advertisements Charged according to Space occupied. Special Contracts entered into with General Advertisers for a Series. All Communications to be addressed as above.

New Edition, handsomely bound, price 5s. MACKEY'S FREEMASONRY.

A Lexicon of Freemasonry, containing a Definition of all its Communicable Terms, Notices of its History, Traditions, and Antiquities, and an Account of the Rites and Mysteries of the Ancient World. BY ALBERT G. MACKEY, M.D., Secretary General of the Supreme Council of the U.S., &c. Revised by DONALD CAMPBELL, S.P.R.S., 32nd Degree, compiler of the Scottish Masonic Calendar.

London:

CHARLES GRIFFIN AND Co., Stationers' Hall Court.

THE FREEMASON,

A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,
PRICE 2d.,

PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY,

CONTAINS ALL THE

MOST IMPORTANT NEWS OF THE WEEK

RELATING TO

FREEMASONRY

IN EVERY DEGREE.

May be had of all Booksellers and News-Agents; or of Bro. GEO. KENNING, Masonic Depot, 3 and 4, Little Britain, London, E. C.

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