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The 'Bus will run daily as follows until further notice. LEAVE MIDDLESBRO'.-8·0 a.m., 9:45, 10 45, 1·0 p.m., 20, 30, 4·0, 5·0, 6·0, 70, 80, 90.

LEAVE LINTHORPE.-8.50 a.m, 1030, 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.

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ILLUSTRATED NOTE PAPER. The following Local Views have been neatly engraved and printed at the top of Note Paper, and are sold at One Halfpenny the Sheet, that people may use them more commonly in writing to their friends. Other Views will shortly be added. Twelve Views sent free

by Book Post, to any address in the Kingdom, on receipt of Six Penny Postage Stamps.

Arms on the Walls of Danby Castle
Basaltic Rock (now destroyed), Lounsdale
Capt. Cook's Monument, Easby Bank
Gisbro Church

Houghton-le-Spring Church
Ingleby-Greenhow Church

Inscription on the Wainstones, Broughton Bank
Kilton Castle from the North

Kilton Castle-Circular Tower at N.E. angle
Norman Doorway, Faceby Church
Norman Gateway, Gisbro' Priory
Old Ralph Cross, Westerdale
Piercy Cross, near Kildale

Railway Workmen's Institute, Darlington,
Ralph Cross, Westerdale
Redcar, East End

Rosebury Topping, from Stokesley Bridge
Ruins of Danby Casile-Interior

Ruius and Arms of Whitby Abbey

Ruins of Whorlton Castle

Stokesley Union Workhouse

Tomb of Robert de Brus, the Competitor, Gisbro
Union Mill, Stokesley

Wainstones, Broughton Bank

War Beacon on Eston Nab

White Cross, between Danby and Rosedale

Yarm Bridge, Railway Viaduct, etc.

Zetland Hotel, Saltburn

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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.

WELLINGTON STREET.

John Duncan, beerhouse keeper.

Petch Harrison, wheel and cart wright.
Barnabus Rutter, blacksmith.

Ann Dawson, beerhouse keeper.

Robert Wrightson, butcher and game dealer.
Thomas Ingledew, brickmaker.

William Walker, fancy repository (and accountant).
John Shepherdson, innkeeper (Victoria inn).
Henry Roberts, grocer.

Thomas Newcombe, junr., undertaker and joiner.
Thomas Newcombe, senr., undertaker and joiner.
John Bowes, tailor.

John Nichols, milk dealer.

Edward Wm. Wood, flour dealer and grocer.

John Tyreman, shoemaker and repairer.

Jane Colbeck, earthenware dealer, &c.

WILLIAM STREET.

John Telby Archibald, french polisher.

BRIDGE STREET WEST.

William James Bird, second-hand clothes dealer.
George Hawkins, shoemaker.

John Thompson, odd-fellows' hall keeper.
Henry Horston, innkeeper (Excelsior hotel).
Robinson and Dennis, auctioneers and valuers.
Brewster and Stubbs, solicitors.

Henry Wilton, cab proprietor.

William Webb, second-hand clothes dealer.

James Stewart, music-master.

Wright Derwent, schoolmaster.

Isaac Cook, builder.

William Hird, temperance missionary.
John Newhouse, tailor and draper.

Ellonor Barker, temperance inn.

Thomas Sturzell, innkeeper (Gladstone hotel).
VINE STREET.

William Mullen, lodging-house keeper,
Matthew Wake, grocer,

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PENANCE IN STOKESLEY CHURCH, 106 YEARS AGO. (From The People's History of Cleveland and its Vicinage, by GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL, F. R. H. S., &c., now in course of publication.)

January 2nd, 1766.-Penance enjoined to be done by James Beadnell, of the Parish of Stokesley, in the Diocese of York, Tailor.

The said James Beadnell shall be present in the Parish Church of Stokesley aforesaid, upon Sunday being the fifth, twelfth, or nineteenth day of January instant, in the time of divine service, between the hours of ten and eleven in the forenoon of the same day, in the presence of the whole congregation then assembled, being bare-head, bare-foot, and bare-legged, having a white sheet wrapped about him from the shoulders to the feet, and a white wand in his hand, where immediately after the reading of the Gospel, he shall stand upon some form or seat, before the pulpit or place where the minister readeth prayers, and say after him as followeth :

"Whereas, I, good people, forgetting my duty to Almighty God, have committed the detestable sin of Adultery with Ann Anderews, and thereby have provoked the heavy wrath of God against me, to the great danger of my own soul and evil example of others, I do earnestly repent, and am heartily sorry for the same, desiring Almighty God, for the merits of Jesus Christ, to forgive me both this and all other my offences, and also ever hereafter so to assist me with His Holy Spirit, that I never fall into the like offence again; and for that end and purpose, I desire you all here present to pray with me, and pray for me, saying, Our Father, which art in heaven," and so forth.

On by holt and headland,
Over heath and bent.
Chime, ye dappled darlings,
Through the sleet and snow;
Who can over-ride you?
Let the horses go!
Chime, ye dappled darlings,
Down the roaring blast;
You shall see a fox die
Ere an hour be past.
Go! and rest to-morrow,
Hunting in your dreams,
While our skates are ringing
O'er the frozen streams.

Let the luscious South-wind
Breathe in lovers' sighs;
While the lazy gallants

Bask in ladies' eyes;

What does he but soften

Heart alike and pen? "T is the hard grey weather Breeds hard Englishmen. What's the soft South-Wester? "T is the ladies' breeze, Bringing home their true-loves Out of all the seas;

But the black North-Easter,

Through the snow-storm hurl'd, Drives our English hearts of oak Seaward-round the world.

Come, as came our fathers,
Heralded by thee,
Conquering from the eastward,
Lords by land and sea.
Come, and strong within us
Stir the Vikings' blood;
Bracing brain and sinew,

Blow, thou wind of God!"

CANON KINGSLEY.

ODE TO THE NORTH-EAST WIND.

Welcome, wild North-Easter!

Shame it is to see Odes to every zephyr ;

Ne'er a verse to thee.

Welcome, black North-Easter!
O'er the German foam;
O'er the Danish moorlands,
From thy frozen home.
Tired we are of Summer,
Tired of gaudy glare,
Showers soft and streaming
Hot and breathless air.
Tired of listless dreaming,
Through the lazy day;
Jovial wind of Winter,
Turn us out to play!

Sweep the golden reed-beds,
Crisp the lazy dyke;
Hunger into madness

Every plunging pike.
Fill the lake with wild-fowl;
Fill the marsh with snipe ;
While on dreary moorlands
Lonely curlew pipe.

Through the black fir-forest,
Thunder harsh and dry,
Shattering down the snowflakes
Off the curdled sky.

Hark! the brave North-Easter! Breast-high lies the scent,

NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS, NOTES
AND QUERIES, &c.

A NOTTINGHAMSHIRE NONCONFORMIST MINISTER will find the verse he inquires for in a pretty little poem by our friend Charles Swain, entitled "Home and Friends." We will endeavour to make room for it in our next number.

MORTON THE DRAMATIST.-A Glasgow Subscriber writes :"In one of the early numbers of The Bards and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham, you give a sketch of Reed the Dramatist. I was in hopes at the time that you would also give a brief sketch of MORTON in a subsequent number. I learned when I was young that he was a native of Durham. I have long wished for a brief sketch of the life of Morton, and wish to make inquiry whether any Life of him, or any collected edition of his Works, have been published?" Perhaps some of our Durham Subscribers may be able to furnish us with an answer.

YORKSHIRE PRISONS.-At the present time, 1871, there is "accommodation," according to the reports of the government inspectors, for 84 criminals at Beverley, 367 at Hull, 459 at Leeds, 213 at Northallerton, 21 at Ripon, 60 at Scarbro,' 1419 at Wakefield, and 150 at York; making a total of 2773.

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THE CELEBRATED "YORKSHIRE ROSE."

(See The People's History of Cleveland and its Vicinage, now in course of publication.)

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