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Parties about to make presents are strongly recommended to visit the show-rooms of Messrs. Parkins and Gotto, of 24 and 2oOxford-street, London, who have displayed excellent taste m at moderate
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Ad
the selection of an immense stock of really useful articles , ( mouerare prices ) , especially adapted for presentation , consisting of writing and dressing cuses , bags , reticules , stationery cases , blotting books , inkstands , despatch-boxes , desks , work-boxes , book-slides , beautiful specimens in pearl , papier-inach < 5 , and tortoise-shell , olegantjy mounted articles , Bibles , Prayer-books , and Church Services ; in fact , an endless variety of articles to suit every taste and pocket . ' WniTiNa-X'APEtt and envelopes are now stamped with crest , initials , or address , without any extra charge , by Parkins and Gotto , paper and envelope makers , 25 , Oxford-street , London ; they moreover undertake to ijay the carriage to any part of England or Wales on orders over 20 s . 20 j 000 envelopes of any aizo can bo had at a minute ' s notice . Oifice atationory and household paper . Institutions and schools supplied at » saving of full six shillings in tho pound . Fifty samples ol paper sent free by poet upon receipt of ' four stumps . Their Guinea Case of Stationery is tho cheapest and Dost guinea ' s worth in England , ana upon receipt of post-olUco order is sont carriago free . — [ Ailoertiscment . ~ \ it iii
Untitled Ad
Does not the ai'ticlo you use lor your hair please you t nor , «« immediately inquire of your perfumer for Churchor ' s Toilet Cream ; ir is tho best and cheapest article over offered to tho public . Those who have failed in procuring a good dye for their hair should purchase Batohlor ' s Instantaneous Columbian HairDyo ( in the Now York original packets ) . Proprietors of Hair-cutting Saloons and Vendors ot Perfumery will Bave immensely by resorting to R . Hovcnden s WhoJeialoTorFum ^ or 5 , Marlborough-stroot , W . A list of R . Hovenden ' fl propnetovy articles can be obtained on application to any Perfumer in Town or Country , or froe by post , —' [ Advertisement . ]]
Untitled Ad
The Mvflfterious power of "tho Magnet is most beautifully developed by Mr . F . * Herring , of 32 , Basinghall Street , in his Patent Magnet 10 Brushea and combs , whioh are tuij Rqmody for Groy . Huir , Weak or Fulling Hair , Neuralgia , Nervous Headache ; Rheumatism , Stiff Joints , &o , His Teazlo Brushes for Cloth , Velvet , &c , are adniirablo ; tlioy not only cleanse , but preserve the fabric in a remarkable manner . XM Publio are oautioned against counterfeits . —•[ Advert ' Mment . '
Untitled Article
mainder of the session , opposed notices and orders should not be proceeded with upon which debate should arise after one ' o ' clock in the -morning , —Sip-Gr- ^ tBE ^ -said-the-subject- was no doubt of . considerable , importance , and , looking at the late hours to which the sittings of the House were protracted , he was not surprised at the motion , for the sake , not only of members , but of the officers of the House . After a short debate , the motion was withdrawn , and the House went into committee , when the Chancellor of the Exchequer made Iris statement of the manner in which the Govei'nment proposed to meet the expenditure voted in supply on account of the China , war . In February , he observed , the provision made for the war was £ 800 , 000 , to be charged upon the finances of the year 1855-60 , and double this 550
to be violated . He concluded by impressing upon propriety of England speaking candidl y and fairly to France upon the necessity of allaying , by assurances of peace to Eng land , as well as Germany ^ the restlessness of the public mind in Europe , a restlessness which placed this country in a position of suspended hostilities . Lord WoDBHouSE , in assenting to the motion , addressed himself to the main point of Lord Clanbicaede ' s speech , whether this country should or should not go into the congress , and in doing so , considered the circumstances attending it . The only question to be taken into consideration was as to the feeling of Switzerland , and that had been clearly expressed by Switzerland demanding of the great powers that a conference should be heidi Lord jSormaNby was in favour of the conference , as Switzerland had demanded it . Lord StbatfObd i > e Eedclifpe would
confine himself ; to the very narrow point of this _ exterisive question— - viz ., whether this country should attend the congress or not . If he were convinced that any guarantees for the independence of Switzerland vrould be-secured by . a conference , he should most cordiajly approve it . Lord BiibuGHASi expressed his approval of going to tire Conference , as the manly conduct of the Swiss had attracted to them the sympathies of Europe . The motion was then agreed to , and their lordships adjourned at ten minutes to eight o ' clpck .- ^ In the House of Commons , on the report of the committee" o f supply of the vote of £ 443 , 896 for arrears due to the Indian Gpvernmenoniaccount of the last Cliin 0 se war , Mr . Roebuck tookoccasion to condemn the war with China as utterly indefensible as regarded either the interests or the honour of England . The Chancellpb of the Exciiequek admitted that this was a question which could hardly be too much discussed , and that , in dealing with Easternnations * we should adopt the principles of truth and fair dealing . The report was then agreed to . On the order for going into a committee of ways and means , Mr . Newdegate moved a resolution to the effect that , during
therethe Government the account of former expeditions to China , was agreed to , after a long discussion , which ranged over a great variety of topics relative to the policy of the present and past wars with China , and to the financial incidents of this particular vote . —In the House of Lords , on Monday night , Lord Clanricarde moved that an humble andress be presented to her Majesty , for a copy of a letter addressed by the Foreign-office to the late Duke of WEiiLrxGTON , in 1 S 15 , concerning the military frontier of Savoy , referred to in Lord J . Russeix ' s despatch to Lord Cowlet of April 24 . He prefaced his motion by expressing his high sense of the importance of the French .. alliance to this country , and of the propriety of maintaining it , although he could not allow that its maintenance was to be preserved by allowing the international law of Europe
Lord J . Russexi ., in reply to Mr . Kinglake , said the French Government had proposed three different modes of reconciling the article of the treaty of Vienna concerning Switzerland with the treaty of Turin ; a conference was one of those modes , and her Majesty ' s Ghovernment had no hesitation in accepting it as . the best mode . ; but it did not appear that any definite answer had been given b y the other powers of Europe . ' With' respect to the statement made by Mr . ICingxake , he observed that what had occurred at the conference at Villafranca could have passed only between the two Sovereigns , no other person being present , and , though the Government had received various accounts , more or less official , as to the general subject of the conference , they had not received any account that the proposal alluded to was made . The House then went into a committee of supply , when the vote of 443 896 £ ., for repayment to the Government of India of advances on
amount upon those of the year 1860-61 , making together £ 2 ,, 000 , which was the whole provision the Government proposed to make on account of the expedition to China before they knew that we should have to conduct warlike operations . The vote was increased by other items . The whole of the charges for the expedition to China up to the present period , so far as the Government had cognizance of them , amounted to £ 5 , 400 , 000 , to which must be added £ 450 , 000 due on acopunt of . the former war . The whole of the £ 850 , 000 charged upon the finances of 1859-60 had been paid out . of the produce of the taxes , the . revenue of the year having been so productive . But , although the condition of the revenue up to the close of June was eminently satisfactory , and even exceeded the expectations of the _ Government , h , e did not recommend any interference with the estimate of the revenue he had made in February . He then proceeded to state the mode in which the Government proposed to provide for the reoent
vote of £ 3 , 800 , 000 . Taking the £ 500 , 000 inoluded in the provision m February , together with the surplus of revenue , then estimated at £ . , 000 , but which was reduced by errors and miscalculations to £ 264 , 000 , and £ 700 , 000 the produce of the paper duty available for the financial year , if it should please the House of Commons that the duty should be levied ) , these three items would amount to £ 1 , 464 , 000 . Deducting this " sum from" £ 3 , 800 , 000 , 7 ~ t } x 0 . ^~ v& ^ i ^ ' 0 & ^ X ^~^~~ VJ !^ AeA' ^ ' ^ OT ' £ 2 , 336 , 000 , whioh the Government asked the Committee to be authorized to raise partly by taxation and partly by other means . They proposed to obtain the sum of £ 2 , 000 , 000 by an additional duty upon ardent spirits of is . lid . per gallon on the various descriptions charged under the Kxoiso and Custome . Tho effect would be to roiaa the duty o British spirits to 10 s . per gallon , oq colonial spirits to 10 a . 2 d ., and on foreign spirits to 10 s . 5 d . He explained at some length the reasons whioh had weighed with tho Government in making this addition to the spirit duties ( which would be permanent ) , and wjiy they considered it praotioable and timely , and likely to produce therowlti they anticipated . Hevrw aware , he naid , that there irero
special circumstances which occasioned epme uncertainty in the calculation of the produce of the duty , and it would be necessary to accompany the augmentation with some modification of the duty on wine ; and he had therefore assumed an addition of only £ 1 , 050 , 000 to the revenue of the financial year . This would reduce the sum of £ 2 , 336 , 000 . to £ l , 286 j 000 ; and that sum-it was proposed to provide for out of the balances in the Exchequer , whifcb . would admit of the withdrawal o £ even £ 2 , 000 , 000 . It would be his duty to ask the Committee for an immediate vote , in order to secure the change of the duty on the commodity ; and he added that it was not the intention of the Government to make . any further demand upon the taxation of the country on account of fortifications , the subject of which would be brought before the House on a future day . After a brief discussion and a few explanations , the resolutions moved to well
by the Chakcelxob or the Exchequer were agreed , as as other resolutions respecting Excise licences , malt credit , hop credit , chicory , contract notes , &c . The House then , in committee , resumed the consideration of the clauses of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency BUI . A lar ^ e portion of the discussion was engrossed by the 152 nd clause , abolishing the distinction between traders and non-traders , it being objected that , considering the acts which by the Bill would authorize an adjudication of bankruptcy and its consequences , the clause would operate with oppressive severity upon non-traders without more safeguards than were provided by the Bill ; and Mr . Henley moved an amendment , the effect of which was to limit the Bill to traders . Before the discussion of the clause terminated , the Chairman was ordered to report progress . Upon the report , in a conversation as to the principle of comprehending non-traders in the Bill , the
Attorney-G-eneral said he was not bound to the principle . The House then went into committee upon the Refreshment-houses and Wine-houses Bill , and the Chairman was soon ordered to report progress ^ The Prisons ( Scotland ) Bill passed the committee ; other Bills were also forwarded , and the remaining business having been disposed of , tho House adjourned at 3 o ' clock . —In the House of Lords Tuesday night Lord Brougham : called the attention of the House to the fact that , persons of colour , free citizens of the United States , had been refused it first-class passage on board one of the Cunard steamers . Lord Gran-ViwaG was not astonished that the attention of the House had been called to the case , but it was one in which the Government ^ of course , could not interfere . Lord Brougham said , in a similar case which
took place some years ago an action had been brought against the captain of the vessel ; but , although damages could have been recovered , the case was compromised . The Annuity Tax Abolition ( Edinburgh and Mbntrose ) Bill was read a second time . The Titler to Land ( Scotland ) Act ( 1858 ) Amendment Bill , after a short but animated discussion , in which Lords Derby , Grats-viile , Cranworth , Brougham , and the Lor& Chancellor participated was read _ a second time . - ^ In the House of Commons . Lord Fermoy moved a resolution , " That the ¦ rejection by the House of Lords of theT 3 ill for the repeal of the Paper Duties i& an encroachment on-the rights and privileges _ of the House of Commons ; and it is therefore incumbent upontilis House to adopt a practical measure for the vindication of its rights alter tho
and privileges . " In the House of Commons en Wednesday , Highways ( South Wales ) Bill had been considered in committee , the Coroners ( iKTo . 3 ) Bill w < is read a second time andcommitted pro forma The County Rates and Expenditure Bill arid the Agricultural Servants Bill were withdrawn . Tho Lords' amendment of the Duchy of Cornwall ( Limitation of Actions ) Bill was agreed to . The House went into committee on Sir J . Shelley ' s Metropolis Local Management Act Arnnnrimpnt ( No . 2 ) Bill , the clauses of which underwent ¦ Amend - jnent . . . ¦¦ , '¦ ' ' ^ , ; • ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ . ,.
Untitled Article
67 & ThtJS&ti ^^ [ July 21 , I 860 ,
Parties About To Make Presents Are Strongly Recommended To Visit The Show-Rooms Of Messrs. Parkins And Gotto, Of 24 And 2ooxford-Street, London, Who Have Displayed Excellent Taste M At Moderate
Parties about to make presents are strongly recommended to visit the show-rooms of Messrs . Parkins and Gotto , of 24 and 2 o . Oxford-street , London , who have displayed excellent taste m at
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), July 21, 1860, page 678, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2357/page/14/
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