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The Mysterious power of the Magnet is most beautifully developed by Mr. F. Hbbring, of 32 ? Basinghall Street, in his Patent Magnetic for Weuk
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PARLIAMENT.
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Brushes and combs , which are the Kennedy for urey , w or Falling Hair , Neuralgia , Nervous Headache , Rheumatism , Stiff Joints &c . His Teazle Brushes for Cloth , Velvet , dfcc , are admirable ; they not only cleanse , but preserve the fabric in a remarkable manner . The Public are cautioned against Counterfeits . [ Advertisement . ] Docs-not the article you use for your Toilet please you ? if not , then immediately inquire of your perfumer for Churcher ' s Toilet Cream 5 it is the best and cheapest article ever offered to the public . Those who have failed in procuring a good dye for their hair should purchase Batchlor ' s Instantaneous Columbian Hair-Dye ( in the New York original packets ) . Proprietors of Hair-cutting Saloons and Vendors of Perfumery will save ¦ immensely-by ' resorting ' to U . llovenden ' s Wholesale Perfumery Warehouses , 57 and 58 , 'Crown Street , J ? insbury , E . C ., or 5 , Marlborough Street , W . A list of R . llovenden ' s propriet ary articles can be obtained on application to any Perfumer in Town or Country , or free by postf Advertisement . ! ... _ ..
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Tub Postmaster has decided that the Society of Arts' Prize Writing-case , for which they awarded the prize of twenty guineas and their silver medal to Parkins and Gotto , can be sent through the post for Id ., so thut thia extremely useful and durable waterproof case , fitted with writing-paper , envelopes , blotting-book , inntal ptmcase , with reserve of pens , &c , < &c , can be bent free through the post to any part of the kingdom , on sending twenty-eight stamps to Parkins und Gotto , 21 and 25 , Oxford Street ,, London . It forms a most appropriate present . Selling price at their stationary warehouse , 2 s . each . Their Sample Packet containing fifty kinds . Writing Paper and Envelopes can bo liud free by post for four stamps . ¦ ' ¦ ' .. , Parkins and Gotto make no charge for stamping writing-paper ana envelopes , with crests , initials , or address , and , undertake to pay the carriage to any part of Englund , on orders over twenty shillings . Aw *"'/ thousand envelopes , of any sizjj or quality , at a minute a notice . Office stutlonury and household papers ' . Institutions , colleges , and schools lifppliod / Price list post tree . A saving of full J ... -i « ^ AXd " Parkins and Gotto , pnp 6 r and envelope makers , U and A > , uxioru Street . [ Advt . ]
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oven ) ¦ and Chopin ' s Mazurkas , No . 1 , G minor , No . 2 , D major , and No . 3 , B minor . He also took part in a duet with M . Sainton for violin and piano , and in a trio for the same instruments and violoncello with MM . Sainton and Paque ? the latter artiste also o-iving a violoncello solo from Rossini ' s " Stabat Mater ; " The Hall was well " 'lied by a'fashionable audience , who testified . their pleasure and satisfaction with the performance in the warmest manner . Mr . Benedict and Mr . Harold Thomas were the conductors .
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TN the House of Lords on Thursday night the Pleas on the In-X dictment Bill , on the motion of Lord Bbotjgham , was read a second time . The Adulteration of Food and Drink Bill passed through Committee . —In the House of Commons , the adjourned debate on Sir C . Wood ' s motion for leave to bring- in a Bill to repeal the law enabling- the Secretary of State for India to raise men for her Majesty ' s local European forces in India was resumed . Lord Stanley having- noticed briefly the objection to the maintenance of two European armies in India , that it was a theoretical anomaly , he remarked that the difficulty of dealing with the question was greatly increased by the absence of any distinct plan to be substituted for the existing scheme . General Peel stated the grounds upon which he hud come to a perfectly different conclusion from Lord Stanley . He was convinced that there would
be no penury of qualified line officers for continuous service m India ; and as to the expense of maintaining a single army , he agreed with Sir C . Wood , that the most efficient force was the cheapest , and did not see why the expense should be greater than at present . He gave his cordial support to the motion for leave to bring in the Bill . Colonel Sykes insisted upon the question of expense , the constitutional question and thequestionofpatronage , as furnishing reasons why Sir U . Wood should not persevere in his measure . Mr . Peacocke said he was a partisan of a thorough and entire amalgamation of the two armies . Sir De Lacy Evans objected to the form in which the House was called upon to give a vote upon the question , whether there should be a local European force in India . The alleged cause of the Bill was the mutiny of that force ; but he
contended that the soldiers had been led into the belief that they were " entitled' to the bounty on their discharge by the language of the . First Minister of the Crown . Assuming that the amalgamation ' of--the" armies would augment the military patronage at home , he expressed in very plain language his distrust of the Horse Guards and the War Department . Captain Jeevis observed that this was not a question of amalgamating the two armies * but of creating a new local force . Leave was then given to bring in the Bill . The Poor . -Belief , &c . ( Ireland ) , Bill was read a second time . The Local Boards of Health , < fcc ., Bill , and the Local Supplemental Bill , were read a third time and passed . On the order for the third reading of the Caledonian and Cririan Canals Bill , Mr . W . Williams hoped the
House would not g-ive any further aid to an undertaking -which he characterised as a gross job , and moved to defer the third reading for three months . The Chancellob of the Exchequer said the Bill authorised no grant of public money ; it merely empowered JbhjLErab ^ qjuusr ^ security . After some discussion , the House divided , when the amendment was negatived by 98 to 47 , and the Bill was read a third time and passed . The Law of Property Bill was also read a third time and passed . The Burials Ground ( Ireland ) Act , 1856 , Amendment Bill was read a second time . The House went into Committee upon the Roman Catholic Charities Bill . In . the House of Lords on Friday night the Law and Equity Bill was referred to a select committee . The Duke of Someuset stated , in reply to
objected to the charge of £ 21 , 000 'proposed to he thrown upon the Consolidated- Fund tor compensations to persons who had no claim upon that fund , and moved to omit from the resolution the word " compensations . " After a brief discussion the House divided , when the amendment was carried by 111 to 98 . Upon the announcement of the result of the division , the Attorney-General said it wouM be impossible'for him to go on with the'Bankruptcy and Insolvency Bill , the Committee on which was the next order of the day . The debate was adjourned till Thursday . The House then went into Committee upon the Excise and Assessed Taxes Acts , when resolutions were agreed to for imposing duties on game certificates . The report on the Anstruther Union Harbour Bill was agreed to . The Tithe Commutation Bill was read a third time and passed . The ? Spirits Bill passed through Committee . The Chancellor of the Exchequer , in moving the second reading of the Oxford University Billstated that its object was to Confer upon the
Univer-, sity certain powers granted to the University of Cambridge . After a few remarks by ^ Mr . Lygon and Mr . Mowbeay , the Bill was read a second time . The liefreshment-houses and Wine Licenses ( Ireland ) Bill was read a second time . The Ecclesiastical ; Commission , &c , Bill was read a second time . The House then went into Committee upon the Mines Regulation and Inspection Bill , and some of the clauses were agreed to , after much discussion , the chairman being ordered to report progress . The Inland Bonding Bill was read a third time and passed . The Union of Bene-The went into
fices Bill was read a second time . House Committee upon the Municipal Corporations ( Ireland ) Act Amendment Bill . In the House of Lords , on Tuesday night , the Archbishop of York having moved the second reading of the Ecclesiastical Commission Bill , a discussion took place on the point whether the money paid by the see of Durham to the Ecclesiastical Coinmis * sioners ought not rather to be expended for the benefit of the miners and poorer classes of the diocess of Durham than applied to the general ecclesiastieal purposes of the kingdom . The Bill was read a second time . In the House of Commons ^ Mr ; S . EEeb . ^ -
bert obtained leave to bring in a Bill for extinguishing certain . rights of way through Cole wort Barracks , Portsmouth . Mr . Heebert also obtained leave to introduce a Bill to amend the laws relating to the Militia . Mr , Clive obtained leave to bringin a Bill to amend the Local Government Act . Sir G > Lewis , in moving for leave to introduce a Bill to make better provision for preventing corrupt practices at elections of membfers of Parliament * stated that it had been prepared at the suggestion of the Select Committee ^ whose recommendations it embodied with the provisions of the Corrupt Practices' Prevention Act . Leave was given . The House then went into Committee upon the Locomotive Bill y but before the clauses were gone through , the Chairman was
ordered to report progress . The Sale of Gas Act Amendment ( No . 2 ) Bill was read a second time , and referred to a Seleet Committee . In the House of Commons on Wednesday the Labourers' Cottages - ( Scotland ) Bill passed through Committee . The Bleaching and Dyeing-Works Bill having been comraited , Sir H . Cairns moved an amendment on the first clause , with the object of exempting from , the operation of the measure works in the bleaching or dying of linen , linen yarns , or cambric only is carried on . After some discussion the amendment was adopted on a division , by 190 to 48 . - ^ je-flevei'al ^ lauses-of ^ h «^ il ^ 4 iiiui ^ clause being- under discussion , when the Chairman was ordered to report progress . The House rose a little before six o ' clock .
Lord Dungannon , that no British subjects were employed at Cherbourg . Some British shipwrights had gone thither in hopes of obtaining 1 employment , but had been woefully disappointed . The wages given at Cherbourg were 2 s . 6 d . for twelve hours' labour , and the men were not allowed to leave the dockyard to take their meals . In addition to this , ho learnt from our Consul there that no additional hands were required at Cherbourg . In the House of Commons Lord John Russkll , in reply to Mr . Griffith ' s inquiry , said the Government hud received information of the capture of the two vessels by a Neapolitan frigate , but no account confirming- the statement in the journals of the hoisting of English colours . Colonel Dickson culled attention to the present state of the army in the United Kingdom , contending that , in the present state of Europe , we required a larger force , and aug-yosting- means by which the additional force Colonel
could be raised . Mr . Sidney Heubekt replied to Dickson , explaining in detail the state of the army , and the measures taken for its improvement in number und condition . The House went into Committee upon Savings-bunks and Friendly Societies Investments Bill . The Universities aud College Estates Bill pusNed the Committee . The Railway Cheap Trains , < &e ., Bill Was reud u aecolid t read a third tune , and passed . Other Bills were advanced untune . —In the Houae of Lords on Monday night Lord Stbatiiedkn moved thut a humble addresH be presented to her Majesty , praying her Majesty to be graciously ploused to appoint a Consul at Mozambique , with a view to promote ( he interest !* of commerce and the execution of the treaties between Great Britain and Portii £ u , l opon the slave trade . The address was agreed to . —In ' the Houae or Commons , on the report of the resolution of iho Committee upon the Bankruptcy and Inuolvenoy ( Salaries , &c ) , Sir H . Willouguby
Untitled Article
June 30 , I 860 . j TheLeader and Saturday Anahj'si . 621
The Mysterious Power Of The Magnet Is Most Beautifully Developed By Mr. F. Hbbring, Of 32 ? Basinghall Street, In His Patent Magnetic For Weuk
The Mysterious power of the Magnet is most beautifully developed by Mr . F . Hbbring , of 32 . Basinghall Street , in his Patent Magnetic wair euic
Parliament.
PARLIAMENT .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 30, 1860, page 621, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2354/page/21/
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