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T^ CONOMf IN FUEL.—The waste of coals J2J arising from the use of badly constructed fireplaces
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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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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
in most families is truly enormous . ¦ desirable objects of effecting a great saving and adding to the comfort of apartments are obtained by the use of the following grates : —i . Improved Smokeless Fire Grates , now made from 20 .- * . each . These grates burn little fuel , give much heat , will burn for hours without attention , and accumulate so little soot that chimney-sweeping is almost superseded . 2 . Improved Grates , with Stourbridge fire-brick backs , from 24 « i . each , complete . Any one who has experienced the superiority of fire brick over iron for retaining heat and radiating it into an apartment would never consent to have grates with iron backs / which conduct the heat away . S . Improved Grates with Stourbridge fire-brick backs ¦ ai-ut porcelain sides from 35 s . each , complete . The advantages of porcelain for ornament over iron or steel arise from its cleanliness , savin ? of trouble in cleaning , and from its beauty not being impaired by lapse of time . Illustrated prospectuses forwarded on application . Also STOVES FOR ENTRANCE HALLS , SCHOOL ROOMS , CHURCHES , &c , Of the best construction . These Stove 3 burn little fuel , rea « " * e very little attention , may be had with or without open fire , and will burn » night and day in severe weather , or throughout the season if required , whilst they are entirely free from the objection found to so many stoves , that of a liability to become overheated and to render the atmosphere offensive . Illustrated prospectuses forwarded . Manufacturers of Edwards ' s Smokeless Kitchen ' Range , which alone obtained a first-class medal at the Paris Exhibition of 1855 . —F , EDWARDS , SON , and Co ., General Stove and Kitohon Range Manufacturers , 42 , Poland-street , Oxford-street , W .
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SOHO LOOKING-GLASS MANUFACTORr , 26 , Soho-square , London . —Established 20 years . —Tho Proprietor begs to call the attention of the public to tho following very reduced List of Prices for LOOKINGGLASSES , of superior quality , fitted in carefully nianuactured carved and Rilt frames ;—Size of Glass . Outside Measure of Frame . Price , 40 by 30 in . 51 in . wide by 39 in . high from Si . 10 s . eacb . 46 by 36 in . 48 in . wide by 58 in . high from 51 . 0 s . each . 50 by 40 in . 52 in . wide by CO in . high from Ql . 0 s . each . p 3 by 43 in . 55 in . wide by 65 in . high from 11 . 7 s cacli 56 by 40 in . 59 in . \ yide by 69 m . high from 8 ? . 8 s . each 60 by 48 in . 62 in . wide by 74 in . high from 10 Z . 0 s . each 70 by 50 in . 64 in . wido by 84 in . high from I 2 Z . Os . cach , Mahogany dressing and cheval glasses , gilt cornices ' , girandoles ,- picture frames , &c , at equally moderate prices . Merchants and shippers supplied by special contract .
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THE VERY FINEST COLZA OIL f or moderator lamps , solectcd from choico parcels direct from LiUo , 4 s . Oil . per gallon . Tallow Storo Dips , 7 u . per lh , ; ditto Moulds , Ss . per dozen lbs ., stored in March la » t especially for family use . Household Spaps , 40 s ,, 4 ts ., 40 s ., nnd 48 s . per cwfe . Delivered free to any part of , or within ilvo miles of , town , and orders of til . value railway free to any part of . England . WHITMORE and CRADDOOK , 10 , Blshopsgatc-street Within . E . G ., London , old servants or , and City Agents to , Price ' s Patent Candle Company .
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BOND'S PERMANENT MARKING INKTo avoid disappointment from the substitution of counterfeits , bo careful to ask for tho gonuiuo Bond ' u Marking Ink ; and further to distinguish It , observe that' no Sixpenny size is , or has at any time boon prepnrud by him , the Inventor and Proprietor . N . B .-Tho general and ORIGINAL BOND'S PERMANENT MARKING * INK bears tho addreNs on tho label , 1 Q LONG-LANE , WEST SMITHFIELD , CITY .
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EPPS'S COCOA .--Epps , hoinccopathvochemist , London . —lib . itud 41 b . packots , 1 h . ( Id . and Oil . — TIiIb excellent production , originally propnrccl for tho special uso of homoeopathic patients , having boon adopted by the gouoral public , can now ho had of tho principal gi-ooors . Jvnch packet is labelled James Epps , Uojiuuopatliio chomt&t , London .
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OAUTION to Householders , Bankers , Mei-V ^ chants , and Publio Ouloos . Tlio Pnfcont NATIONAL a » d DEFIANCE LOOKS can bo hnd only of 1 ' . 1 'IJCK-1 UDGB , 82 , Strand , nearOhiiriiiK-cross . Tlioso I' » cknnru important for thoir security against burglars ant 1 tlilovch , as evidenced In tha fraudulent attomnt to pick I ; at tlio « t S . Sbi ' , ' M « ' . » k % n iit » w ^! ami BoJiMitohHpxw . BiiiI » o « i | hb WoMo . Vnrraiitod Street-Door LiUches , 17 s . oil . o « ch .
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'HmOM THE LONDON GAZETTE Tuesday , November 23 . BANKRUPTS . Edmund Connor , Brooke-street , Holborn , wholesale boot and shoe warehouseman . Thomas Fishek and Williabi Fishbr , Northampton , and Harlestone , Nort hamptonshire , carpenters . WiLmam Holtaway , Park-terrace , Hammersmith , ink Jam ^^ Dalt , Shacklewell , licensed victualler . George PiWidgb , Crown-row , Walworth-road , FiSciTingham , High Holborni grocer . Robert Slbjiming , Portsea , Southampton , boot and shoe maker . . John Mobrav , Sheerness , Kent , ironmonger . Thomas Hakkison , Wlntehorscyard , High Holborn , fringe and trimming manufacturer . Samuel Hanks , Birmingham , coal dealer . Maey Geokge , Bryn-mawr , Brecousliire , druggist . Thomas Jennincs , Truro , dealer in iron ore . Thomas Piciovorth and Robert Walker , Sheffield , builders . George Woodmancy , Glamford Briggs , Lincolnshire , a «* ^¦ tM ^' hi' * f % Y % £ *
^ *^* CU 1 IX UlClbllrtUbi SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS . Robert M'Nair , Edinburgh , warehouseman . AlexaJoder Milne , Glasgow , draper . Friday , November 26 . BANKRUPTCY ANNULLED . George "Whiez-don , Wincanton , Dorsetshire , brickmaker . BANKRUPTS . Robert Pigg , North Tuddenham , Norfolk , grocer Joseph Elliot , Devon port , grocer . John Bradley , Manchester , starch dealer . James Beeson , Derby , ironfounder . William Woolxatt , Nottingham , lace manufacturer . Stephen Cox , Bristol , chemical manufacturer . Thomas Haynes , Chiddingstone , Kent , farmer . Edward Button-, Gravesend , butcher . John Perkins , Sandwich , Kent , shipowner . Joseph Cooper , Birmingham , licensed victualler . Georgi : Battisox Haines and John Metcalf , Birmingham , electroplaters . William Goddard , Leicester , shoe manufacturer . George Taylor , Swinderby , Lincolnshire , licensed victualler . . William Whixtikgton Morris , late of Sise-lano City , chemical merchant .
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The Great Ship and her Companies . —The owners of the great ship , if we are not mistaken , -will yet , as far as English commerce is concerned , render unnecessary the labour of that Isthmian gamester , M . F . de Lesseps . They have spent 64 0 , 000 / . in and about the construction of their leviathan ; but until lately there seemed a lamentable prospect that she might continue for ages to obstruct the navigation of the Thames , and to be a mark for the scorncr . Tho 640 , 000 / . hail exhausted the share captial . Lenders shook their heads at the security of shares
manufactories of Portugal are prosperous and on the increase , and the result must be highly injurious to the English trade with that country . But it is thought by Mr . Paget that Portugal should content herself with being an agricultural country , and supplying the markets of the world with grain and wine . The system of Government monopolies is rife , and is of course productive of the worst effects ^ The Portuguese agriculturists are incorrigibly stupid . They will only act according to " custom , " they disdain the wisest counsels , and censure those who attempt to make innovations . There are districts in which vile wine is m ade from good grapes , although much better wines might be produced with less trouble . There is no wine of any kind , or anywhere
obtainable , that may not be grown in Portugal , yet more than half the land is uncultivated , and all modern improvements are carefully eschewed . This sad state of things is chiefly attributable to the want of roads . Whatever the Government do not undertake remains undone . A source of immense wealth exists in the Portuguese mines ; quicksilver and copper are known to be plentiful , but the mines are only slightly worked . Mr . Paget observes that every work of improvement and progress finds the most strenuous support in the present intelligent sovereign of the country . As regards port wine , it is a fallacy to suppose that " pure" port wine exists , as it is invariably mixed with brandy at Villa Nova . .
The Ship Indian E » tPiRE .- ^ -This Galway steamer which left New York for Ireland exactly a month a / ro is still overdue . The rate of 25 guineas per cent , hat been paid for insurances , the regular charge being fron : 15 s . to 20 s . only . The Indian Empire is the last of the overdue American steamers , the Edinburgh having arrived on Wednesday . The Atlantic Royal Mail Steam Navigation Company have since received the following telegram : — " The Indian Empire was at Halifax by oui last advices undergoing repair of damages caused by a brig running foul of her . "
The Fbenohc Rentes . —rParis letters revive the report of an intention on the part of the Government of the Emperor to convert the Four-and-a-Half per Cent . Rentes into Three per Cents . They remind us that the time is peculiarly favourable for such an operation , ad the empire is . at profound peace , its foreign relations eminently satisfactory , and the population perfectly contented , whatever maj' be said about the feelings of certain classes in Paris . The only doubtful point is , the time at which the conversion will be officially announced ; meanwhile , it is positively asserted the scheme has been provisionally elaborated by M . Fould , and referred by the Emperor to M . Magne for his opinion .
English Bankrupts and Scottish Sequestrations . —Another case of an English bankrupt without effects in Scotland taking out sequestration has been heard in the Court of Session . The bankrupt , Mr . Legh , from 1827 to 1846 carried on business in Regentstreet , London , as a wine-merchant . In 1832 he was left an estate in Kent , where he lived , though he occasionally slept in Regent-street . In 1846 he retired from business . Subsequently he became a shareholder and director of the London a " nd County Assurance Company , went for two years to Boulogne , came back in March , and came down to Gourock in July . ' On the 16 th of September he applied for sequestration under the designation of " Edward Legh , some time residing
and carrying on business as a wine-merchant at No . 95 , Regent-street , Westminster , London , and presently residing at No . 7 , Ashton , Gourock , in the county of Renfrew . " The concurring creditor was filr . Esphi , his family solicitor : and , as the bankrupt had neither estates nor debts in Scotland , the first meeting of creditors was composed of Mr . Espin ' s mandatory , Mr . A . M'Callum , writer , Port-Glasgow . This Mr . M'Callum ( as constituting in himself the meeting of creditors foresaid ) voted himself ( 1 ) preses ; ( 2 ) appointed bis clerk clerk : ( 3 ) named a trustee ? ( 4 ) a commissioner , " no
other creditor having claimed on the estate ; and , finally , Mr . M'Callum resolved that the bankrupt's personal protection be renewed for twelve months . A petition was now presented for recal of sequestration by Mr . M'Creight , of the London and Comity Assurance Company , now in course of being wound up , the recal being prayed for on the ground that the bankrupt could not be said to be subject to the jurisdiction of the Scotch courts . The Lord Ordinary thought that the further arguments should be postponed till the result of the " Tobcrmory Case" was known .
Salt Tradk to China . —With reference to the admission of English salt into the ports of China , we append tho copy of a letter written after Lord Malmesbury had been made acquainted with the fact of Chinese solar salt being freely admitted at Calcutta on the same terms as that from England : r— «• Foreign-office , Nov . 17 . Sir , —I am directed by the Earl of Malmesbury to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 13 th instant , respecting the admission of British salt into China , and I am to state to you in reply , that as the Earl of Elgin will , according to all probability , have left China before any instructions founded on your letter could reach Ms Excellency , Lord Malmesbury considers it best to defer the issue of such instructions until the departure of an ambassador who will bo sent out to Pokin from this country , nnd whose attention will then bo direoted to the subject . —E . Hammond . " - —Liverpool Albion .
Ciikql'ks on Country Bankers . — On Monday , 22 nd inst ., tho London bankers commenced a clearing for country cheques . The process adopted is , that each London banker sends a clork to tho clearing-house at twelvo o ' clock with such cheques on country bankers as may have been left with him to be collected ; these cheques nre delivered to the respective agents of the country bunkers , by whom they are forwarded to thoir sevcrnl destinations , and upon receipt of advice of p ayment , the balances aro settled in the London clearing . By this mode , time , labour , nnd expense of postage are economised , and so soon as tho country bankers shall generally have given in thoir adhesion to tho plan , the Hyatoiu will bo very complete . Wo understand Its adoption is proceeding vory satisfactorily .
Uud Ska and India TEJUKonAPii . —The contract with this company has buon signed by the Lords of the Treasury , and tho manufacture of the submarine cable la in rapJrt progress . It is hoped that tho section from Suoz to Aden will bo laid in tho spring , and an expectation in entertained that a call , not exceeding 3 / . per sluuo , will bo necessary next month , tuul nnothor of like amount Id Jumiary .
of an unfinished vessel . There were no takers at par ; and had t hero been , there was no room for them on the register . The original company , therefore—and there were only 800 of them—boldly faced , as was their only chance , their difficulties . They met , confessed their errors , and resolved to be jolly under the circumstances . As a half-loaf was bettor than' no bread , they determined to sell their 040 , 000 / . worth of dead money for 160 , 000 / . worth of shares in a new capital of 330 , 000 / . To get 170 , 000 / ., thereforeof cash available for the completion of their
, enterprise , they enst to the winds fifteen shillings out of every pound they have spent ; and each new shareholder joining thoir new company will reap , paripassu with themselves , the benefit of experience purchased at this enormous sacrifice of 480 , 000 / . It wore a lusting reflection upon tho enterprise of our rich community if this financial scheme were to fail . 880 , 000 / . is the ontlro capital of tho new Great Ship Company ; of which tho 100 , 000 ? . ( mostly takep out in new shares ) will
purchase tho vessel ; 180 , 000 / . will fit her for sea ; and the other 40 , 000 / . will pay her working cost . Her first trips will bo Transatlantic , but her freight-earning power will bo greater in the Eastern trade ; and this wo believe to bo her future . If investors wore forthcoming in bad times to believe that the former speculation would pay interest on 500 , 000 / ., it is hard , when money is cheap , if public confidence ia denied to a similar adventure fully furnished with experience , having more than equal chances of revenuo , and with only half that capitul to divide the profits .
TllADIS AND RlCSOUItOlCS OV PORTUGAL .- — It 18 shown by Mr . Paget , our diplomatic agent at Lisbon , that tho exports to England from Oporto amount to 5 , 712 , 681 mllrula , and tho imports from England into Oporto to 5 , 475 , 701 ) niilreis . The exports from Lisbon to England amount to 1 , 000 , 050 milrois . ami the , imports from England into Lisbon 4 o 4 , 138 , 522 mllreia . Those figures show that the trmio of Portugal with England is more than double the whole of her trade with tho rest of tho world . The Portuguese tnrifl taxes vory highly both manufactured goods und tlio raw material . Tho
T^ Conomf In Fuel.—The Waste Of Coals J2j Arising From The Use Of Badly Constructed Fireplaces
T ^ CONOMf IN FUEL . —The waste of coals J 2 J arising from the use of badly constructed fireplaces The
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No . 453 , November 27 , 1858-1 T H E L E A D E B . 1301
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 27, 1858, page 1301, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2270/page/29/
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