Patent Notices




Numb. 71.

1889

SUPPLEMENT

TO THE

NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE

OF

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902.

Published by Authority.

WELLINGTON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902.

CONTENTS.

Complete Specifications accepted .. .. .. 1889
Provisional Specifications accepted .. .. .. 1895
Letters Patent sealed .. .. .. 1896
Letters Patent on which Fees have been paid .. 1896
Subsequent Proprietors of Letters Patent .. .. 1896
Requests to amend Specifications .. .. .. 1896
Requests for Correction of Clerical Errors .. .. 1897
Clerical Errors corrected .. .. .. 1897
Applications for Letters Patent abandoned .. .. 1897
Applications for Letters Patent lapsed .. .. 1897
Letters Patent void .. .. .. 1898
Applications for Registration of Trade Marks .. .. 1898
Subsequent Proprietors of Trade Marks .. .. 1903
Trade Marks registered .. .. .. 1903
Applications for Trade Marks withdrawn .. .. 1903

Notice of Acceptance of Complete Specifications.

Patent Office,
Wellington, 3rd September, 1902.

COMPLETE specifications relating to the under-mentioned applications for Letters Patent have been accepted, and are open to public inspection at this office. Any person may, at any time within two months from the date of this Gazette, give me notice in writing of opposition to the grant of any such patent. Such notice must set forth the particular grounds of objection, and be in duplicate. A fee of 10s. is payable thereon.

No. 14026.—21st September, 1901.—WILLIAM AGGERS, of Auckland, New Zealand, Upholsterer. An improvement in easy-chairs, settees, and couches.*

Claim.—In the construction of chairs, settees, and the like, a seat hinged at its front end to pillars upon a rocking-frame, and supported at its back upon springs resting thereon, and provided with arm-rests pivotally secured to the back of the chair or settee, and supported above the seat by means of springs interposed between them, as specified. (Specification, 2s. ; drawings, 1s.)

No. 14052.—24th September, 1901.—DANIEL JOSEPH KELLEHER, of Fairton, New Zealand, Engineer. Improved mode of and apparatus for detecting fires in buildings and for communicating the alarm abroad.*

Claims.—(1.) The general arrangement comprising my improved means for making known the presence of fires in a building simultaneously within every part thereof, and at the same time in the street and at the fire-station, substantially as described and explained. (2.) The described means for simultaneously sounding an alarm of fire in a house or building, which consists in the combination with suitable thermostats of bells arranged in the overlapping line of a three-wire circuit that can only be closed with the whole circuit when one of the thermostats closes, lead-off wires b, b, from the main line to one pole of each bell, and relays that connect the circuits of one story of the building with another story, substantially as shown and explained. (3.) In apparatus for the purpose described, in combination, an electric battery, an intermediate or overlapping line or circuit in which bells are placed, lead-off wires b, b, from the main line of wiring that attach to one pole of each bell, thermostats which on being closed make connection between the overlapping line and return-wire to negative pole of battery, relays that connect one circuit with another for the purpose of ringing the bells in the other stories or flats of the building and fire-brigade station, and lead-off wires F, F, from the street line to the relay of each house circuit, the whole substantially as explained and for the purposes set forth. (Specification, 3s. 3d. ; drawings, 1s.)

No. 14244.—20th November, 1901.—CHARLES TANDY, of Wellington, New Zealand, Blacksmith. Improvements in or relating to shearing-machines.*

Claims.—(1.) An attachment to metal-shearing machines to prevent plates laid therein for cutting tipping as the shear descends, such attachment consisting of a plate bolted to the front of the anvil or block of the machine and bent round over the top surface of the same, as specified. (2.) An attachment to metal-shearing machines consisting of a plate bolted to the front of the anvil or block and bent round over the top surface thereof, such plate being capable of vertical adjustment upon the block, as and for the purposes set forth.

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VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1902, No 71





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🏭 Notice of Acceptance of Complete Specifications

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
3 September 1902
Patents, Complete Specifications, Public Inspection, Opposition, Patent Office, Wellington
  • William Aggers, Accepted patent for improvement in easy-chairs
  • Daniel Joseph Kelleher, Accepted patent for fire detection apparatus
  • Charles Tandy, Accepted patent for improvements in shearing-machines

  • Patent Office, Wellington