SHIPPING.
PORT OF AKAROA. ARItIVED March IG—Taiaroa, 416 tons, Pieterson, from Dunedin. Agent—W. 11. Henning. Passenger—Ko Chi. SAILED March IG.—Taiaroa, s.s., Peterson, for Lyttelton. Passengers—Messrs Kennedy, GUI, Styche, Rogers, Smith, Wiggins, and Dawber, Miss Iloughton, Madame Citron and child. IMPORTS. 11 sacks and 70 bags flour, 34 boxes sundries, GO mats sugar, 3 pels, 13 cases, 8 bdls, 97 pkgs, 1 half-cluMt, 118 empty fruit cases, 2 coils wire, 2 kegs, 7 pieces timber, 1 trunk, 1 truss, 1 jar, I bale, 10 tons coal. Consignees—Vangioni, Daly, Watkins, Citron, McDonald, Aylmer, Garwood and Co., Black, Rodrigues, Billens, Scott, Brown, Bank of New Zealand, Henning and Wright. EXPORTS. Per Taiaroa —7 bales wool, 4 bgs blocks, 8 cases fruit, 2 cases sundries, 17 cases cheese, 29 cheese, 203 sacks grass seed. Shippers—Narby, Magee, Feltham, Daly, Caterer, Aylmer, Lardner, Garwood and ■Co., Vangioni, Wood, Latter, and M'Kay. The Taiaroa left Dunedin on Monday at 1 p.m. She reached the Heads at 4.45 a.m. on Tuesday last, an I came alongside the wharf at 5. Experienced calm sea and favorable wind. She sailed again at 8 o'clock the same merning for Lyttelton. The Union Cos. s.s. ATawata arrived at Lyttelton at 6 a.m. on Thursday last with the English mail, transhipped from the Waitaki at Wellington. The steamer left Auckland on the 11th, and called at Gisborne and Napier. She sailed for Port Chalmers at 4 p.m. A ship was signalled from the northward at Lyttelton on Tuesday last. She is supposed to bo the Salamanca, to load here for home. A small steamer, from the North, alt-o seen, is supposed to he the Jane Douglas. The Lyttelton harbor master yesterday stopped the Euterpe from taking in more grain while alongside the Gladstone Pier, as the vessel was occupying one of the new births at the extension. She wanted but thirty or f oity tons more to complete tier cargo, and that will probably be lightered off to her after her removal this morning to the stream. She will be cleared to-day by the New Zealand Shipping Company. At 8 a.m. on Tuesday the Bruce, bound for London, passed out of sight of the signalman at the Heads, the wind being then light easterly. The Remonstrant is to sail for home next Tuesday.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AMBPA18800319.2.3
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Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume 4, Issue 382, 19 March 1880, Page 2
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380SHIPPING. Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume 4, Issue 382, 19 March 1880, Page 2
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