Shipping.
HIGH WATER. TO-MORROW. HkaOs I Port Chalmers J Donedik 6.7 p.m. I 6.37 p.m. I 7.22 p.m. PORT CHALMERS. SAILED. Crest of the Wave, for Hokitika Result for Allday Bay CUSTOM HOUSE, DUNEDIN. THIS DAY. INWARDS. Tararua, 523 tons, Pearce, from Northern Advance, 13 tons, Latimer, from Waikouaiti Beautiful Star, 126 tons, Hart,from Lyttelton Geelong, 108 tons, Sinclair, from Oamaru, Wellington, 262 tons, Kennedy, from Lyttelton , _ Strathnaver, 53, Mackay, from Mercury Bay. OUTWARDS. Alice Ball, 1080 tons, Guest, for Newcastle. Wellington, 262 tons, Kennedy, for Oamaru Alhambra, 497 tons, Underwood, for LyttelTararua, 623 tons, Pearce, for Bluff PASSENGER LIST. Per Tararua, from Melbourne via Northern Ports.—Mr and Mrs Aylmer, Mrs and Miss Ashcroft, Mrs Palmer, Miss Deck, Miss Dyer, Misses Snow (2), Master Snow, Bishop Moran, Messrs Rutherford, Thomas Wood, R. Wood, and six in the steerage ; 14 saloon and steerage for Melbourne. Per Tararua, for Melbourne via Bluff— Mrs Bennett, Messrs J. M. Ritchie, J. C. Morris, Medlicott, Jones, Anderson, Engel, Wilson and son, and 20 in the steerage. projected departures. Beautiful Star for Oamaru, June 25 Beautiful Star for Lyttelton, June 28 Nevada for Northern Ports, July 5 Pretty Jane for Port Molyneux, June 29 BeJeliffe for Kakanui, June 26 Wild Deer for London, July 5. Wellington for Northern Ports, June 23 The topsail schooner Crest of the Wave, for Hokitika, and the schoonsr Result, for Allday Bay, sailed this forenoon. Onr Auckland correspondent telegraphs : —The English papers by the San Francisco twjvil contains the following list of arrivals and departures for New Zealand .‘—Arrived: Anne, from Wellington ; Venus, Ifrom Napier; Shun Lee, from Canterbury. Sailed : Celestial Queen, for Auckland; Halcune, for Wellington ; Wave Queen, for Otago. The cyclone at Madras on May 1 was terrific, and its equal in intensity has not been felt there for many years. The Friend of India's telegraphic despatch says :—Many houses had been damaged, some having their walls blown down and others having their windows and doors carrie I away. Substantial pandals were thrown down andshattered. These were scenes sad enough to behold, but a still more dreadful sight was to be witnessed on the beach, from where one could see that almOst every vessel that had been riding at anchor in the roadstead on the previous evening had suffered severely. About half a dozen vessels were wrecked, others were in great distress, and others were fast drifting towards shore. By 11 o’clock the following English ships were found to be wrecks :—Hotspur, Burlington, John Scott, Armenian, Sir Robert Seppings, Inverness, Ardberg, Missir, and Kingdom of Belgium, About a dozen native and three foreign vessels were also destroyed, and the pier was divided into two parts by vessels being driven against it. The loss of life is not ascertainable.
ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH. ARRIVED. Timaru, 24th, 7.30 a.m,, Maori from Dunedin. Wanganui, 24fch, 11 a.m., Keerafrom Onehunga, with English mail. SAILED, Auckland, 23rd, late, Nevada for Napier.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18720624.2.3
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Evening Star, Issue 2916, 24 June 1872, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
485Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 2916, 24 June 1872, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.