Shipping.
Sigh water. To-moArow. [ £oht Chalmers I Duheoin 4.36 p.m. I 5.16 p.m. | 6.1 p.m. PORT CHALMERS. ARRIVED. July 15.—Ladybird, s.s., 227 tons, Andrews, from the North. Passengers: Mis Woodland, Captain Boyd, Messrs Eng, Haines, Fraser, Hunter, Kirby, Moorhead, Robertson, Boyes, and three in the steerage. Havana, ship, 795 tons, Thomson, from Lon don. Passengers: Twenty-six in the second cabin and steerage. Clematis, brig, 240 tons, Johnson, from Geographe Bay (Western Australia), Jessie Anderson, schooner, 92 tons, Robertson, from Wangapoa. Crest of the Wave, schooner, 82 tons, Bowers, from Kakanui. Maori, s.s., 118 tons, Malcolm, from Lyttelton and intermediate ports. SAILED. July 15.—William Davie, ship, 769 tons, Rankm, for the Bluff. Wallabi, s.s., 101 tens, Leys, for the Bluff. projected departures. Beautiful Star, for Lyttelton, early. Claud Hamilton, for Bluff, July 21. Easby, for Newcastle, July 17. Ladybird, for Northern Ports, July 17. Lizzie Guy, for Hokitika, early. Macgregor, for San Francisco, July 28. Maori, for Lyttelton, July 17. Otago, for Northern Ports, July 18. Samson, for Oamaru, July 17. Wanganui, for Bluff, early. W allabi, for Bluff, early. The s.B. Wanganui will sail for her usual trip te the Bluff this evening. The ship Hindostan will be removed this evening alongside the railway pier to discharge. The schooner Crest of the Wave, Captain Power, arrived from Kakanui yesterday, on the flood tide. The baroue India was removed from the old jetty to the end of the railway pier by the Golden Age. There was a three-masted schooner at the Heads last evening. She is supposed to be from Puget Sound. The ship Caroline was unmoored from the stream, and hauled in to the pier, where she will discharge her cargo. The ship William Davie. 769 tons. Captain Rankin, was towed to sea last evening by the Geelong; bound to the Bluff. The Harbor Co.’« s.s. Maori arrived late last night from Lyttelton and intermediate ports, and steamed up to Dunedin. The brigantine Hally Bayley was towed down from Dunedin yesterday by the s.s. Wallabi, and sailed for Hobart Town with a light S.W. wind this morning. Messrs Houghton and Co.’s s.s. Wallabi sailed for the Bluff, taking passengers from the ships Caroline, Hindostan, and Cartsburn, about seventy-five in number from all. The Jessie Anderson, a new Auokland-hnilt fore-and-aft schooner of 92 tons, under the command of Captain Robertson, arrived in harbor yesterday. She came up the harbor under sail to Deborah Bay, and was afterwards towed to Dunedin by the Peninsula. The New Zealand S.S. Co.’s Ladybird arrived in port at six o’clock last evening. She left Manukau at 2.30 p.m. on the sth, called at Taranaki, Nelson, Picton, Wellington, and Lyttelton. We thank Mr Dougherty, her purser, for report of passage, files, and ether layers. The ship Devana, which was reported in our last issue as having been tewed up to the quarantine ground, on account of having on board 200 barrels of gunpowder, is a fine wooden vessel of 795 tons, and is owned by Mr Jamieson, of London, but under charter for this trip by Messrs Shaw, Saville, and Co. She encountered very bad weather during tbe voyage, having bad her bulwarks stove in and her boats smashed. She reports leaving the docks on the 13th April. She brings twenty-three passengers, and after discharging her powder, will be removed to the railway pier to discharge cargo. We are compelled to hold over our report of the passage. The brig Clematis, from Geographe Bay, Western Australia, was towed up from the Heads at eight last night by the tug. She left Geographe Bay on June 10, and arrived at tbe Heads at 3 p.m. on the 13th, and was towed up close to the railway pier as above. She brings a cargo of jarrah piles for the new jetty. When loading a shocking accident occurred. Whilst taking on board one of the heavy logs, the gear gave way, and one of the blocks struck tiie second mate on the bead, smashing his skull into fragments and killing him instantly. Captain Johnson had a narrow escape, being also rtrnek and cut about the head and face. During the voyage, while the vessel was off the Leuwin, one of the boys fell overboard and was drowned.
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Evening Star, Issue 3555, 15 July 1874, Page 2
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707Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3555, 15 July 1874, Page 2
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