Shipping.
HIGH WATER. To-morrow. Heads I Port Chalmers I Duhboib 3.23 p.m. I 4.3 p.m. | 4.48 p.m. PORT CHALMERS. ARRIVED. Sept. 11.—Melanie, three-masted schooner, 138 tons, Creagh, from Eaipara, via Wellington. Orita, schooner, 50 tons, Travers, from Moeraki. SAILED. September 11.—Seagull, brigantine, 122 tons, Best, for the Bluff. Samson, p.s., 124 tons, Edie, for Oamaru. Alhambra, s.s., 467 tons, Sinclair, for Melbourne via the Bluff. Passengers for Melbourne : Mrs Sutton and child, Misses C. M. Phillips.and Brown, Messrs Herman, poring, J. P. Maitland, Patrick, Eagan and child, and twelve in the steerage. For Bluff: Messrs Wilson, Cameron, H. Brackett, Kerr, Conyers, G. Thomas, Kimsdon, and three in the steerage. PROJECTED DEPARTURES. Beautiful Star, for Lyttelton, early. Easby, for Newcastle, September 14. Lizzie Guy, for Greymouth, early. Lady of the Lake, for Port Molyneux, September 14. Mary Ogilvie, for Greymouth, early. Maori, for Lyttelton, early. Otago, for Northern Porta, September 16. Peter Benny, for London, early. Samson, for Oamaru, September 15. Star of the South, for Fiji, October 4. Taranaki, for Northern Ports, September 15. Tararoa, for Bluff, September 30, Vision, for Auckland, early. Wallabi, for Bluff, September 12. Wanganui, for Bluff, early. The schooner Oreti returned last evening from Moeraki The p.s. Samson sailed for her usual trip to Oamaru this rooming. The a.*. Alhambra sailed this afternoon for Melbourne via the Bluff. The ship Mairi Bhan was removed from the railway pier and anchored in the stream. The ship Conflict, from Wellington, passed the Heads this morning on her war to the Bluff. The cutter Hope, for the Tois Tois, which Eut back on Monday, made another start for er destination last evening. The brigantine Seagull was towed down from Dunedin by the p.s. Golden Age last night, and got under way this morning for the Bluff. The clipper schooner Zier. from Hokitika, with a fuU cargo of sawn timber, arrived at the Rattray street wharf yesterday afternoon. She reports having left Hokitika on the 29th of August, with light moderate winds from E., which continued till off the Kaikouras, when she was met with a heavy gale from the S .W., which compelled her to run back to Cape Campbell, where she got shelter, and brought up for forty-eight hours. Prom thence she had light variable weather till arrival as above. . The three-masted schooner Melanie left Kaipara on the Ist, and had splendid winds all the way down the West Coast and through Cook’s Straits to Wellington, making the run in fortyeight hours. She put into Wellington for orders on the 3rd, sailed on the 4th, and had got across the strait to within a few miles north of the Kaikoras, when she was caught in a stiff S.E. buster, which lasted for seventy-three hours, during which the schooner was hove-to on the starboard tack, and was driven over 160 miles up the coast. The gale took off on Sunday, the 6th, at noon, and was succeeded by moderate breezes from S.W., W., and S.E. The schooner passed Banks’s Peninsula on the Bth, and arrived off the Heads on the 9tb, where she brought up and lay until yesterday morning, when she signalled for a tug. SHIPPING TELEGRAM, Lyttelton, September 11,— The Taranaki sailed south to-day at 11.30.
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Evening Star, Issue 3605, 11 September 1874, Page 2
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540Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3605, 11 September 1874, Page 2
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