Shipping.
HIGH WATEE. T O-MOBROW. Heads I Port Chalmers J Doredib 7.5 p.m. I 7.40 p.m. | 8.23 p.m. PORT CHALMERS. ("ARRIVED. October 30. —Swatara, US. 14., 1,250 tons, Ralph Chandler, from the Chatham Islands. Annie Bloomfield, brigantine, 134 tons, Dawson, from Kaipara. Euphrosyne, three-masted schooner, 75 tons, Spence, from Hokitika via Oamaru. SAILED. October 30. —Samson, p.s., 124 tors, Edie, for Oamaru. PROJECTED DEPARTURES. Agnes Jessie, for Melbourne, November 2. Alhambra, for Bluff, November 5. Craigellachie, for Bluff, early. ' Easby, for Newcastle, November 5. Helena, for Auckland, early. Jessie Henderson, for Auckland, early. James Paxton, for Bluff, early. Lizzie Guy, for Hokitika, early. Otago, for Northern Ports, November 10. Phoebe, for Northern Ports, November 8. Taranaki, for Northern Ports, November 3. ■ Wallabi, for Bluff, October 31. The p.s. Samson sailed for Oamaru shortly after the arrival of the 6.30 train this morning. The s.s Maori will sail this evening for her usual trip to Lyttelton and intermediate ports. The ketch Defiance arrived yesterday with a full cargo of produce from Moeraki, and passed up to Dunedin. The s.s. Wanganui came down from Dunedin this morning and steamed alongside the ship Haddon Hall for transhipments, and will sail for the Bluff this evening. The brigantine Annie BlootnfieM was towed up te Dunedin this morning. Captain Dawson reports having left Kaipara on the 20th, and meeting with very squally weather. It was telegraphed from Wanganui on Tuesday that the topsail schooner Jane Anderson, Captain Paterson, produce laden, from Oamaru to had gone ashore on the South Spit, in entering the river. Yesterday, however ..another telegram had been received stating that she had £*ot off. The American war ship Swatara returned from the Chatham Islands last evening. She left the Heads at 6.30 a.m. on the 19th, and had fine weather all the way to the Chathams, where she landed all her party and their instruments, and all were comfortably house in tents, &c. The instruments were up and in good working order three days before the Swatara left. The Swatara will sail to Wellington, Hobart Town, and back to the Bluff, leaving about next Tuesday. ' She passed a large British shil-*, apparently in ballast, standing in for here, about ninety miles off, supposed to be the Waikato. The three-masted schooner Euphrosyne arrived this morning from Hokitika via Oamaru, where she discharged a cargo of timber. She left Hokitika on the 4th inst., with a N.N.W. wind u Inch continued until the morning of the 6th, when it shifted to the S.W., and increased to a heavy gale, during which she carried away part of her bulwarks, water casks, and stove in her beat. Passed Cape Farewell on t(ie 7th, and the gale still continuing bore away for Port Nicholson. She left there on the 10th, passed the Kaikoraa next day with a moderate N.N.E. wind which shifted to the S. W. on the 12th and increased to a heavy gale, with tremendous high sea, the ship laboring heavily. During this gale she carried away her rudder stock, but on the 14th it moderated and she bore up for Akaroa. Left there on the 15th and had moderate variable winds until arriving at Oamaru on the 20th. Left for Port Chalmers at 8 p.m. last night with a fine N.E. wind, and sailed up as above. She will be taken on Isbister’s slip to be cleaned, and her rudder repaired, after which she will take in a cargo of coal for Oamaru
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Evening Star, Issue 3647, 30 October 1874, Page 2
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579Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3647, 30 October 1874, Page 2
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