Shipping.
high water. a Hsuna t J-°' m Oßßow. 2.19 p.iru i P0B 2 59 R n LMEHS I Dr ™iN F< 1 *-o9 p.m, j 3.41 p . m. PORT CHALMERS. January 19 1 Pnsnt, from Hokitika ’ 6r ‘ gant “ e . 145 *»ra, CatSS K!?i.. Bcl,ol,ner ’ 52 •»”». Gxnt, hw, » *on». (V £GS in the steerage. ’ jes, Peters, . January 20. ames Sewell, for the Bluff. B Russell, and Oceso, brigantine, 43/ from New York on Or s -> 125 tons > Best > -banny Bresianer irrar the Mauritiu * tons, E. B. Lowry, - Prosper©, hr ; -sober 1. Mauritius on ’ ■ srquo, 257 tons, Milne, .a on December 16. Januaf -g, 19 5 tons, Malzard, from Wag P Deceml Jer n, Sar sailed. P y2o.—Shfig, ».s., 45 tons, Wing, for oint. aeon, s.s., 124 tons, Edie, for Oamaru, barque, 291 tons, Law, for Newcastle. Royal Diadem, barque, 475 tons, Dennis, for Guam. Tararua, 522 tons, Bowden, for Melbourne. Passengers :—Mr and Mrs_ C. H. street, Mr and Mrs C. Field, Mrs Hislop, Miss Flynor, Capt Macfarlane, Messrs Leathes, Murdock, T. Barnfield, and twenty-five in the steerage. For the Bluff—Mrs Miller and two children, Mr W. Gilchrist, Master Quinn, and one in the steerage. PROJECTED DEPARTURES. Alhambra, for Bluff, January 29. Bruce, for Timani, January 21. Easby, for Newcastle, February ]j}. Express, for Bluff, January 23. May Queen, for London, January 25. Maori, for Oamaru, January 22. Mataura, for London, early. Phoebe, for Northern Ports, January 30. Seagull, for "Wellington, January 18. Taranaki, for Northern Ports, January 26. The p.s. Comerang arrived this morning, from the Bluff, and passed up to Dunedin. The s.s. Tararua sailed this afternoon for Melbourne, via the Bluff, with the outgoing Suez mail. The brigantine Swordfish will finish discharging her cargo of timber this evening, and will shortly sail for Hobart Town. The Harbor Compan’s s.s. Bruce arrived alongside the ship Wakato at 10 last night from her usual trip to Lyttelton and intermediate ports. Se left Lyttelton on the 17th. The brigantine Circe arrived yesterday afternoon from Hokitika, which port she left oh the 10th. Had variable winds to Gape Farewell, which was passed on the 15th, then N.E. winds to arrival The brig Prosper©, from Mauritius, arrived at the Heads this morning, which port she left on the 19th of December. She brings a full cargo of sugar, and sailed up to her anchorage this morning. The Columbus, at the Bluff, is ready to sail for London, but cannot get away for want of hands at reasonable wages. Men there are holding out for Ll2 a month for the homeward voyage. The cargo of the Columbus consists ©f 3,500 bales of wool, and about 300 tons of miscellaneous merchandise. The barque Fanny Bresianer, which was re{)orted at the Heads in our last issue, sailed up aat evening as far as the Quarantine Ground, where, the wind falling light, she came to anchor, and sailed up this morning with a fine N.E. wind as far as Carey’s Bay, after a splendid passage of thirty-four days from Mauritius. That port she left on December 16 with the usual trade wind, which continued until in lat. 31 S. ; then light, variable winds until the 26th, when she got the westerlies, which were steady and light, in lat. 34, long. 75; passed the Island of Amsterdam, about twenty miles to the northward, on the 28th, and passsed the Leuwin on the 6th of January, Tasmania on the 15th, and sighted the South Capo at midnight oa the 17th; had light, variable winds along the Coast, and arrived as above. She brings a cargo of 305 tons of sugar for this port. The fine American brigantine Oceso, of 454 tons register, was signalled last evening at the Heads, sailed up this morning with a fine N.E. wind, and came to anchor off the old jetty after a fine passage of 110 days from Now York, which port she left on the Ist of October with S.W. winds. These continued for a few days, then had winds until the 21st, southerly winds until the 30th, thence light baffling winds until crossing the equator on the 6th of November, and got the S.W, trades in lat. 1.37 Swhich continued until the 16th in 18.42 ; thence N. and N.E. winds until meeting with' the westerlies in lat. 41.33 on the 11th of December. Crossed the meridian of Greenwich on. the sth of December in lat, 40.35, and that of the Cape on the 10th; ran down her easting in 44, and passed the meridian of Cape Leuwin on the 4th of January, 95 days out:; had variable winds until sighting the south coast of Tasmania on the 12th, and came round the Traps on the 17th; had light variable winds along the coast, and arrived at the Heads yesterday afternoon and sailed up as above. She brings a full cargo of Yankee notions, a portion of which w for Wellington. On the 29th of November boarded the barque Lucy S. Wills, from New York, bound for Batavia, 56 days out, all well m long. 17.49 W,, lat, 37.31 S,
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Evening Star, Issue 3716, 20 January 1875, Page 2
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849Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 3716, 20 January 1875, Page 2
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