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SHIPPING.

PORT OF WELLINGTON High Water, 6.10 a.m.; C. 32 r.M. ARRIVED. November 25.—Shepherdess, schooner, 83 tons, Cochran, from Havelock. Aurora, schooner, 52 tons, Romeril, from East Coast stations. Edward Pearce, agent. Unity, agoln. Kruli and Co., agents. Aspasia; schooner, 45 tons, Thompson, from East Coast stations. E. Pearce, agent. Cordelia, barque, 598 tons. J. W. Seymour, from Port Chalmers. Turnbull and Co., agents. Forest Queen, ketch, 34 tons, from the Coast. CLEARED OUT. November 25. —Helen Denny, ship, 727 tons, Ruth, for Napier. ■ ■' Planter, barque, 270 tons, Anderson, for Newcastle. IMPORTS. Shepherdess, from Havelock: 23,000 feet sawn timber. Aurora, from East Coast: 107 bales wool. Unity, from Cape Turntgain: 91 bales wool, 1 cose. Aspasia, from East Coast: 70 bales wool, 1 case, 1 box, 4 bills skins, 4 bides, 1 keg tallow. Cordelia, from Liverpool via Port Chalmers: original cargo from Liverpool, comprising—162 cylinder plates, 33 boxes fastenings, Minister of Public Works; 100 brls beer. Order; 45 tons coal. Order. Shipped at Port Chalmers for Wellington: 430 sacks flour, 350 half* sacks do, 500 qr-sacka do. EXPORTS. Helen Denny, for Napier: 5 half-tierces tobacco, 5 cases do, 500 do kerosene, 10 boxes oysters, 1 do clocks, 12 do scales, 1 case snaiths, 3 racks churns, 11 pkgs machinery, 50 cases sarsaparilla. EXPECTED ARRIVALS. London.—Howrah, Avalanche, Hindostan, and Soukar. New York.—Sunlight, barque Northern Ports.—Wellington, s.s., thisday. Melbodrne, via the South. —Albion, s.s., this day. Southern Ports.—Beautiful Star, s.s., this day ; Taranaki, s.s., this day. Melbourne, via the West Coast. —Alhambra, s.s., 30th inst. Wanganui.—Manawatu, p.s., this day; Storrabird, s.s., this day, PROJECTED DEPARTURES. London. —Adamant, in December; Jessie Roadman, early. Southern Ports.—Wellington, s.s., this day. Melbourne, via the South, —Alhambra, 30th. Wanganui.—Manawatu, p.s., this day. Melbourne, via the West Coast.—Albion, s.s., this day. Northern Ports.—Taranaki, s.s., to-morrow. Blenheim. —Falcon, this day. Castle Point.—Aurora, to-morrow, Paha.ua. —Aspasia, to-morrow. BY TELEGRAPH. • AUCKLAND, Wednesday. Sailed: Wonga Wonga for Sydney. LYTTELTON, Wednesday. Arrived: E. P. Bouverie. Sailed: 4.30 p.m., Star of the South, for Wellington; 4.55 p.m., Albion, for Wellington; 6.45 p.m., Taranaki, for Wellington. PICTON, Wednesday. Arrived: 7.10 p.m,, Wellington, from Nelson. NAPIER, Wednesday. Arrived: Rangatira. She sails for Poverty Bay to-night, and leaves Napier for Wellington on Friday. PORT OF HOBARTON. Arrived: November 2, Freetrader, from Dunedin. November 7, Lady Emma, from Lyttelton. Sailed: November 2, Malcolm, for Lyttelton, with timber and produce. November 7, Bella Mary, for Auckland. Ferdinand Holm has at last been gazetted to be a pilot for the port of Wellington. The steamer Wellington will arrive this morning early from the Northern ports with the Southern portion of the American mail. The steamers Taranaki and Albion are both due to-day from Lyttelton. The latter has the Northern portion of the Suez mail on board. The steamers Stormblrd and Manawatu are both due to-day from Wanganui. The former on arrival will be -placed on the patent slip for the purpose of receiving a general overhaul. The barque Planter cleared at the Customs yesterday. Haring completed ballasting, she hauled into the stream last evening. The barque Adamant Is discharging the remainder of her cargo of coal into drays. She will commence loading for London. The brigantine Enterprise may be expected to put in an appearance from the East Coast to-day. The ship The Douglas is taking in ballast. She will probably get away for Newcastle at the end of the present week. The ship Helen Denny cleared yesterday for Napier, where she will load wool for London. The Napier portion of the Oneco’s cargo will be conveyed to its destination by this vessel. She took advantage of he southerly breeze in the afternoon and dropped down below Pipitea Point, where she came to an anchor just •aa the breeze dropped away into a perfect calm. She. bad her royal ana topgallant masts and yards sent down. The schooners Aurora, Aspasia, and Unity arrived frnm +V>f> Tvaaf f!nmf. ohann fl.tr _ SljOPy breeze from the southward, with thunder, lightning, and heavy rain, was encountered. The fine iron barque Cordelia, Captain J. W. Seymour, anchored In the harbor at five o’clock yesterday morning. She left Port Chalmers on the 12th instant with a strong breeze from the S.W., which, however, only carried her fifteen miles, when it changed to the N.W. Experienced strong northerly weather for ten days; six of which the Kaikouraa were in view. A alight air came up from the south at eight o’clock on Tuesday night, and increased to a strong breeze which brought the vessel to her destination. The Cordelia has bridge material on board, upon discharge of which she will proceed to Newcastle to load coal for Valparaiso. The barque Malay, of Wellington, was in the harbor of Hobarton on the Btb instant. The steam launch Fairy has been purchased at Auckland by Captain Souter, for the river Thames trade. The barque Stanley Castle has been chartered by Messrs. Arnold, Hines, and Co., of Auckland, to load gum, &c., there for New York. Thts brig William Cundell (a Yankee craft, we believe) now at Dunedin, may be shortly expected to arrive at this port. She comes consigned to Messrs. Watt Brothers, and will load here with wool, kc., for London direct. Being of sufficiently light draught, this vessel will be able to ship her cargo in the inner harbor. —Hawhfs Bay Herald, November 20. The steamship Kennedy, from Nelson, arrived off the Grey bar at 8 a.m. on Thursday, and anchored until high water at half-past eleven, when she proceeded to take the bar, but got ashore on the North Spit, about 200 yards further north than where the steamer Waipara was stranded recently. The mails and passengers were got ashore by boat after the tide bad retired. It is estimated that it will coat £IOOO to get the steamer afloat.— Westport Times, November 17, The tug Titan arrived on Friday night from Hokitika. Next morning she towed out the Marion, in ballast, for Newcastle, and towed In the Elderslie, schooner, from Wellington. On coming up stream the Elderslie, drawing 12 feet 3 inches, ran her nose on to the shingle spit off the wharf, and it took the tight little Titan aU she knew to pull her off again stern first. But the feat was accomplished. —Westport Times, November 17.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18741126.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4270, 26 November 1874, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,045

SHIPPING. New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4270, 26 November 1874, Page 2

SHIPPING. New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4270, 26 November 1874, Page 2

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