SHIPPING.
J PORT OF NEW (PLYMOUTH, 1 l WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1910. PHASES OP THE MOON,, Full moon, 12th, 8.7 p.m. Jjast quarter, 18th, 5.12 New moon, 27th, 9.11. THE TIDES.' High water at New Plymouth to-day 10.22 a.m. and 10.38 p.m.; to-morrow, at 10.53 a.m. and 11.9 p.m. " THE SUN. ' The sun rises to-day at 0.12 a.m. and sets at 5.4S pjn.; to-morrow, rises at O.U a.m. and sets at 5.49 p.m., EXPECTED ARRIVALS. Kowhai, from Onehunga, to-day. Corinna, from Oneliunga, Thursday. Rarawa, irom North, Friday, fiarawa, from North, Tuesday. ARRIVED. September 12—Rarawa, s.s., 1072 tons, Bark, from Onehunga; 'Passengers I 'Misses Fitzherbert, Fitzgerald, Harrison, Hamatus, Miller (2), Barker, Ayton; Mesdames Fitzberbert, Breimam, Glynn, Davis, Barlow, Miller, Watkins; Messrs. Komana, Modtlell, Semrau, de Chateau, Walfcham, Hardman, Nugent, Oarapell, Laurence, M'Kenzie, Ayton, Ekman, Madder, Gee, Duncan, Glynn, Stuye, Pollard, Bock, Knox, Rasper, Liston, o'twa.y, Honehen, M'Mahon, Holiday and three boys, Salisbury, Cough, Adlam, Agnew, Young, Miller (4); 8 steerage. TELEGRAPHIC^ ARRIVED. Auckland, September 12.—Victoria, from Sydney; Whanga.pe, from Fiji. Melbourne, Sept. 11.—Kaikoura, and Walton Hall, from New Zealand, ' SAILED. AucMand, September ,11,-»-Westralia, for THE RARAWA,. The Rai'awa arrived early yeslerdVy morning from Onehunga.. She iad a cargo of 87, tons and several .passengers. The 'Rarawa' left again last might and returns on Friday. \ . THE REGULUISi Messrs. Cock ami Co. have received advice that the Kcgulus will arrive .at New Plymouth from Westport tomorrow She will sail again the same day after discharging .her cargo> THE KARAMU. ' Tlie local office of the Union Company received tho following message from the head office yesterday:—'"lvaramu leaving Lyttelton to-night. Calls at Wellington'for New Plymouth cargo." " BIG PRICE FOR PETONIS, According to the latest mail news from London the well-known coastal steamer I'etone, recently sold hy the Canterbury Shipping Co. to oversea buyers, changed owners at the handsome sum, of £21,000. The vessel was to be delivered in New Zealand to her new owner?: NOTES. Giving some details of the voyage lie recently made round the world in the 23-ton yacht Man*, Mr. Scoresby Routledge remarked: "After leaving San Francisco we came down the Mexican coast. Two hundred miles from land we came upon three islands marked as uninhabited, and I decided to laud to try anct get some meat. One of the first things that caught my eye was a piece of wood hearing the name Annie Larsen, which 1 learn from a shipwrecked sailor "who was on the yacht was the nam* of a vessel engaged in blocked running of contraband. This remote island had been a dumping ground for Mexican revolutionists." This reference to the Annie Larsen is of more than passing interest to New Zealand shipping men, inasmuch as that vessel brought a cargo of lumber to Lyttelton from iPuget Sound only a few ■ months ago. On arrival at the southern port she was "arrested" on a charge of gun-running for the Germans round about the Persian Gulf. The case, however, fell through, and discharge of her lumber was commenced.
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Taranaki Daily News, 13 September 1916, Page 2
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499SHIPPING. Taranaki Daily News, 13 September 1916, Page 2
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