SHIPPING
PORT OF NAPIEK Sun rises to-morrow at 4.21 a.m. Suu ets to-morrow at 6.34 p.m. Hieh tide to-morrow at 7.48 a.m. High tide to morrow at 8.14 D.m. ' Arrivals November 13 —Fairburn, auxiliary schooner, from Porangahau 15 Monowai from Nor hern ports Passengers: Misses Thompson, Williams, Morgan, Row. Wilkinson, [Barry; Mesdames Williams and I child. Bailie. Thorns and child, WatJ son and child: Buckley. Oakley, Scott land infant; Messrs Ryan, Griffen, ) Murtagh, McKay, Singleton, Laery. Seiig, Chicke , Ross, Hennt ssey, Bailie. Baird, Thorns. Martin, Wachsmanr, Tate, Kelly, Y.Ming, Reynolds, Perry. Witson, Forrest, Dick. Harding. Fitzgerald, Sherratt, Captain F«r is, nr hinray, ! Williamson, Barry. Lu as, Hall, ! Brown, Coleman. Dr beou, -lassey, Bailey ; 28 steerage Departures November 13—Niwaru, for Gisborne 15—Monowai, for Southern ports Expected Arrivals. November 16 —Tarawera from Southern ports 17 —Flora, from Gisborne 18—Niwaru. from Gisborne 18—Wimmera, from Northern! ports and Sydney 19—Waikare, from Southern ports J Projected Departures. j November J 15—Weka, for Waikakopu j 16—Tarawera. for Northern ports ; 17—Flora, for East Coast bays 18 —Wimmera, for Southern ports 19 —Waikare, for Nor'hern ports Vessels in Porr. j The Union Co.'s Tarawera is due on Tuesday forenoon from Southern ports and leaves at 8.30 p.m. on same day for Gi borne and Auckland. The Huddart Parker and Co.'s Wimmera is due on Thursday morning from Northern po'ts and Sydney and leaves at 2 p.m. for Wellington and South. j The Union Co.'s Flora is expected j on Wednesday from Gisborne and i loaves again the same day for Gisborne. East Coast Bays and Auckland. United I'm-* A«s>- ci*tio•» —Bv Electric l Telegraph—Cop.v right (Received 15. 935 a.m) Sydney, November 15. Arrived: Waipara, from Westport. Sailed: Waitemata, for Westport. Newcastle, November 15 Sailed : Kaituna. for Greymouth
A general meeting of shareholders of the Starr-Boukett Building Society I will be held in the Old Athenaeum j Hall this (Monday) evening, 'at I 8 o'clock, for the purpose of making appropriations as follows: —No I. issue, £SOO by ballot; No 2 issue. £SOO by sale* Mr W. G. Gould, secretary of the j fl.B. Fruitgrowers' Association, has left Hastings on a visit to the townships on the Main Trunk line, on business in connection with his Association. He does not expect to return to Hastings until about December Bth. On Saturday afternoon Mr C. Hampton, who for the last eight years has been in the service of the H.B. Farmers' Co-operative Association at Port Ahuriri, was pre- . sen ted with a full set of dinner rind j dessert knives with solid ivory j handles. Mr Hampton intends to 1 engage in business at Havelock North. 1 A trip to Cape Kidnapper, via Clifton and along the beach, provides a most enjovable outing, but it has j its drawbacks if one happens to be caught by the tide. Yesterday three young men made the j "mrney and on their return found the sea barring their progress at the Black reef. They had to abandon their bicycles for the night and tramp over the hills and gullies to Clifton which place they fortunately reached before dark. People who essay the journey should make sure of a favourable tide before starting. | Messrs Well wood and Wellwood I advertise for sale an excellent house j property in Hastings, an orchard and vineyard at Frimley and a little block of dairying land. •
! At a meeting <s>f the Heretaunga 1 Dairy Company; at the Oddfellow's Hall this Mr T. S. Percival was re-elated Chairman and Managing it was decided that the price pai-Jf-vr butter fat for the current iu«n| .-hotiiJ be oMd. Bonuses v. ere v iu tn- directors and members of rh_- ; ,ir:ff. The fallowing acctiunib were nas-=rd for payment :—Di\ den's nus £166 rss ud, milk cheques to suppliers £BIO 10s 7d, wages £47 6s, general accounts £194 19s (3d. Total £1444 5s sd. Fruitgrowers are watching w't'i great interest the Government Biologist's experiments with oil sprays. Oil is one of the most effective materials available to gardeners and I fruitgrowers, but its defect, however. j is its well-known chemical reluctance Jto mix with water. Mr Cockayne. j however, has made some very sucIcessfu! trials with a special form of J emulsifier, made from soap, which j instantaneously emulsifies the oil, so that it can be sprayed without J fear of damage to the tender shoots lof the plants. He has used the (crude Taranaki petroleum, costing Qd per gallon, subject of course to heavy dilution with water. As an aphis killer it has no equal. It is understood that full particulars of the trials will be published shortly. The Dresden Piano Company is proud of the confidence placed in" it by the public—a trust built up by years of honest dealing. Frankness is "The Dresden's" motto in all its relations with a purchaser. The more the latter knows about the piano he is buying, the more likely he is to be satisfied. What the Dresden Piano Company has to offer its patrons is quality—never anything else. Had not good value been a characteristic feature with the Dresden, theirs would not be the business it is to-day. That Company has many advantages. It possesses extensive capital and an enormous output. Thus, it commands stock on a bedrock basis from the world's ; foremost manufacturers- Then it : possesses officers of great experience, of unrivalled judgment, and of unquestioned integrity, in whom not only has " The Dresden" the utmost confidence, but on whom the public, too. can rely— to the last word. Local representatives Berryman Bros.
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Bibliographic details
Hastings Standard, Volume XIII, Issue 4311, 15 November 1909, Page 8
Word Count
920SHIPPING Hastings Standard, Volume XIII, Issue 4311, 15 November 1909, Page 8
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