SHIPPING.
Hioii Water at Auckland—4.6l a.m.; 5.18 p.m. „ , „ Manukau—B.:u a.in.; 8.53 p.m. • Sun.—Rises, 5.40 n.ni.; sot*, 0.1 p.m. • • MOOS—Now; October 3,0.28 p.m. ARRIVALS. Mnnapourl, s.s., 1786, E. Wheeler, from v ' Melbourne and South. y Passengers ,g—Misses Stace, Cromer. Humphries, _ Steward, Stewart, Reea, Mesdamos Lees, Rees, Macquarie, Maniokahia, Davidson, ColviJle, Auckland, Messrs. T. Thompson, Arcy, Ortzmann, Reid, Manjokalna, Jenkins, Turner, Heany. Pritchard.Pettie, DeLatour, Lavisohn, Best, McDonald, Stuart, Captain Davidson, and 31 steerage.—Union S.S. Co., agents. . ' ■ ,' Saxon, schooner, Martin, from Picton.— T. Hendry, agent. CLEARED OUTWARDS., Tekoa, s.s., 4050, D. Stuart, for Wellington and South. — Now Zealand Shipping Co., agent 3. Camana, barque, 553, Johnson, for London, Passengers :—Messrs. Johnson and family. N.Z. Shipping Co., agents. Clansman, s.s,, 330, Farquhar, for.Russell »nd Northern ports. — Northern S.S. Co., agents. lona, s,s., 159, Amodeo, for Kuaotunn and Mercury Bay.Northern S.S. Co., agents. ... Chelmsford, s.s., 79, Hopkins, for Opotiki, •-Northern S.S. Co., agents. DEPARTURES. Tekoa, s.s., for South. Clansman, s.s.,_for Russell. > lona, s.s., for Kuaotunu. j *Chelmsford, s.s., for Opotiki. K . EXPECTED ARRIVALS, j '•>/ LONDON* : Waiotahi, 8.9., sailed July 20. Mamati, s.s., sailed August 21, " Waitangi. ship, sailed July 4. ' Brussels, barque, sailed July 10. ;Duke of Buckingham, s.s., loading, Honnione, ship, sailed August 5. JHSW YOIIK : ' I Star of the East, barque. tine 3. 1 Essex, barque, sailed July 14. • Flora, barque, sailed August 1. C Elinor Vernon, barqucntiue, loading. si* 1 - SKNVOASTLK : >Darcy Pratt, brigautme, sailed Sept. 19. : v SYDNEY : Cuthona, barquentine, sailed Sept. 19. . %■ ■ WOLLONOO.VO: Northern Chief, barque, to load. Defiance, brigantiue, to load. FIJI: fh : Pitcairn, schooner, early. , NArir.r.: ' Enterprise, schooner, early. } UAKOTON'GA : Torea, schooner, to sail September 17. PROJECTED DEPARTURES. j? . ' LONDON": C'anmnn, barque, to-day. Helen Denny, barque, to load. s. Himalaya, barque, to load. l?£\v YORK : B. Webster, barque, to arrive, BY d.sky : Edith May, barquentine, to load, M.' KELSON : Northern Star, barque, loading, KLT.I fSTOM : Agnes Donald, schooner, early. UNION S.S. GU'sIIOVEMENTS. • To-day.—Tarawera arrives from Sydney; Matiapouri leaves for Sydney, 5 p.m. ; Australia leaves for East Coast, 5 p.m. Wednesday.—Mahinapua arrives at Onehunga; Taupo leaves for Groymouth and Hokitika at 2 p.m. Thursday.—Ovalau arrives from Fiji, and leaves for Wellington ; Muhinapua leaves Onehunga, I p.m.; Tarawera leaves for South, noon. : NORTHERN S.S. CO.'S MOVEMENTS. To-day. — Wellington leaves _ for Wha.l' ngarei, Marsden Point, Manjjapai, and Parua Bay at 10.30 p.m. ; lona arrives from Kuao- . tunu and Mercury Bay; Douglas leaves for M', - Whangamata, Tatiranga, and Whakatane at 5 p.m. Wednesday.— leaves for Opunake jii and Wanganui at 1 p.m; Gairloch arrives fe: from New Plymouth. ;t' Thuksday.—Gairloch leaves for New Plymouth at 1 p.m. ; lona for Kuaotunu and '. Mercury Bay at 9 p.m.; Wellington arrives u J from \V haugarei. .. arrives from Russell early, and leaves for Tauratiga at 7 p.m.; Wellington leaves for Marsden Point and : . Whangarei at 10.30 p.m.; Glenelg leaves for J Hokianga at 1 ]) m. { Thames Service. —At'gylo or lona leaves for Thames daily. . ; VESaELS IN HARBOUR. (Till.-) li.it does not include coasters.} „ Arawata, s.a., in stream. ■ i Helen Denny, barque, in stream, ! ( Camana, barque, at Queen-street Wharf. Himalaya, barque.. »»t Quay-street Wharf. Northern Star, barque, at Railway Wharf. Edith May, barquentine!, at Railway Wharf. • Oatnaru, brigantine, at Railway Wharf. Vision, brig, at Queen-street Wharf. ' IMPORTS. Per schooner Saxon, from Picton: 780 sacks potatoes. * Ai i v Per s.s. Manapotiri, from South : 317 packages tea, 10 it-casks brandy, 20 hogsheads • beer, 1C cases tobacco. 134 plates iron, 20 bales paper, 871 sacks oats, 500 sacks • • potatoes, 563 sacks wheat, 100 Sacks malt, 50 packages agricultural machinery, and sun- : dries, 263 bags bark, 50 cases starch. Per Saxon 820 sacks potatoes.—J. B. ;y Macfarlane. EXPORTS. 1 Per barque Camana, for London:—s33 f'S Backs barque, 17798 horns, 1131 sacks copra, vf „ 1050 bales flax, 1021 rases and 101 sacks gum, 166 tons manganese, 16 sacks tallow, 139 bales wool, 57 bales leather, 31 bales rags, IS v.,' bales waste, 100 barrels oil, 50 sacks pease, 0 v . drums glycerine, 29 pieces of timber and ' 'i: sundries.
About 9.45 o'clocki yesterday forenoon the ® . Union S.S. Co.'s Manapouri, now in charge of : Captain E. Wheeler, arrived from Melbourne I ana Southern ports, with passengers ancl I' general cargo. The purser reports that the j': steamer left the Queen's Wharf, Melbourne, at '2.15 p'ro. on the 16th, and cleared Port I / Philip Heads at 0.15 the same day. She | reached the Bluff at 5.40 p.m. on the 20th : Inst., sailing again at 5.30 p.m. on the 21st ; • for her usual way ports. She called at DuujM V «din on the 22nd, leaving again on the 23rd ; >¥ v Lyttelton on the 24th, Wellington on the *•'. 25th, Napier on the 26th, and Gisborne on the 27th. She got away from the last-named : *• port at 11.15 a.m., and arrived as above after ;a smart passage of 22 A hours. Is#-;/. The new steamer Paeroa, of the Hauraki r i: S.S. Co.'s (Messrs. Brown, Geddeaand Syms) ' * - fleet, is rapidly approaching the completion • of her fitting up at the Thames, and Captain J. M. Syms will probably bring her into this ■ port about Friday. . - From Southern exchanges we learn that the paddle steamer Terranora, which was ' recently engaged in an opposition service to '■!" ■ the established lines between the Manukau and Waitara, is now doing collier work in : the South. She arrived at Lyttelton on the 23rd with 250 tons of coal from the Moki- *. liinui mines, and has been chartered to run six trips between the latter place and the i" Canterbury port. ;v,: The barque MenschikofT, which was recently purchased by the Union Company for a coal hulk, is receiving the necessary rcliairs, and the work of dismantling her is being proceeding with. " - At tho Quay-street , Wharf yesterday the 1 . barque Himalaya began to put out her cargo, J; 1 '; and the packages landed have so far proved in excellent condition notwithstanding the . vessel's long and stormy voyage. , . * Last evening the Northern S.S. Company's v Chelmsford took for her usual ■. ' ports in the Bay of Plenty well loaded with 7. mixed cargo. About three o'clock yesterday the Now > Zealand Shipping Company's splendid cargo fe' steamer Tekoa took her departure for the v South, going out under the pilotage of the chief harbourmaster, Captain Burgess. The Tekoa'a first place of call is Wellington, where she has to land a large shipment of cargo, and she will thence proceed to Lyttelton and Port Chalmers to land about 1500 tons London merchandise at each. Her loading ports are not yet quite definitely f decided, as a vessel of her capacity will need to call at several to get her full complement Jo : of frozen meat, etc. She will visit some of the Southern freezing stations, and call y V next month at Waitara, while it is not unlikely that she may drop in again at Auckland to complete. If she should do so, her arrival will bo gladly hailed by many of the townspeople with whom Captain D. Stuart . and Ilia staff have made themselves uniformly popular by their ready courtesy and geniality during their brief stay. ' The s.s. Taupo was rapidly discharging her cargo of transhipments at the Queen-street #:V. Wharf yesterday. , She is to leave to morrow for Greyinouth, . ...... At Port Chalmers the "crack" steamer Rotomahan/i, of tho "red funnel" fleet, is having the extensive alterations necessary for V- • her engaging in theTaemanian pushed .on with all possible despatch, and she will be ready to leave very shortly for her new • • sphere of labours, in which sho .is certain to prove as great a favourite as she has been in tho New Zealand coastal and intercolonial trade. The schooner Agnes Donald, now discharg- . - ing produce, lias been fixed, to fill nt) with timber for Wellington. ' «, 4 - f V '*' ! 1 i,v.\r-v " • "i . ■
At the Customs yesterday the barque Camana, Captain Johnson, was cleared out by her charterers, the New Zealand Shipping Co., and is to sail for London to-day. The barque has pot nearly a full freighting of gum, wool, flax, and sundries, but has to take in ft few small shipments this morning. ■ ■' The threo-masted schooner Edith May, Captain Joss, is ready to sail for Tairna, there to complete her loading of timber for Sydney, and she will leave port to-day. The schooner ; Saxon, Captain Martin, reached Port yesterday from' Picton, laden with potatoes for Mr. J. T. Hendry. The vessel has had a long and : stormy passage, and had to put into Gisborno for shelter. After several days' detention she resumed her voyage, and arrived as above, after a trip of three weeks. Tho barque Northern Star lins boon entered out at the Custom for Nelson. She takes a mixed cargo. . PORT OF ONEHUNGA. DEPARTURES. ■ , ' - Gairloch, s.s., McArthur, for ISiow Plymouth. Passengers : Messrs. Storey, Jones, and 1 steerage.—A. Barnes, agent. Takapuna, s.s., Grant, for the South.. lassengers : Misacs llruco, Neilsen, Churton and infant, Mr. and Mrs. S. Nathan, Mrs. Chapman. Mrs. Jones, Rev. Mr. Neilsen, Messrs. R. W. Mahopaku, Is. lairs, J. Glvnes, C. D. Farley, W. R. Glvnes, J. M. Dargaville, P. Gleeson, Master Churton, and 10 steerage. —Union S.S. Co., agents. The Northern Company's s.s. Gairloch, for Kcw Plymouth, sailed at noon yesterday. Tho Union Company's s.s. Taliiipuna, Captain J. Grant, for the South, sailed at 0.30 p.m. yesterday. . \ ; BY TELEGRAPH, MANGONUI. , September 23. —Arrived, last Friday s The s.s. Ethel 1., bound for Kaipara. Left on Sunday afternoon. A largo steamer passed here on Friday, which is supposed to be the dredge going is or th. HOKIANGA. September 28.—The s.s- Glenelg arrived yesterday, after remaining off tho bar for 24 hours. A heavy sea smashed tho officers cabin and did other damage. SYDNEY. September 25.—The barque Pet, 105 days from German New Guinea, arrived in port yesterday. For a part of tho voyage t the vessel was worked by two men and a boy, the rest of the crew being ill with fever. THE DREDGER IN BAD WEATHER. Russell, September 2S. —The Dredger No. 121 returned here at 10 p.m. yesterday, having encountered the full force of the westerly gale when 55 miles to the S. YV. of the North Cape, which caused the vessel to ship large quantities of water. The pumps becoming choked, the captain determined to put back to overhaul them.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 8684, 29 September 1891, Page 4
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1,703SHIPPING. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXVIII, Issue 8684, 29 September 1891, Page 4
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