I have the honor to transmit a letter addressed to you by
M Greville Mathew, Registrar of the Supreme Court of this Colony,
praying under the circumstances stated, that you will transfer
him to some appointment requiring less physical exertion than
the one
he he at present holds.
2.
M Mathew's statement is quite correct. By his accident
he is incapacitated for a long time, probably for life, from
fulfilling properly the duties of his present situation. I
enclose letters addressed to him by the Judge of the Supreme
Court and the Attorney General showing the high estimation in
which he is held by the Bench and Bar.
3. I would most willingly
provide provide for
M Mathew myself
if I saw any probability of my being able to do so. I have not
however had a single situation to give away since my arrival and
I do not see the most remote prospect of any patronage falling
into my hands. As stated in my despatch No. 33 of
5 September,
my Predecessor has left me some unattached public officers for
whom it is my duty to find employment in any situation which may
fall vacant. Even the creation
of of a new Staff of Officers at
the
Kootenay Gold Mines does not exhaust the superabundant supply
I have on hand.
3. [4.] It
gives me great pleasure to be able to state that
M Mathew is a gentleman of good education and conduct. He has
I am told shown great ability in the performance of his duties,
which come more under the notice of the Judge than of mine.
M
Mathew would much prefer an
appointment appointment in the West Indies to
one in
British Columbia. His father is Her Majesty's Minister
Plenipotentiary in Central America.
[P.S.] I will more formally report by the next opportunity that
I have, on a medical certificate given
M Mathew leave to return
to England.