It appears to me that whether preemption is the best
                     or the worst system, it will be hopeless to maintain in 
B.
                        Columbia a system of land selling less inviting to immigrants
                     than that 
w prevails in the U.S.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I should write out as follows, that HG had received N
                     145 sending the copy of an Act from which he had withheld his
                     assent & 
w he states himself to have reserved. That to
                     prevent misapprehension it is as well to point out that the O.
                     in C. from 
w M S's powers are derived do not give him
                     the power of reserving a Bill for the signif of HM, nor
                     give to HM the power of assenting to such a bill. That the
                     present bill is sent home without Colonial Seal & his (
M S's)
                     Signature 
w is prescribed by his Instructions as the mode of giving
                     his assent; and therefore that as the Ord does not contain a
                     suspending clause it is for 
M S. to take the advice of his
                     L.O whether having reference to what has in fact
                     passed (of 
w HG is of course uninformed) the Ord may not
                     be in legal operation. Point out that much confusion and
                     corresp 
w be saved if 
M S. w take care that the
                     exercise of his powers as 
Gov are in conformity with the
                     instruments from 
w these powers are derived, with 
w it is

                     advisable that he should make himself acquainted. That HG
                     would be glad to receive returns from the
                     proper office and a report from the 
Gov shewing clearly the
                     working of the present system of land sale, that HG 
w desire
                     to know to what extent settlers had taken advantage of the
                     preemption system,

 to what extent their lands had been surveyed
                     and granted, to what extent the conditions of settlement by way
                     of personal residence & improvement had been actually enforced
                     and whether any difficulty had been found in obtaining payment
                     for the land occupied & in defining its boundaries.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     And I would point out that though the mode of allowing any
                     immigrant to take what he likes and where he likes is doubtless
                     that 
w will impose least trouble on the 
Gov Officers for the
                     time being & will have an appearance of satisfying immig; yet
                     that

 such a system is obviously calculated to furnish occasion
                     for future disputes as settlement advances and has been in
                     fact found to do so in other Colonies. That there are therefore
                     strong reasons, if the thing can be done, for making Surveys
                     precede instead of following settlement.