I transmit to you herewith the copy of a letter which I have
               received from 
Mr John Barnston of Montreal, containing an extract from
               one [letter] from his son, a Canadian Barrister, residing in 
Vancouvers
                  Island, complaining of his exclusion, as a Colonial Lawyer, from
               practising in the

 superior courts of 
Vancouvers Island, and 
British
                  Columbia.
               
               Mr Barnston's application that this disqualification may be
               removed appears to me in itself to be a reasonable one, but it is a
               matter in which I am unwilling to interfere with your discretion, and I
               must leave it to you to decide whether his request can properly be
               complied with.  Should you see no objection to the admission of Lawyers
               educated either in Canada or in the British Colonies generally  the local
               legislature has the power in
 Vancouver's Island
 Vancouver's Island to effect this, as I
               have pointed out in my recent despatch No. 45 of the 
9th April on a
               similar application from the Scottish Solicitors, and you will be at
               liberty to introduce the necessary measure for the purpose.  In 
British
                  Columbia all that would be necessary would be the requisite amendment of
               the Judges order in Court transmitted with your despatch No. 65 of the
               
6th January which provides for their temporary admission only.