I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your
               Despatch of the 5th January 1863 No 3, transmitting for my
               information copy of a letter from one of the Agents General for Crown
               Colonies in respect to the Loan of £50,000, recently contracted
               by this Government.
               
               2.  In compliance with Your Grace's instructions, I forward
               herewith a Return exhibiting the various details of information
               required by Your Grace in respect to the manner in which the Loan
               was disposed of.
               
            
            
               3.  I have perused the remarks of 
Mr Julyan upon the course
               which was adopted with the view of immediately realizing of the
               proceeds of the Loan.  I do not doubt that under ordinary circumstances
               the method suggested by 
Mr Julyan would have been found
more
 more
               advantageous than that which was followed, but under the
               circumstances existing I conceive the arrangement entered into
               with the Bank of 
British Columbia was in every way advantageous.  The
               pressure upon me for money was urgent, I had no positive certainty
               at the time the arrangement was made that the Act would be
               confirmed. I could not therefore without previous intimation
               have placed paper in the market that I was not satisfied would be met.
               The paper of the Bank of 
BritishColumbia Columbia
 Columbia on the other hand I had every
               reason to believe would be duly honored, and had the Loan
               Act not been confirmed or had it been delayed through error in
               form, the Bank would have become the creditors of the Government
               at a rate of interest of one third less than money could have
               been procured on the spot.
               
               4.  
Mr Julyan is also mistaken in one or two of his assumptions.
               Subsequent events have proved this.  The negociation of the 
Vancouver
                  Island loan was not effected upon much better terms by the Agents
               General,
than
 than the 
British Columbia Loan by the Bank of 
British Columbia.  The minimum fixed by the
               Bank was 103 1/2.  At the first allotment £6000 was disposed of
               at and  above this price.  The minimum fixed by the Agents General for
               the 
Vancouver Island Debentures was 103 3/4: and at the first
               allotment only £5900 were disposed of at and above that price.  I
               believe that since, the two Debentures command about equal rates.
               I am inclined to think better rates would have been obtained for
               the 
British ColumbiaDebentures
 Debentures had the Agents General abstained from
               putting a notice in the Times, which I cannot but view as calculated to
               create a feeling of uncertainty respecting the Loan which would
               be prejudicial to it; and although so far as that Loan was
               concerned in a money point of view, it might not affect this Government,
               yet such a feeling with respect to the first Loan of the Colony
               could not but be detrimental to the credit of the Colony and likely
               to injure the negotiation of further Loans.  The Drafts of the Agents
               General could
not
 not have been disposed of in the Colony at any
               better rates than the Drafts of the Bank of 
British Columbia.  We
               generally obtain the best rates for our Drafts from the American House
               of Wells Fargo & C
o the great Express Agents.  A draft upon the
               Agents General recently offered to them for sale on 
Vancouver Island
               Account was questioned, and I believe objected to as they had no
               knowledge of such paper.  The drafts of the Bank of 
British Columbia
               are readily taken
               by them and command as high rates as the drafts upon Her
Majesty's
 Majesty's
               Paymaster General.  I merely mention those particulars to shew that,
               however justly 
Mr Julyan may judge of matters from his point of
               view in 
London, yet it is necessary to make allowance for local
               circumstances before a full appreciation of the case can be arrived at.