I have the honor to transmit herewith an extract of a letter
               received from the principal officer of the Hudson's Bay Company
               in 
British Columbia, dated 
Victoria, 
Vancouver's Island 29th
                  April 1868, on the question of the right of British vessels to
               free access to the 
Stikine River in the Territory, recently
               ceded by the Russian Government to the United States.
               
               By the 6
th article of the Convention between Great Britain
and
 and
               Russia  dated 
St. Peter[s]burgh 16/28 February 1825, it is
               provided—
               
               That the subjects of His Britanic Majesty, from whatever
               quarter they may arrive, whether from the Ocean or from the
               interior of the Continent, shall for ever enjoy the right of
               navigating freely and without any hindrance whatever, all the
               rivers and streams which in their course towards the Pacific
               Ocean may cross the line of demarcation upon the line of Coast
               described in Article III of the present Convention,
               
               and the Company presume that there can be no doubt that this
               Article is binding on the
United
 United States as the present possessor
               of the Territory.