 
                        
                        
                           M Mackean of the Bank of 
British Columbia called on me at
                           this Office to have some conversation on the subjects of a Mint,
                           of the Steam Communication with 
Panama, and of the Gold Escort.
                           I think that on the two last mentioned subjects, he was pretty
                           well satisfied by what he heard, and that on the first subject
                           he was led to doubt whether the existing 
Assay Office might not
                           be sufficient, but that on this point he will probably communicate
                           with his correspondents in the Colony in terms which may lead
                           them to consult with, or apply to, the local Government.
                           
 In 
                        
                        
                           In referring to the former papers, I find that on the question
                           of having an 
Assay Office or a Mint, there were two very important
                           letters from 
the Treasury dated the 
27 of May 1859 and 
5
                              July 1859, but that it so happens that neither of them was forwarded
                           to the Governor. There is nothing in their contents to render
                           a communication of them objectionable, and as they enter very
                           fully into the general principles affecting the subject, and
                           point out some obvious considerations which would seem to have
                           escaped at that time the attention of the local authorities, I
                           cannot help thinking
that
 that it would be an advantage even now to
                           put the Governor in possession of them. They would probably
                           be very useful guides to him in any fresh discussions which may
                           arise on the spot.
                           
                           Should this view be adopted, we could send them out in a
                           very brief covering despatch, to the effect that finding that
                           two important letters which had been received from 
the Treasury
                           in 
1859 on some of the general principles connected with the
                           establishment of an 
Assay Office or of a Mint, had not been at
                           that date communicated to the Governor, and thinking that the
                           observations which they contain are such that they

 may at any
                           time be useful to him in considering any questions which may
                           arise connected with those topics, the 
Duke of Newcastle now
                           transmits copies of them for his information, and in order that
                           they may be placed amongst the records of the Colony.