I have had the honor to receive Your Lordship's Despatch N
               29 of the 
20 October last, transmitting copy of a Letter
               which the 
Hudson's Bay Company had addressed to you complaining
               that the Colonial Government fail to give them any assistance in
               attempting to check the illegal
traffic
 traffic in Spirituous Liquors on
               the Coast; and requiring me to report whether the
               Ordinance—N 28 of 
1867 had been strictly enforced, or
               whether its provisions are not sufficiently stringent to effect
               the object for which it was passed.
               
               2. No representations whatever have been made to me by the
               Representatives of the 
Hudson's Bay Company in this Colony on
               this subject; and it would have been reasonable to expect if
               their Agents regarded
the
 the government as having the power to
               prevent the traffic of which they complain that they should have
               called my attention to the matter; and I am not informed that
               the Company itself makes any attempt to check the traffic; they
               certainly have furnished no information which would lead to the
               conviction of offenders. In fact they are as well aware as I am
               that the difficulty lies not in the insufficient stringency of
               the Law or the absence of willingness to enforce it, but in
the
 the
               circumstance that practically it is found, as stated by 
M
                  Grahame, to be impossible to "prove any case in point," for want
               of proper evidence. 
M Grahame's remedy is that a "Gunboat
               should be employed to watch the Coast." But, even one Gunboat
               would be inadequate to exercise the necessary surveillance over
               several hundred miles of Coast; and I fear that without the
               constant employment of one or more Vessels as Cruisers for this
               purpose it will always
remain
 remain difficult to prevent the traffic.
               It is represented as carried on in "Schooners that clear from
               
Victoria and take on board liquor outside the Harbor." It is
               true that the liquor is not on board when these Coasting traders
               leave 
Victoria; but it is not in fact known where or when they
               take on board the liquor which it is believed that they trade to
               Indians in exchange for furs. The 
Gulf of Georgia abounds in
               Islands, Bays, and Inlets affording numerous places where
it
 it is
               easy to have the liquor left to be taken, or put on board by
               concert with other persons for such a purpose; and, moreover, as
               the American Ports on 
Puget Sound are at no great distance from
               
Victoria it is quite possible for their supplies to be obtained
               from thence. It is only by following these traders to the parts
               of the Coast far up to the North which they frequent for traffic
               that it is possible to prove against them any infraction of the
               Law. In cases where the offence has been
proved
 proved the penalty has
               been enforced. One such occurred during the visit of my
               Predecessor to the North Coast in the early part of last Year as
               mentioned in 
M Trutch's Report forwarded in 
M Hankin's
               Despatch N 22 of 
26 June 1869. But, it is not within
               the means of this government to maintain an armed Vessel
               specially for this purpose, nor do I think that the Lords of the
               
Admiralty would readily consent to the employment of Gunboats
               for this service. But without some such assistance it is found
               practically
almost
 almost impossible to give effect to the provisions
               of the Law however stringent or salutary.