I am directed by the Postmaster General to acknowledge the
               receipt of your letter of the 
12 Instant, transmitting copy
               of a Despatch from the Governor of 
British Columbia, relative to
               the Rules which are proposed for the transaction of Money Order
               Business between the United Kingdom and that Colony, and which,
               it is seen, are generally assented to by the Colonial Government.
               
               The only Rule on which they make a remark is the 18—relating
               to remittances of money to pay the Money Orders drawn in 
British
                  Columbia on the United Kingdom. In the case of this Colony,
               such remittances, as stated by the Governor, will probably not
               be necessary, because this Office has, periodically, to make
               payment to the Colony, through the 
Crown Agents in 
London of
               between £500 and £600 annually, on account of the subsidy for
               conveyance of the Colonial Mails to and from
San San Francisco
 San Francisco; and
               the sum thus payable may be retained as a set off against the
               Money Orders drawn upon this Country by the Colonial Post
               Office: on the understanding that, should the amount due from
               the Colony for Money Orders at any time exceed the sum due from
               this Country for the Packet Service, the question of remittance
               must be again considered.
               
               I am to request that the 
Earl of Kimberley will inform the
               Governor accordingly, and, in desiring him to take measures for
               carrying the Money Order system into operation, will propose to
               him, as a convenient arrangement, that the 
1 May next shall be
               fixed as the date for commencing the Business on both sides.