I have sent you in today a letter from
                     
Mess Coleman offering to
                     undertake the examination of the 
H.B.Co's accounts at certain specified rates. This letter has
                     been delayed more than it ought to have been, but not by my fault. On receiving the
                     
C.O.
                     letter of 
2 Inst
                     I thought the safest course was to enquire at 
the Treasury,
                     privately, whether there was any person they were in the habit of
                     employing in such matters—or whether their experience would afford
                     us any assistance. From one cause or another the answer was delayed,
                     and it was only on Wednesday that I was in a position to

 act. The
                     general result of what I learned at 
the Treasury was that they had
                     paid upwards of £8000 to Quilteo & Ba[name partly off microfilm] for a report on the
                     [Weedon?]
                     
                     Stores all [of?] which was of no practical use—and therefore that we
                     
sh employ some one else.
                     I therefore wrote to 
M Coleman on
                     Wednesday—had one interview with him on Thursday—and received this morning the letter
                     I now enclose.
                     
                     M Coleman appeared to me to take rapidly and clearly the main
                     points to be enquired into—and he promised me to make the examination himself. I presume
                     that his appointment should be from
                     the 
Colonial Office, but he will require instructions and, unless I
                     hear from you to the contrary, I will send a Draft for your
                     consideration in the

 course of a few days. I presume that you [one
                     word off microfilm] wish to have the examination [start] as early as
                     possible. 
M Coleman would prefer putting it off for a short time,
                     but I told him the matter was urgent—and he in consequence undertook
                     to put other matters aside in order to proceed with it at once.