3
not
was
22 January 1845; and why it should speak of the transmission of accounts, at that earlier date, of which the June Quarter is not complete until the 30th December, and the September quarter is not complete yet. The Auditor has very naturally, in my opinion, guarded himself from the implication to which this mode of dating subjected him.
I have authority, both from your Lordship, and the Treasury Board, to make such a modified application, to this new colony, of the Board's Instructions, as the necessities of practical detail and peculiar circumstances render inevitable. The concluding Paragraph of Mr. Martin's letter suggests "the propriety of diminishing the lowest scale of the Colonial quarterly advances on Imprest, which in the June accounts amount to £1,708 4 11 13/4, and which in the September Account have increased to £6,137, 10 3. Nothing is here mentioned as to the nature of those advances; but on reference to the accounts it appears that by far the larger portion were in the Surveyor General's and Chief Magistrate's departments, and arose from the absolute necessity for paying the wages of workmen employed on public works, and the Police force.
The numerous important matters that press on my attention, in my duplex relations with your Lordship's and Lord Aberdeen's Departments, lead me to deplore this species of correspondence, which merely aggravates the loss of time in which it originates; and I can only hope that the future regularity of the Treasurer's accounts will diminish the probability of its reoccurrence.
I