your Lordship's humble Petitioner is

praying has been awarded, is so exceeding by short, that full rules of suspension, but the period for which a Fellowship in having signified a disapproval of his highly sensible of the favor accorded to him by your

is constrained

Year

without employment to know the pleasure of Her which he has waited and three quarters, during which he may be made to him for the long interval of One Your "I pray that some further and other compensation

Her Majesty's Government.

And your Lordship's humble Petitioner

respectfully craves

permission to state the following,

addressing your Lordship

reasons for the liberty, which he

on the subject and takes in now takes

he

Should await your Lordship's instructions, and " Considered it desirable that your Lordship of the case His Excellency (Governor (Davis) Secretary stated that, "Under all the circumstances Lordship's Petitioner in which the Colonial to your Secondly, That in January 1845 a Letter was sent - the period to which pay has been awarded to him Union in this Colony until several Months after pleasure could not by any possible means be pleasure of Her Majesty's Government ; and this suspended from Office distinctly pending the

That your Lordship's Petitioner was First,

most favorable consideration trusts your Lordship will take the same into your

Petitioner

that

that your Lordship's decision might be looked for by the then ensuing Mail

advice) à jour

qua

ntz

that 2:18

And that acting upon this Lordship's Petitioner waited in anxious expectation until the Month of December year, when he had the honor to receive an extract from your Lordship's dispatch to His Excellency The Governor, by which he learnt that an answer to his Letters to your Lordship (on the subject of the Suspension) would be sent as soon as the necessary information for that purpose, had been obtained ? Furthermore, That when on the 2nd of October 1847 a letter was sent to your Petitioner in which the Surveyor General stated that a portion of his establishment had been curtailed, and that in Consequence, the Office then hitherto held under the denomination of "Clerk of Deed Registry" had been abolished from the 30th of the preceding Month, "Your Petitioner supposed from the peculiar nature of the duties of that Office (which may not be left unperformed, unless the Ordinance 12 of 1844 Establishing a Deed Registry Office is also done away with, and which is superfluous in your Petitioner to remind your Lordship is not the case of the the duties of the Office, had been amalgamated with the Office of Book keeper, and as the person performing the conjoint duties had been taken into the Government Service, some Eighteen Month's previously

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