Sir,

And even the means of affording redress before their tribunal, much less to scourge when the offenders go there.

Of serving a summons to comply.

E Justice on

If Sam to proceed with the duties imposed on me by law, such as the immediate removal of the Acting Chief Magistrate of Police and his brother Lieutenant from a bench on which they have disqualified themselves to sit.

I have the honor to be,

Sir, Your Obedient Servant,

Milman Cooper

Sir,

The same to the same.

25th July, 1856

I have the honor to request that you will be good enough to communicate to me His Excellency's decision upon the points I submitted on the 23rd instant, and I trust that His Excellency will exonerate me from undue precipitation, because at this present time nuisances exist in and about the town of Victoria, are daily and hourly increasing in number, and although it is published and placarded that I shall summon all persons guilty of any nuisance, I am, for the reasons fairly detailed in the letter, utterly unable to do so;

I have the honor to be,

Sir, Your Obedient Servant,

Milman Cooper

Sir,

The same to the same.

26th July, 1856

20

In reference to my letter of the 25th instant, I have the honor to report that I yesterday, with the Superintendant of Police, inspected a house at the junction of Polinger Street and found the same in a very dangerous state, and that a considerable portion has since fallen.

I trust this fact will exonerate my application of yesterday from the charge of undue precipitation.

I have the honor to be,

Your Obedient Servant,

Milman Cooper

Sir,

The same to the same.

No. 59

29 July 1856

I have the honor to enclose a despatch addressed to the Right Honorable The Secretary of State for the Colonies (open) with an appendix, which I request you will transmit in the usual way by the next mail leaving this in 12 days.

I have, etc.

Milman Cooper

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