secasionally by an insubordinate, justert-
Jand
if diving
him from his post
was
was
person extremely
Mr. Wilsons object he
jeasy to get
C
any
rid of by subjecting him to small tipanny. Never having before hew.
amy
Government employment he
سند
he moreover
understood little of the routine of the
+
Departmental duties in which Mr. Wilson
мас
tolerably
verbed.
bonsequently b
he
was
Thequently exposing himself to attacks, which
his superior profesional experience made him feel the more
Keenly.
24. It sufficed houwer to this Exalluny to know that Mr blank had commenced
with good
good faith
and aw
to do his duty in such
might jain
earnest desire
wwanner as
him reputation and confer
MD.
+ Bul
der $
له
for phan dute.
advantage
25.
J
44455
on the Public
was resolved
Therefore His Excellery
to keep him in the Service if possible.
and on
learning that Mr. Wilson threw
way of
-every difficulty he could in the 1 M "blank's eltuiming private practice, and
Chad
wven
gone
the length of preventing
his discharging that part of his duties,
which brought him most in contact
with the
16
queral community- viz.
those
connected with the
supervision of private
Buildings under the Building Ordinance
His Excelency directed a Men? on the subject to be adchiped to the Surveyor General. His Excellency lays that Mam? (28th January
1868) on the table with M
Wilson's reply, whose apertions throughout