right,

wrong

ta

they all Stephone hast from ect.

conclusion as to where his

boundary lay. If the Count decided

wrong,

the

then it is by appout from judgment of the Court rather than

to the Govern

ment that ell? Stephens

should seek redress.

in pris letter

12.

of 19th Dececubor, 1885,

ell? Stephenw makes & renewed claim

a

for compervation, and lower it i

the

upon

ground that the Officers of the Crown put him in actical poesession of the piece of ground of which he has now

been

deprived, marking

-porgs and arousing редо

boundaries

دست یار

it out with

him that the

marked were correct,

and also upon the

ground of certain

Conversations which, he

says,

he had

"with the "Crown Officers" before and

during

388

during the progress of his suit, and he threatens legal proceedings against the Government to enforce this claim.

It is important to know what _

truth there is in these strelements and

it

1100

fack,

with a view of getting

at the

and accertaming particularly

as ellr Stephens says,

whether,

the

Crown Officers clid put him in actual povecssion of port of the land of which he how been deprived by judguent

of the

the Court, that I uuggested the reference to Surveyor General's

Departement in

rrry

iivinite on

C.S.O. 3216 on 7th Jan 1886. But

Mr Price's report

thereupon called

which

for gives

was

110

information whatever on that point. I think this is the first

thing

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