38 8. The case of plague alluded to in paragraph 6 of the same letter necessitated, under the orders of the Government of India, the detention of the pilgrims for a period of ten days from the time of the removal of the patient to a distant isolation hospital, i.e., the evening of Friday the 26th February, and the various Local Governments concerned were informed accordingly. But on the 2nd March Mr. Stewart, Assistant Collector, Násik, who had taken over charge of the camp from Mr. Maconochie, proceeding home on sick leave, report- ed that the case had turned out to be one merely of small-pox, and. the Govern- ment of India accordingly directed that the pilgrims might be allowed to depart ten days after their arrival at the camp, provided that no case of plague inter- vened. This intimation, however, arrived too late to permit of the pilgrims being despatched on Thursday, March 4th, as the Governments of Bengal, Madras, North-Western Provinces and the Punjab had made no arrangements to send their police escorts for the pilgrims in time to reach the camp by that date, and the first large batch of pilgrims did not leave till the night of March 8th, Mean- while nothing very eventful happened at the camp. There was no fresh case of sickness. The temper and conduct of the pilgrims continued to be excellent, and the only disturbance reported was a slight one on the night of the 28th February, when one of the Central Asians was somewhat quarrelsome and was said to have threatened another pilgrim with a knife. On the 4th March the escort of 100 British soldiers was reduced by one-half. All the pilgrims were evidently well satisfied with their treatment, as indeed they had every reason to be. The following extract from a letter dated 24th February 1897, from Mr. Maconochie, supplies some further details regarding the management of the camp: "The camp is getting along very well, and is the greatest success. The pilgrims are quite delighted with their treatment, and will, I am sure, carry home glowing accounts of the kindness of Government. The Bokháris were saying this morning that they would lile- to stay for a year on the same conditions, and they hoped the Pilgrims Protector would ask the Sáhebs to keep them; they have settled down as if they were permanent inhabitants of the country. " We found that they much preferred to cook their own food, so we divided them into messes according to tribes and families, and appointed a mukádam to each mess to receive the daily rations. The food is issued to these mukádams every morning, and we thus ensure perfect order and equal distribution. I have not had a single complaint, and all the faces one sees are smiling. " Isolation is being strictly enforced, only persons actually bringing supplies being allowed in the camp. The sweepers and water-carriers are kept inside, and cleanliness is scrupulously attended to. There has not been a single case of illness of any kind, nor is there likely to be, as far as can be seen. Dr. Street inspects the camp and people every morning and is quite satisfied with all the sanitary arrangements. The British soldiers keep a cordon round the camp night and day, and the Bombay and Násik Police are on duty inside, keeping order at the grain and meat stalls. " The British troops are in tents to windward (west) of the camp, the Násik Police are to the north and south-west, the Bombay Police to the east. On the south are the latrines clear of every one and everything; the water supply is a running stream on the south-west, which we have fenced off into two parts, the lower for bathing and washing, the upper for drinking. We have two water carts and seven water-carriers going all day, and the pilgrims have all been given earthen pots besides, so that.they can fetch their own water in the evening before the sentries close in and cut them off from the river. The Ramzán being on, they get up at 3 A.M. and have a meal before sunrise, so they have to keep water ready overnight. "Captain Downing and Lieutenant Aton, in command of the British troops, are most obliging, and they and their men are invaluable. Inspectors Wilson and Gannon, of the Bombay Police, are of the greatest use. I see them going about on duty nearly the whole day. "The pilgrims all know now that the Haj is stopped.. Only one old Sayad was indig- nant and began to shout when he heard it, but we quieted him in five minutes. Sardár Abdul Ali and the Pilgrim Protector are most helpful in explaining things to the people." 9. As regards the petition made by the Central Asian pilgrims, which has been mentioned above, Mr. Stewart in forwarding it wrote as follows: "3. I also annex the petition of the Central Asian pilgrims to which I referred in a previous letter. It merits serious consideration, as it would be a great hardship to these