?79 cial parts of the district is it possible to find sites removed more than 400 yards from anopheles breeding places; and in this very portion we have seen that malaria is just as rife as in the apparently more unfavourably situated areas. Drainage.-Where swamps or marsh lands exist it might be pos- sible by circumferential or other systems of drainage to reduce the breeding places of anopheles, but this would often necessitate the stoppage of rice cultivation, and the initial outlay and cost of main- tenance would be heavy, and so great in the case of gardens where swamps are numerous as practically to prohibit such measures on a scale likely to prove of any benefit. In the case of many streams it might be possible to train the edges and by arranging the pebbles and boulders to confine the water to one channel, and perhaps prevent the formation of isolated pools. Also such pools when formed could often be filled in with sand or stones; but though such operations might prove of value in special cases they cannot have a very wide or general application, and it is not likely in existing circumstances that work of this kind would have any appreciable effect in reducing malaria. Petrolage.-For small streams and for more or less permanent collections of water spraying at regular intervals with kerosene would be an excellent method of treatment, but the wide extent of ground to be covered and the systematic and thorough treatment necessary is a matter not generally appreciated. There is a tendency among the planting community to arrange for some absurdly inadequate measure such as the appointment of a man to "oil the streams" and to rest satisfied that this will have some effect. All such systems of attempting to combat malaria are to be deprecated since they are not only themselves useless, but give rise to a false idea of what should be done. In the general run they may be likened to the now rightly ridiculed practice of placing a saucer of condy's fluid on the floor of a room to disinfect the air. We have, however, seen one very thorough attempt in the Duars to combat malaria on these lines carried out by a very keen and capable planter, but as noted elsewhere the measure served only to demonstrate the difficulties to be encountered.