?18 The Members were:- Sirdar Umar Jamal. Mr. Vasantji Khimji. Mr. Narayan Trimbak Vaidya. The Hon'ble Dr. Bhalchandra. Rao Saheb Ellapa Balaram. Mr. P. B. Joshi. ROUGH ESTIMATE. G. I. P. B.B. & C. I. Kalyan 100 Bandora 1,000 Diva 100 Santa Cruz 1,000 Dimauli 50 Malad 500 Mumbra 100 Borivli 400 Thana (including Navpada) 560 Andheri 1,500 Bhandup. 500 Goregaon 1,000 Kurla , 1,500 Chimbur 1,000 Ghatkuper 2,000 5,900 5,400 Total 11,300 formed to make the wish of Government generally known and to explain the need for leaving infected localities, and the help which the Plague Committee was ready to give to all settlers. A large number of upper-class Hindus had already settled in bungalows and sheds in the parts of Salsette near the railway and were coming daily to Bombay by train. The total number of settlers was probably about 11,000. The scheme for forming camps in Salsette was not successful. The ar- rangement of clustering in sheds round bungalows, in settlements of forty to fifty families, suited the better class of settlers better than the publicity of a camp. No measure of success attended the efforts to induce any class of working people to settle outside of the Island of Bombay. They could face neither the going so far from their houses nor the time required for the daily journey. The attention of the Committee was therefore turned to the opening of large Health Camps on all convenient sites in the Island of Bombay. The Dadar flats, within easy reach of both railways and of the Tansa and Virar mains, were chosen as the chief site. With the approval of Gov- ernment it was arranged to build a camp or camps able to house 40,000 people. The work of superintending the laying out and the building of two of the four proposed camps, was entrusted to Captain Swayne, R.E., Executive Engineer, Military Works, and the building was entrusted to two leading contractors who had throughout been of the greatest service to the Committee, Sirdar Umar Jamal and Rao Saheb Ellapa Ballaram. In the neighbourhood of the large camps clusters of huts were built to suit the requirements of well-to-do settlers, and these were occupied at low rents. At Matunga and along the line of the Vincent Road were many private settlements, some of them of timber huts, which had been in use during the former epidemic. The Committee were anxious that the excellent sites on the north slopes of Antop Hill should be used as a camp. The Municipal Com- missioner arranged for a supply of water, and a settlement of about 150 upper-class Hindus was formed. Except that it is nearly a mile from the railway, Antop Hill is an excellent site. Other places admirably suited for camps are the west slopes of Worli Hill and the recently reclaimed shoreland to the south of Sewri.