60 requiring the declaration of sickness, early information of seizures is at once the least irritating and the most efficacious means of discovering cases. With patience and discretion valuable information can be generally obtained not only from the employés of the Plague staffs but from sepoys and peons, and from anxious or needy neighbours. And when trust is inspired, much assistance is given by rent-collectors, medical practitioners, and caste-leaders. Efforts were made to encourage a system of information which would give knowledge of cases of Plague before they ended fatally, and before the patient had passed into a hopeless condition. During the rainy months and till December in certain parts of the city, notably in C Ward, the efforts to secure information were highly successful. The Committee's efforts to remove the sick were hampered by the concealing of cases. To dissuade relations from hiding their sick, the influence of members of their community, and the counsel and orders of their religious and social leaders were in many cases of great service. The opening of caste or community hospitals, with the attrac- tions of quiet and privacy, where friends could attend, and where the chance of recovery was greater than at home, in many cases overcame the passion for concealment. Death registration. Nevertheless during the past ten months the efforts to conceal Plague cases and deaths, with the object of escaping house disinfection, segregation of contacts, and other unavoidable annoyances, have been very successful and have to a great extent been due to the imperfect registration of the house of death. During the past epidemic in a large proportion of daily deaths, per- haps in one-fourth of the whole, the place of death has not been recorded in the cemetery returns with sufficient clearness to enable the case to be traced. To remove this serious flaw in the registration of deaths in connection with Plague operations, three suggestions have been made:- (a) To require the notification of sickness. (b) To enforce corpse-inspection. (c) To secure the correct address at which death took place. As regards (a);-compulsory notification of sickness is open to the objection that either every case of sickness must be notified, a require- ment which would press heavily on the mass of the people, or that, if the notification is limited to cases of Plague or other epidemic disease, to secure conviction for default it must be proved that the patients' relatives were aware of the nature of the complaint. Asre gards (b);-corpse-inspection has been successfully enforced both in Poona and in Karachi. The objection to its introduction