?33 ment of a Hakim, who continued to attend the case after its removal to hospital. On being called upon for an explanation of his failure to report the case he wrote as follows :- "The plague according to our Unani medical practitioners is attended with high "fever, delirium and sometimes total insensibility. One of the highest authorities of " our medical system, Don Henri de Matteis, late physician to the late Begum of "Bhopal, assigns the above symptoms to the plague in his work." He then proceeds with an admirable air of indignation to maintain that his patient had none of these symptoms, and to challenge denial of his statement. His position was impregnable. The information supplied by the Military refers entirely to those portions of A Ward where their co-operation was enlisted, and the District Officer speaks very highly of the efficient manner in which they searched out every case of plague occurring in those limits. The figures show how heavily the work of searching out plague cases fell upon the staff in D Ward. A certain number of the cases were roadside. The discovery of the remainder was due partly to the cordial relations which many of the sectional Medical Officers managed to establish with the residents in their charges, partly to the careful inspec- tion of infected and insanitary localities, and partly to the information picked up by the subordinates of various public departments in the course of their daily duties. In the earlier part of the year a certain amount of money was in some parts of the city paid to people who brought news of plague cases, but this system is open to abuse and was almost entirely discontinued. Here and there landlords and their agents were induced to keep the Plague Staff notified of any cases that might occur in their chawls, but as a rule the dread of evacuation with the possible loss of rent involved inclined them to keep any sickness secret. Information obtain- ed from the cemeteries was in one sense most unsatisfactory and in another supremely important. As evidence that an individual from a certain house had died of plague it was entirely unreliable, for except in the few cases when a medical certificate is forthcoming the cemetery establishment is entirely dependent upon the account given by members of the funeral party as to the cause of death and for the address where the deceased had expired. Usually the one object of the funeral party was to satisfy the cemetery officers that death was not due to plague, and through ignorance or intention they constantly gave incorrect addresses. The supreme importance of information from the cemeteries lies in the fact that the major portion of plague cases terminate fatally, those that linger long enough to recover are usually brought to light sooner or later in their residences, those that succumb are invariably included in the returns from one cemetery or the other. It is a fairly safe conclusion that all plague cases not otherwise discovered are included, if not identi- fied, in the daily death returns.