6 place has been in force since October 1902. There is evidence in the reports to show that the people are occasionally disposed to keep suspected strangers out of their villages, though they have not as yet been able to act with sufficient determination or combination to do so successfully. 14. Plague inspection and disinfection posts were maintained on the approaches to the town of Simla throughout the year. They were at first situated at Kálka and Tawi, between Simla and Jutogh, and at Mashobra. The post at Mashobra was found to be unnecessary ; it was closed in August 1902, and has not been re-opened. In April 1902, after plague had broken out in Kálka itself, the post there was removed to Tára Devi near Simla. During March, April and May 1903 inspections at Kálka were resumed for the examination of the Government of India establishments on their move from Calcutta to Simla. In 1903 the Tawi post was transferred to a more convenient site at Tattu, close to its original situation. All travellers passing through the posts were liable to inspection, and if suspicious were detained under observation or allowed to proceed after disinfection. Lists of persons to be kept under surveillance were forwarded regularly from the posts to Simla, and the persons concerned were kept under observation by a special agency which was mainly voluntary. The plague rules sanctioned for Simla and other Hill Stations provide for the application of stringent and compulsory measures of segregation evacuation and disinfection in case plague should occur. The report for 1901-02 does not state the number of persons examined at the Simla posts during the year, but it must have been very considerable, as while inspec- tion was carried out at Kálka over 300 or 400 persons were disinfected daily. During 1901-02 the only cases of plague detected at the posts were 2 or 3 detected at Kálka. One case passed the Tawi post without being detected there, but the necessary precautions were taken without delay on its discovery in Simla, and the infection did not spread. In 1902-03 the number of persons inspected at the posts was 203,029. Of these 64,707 were disinfected and 19 were detained, but only 1 plague case was detected. Three cases, however, passed into Simla without detection, but the infection introduced by them was promptly stamped out. 15. Inspection posts for the protection of Dalhousie and Murree were opened in April 1902 at Dunera and on the Ráwalpindi-Murree Road, and after being closed during the cold weather were re-opened in April 1903. One case of plague occurred in Murree just before the Murree post was es- tablished, but subsequently no case was discovered either at Murree; or at the post. Dalhousie escaped without any plague occurrence, and during the two years of its working only one case was detected at the Dunera post in 1903, The numbers of persons inspected during 1903 were 21,943 at Dunera and 28,289 at the Murree post: 2,884 persons were disinfected and 6 detained at the former post ; and the numbers of persons disinfected and detained at the latter were 508 and 47 respectively. 16. Special arrangements for the inspection of travellers by railway were made in connexion with the Delhi Darbár. Over 15,000 passengers were in- spected, and 6 plague cases were detected at four Railway Stations in the Punjab, and there were also inspections at Gháziabad. The management of plague measures at the Darbár was under the control of the Government of India, but a special staff was sent to Delhi by the Punjab Government to deal with any outbreak t hat might occur outside the Darbár area. It is a matter for congratulation that there was no outbreak of plague among the multitudes which collected for the Darbár. 17. It may be noted that in addition to the inspection posts maintained by the Punjab Government inspection posts were maintained by Native State authorities for the protection of the towns of Kapurthala, Máler Kotla and Faridkot. From neither of these towns was plague kept out, and experi- ence has shown that, except for the protection of places to which the ap- proaches can be effectually guarded, such as the Hill Stations, plague inspec- tion posts are useless. They will not again be established in the plains, but the Simla, Dalhousie, and Murree posts will be continued and railway inspections will be instituted on the Kálka-Simla Railway.