?27 Type. The bubonic form of plague prevailed and was of a somewhat mild type. Only 34.81 per cent. of the cases reported proved fatal. The comparative mildness of the epidemic and the low fatality of attacks is attributed by the District Plague Medical Officer to the scattered nature of the population, and to the hot climate of the district. The classes most attacked were Hindús of the Arora and Kamboh castes. Females suffered more than males. Medical Staff and Establishment. The Medical Officers and establishment on plague duty in the district were as follows:- Dr. Gardiner, Assistant Surgeon Basharat Ahmad and a Compounder. LAHORE DISTRICT. Epidemic. Review. 39. The Lahore District became infected with plague for the second time during the year under report The present epidemic was more severe than the former, there having been in all 759 towns and villages infected, with 54,284 cases and 25,652 deaths. During the previous epidemic there had been 20,214 cases with 9400 deaths. The epidemic rose steadily from the commencement of the season, with a slight lull during the second half of January, to reach its climax during the week ending May the 2nd, when 6,181 cases with 2,952 deaths were returned. Attitude of the people. On the outbreak of the disease at the commencement of the season the people were by no means afraid of it, for the cases were of a mild type and the mortality rather low. There was, however, a scare among the people of the infected areas when the disease became widespread and acquired a more virulent character. Those of the inhabit- ants who had had an opportunity of watching the effects of the measures designed for the mitigation of the disease during the previous season were favourably disposed towards the adoption of similar precautions during the present one. But where the epidemic broke out for the first time this season the people had but little faith in such measures and could with difficulty be prevailed upon to adopt them. The inhabitants of the Kasúr Tahsil were the best disposed towards plague measures, whereas those of the Sharakpur Tahsil adopted them least of all. Preventive measures. There was no surveillance of any kind over arrivals from infected areas, and the villagers never refused access to their villages to persons from infected areas. Disinfection. One thousand three hundred and ninty-three rooms were chemically disinfected and 143 desiccated. Some experiments were made with Sawhney's stove in Lahore City. It was found that to desiccate a room 10 x 10 x 10 feet about two maunds of cowdung cakes, costing ten annas, had to be used. In half an hour the temperature taken by a thermometer hung on the wall one foot from the floor recorded a temperature from 180 to 200° Fahr. This gradually fell to 130 in 15 to 20 minutes, and fresh fuel had then to be added. In this way the temperature could be kept up for two hours. No difficulty was experienced in carrying out the measure, which was popular and much preferred to chemical disinfection. The people did not remove the contents of the rooms. When wood was used in the stoves 21/2 maunds were required, costing one rupee. The temperature, however, was not raised so rapidly as when "páthi" was used. Another form of stove, named from its inventor the "Holden" stove, gave satisfactory results at Clarkabad. Four villages- Dholanwál, Pakki Thatti, Sirirámpura and Chakabad-were thoroughly evacuated and disinfected. The results were satisfactory. Segregation. Segregation of sick was never practised. Treatment. Medical treatment was accepted in some places to a very considerable extent. Infection Personal communication was as a rule the means of spreading the infection from infected to uninfected places. It was often noticed that, even when men were suspected to be the bearers of infection, women were the first to develope the disease. Persons suffering from the pneumonic variety of the disease were found to be the most dangerous transmitters of the disease. Rats. Mortality of rats was very commonly traced in connection with plague. Of 28 villages, concerning which special en- quiries were made, 19 reported mortality among rats to have followed the first human case, whilst 9 reported that rats began to die before the outbreak among the people,