178 2. The Justices will be asked to attend at the office of their sub- divisions at 7 a.m. on each day. 3. After the muster of the staff under each Justice, they will proceed to their sub-divisions with their staff for house-to-house visitation. 4. It is not expected that the Justices can personally visit every house daily, though it is hoped they will visit as many as possible, and it is presumed that they know their sub-divisions so well that information in regard to sick persons will be quickly obtained by them. 5. The staff allowed to each Justice will be organised according to the number of houses in the sub-division, but the minimum staff will be one sub-inspector or muccadum (native), one police sepoy, and four Military sepoys. Each Justice, on receiving intimation of, or on finding, a sick person, will make a note of the name of the place and the number or description of the premises, leaving a sepoy on guard to prevent the patient being removed until an ambulance can be obtained. 6. Each Justice, on having inspected the whole of his sub-division, will return to the office of the sub-division to fill in and hand over a report of his morning's work in a printed form provided for the purpose. 7. This procedure will be followed from day to day, and any Justice prevented from attending on any particular day is requested to send an early intimation to the Sub-divisional Medical Officer, who will delegate the work to some one else. 8. Sub-divisional Medical Officers, on receiving reports from Justices, will immediately arrange to send ambulances to the houses in which cases have been reported. 9. Before removal, cases should be visited by the Sub-Divisional Medical Officers or one of their qualified assistants, or, in the case of females, by a Lady Doctor, who will arrange for their removal; 10. The bullock carriage at each sub-division, should be utilized to convey the family of each patient to the segregation quarters at the hospital in which the patient has been placed. 11. In the removal of sick persons, the Sub-Divisional Medical Officer should, in the absence of the District Medical Officer of Health, personally supervise the procedure and submit a detailed report to the District Medical Officer of Health. 12. All commissariat and other arrangements for those people removed will be made by the District Medical Officer of Health, or such official, as he may appoint in each sub-division. To each Justice of the Peace was given the powers of a Special Constable. This enabled him to legally enter houses for inspection work."