SATARA DISTRICT.] 255 wide in extent, was limited in virulence. This was doubtless, to some extent, due to the increasing adoption of evacuation, which was carried out completely in 127 villages. Every effort was made in the Sátára District to popularise inoculation ; but with little success. In Sátára Town and Camp 1,173, and in the rest of the District only 512, inoculations were performed. Of these 1,685 inoculated people, only three were attacked by plague. There were several instances of plague occurring on re-occupation, even after the houses re-occupied had been disinfected ; these instances were houses which had not remained vacant for any considerable time. Lieutenant N. E. Anderson, I. S. C., quotes Kamatipura and a Government building adjoining the jail in Sátára Town as examples. Ventilation and admission of light and air by partial unroofing was freely resorted to : except in the case of fiat roofed houses, in which any action short of complete unroofing was ineffective, and did much damage. In this connection, the following observations by Mr. C. G. Dodgson, the Collector, are both valuable and interesting :- "The plan which I have followed is to permit re-occupation 2 months after the last case of plague and between o or 4 months after evacuation. The method employed is to allow the houses to be first repaired (i. e., roofs mended) and thoroughly cleaned. One person is then allowed to sleep in each house. If after 10 clays none of the people sleeping in the village are found to be ill entire re-occupation is permitted. The results have been satisfactory, as infec- tion has not broken out again in a single instance. As far as my experience goes, it makes no difference whether the houses have been disinfected with chemical disinfectants or not, as in no house has plague broken out again, provided that the house had been empty for at least o months. Where houses were chemically disinfected and re-occupied after a lapse of, say, a fortnight, plague has broken out on more than one occasion. I am inclined to think that even it' houses had not been ventilated at all but had merely been left vacant for, say, four months, that the germ would be found to have become innocuous. In many cases the lower stories of upper storied houses have not been capable of ventilation and still re-occupation has done no harm. The rule which I have stated above has not always been rigorously followed, some villages having been re-occupied after a lapse of not more than two months. " The following statement shows the total numbers of plague cases and deaths throughout the District during the whole of the third epidemic :- Month. Cases. Deaths. July 1898 248 220 August " 432 305 September ,, 1,229 872 October " 2,265 1,892 November " 2,219 1,847 December ,, 1,362 1,069 January 1899 970 787 February " 705 628 March ,, 583 497 April " 163 150 May " 221 175 Total 10,397 8,442 Mahábaleshvar and Pánchgani. The strictest precautionary measures were adopted for the protection of the important hill-stations of Mahábaleshvar and Pánchgani, and it is a matter for congratulation that throughout the long period during which plague has lasted in the District, these stations have been kept quite free.