BELGAUM DISTRICT.] 273 The following statement compares the figures for Belgaum Town with the rest of the District :- Week ending BELGAUM TOWN. OTHER PLACES. Cases. Deaths. Oases. Deaths. 3rd December 1897 ... 10 10 90 75 10th " " ... 9 7 49 50 17th " " ... 13 9 62 44 24th " " ... 31 25 36 38 31st " " ... 36 35 47 42 7th January 1898 ... 56 60 37 31 14th " " ... 69 54 45 39 21st " " ... 52 47 25 22 28th " " ... 38 28 43 43 4th February " ... 26 26 23 14 11th " " ˇˇˇ 10 8 59 56 18th " " ... 11 6 56 43 25th " " ... 9 11 75 67 Total ... 370 326 647 564 Jngál. Population -2,589. Jugál village was infected from Kágvád by a woman who returned sick after visiting a plague-stricken relation. She died on the 21st November 1897, within two days after her return. The village officers state that they did not know that she had been to Kágvád or that it was a case of plague. The total number of cases and deaths for this epidemic was 121-106, respectively. All the measures of suppression and control adopted at Kágvád were adopted at Jugál also. Of segregated people becoming re-infected after visiting their houses in the village, the Deputy Collector writes as follows :- " At Jugál we did not wait for evacuation until the occurrence of a suspicious case in the street. The entire village was evacuated before the 16th January 1898. "Up to this time 32 cases had occurred, 6 in the village site before discovery of plague, 9 in the segregation camp, 15 in the fields, and 2 in such part of the village site as had not been evacuated. The residents of an infected house and of adjoining houses were taken to the segregation camp, and the rest were permitted to go to their fields. From the 18th to 26th January 1898 there was no case. Five cases, however, occurred at once on the 27th, and they began to occur again almost every day until the 6th of February, when they stopped again for a few days. I have not been able to ascertain the cause with certainty, but I have strong suspicions that the fresh cases were due to the return to houses and the opening of grain pits during my illness, when on the 26th January 1898 I proceeded to Kudchi for medical advice. " On the 10th of February, on account of the storm, which was even worse than at Kágvád, the people were allowed to return to their houses and live in verandahs. They were turned out as soon as the ground became dry and the huts habitable. But even the short sojourn of three or four days was disastrous. We had a severe recrudescence." Khŕnŕpur. Population-4,918. The first indigenous plague cases in Khánápur, which were identified as such, occurred on the 10th January 1898. Five days previous to this a number of rats and mice had been found dead in a house, the floor of which was being dug out and relaid in preparation for a marriage ceremony. The inmates of this ˇ house had thereupon been ordered to quit the village. On the same day, an imported case of .plague was discovered, the patient being 69