302 Measures to prevent the [CHAP. X. observation all suspicious persons. Railway communication was accordingly re-opened. Rohri. Later on the plague having spread to Rohri and other stations in the Shikarpur district, the Government of Bombay informed the Gov- ernment of India that the District Magistrate had prohibited all booking, except with the permission of the Plague Committee, from Sukkur and Rohri, from stations between Sukkur and Shikarpur on the branch of the North-Western Railway leading to Baluchistan, from stations between Rohri and Reti on the branch leading to the Punjab, and from stations between Rohri and Setharja, inclusive, on the chord line to Kotri. The Government of India objected to these arrangements, and suggested that passengers leaving Rohri should be examined in the manner prescribed for Sukkur; persons travelling from Rohri towards Baluchistan being inspected at the Indus cross- ing. After some further correspondence these instructions were carried out, and the closed portion of the line was re-opened, except at stations between Rohri and Tando-Mastikhan on the Rohri-Kotri chord and between Rohri and Pano Akil on the line leading to the Punjab. The stations on these portions of the line were kept closed for some time longer to prevent persons booking from stations in the immediate neighbourhood of Rohri in order to avoid examination at that place. Baluchistan. Another proposal to impose quarantine against railway travellers was made by the Agent to the Governor General in Baluchistan towards the end of March. He stated that there was serious sickness of plague extending to Quetta from the infected districts of Sind, and strongly recommended that quarantine should be imposed at Jacobabad on all native third class and intermediate passengers for Baluchistan from Sind. He pointed out that, with quarantine on railway passengers at Jacobabad, it would be almost impossible for plague to reach Baluchistan owing to the intervening desert. In reply the Government of India explained their objections to the imposition of land quarantine, and stated they had refused to allow it in other places in India. They remarked, however, that the fact that the desert has to be crossed would render effective quarantine easier for Baluchistan than elsewhere, and they stated that in view of the possibility of plague advancing by Baluchistan to Afghanistan political considera- tions might outweigh the general consideration against land quaran- tine. The Agent to the Governor General was further informed that if quarantine were imposed at all, it should be within the Baluchistan border and not in Sind, that it must apply to all passengers by what- ever class they travel and whatever their race, and that separate camps for each day's arrivals as well as segregation hospitals must be provided