LARGE CITIES OF THE PLAINS NEAR THE VIIth ISOSEIST. 149 



brick, the W. wall, which was of unburnt brick, has fallen outwards. 

 There is a wide crack in the E. wall near the N. corner. 



In a second burnt brick hut, the wall on the S. has fallen outwards 

 and the E. wall was pulled down on account of its dangerous cracks. 



In two cases arches running N. and S. over native booths have 

 collapsed ; in one case the arch was near a corner of which the wall 

 running E. to W. is leaning considerably towards the N. 



In another house, the S. wall had to be pulled down by reason of 

 wide cracks in the walls on the E. and W. near the S. corner. 



The Military lines have suffered less than might have been expected 

 after witnessing the condition of the Cantonment 



Military lines. , , 4 , , , . -, , 



bungalows. A number of chimneys have been so 

 shaken as to require rebuilding, but none have actually fallen. 



Bungalow No. 18, the married quarters of the 1st Northampshire Re- 

 giment, has received the greatest injury. This is a long one-storied 

 building which is more or less sound in the central portion, but there 

 are serious cracks at each extremity. 



In a double-storied barracks pointing N. E. by E. and S. W. by 

 W. many of the arches irrespective of their direction are cracked. 



Jullundur City, about 5 miles N. W. of the Cantonment, comprises 

 two or three Government offices, the church, the 



Jullundur City. 



Deputy Commissioner s house, and the bazar. 

 The post office is a small building with its longer axis E. N. E. — 

 W. S. W. The r-acks, which ore vertical, predomi- 

 nate in the walls parallel to this axis, but are not 

 serious. 



The Magistrate's Court has a few slight cracks. 

 In the dining room of the Deputy Commissioner's bungalow a 

 quantity of plaster fell from the upper region of the walls on the N. 

 and S., while one small piece only fell from the wail on the E. and 

 none from the W. wall. As in the post office at Lahore, so here, there 

 appears to be a tendency for plaster to fall from walls more nearly 

 parallel to the line of shock than from those more oblique. 

 The church is uninjured. 



