05 
6. All the canoes along the Luapnla river should be seized. 
7. All Arab and Swahili traders should be expelled from the 
country. 
8. All villages on either side of the Mweru-Tanganyika boundary 
should be moved back, if possible. 
9. Should it be impossible to carry No. 8 into effect, the 
establishment of patrols must be considered. This would, however, 
not be so satisfactory. 
10. Legislation should be passed tp deal with any infringements 
of the regulations promulgated witli regard to sleeping sickness. 
11. The Government of the Congo Free State should be 
requested to co-operate actively with the Administration of Rhodesia 
in rendering any measures effective which may be adopted from time 
to time for the protection of the frontiers. 
12. That special medical officers be appointed to travel through 
the country to search for cases of the disease. 
13. That a central segregation camp, under a resident doctor, be 
established in a district free from fly. 
14. That all villages be moved, wherever possible, from the 
vicinity of tsetse flies, more particularly G/ossina falpalis. 
15. In cases where removal is impossible, clearings round the 
villages at least 300 yards in width should be insisted on. 
16. The chiefs should be instructed with regard to the disease, 
its relationship to tsetse flies, and the importance of keeping the 
villages in fly-free country. 
Madona, Feir/tary i.r/, 1908. 
In a letter dated Madona, February 13th, igo8, Dr. Kinghorn 
refers to the official report of Dr. Spillane. He states that the 
report verifies what Dr. Todd prophesied in 1906. He also states that 
6'/. morsitans, as a possible transmitter of the disease, is ignored in 
drawing up preventive regulations. 
‘ Another case of sleeping sickness has been found in the vicinity 
of Madona. This man, a chief named Matanda, says he has never 
been in the Congo since Europeans came into the country. His 
village is not far away from two others in which cases have been 
found. 
