The Brahooces are a pastoral tribe, inhabiting the tract of country south of the Khojuk range, graying their flocks on the tablelands, and in the hills during the summer, and descending to the plains of Kuch Gundava in the winter. Their chief, the renowned Nusseer Khan, was tributary to the Suddozye monarchs, and furnished them with a large quota of troops, but on the decline of that power, many of the districts held by the Brahooees were wrested from them by both Affghans and Sikhs. During the late war, Kelat, the capital of Eastern Beeloochistan was stormed by a force under General Sir Thomas Wilshire, and its ruler Mehrab Khan slain. Some timer after this occurrence, his son Nusseer Khan raised his standard to endeavour to recover the inheritance of his forefathers, and was joined among others by Mahomed Khan, (represented seated on the ground) of the Shahwanee subdivision of the tribe, and chief of the town of Hajee Ka Shuhur, in Kuchee. Subsequent events having placed the Brahooees in alliance with the British government this person served with our troops, and was wounded when with the army retiring from Quetta. Hajee Ebrahim, the Commandant of the Bolan Rangers, a corps raised to keep open the communication through that pass, has his matchlock slung over his shoulder: a Private of the regiment stands near him. On the other side of the drawing is Wsak, Brahooee, (in a dark dress and brocade cap) head of the post-office department at Dadur, and one of his men. The only part of the costume of the Brahooees deserving remark, as differing from that of other tribes in the neighbourhood, is their head dress. The small skull cap is as often worn without as with a turban round it while over the high circular one, nothing more than a loose cloth is ever thrown. They cultivate the growth of their hair with great care, but are by no means cleanly in their persons. Among the poorer class, sandals made of grass are in common use: they protect the foot from stones, and give it a firm hold in climbing the mountain passes. With them the produce of their flocks is their chief food; a wild berry, dried and pounded serving as a substitute for grain. For the winter consumption of those families, which do not migrate to the plains, the carcases of sheep are salted and dried in the sun. The principal bones being extracted, the limbs are extended with small sticks, and these flitches of mutton thus prepared keep wholesome a long time. The town of Dadur, in Kuchee, is situated four miles from the mouth of the Bolan Pass. It was plundered and burnt by the followers of Nusseer Khan, when he came down from the hills in October, 1840, but after the dispersion of this force by the troops under Major Boscawen H. M. 40th Regiment, the people returned to their habitations, and it was soon restored to its former state.