Memorial to the Secretary of State for India from Syed Mohi-ud-din Khan, alias Budan Sahib, of Delhi, appealing against the confiscation of part of his lands by Government - the lands had been confiscated owing to his allged complicity in the Mutiny (with associated correspondence)
Case of Fateh Ali Khan of Alizai who was implicated in the raids recently committed on British territory by the Bezoti Afridis - a portion of his lands is resumed by Government and he is banished beyond the Indus (includes, on pp 12-13, a review by Lieutenant Napoleon Cavagnari of the tribes on the Kohat border)
Memorial to the Secretary of State for India from Amatul Fatima Begam, eldest daughter of Saif-ul-Mulk Bahadur, appealing against the refusal of the Madras Government to grant her part of her father's Carnatic pension (with associated correspondence)
Abandonment by Thomas Thornville Cooper of his plan to travel from China to India via Lhasa - he is now expected to travel to Burma via Talifu and Bhamo
Papers regarding the ex-Amirs of Sind, Vol 1 - Mir Abdul Husain Khan Talfur is allowed to draw 500 rupees 'per mensem' from the date of his marriage and 800 rupees 'per mensem' from the date he attains his majority - he is also to receive 3000 rupees for building purposes and a similar amount for defraying his marriage expenses
Papers regarding Siam - death, on 1 October 1868, of the King of Siam [Prabat Somdat Phra Chom Klow alias Maha Mongkut] - succession of his eldest son [Chow Fa Chulalongkorn]
Memorials to the Secretary of State for India from Mir Zulfikar Ali Khan and Mir Akbar Ali Khan claiming a pension from the British Government on the grounds that their father the late Amin-ud-din Ali Khan was a collateral relative of Tipu Sultan and a Bakshi under that Ruler (includes, on p 6, a genealogical table showing the two petitioners relationship to Tipu Sultan)
Papers regarding a murderous raid made on 23 Oct 1868 by a party of Lushai tribesmen upon the village of Nungdang in the Manipur hill territory - measures taken to prevent such incursions in future
Government of India state in reply to paragraph 4 of the Secretary of State's dispatch of 31 October 1868 that the two representatives of the Rangoon Chamber of Commerce [Alexander Bower and Theodore Stewart] who were permitted to join the Bhamo expedition were clearly informed that they were under the orders of Captain Edward Sladen