?(2) without my having visited these localities expressly for this purpose. The budget grant for my travelling expenses was so reduced for the year 1876-77 that I have been unable even to inspect most of my dispensaries and sub-divisions since the commencement of the year 1876-77, much less undertake on the receipt of the circular visits to localities affected with leprosy. I have ascertained that out of a population of 2,030,000 in the Burdwan District, inhabiting 5,181 villages or towns, 4,915 persons in 1,885 villages are classed as lepers. I say "classed" because I am certain that many cases of secondary and tertiary syphilis are looked upon by the natives of this part of the country as leprosy. Many lepers that I have examined have attributed the out- break of their symptoms to syphilis or to salivation for the cure of syphilis, and a great confusion of the two diseases exists in the minds of most natives of this district. We may, therefore. fairly consider that amongst these 4,915 cases are a considerable number of persons suffering not from leprosy but from syphilis, and put them against those lepers whose symptoms, if merely those of anęsthetic leprosy without eruption, are as yet unrecognized by their neighbours. This number gives a percentage of 0.24 of the total population. The highest percentages in any individual thannahs are ·58 and ·55 in Raksha and Raneeguge and the lowest .02, 0.04 and ·05 in Jehanabad, Culna and Raynah. The annexed statement shews the names of the thannahs in the district, their population and number of villages, as well as the number of villages in which lepers are found, the number and percentage of lepers and the names of villages in which more than ten lepers are said to be found. Roughly the greatest percentages of cases appear to exist in the portions of the district on or bordering on the laterite soil and jungle lands, while the smallest percentages are found in the thannahs in the South and East of the district compris- ing the alluvial lands lying between and near the great rivers. Percentage of lepers amoungst Mussulmans 13 Ditto ditto Hindus 25 The Mussulman lepers are to Hindu lepers as one to eight nearly, while the census returns shew 347,766 Mussulmans to 1,682,059 Hindus in Burdwan, prov- ing that the disease is less common amongst Mussulmans than amongst Hindus. The proportion of females affected was not stated in all the returns; but out of 3,015 lepers 564 were females, or about one to every five males affected. In the annexed statement I have given the names of the villages in each thannah in which more than ten lepers are to be found. Should it be deemed necessary special inqui- ries may be made in such villages as are reported to contain many lepers. I can at present give no information regarding the special peculiarities of such localities or any special conditions under which the people in these localities live favourable to the continuation or propagation of the disease, no opportunity in the ordinary course of my duty having offered itself for the acquirement of such information. With regard to the propagation of the disease either by contagion or hereditary taint, I may mention here that amongst 30 lepers whose cases were detailed in my annual reports on leprosy dated July 1875 and 1876, I only found thirteen who acknowledged to any hereditary history of the disease. Of the 30 ten acknowledged to having had syphilis and twelve denied both syphilis and hereditary leprosy. As regards contagion, of the 30 only one man attributed his disease to having lived with other lepers and denied hereditary taint; but as he also stated that in his village (in Beerbhoom) there were ten or twelve other lepers out of a population of one hundred or so, the denial of hereditary taint is almost worthless. In my opinion I have seen nothing in the cases of leprosy that have come under my observation to support the popular idea that the disease is contagious, and the minute pathology of the disease, shewn by recent observers to be a disease of the nerve trunks, is strongly against any such theory. The purely tubercular form of the disease is much more rare than the anęsthetic. Of the 30 cases treated in the Burdwan Leper Jail between July 1874 and July 1876 only two were of pure tubercular leprosy, or 6.6 per cent. In addition to the 30 cases treated there were several other convicts suffering from slight degree of anęsthetic leprosy whom. I did not judge proper to relegate to the leper ward But without a personal examination of all the lepers in the district I can only assert, as a matter of opinion, that (1) the anęsthetic form of the disease is many times more common than the tubercular form; (2) that the disease is chiefly propagated by hereditary taint, appearing usually in adults; (3) and that the disease is very pre- valent in some parts of the Burdwan District.