?3 names in the returns submitted to me by the Revenue authorities often differs so much from the names printed in the ordnance map, that I have not been able to recognize all the places where cholera appeared, but enough are indicated in the accompanying map to show the northward progress of cholera in April and May. Northward extension of cholera observed in Nellore in April, and in Kistna in May. Virulence of cholera in Nundigama Talook on the Nizam's frontier early in May. 15. On referring to the daily death report of cholera, I find that, while the disease was active in the Nellore District in the month of April, it did not become so in the Kistna District to the north- ward until the month of May. In this month the intensity of cholera was most marked in the Nundigama Talook, which adjoins the Nizam's country. Out of a total of 120 cholera deaths in the Kistna District in May, eighty-five occurred in the Nundigama Talook. In the town of Juggiapett, which stands on the Nizam's frontier, there were eighteen cholera deaths in May. Epidemic disease began there apparently on the 8th of the month. This town is only a little more than 100 miles from Secunderabad, and is on the high road of traffic between Hyderabad and Masulipatam on the Eastern Coast. From another village in the Nundigama Talook, "Pendala" (not marked on the map) there were reported twenty-eight cholera deaths in May. Disease imported into Secunderabad along eas- tern road. 16. Beyond the frontier talook of Nundigama there are no records to show the daily advance of cholera along the high road towards Hyderabad, but it is a fact beyond all question that, so far as Secunderabad is concerned, the disease was introduced along this eastern road. History of earliest known cases in Secun· derabad. Extract from Dr. Bar- clay's Official Diary. 17. We have seen the disease established at Juggiapett, about 100 miles distant from Secunderabad on the east, on the 8th May. On the 20th May three travellers, who had passed over this eastern road, died of cholera in a chuttrum near "James' bazaar," the most densely populated part of Secunderabad. The circumstances attending these cases are thus described by Dr. C. Barclay, Deputy Inspector- Greneral of Hospitals, Indian Medical Department, in his official diary, under date the 22nd May:- "On Saturday evening (20th May) received a letter from the Cantonment Magistrate, stating that two or three deaths from diarrhœa had lately occurred in the bazaar, and requesting to be fur- nished with some astringent pills for distribution to the different Police Stations. "Received at the same time from the Medical Officer, Civil Dispensary, information of three fatal cases of purging, with vomiting, having just occurred in a chuttrum, near James' bazaar, among a company of Banyas, who arrived on the 18th from the village of Buchampett on the Masulipatam road, said to be sixty miles distant. These cases were seen by the Dispensary Dresser, who suspected them to be cholera. Their exact nature, however, appears to be doubtful. No cholera is known to exist in the town or station. None has been reported any- where in the neighbourhood, and the Banyas state that they neither saw nor heard of any on the road. It has been judged more prudent, however, (to prevent needless alarm) to return these cases as "diarrhœa," taking, however, the same precautions as if they were cholera. The clothes of the deceased were burnt, and the chuttrum which I visited this morning, has been thoroughly