(97) Dhaka.-This district also " suffered severely from cholera, the disease having been reported from 1,275 out of its 5,016 villages. There was a more even distribution of the disease over the months from January to June, and a sudden fall from the end of September to the middle of November.* * * At the two large fairs held in the district there was a comparative absence of the disease. Jailpaiguri.-Here the disease prevailed from April to December, and unlike the foregoing districts, manifested greatest intensity in June and October. From April to the close of the year the disease was more evenly spread over those months, and there was an almost total absence of it in the first quarters of the year. In the latter end of April virulent outbreaks of the disease occurred simultaneously at Boda and Alipur, which are situated at opposite extremes of the district, the former on the Dinagepur frontier, and the latter on the skirts of the Terai, about 20 miles south of the cantonment of Buxa. * * * Another outbreak occurred at the railway works at Man- dalghat, three miles south of the sadr station. * * * Of the 250 villages 90 were visited by cholera.'' The police returns greatly under-state the mortal- ity that occurred. The districts of Chittagaon, Noakhali, Tipperah, Faridpur, and Bakirganj all suffered severely from cholera, and the seasonal incidence of the disease corresponds with that of the districts of the Dhaka division. The following statement gives at a glance the wide prevalence and fatality of cholera in the abovementioned districts:- DISTRICTS. Number of deaths. Ratio per 1,000 of population Number of circles attacked. Number of villages attacked. Number of villages in the district. Chittagaon 875 .77 10 174 1,088 Noakhali 2,204 3.08 8 364 2,034 Tipperah 2,222 1.44 14 577 6,150 Bakirganj 3,022 1.60 15 458 3,244 Faridpur 3,303 2.17 13 973 3,332 Kattak.-Deaths from cholera were reported from this district in every month of the year, but it was much more general and fatal from March to December; June, July, November and December being the months of greatest fatality. The disease was reported in 10 out of 12 circles. Compared with the returns for 1873 and 1874, cholera was unusually prevalent in 1875 after the month of September. " Through this district passes the chief pilgrim route from Northern and North-Western India, and several minor routes join the main road from the west. There is also a constant stream of pas- sengers from the new port of Chandbally through Kendrapara to Kattak. The total cholera deaths reported during the year is 4,102. Puri.-There are special circumstances connected with this district and its chief town of the same name, which enhance the value of all observations bearing on the origin, progress, locality and seasonal activity of cholera. The town of Puri, containing the temple of Jaganath, is the goal to which constant streams of pilgrims converge from Northern, Western, and Southern India. It is periodically thronged to overcrowding by poor and wearied travellers, and this overcrowding occurs at the most unhospitable season of the year. Cholera is a yearly visitor in the district, and its occurrence is invariably attributed to importation by pilgrims. * * * In all the months, except January, cholera was present in the district, but unlike the districts of the Presidency and Dhaka Divisions, the period of endemic intensity occurred in July, August, and December, instead of March or April, and November. The circles in this district in which cholera prevailed most were Puri, which returned 4.81 deaths per 1,000 of population, Pipli 2.16, and Khudra 1.94. It is through these circles that the chief pilgrim routes pass. The Banpur and Tanghy circles, through which a small number of pilgrims from the south travel, returned a death-rate of 1.82 and 2.60 respectively, the Gop circle, to the eastward of the district, through which no pilgrims pass, gives a death-rate from cholera of .41 per 1,000 of population. In this last circle, however, regis- tration, it is stated, is least advanced, for the deaths from all causes are little O