(116) prevailed pretty widely over the district. The other, the most disastrous of any on record, followed in the train of the cyclone inundation which burst upon this district on the night of the 31st October. The rains which were unprece- dentedly excessive during June and July 1875 culminated during the first week of August in a serious inundation which deluged the half of the north-east of the district. This was followed by a season of unusual dryness, and the soil which during the rains became over-saturated now became abnormally dried up by the sinking of the sub-soil water.* * * Moreover, the rays of the sun acting upon the inundated ground caused the evaporation of malaria, and so the general unhealthiness caused by the other factors, such as bad food, unsuit- able dwellings, bad or absence of all conservancy, was increased. " A notable fact mentioned by the Magistrate is that the Maghs down Cox's Bazar, who eat putrid fish habitually, and whose houses are raised on piles, and all the offices of nature performed through the floor, and the ground beneath never cleaned for generations, had no cholera." The second epidemic broke out suddenly in November, almost immediately after the cyclone and storm wave which swept over the eastern portion of this district on the 1st of that month, extending inland from three to six miles along the coast. The deaths in November were 2,101 and in December 5,261. The high military road from Dhaka to Chitta- gaon was the inland boundary of the wave in the north of this district. The inundation lasted only a few hours. Cholera was severest and soonest in inci- dence in the north, later and less intense in the south which was farthest from the centre of the cyclone (the inundation came from the west and south-west gathering force and volume as it passed to the east). The whole district was affected, Cox's Bazar excepted. Where the storm wave did not encroach, there was a comparatively little cholera. Europeans who are careful about sanitary arrangements, and who, in the Sadr station, live upon the hills and elevated dry ground, suffered little. Besides prevailing extensively, this epidemic was very fatal. Out of 8,464 persons specially reported by the police to have been attacked in November and December, 7,362, or nearly 87 per cent., were said to have died. Naokhali.-Cholera in this district, as regards its endemic prevalence, epi- demic intensity, and seasonal subsidence, does not differ from that of the other districts in Eastern Bengal. The summer prevalence of the disease in 1876 was not generally severe or epidemic in character, but during April and May it was prevalent in every circle, and those parts of the district which are near the large rivers, particularly to the south and south-east, suffered most. Dr. Lyons, the Civil Surgeon, says:-" Both the disease and its cause are never absent, being aggravated by atmospheric and other conditions which are not yet sufficiently understood. One of the conditions I have noticed lately and wish to convey is that a very perceptible heat is felt from the earth upwards for several feet, accompanied in parts by unpleasant smells noticeable along the roads and over ground apparently dry and well formed. These are forced on the attention only in such places where the sun is acting powerfully, so that when it rains heaviest and the country is under water, the active causes, whatever they may be, are kept in check." He adds that not any of the Europeans, native officials, or other well-to-do people suffered from the disease, notwithstanding that the epidemic raged with extreme severity in Sadharam. The inundation caused by the cyclone, and which was pretty much, if not entirely, of salt water, involved the whole of the southern portion of the district, and affected all its registering circles, except those of Ramganj and Begumganj. Early in November (the third or fourth) cholera broke out epidemically throughout the inundated tracts, and caused very severe mortality, the deaths in November and December in these tracts being no less than 16,125 out of a total of 18,461 deaths in the same area during the whole year. Patna.-The character of cholera in this as well as the other districts of the western division of Bihar differs in point of seasonal prevalence from that of the disease in the districts of Lower Bengal. In the western Bihar districts there is no second or winter epidemic, nor continued prevalence of cholera from the close of one year to the opening of the next, both the earlier and later months of the year being markedly free from the disease; the period of maximum intensity being from April to June. In 1876 cholera prevailed very severely and fatally in the Bihar sub-division in June; in Dehree there