?(118) in October. The disease was not confined to any particular locality, but was often found to be present in widely separated villages. Bhagalpur.-In this district the endemic cholera often assumes the epidemic form. March to August is the period of greatest prevalence; Septem- ber and October are months of subsidence, and January and February and November and December are months of marked immunity from the disease. In 1876 cholera was spread over the whole district, but, on the whole, the visitation was not severe. A large number of cases in the town of Bhagalpur occurred among children. Parnia.-The periods of immunity, increase, and subsidence of cholera in this district resemble those observed in Bhagalpur. The disease was not severe in 1876, though every circle was affected, and there were smart and fatal outbreaks in some of them. In this year the rainfall, 64·85 inches, was above the average, 62·54 inches, of several previous years. In 1873 the rainfall was only 33 inches, and the disease prevailed epidemically. Sonthal.-The periods of cholera prevalence, subsidence, and immunity in this district are same as in the other districts of Eastern Bihar, except that there is exacerbation of the disease in November and December. In 1876 cholera first appeared in February among the pilgrims assembled in the town of Deogarh for the Shibrath festival, and rapidly spread to the neighbouring villages where it continued until May, March being the month of greatest prevalence. In the Godda sub-division cholera commenced in March and lasted till August; in April, May, and June the disease spread over the whole sub-division, and these were the months of greatest suffering. During the rains the disease subsided greatly, but it reappeared after their cessation, and was very severe in November. " Village after village was attacked, but the affected villages were at a great distance from one another." Kattak.-Cholera prevailed with greatest severity throughout the year 1876, but May, June, and July were the months of greatest suffering. There was scanty rainfall and drought here in this year. " It is worthy of notice that though so many thousands of pilgrims pass through Kattak year by year carrying cholera with them, the European residents have never suffered from it. The Madras Regiment, too, almost invariably escapes." * * * Puri.-A very severe and wide spread epidemic outbreak of cholera occur- red in this district in 1876. It commenced in January and lasted until August. In March, June, and July, the last mentioned month particularly, it was most virulent and fatal in character. In January the disease was present both in the district and in the town. In many places far from the pilgrim routes the disease prevailed virulently: " notably among them are Gop, where it was severe, and the Karnalla and neighbouring villages in parganah, Chowkisbad bordering on the Chilka lake, in the Puri circle, where it was most virulent this year, while in the previous one there was hardly any present in this locality. There was no communication between these villages and the nearest pilgrim route. With regard to the prevalence of the disease among the pilgrims themselves, the usual oft-repeated causes were in operation, principally fatigue and exposure during the long journeys that they undertake, errors of diet, coarse, uncooked food, polluted water, damp earth, night chills along the road, &c. On arrival at Puri the people are densely crowded, sleep outside, eat bad food, drink foul water, and their defoecations pollute the soil. During the festival they are in a high state of religious excitement, and this is followed by utter mental depression, and they are also subjected to much exposure, as the festival takes place in the beginning of the rains (June) when the pilgrims have to walk about in the wet, and lie on the damp ground. It is noted that the record relating to the mortality among pilgrims could not be completed this year, but the ascertained number of pilgrims who died in the Puri circle was 508, of whom 274 succumbed to cholera, and the rest to the other diseases, principally bowel-complaints. Of this number again 204 were victims to cholera during the months of June and July when the car festival took place. A high temperature with maximum rainfall is mentioned as the great concomitant of the severe prevalence of the disease this year as compared with the preceding year. The temperature during the first seven months of 1876 was much higher than it was during the corresponding period of 1875 while the rainfall was much less, the mean temperature for this period in the former