(141) Total rainfall of the year, 60·62 inches. The figures show great prevalence of cholera in January, very consid- erable decline in February, great increase in March, continuing up to May, with a maximum of prevalence in April; sudden decline in June, continued steady decline month by month to October, increase again in October, con- tinued with great prevalence in December. The great prevalence in January was a continuance of the preceding year's cold-weather epidemic, which, as usual, finally subsided in February. The rise for this year's cold-weather epidemic is not so great as in some former years, and commences later, due probably to the prolonged continuance of the rains. The year 1878 opened with a more or less severe prevalence of cholera in Bengal and Orissa. Within this area the disease continued to prevail with increasing virulence up to May in Bengal, and up to the end of the year with slight intermissions in February, October, and November in Orissa. In Darjiling and Jalpaiguri, its prevalence, however, commenced and also ended later, viz., from April to September. In Bengal the intensity was sub- dued generally from June to September, and the winter increase was from October to December. Chota Nagpur suffered severely only from March to August, and was comparatively free from the disease during the rest of the year. East Bihar, with the exception of Shahabad and Darbhanga, showed a marked immunity from the disease throughout the year. In the western districts of Bengal, as a whole, cholera prevailed more extensively and with greater fatality in 1878 than in the preceding year. The months of greater prevalence were January to April, and November and December. The disease was present in 2,072 villages against 1,711, and the mortality amounted to 1·29 against ·88 per mille of population in 1877. But there were certain localities within this area in which the reverse was the case; thus, in Birbhum the mortality from cholera in 1878 stood at 1·86 against 2·42 per mille of population in 1877, and the area affected was covered by 4,659 villages against 5,885 in the preceding year. In Dinagepur cholera prevailed with great mildness in November and December, while it was very severe in the same months of the preceding year. This immunity is attributed to the heavier rainfall of 1878 and to the floods of the river Parnobaha. In Rajshahi there was exceedingly little cholera in 1878; and in Darjiling, while the town was entirely exempt from the disease, it prevailed with much severity in the Terai and spread as far as Kurseong which also suffered much. In Eastern Bengal there was a very great and sensible reduction of cholera in 1878, both in regard to its extent of prevalence and fatality; only 4,428 villages were affected against 7,828 in the preceding year, and the mortality fell to 1.18 against 6.63 per mille of population in 1877, the high mortality of which year was largely due to a continuance through its earlier months of the cholera epidemic which followed the cyclone inundation of October and November 1876. In this portion of Bengal it is an established fact that the months of greatest prevalence of cholera are January to May and November and December, the rainy months being those of greatest immunity. In Dhaka in 1878 cholera prevailed somewhat severely, and became general from the end of March to the end of April; the usual autumnal epidemic did not commence until December, and was very mild in character. This delay in its appearance was attributed to the heavy inundation which began in the end of July and continued to the end of September, when the rivers rose higher than they had ever been known to have done before. In Bihar the extent of country affected by, and the mortality from, cholera in 1878 were somewhat less, on the whole, than in 1877, the death- rate being 1·27 against 1·33 per mille of population, and the number of villages attacked 3,297 against 4,591. But this diminution was confined to the eastern district of the area, the fatality and extent of country covered by the disease being considerably greater in the western districts, excepting Malda in which district the monthly incidence of the disease is the same as in Bengal, whereas in the other districts of Western Bihar the months of greatest cholera prevalence are March to September. In Parnia cholera was epidemic in many parts of the district from March to May; the disease is