?52 Cholera really pre- sent in the district in February. 72 But the district of Tinnevelly began to yield cases of cholera from the beginning of the year. In January, eight deaths were noted- two in the Tinnevelly talook, three in Nangunnerry, one in Satur. and two in Ottapidaram. In February the cholera mortality had advanced to forty-six, and in the Tinnevelly talook three villages had suffered, and it is very clear from the fact that fatal cases had occurred in twenty villages in the entire district, that cholera had begun to be active so early as February. Collector's report. The Collector of the district, in writing on the 20th May, thus describes the progress of cholera:-"The disease has been more or less prevalent in all parts of the district since the middle of March. It was at first confined to the towns and villages on the banks of the Tambrapawni river, the waters of which overflowed the banks to a great extent during the disastrous floods of November. The disease then travelled to the south-west and south of the Tambrapawni." " It has been confined almost entirely to the southern and western talooks, the northern talooks having been almost free." In a later communication, dated 26th July, Mr. Longley, the Collector of the district, observes, " I regret to say that information has just reached me that cholera has also broken out in Streevulliputtur, the northernmost talook of the district, and which talook up to this date has been perfectly free from the disease." This latter observation is, however, scarcely correct, as the registration returns show three deaths in March, twenty-one in April, thirty-four in May, and thirty in June in the Streevulliputtur Talook, though it is very evident that the disease had not begun to spread rapidly in that talook. Nor did it, in fact, affect the Streevulliputtur Talook to any extent. Marked preference of cholera for villages on river banks which had been inundated by the late floods. 73. The marked characteristic of the cholera epidemic in Tinnevelly was the avidity with which it seized upon the low lying villages along the banks of the Tambrapawni, and other rivers, avoiding in the first instance the higher grounds, though spreading to them at a subsequent date. Mr. Longley has been good enough to furnish me with a list of the villages attacked up to the end of June, showing those situated on river banks, and those away from the influence of river moisture. The facts are embodied in the following table, and they are not a little remarkable as an illustration of the mode in which cholera prefers a moist soil to flourish in :- AMBASA-MOODRAM. TINNE-VELLY. TENKA-KAI. NANGUN-NERRY. TENKASI. SATUR. SANKARA-NAYANAR COVIL. STREE-VULLI-PUTTUR. OTTAPI-DARAM. Total. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. Deaths in places on river banks. Deaths away from river banks. January 2 3 1 2 8 February 22 12 2 1 5 1 2 45 March 2 15 1 194 7 1 6 4 2 3 1 7 243 April 85 204 36 85 33 14 19 56 9 9 13 13 21 1 39 637 May 318 7 149 75 391 92 232 127 40 13 51 46 4 18 21 13 12 112 1721 June 237 1 210 61 304 102 229 388 15 24 20 59 27 30 14 190 1911 Total 642 8 602 173 986 234 475 537 112 48 87 128 4 61 21 67 28 352 4565