?131 Removal of camp to opposite back of the river Irrawady. on the 13th instant, the local Military and Medical authorities arranged for the movement of the troops to the opposite bank of the river. An elevated site was chosen, and on the 16th, 19th, and 20th April, respectively, the B., G., and L. Companies, and the Band and Drummers were sent across the river and encamped on this ground. No cases occurred in the new camp until the 20th, when a man of the G. Company (which had crossed the river the day before) was seized and died very rapidly. Several cases of "diarrhœa" were reported also in all the companies. Prevalence of diar- rhœa both in camp and barracks. 170. During all these days no cases of cholera occurred amongst the troops remaining in barracks, but Dr. Thompson reports that there was a good deal of diarrhœa and much debility, especially amongst women and children. The Battery of Artillery had only a single case of cholera on the 7th instant, cholera prevailed to some slight extent amongst the natives of the cantonment. Fresh cases in bar- racks on 20th April. 171. On the night of the 20th April two children were attacked in No 12 Family Barracks in Thayetmyo. The rooms were immediately evacuated and purified. No further case in the cantonment occurred on this occasion. About the end of May, after the return of the affected troops to cantonment, there was another outbreak, confined chiefly on this occa- sion to the Royal Artillery which had furnished only a single case during the epidemic intensity in the 76th Regiment. Cessation of epidemic in camp on 21st April. 172. On the afternoon of the 21st April, the Roman Catholic Chaplain, who had been indefatigable in his attendance on the sick in the hospital camps, was seized with cholera and died on the 23rd. This was the last case connected with the camp. On the 2nd May the men returned to their barracks in Thayetmyo. 173. The general health of the Regiment appears to have undergone a great deterioration during the presence of choleraic influences in the station. For some weeks subsequently, notwithstanding all that was done for their comfort, the men suffered greatly from the depressing influences that had surrounded them. Report of the Princi- pal Medl. Officer on the health of the Regt. The Principal Medical Officer, British Burmah, inspected the Regiment on the 13th June, when he found a large number of sick in hospital and a still larger number unfitted for duty. He remarks:-"I satisfied myself that the health of the Regiment was unquestionably bad. The symptoms from which the men suffer are extreme debility, with pains in the back and limbs; a small weak quick pulse; a white flabby tongue, marked distaste for food, and in some instances slight diarrhœa, with a general feeling of malaise; there is tendency to syncope and giddiness; the countenance is anxious; the eyes hollow and dark around their orbits; and the face suffused with pallor, and a general expression denoting debility. To such an extent were the symptoms and signs of weakness present, and so long had these men been attending hospital without the least amelioration of their condition, that I considered it necessary to select fifty-four of their number for change, with a conviction that they would not regain their health at Thayetmyo." L L