Distribution of Leprosy. 133 that only about two-and-three-quarter millions expose themselves to the possible risk of acquir- ing leprosy by means of vaccination. (c) To be infected these children must have been vac- cinated from a leper child. Now leprosy is found in about one out of two thousand individuals of all ages, and it is certainly not found as often as in one out of one hundred thousand cases at an infantile period. (d) Lastly, the error of using lymph from a leprous child, especially as the disease is easily recog- nised, must occur extremely seldom. The chances, therefore, of leprosy being spread in this manner must be very small indeed, if at all conceivable. Vac- cination is becoming more popular every year, and yet leprosy has not increased, but rather decreased since the last enumera- tion: that "recrudescence," assumed by many, has not taken place, so far as the census figures show. The latter, however, have always been employed as evidence by those who con- demned vaccination or clamoured for compulsory segregation. Lastly, reference must be made to some important evidence which has lately become public. Surgeon-Major Pringle, in a paper on "Vaccination and Leprosy" read before the late Congress of Hygiene and Demography, stated that for a period of twenty years from 1864 to 1884, when Deputy Sanitary Commissioner in the North-Western Provinces, he had spent five months each year in camp in the hill districts of Kumaun and British Garhwal. He estimated that during these twenty years he had vaccinated about two million persons, but he had never seen a case of leprosy traceable to vaccination, and had never heard of its happening, though natives of those districts were ready with objections and reasons for not having their children vaccinated. Dr. Pringle also stated that during his tenure of office he was in the habit at the end of the hot weather of bringing