?7 considerable, upset the balance for a time. If prices fall, the result on the health conditions of the poorer classes is favourable for a short time ; if they rise, and especially if the rise is sudden, the effect upon the health of these classes will be proportionate to the stress produced and will continue until a balance has been struck, either by adaptation to the changed condition or in consequence of prices falling again. The following table shows the prices during the past 40 years of the four principal food-grains used in Bombay. The table shows the average number of seers (about 2 lbs. avoirdupois) purchasable for one Rupee in each year:- Year. Wheat. Jawár. Bájri. Rice. 1871 10.21 16.38 13.21 9.67 1872 10.94 16.12 12.77 10.75 1873 11.64 19.61 16.41 12.61 1874 12.38 22.28 19.49 14.1 1875 11.88 21.09 18.37 11.33 1876 11.64 18.67 15.19 10.79 1877 8.21 10.76 10.78 9.18 1878 6.58 10.25 9·7 8.01 1879 6.93 11.42 10.58 8.54 1880 8.93 16.67 13.72 10.11 1881 10.99 22.38 18.78 12.03 1882 10.37 19.62 16.75 12.41 1883 10.29 18.7 15.85 12.29 1884 11.22 17.41 14.73 11.05 1885 11.38 18.54 14.91 11.14 1886 10.38 17.94 15.07 10.92 1887 9.93 17.77 14.07 10.92 1888 9.6 16.07 13.33 10.78 1889 9.91 16.84 13.14 10.7 1890 10.49 17.38 14.12 11.16 1891 9.7 16.92 14.01 11.11 1892 8.43 13.78 12.68 10.05 1893 9.78 13.41 13.67 7.78 1894 10.95 13.5 14.02 9.63 1895 13.18 14.91 13.94 10.75 1896 11.84 14.74 12.64 10.24 1897 6.66 9.54 8.97 8.45 1898 7.61 13.43 12.94 9.85 1899 7.69 12.4 11.68 9.82 1900 6.06 8.97 8.65 9.01 1901 6.68 13.00 12.21 9.46 1902 7.37 12.61 11.88 8.78 1903 8.12 13.45 14.19 8.33 1904 8.31 13.66 13.49 8.28 1905 8.33 12.85 11.39 8.28 1906 9.44 11.78 11.94 8.27 1907 9.39 12.22 13.23 8.12 1908 6.54 9.83 9.83 6 64 1909 6.86 10.79 10.97 8.30 1910 6.76 11.46 10.79 9.08 In 1865 and 1860 prices of grain rose to an abnormal height in Bombay and did not fall again until alter 1870. In 1877, owing to failure of the monsoon, they rose suddenly once more and remained high during the whole of 1878. After this for nearly twenty years they remained comparatively low, but owing to short rains in 1895 and 1896, they rose very suddenly in the last quarter of the latter year and remained high through 1897. In 1900 there was a still greater rise owing to famine in the Presidency, but in 1901 they fell considerably. In the middle of 1907 a very sudden rise took place in the cost of every kind of food in Bombay and of fuel also, and in December prices were far in excess of those at the beginning of the year. The cost of wheat rose 60.1 per cent., jawári, bájri and náchni 37.5 per cent., flour 33.7 per cent., common rice 31.7 per cent., grain and tur dál 20 per cent., cocoanut oil 25 per cent., ghee 20 per cent., and firewood 31 per cent. In 1908 prices still remained high and a still further rise took place in the prices of bájri, náchni, gram and