?40 This condition is not so bad except in a few cases as to attract attention, but it has a most important bearing on the question of enteric fever, as scurvy, it will be remembered, is one of the diseases associated with this disease, and its combination with dysentery in India is a point ever to be remembered. For these reasons I think that the vegetables at present supplied, viz., 12 ozs. of potatoes and 4 ozs. of onions, should be supplemented by an additional ration of 4 ozs. of green vegetables, such as cauliflowers, spinach, lettuces, or even bháji. Whilst the necessity for allowing a small quantity of vinegar has often before been urged, a larger quantity of salt would also seem to be desirable. The amount served out in some Continental armies is larger than in our own. "Our army is sup- plied with *5( = 1/2 oz.), the French ˇ5, Prussian ˇ87, Russian 1ˇ87; but for a long time the Russian army had salt money given, and it was only when scurvy attacked them that the money was stopped and the salt given.-Squire." In connexion with the question of food it is necessary to urge that perhaps more stringent orders are required regarding the keeping of pigs in Cantonments. At Mhow there is a piggery establishment in the village of Pensionpoora, with- in Cantonment limits. This is, I quite allow, very carefully kept; but at Deesa Bâzár I witnessed the following sight:- Whilst inspecting in company with the Cantonment Magistrate the tatties erected for the use of the inhabitants of the Sadar Bázár on the sandy banks of the river, I noticed a herd of swine rushing violently down a steep place into the enclosure where they greedily eat up the freshly-deposited human ordure. This practice had not been previously known to the Cantonment Ma- gistrate and was said to be of recent occurrence, and it has since, I believe, been stopped; but it must not be forgotten that, as Aitken points out:-"It is very probable that some of the so-called epidemics of typhoid fever in former days were caused by the propagation of Trichinœ in the human body". It may here be interesting to observe that an outbreak on board the Re- formatory Ship Cornwall was, as reported in the 9th annual report of the Local Government Board, 1879-80, attributed by the medical officer in attendance to enteric fever though its identity with that disease was afterwards disproved by Mr. Power, the Inspector sent down by the Local Government Board to enquire into the circumstances attending the outbreak. Mr. Power, as Dr. Buchanan says:- "Searching for direct post-mortem evidence of its nature found himself concerned with a parasitic disease in essential particulars resembling that produced in the human subject by the presence of Trichina. Some anatomical peculiarities of this Cornwall parasite (noted at the time by Mr. Power, but by him regarded as of no generic importance) tended to throw doubt on its identity with Trichina; but a further report on this subject by Dr. Bastian refers the parasite to the genus Pelodera, which has not heretofore been known to invade the human body." Dr. Bastian says:- "If future observations should confirm the view entertained by Mr. Power and Dr. Cory that such nematoids as were found in the body of the boy Pierce caused the malady from which he died and were causes likewise of the various other cases of febrile illness that occurred in epidemic fashion among the residents on board the Cornwall, the importance of this discovery will be increased rather than diminished by the fact that the nematoid in question is not as they at first naturally enough supposed Trichina Spiralis, but some hitherto unknown form producing a previously unrecognized disease whose clinical affinities are almost as strong in the direction of enteric fever as they are in that of trichiniasis. In this case we shall in future have to distinguish between two distinct fleshworm diseases in the human subject, the one caused by the Trichina fleshworm and the other by the Pelodera fleshworm. Peloderiasis would also be the name by which the new affection might be distinguished from Trichiniasis. "The mode in which worms of the latter class or their allies gain entry into the body would still remain to be determined." Dr. Bastian gives a caution, it is as well to remember in India, "against the eating of raw fruits or vegetables contaminated with such organisms or with minute slugs that may have swallowed them in addition to the drinking of unfiltered and unboiled water which may for some time have been stored in tanks or cisterns containing much organic sediment-a possible mode by which dwellers in towns or other communities might be infected. The young or the ova of particular free nematoids might from time to