H. MARTYN OLARK on MALARIA.

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Another curious fact concerning malaria which has come under

my notice is that it sometimes concentrates itself for weeks,

and even months, in a particular locality. The malarial poison

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is usually breathediihto the system, but it is in my opiniɔn

quite as commonly imbibed. Water is contaminated intwo ways:

either by the power that it hasof absorbing malaria woich passes

over its surface, or, in the case of wells, through the auba oil

water, as I have noted elsewhere; and this is the reason why

some Indian cities have not benefited from the now water- supplies

sa the water comes from an infected source. Streams flowing

through the Terai are often very dangerous because of the mal-

aria in them. In 1884 a party of workmen asth

Bett to repair a

bridge over the Chuka drank of this stream, apd out of thirty

only three escaped fever, while several of them died.

The various malarial diseases inall lands are the outcome ɔť

one identical poison, and the effects produced depend on the

quantity of the poison which enters the system, its degree o

M concentration, the seasonal temperature and humidity, and last,

but not least, on the individual constitution. Though feversy

atr the chief manifestations of malariai poison, they are notë

the only diseases produced by it. The number of diseases of which

malaria in the parent is infinite, Even when there is no actual

disekat present, the poison is inimical to life, especially the

life of Europeans,

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It resists remedies in a remarkable degree,

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