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to wed a child of 16, with the inevitable result of begetting a progeny rickety, scrofulous, and (to use the indigenous phrase) hastily run up. Asiatic cholera has already numbered one victim, and New York trembles to think what ravages that pestilence will make when it fairly warms to its work.” From another medical journal, published in Philadelphia, I extract the following paragraph:— “The harvest of death. The protracted and unprecedented heat of the first and second weeks of July were accompanied by a mortality in this city of a most startling character. The whole number of deaths for the week ending 6th July was 764, an increase of 350 over the week previous. Of these 274 were from cholera infantum. High as these figures are, they were exceeded by those of the following week, when they reached 852; of this number 497 were children under two years of age, and 383 under one year. Of cholera infantum there were reported 310 cases, and of sunstroke 68.” Recollecting that we had passed through a summer hotter than usual, I determined to compare the mortality among children under two years of age during that season with the mortality during the previous summer, and during other periods of the year. I examined in the Registration Office for the Dunedin district the records of all deaths among children under two years of age during the period of the two years, from 1st July, 1870, to 30th June, 1872. During that time 232 deaths took place. I divided the causes of death into three classes: deaths from affections of the brain, deaths from affections of the respiratory organs, and deaths from intestinal affections. Of the 232 deaths, eight occurred in children that had not reached the age of one week, and the circumstances of their birth had probably more to do with their death than any external cause acting upon them; thirty-three died from affections of the brain, fifty-eight from affections of the respiratory organs, 103 from intestinal disorders, twenty-six deaths were recorded as having occurred from debility or atrophy, two from tubercular disease, without specifying the locus of that disease, one from jaundice, and one from heart-disease. It is to be regretted that the causes of so many deaths are recorded in such an indefinite manner, it takes somewhat from the little value that statistics have, when twenty-six deaths are set down as having occurred from debility or weakness, without specifying the cause of that weakness, or what organs were especially affected. On examining the periods of the year during which the deaths occurred from these three classes of disease. I found that there was no particular time during which deaths from brain affections were especially prevalent. The summer heat is not intense enough here to produce sunstroke, with ordinary precautions; at least that disease is not of frequent occurrence, and no deaths among infants are attributed to it. The thirty-three deaths that occurred