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Each company
supplies both rich and poor, both large houses and small; there is no
difference either in the condition or occupation of the persons receiving
the water of the different Companies. Now it must be evident that, if the
diminution of cholera, in the districts partly supplied with the improved
water, depended on this supply, the houses receiving it would be the houses
enjoying the whole benefit of the diminution of the malady, whilst the
houses supplied with the water from Battersea Fields would suffer the same
mortality as they would if the improved supply did not exist at all. As
there is no difference whatever, either in the houses or the people
receiving the supply of the two Water Companies, or in any of the physical
conditions with which they are surrounded , it is obvious that no experiment
could have been devised which would more thoroughly test the effect of water
supply on the progress of cholera than this, which circumstances placed
ready made before the observer.
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