154 I. IJIMA AND K. MUKATA 



Fig. 3). The other surface (the lower part of the same figure) was 

 divided into three longitudinal areas (one median and two lateral) of 

 about equal breadth, by two lines of shalh^w depression. The dis- 

 tinctness of these areas was brought forth more by the fact that the 

 lateral areas greatly bulged out in comparison with the median, than 

 by the presence of those grooves. Moreover transverse constrictions 

 were to be found mostly on lateral areas. 



Case ;IV. — Both'. Uguloldes from the eije. — This case has been 

 kindly communicated to us by léakushi R. Sato of Utsunomiya, 

 He also placed the worm at our disposal. It was preserved in spirit, 

 25 mm. long, narrow (1.5-4 mm.) and fiat. It was very much 

 twisted and shrunken up, but microscopical investigation left no doubt 

 of its beino- Bothr. li^-uloides. The one end was cut and the other 

 broken into shreds. 



As to its oriii'in Sato informs us that it was at the end of 1883 

 when he came across a patient with blepharitic symptom. He was 

 a young luan, 17 years of age, living at Kanazawa in Province Knga, 

 where Sato then resided. (En Chiaijai-lji-Shimpö, No. 181, in which 

 one of us published a note of this case, it was stated by mistake that 

 the locality was Utsunomiya). The affected place was the region of 

 the inner angle of the left eye. At this place, not only the eye-lids 

 but also a part of the C(jnjunctiva around the Plica semilunaris was 

 in a state of severe inflammation. At a spot just over the Caruncula 

 lachrymalis, Sato observed a whitish spot which seemed to protrude 

 itself. This was taken hold of by a pincette and pulled out, when it 

 proved to be the worm in question. 



Case Y. — Botlw. Ivjulokles from the eye. — We know one more case 

 in which the parasite was located in the orbit. For information and 



