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cambaiensis^ the Magpie- Robin, Copsychus saularis^ and the 
Indian Palm -Dove, Turtur camhayensis. 
The Museum at Lahore, called the ‘^Jubilee Museum,” 
though chiefly devoted to antiquities and art, contains a 
small zoological collection, including some fine horns and 
antlers of Northern Indian big game. 
Among the exhibited series of weapons there is a “ Fish 
Sword,” the saw of a Saw-Fish, Pristis sp., with the basal 
end cut into a hilt, capable of being grasped in the hand.^ 
This Museum owes a great deal to the work of the late 
Mr. J. L. Kipling, C.I.E., and Mr. Rudyard Kipling has 
acted as its Curator. 
* In the Museum at Bristol, England, in a case marked “Solomon Islands," 
there is a somewhat similar “ Fish Sword,” also made from the saw of some 
species of Pridis, The grip is improved by pieces of shagreen inserted into the 
carved out base of the saw. 
