80 
Plate XXX 
British Columbia Coast 
Clubs Made of Stone 
Figure 1. War or ceremonial club made of stone. From 27 feet deep, Quamichan, Waka- 
shan Indian area of southeastern Vancouver island, B.C. Cat. No. IV A 2406-92 in 
Royal Ethnographical Museum, Berlin; $ natural size. After Figure 39b, Smith, 
Shell-heaps, 1903, from cast, Cat. No. 16-8904 in American Museum of Natural 
History, New York, Also illustrated in Figure 176b, Smith, Gulf of Georgia, 1907. 
This form of club has not been found outside the area of southern Vancouver island, 
the lower Fraser valley, and Puget sound. 
Figure 2. Two eagle heads and a toad carved and inlaid with abalone shell on a war club or 
slave killer made of stone; probably modern. From Metlakalla, B.C. Tsimshian 
Indian area. Purchased by J. W. Powell. Contributed by the Department of the 
Interior, December, 1879. Cat. No. X1I-B-562 (32) in Victoria Memorial Museum, 
Ottawa, Canada; J natural size. AIeo illustrated in Figure b, negative, Cat. No. 
38055. 
Figure 3. Toad projected from Figure 2. 
Figure 4. Double-bladed, double-bitted war club made of stone. From Caribou road 
between Lytton and Yale, B.C. Salish Indian area. In collection of Daniel Ash- 
worth, Wappingers Falls, N.Y. From cast, Cat. No. XII-B-576 in Victoria Memorial 
Museum, Ottawa, Canada; J natural size. Also illustrated in Figure 149b, Smith, 
Gulf of Georgia, 1907, from cast, Cat. No. 16.1-134 in American Museum of Natural 
History, New York. This form is unique in collections from America. 
