In November, 1912, a carpenter, searching amongst the débris which had been precipitated from the top of a hill overlooking the country district of Magrè into the limestone quarries at its foot, discovered a fragment of a lead pig and four pieces of stagshorn with short inscriptions in an early Italic alphabet. The find was in due course reported to the officials in charge of antiquities coming to light in the province in which Magrè is situated, and careful excavations were made during the same month, resulting in the discovery of the other inscribed fragments of horn, which, with the four first found, form the subject of this article. These objects are now preserved in the Museo Nazionale at Este, where, at the suggestion of Professor R. S. Conway, I examined them at the end of March, 1922, and made a transcript of the text, which, it is expected, will later be published in Part II of Professor Conway's forthcoming Pre-Italic Dialects of Italy.