642 Notes. 



of the late Mr. White, taxidermist, of Salisbury, that a specimen of 

 this bird had been shot by Mr. Carey Coles, at Winterbourne Stoke in 

 1908. As doubts had been expressed as to whether this bird had been 

 correctly named, Mr. Rawlence obtained the loan of the bird from Mr. 

 Carey Coles and took it up to the Natural History Museum at South 

 Kensington for identification. Mr. W. R. Ogilvie Grant, of the Museum, 

 writes after examining the specimen, " There can be no doubt that it 

 not a specimen of the Yellow Shanks, but is a Common Redshank on 

 which the beak and legs have been wrongly painted yellow. While 

 the glass was off the case I instructed my taxidermist to paint them 

 the proper colour." 



Bohemian Waxwing'. An immature specimen was shot by a 

 keeper in Braydon Wood and brought to the Rev. D. P. Harrison, of 

 Lydiard Millicent, for identification, December 31st, 1913. 



Salisbury Token, unpublished. Dr. H. P. Blackmore reports 



the occurrence of a token : — 



WILLIAM CLE MENS ^Shield of Arms. 

 OF . SARUM . MERCER 1664=C.W.E. 



WrOUghton Church. Mr. Thomas Codrington and Mrs. Story 

 Maskelyne write to make certain corrections in the account of the 

 model of Wroughton Church in Mr. Ponting's paper in W.A.M. xxxviii., 

 415. Mr. Ponting's notes were made from the photographs of the 

 model, not from the model itself which he had never seen, and from 

 information given him at the time by Mr. Codrington and Mrs. Story 

 Maskelyne. 



Page 415, 1. 22, and on Figs. I. and II. The date of the model given 

 as 1835 should be May, 1839. 



Page 416, 1. 26. The model does not show a " small roll mould " on 

 the edge of jambs and arches of the three semi-circular openings on 

 the north side of the nave formerly existing, but a square recess or 

 rabbet. This the model maker could copy, but the mouldings of the 

 later arches he did not attempt to copy, but shows them by a plain 

 chamfer. 



Page 424, 1. 33, note. The " big pew inside the Chapel by the arch 

 into the Chancel " was neither the Wroughton House pew nor the 

 Manor House pew. "I rather think," writes Mr. Codrington," it was the 

 servants' pew, my grandmother's pew was inside the screen, in the 

 north-west corner of the Chancel, where it can be made out in Fig. I. 

 It was not the Manor House pew, but appertained, like Wroughton 

 House and the Chancel, to the Rectory property. I do not remember 

 where the Manor House pew was." 



Page 425, 1. 2. The stairs to the west end galleries; from the south 

 aisle (not the tower) are shown in the model though not visible in Fig. 

 I. 



Page 425, 1. 5. The stairs to the pulpit as shown in the model led 

 from the middle aisle. 



Page 425, 1. 8. " The Skreen " mentioned by Aubrey is shown in the 



