504 
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 
[SALVIN 
subject. This book contains about 150 pp. on birds and 
their medical qualities. The names and descriptions of the 
species and their habits are chiefly compiled from Willughby, 
generally without acknowledgment, but not without the 
errors that usually dog the compiler’s path. Salmon died 
December 1712. 
1693. Seplasium. | The Compleat | English Physician : | or, the | Drug- 
gist’s Shop Opened. | Explicating all the Particulars of which 
Me- | dicines at this day are composed and made, | Shewing 
their various Names and Natures, their several | Preparations, 
Virtues, Uses, and Doses [etc. 5 lines]. | In x Books. | By William 
Salmon, | Professor of Physick, near Holbourn-Bridge, London | 
Multa multimque. | London. Printed for Matthew Gilliflower at 
the Black Spread Eagle in Westminster-Hall . . . 1693. | 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo, title, ded., pref., etc. 11 11., table of 
j diseases xxiv 11., and pp. 1208. Birds at pp. 476-635. 
Salter (John Henry), viv . 
The undernoted annotated list compiled by Professor 
J. H. Salter, D.Sc., with the assistance of Captain G. W. 
Cosens, Mr. F. T. Fielden, Mr. W. B. Powell, and Sir Pryse 
Pryse, Bart., was “ published by the University College of 
Wales Scientific Society.” 
[1900.] List of the Birds of Aberystwyth and Neighbourhood. Aberyst- 
wyth : [n.d.]. 
Collation — 8vo, pamphlet, pp. 19. 
Salvin (Francis Henry), 1817-1904 
This well-known writer on falconry was the fifth and 
youngest son of William Thomas Salvin, of Croxdale Hall, 
Durham, his mother being a daughter of John Webbe- Weston, 
of Sutton Place, near Guildford, Surrey. He was born at 
Croxdale Hall, April 4, 1817, and educated at Ampleforth, 
a Roman Catholic School in Yorkshire. In early life he 
served in the Militia, joining the 3rd battalion of the York 
and Lancashire Regiment in 1839 and retiring with the rank 
of Captain in 1864. In 1857 he inherited the Sutton Place 
property from his uncle. 
His early love of hawking is said to have been stimulated 
