No. 8.] BIRD NA3IE8. 21 



Lawson, in his New Yoyage to Carolina, 1709, says : " The 

 bald, or white faces are a good fowl ; they cannot dive, and are 

 easily shotten." 



At Crisfield, Md. (east shore of Chesapeake), and Wilming- 

 ton, K. C, BALD-CROWN : at St. Augustine, Fla., BALD-FACED 

 WIDGEON. 



Dr. David Crary, of Hartford, Conn., tells me that while 

 shooting in Benton Co., Oregon, in 1885, he found this species 

 in enormous flocks on the wheat-fields, and that it was there 

 called the WHEAT-DUCK. 



Eobert Kennicott (cited by Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway) 

 speaks of its Ijeing known to voyage urs throughout the Fur 

 Countries as SM0KIN6-DUCK,* and Pennant, in his Arctic Zo- 

 ology, 1785, tells of its being "sent from ]^ew York, under the 

 name of the Pheasant Duck ;" but the latter name (as others 

 have suggested) was probably applied by mistake. 



* Probably because its note was tliougbt to resemble tlie puffing sound 

 made wbile smokinor. 



