Bail. N.O.C, Q,Oot, 1881, p.233 
Birds T!dga Qo, N,Y> Sides Lor ing, 
451. Bald Eagle. ?4ot rare. While out , 
hunting ducks last winter I wounded a Whistle- I 
wing, and after chasing him around a while 
he;took to the old device of diving and stick- 
ing just the end of his bill out of the water. I 
I soon lost trace of him and went on but. hap- 
pened to look back and saw an eagle trying to 
catch my duck. I ran back hoping to get a 
shot, but as soon as the eagle saw me he flew 
away. I saw three more that year, two of ! 
them at one time. 
XV, Muq, 199 o/p.86 
Winter Notes f rom Stephento-wn, N. T, 
jBeniamin TTrvAcr * 
In December one of our local trappers 
caught a magnificent specimen of the Bald 
Eagle in a fox trap. 
O. & O.Vol. 18, Jan. 1893 p.ll 
(ru. Ct-Ji. 
6. Haliseetus leucocephalus. Bald Eagle. — Decidedly less common 
than formerly, but still to be seen on Oneida Lake. Lewis Point, near 
South Bay, has been a favorite nesting place for many years. 
