Cambridge.
Ther. [Thermometer] SUN. [Sunday] JAN. 2, 1910 [January 2, 1910]  Wea. [Weather]
40 [degrees] Partly fine
Forenoon Cloudy; afternoon clear.
Calm & mild. The snow & ice that
has clung for a full week to trees
shrubs flowers & houses began to let
go last night and was falling at
intervals through the day so that
by sunset things about our place
had nearly resumed their normal
aspect save for the broken trunks
& branches which are more numerously
shown now that they are once more bare.
As I feared the destruction in the
Garden has been very great.
Spent most of the day in Museum
writing letters. Mrs. Wyman & Miss.
Allyn dined with E.R.S. [Elizabeth R. Simmons] & me at 1.30.
I took tea at the Almys & spent the
evening there & noted but one bird
about the place, a Blue Jay screaming in
the Jungle.
Cambridge
Ther. [Thermometer] MON. [Monday] JAN. 3, 1910 [January 3, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
Cloudy
Snowing most of forenoon but so
sparsely & fitfully that less than an inch
fell. The sky cleared at sunset.
Spent day in Museum working
at various odd tasks chiefly
connected with the library. Picked
out a set of Horned Owls for Bent
to show this evening at the Nuttall
Club. He read a paper on the 
Bubos which consumed over an
hour. It was very interesting
& well done. We had a rather 
large attendance. Chas. R. Lamb
who had just joined the Club again
after nearly 20 years of absence from
its meetings came for first time. He
with his wife & mother & Barbara Carter
& Purdie dined with E.R.S. & me at 6.30.
A Blue Jay heard in Garden this morning.