Cambridge.
Ther. [Thermometer] THURS. [Thursday] FEB. 3, 1910 [February 3, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
Dull.
Cloudy & mild but chilly. Heavy
rain after dark this evening.
  Spent day in Museum.
Catalogued and distributed a 
number of birds and rearranged a 
lot of books. Billcliffe  at work on
the step ladder to gallery.
Agent of N. E. Tel & Tel Co. called
in A.M. I signed renewal leases
of both telephones at Concord for
another year at reduced rates.
Miss Swasey lunched with us.
C. [Caroline Brewster] is now nearly well. She made
two calls yesterday & comes down
to luncheon & dinner regularly now.
No birds noted in Garden. Very
few reported from other parts of
Cambridge. It is evidently a "birdless"
winter for this city. E.R.S. [Elizabeth R. Simmons] read
Shackleton to me this eve. Evening with C. 

Cambridge - Boston.
Ther. [Thermometer] FRI. [Friday] FEB. 4, 1910 [February 4, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
Fair
Cloudy with snow flurries, in A.M.
Clearing in P.M. Calm. Mild.
  Spent day in Museum devoting
most of the time to labeling trays,
rearranging books etc. Billcliffe & 
Gilbert working with me. All
these changes & rearrangements have
become essential because of the
necessity of making more room
for books & making the birds &
eggs more available for study &
comparison. To complete the work
as it should be done would require
more time than I have given or care
give to it.
  To Boston this evening to N.E. Botanical
Club meeting. Fernald expounded his new
theory about early Norse settlements & Brainard [Ezra Brainerd]
talked about violets & Mendel's laws. It was
a most interesting meeting, largely attended.