Cambridge.
Ther. [Thermometer] TUES. MAR. 15, 1910 [Tuesday, March 15, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
26 min. [26 degrees minimum]   Dull.
Chiefly cloudy. Calm. Rather chilly.
  Spent day in Museum working
on reply to Dwight & nearly finishing 
it. No callers. Miss Eastwood
lunched with us. It was our
city election day. I went to the
polls on Lowell Street at 9.30 &
voted the straight non-partisan 
ticket. Mr. & Mrs. Thorpe came in 
while I was there. C.[Caroline] & E.R.S.[Elizabeth R. Simmons]
took around some of Forbush's
water-fowl law petitions getting 
a lot of people to sign them. Mr. C.W.
Eliot [Mr. Charles William Eliot] refused, because of Dr. Walcott [Dr. Henry P. Walcott].
I made a short call at the Almys'
after dinner seeing Mrs. Almy & Mary.
  A Fox Sparrow, a Junco, a [male] Downy [Downy woodpecker]
2 Flickers & 2 Crows in the Garden
today. It must have been the 
Fox Sparrow I heard chirping there 
yesterday.
Cambridge - Boston
Ther. [Thermometer] WED. MAR. 16, 1910 [Wednesday, March 16, 1910] Wea. Weather]
26 min. [26 degrees minimum]   "We Dine"          Fine
Clear, cool, calm. Warm sun through day.
It freezes hard every night now.
  Spent day in Museum "polishing" the
reply to Dwight. Although it is practically
finished I may spend several more
days on it. I was interrupted just
after dinner by Alva Coolidge who
spent about two hours looking at the
birds & eggs. He had just come from
Lexington, Maine, & was on his way 
to Connecticut. He was natural &
cordial & I had a very pleasant
talk with him. Miss Eastwood lunched
with us. I went in town this evening
to a "We Dine" at Jeffries'. All the
old members were there except Spelman
and [?] two new ones Bent & Barbour
made their debut. A Flicker & a 
Grackle were the only birds seen in Garden.