Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Saturday, Feb. 13, 1915 [February 13, 1915] Wea [Weather]
Fine
  Clear, calm, bracingly cool air
but snow melting fast at noon.
Recent rains have given it a 
highly-polished icy surface. It
still covers the ground here about to
a depth of several inches.
  In Garden: a solitary Chickadee,
a gray Purple Finch in Parkmann's
apple eating its tiny fruit (or seeds)
in company with 7 or 8 House Sparrows,
a Flick [Flicker], two Jays, a Crow
cawing.
  Spent day at my desk, working
on Nighthawk story. Rewrote
part of it for second or third
time and then compiled three
pages from Journal.
  Heard this morning that Edith Dana
had been operated on for gall stones
last Thursday. Called at house this
evening but Dick was not in. Saw
his nephew Skinner (Henrietta's son) &
wife. Spent half an hour with them. 

Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Sunday, Feb. 14, 1915 [February 14, 1915] Wea [Weather]
Dull.
Cloudy, calm & mild but chilly.
  In Garden: a Chickadee, a Junco ([male])
a Downy [Downy Woodpecker] (heard), a Flicker, a Crow
(heard), 2 Jays and ten or a dozen
House Sparrows (very noisy).
  A [male] Starling in Thorpe elm, Brattle St.
  Met C. [Caroline Brewster] at St. John's [St. John's Memorial Chapel] at 10.20.
Lizzy Fuller sat with us in Mrs. Wyman's
former place. Dr. Hodges preached a
wonderful peace-war sermon in
commemoration of one hundredth
anniversary of Treaty of Utrecht. Pulpit
draped with two flags, that of
Great Britain & the United States.
  We had at dinner Mr. & Mrs.
Darling, Mr. & Mrs. Galloupe and
Miss Allyn. Victrola playing most
of time from 2.30 to 4 P.M.
They all departed at 4.30. After
that I wrote letters in Museum.
More Victrola & some reading, after
supper.