Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1919 [January 22, 1919] Wea [Weather]
30 [degrees], 36 [degrees] Dull
  Dark cloudy, calm & mild but
chilly.
  Garden birds. Chickadee & Jay
heard.
  Spent entire day in house &
Museum weeding out great
numbers of pamphlets & a few
books to send to Sherman
for sale or to Elizabeth Brewster
for the Wolfeboro Library, the
latter getting all the voluminous
propaganda with which 
Sir Gilbert Parker and later Prof.
Dixon, have kept me so well
supplied during the past four
years.
  E.R.S. [Elizabeth R. Simmons] read to me from
Transcript [Boston Transcript] 7.30-8.30 P.M.
Later I called on the Almys
seeing both Mr. & Mrs.

Cambridge
Ther [Thermometer] Thursday, Jan. 23, 1919 [January 23, 1919] Wea [Weather]
  Continued gloomily cloudy,
mild but chilly, windless
weather, reminding me of
that which we had in England
most of the time in September,
1909. This resemblance especially
marked in afternoon when a dense
fog shrouded everything.
  Garden birds. At least 4 & I 
thought 5, Chickadees with
an unseen but vocal White breasted
Nuthatch, in the lilacs; a [female]
Downy Woodpeck [Downy Woodpecker] in grape arbor,
a loud screaming Blue Jay.
  Spent most of day in Museum
writing letters. C. [Caroline Brewster] came up
at noon & went back at 4.
Gilbert [Robert A. Gilbert] motoring her both ways.
We visited hen house & got an egg.
"Jack", talking well at 8 P.M.,
spelled "one - i - c - p - dog" with
perfect, slow, distinctness, Delia
& I standing near him at the time.