Cambridge - Wolfeboro.
Ther [Thermometer] Friday, June 21, 1918 Wea [Weather]
Fair
Forenoon sunny; afternoon cloudy
cool with fresh southerly wind.
  Arthur Estabrook & I, with Evans,
left Boston by 9 A.M. train for
Weirs which we reached about 12.30.
Judge Bell & his daughter joined us at
Nashua. Judge Young at Laconia.
We were met at Weirs by Galloupe,
Mrs. Haley, Miss Pitman Mr. & Mrs.
J. K. Lord & daughter. They had come
over in a small but comfortable
screw steamer. The trip back across
the lake was pleasing despite a
rather high wind & rough sea.
Rattlesnake Id. [Rattlesnake Island] a sad spectacle for
its once attractive forests have been
cut within the past year & nothing
remains but wrack & ruin. Saw an
ad. [adult] Bald Eagle perched on blasted pine.
  Trustees meeting in Academy 3-5.30
Dinner cooked & served by school girls
5.30-6.30. Graduating exercises in
town hall 8-10. All essays good &
some remarkably fine the very [?]
by Sargent's son. Singing delightful.
  Trustees met again 10-12.15 midnight,
at Mr. Haley's.

Almost no birds seen or heard in Wolfeboro village. Weather doubtless silenced them.

Wolfeboro - Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Saturday, June 22, 1918 Wea [Weather]
Stormy.
Incessant heavy rainfall began about
midnight, last night, & continued through
forenoon of to-day. Everything thoroughly 
soaked by it. Surface water pools in
grass fields & streets half flooded. Very
cool despite S.W. [southwest] wind.
  Wolfeboro to Boston via Rochester Portsmouth
& Eastern Div. thence. Little or no signs of
frost along this route. Yesterday it was
deplorably evident throughout most of
Merrimac River valley where our train passed
countless fields of corn & potatoes, some
of tomatoes & many fern-grown woodlands
where it had cut down or blackened 
pretty much every tender plant.
  Reached Boston about 1 P.M. Percy met
me at North Station. Found Mary Greenough
at lunch with C. [Caroline Brewster] & E. [Elizabeth R. Simmons] Spent afternoon
in house, reading & writing. Usual
evening reading
  Garden birds. A few Grackles, Robins, Starlings
& House Sparrows eating the few remaining
cherries of which there has been but a
slim crop this year,.

No signs of insect damage to foliage anywhere noted between Wolfeboro & Boston, yesterday or
to-day.