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flower, no doubt due to the continued cloudy and rainy
weather.  Close to the path passing the spring the Roland
Park Co. were sinking another artesian well; this will be
number four besides the fine spring.  I walked in the direction
of the Mt. Washington Electric Railway on Fall's Road.
Before I had reached the road, although only 11 o'clock I
had eaten my lunch I had become so hungry.  Reaching
the road I walked out to the car barn.  Here I made my 
most important find of the day, growing in among a lot
of the ordinary Ambrosia artermisiifolia with <s>its</s> staminate
spikes was one plant with all pistillate spikes.  Near the
barn was a road leading towards the fall, I concluded
taking this road and very glad I was that I did for it
took me to a path leading along the falls.  The path proved
very enticing and took me past many charming nooks.  I 
followed it up into Mt. Washington.  A plant very frequently
met with to-day was Actinomeris squarrosa. Just as I
entered the path along the falls I saw one plant of
Polygonatum giganteum in fruit.  Along the hillside were
hundreds of plants of Aster corymbosus, only a few of them fully
        