
          893.

the 7.34 train to Cockeysville.  We arrived there at abut 8 o'clock.
From C. we went to Warren on the Gunpowder.  To reach W. we had
to go south along the York R'd a short distance to a road called the
Warren R'd.  It took us directly into the village and to the large
iron bridge crossing the river.  As we were going along this road
I found a little bunch of Grape Hyacinths that had been plucked
and laid there.  In the field we saw a man ploughing, so we waited
till he approached us, and we asked him if he knew where the
flowers grew.  He told me right were he had been ploughing, and
that he had cut the flowers to take to his wife but that he had
forgotten them.  We now looked about in the field and found a
few <s>more</s> of the plants.  The flowers seem to be slightly different
from those at Arlington and yet they do not seem to be the
species racemosus.  I took a few of the plants to transplant in
my garden for closer study.  Mr. W. took one, too, he transplanted
it on the little hillside at the run, close to the fence.  As we passed
through W. I saw in a garden on the <s>righ</s> left side of the road a fine
plant of Ribes aureum; I secured a specimen of it.  Nearly all the
inhabitants of W. work at the large cotton mills on the east side
of the river.  When we reached the bridge, Mr. W. said we would now

        