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Fact and Rumor.

Mr. S. E. Winslow, '85, visited Cambridge yesterday.

Princeton beat the Yale lacrosse team on Saturday 4 goals to 0.

The section in Greek 9 will begin to read the Eumenides on Tuesday.

Mr. G. M. Seeley, '87, has returned from his long absence in the South.

Seats have been assigned in Political Economy 1 and are posted in Massachusetts 3.

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The fares on the Cambridge and the Charles River roads will be raised to six cents to-day.

The ball game with the Beacons, arranged for Tuesday, has been indefinitely postponed.

In the 1,000-yards race last Saturday, Myers beat George, making the distance in 2 m. 23 2-5 s.

The New York Yacht Club has offered a cup valued at $1,000 as an international prize for steam yachts. The first race for it will take place next July.

The Harvard Veterinary School has treated, during the past year, 1,393 different animals; of these, the majority were horses. The Spirit of the Times says that the school has a great future before it.

Since the inauguration of the Mott Haven games, Yale has won fourteen first and five second prizes. - Yale News.

Harvard, Haverford and the University of Pennsylvania form the Inter-collegiate Cricket Association.

In the glass-ball matches on Saturday afternoon the Harvard Shooting Club beat the Dedhams by a score of 109 to 91.

The career of the '89 ball nine promises to resemble in more than one respect that of the unfortunate freshman nine of last year.

The class meetings of the Athletic Association will take place next Saturday. There will be two attempts to break records in special races.

The book for the signatures of those who wish to go to New Haven on Saturday to see the Yale game, is at Leavitt and Pierce's. Over thirty men have already signed.

A number of Harvard men who went to Providence to see the base-ball game walked out to the professional grounds, which are three miles distant from the Brown grounds, on which the game was played. Fortunately they got back in time to see the opening of the game.

The musical contest for amateurs, which is advertised in our columns promises to be a very enjoyable and amusing affair. 100 tickets are reserved at Bartlett's for Harvard men. A great number ought to take advantage of this opportunity to hear a highly original concert.

At the Friday evening performance of Papillonetta, Mr. C. C. Whitman was presented by the members of the Hasty Pudding Club with a handsome ebony baton, in honor of his efficient management of the theatricals. Upon one end on the baton is a golden butterfly with rubies and pearls on the wings. The design is made by Tiffany.

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