The January Monthly will be out this afternoon.
The interest taken in sparring at Exeter is greatly increasing.
The old university town, Heidelberg, supports a saloon for every eighty-seven inhabitants.
Rev. William Lawrence will conduct the service at Appleton Chapel tomorrow evening.
In the final round of the chess tournament, Webster beat Black yesterday. The remaining games will be played off as rapidly as possible.
The mild weather yesterday brought the candidates for the lacrosse team out of doors, where they took advantage of the opportunity for stick practice.
The programme of the symphony concert this evening will be as follows: W. A. Mozart, symphony in E flat major; Moritz Moszkowski, concerto for violin, to be played in Boston for the first time. The third symphony by Saint-Saens announced for tonight will have to be omitted on account of the organ, which is not in proper condition. Selections from "Gotterdammerung" and "Siegfried" will be played instead.
The class of '84, Boston Latin School, held their annual meeting and dinner at Young's Hotel, Thursday night. S. F. McCleary, jr., was the poet of the evening: Herman Page, the orator, and L. H. Paddock, the historian.
About thirty candidates for the Mott Haven team, including a large proportion of new members, exercised in the gymnasium yesterday afternoon; but they will not be regularly organized until Monday, as many of those who intend to train were not present at the meeting on Thursday.
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The Mott Haven Meeting.