The Yale nine went into training April 3rd.
There will be an hour examination in Philosophy 1 on Saturday.
The Dartmouth nine are running and sliding bases in unusually fine form.
There will be an hour examination in Latin C this morning. The divisions will be examined at the regular recitation hours.
T. F. Bayard, Yale '90, has been elected president of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association to fill the place made vacant by the resignation of J. M. Hallowell of Harvard.
The Princeton Glee Club start on their Easter trip tonight and will return on the evening of the 20th. The club will sing in Buffalo, Detroit, Chicago, Bloomington, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Pittsburg.
On Saturday, March 30, delegates from Harvard and Yale met in New York to decide where the Harvard-Yale football game shall be played next fall. Harvard was represented by Cumnock, Butler, and Lee; Yale, by Mr. Walter Camp, '80, and Rhodes, '91. It was decided to hold the game in Springfield, if proper grounds can be obtained and the necessary railroad arrangements made.
Pitcher Ames, of the Princeton nine, has done the best work of any of the college pitchers up to this time. The strong Jersey City team made only two hits off his delivery, and the Athletics found almost as much trouble in hitting the ball sately.
The attention of the college is called to the following. We publish it feeling that it may probably be of some service to the students: 423 Walnut St., Philadelphia, April 6th, 1889.
We have a first-class opening for a young man who desires to enter journalism. May we ask if you will be good enough to allow the following to be posted on your college bulletin; published in your college paper; or handed to some one whom you think a proper person? Early in September there is to be begun in New York, Philadelphia, Boston and London, the publication of a journal for young people, of a grade of St. Nicholas and the Youth's Companion, but unlike either in character of contents. It has a new field and its aim will be: The best juvenile journal in the world.
A company with $100,000 capital is behind it, composed of some of the best literary and social elements of New York and Philadelphia. To a young man of a literary turn, who is able to command a small sum as an investment, in order that he may be a principle, a leading position is available, and an opportunity is offered for a name and a profitable life work. Technical newspaper training is not necessary. Idlers will please not write to us; we hope to hear from a young man who means business.
For the company,
EUGENE M. CAMP.Late of the editorial staff, Boston Herald and Philadelphia Times.
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