ENGLISH A AND 7, ECONOMICS 10, TUTORING. - R. E. Gregg '94, The Stanstead, 19 Ware street (near Ware Hall, one minute from the yard). Men are advised to come early.
71 18tFINE ARTS 4, History 1, 10, 11, 12, Tutoring.
W. W. NOLEN,2 Manter Hall.TUTORING in History 1, History 10, Fine Arts 4, Govt. and Law 17.
C. E. WHITMORE, JR.,
71 *tf
21 Trowbridge St.ARE you preparing for the finals? You can find pure air, cool breezes and absolute quiet at The Outlook, Arlington Heights. Forty minutes from Harvard square. Send for full particulars to Mrs. Lucy F. Perkins.
TUTORING for admission examinations, also in French, German, Spanish and Italian. Boston School of Languages, 88 Boylston street, Boston.
*yALL students desiring light, pleasant and lucrative employment for whole or part of the summer call any day between 11 and 12 at 44 Brattle street, room 2.
FOUND in College Library. Pennell's Journey to the Hebrides. The book appears to have been taken from some society library, as the front cover shows the remains of a book plate.
BEGINNING next Monday, Stephanson & Cellier's comedy opera, "Dorothy," will be produced for one week at the Castle Square Theatre. This opera is a comparative stranger to theatre-goers, and its story is worth retelling. Dorothy, the daughter of a wealthy foxhunting squire, dons peasant dress and at the village inn serves the landlord's customers, and falls in love with a gentleman whose horse has lost a shoe. Dorothy is accompanied by a friend, who masquerades with her, and also falls in love with a customer. The two girls give their lovers two rings, which the lovers swear never to part with, and the same evening present them to two grand ladies at a ball, who are no other than their sweethearts of the morning, now clad in their legitimate raiment. The two gentlemen, in the middle of the night, play at burglars, and bind the squire in his chair and rob him. Dorothy, disguised in male attire, challenges her lover to fight a duel, and, the challenge being accepted, displays arrant cowardice, thus making the denouement and inevitable explanations easy and natural.
More fun is afforded by the actions of Lurcher, a sheriff's officer, who has followed the town gallants, Geoffrey Wilder and Harry Sherwood, down from London in the hope of collecting a bill from the former, who, as the nephew of Squire Bantam, is expected to marry the squire's daughter Dorothy.
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