YALE ALUMNI Ih te ee THE SOUTHERN TRIP. [Continued from rst page.] The score: YALE. AB. R. H. PO. A. E deSaulles, 2b. ...... Re Os O° CO. Wadsworth, 1b. ..... S905 169: O 2D ae SA oe ee Bee eee Greenway; li. .of.... Ae G2 OO Bresen 7b... ka Sees fl Eaten, $8.80. ges 5. ” Nagi Soe, WR aaa a2 MPBUIECE. ff. 5 os o5.%> SHO Ts te Oo 'O WeSteP. Do os isas cas 42°5525"0" 2-2 NE CSS es oes @ 0S 2A ss mtn. fea che es oF: 599-27 15.8 GEORGETOWN. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Pranord,: 3b. si eae Ee Oe ITS EO PANO: 20... Sanes 2) 0.8: Sad Moreh, $8)6..065 66 4'Or bk 25328 Watsh. ri. .32 aps 42 BS eae Mecarthy, lf. /o5... 4:°3° 0) 223 0 1S etn Co ae lee a So oT fe Bowness, ch... A O20 a OSG (eS RE 6 Re agian a AO: 84925020 PND, eas ae ves aa Se Se kee 0 PERE ee eG a4: ..2 Bore Score by innings: Tege3 @ <5: 6. 7. 89 ee. .5...0. 1 O° 0 2. 2° 0°-0':-0—5 Georgetno 0 0 300.00 0O—3 Summary: Two-base hits—Downes, Hafford. Three-base hit — Wallace. Sacrifice hit—Wallace. Stolen bases— Georgetown, 2. Double plays—Camp to Wadsworth, Hazen to Wadsworth. Bases on balls—Off Fearey, 1. Hit by pitcher—By Fearey, 1; by Downes, 1. Struck out—By Fearey, 10; by Downes, 3. Passed balls—Maloney, 2. ° Wild pitch—Dowd. Time of game—Two hours 25 minutes. Umpire—Green. Yale, 12—HWampton, 0. On Friday afternoon Yale played the Hamptons at Hampton, Va. The Hampton nine was organized especially for this game and included among its players five old Yale men, Harvey Rushing, ’or: TP. Boo Smith: “ores a. Armstrong, ’95; W. O. Hickok, ’o5 S., and C, M. Chester, Jr., ’97 S. The game was featureless, Yale win- ning easily by a score of 12 to o. The score: YALE. ‘ AB. R. H. PO. A. E, desaulles, 2b) 24305. O 2° EF eae k Wadsworth, Ib. ..... SoS Fae ee i as Rc Miya gn Sl eo Msreen way, ik: 4064. 4.2. 4°°6° 0-5 Feazen, Qbyavieds say. 0-10 1°-6 ein, 55, . ... fda) .t S20 .0.. 164r0 Weauacet, fi .5 85 2S 3° 2°52" 1. Oo LimMguncey, Di cissicn AO. T= 0 6S 6 VET, Co? ew aac 3 8. 0 14 0.0 Pe ie ens vcs = 40 te Mepiieren, .. 6.5 ss... 5942 “0° 278 Boanew it. fo. 8s 20 te 2. tid ie ee kw ed tT 0 0: 4 0-6 Namen, c. 25;....; 2e7%0" 3: 017 memieersall cf. .... 3° 0 0 1.00 ete aa... 2 OF 0. Gd Wet 1, Ss iw = 0° Is 7 ee MOtalS” yer .. .ois ; OF a 4°20. 5859 The score by innings: tS 2 AS. 6555 8 Yale. pores 0.2 0-10 +2 "0. o—5 Witeda.:. 0 6 0) 6D 6 6 0—oé Summary: Stolen bases—Yale 3; Vir- ginia 2. Double plays—Camp to de- Saulles, to Wadsworth; Camp unas- sisted. Bases on balls—Off Fearey, 4; off Collier, 6. Hit by pitcher—By Collier, 2. Struck out—By Fearey, 4; by Collier, 6. Passed balls— Mangum, 3. Time of game—Two hours. Um- pire—Betts. Yale, 9—Georgetown, 6. Yale again defeated Georgetown on Tuesday, by a score of 9 to 6. The game was well played and the frequent scoring in the last three innings kept the result in doubt until the last man was retired. Hall pitched for Yale until the seventh inning, when he was relieved by Chauncey, and Bache was in the box for Georgetown. All the pitchers were hit rather hard. The fast work of the Yale infield and Wallace’s two home run drives were features of the game. The score: YALE. ABR. Wi PO, ASF: demaulles, “20... se ae a So Wadsworth, 1bs 32 5 oo ear 6 o Wreeat ei eeee Si 2 1 2 Greetway [f 3... 3 Bo O42 i 0. 6 Hagen, $0.2... .,5,. 24 1 = 0 Camp, sé 327 4. 4.8: 0 Few o Wallace, ghee. i. eae eo aes Tia? Oo 33, ee 3 0 8 042 oO Chaenncey. .p./5 743 2-0 0.0 6:0 SHiVanes, ft i> Bo. oO otals’.. 5 5 At 0 It 27 3 “3 GEORGETOWN, . AB. R. H. PO. A. E. tlafiord, 3) 3. 6 A271 eT Mownes, 1 oh 5 2) A Se ) Maroney G65 .52 5 5, 5 0 2-10 0: 6 WVaish Tt 5 0 °O 0D 0: 6 NMeCarthy, cl... 05 5 6° oe 6 =e NOTA Be) 68. G3 “usec? 8 OCR 4 2 Butenes, 2b... os a9 1° 6 4 ew, Ge. yee 4.1,:0 0.0 4 BeCNG, Pr eee ees 3° O° 6 6 a TONS wae" 6 76 Se 17 4 Score by innings: Lied Bono 8 gt ee Vale: :230 O46 2.0 6. 2.4, 6-5 Georgern 1 65-00, 1 O22. 2, oan Summary: Two-base hit—Downes. Home runs—Wallace, (2). Stolen bases—Yale, 3; Georgetown, 6. Bases on ball—Off Hall, 3; off Chauncey, 2; off Bache, 4. Hit by pitcher—By Bache, 1. Wild pitch — Chauncey. Time of game—two hours 20 minutes. Umpire—Sneider. <> &, > ee a Athletic Calendar. April 23.—Annual Spring games, open to Yale men, at Yale Field. April 23.—University of Pennsylvania relay races at Philadelphia. April 30.—Invitation games, at Yale Field. April 30.—Yale Interscholastic Ten- New Haven. May 14.—Dual ._Yale-Harvard track games, at Cambridge. May 21.—Yale Freshman-Princeton Freshman baseball at New Haven. | May 24.—New England Champion- ship Tennis Tournament, at New Haven. May 27 and _ 28. — Intercollegiate games, New York. June 4.—Yale-Princeton baseball at New Haven. June 4.—Yale Freshman-Princeton Freshman baseball at Princeton. June 11.—Yale-Princeton baseball at Princeton. ; May 14.—Yale Freshman-Harvard Freshman baseball at New Haven. _ June 18.—Yale-Princeton baseball at New York, if necessary in case of a tie. CHASE’S PRICES 5g 5 a Most people say they are well up. That is perfectly true, and we mean to keep them there. And yet we are doing more and more business, month by month and year by year. Why? Come and see—or write for samples. J et CHASE & CO., NEw HAVEN HousE BLOCK. A Golf Suit Novelty Which takes very well. The coat is plain, in one of the beau- tiful shades of the rough goods, and the trousers are of the same body with plaids worked on it. Very pretty cloth; very pretty patterns. My New York Day ..... Is the same— Thursday. Time, 12 to 4. Place, Astor House. F. A. 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