YALE ALUMNI WEBB Y FIRST GAME FOR PRINCETON. Yale Nine Lost Through Fearey’s Weakness and General Poor Play. The first game in the Yale-Princeton championship baseball series was played at the Yale Field on Saturday and resulted in an easy victory for the Princeton Nine. Almost four thousand people saw the game in spite of the weather conditions, which were ren- dered decidedly unfavorable by reason of a strong wind blowing across the field from the North. The result of the game was in doubt at no time after the fourth inning, although the rally in the eighth gave some hope to the Yale fol- lowing, recalling as it did the sensa- tional finish of the first Princeton game last year, when Yale turned almost cer- tain defeat into victory by opportune batting in the ninth and tenth innings. Fearey pitched the first four innings for Yale and principally through his wildness Princeton secured her unsur- mountable lead. Greenway succeeded Fearey and finished the game in credit- able form, although he was hit freely. The field work of the Yale Nine was ragged at times. Camp, Hazen, Wads- worth and Wear, however, filled their positions in fine form, and with Green- way, were the only men on the team who were able to hit Hillebrand’s de- livery. Sullivan’s weakness in throw- ing to bases was again apparent, five men succeeding in stealing second. Hillebrand pitched a steady game for Princeton and was well supported ex- cept in the eighth inning, when Butler's errors and Kafer’s passed ball proved costly. The batting of Kelly and Hil- lebrand was a feature of the game. The play was. marked by two sensa- tional catches, one by Watkins of Sulli- van’s hit over short-stop and the other, deSaulles’ stop of a line drive between first and second. Eleven bases on balls and six hits off Fearey, coupled with four stolen bases, errors by Greenway and Wallace and three passed balls, allowed nine Prince- ton men to score in the first four in- nings. © Princeton. scored. two. more runs in the fifth on three hits and errors by Wallace and deSaulles. A sacrifice hit, followed by Kelly’s single, sent Easton across the plate in the eighth and completed Princeton’s scoring. Wear’s home run in the seventh in- ning was Yale’s first score, although the side had been retired in three pre- vious innings with three men on bases. Yale made six runs in the eighth on errors off Butler, a base on balls, sin- gles by Camp, deSaulles and Wads- worth and Greenway’s three-base hit into right field. The . score: YALE. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. PeReuleS:: 2Di.\ seesaw. 2 (2d 2 ’ Wadsworth, Ib. 5 Oe 230-0 Wear Ci. 6 Ae. Go Vue. hws Greenway, 4h op. 2468 of 10 4 BI. 3 1 wWraace, Tha 53:0 Fae Ss KSer, SS. i eens ee OE rg PRA Sb ATG ee’ eae pp Peavey 004s Tase rea SO. I la O Bia Ate Re ee 20 70.0 OO UL Van Cores Paes ee oT! “Ohas ee® ae eect ee Tee a Gtare ft. 2 i see a7." 9 F274 Ss PRINCETON. AB. R. H. PO. A. E yee itl! ...< yanokiad Ok Rae eee Mocha At. oes eee 5 32 OO ar DO Bee es sa a sees An Ete Rey ID. ok reas 6 TG Biss BUver, S823. ee 6:0 te Or 13 PAAMeCHINGS. BD: fsa Bie, ccuk ere eS Pee DTAHd,