VALE ALUMNI CVEEKLY expected to be present. A _ business meeting will be held_in the morning and in the afternoon the Class will attend the ball game. The Sexennial ban- quet will be held in Harmonie Hall at seven o'clock. Hugh A. Bayne will preside at the dinner and speeches will be made by Clive Day,. W. B. Frank- lin, W. N. Runyon and Percy C. Eggleston, NINETY-FIVE. The Triennial Exercises of the Class of Ninety-Five will take place on. Tues- day, June 28. The program will be as follows: At 9 A. M. the General Alumni meeting in Alumni Hall; at 10.30 a. Mm. the business meeting of the Class in 176 Lyceum, after which a photograph of the Class will be taken; at 2 Pp. m. the Class will assemble at Osborn Hall and proceed to the Yale-Harvard baseball game at the Field, attended by the Naval Reserve Band of New York; at 6.30 Pp. M. the Class will again assemble at Osborn Hall and go to the Class sup- per at Warner Hall, where the Class Cup will be presented to R. T. Lowndes, Jr. Members of the Class may secure rooms in Divinity Hall upon applica- tion to E. F. Hill, East Divinity. NINETY-FIVE SHEFF. The Class of Ninety-Five Sheff. will hold their Triennial Exercises on Tues- day next. The business meeting of the Class will be held in North Sheffield Hall at 11 A.M. After the meeting\the band will meet them and they will march to Osborn Hall. After lunch the Class will again form in a body and go to the Yale-Harvard ball game at the Field. The Class supper will be held at Lenox Hall at seven o’clock. YALE WINS SERIES, Better All-Round Play Gives Her the Final Game With Princeton. The University’s confidence in Cap- tain Greenway was justified for the sec- ond time, when the final game with Princeton went to Yale last Saturday in New York. This Princeton series has been one of the most satisfactory a Yale baseball team has ever played. Everybody realized that the home team did not do themselves justice in the New Haven game, when they were so badly defeated. Good judges said Yale would do better at Princeton the next Saturday, even though the Princeton team would be backed up by a Com- mencement crowd. It all depended upon whether Greenway could pitch or not. In spite of a bad arm he went into the box, and by his steadying ef- fect on the team and excellent play, the game was won. So sure was Princeton of a favorable outcome that the members of the team had their possessions packed ready to go to their several homes after the game was over, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL. Washington Square, New York City. | DAY CLASSES (LL.B. after two years).—Twelve , hours’ required work and six hours’ optional per _ week, The daily sessions (from 3.30 to 6 P. M.) are so arranged that the student may do effective work in an office every da EVENING CLASSES (LLB. after three years.).— Ten hours’ required work and four hours’ option- al SA week. nee sessions from 8 to zo P. M. LIBRARY FACILITIES are excellent. The Law Library contains over 11,000 volumes. Tuition, $100 per year. For circulars, address L. J. Tompxins, Registrar. 15 Instructors, - HOME LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. GEORGE E. IDE, President, Wo. M. Sr. Joun, Vice-President. E.uis W. Grapwin, Secretary. M. A. MARSHALL, Actuary, . W. Cuapin, Medical Director, 625 Students, EUGENE A. CALLAHAN, General Agent, State of Connecticut, 23 Church Street, New Haven, The Most Acceptable Wedding Present this season, will be found among the COMPACT sets of sterling silver forks and spoons. We are now showing many combinations of these sets, ranging from five dozen upward. They are selected from our current copyrighted ‘patterns of forks and Spoons, sold at $1.00 per Ounce The highly polished wood compact cabinets, with lock and key, are marked equally close, in harmony with the prices of the silver. Tiffany & Co.’s products can be purchased only direct from their own establishment. “Tiffany & Co. UNION SQUARE NEW YORK but they found it necessary to unpack them and wait another week, for the deciding game. To answer the question how it was done is not difficult. The bulk of the credit lies with Yale’s Captain. He put the balls over the plate, but not neces- sarily in a straight line, and even when Princeton did hit, Yale’s field proved impregnable. Outside of Greenway, no one man can be picked out as having done work that discounted the rest, un- less it be the four who made the phenomenal stops of the day. Umpire Gaffney called the game promptly at 3.30 o'clock. At that hour, the big stands at the Polo Grounds were filled with a typical college crowd, with the exception of a few seats on. the ends. Princeton supporters seemed the most numerous, but when the little bunch of Yale men in the cheering section got together, it was plain to be seen that Yale was not to be outdone in vocal loyalty. A moderate breeze was blowing across the field from second to home. Captain Greenway won the toss and sent Princeton to the bat. Only four men were up in Princeton’s haif and no score was registered. deSaulles, Yale’s surest man to first, brought the Yale crowd to their feet by scoring on a passed ball, one to nothing looking very well. In the first half of the sec- ond, deSaulles made one of the prettiest plays a person is likely to see on a baseball field. A hot grounder was knocked down toward first base just out of reach of Wadsworth’s hands. deSaulles, from his position near sec- ond, sprinted after it, but just before it reached him it bounded high. He arose several feet, seemingly, after it and pulled it down, but the impetus of his run prevented him from making a throw. With characteristic cleverness, he made a back hand toss, the ball rollng slowly into Wadsworth’s hands just before the man reached the base. The three other phenomenal plays like- wise made the Yale crowd wild with enthusiasm. In the first half of the fourth, Hazen, at third base, made a dive for a grounder and was just able © to stop it with one hand. He recovered the ball and threw the man out at first. In the seventh, at a critical point, a hot liner was hit which Greenway caught about two feet from the ground. And in the ninth, Wallace made the most beautiful play of the day by pulling down with one hand a long fly to right, which was apparently a home run. There were two men on bases and if he had not reached it, Princeton’s score. would have come up to six. The fifth inning proved to be Yale’s lucky one, instead of the eighth, as is usual. With the score three to three, Yale, by the timely hits of Greenway, Wallace and Camp, advanced it to six. In the next inning, the two finals runs of the game were made by deSaulles and Wear, and Yale had won by eight to three. The full score: YALE. 2 : AB. R. H. SH, PO. A. E. deSattiles: 2b. . <3: 2 DiS P40 Wadsworth, tb. 2.24 0:9 (£10: 0° 0 NERD OG ay ee Aah ee © Creerway pec. § Soe Gam WWeracey ft rs 5 rk 8 Camp, S82 ee. Bi oa a 4 teaser, S07 oe AO 8 ee or Baty ly oo es | fOr OO Oa OG Sullivan 6) 2 ar. 40+ OO 42 eG ata ey 30° 8) OG 227 Eis : PRINCETON, AB. R. H. SH. PO. A. E. Sitker sbi. saa. 5. 07:2: 6.6. 0:0 DastOR AG: scat ine ee OO O WMS? Coos ig. 5, 4:0 0° 07G &.0 ee 1 ea 4 OO 0 Gi cro Pauitier, Shc. 4% ieee fF 6 ELutchings, 3b... 54° 1°! Ae 22 Pifieprand, ‘pyc i 4 1 eee 0 Bite, 2B... ie 4 0.2 074 72.32 Weatiins...ch: 3.4 4.70 3.0.40: 1:10:.0 CS) 7 SG Ne wai, Bae SS ei ge | Score by innings: Bie 23° 425.7 Ss POG 5 Fo OG 2-. 3. 22 6-O Princeton; 0-15.02 :2 0..-0-- 01 6.-O--3 Summary: Three-base hit — Wear. Stolen. bases—Yale, 1; Princeton, 2. Bases on balls—Off Greenway, 2; off Hillebrand, 2. Hit by pitched ball— Wadsworth, deSaulles, Camp. Struck out—By Greenway, 4; by Hillebrand, 7. Wild pitch— Greenway, Hillebrand. Time of game—Two hours thirty min- utes. Umpire—Gafiney.