2'16
YA LE
Adal) IVAN I
VY Ses iy
Yale, 6; Holy Cross, 7.
Yale was defeated by the Holy
Cross Nine at Yale Field on Wednes-
day, April 26, the score standing 7 to
6. The University team took a big
lead in the fourth and fifth innings and
apparently had the game well in hand.
In the eighth, however, Robertson, who,
had pitched fairly well up to that time,
weakened very much, and the visitors
made three singles and a _ three-base
‘hit, scoring four runs, which, coupled
with three runs made in the preceding
innings, gave them the lead and the
game. The Yale team played sharply
in the field, but a general weakness
characterized their work at the bat.
Waddell and Camp, however, hit well,
securing five of the seven hits. Robert-
son’s work in the box was not as
steady as in previous games, as he al-
lowed five bases on balls, hit two men
and made two errors on throws to the
bases.
The score:
YALE,
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Me Sawes. 2D. a3 SO 2 2; D
Ounby; ches BOO! 82670
aWieat >i cic). gee E Oy RAPE
Wallace. oo aoe o> 2.16.2 DO
Waddell. ti<o;¢is iz. S32 35: a SO
amp, Sse". sc nee a: Le SO
miivan he ferrets ge ogy gore}
Bronson, bios ee3 407 3G. Oc Hie
Robertson, p. ...... So GoBate a: 2
Otis sol pes elas a6. D724 10.2
HOLY CROSS.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Kenney, 2 ska hive cars 0 is 22D
OK BBS ts <e yos 4.68 7 Oo hoe
Me ligne: 1D, sik .a se Al fe Oe ok
APNE y Olle esas . I 2:1. 0
Tinnenan, -2oc- ois 25 ahs aod, sik pacers
Dyer 68.2 ci aay dens OO to a ee
Cy Rely. Wien pata a. ki ont ea
BrennatG.. <5. 43 A Es TD ae
Rit hws <a ates wo aT A ee
TOntS oes bh ae 2 Gy 20S
*Wear out for not touching first base.
Score by innings:
Ti ggg 61:77 By
Voie oe 0003300 0 0o—6
Hoty’ Cross." 6 1-@ 8 O81? TAP ee
The summary: Earned runs— Yale 2,
Holy Cross 4. Two-base hits—Wallace,
Dyer. Three-base hits—Linnehan, Fox.
Stolen bases—Yale 3, Holy Cross 2.
Bases on balls—Off Robertson 5, off
Griffin 2. Hit by pitched ball—By
Robertson 2, by Griffin 3. Struck out
—By Robertson 1, by Griffin 4. Time
of game—Two hours and fifteen min-
utes. Umpire—Gruber.
Yale, 23; Brown, 6.
Yale won from Brown at Yale Field
on Saturday by the large score of 23
to 6. Yale’s terrific batting and Cook’s
effective pitching were most gratifying
features of the game from a Yale stand-
point. Sedgwick, who pitched the
first four innings for Brown, was suc-
ceeded by Woodworth, but Yale con-
tinued her heavy hitting throughout the
game. deSaulles made five singles,
Wallace a home run, a three-base hit
and a single, and Quinby two singles
and three-base hit. Brown secured six
hits off Cook in the first two innings,
but then he steadied down and pitched
A KNOX AD.
You notice it generally doesn’t say
much about the Knox Hat.
Why? Simply because we
don’t like to ring the changes
on the assertion that the Knox
Hat is the best that can be
made. It might look as though
a claim were being made, when
as a matter of fact we were
only repeating a commonplace.
Why repeat it?
most effectively, allowing but one hit
during the remainder of the game.
The work of the Brown team was uni-
formly weak,—in the box, in the field
and at the bat.
CHANGES IN THE NINE.
Yale three
The presented
team
_changes in the field, which had been
tried in previous practice and promise
to be permanent. Waddell was trans-
ferred from left field to first base, sup-
planting Wear, who returned to center
field, the position which he has played
during the last two years. Quinby in
turn was transferred from center field
to left field. The score follows:
YALE. .
<i nAB, Bi 1B.-PO.:A. E.-
dépaniies. Syst oea 7°45: 2: 322”
Ouisthy:, lisce'syaysa} 2 bn de Dat
West cefi it. ..59-4- 5% e212 1 lO
Wallace .£is: 0c sis 0s » 28 SEO
Wrage ID ae 5 2 111, 2 8
Carp ASS sis bcs sihe x 52.3 3:-RiceeeP
elivalt he So se 23 O02 ido
BrOnsen 40. +s. 6s 762 Tt O20
Cook Oe iaewreeea> rn Nee oe Be 0
OLAS re rs pes Fo GA 23 Or 27-0 3
: BROWN.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Richardson, cf. ..... AG. 2 8
Macon, S8ec. res cx s&s A Ee Oars
Wetmers, LO. cess. a 0° 0.17 02 1
Paine; 20 34-2 eee 3°00. 03.0
Washburn, rio. .3 rf oO: F 0-00
‘Newman, lf 225453 go. 4-40 “2
Glark= Ui: <3 ew 2° Os 2 OI
Holman, tL -and 2b.. 3: 1.90. 12.2 0
Sherlock. <3ba -..5.. 4 Psi 0; 453
Chase 62 (oi ex ces ces Ue ae Oe
Sedgewick, p. ...... a. 124..0 6-0
Woodworth. pz «22.2 2. (0°50 0.3550
OLAS fe Ss 2450. 7.27. 26 Ti
The score by innings:
L224 5.07 8 9
Vato... Gee 0-3-3 tb OR
Brown .....2 3000100 0—6
Summary: Earned runs—Yale 8,
Brown 3. Three-base hits—Wallace,
Wear, Quinby, Newman. Home run
—Wallace. Stolen bases— Yale 4,
Brown 8. Bases on balls—By Cook 3,
by Sedgwick 2, by Woodworth 3. Hit
by pitcher—Camp 2, Sullivan 2, Chase.
Passed ball—Sullivan. Wild piteh—
Woodworth. Struck out—By Cook 7.
Left on bases—Yale 12, Brown ‘5.
First base on errors—Yale 6, Brown 2.
Time of game—Two hours fifteen min-
— Umpire—Gruber. Attendance—
50. :
Yale 1902, 9; Brown 1902, I.
In a well played game, the Freshman
Baseball team defeated the Brown
Freshmen at New London, Thursday,
April 27, by the score of 9 to I. Con-
siderable improvement was shown in
the playing of the Yale team. The
features of the game were Garvan’s
pitching and Guernsey’s throwing from
left field.
The score follows:
YALE 1902. Q
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Robertson, 2b. ..... 2 Bo, ee
sramimer, SS. 5a, 5 28 ok 3 2
Cond, 02 2 ce ee 4.0.2.4 .-.3,.9
Johnston, 1b.°,.5, 5 4 2 2. 0. 0
Guerisey, 0. 305 cee ge eee a
stoddatd, .3ho45 2. 2 Oh
Perkins, cl ee Sy Je - OO
Ward, ff. Sse ae 4 TB O56
Garvin, 25553 0.0 0.71 0
Totals “see. Bae 36 9-10 27 10 3
BROWN 1902.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
FH OE ak a Sean BEM: Od 0-0
TRAY, Qi Gi ies tke 2 ote 2 er
VW o0g Werte, S605. .6. 52 0°30: 6. 14
PSD. 555 Sas hk 3.6401 053:010
Bates.) $b. 43.550. 45 5 4201 >9° 6:06
Kendall3abe-3 (055445 AO? OO oh
Maciwenaey Cat ttn AO ta 0) -
WHEW, Anime oN. (450 2-05:0 213-0
Bartlet; these. es 2° O80. 2 56
HOtas iw 6 ies BR 1 3 BF. Bs 2
The score by innings:
123456789
wale 1902.<.. 45420: 0.0.1 2-1 as
Brown 1902.. 0 0 0 oO 020 @-.2:0—1
Summary: Toro base hits—Gr
Ray. Stolen bases—Yale i Bowe
Base on balls—Garvin 4, Rush 7.
Struck out—By Garvin 3, by Rush 9.
Yale 1902, 6; Tafts, 4.
The Freshman team defeated the Tafts
School at Watertown on Saturday, by
a score of 6 to 4. The game was
loosely played throughout and _ the
Freshmen won through timely hitting.
The score follows:
YALE, I902.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E
Robertson, 2b. ..... 0 Ip 0 O66
Siete ce dS I AO Rd
fwardner-ss. 2b. ..°2 1 0.0 4°3
ee ee eh wD OTs St 9
Jonnston. “1b... .... 6 =f 10. 020
Guernsey; 5.4 LS Be Sas 4425 ae
An Ue See 22D OR 22 t 3
Peres, Gt. 0 a: OS OF
Ward. fe. Bera cy Ee ae Bee ee omer
MeKelvey. 6... = 4d 2 Oo 2
MIME. ee iS 3020 poe 10. 6
TAFTS,
: _AB..R. IB. PO. A. E.
INtON,< 2D 5 15 aie Ba O29 “44. ae
Coma piai« Shi Gh... tha 4032 42) Yip a
WV Clton.: C6755 04. cok: 1 122 Tee St
Magn? 88.032 7 A OOO ARR OE
Reritcah:. series, AO 2° 20 -0
Frudson, seid. Fas 428 O53 284
Dent ois sends oss 8 OO ed 2a
Perions Thanh 235% 3° 0: @>8°:6 0
WRITS Siac. ol. ees 4 OOF e856
Letads!) ; staat, ge 30 (-4ay 2 Tis
Score by innings:
i 2734 546 9. 25
Vase, 1002, 563.0440 00 3251-8: 25
fe: Seer 2.0 0°00 Tt I 0 0-4
Summary: Two-base hit—Welton.
Double plays— Johnson and Hall, Win- —
ton and Mann; Bases on balls—By Mc-
Kelvey 2, White 2. Hit by pitched
balls—By McKelvey 1, by White 1.
Struck out—By McKelvey 2, by White
3. Passed ball—Cunha.
<>
~~
ys
2 sat
Our National Game.
[Walter Cump in Collier’s Weekly.]
Several years ago, before it became
the common lot of the baseball umpire
to be assaulted and taken from the
grounds under the escort of the police,
it is said that a man by the name of
Hawes, who had been at one time
change catcher for the Bostons, was as-
signed by the secretary of the League,
Mr. Young, to umpire a game between
the Providence and Boston nines on the
Boston ball grounds. In the course of
the game he made some decisions so
adverse to the Bostons that it was only
with difficulty and by the aid of a cab
that he was finally rescued from the
infuriated mob. This treatment was at
that time so unusual, and made such an
impression upon Mr. Hawes, that when
Secretary Young advised him, a short
time later, of his assignment to another
Providence-Boston game in Boston he
replied by the following telegraphic
dispatch: “I am no hog; I know when
I have had enough.”
And yet the game has been one, even
up to the present day, where the charge
that has attended professional sport of
other kinds—namely, that of dishonesty
—has seldom found lodgment. There
have been some cases on record of sell-
ing the results, but those cases have
been so few as to make it all the more
evident that in this respect the sport
has no doubtiul record.
The bad odor which attends the pro-
fessional game has had its material
effect upon the game in amateur hands,
and there is a distinct loss of interest
noticeable in the amateur pursuit of the
sport. It has become less the fashion
even at our universities, and while the
Commencement Day games still draw
the usual crowd, the smaller games lack
that patronage which they used to se-
cure, and the number of men taking an
active part in second nines is growing
less every year.
All this means that without reform,
and serious reform, not reform on
paper, the National Game of America is
going to disappear, or, rather, become
lost in the limbo of rowdyism. If the
Englishman can preserve his cricket
and football through the trials of, and by
the side of professionalism, it would
seem possible that the American game
might yet be saved from its impending
doom by the force of administrative
ability when the ability has been set to
work with clean hands.
All Piled Up
Down stairs with boxes
from our shirt factory.
Takes two weeks now to
fill an order. Our cus-
tomers are eating into
our pattern list, but it
takes hundreds of orders
to seriously deplete the
stock. These are the days
when you really begin to
want the colored neglige
shirts.
CHASE & CO.,
NEW HAVEN HOUSE BLOCK.
HENRY
HEATH
HATS.
The..
Big Plaid,
In a brown or a gray, need
not be loud. Of course
there are plenty of striking
patterns, but plenty of oth-
ers with life and style, that
are thoroughly self-con-
tained.
CORBIN
ig In New York, Astor House, every
Thursday, from 12 to 4.
1000 CHAPEL
STREET.
Dunham Crew Disbanded.
The Dunham Crew, the pick of the
class and scrub crews, disbanded last
week when it became known that a
competitor would not be forthcoming.
The Harvard Faculty vetoed the race
planned with the Newell Club and as
several attempts to have a race in other
directions were unsuccessful the only
thing left to do was to break up. The
men trying for the Dunham eight have
returned to the class and scrub crews.
Rowing News,
Government orders for the sailing of
the training ship Monongahela have
made it necessary to change the date
of the College Crew-Annapolis race.
According to the present arrangement
the race will be rowed over a two mile
course on Saturday, May 27.
<<
Berkeley Association Officers,
At the annual business meeting of
the Berkeley Association held on Fri-
day evening, April 2ist, the following
officers were elected for the ensuing
year: President, William B. Stoskopf,
1900; Vice-President, Edward Bb.
Greene, 1900; Secretary and Treasurer,
HK. N. (aris, 10907.
ty, a>
~wew
Glee and Banjo Officers,
Officers for the ensuing year were
elected by the University Glee and
Banjo Clubs, on April 26, as follows:
Manager, Frank Dexter Cheney, 1900,
of South Manchester, Conn; Assistant
Manager, Leonard Moorehead Thomas,
1901, of Philadelphia, Pa.
—_— -
Be, Gigs
The University Golf team defeated
the Brooklawn Country Club team, at
Bridgeport, Conn., on Saturday, April
- 22 by the score of 24 to 14.