272
VALE ALUMNI WHEEKLY
YALE.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Quinby, 3b. 2391 18-38
BeOwngssbs 0 FS a0 0 2. ene
DaNWelPee ir: koe S30 0° OTD
Weandeli-Tiss.. 2.7. to 0 0 <0 @
Guetnsey;. 1f.%G5..5.2. eee Cf. IO a
BatnMee es oS. . Bras a wT 1: 3 488
BainveG. tf... 25. 'e “Soe 38 Yew
Bhatpen ib: :...3 2.22402 FS O20
Se) a Ae bao @ (1. To
eon Cr kis. a. a 2° 3). 2-029
Oe aS ee 7 OF FOr
McKelvey, p. ..-..--. ao 0 30
go Se | ee re nb 0-0 6: @
EPR Eis aparece >: 0 °0..0 6 6
CVT ES Se ec 12 10 27 107H
WESLEYAN.
AB. R. IB. PO. A, E.
ADACTSON, SS... «canoes Beko 2: Ace
Walder =f... Stud od. Ooo
Terrell. 3b,. .i keene a oo. Tae ee
Piavey, (D.. .:¥. CR Se eee ae
MacNauchton, 2b374.4.2 2.0. -30:%
Pitter, 1f,: 33 eee se ges Wie eae pees C0 «
Garman, ci... BF OO. t. O98
Bailey, “ef: “3.7.44 ao oO: OOo
Butkin, pooy soe 2 Do OOo 1
Cortiwatl p. 7 eee . 0 t 0.20.2
Inglis, ch, .o Soe AO O10“ Pe
‘EOtAL Sc.) ae 42 10.12 24° 10° &
ha 3 45 f 750-9
. RRS eee 10603020 x—I2
Wesleyan. ...-., 000300 3 4 0—I0
Summary: Two-base hits—McKelvey,
Havey. Three-base hit—Lyon. First
base on errors—Yale 3, Wesleyan 5.
Left on bases—Yale 6, Wesleyan 9.
Bases on balls—Off McKelvey 3; off
Wescott. 2; off Lufkin 1; off Cornwall
3. Struck out—By McKelvey, Wilder,
MacNaughton, Garman; by Wescott,
Bailey; by Lurkin, Guernsey 2, Sull-
van, Barnwell 2, Lyon; by Cornwall,
Camp. Hit by pitcher—By Lufkin,
Camp, Irwin 2; by Cornwall, McKelvey.
Wild pitch—McKelvey. Passed balls—
Inglis 4. Sacrifice hit—Barnwell.
Stolen bases—Sullivan, Quinby, Lyon,
Havey 2. Base hits—Off McKelvey 7;
off Wescott 5; off Lufkin 7; off Corn-
wall 3. Double play—Camp to Sharpe.
Time—Two hours 25 minutes. Umpire
—McKee. Attendance—450.
~<thi
~~
Law School Nine Schedule.
C;.. .P..Hine,...Manager .ot.-the: Law
School Baseball Nine, has arranged the
following schedule for the Easter trip
of the Nine to the South: Wednesday,
April 11, St. Francis..Xavier at New
York; Thursday, April 12, Albright
College, at Myerstown, Pa.; Friday,
April 13, Lebanon Valley. College, at
Atavile, Pa: Saterday, Apri = 14,
Johns Hopkins University, at Baltimore,
Md.; Monday, April 16, Howard Uni-
versity, at Washington, D. C.; Tuesday,
April 17, Randolph-Macon College, at
Ashland, Va.
The schedule for the remainder of the
season, after the Easter trip, is as fol-
lows: Saturday, April 21, Westville
Athletic Club, at Savin Rock; Satur-
day, April 28, Yale Freshmen, at Yale
Field; Wednesday, May 9, Holy Cross
College, at Worcester, Mass.; Satur-
day, May 12, Trinity College, at Hart-
ford; Wednesday, May 16, Hotchkiss
School, at Lakeville, Conn.; Saturday,
If you
Wear a Hat
You know all about Knox
hats of course.
_ Vice-President,
May 109, Williston, at Easthampton,
Mass.; Wednesday, May 23, Manhattan
College, at New York; Wednesday,
May 30, Hollywood Athletic Club, at
Yonkers, N. Y.
Wallace Lane, Captain of the Nine,
expects to put a strong team into the
field.
These men of the Law School will
make up the team on the Easter trip:
Payne, 1902, c.; Fessenden, 1901, p. and
tb.; Malone, 1900, tb. and p.; Lane
(Captain), 1900, 2b.; Buchanan, 1901,
3b.; Robertson, 1901, ss.; Bacon, 1902,
1f,> McGrath s002; ri. and -<Lyman,
1900, ci. ~
<i>
eS
Saturday’s Baseball Games.
The baseball games of last Saturday
resulted as follows: Harvard 8, Boston
College 7; Princeton 12, Tufts 2; U. of
Pe<7;.-Carlisle. indians:.6; -.Holy~ Crass
16, Trinity 4.
—__++—____—_
Vardon at Yale.
Harry Vardon, professional golf
champion of England played three ex-
hibition matches with members of the
University Golf Team on the links of
the New Haven Golf Club, Friday and
Saturday, April 6 and 7. In his first
match on Friday afternoon, which was
against the best ball of Captain T. M.
Robertson, 1900 and T. L. Cheney, Igor,
the College champion, Vardon was de-
feated by 2 up and. 1 to play. Both
Robertson and Cheney were playing
their best game, while Vardon’s game,
particularly in approach work, was much
below his usual standard. His driving,
while nothing phenomenal, was unusu-
ally as straight as an arrow. A little
of his poor play was due to unfamiliar-
ity with the course. The result of the
match. which was one of 18 holes, was
as follows:
First round:
1213 4.5.0 7.5 0
Vardon . cates os oe od es ee
Robertson wasass 54474454 5—42
Cheney ois... 8 4 aS 44 Ae OA
Second round: :
IO II 1213 1415 161718
Vardon 2203'S) 4a Sa 6 sa 6-96
Robertson’: 3:64 4 96 5 8s Se
Cheney 55°35 49 4.4 -5 qe 5 ar
‘A Otals: - Vatcon,..62° est _ball,..2o.
Cheney, 84 and Robertson, 84.
On Saturday morning Vardon played
against the best ball of L..P. Myers,
1001 >. and A, “t. JDwielt. i00t,. and
after a very interesting match, beat the
Yale men by 2 up. His game was much
improved over the preceding day, par-
ticularly in approaching and putting.
His drives were wonderfully accurate
and one of them measured over 260
yards. In the afternoon he played
against the best ball of the two remain-
ing men of the Yale team, E. M.
Byers, 1901 and C. Hitchcock, Jr., 1903,
winning easily by 5 up and 4 to go. On
his first round, he brought the record
of the course from 75 strokes, made by
John Reid, ’99 in 1808, to 71. A large
crowd running as high as two hundred,
followed all the matches, many having
come from surrounding towns to watch
the .exhibition. The following are the
scores of the two Saturday matches:
Morning round:
Vardon: 1:23 hee 6 7/8 o
GEES chee 6°55 4:3 44°4° 4-430
ee 5446445 3 5—40—79
Myers
Cate rs 6:5 4 6. 4.5:6 4°4—45
Tae fee ee 56464564 4—44—89
Dwight
Mo O-A099. A AsO 75. SAF
In, ......... 544845 7 3 7—47—04
Afternoon round:
Matdon- ==
RE oe tacit 44.3534 4 3.6—36
Ties: -54353443 4-35—71
Byers
Omi. nds OA DO A 7 A oeAe
BD, os xeaus tec 450.595 6 4-8 - adc
Hitchcock : :
Bi 44.58 445.3 4—Al
In, rete eee GA 30 #875 sch ay ae
These officers of the Yale University
Lawn Tennis Association were elected
April 4: President, S. L. Coy, I901;
CL, Childs, root S:*
Secretary and Treaster, CH. 1b, Gal-
pin, 1902,
Eastern New York Association.
The Yale Alumni Association of East-
ern New York held its annual meeting
at the Fort Orange Club in Albany,
N. Y., Wednesday evening, March 28.
Sixty-five members and guests were
present and the meeting was the most
enthusiastic ever held by the Associa-
tion. President Hadley was the guest
of honor and made the principal speech.
Lieutenant-Governor Timothy L. Wood-
ruff, ’79, acted as toastmaster, and the
following made brief, informal, speeches:
St. Clair McKelway and A. W. Burr
of Brooklyn, N. Y., Julian W. Curtiss,
79, and Joseph B. Vernon of New York,
and James W. Eaton, ’79 of Albany.
The University Glee Club quartet,
Messrs. Baker, Ellesworth, Clarke and
Lyon was present and sang many selec-
tions. The following were present:
"41—Horace Andrews. —
*48—John H. Pumpelly.
766—W. E. Wheeler.
*70—F. N. Mann, H. P. Warren.
*71—John K. Howe.
73H. A. Strong, A. H. Allen.
"73 S.—A. W. Brown.
"74 S.—Dr. Henry Hun.
*75—A. T. Bulkeley, W. W. Seymour.
’*76—President A. T. Hadley.
76 S.—W. B. Palmer.
’78—J. B. McEwan, W. P. Belden.
— *79g—Julian W. Curtiss, Timothy L.
Woodruff, James W. Eaton.
*81—C. S. McChesney.
"*84—E. A. Merritt, F. C. Hughson.
°85—L. B. Gleason.
’°86—Judge H. T. Nason.
"890—E. E. McCandliss.
’90—H. M. Sage. ‘
*oI—L. H. Tucker, A. J. Parker, Jr.
’*93—J. H. Morgan.
’94—F. P. Farnsworth.
*9s—E. F. Elmore.
°959.—C. E. Watrous, W. McEnerney.
96 S.—C. F. McCarthy:
’°97—Foster Pruyn, DeW. L. Sage.
Just before the dinner the annual elec-
tion of officers was held and resulted
as follows: President, F. N. Mann, ’7o;
Vice-President, John K. Howe, ’73; Sec-
retary and Treasurer, Thomas H. Guy,
’9t; Executive Committee, Calvin S.
McChesney, ’81; Charles E. McElroy;
pret Pruyn, ’97 and L. S. Treadwell,
99 S. |
<i
yeas
Ninety-Seven Dinner.
The long-heralded dinner of the ’97
New York Alumni, was given at the
Yale Club in that city on Saturday even-
ing last. On the menus the event was
described as “A little gathering of Yale
’97 at the Yale Club, New York, March
31, 1900, the occasion marking the second
annual dinner and third annual reunion
since graduation of the members of the
Class living in and around the city.”
Fifty-eight acceptances were received for
the dinner, and as several members of
the Class who were unable to be present
in the early part of the evening came
in later, the total number was about the
same as at last year’s reunion. 7
A meeting of the Class was called in
the Club library before the dinner. J.
S. Wheelwright, 2d, presided, and spoke
of the recent death of Henry V. Ryder,
’97. On motion, H.-S. Coffin and Albert
E. Kent were elected as a committee,
with power to choose additional mem-
bers, to draw up suitable resolutions on
behalf of the Class. It was then decided
to elect a permanent committee to have
charge of these annual meetings of the
Class in New York, and A. B. Kerr,
Go P.- Day; RS: Brewster anda TF S:
Clarke were elected.
The Class then adjourned to the din-
ner, which was followed by a thorough-
ly enjoyable smoker. The list of those
present during the evening, which in-
cludes the names of some ten men from
out of town, who came to New York
especially for the occasion, follows:
- TT. Ware, G. PP. Day: F.: Co Dodd,
CrP, Neersaard, A. Bo metri Fi 4...
deForest. W. Church, W. S. Hubbell,
It Me BeParis) <TD. MeDonalde =F:
M. Brown, A. E. Kent, C. Gillette, M.
S. Howland. W. A. Todd, G. C. Brooke,
A. Poulet. R. S. Brewster, J. H. Simp-
son, C. H. Studinski, J. Ri: McNeille,
W. L. Goodwin, J. F. Pierce, Jr., McK.
Boyle, W. A. Hart. J. A. Ewell. Jr.,
Pee Clarke W. Te Cowdreye @. A.
Wilson, A. C. Sherwood. R. D. Mills,
J. C. Converse, L. C. Sefeld, D. I. Mead,
W. Darrach, J. S. Wheelwright, E. L.
Barnard. U. A. Williams, F. Brookfield,
J. H. Thompson, Jr., S. D. Babcock,
Jr., A. W. Lawrence, C. M. Reed, P.
As to our
New Quarters
Our ambition has been to make and
equip a store that would meet
New Haven’s most exacting de-
mands. We have gone on the
principle that only the best that
any city had was good enough
for this city, the home of Yale,
and that sometimes that would’nt
do.
succeeded ?
Chase & Co.
1018 & 1020 Chapel St.
How do you think we have
Van Ingen, C. M. Fincke, F. McCoy,
Jr., B. Newcombe, A. W. Ferrin, Jr.,
W. G. Low, Jr., R. S. Chisholm, H. H.
Townshend, H. L. Sutton, C. Chadwick,
W. H. Stuart, L..M. Sonnenberg, J. R.
Gerhard, A. R. E. Pinchot, R. W. Carle,
K. Webb, H. M. Keator.
—_——+e4—___-
Debating News.
At a meeting of representatives of the
debating organizations of the Academic,
Scientific, Law and Theological Depart-
ments, Tuesday evening, April 3, it was
decided that, hereafter, all the prelimi-
nary trial debates of these departments
should be thrown into one, thus making
a shorter road to the selection of the
team. Another change in the system of
preliminaries was the decision to let
those men, who had taken part in an
intercollegiate debate, go into the finals
without entering the preliminaries.
The final trials for the Yale-Princeton
debate, May 8, at Princeton, were held
Tuesday evening, April 10, the results
coming too late for this issue of the
WEEKLY. Nine men from the Aca-
demic Department, one from the Scien-
tific and one from the Theological De-
partment, who had been chosen in the
preliminaries, spoke. They were: W. S.
Coffin, M. S. Cressy, G. Green, E. W.
One, T. W.. Swan, all Academic
Seniors; R. H. Edwards, 1901; R. H.
Ewell, 19003 and A. Tulin, 1903; F.
Ballou, 1901 S., and C. W. Merriam,
Teor 4.S.
—— —_—_} > __-----
Divinity School Anniversary.
The annual address to the Divinity
School will be given Sunday evening,
May 13, by President Harris of Amherst
College, in Center Church. The ad-
dress to the graduating class, after the
speaking by the students, at the anni-
versary of the School, Wednesday, May
16, will be given by Rev. Dr. Alexander
McKenzie of Cambridge, Mass., in
Battell Chapel.
<i
we:
Intercollegiate Golf.
The Lawrence Harbor Golf Club of
Staten Island, N. Y., has offered a cup
valued at $250, which is to be competed
for by college teams. As yet no date
has been set, and there have been no
entries, but it is probable that Harvard,
Yale, Princeton and Columbia will com-
pete, and perhaps several others.
<i, Le
Rn, Seal
The Easter recess in the University be-
gins Wednesday, April I1, at noon,
and ends Thursday morning, April 19,
at 8 o’clock. The recess affects all de-
partments but the Divinity School,
whose year closes May 106.
The University and Second Crews
will be given a rest from and including
Wednesday, April 11 until the follow-
ing Monday. The Freshmen will row
daily, up to Saturday, April 14, and
will then be given a vacation till Thurs-
day, April 19.