Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 23, 1900, Page 2, Image 2

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    332
Alo. ATLIMNE- WEEKLY
ville, Ky.; Ethebert Ide Low, Brook-
lyn, New York; Henry Sargent Mead,
Dayton, Ohio; Frank Wells Nevins,
Stamford, Conn.; Robert Castle Nor-
ton, Cleveland, Ohio; Jay Morse
Pickands, Cleveland, Ohio; Roderick
Potter, Buffalo, New York; Keith
Smith, Chicago, Ill.; Rush Sturges,
Providence, R. I.; Alan McLean Tay-
lor, Mansfieid, Ohio; Arthur Yancey
Wear, St. Louis, Mo.; Mark Skinner
Willing, Chicago, III.
ZETA PSI.
Oliver Sidney Ackley, Jr., Brooklyn,
N. Y.; Nathan Roscoe Francis, Win-
chester, Tenn.; Robert Perkins Grif-
fing, Riverhead, N. Y.; Lucius Hud-
son Holt, Hartford, Conn.; John Sam-
ple McKelvey, -Jr.; ‘Pittsburg, Pa.:
Malcolm Moore, Buffalo, N. Y.; Isaac
Gray Phillips, Winchester, Tenn.;
Frederick Harvey Strong, Portland,
Ore.; Frank Joseph Sladen, Portland,
Ore.; Lyman Strong Spitzer, Toledo,
Ohio; Bernard George Teel, Wells,
Me.; George Burwell Ward, Bristol,
Conn.; Arthur Stanley Wheeler, New
Haven, Conn.; Samuel Dudley Wood-
house, Wethersfield, Conn.
» we
_—_—
The Week in Baseball.
Rain interfered greatly with the prac-
tice of the Yale Nine during the past
week, and caused the postponement of
the games with the Orange Athletic
Club at Orange, last Saturday and with
Georgetown at New Haven, Monday,
May 21. The latter will be played at
New Haven, Friday of this week.
An important change made in practice
since the Lafayette game, which may be
only temporary, was the substitution of
Guernsey for Brown at third base in
an attempt to strengthen the batting
of the Nine. Rumsey was given a trial
in left field, but his play there’ and at
the bat was weak.
<tt> <n»
~~ ow
Yale 7; Lafayette I.
The game between the Yale Nine and
that of Lafayette at the Field, Wed-
nesday afternoon, May 16, was one of
the slowest and most uninteresting that
has been played there this season. The
score was seven runs to one, in Yale’s
favor, the home players making no par-
ticular effort to profit by the ragged
work of the visitors. Cook, Cunha and
Sullivan made seven of the ten Yale
hits, the former leading with three and
Cunha and Sullivan two each. Quinby
made Yale’s only error on an easy
chance on a slow grounder to second.
The shortstops on both nines handled
a large percentage of the batted balls
and did their work without errors.
The score.
YALE.
AB, R. IB. PO. A. E.
Wimpy, 2b) vo aes Ry ae ae aa
Barnwell th os i 3
ani 68.077 ye Se ayo ee
Ula Fie eee a: Oe ee es OFM c,
COOR ST 3. oc ps Sa ee Oa a ele
Cunha tos jae a ee Tt
piarpe 1h... 2. 3 i a 10 OO
Brows, sh. ee, BP ok Bd 0
Alvan ee pe: eee 8 age: Sass
HON on esters. ak PO ee
Perhaps it is and _per-
haps it isn’t a Straw
hat you want ; but it’s
probably a Knox Hat.
LAFAYETTE.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
waricht, “li. i.e aeaw UES Gh ae Riess oS 2,
Pe, 2D... «sha ores Soh. O24 FS oO
_halmersesta. & Ss. . wep 0 23: Sam
RAY, Of) huis i. oe sop 1 20: £0
prupiey. 3bi a. 3 Pe ee ee
Reutiier. SS. seys. 65 A 0. a
BtOWO, D:<-. 2a.) eO...0. ae ee
mowarG, tb. s2. 3% :.. tide f . re
Bnight; 2.102.682” 2°.0°0 20
Lotal ....-si:.5:b 3O 1 oe 3
*Bell out, hit by batted ball.
fSullivan out for not touching third.
Score by innings:
cB 3 -ot--5:-6-7 2-9
Mas. eat 20100112 *7
Lafayette .-. 1 0000000 0~1
Summary: Two-base hit — Sharpe. _
Stolen bases—Cook (3), Sharpe, Camp
(2), Barnwell, Wright, Knight. Struck
out—Howard (2), Bell, Knight, Chal-
mers. Sacrifice hits—Bell, Barnwell,
Brown (Lafayette). Hit by pitched
ball— Camp 2, Bases on balls — By
Garvan 2; by Brown 3. Left on bases
—Yale 8; Lafayette 6. First base on
errors—Yale 3, Lafayette 1. Double
plays—Brown to Howard to Hubley;
Quinby to Brown to Camp. Time—
One hour fifty-five minutes. Umpire—
Gruber. Attendance— oo.
Yale 1903 16; Betts 6.
In a long and uninteresting game,
the Freshmen Nine defeated Betts
Academy at Stamford by the score of
16 to 6. The Freshmen showed the
best work of the season in the field,
and the batting was fairly strong.
Betts’ fiélding was very bad, thirteen
errors being credited to the Nine.
' The score:
YALE.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
PiGtine’, ofirease POE Ba BST)
Aetiistrone Obi Gra a0°3 250 BH
heise dab tie i eee Nay aa
_OvIn abs Shae: PeG a0 ey
Oglesby (xfs 7 sos Bg 9: Seg 86
Darien ss 920248 O28 5s a ha
McKnight, abs oats: Se Pe! 2205
MeO 5 f. 21073 75
PASORO DS) Shs a yer eye GS
Wessott, pi 2027): E6629 966
Pol (ieisieh Alas 4B 14527 6 23
BETTS
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
WVOlSE O20: 4 ee Sid PR aps Be
OHCore, ssi: hater aly Gee GS Se ch
WN etittidny po St 2 SS a
Biddle thst sone: BPR ee Ga
MeTurck, sb: oe: BE Bee ag
Todd) 26.5. Gee ays pis te
Sold? cea eeu: 4-6-2" 62 o
Weis ab, “hares or, eo UGG 24
See = On ae ike, ket Seed & ee ore
ge ae oe 39 6 14 27 13 13,
Score by innings:
I 23 4 5 6: 72846
Yale:1903°:.°3 0 4 0 1 20 1 516
Betts. Acad.. 0°93 9-6 © 40 o—6
: Summary: Earned runs—Yale 4;
Betts 3. Stolen bases—Blount, Tobin
(3), Barker (2), Alsop, White, Olcott,
McTurck (3). Three-base hit—Biddle.
Two-base hits — Blount, Armstrong,
Littlefield, Wolf, Sola. First base on
balls—Off Alsop 3; off Wescott I; off
Neuman 1. Struck out—By Alsop 5;
by Wescott 4; by Neuman 9. Base on
hit by pitched balls—By Alsopogtj-oby _
Neuman 6. Wild pitch — Neuman.
Time — Three hours . Umpire — Mr.
Giblin.
Yale 1903 5; St. Pauls 0.
The Yale Freshmen Nine played a
fast, clean game with the Nine of St.
Paul’s School, at Garden Cuty cise ae
_ Thursday, May 17, and won 5. bo sD.
Wescott pitched better than before this
season, allowing only four scattered
hits.
bat, except Oglesby, who made two
singles and two doubles.
The score:
The Freshmen were weak at the ©
ST. PAUL’S.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
RPeVCS, Cr ce A ate 30. Bates
Sramaier, 68)... ee 8 ae 0 01:
Pell: $6275 S23.424 47. oo. 0 0-0
rOWiIE, 3D. oo ass S60 358 4
piatttepan, Ac. et Ae ee IT a
Goode. . oy. os os 4°O-2 % AG
schGoimeld. ¢......4 4-0; 5 332
oes eG eae ee yO P2020
Magiineale: 2b. .... 3 0... Sow
et eg 5.0 01 ee
Daal. ae 30-0. 4°27 1230
YALE.
AB. R. IB. PO. A. E.
Panne, cL). ae ee ee
ALBIS TORS tio 2: ee eee tae ee
EHUCHEIG, ID. cscs aol YO eee
Wabin. + sho. sips icc 40: OF TY 26
(Petesby, lh. nik die At OF
rat K G6. ASe iia wre esses ALA: 08225550
Meh niebt, tbr. Hi vO4-2 2 4t8
Wes Ci See ee ca 9590 ©: -35420
WeESICOU, Dy: agen 4st Do % Os SO
Petal vc chaps) HQO5 F 10 27572 81
Score by innings:
LP 3eg 356°? BoH
we Paes °). 8 8 6 6 05 -G. 0 6225p
Yale 1063). 300 Db 8 POT Oe
Summary: Earned runs— Yale 2.
Two-base hits—Oglesby (2). Stolen
bases—Blount (2), Littlefield, West-
cott, Oglesby, White, Barker, Mc-
Knight, Hine, Nightingale, Gardiner.
Bases on balls—Off Westcott 2; off
Patton 1. Struck out—By Wescott =:
by Patton 5. Time of game—Two
hours.
Baseball Games of Last Week.
The following college baseball games
were played last week:
Monday, May 14—At Lawrenceville, ©
. Princeton 17, Lawrenceville o.
Tuesday, May 15—At Cambridge,
Harvard 8, Lafayette 2.
Wednesday,. May 16—At Princeton,
Princeton 11, Brown 6; at Amherst,
Amherst 8, Columbia 3.
Thursday, May 17—At Philadelphia,
University of Pennsylvania 11, Brown
2.
Friday, May 18—At Hanover, Dart-
mouth 3, Wesleyan 1.
Saturday, May 19—At Ithaca, Prince-
ton 7, Cornell o.
The heavy rain on Saturday prevented
most of the games of the eastern col-
leges.
Yale’s Intercollegiate Entries.
The twenty-fifth Intercollegiate Track
Meet will be held at Columbia Field,
New York, Friday and Saturday, May
25 and 26. More men and better men
are entered this year in the events than
ever before, and owing to the proba-
bility of the different smaller colleges
taking seconds and thirds, and even
. first from the larger colleges, it is im-
possible to forecast the result of the
meet. Yale will take only thirteen or
fourteen men to the games. Richards
for the hundred; Richards and Board-
man for the two-twenty; Boardman and
Brennan for the quarter; Smith and
Poynter for the half; Weston for the
mile, and possibly Speer and Teel;
Fincke and Thomas for the low and
high hurdles; Beck for the shot: Still-
man for the hammer and Capt. John-
son, Adriance and Hord for the pole
vault. Yale will not enter the two-
mile run, or the high and broad jumps.
This buck shot by one of the ’99 Camp at
Long Lake, Allagash waters, in September.
KAHKOU CAMP
of Maine.
’93), lately of the Hopkinson School, Boston,
and by A. S. Gregg Clarke of the Gunnery
School, Washington, Conn.
left behind and the summer is Spent on the
Penobscot and Allagash waters.
separate provision is made for those who
wisi to be tutored for college examinations.
CAMPUS
HABITS
Are very strange habits, sometimes,
Academic fashions of dress
are not like other fashions.
Our idea is to have what our
customers want. Our student
stock is for the students; our
graduate stock for graduates;
and each for the other as
much as each pleases.
the new styles of straws ?
Drop into the new store when you
come to the game.
CHASE & COQ.
1018 & 1020 Chapel Street.
Seen
Instantly adjusted to any height, angle or po-
sition. All parts of steel, beautifully nickeled.
NO MORRIS CHAIR COMPLETE WITHOUT
ONE. Engraving shows user rising from chair,
Swinging book to one side as she does so without
necessity of changing any of the adjustments.
ok remains open at same place until seat is re-
sumed, when shelfis swung back into former po-
sition Send for illustrated booklet to the pat-
entee and manufacturer. ..W. H. JACKSON,
554 Pierson Hall, New Haven, Conn.
_ Every lantern tested before leaving
factory. Have you seen the “ Wish-
bone” bracket ?
BrrpGEport Brass Co.,
Bridgeport, Conn.
tn BE pees iiee
=
~~ AND - -~
S%¢ % CANOE TOURS.
A summer of real roughing in the woods
Conducted by E. H. Wells (Yale
Civilization is
Special and
Address
ALUMNI WEEKLY or MR. WELLS,
72 Mansfield Street, New Haven, and a pros-
pectus will be sent.