357
CRESCENT ATHLETIC CLUB.
. AB. R. IB.P.O. A.
Keator isisses? a ake En Bigs er ee
Appeld: (eapt.s 3b. 4-2 1 3 I
Redingtot;e7... 270. 5.0 2770
F, Stevenson, i): >... 40° F° 6 0
S. ' Quaipy pss... me ge
Butler $seeF5 ni 4 OF 80% 33
Dunn 2 +60 2 3
G. Stevenson, r.f..... 2. G2 O 8
J. Quinby ti ee 1. Ree Bo
Chauncey. pose: A oO SE ET
SN
£23 456789
Yale Sergi ets e: 030031000—-7
Cy ARR. ee. 4G 1-6 04.1 6 G—Ss
Summary: Stolen bases—Quinby,
Camp, Cunha, Rumsey, Ward 2, Guern-
sey, Appeld 2, Redington 2, S. Quinby 2.
Sacrifice hits—Sharpe, J. Quinby, Ap-
peld. Double plays—Yale 1; Crescent 1.
Bases on _ ball—Cook, F. Stevenson,
Dunne. Hit by pitched ball—Camp 2,
Rumsey 2, Guernsey. Struck out—
Rumsey 2, Chauncey 2, Butler 2, S.
Quinby. Wild pitch—Chauncey. Time
of game—Two hours twenty minutes.
Umpire—Gruber.
Yale, 3; Brown, 7.
Brown took the deciding ball game of
the series with Yale by beating Yale,
7 to 3, at Providence, May 30. Yale
could not hit Washburn when there
were runners on bases, and by some bad
errors helped Brown to get a winning
lead. Sullivan, who caught for the first
time in a month, did some good work.
Cook accepted five difficult chances in
the field, but could not make a safe hit.
Garvan was hit safely eleven times.
The score:
YALE.
<3 SAR Tp P.O; ACE:
Oui ga ee. ae ee es a ee
Biota be .. a ey
Sule 6 Sok es ae es
Cook @f oo: 42 tee <-4, 20 16 -59.2 8 “0
advise I 3. a oT 1
Rumsey. TACKS 2. 2 FO ee Jo Oo
Guernsey, 3b. 5.) 2 io
Browie So. 342 he ORO TD 0
Garvaie i er. 4 O° 022 54-0
34°. $624 too
BROWN.
AB. R. IB.P.0. A. E
Tobe Fay asi 4~ ck: 0. 4-6
Bacohoen. 33.6... & 0. 2 A. 2 @
lath eee. ee 43. 1 2 Ow
Batty, hee. ss 4°80 4 oO
Deters, te F hees Gey = Be
SetinGereess C4. 4 eee et
Whittemore, c.°..... ae Tee en at
Cpaner te ee SPS 4°
Wy asi ee Oe OP ae a ee ©
Score by innings:
Brow. 32... . 2
Summary: Earned runs—Yale 2;
Brown 1. Three base hit—Bacon. Sac-
rifice hit—Blount. Stolen bases—
Blount, Guernsey, Tobey. Bases on
balls—By Garvan 2; by Washburn 4.
Struck out—Rumsey, Cook, Guernsey,
Quinby 2, Blount, Brown, Crane, Saun-
ders, Barry. Left on bases—Yale io;
Brown 7. First base on errors—Yale 3;
Brown 2. Time—Two hours twenty-five
minutes. Umpire—Mr. Synder.
. £2 3:4 5
Nabe tg tar ONS 2
22 0:1
Yale, 1903, 4; Harvard, 1903, 8.
The Harvard Freshmen defeated the
Yale Freshmen at Cambridge, Saturday,
June 2, 8 to 4, thus winning the series.
Clarkson pitched for the Harvard men
and was very effective, striking out 109
men and giving but seven hits, well scat-
tered. Alsop and Wescott pitched for
the Yale Freshmen.
The score:
YALE 1903.
| AB, R. IB. P.O. A. E
Oglespye tt 28st Sek
Artistonprce st. OC aay eg By! 4
Litthefret “tbo 3.0: ger
Tobie 4p. 8 20 2S 25
Smith eee ee 4.0 0 3 OD
McKnight? 2b... S* @pGcGte 2 0
Thompson, ss. ..:.... ee Ge oe I
Barkek aera oes eS SP 0
Alsopepes ssp aca: So OMe aa 6
Weséeté py Sacuasd. faoOs -On-6 8.6
SP 4 Fe 244251
*Smith out for interfering with
catcher’s throw to 2b.
COOHOHOOOOF
HARVARD 1903.
AB. R. IB. P.O. A.
tol. $b. eo ae ee os eats
OVET CO ee i Sov ere aes ear e
Baldwiat th. 32407 3. AVIS 0
CAatkSOn 2 see RE eee Cs
sherloge. ob. 4 4. O;-0- 6 <0
Merlane.g 77 6 32 ie Or raie 4
Van Amringe, £3. 4 4° q- 1 o
Lovering, thc 4. at TF 6
Jackson. 6 2 4-2 Oo ¢@
—— ee eee
Score by innings:
123456789
male 100%... 0002002004
Harvard 1903....00301 400 x—8
Summary: Earned runs—Yale 1; Har-
vard 5. Home runs—Clarkson, Story.
Three-base hit—Lovering. Stolen bases
——Oglesby 2, Armstrong, Barker Zs
Story, Merlan 3, Lovering. Bases on
balls—Off Alsop 3; off Wescott 2; off
Clarkson 1. Hit by pitched ball—By
Alsop, Merlan. Struck out—By Alsop,
Jackson, Van Amringe, Baldwin: by
Wescott: Lovering, Dever; by Clark-
son: Oglesby, Armstrong 2, Littlefield
2, Tobin 2, McKnight 4, Alsop 3, Wes-
cott, Smith, Thompson 2. Left on bases
—Yale 6; Harvard 8. Passed balls—
Barker, Merlan 5. Wild pitch—Alsop.
Time—Two hours thirty minutes. Um-
pire—Mr. Murray. Attendance—soo.
Yale, 1903,8; Princeton, 1903, 4.
The Yale Freshman Nine defeated the
Princeton Freshmen in the first game of
the series, at Princeton, Saturday, May
26, 8 to 4. Rain fell almost all the time
of the contest. Alsop, for Yale, pitched
a steady, effective game. Blount led at
the bat with three singles and a two-
base hit. Encouraging features of the
game were the cleanness of the fielding
and the head work used in base-running.
The score:
YALE 1903.
3 AB. R. IB. P.O. A. E.
ENGHNE CL Sou Ges 5-2 4S OFS
Amnsitone ti, .o5.. <8 2-3 65.640
battioneld: “Tb. osi.y.. =e ee fe aaG
Ceieshy, £22 4-1°-6-2- 06-6
SIN. AB os ae ess OG
MetSnioht. 2b. .5i55.. C2405 4 2259
SMOMIDSON, SS... s. cs ME: Ses ee ae
MMe oe oo a, ek SS St PA! * SEY? os
gai SRL: Seema ae oe B21 On Obs B20
36. 8. FL Bey 2
PRINCETON 1903. 7
AB. R. IB. P.O. A. E.
HON Cs ork oes oe ee
Boys; 4s oi oi ek 4b Oe
PIC De ea 15 ke 5 Sivas Ge a 3
Pavsots 6. 4? 25, ut. 5 2558 3
Mek ee In, G ble 6 - o
Bien bee. 22 O26 1 eG
BSN 2 Saks ont. 4G 2 ae
bec i) Shag a Hee eesee Bees 4) 0-2 Oe
Gepliatt.oss, 2 ec ies 4°06 20236352
335427726 13:6
*Littlefield out for not touching
second.
Score by innings:
bS345073 9
Vole 3008.5 << 5:03 000006 200-8
Princeton 1903...00000300 I—4
Earned runs—Yale 3;
Three-base hit—Ameli.
Summary :
Princeton TI.
— Stolen bases—Blount 3, White 2, Arm-
strong, Oglesby, McKnight, Thompson,
Knox, Bush. Bases on balls—Off Ameli
5; off Alsop 5. Bases on hit by pitched
ball—Oglesby, McKnight 2, Knox 2.
Struck out—By Alsop, Ameli, Knox,
Scott, Gephart; by Ameli, Tobin, White,
Alsop 2. Passed balls—White, Parsons
3. Left on bases—Yale 9; Princeton 10.
First base on errors—Yale 5; Princeton
1. Time—Two hours. Umpire—Mr.
Hamilton, Princeton 1901.
Yale, 1903, 7; Princeton, 1903, 1.
The Yale Freshman team won the sec-
ond baseball game and the series with the
Princeton Freshmen at the Field, Wed-
nesday, May 30, through their ability to
hit Freeman, and to steal bases on him.
Wescott pitched a-steady game for the
Yale Freshmen, and allowed only two
hits. His support, was erratic, Thomp-
son at short stop making four errors.
HOOHHOOHOP
S0n 2 fopin 2.
Oglesby and Smith played the best game
for Yale.
The score:
VALE 1904) 7 8 TO
AB. R, 1B. POCA EY.
Oglesby, fives: .. ix 4.62°.3, 5 O° 0
AMAStrONe RT... 2.57.91 6 0 0
Latheneld, 10. oe AD 10 8 6
WOUIN. 3D. <3... A A OF 8 EF Oe
Inet, (C8 ook ee es
Mek night ob 2.3 3) 02% 2
e HOmpson, S80.) Se ee
MTMEG SS ke es Ooi coghe ald es
<< SeePCT, ee ee 6 UER a age a PE og
Wester 6.35 AO 0 Oe ©
a7 7 92770 6
PRINCETON 1903
AB. -R, 1B. PO, A. E;
Brier, C46 fe Ae ee OO
Keys, 20... 352 os) me Oe 8
witht, SSeS Se 4.0 Get hs
Wagsons, “ees. 2S 4.0 Oe 2. E
Net lave: 1h 0 + OC AS Gt
Rags Ch. oO aes
Bust, Gb A OO 8
Freeway 8.5 3.) 450,40 234 41
DOO Ee oe es ¥: $26 $0. 7.36 35
Score by innings:
L2345 670-0
Yale 10075 3c 10211002 0—7
Princet6m 1003: 06.00 1°00 6: 6-1
Summary: Earned runs—Yale 2.
Two-base hits—Smith, Oglesby, Mc-
Knight. Stolen bases—Oglesby 2, Arm-
strong 3, Littlefield, Smith 2, Thomp-
Shafer 3, McClave.
Double play—Freeman to McClave.
Base on balls—Off Wescott 2; off Free-
man 6. Struck out—Knox 2, Freeman,
Bush, Smith 2, White. Passed ball—
White. Sacrifice hits—Armstrong, Mc-
Knight. Time of game—One_ hour
forty-five minutes. Umpire—Mr. Gru-
ber.
Princeton Won Bicyclic Meet.
In the annual intercollegiate bicycle
meet, held at Woodside Park, Phila-
delphia, Decoration Day, Princeton won
the champions&ip with a total of twenty-
two points, Yale taking second place
with twenty-one points. Columbia came
in third with seven points and the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania fourth with five.
Swarthmore and Cornell failed to win a
place. The fine work of the day was
the riding of Bert Ripley, of Princeton,
whose remarkable spurting in the mile
and half-mile events won the champion-
ship for Princeton. Yale was rather
badly handicapped by the illness of Cap-
tain Strong. Again, the team met with
bad luck in the five-mile event, in which
Moore’s tire burst, loosing Yale a prob-
able place. In a preliminary heat J. H.
Overall, 1902S. reduced the half-mile
intercollegiate record to I m. 53sec.
The one mile tandem race called for
an ununsually close decision, as it was
almost a dead heat. Owen G. Butts,
1902 S., who finished in the quarter mile ©
in a dead heat, was awarded his “Y.”
Pennsylvania’s chances for third place
were spoiled by a collision in the five-
mile event, in which Captain Hopkins
injured his knee quite badly. First
places counted five points, second, three
poins, third, two points, and fourth, one
point.
The summary:
Quarter-mile—Won by E. W. Farley.
1901 S., Yale, and O. G. Butts, 1902 S.,
Yale, in a-dead -heat;-E. S. Barnity,
Pennsylvania, second. Time, 314% sec.
Half-mile—Won by Bert Ripley,
Princeton; J. H. Overall, 1902 S., Yale,
second; C. R. Rose, Columbia, third.
Time, I minute 17% seconds.
One mile—Won by Bert Ripley,
Princeton; S. W. McClave, Princeton,
= =_ =—
second: C. V. Voorhees, Jr., Pennsyl-
vania, third; FE, W. Farley, 1901 S.,
Yale, fourth. Time, 2 minutes 493% sec.
One mile tandem—Won by H. R.
Levick and S. W. McClave, Princeton;
+E, A. Strong, 1900S. and M. Moore,
1002," Yale. second, EF. W. Farléy,
1901 S. and J. H. Overall, 1902 S., Yale,
third. Time, 2 minutes 16 seconds.
Five mile—Won by C. R. Rose, Co-'
lumbia; Bert Ripley, Princeton, second;
FE. W. Farley, 1901 S., Yale, third: W.
C. Langley, 1903, Yale, fourth. Time,
II minutes 354 seconds. ;
y-wwns
wor
A Gift for Mr. Johnston.
After the game with the Harvard
Freshmen at Cambridge, June 2, the
members of the Yale Freshman Baseball
Team presented Leslie M. Johnston,
1902, of Westmoreland, N. Y., the coach
of the team, with a gold watch, in re-
cognition of his conscientious work with
the team during the season. On the
back of the watch are engraved the
initials “L. M. J.,” and inside the cover
is the inscription “Presented by the
Yale 1903 Baseball Team.”
Colonel Jacob L. Greene, M.A., 1808,
delivered an address on “An Ideal Cur-
rency’ before the American © Social
Science Association at Washington, May
10. The address has since been pub-
lished in pamphlet form.
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,
f swinging book to one side as she does so without
f] necessity of changing any of the adjustments.
Book remains open at same place until seat is re-
sumed, when shelfis swung back into former po-
sition. Price $3.50. Send for illustrated book-
let to the patentee, W. H. JACKSON, 554
Pierson Hall, New Haven, Conn.
__ BURNS GA
a eer
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“Search-
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Projection of light perfect.
Carbide chamber cannot become
clogged.
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