Spalding's official college base ball annual1911- . —Coll. of Hawaii1—Princeton 5 13—Notre Dame 05—Harvard 42—Holy Cross 30—Amherst 34—Tutts 52—Harvard 1 4—Holy Cross3—Tufts 02—Trinity 35—Yale 60—Amherst 38—Amherst 9 UNIVERSITY OP 4— Naval Acad. 3 6—Frank, and Marsh. 513—New York Univ. 214—Holy Cross 3 5—^Swarthmore 3 6—Dartmouth 3 2—Holv Cross 1 2—West Point 11 17—Ursinus 43—Brown 95—Virginia 40—Irinceton 83—Yale 3 18—Lehigh 02—Irinceton 33—Lafayette 4 8—Michigan 4 1—Harvard 2 6—Cornell 215—Columbia 2 9—Johns Hopkins11—Michigan 4 1—Michigan 2 UNIVERSITY OP VERMONT, BURIiINQ


Spalding's official college base ball annual1911- . —Coll. of Hawaii1—Princeton 5 13—Notre Dame 05—Harvard 42—Holy Cross 30—Amherst 34—Tutts 52—Harvard 1 4—Holy Cross3—Tufts 02—Trinity 35—Yale 60—Amherst 38—Amherst 9 UNIVERSITY OP 4— Naval Acad. 3 6—Frank, and Marsh. 513—New York Univ. 214—Holy Cross 3 5—^Swarthmore 3 6—Dartmouth 3 2—Holv Cross 1 2—West Point 11 17—Ursinus 43—Brown 95—Virginia 40—Irinceton 83—Yale 3 18—Lehigh 02—Irinceton 33—Lafayette 4 8—Michigan 4 1—Harvard 2 6—Cornell 215—Columbia 2 9—Johns Hopkins11—Michigan 4 1—Michigan 2 UNIVERSITY OP VERMONT, BURIiINQTON, VT. 1—Trinity () 20—A. and M. of N. C. 07—^Wash. and Lee 11—^Georgetown 48—Catholic Univ. 11—Yale 27—Holy Cross 318—New Hamp. State 2 3—Bowdoin 10—Harvard 02—Brown 51—Syracuse 04—Lafayette 310—Univ. of Maryland 09—Norwich 32—Cornell 1 1—Notre Dame 46—Dartmouth 25—Colgate 40—Tufts 42—Mass. Aggies 17—Amherst -12—Williams 0. SPALDINGS ATHLETIC LIBRARY. 75 Base Ball Notes Northwestern College, Watertown, Wis.—^With Schumann and of state league caliber; with Rosin behind the bat, and with astrung battiug aggregation. Northwestern made a ceditablc record duiiug1912. The teams batting average was .243 and fielding .905. Kearney (Neb.) State Normal School.—The team played good ball most ofthe st-asou, but seemed tu have started wrong on a five-gam^ trip. McClureand Randolph pitched winning ball but lacked batting support from theirteammates. De Vol caught fairly well, but the trouble was the pitcherswere too fast for him. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.—The feature of Vanderbilts play-ing during the season of 1912. was W. Collins work in the pitchers did not los? a game, and was considered the most sensational collegepitcher in the South. Freeland. first baseman, led at the bat with .3G9,Captain J. Roy Morrison, catcher,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbasebal, bookyear1913