Word: batted
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...game was a perfect farce. The seniors vied with each other in seeing who could make the most errors, while the juniors were strong at the bat and in the field...
...spite of the threatening weather a goodly number of spectators gathered on Jarvis yesterday afternoon to see Eighty-seven play her second game with Ninety and beat her by a score of 12 to 9 after a ten inning game. Eighty-seven proved stronger at the bat than Ninety, making two more hits and a larger total than the latter. The battery of the former was also more steady and effective. The fielding of the freshmen however was excellent, making as they did but four errors, the weak spot of the nine, being as in all other games, its battery...
Gallivan played once more on the Eighty-eight team, and the result was felt at once. Eighty-eight braced up and played well at bat and field. There was liberal applause, though Holmes is too vast for a small audience to grow excited in, and only towards the end of the game was there any cheering. The game, however, was well played and interesting. The feature of the game was Gallivan's game at short, accepting ten chances without an error, and making two marvellous one hand catches. Young played a brilliant game at second, though but one catch...
Eighty-eight went last to bat. In the third, Austin got a run on a scratch and a wild throw of Slade's. In the fourth. Foss got another on a hit, an error and a sacrifice. Beals scored again in the sixth on an error, two steals and a wild pitch. Carpenter's timely hit and a base on balls brought in three runs in the seventh, and clean hitting sent in two earned runs in the eighth. Ninety tied the score in the fifth on a fumble, a hit and a wild pitch, and a fumble of Austin...
Princeton came to the bat much discouraged, but on a base on balls, a pass ball, a wild pitch and King's base hit two runs were made. Price retired at first; Campbell caught by Reynolds at second by feigning a fast ball; Evans struck out. Harvard, 16; Princeton, 7. Fifth Inning. - From this time on Harvard played listlessly, doing everything to hasten the game, which had grown very tiresome. Mumford struck out; Morgan got a base on balls, but was left at second; Wiestling and Linn went out at first. Princeton retired in one, two and three order...