Word: brownings
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...cricket yesterday, especially after the two showers, but the scheduled championship match was played off in spite of unfavorable conditions. Haverford went to the bat first, and by steady play piled up 85 runs, Muir leading with 19. Sharper fielding by Harvard would have kept the score lower. Brown and Garrett led off in Harvard's first innings. and made 25 runs in quick succession before the first wicket fell. After that the side was retired rapidly by the puzzling balls of Martin and Baily. The game was stopped by rain after Haverford had begun a second innings, in which...
Folling is the make up of the cricket eleven which plays Haverford today: Brown, Garrett, Frost, Balch, Sullivan, T. S. Lee, J. P. Lee, Crowninshield, Carpenter, Butters and Austrian...
WILLIAM H. BROWN. Wanted.- All kinds of Gents' cast-off clothing, boots and shoes. Highest cash prices paid. Cleaning, repairing, pressing and dyeing of all kinds. Call or send postal to 465 Main street, Cambridgeport...
...form there would be little question of the result of the game but without him in the box the work of the team is exceedingly erratic. The nine is at present made up as follows: Dickerman, cf.; Upton, p.; Stearns, lf.; Owsley, ss.; McCormick, rf.; Cheney, 2b.; Leland c.; Brown, 3b.; Pond, 1b. White, who played second base for Andover last year has made a change of base, and will pitch for Exeter next Saturday. Exeter's team is batting heavily but fielding poorly. In this last respect however, it is no worse than Andever's nine. The make...
...less than three of the articles in the Atlantic Monthly for June are from the pen of Harvard professors. Professor Charles Eliot Norton contributes a charming sketch entitled "Rawdon Brown and the Gravestone of 'Banished Norfolk,' " in which he describes Mr. Brown's antiquarian works in Venice. Professor C. H. Toy has an article on the origin and history of "The Thousand and One Nights." The mixed Indian and Persian and Arabian character of the stories is traced. Professor Royce publishes his second paper of "Reflections after a Wandering Life in Australasia" which is fully as thoughtful and interesting...