Detroit2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1—3
New York0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0

Two-base hit—Maisel. Three-base hit—Cobb. Stolen bases—Cook, Cobb (2.) Earned runs—Detroit, 2. Sacrifice hit—McKee. Left on bases—New York, 7; Detroit, 4. First base on error—New York. Bases on balls—Off Caldwell, 2; off Dubuc, 2. Hits—Off Caldwell, 4 in 8 2-3 innings; off Pieh, 1 in 1-3 inning. Hit by pitcher—By Dubuc, (Cook.) Struck out—By Caldwell, 5; by Dubuc, 2. Time of game—One hour and fifty-five minutes. Umpires—Messrs. O’Loughlin and Hildebrand.

FIRST VARSITY EIGHTS
Yale20m. 52s.
SECOND VARSITY EIGHTS
Yale10m. 40s.
FRESHMAN EIGHTS
Yale[H]8m. 6s.
FRESHMAN FOURS
Harvard6m. 21s.
GRADUATE EIGHTS
Harvard3m. 5½s.
VARSITY
YaleHarvard
½ mile2:052:08½
1 mile4:404:45
1½ miles7:27½7:34
2 miles10:0510:14
2½ miles12:39½12:52
3 miles15:2715:39
3½ miles18:2218:40
4 miles20:5221:13½
FRESHMEN
Half mile2:222:23½
Mile5:205:22
Mile and a half8:068:10
Ouimet435555436—40
Tewksbury5 45 54 4 5 4 5—41
Ouimet354447363—39—79
Tewksbury344 [I]74736 3—41—82

[I] Approximated.


CHAPTER XIV
SOCIETY

Interest in social and personal news is so great that practically every newspaper maintains a society department under the direction of a society editor. The form and style suitable to such news are partly determined by social usage. The typographical style of the society columns often differs somewhat from that of other parts of the paper. Society news taxes the writer’s ability to give variety to stories of the same kind of events as they take place day by day. In no other kind of news is he more frequently tempted to use stock phrases over and over again. It is possible, however, to give considerable variety to society stories as well as to avoid trite, colorless, description.