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Show 4. t Wild Heaves and Such j The best hitters: AB. H. TB. Pot. Fitzgerald, San Fran 4 3 3 .750 Dale, Salt Lake 4 2 3 . f0u Spc-nctr, Salt Lake 4 2 3 .500 Krug, Salt Lake 4 2 2 .5'.m Hnutcr, San Francisco. .4 2 2 .500 Kumm, San Francisco. .4 2 5 . 5o0 Schick, San Francisco. .4 2 2 .500 Elliott, Oakland 4 2 2 . 5 n 0 R. Arlett. Oakland 4 2 2 .500 Knight, Seattle 3 5 Cady, Sacramento 4 2 2 . 500 Home-run hitters Sheely, Salt Lake; Kamm, San Francisco; Ellis, Los Angeles. An-geles. The series stand: San Francisco won 0. Salt La we won 1. Seattle won U, Sacramento won 2. Los Angeles won 1. Oakland won 1. Portland won 0, Vernon won 0, two postponed. Johnny Couch may flintr for the Seals today, with Al Gould for the Bees. SjJ G. T. The ball which was overthrown on Killefer did not leave the field, and was always in piay. Killefer went to third at his own risk. KamVn's overthrow over-throw on June 29 went into the stands. The .ball was not in play, and Mulligan was entitled to advance o second without with-out liability of retirement under the ground rules. Heine Sands was in the Seattle line-up yesterday. Heinle got a two-bagger for himself. About four of the hits charged against Dale were not hits at all, but flukes. Dale failed to cover first in a couple of instances in-stances and once collided with Sheely. The batsmen who made those hits should have been retired with ease. Harley Maggert gave his pony plenty of exercise yesterday afternoon. Almost every ball hit to center came down near the fences. Spencer's arm was in working order Yesterday. He nabbed verturesome Seals by yards. Yesterday was Admiission day in California, Cali-fornia, a holiday, hence the double-headers on the coast. With the election of officers of the Seattle ball club set for next month, the fans are wondering who will head the organisation next year. William Klepper, guardian of the sheckles of the thirty-nine thirty-nine stockholders, will be the new president, presi-dent, according to Dame Rumor. With the election scheduled for next month, the directors have been casting about for a successor to James J. Brewster, who admits that he has had plenty of baseball base-ball during the past eight months. And as Klepper has been Brewster's right-hand right-hand man, the dapper little secretary-treasurer secretary-treasurer is the likely choice for the berth. Before going south, Prexy Brewster Brew-ster said that this was his first and last year as a baseball magnate. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Dick Cox has been heard from. The peppery little outfielder of the Portland club, who broke his ankle while playing at Seattle three week's ago, is at Santa Monica, Cal., which is located on the beach, a short distance from Los Angeles. An-geles. Cox says that he still has his ankle in a plaster cast, which lie expects to have removed within a few days. It is not causing him much pain, and lie has every reason to believe that it is knitting properly and wiil not cause him any trouble when he is ready to play baseball again. Dick also writes that the great race between the Angels and Tigers is causing caus-ing a great deal of interest in Los Angeles, Ange-les, and that the whole city is divided in pulling for one or the other team to win, as each fan has his favorite. Portland Port-land Journal. President Brewster of the Seattle club is not going to turn over to Sacramento J1500 in the Gardner-Mails deal without a battle. He has the sworn statement of Gardner that he had malaria when Rogers traded him to Seattle, and the records show that Gardner could not pitch after the trade, so Brewster has taken the matter up with president Baum. Brewster is looking for a training camp for the Seattle team for next spring. He got all the worst of it when he went to Taft last spring, but at that time he did not know whether Taft was a town or a disease. Now he knows more than he did then. Now he is looking for some town, maybe in the San Joaquin valley, where he will be able to schedule some games with the Chicago clubs on their way east. San Francisco Chronicle. Dave Williams, the Seattle kid who carried the Salt Lake club thirteen innings in-nings last week, has a lot of boosters in Seward. Alaska. Dave went north to play for the team representing that city, and he won the big series with Anchorage. Anchor-age. The games up there are just as important to an Alaskan as the world series to the local fan. and when Williams tamed the Anchorage gang they wanted to deed him the whole town. Williams showed enough stuff to make the wise ones believe he will be a winner win-ner in this league. He stood up well under fire last week, and any boy who can battle bat-tle the slugging Salts, even for thirteen frames, has the right kind of stuff. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. |