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Show - Games From Beaver t There might have been a baseball game in Beaver Saturday and one in Milford Sunday if it -had not been for two minor drawbacks. In Beaver the worse-than-plowed field gave all eighteen players a grouch and it took the entire nine innings for the said grouch to work off. In Milford, the gentle zephyrs which come often enough to cool an otherwise torrid climate, and make our town so much desired when all other towns in the state are suffering with the heat, developed de-veloped an unusual case of neives or "Suthin" and actually became strong enough to blow a little dust across the diamond. As stated before, excepting for these two small minor causes, there might have been two good games of baseball. As it was, an attempt was made by both teams to play ball and in a measure success attended their efforts. In Beaver, Bell and Herman-sen Herman-sen engaged in a fairly good pitcher's battle, and with any kind of diamond dia-mond but the type played on, the score would have been 1 to 1 in the ninth instead of 5 to 2 in favor fa-vor of Milford. For Milford, Barton Bar-ton bad the old club working and iuicceeded in getting three .hits all good ones. Lynch caught the kind of game needed to win, and helped materially in the success of cur players. Hermanseni of Beaver struck out 16 of our players 'nuff said. In Milford, the score was 9 to in favor of Milford, and that is about all that can be said on the subject. We don't know who has control of the weather in Milford, but whoever he is he must have boen to the dance the night before and forgot to operate oper-ate the switches, so that our usual refreshing, cool breeze would come at 5 o'clock rather than at 3. Really at times the breeze was so stiff that several players were compelled to pull their caps down a little tighter in order to stay with them. You could not expect men to play ball under such unheard-of conditions. Anyway Milford won both games and that's that. Next week the league games begin Caliente, Provo, Milford, Deseret, and Delta are the five teams comprising compris-ing the league. A regular schedule has been adop-' ted and an organization effected which will give us the best baseball ever had in town. Below is the official schedule adopted by the League. The season-will season-will be opened here on May S. Provo Pro-vo being the team opposin.; our boys. 2 9 b H ?s n I r v. tr o v, C S K H H 5 3 r O J ' H a h : : w r i i j : oc ; ; i S ; ; : i i ' ' i ; I ' " CVL1ENTE riAM'T JUTA" 10 SEPT' 1 MAY 29 MAY 15 MAY 8 1 U) 1 SEPT. 18 SEPT. 5 AUGUST 7 AUGUST 28 AUGUST 21 MILFORD JVNE 5lh rwTT 3 JULY 24 JOE 12 JUNE 20 AUGUST 14th I ML JlLY 4 JLL1 24 AUGUST 21 JULY. 31 SEPT. 11 JULY 25 JULY 10 DESERET-OASIS ....J JUNE220 MAY 29 rrrj JUNE 12 - JULY 24 MAY 15 1 ' t-tv AUGUST 7 1U AUGUST 21 JULY 25 AUGUST 28 JULY 31 SEPT. 18 , 1 , J- 3t JVXE 1(1 MAY 8 CTTODADT MAY 23 ,L'yR 5 HELTA j ArGUSX 2S JUXV 17 MJl rUfll JULY 31 AUGUST It ' i MAY ft JVXE 5 JU rrTirrr' M Y 20 j PROVO JUNE 19 ,IrI.Y 17 A, (a ST 14 SI'Pt' 5 THESE SEPT. U i ' . i JUNE 12 : I j RUSTLE JULY 17 ! MAY 22 JULY 10 JlIY 3 r),ir(1 ' U.IA. ! SEPT. 4 JUNE 10 KEPT. 18 JUI Y 4 GA)IES 1 j JULY 25 SE1T' 5 j ; ;'lST 7 j I |