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Show lm SHEELY IS EMM OF BEES' V1CF1I OVER ANGELS, 5 1 3i; SAL TLAKE, OcL 11. Earl Sheely's healthy clouting defeated the Angels yesterday afternoon In the second gamo of the serios, 5 to 3. There were other Bees who contributed to tho victory, of course, but it takes runs to win ball games and, since the young firstsackor scored one run himself and hit in all the rest of them, he deserves tho lion's sharo of tho honors. W'll day this much for tho Bees as a club, however they played ball as If they meant It which, as anyone versed In baseball knows, Is much easier eas-ier when ahead. They started out with pepper to burn and they never stop-pod stop-pod lighting for an Instant When they weren't battling the other side they wcro after tho umps and, all told, they were so much on tholr toes that mey remmueu one ol mo ciud wmcn represented us last season. Bernhad's men really looked good and this Is not written because they won their ball game for thoy would havo deserved the same credit had thoy lost it" 3 to 2, as It looked for a time they wquld. Switches Batting Order. Skipper Bill turned his batting order or-der upside down, topsy-turvy and a few othor things, and it seemed to work. ' The new order tore Into the game with zip and, in front of good pitching, seemed to have the contest in hand, even when it was a run to tho bad. Tom Soaton got tho brunt of tho now batting order's pep at the jump off and did not last long. Charley Hall pitched a brilliant article of ball from there on until tho ninth, when he came to grief. Walter Leverenz went great all tho way, but for tho fact that he stuck fat ones In the middle for Irish Meusel and Rube Ellis in the sixth and seventh sev-enth and the two Angels mentioned soused them out of the parjt. The home crow got away to a quick start in tho opened when Tommy Quin-lan Quin-lan busted one through second for a slnglo. Billy Orp lifted a single Just I over tho infield and Johnny Tobln walked up there to bunt everybody knew he was going to do that very thing and still ho beat it out to fill the sacks. Something seomed to say that there were big doing on tho way when Earl Shoely grabbed his stick. Earl let one go by and laid the next one against the top of tho left field fence. Earl got only as far as first but Qulnlan and Orr scored with time to burn. Charley Hall came on at this juncture and retired tho side. tead tooked Shaky. The Bees had just such a lead in the first inning on the day before and the two runs did not hold out a great deal of satisfaction to the fans for a time, therefore. There was this much about the two run? of yesterday though they were clouted over and not wished on the home club as was the case Tuesday. Leverenz looked right and acted right yesterday and it seemed to be the Bees' game from the start. The one run chalked up by the Angels in the second frame was partially a gift Fournier doubled to right Ellis walked. Bolos laid down a bunt which Hannah handed to Rath. Umps Phyle called Fournier out at third, but an instant later Morrie dropped the hard throw. From there Furnler scored on Terry's sacrifice fly, but Boles was doubled off first. Irish Meusel hit one over the left field fence with two down in the sixth and Rube Ellis put tho visitors a run to tho gqod with a similar clout over the score board In the next Inning. The Angels' ono-run lead looked big as a house against the splendid pitching pitch-ing of Hall. Tho Bees were hitting him, but everything they got hold of went straight at some Angel. In the eighth the bunch tried waiting. wait-ing. Orr drew a walk and then Hall got himself in tho hole trying to make Tobln bunt just where he wanted him, to so that he finally passed him also. Sheely also tried to bunt until ho finally final-ly had two strikes on himsolf. The next one was a wide one, but Sheely reached out hooked it, and shot it down the first base lino toward the clubhouse. Meusel throw the pill in to Fournier and tho latter heaved it over Killefer's head so that the Salt Lake first sackor also romped in. Quite an argument ensued after Sheely's drive. Some of the Salt Lake players Insisted that It went into the clubhouso and therforo was a homer, the Angels argued that it went foul, and the umpires finally settled it by giving Sheely a two-baso clout and the scomrs could do the only other thing, which was to send him In from second on Fournler's overthrow n? third. Manager Klllofer of the Angels was banished from the park by Finnoy during tho verbal combat. The game was over, at any rate, for the visitors could do nothing moro with Leverenz. Otlo Crnndajl was sent in to pinch-hit for Terry with two down In the ninth, but Leverenz fanned him. LOS ANGELES AB R H O A E Maggert, cf ... 4 0 0 3 0 0 Klllefor, 3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 Davis, 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kenworthy, 2b 4 0 0 2 2 0 Meusel, rf 4 1 1 4 1 0 Fournlor, lb 3 1 2 8 0 1 Ellis, If "3 1 1 2 0 0 Boles, c ...3 0 1 2 1 0 Terry, ss ' 2 0 0 2 4 0 Soaton, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hall, p 3 0 1 0 1 0 Crandall 1 0 0 0 0-0 TotxUs 31 3 7 21 D 1 SALT LAKE. AB R H O A E Quinlan, rf 4 1 1 3 0 0 Orr, ss f. 3 2 1110 Tobln, cf 31 1 7 1 0 Sheely, lb 3 1 3 7 0 0 Rvan, If 4 0 0 1 0 0 Crandall, 2b 4 0 1 3 3 0 Rath, 3b 4 0 3 1 1 1 Hannah, c 4 0 0 4 4 0 Leverenz, p 4 0 1 0 1 0 Totals 33 5 11 27 11 1 Crandall batted for Terry in the ninth. SCORE BY INNINGS. Los Angeles': Runs ...0 1 0 0 0 1 1-0-0 31 Hits 1 1001220 07 Salt Lake: Runs ,...2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 x o Hits 4 2 1 0 0 0 1 3 x 11 SUMMARY. Homo runs Meusel, Ellis. Two-base hits Klllofer, Fourier, Sheely. Sacrifice Sacri-fice fly Terry. Double plays Terry to Kenworthy; Tobln to Hannah to Crandall to Sheely. Struck out By Hall 2, Leverenz 2. Bases on balls Off Hall 3, off Levorenz 3. Two runs, 1 hits, off Seaton, 4 at bat in minus inning, out In first, two on, none out. Charge defeat to Hall. Runs responsible respon-sible for Seaton 2, Hall 2, Leverenz 2. Wild pilch Hall. Passed ball Hannah. Han-nah. Left on bases Los Angeles 5, Salt Lake 7. Umpires Finnoy and l Phyle. Time of game 1:43. |