Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 26, 1912, LATE SPORTS, Page 10, Image 10

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10 <®CMAN 9CK ©a» * DOTOT Jeff Was Right; a Man Is Certainly Entitled to His Own Room :: :: :: By “Bud” Fisher ■ "" .. „„„ . ■■ —■—'■■ f .. ■ C S' ~ ~ ' ' '* ~X. S- , mGNCYoU I ~~ I CAN'T | i V/HKT KINO M. r —A r sorry, 5- r~7~- a 49> , ' T ’ S JU£V T! | t zi O _ Gtve You *39* ■ A S-OOrA Olb YOU i \ i 1 'n/knt 1 39 occupied r ’4" ' I THG as 39 ® 59 OR. 69 i Room 3g isoccuPieoj CvJELL, I'*A TH G WITH LJ XoOvx I But I can I VJ/\NT I °NIX Vr<S ONe , I . OR 29 I I WANT IIBY A MR. A.MUTT 7 1/7 A : r< ■ Xr / /hX.TT!•=■- 39« W wfe 1 ks/ < ( O s w I T?w \ 'Wf • $ i 1 - aSi w jgagay Kw - i ' ' 'L^iSSE—-- 4 BWI - I ’ * Mid JBft r wMn» —.—l & ißkiJ .\ ■> ■ ilM\ tM Wx. - 'WW\ Wt>\ ‘i'x x X=' x ® II B If |IB s \ x ) SB , uJ.I/Mj. —~r„X:x jjj X _ _ X \. S'~rc7X. —~^-=— h ~" 'X, - X XX fyer— " X * ' ‘ —■■ ■! __________________L____——— coyvTja-xr *9<a. t «o All-Star Team Proves Weakness of the League -j.»4i •!•••!• +••>• -!-»f 4-«4> -j-*-;- In But Few Positions Are Men Up to Standard By Percy H. Whiting. NOTHING is better calculated to show what a dub year . this good season of 1912 has been in Southern league baseball than the weakness of the all-star team, picked according to the aver ages. This is the team automatically selected from the latest crop of figures: Position. Player. Club. BA. FA. Catcher, McAllister, Mont. .272 .965 Catcher, Seabough, Nash. .262 .978 Ist base, McGilvray. B'hm. 319 .981 !d base, Wares, Mont. . . .285 983 3d base. Almeida. B’hm. . 320 .898 Short. Elberfeld, Mont. . 275 .934 Outfield. Johnson. Mont .354 1.000 Outfield, Welchonce, Nash 308 975 Outfield, Stengle. Mont. . 303 .982 • • • OF course, that is not necessarily the real all-star team of the league. But the best players, ac cording Jo the averages, are there. McAllister, of Montgomery, gets the position of leading catcher be cause of his good batting and de spite the fact that In fielding he stands seventh among the regulars. Seabough Is second among the catchers in batting and third in fielding, so he Is entitled to the other position. Bilger, a really good fielding catcher, is out on the strength (or rather weakness) of a .173 batting average The once highly touted Elliott Is down to .255 tn batting and stands third from last in fielding Haight, of New Orleans, has pretty decent marks, with a batting average of .255 and a fielding of .978, which puts him second in fielding • • • T OOKING over the infield, it is a pretty easy matter to pick those entitled to positions. McGil vray's good batting average gives him first place among the first basemen And that despite the fact that he is next to the worst fielding first baseman in the league. Here's How Crackers Are Hitting the Ball Right Up to Date These averages Include all game# played tn date Players- g- ab. r, h. av. Harbison, ss . 61 211 24 59 280 Bailev. If. . .1 15 402 72 109 271 Agler, lb. ... 51 170 31 46 271 Alperman. 2b .118 43« 58 ns 269 Callahan, cf . 74 285 29 72 253 Graham, c ... 54 167 17 41 241 Becker, p. ... 13 30 2 7 233 McElveen. 3b. .120 435 47 96 221 Sitton, p. . .25 58 11 10 172 Brady, p. . ... 20 62 2 10 .161 Reynolds, c. .13 43 4 6 150 Johnson, p. .. 6 11 0 i ill Wolfe, utility . 7 19 2 2 105 Evons, rs. ..■ 24 72 3 7 09. Waldorf, p. . . S 21 0 1 647 TOMMY~MURPHY FIGHTS IN GOTHAM THIS WEEK NEW YORK, Aug 26 -Ki.l Willmm of Baltimore, who Is after lb. .. ■ of Johnnv Coition, th'- bantamweight chaiuplon. will show Ms - this evening when he meets KM K« New Orleans, in a ten-round ■ r ■ <t Madison Square Garden Willi mis has posted 31.000 forfeit < - ouMn At the St Nicholas Athleti. club n Wednesday night. Tommy Murph? lightweight, will make anothet bow t.- home crowd after his sue < ■ ssful bouts 1n the West His first fight will be with Young Brown, an East S de prod uct At the Atlas Athletic club. Ro. kaw av Gunboat Smith, a California light weight. is scheduled to box ten round' with George Godfrey tomorrow night WELSH MAY MEET TEMPLE MILWAIKEE Aug 26. Ray Tem ple and Ereddi* Welsh, of England, probably will meet In a twelve-round no-deciahm contest at Winnipeg, Man «u Labor day. You can't figure anybody else in. however, for Sykes, who is leading the regulars in fielding, is batting ■ inly ,?35, and Agler, who is second in fielding, is batting nowhere. Wares Is out by himself among the second basemen. He leads the, second sackers in both batting and fielding. Alperman is a good sec ond, with a batting mark around the two-seventies and a fielding record of .959. Almeida gets his position the same as McGilvray does—because of good batting and despite poor fielding. His slugging mark Is .320. but he is fielding next to last among the regulars. Spencer, of New Orleans, has much more con sistent marks—.27s In batting and 960 in fielding Among the shortstops ft Is a toss up. Harbison Is leading the short fielders ,1n batttng. with a hefty mark, but ho Is next to the worst fielding shortstop in the league. Balentf, who Is batting Just behind Harbison. Is fielding Just one posi tion better. Elberfeld Is no star at either batting or 'fielding, but gets the position for lack of a bet ter man. • • • • J N the outfield the stars aren’t peculiarly plentiful. Johnson, of Montgomery. Is batting 354 and fielding "a thousand.” But ho has been in only 39 games. Welchonce is proving himself a real star with a weak team and is entitled to a position, stengle kicks in, despite the fact that he stands fifteenth among the regular fielders of the league. The only man who presses hibn oven close for a pi«ition is Jimmy Johnston, of Birmingham. The rest of the outfielders aio a total loss, as far as the averages show • • • N'’" disregarding the pitchers, for lack of real statistics (a mere record of 'games won" proves nothing!, isn’t that a pretty sorry team to stand out as the best of- |ne\vs from ringside ' Joseph Askey, 62 years old. and a good ■ frten.l of .luck Dempsey. the deceased o , . er ' ' ms btst returned to his home in Baltimore from Portland. Oregon, where lie a ent to plant flowers on his former friend s grave • • • • Harry Thomas, the English f.’ather weight. Who defeated Erankle Conlev in I.OS Angeles last week, will not be seen In I action again until Labor Dav when he is t scheduled to tight Joe Thomas m New • Orleans . Hugh Melnt .sh, the Australian fight promoter, has agree.! to post SIO,OOO with , Al Tearney. tn get Jack Johnson to go to the Antipodes and fight Sam McVex I and Sam Langford Mclntosh offered 1 "Lil Arthur $50,000 for the two battles I '1 he promoter wanted to post the forfeit , mono? with a Chicago bank, but John son Insisted Tearnec be made stake- ' holder. • • • Joe Mandot and Joe Rivers have got down to the actual grind of hard training , and should be in the best of condition for their 30-round contest Labor Day Man <loi has made man? admirers In bis fast Workouts and will have quite a following when he enters the ring t • • • t It looks as though there will soon be s some shake up In boxing circles al <'in f elnnatl The trouble-all st arted be< a use , tw. fighters, ruictll and \ttell, signed artii'i.'S tt. tight at sex.-ral diff. rmt clut«s 4 on lhr same date The boxing commis sion has taken up the case and will prob abl\ <ettle tin- matter in a feu day* • • • ’ All PhUatielplda is singing the praises s <>f Bill Mct’arren, of Allentown. I’a 'l'he , b«>\» • who is known as Jack O'Brien’s s.>‘.'.ooo find. leaped suddenly into popu larity hx his quick knockout of Jack ' « nning a f»*w nights ago He sent the former amateur middleweight champion to dreamland n less than two rounds j Tommx Burns wlio i> training at ("al gar> with ins brother Eddie. is consider ing going t». XustraHa to tight Sam Lang f.«rd »1 ere Lab.-t I»a \ Hugh Mclntosh has offered the former luav s weight chain - pion a guarantee id Hoaoo f<.r a bout there on that <iate Joe • and Fi ankle Russell ait in good con.in u !. i heir ten r< und tight at the Orleans A C , >ew Orleans, to- rn rz ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, AUGUST 26. 1912. sering of the entire Southern league? Don’t McAllister and Seabough stand up as a fine pair of catchers alongside of such giants of the past as Jim Archer, Ed Sweeney, "Nig” Clarke, Sid Smith and a few more? , Oh, elegant! McAllister Is a fair man. nothing more. Seabough was canned by the second worst team in the league In mid-season and is not due to last very long in Class A company. McGilvray Is a pretty sorry "Star of the First Basemen." He doesn't measure up to the standards of other days—Jake Daubert, Jim Fox in his prime, or any one of a dozen that might be mentioned. His bat ting is excellent and above the average. But his fielding is a crime. Wares, of Montgomery, is a tol erably good second baseman. ac cording to the averages. Almeida is a useful third base man because of his grand sticking But he’s a sorry fielder, even if he has done good work «n the Atlanta diamond. Elberfeld at short Is playing good ball, though neither his batting nor his fielding record is remarkable. • « • T T is In the outfield that the pres- 1 ent league shows weakest. Johnson is a fair man, according to the present averages, but he would have to play longer to make it certain that he could keep up such work. Welchonce is a gen uinely good outfielder, but no star. Stengle Is Just an average man. Compare these chaps with the great outfielders of the Southern league’s past—Speaker. Jackson and the boys who have made good in the big leagues, not to mention men like “Daddy” Dungan, Moles worth, Winters. Wiseman and the chaps who grew old in Southern league harness. Oh. yes, it’s a fine league this year. But nobody will be sorry if next year’s effort is just a shade better. night Although Russell has been fight ing little more than a year lie is picked by many followers to defeat Coster. • • • Willie Ritchie will have to train little for his 20-round bout with "One Round" Hogan on the coast Admission Day, as be is in good condition from the many mutches be trained for that fell through BERLIN OLYMPIC STADIUM TO BE BIGGEST IN WORLD CHICAGO, Aug 26. —Within a short time active work will be begun for the erection of the stadium at Berlin, Ger many, where the next Olympic games will be held in 1916, According to a Chicago authority, who has been on the grounds and who witnessed the recent meet at Stockholm, this new stadium will surpass the latter one In every re spect. The field is a big one and the stands will be built in the center of a race track. An idea of the size of the place mac be gathered from the fact that one of the steeplechase courses is 7,01 m meters in length. The Germans are planning for a great stadium, in which there shall be a -2u-metr straightaway, and which will accommodate more speyjtators than ever graced a quadrennial classic RIVERS SLIGHT CHOICE IN FIGHT WITH MANDOT l.«»S WGELF.S, Aug 26 Fight fans ai»> daily docking to the training camps •f Joe Rivers and lor Mandot who u ill battle on the afternoon of Labor Pay F'rom the Interest displaxrd the bout might be a world's championship ex ent instead of a meeting that at best «an in. an nnlx a • hnn< r t" tight \d Wolgast R 'th Mandel and Risers are n irking 1 ard and both are doing a lot «»f boxing The betting stands 10 to £ with River* favonn a larg< amount ia bring u agered. CRACKERS CLASH WITHVOLTEAM TODA! Nashville, tenn., au K . 28. No game is carded between the Crackers and Vols in the schedule for today, but as these teams have a couple of postponed arguments to settle one of ’em will be held today and a double-header put on the bill tomorrow. The Crackers arrived here from Montgomery after losing the last game of the series with the Billi kens to the tune of 9 to 4. Pitcher Johnson blew up in the fifth inning, allowing six rounds to count before he came back to earth. After the series here the Atlanta team moves to Chattanooga. They wind up the week with the Look outs and then return to Atlanta to open up their last home stay in two games on Labor day with Memphis. Nashville and Chattanooga follow in turn at Ponce DeLeon park. The Crackers will close the sea son away from home, the finishing series being carded for Memphis. M’LOUGHLIN WINS TENNIS TITLE BY BEATING JOHNSON NEWPORT, R. 1., Aug. 26.—Maurice E. McLoughlin, the Pacific coast crack, defeated Wallace F. Johnson, the Uni versity of Pennsylvania champion, in the title round of the National Lawn Tennis singles here today, 4-6. 2-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. McLoughlin’s great spurt just when he looked to be beaten beyond a shadow of a doubt was simply w-onderful. Johnson completely outclassed him in the first two sets But the young col legian tired in the third set. He tried, hard to come back in the fourth, but he didn't possess the necessary- stamina to pull him through. MATCH PLAY STARTS FOR DAVIS & FREEMAN TROPHY Match play in th* three flights for the Davis & Freeman golf trophy will begin this afternoon at East l*ake. The pairings in the three flights are as follows: First Flight. G. W. Adair vs. T’. Adair D. Jemison vs. E. T. Winston. E. G. Ottlev vs. C. Knowles. H. Block vs. S. T King A. Davidson vs. C. M. Sciples. D Brown vs. F Adair. D. B. Osborne vs. H. J. Hopkins. J. D Eby vs W R. Tlchenor. Second Flight T. B Fay vs. R. P. Jones, Jr. T r. Hinman vs. J. C. McMichael. J S Baine. Jr . VB. C. E. Corwin J. D. Osborne vs. G. A. Nicholson. C. Angier vs. J. B. Martin. W. c Holleyman vs. R. J. Morris. E. R Jones vs. H. G. Butler J. F. Glenn vs. F. C. Fleming. Third Flights H. M. Ashe vs T L. Cooper. S. M Tupper, Jr., vs. XX M. Markham r A Wright vs. H K Dix. W. F. (’pshaw vs. W. A. Alfriend. R. D. Gresham vs. W. C. Springer. X XX Hodnett vs. H. Hentz. S Hard vs. J. M Beasley. XX \ Jackson vs A. M French. 1 The Big Race Here is the newest dope on how the "Big Five" batters of the American league ar hitting: PLAYER— AB. H. P.C. COBB 444 183 .412 SPEAKER 461 187 .406 I JACKSON 446 167 .374 COLLINS 419 141 .336 LAJOIE 309 97 .314 As there were no games scheduled in i the American league yesterday, none of I the batters were able to increase their j clouting averages. Tris Speaker is only i six points behind Ty Cobb, and the i Georgia Peach has got to keep going to keep the Boston slugger from nosing I him out, for Tr's has been coming like a whirlwind during the past four weeks. Motorcyclists Want to Use the City Race Track T*’r ❖•• J" •?••{• -1-S-? Park Board Refuses to Give Them Privilege By W. S. Farnsworth. THE Atlanta Motorcycle club, an organization of 150 local men, has a great big kick to make. And it is a just one, too. For some reason or other they are being deprived of their rights. The following letter to the writer ex plains itself: Atlanta. Ga., Aug. 26, 1912. W. S. Farnsworth, Sporting Editor The Georgian. Dear Sir: The Atlanta Motorcycle club, numbering about 150 young men of the city, wishes to be heard from on the Piedmont park question. Recently we wanted to hold a mo torcycle race meet and being unable to get the use of the Piedmont park half mile track we had to go to Rome, Ga., our little neighbor of 20,000 popu lation, to get a track to ride on. The grounds at Piedmont park were closed by the city fathers to all fairs, ex positions and pay amusements and promised to the people free as a play ground. The ball teams of the CHy league are allowed to use the baseball dia monds. the concessionaire at the lake is allowed to hold swimming matches and the like to attract crowds, and yet the motorists of the city are denied the use of the splendid driving track. The club has taken the matter up with Manager Carey, of the park board, and after considering the mat ter he Is favorable to allowing the track to be used, but the park hoard purposely took this out of his hands by passing a special order prohibit ing bicycles, motorcycles and automo biles from using the track The reason given is that people are crossing the track to go to the lake. They should be reminded that there is FODDER FOR FANS FODDER FOR FANS The fund to buy John Ganzel an auto mobile has reached the sum of S7OO. If they would put that in some safe savings bank and let the interest pile up they would have enough in 5'- years to buy an E.-M.-F.. with a few dollars left over for accessories • • • Mathewson has spent 11 years trying to find Wagner's batting weakness and threatens to give out entirely before he arrives at the answer • • • The Cleveland owners are tired nt fool ing with the Toledo team. Roger Bresna han Is wearied of petticoat rule at St. Louis and wants to buy a minor league chib. This situation may result in a sale. • • • There are five men in baseball who wore graduated from mines into the game. They are Jake Daubert. Hughey Jennings, Mordecal Brown, Larry Doyle and Joe McGinnity. • • * Fred Clarke is up against ft. When he uses Mike Donlln Mike can hit. but can’t do anything else. When he puts Mensor in Mike's place the kid can do everything but hit. "Players caught in the draft," says L. C. Davis, "are usually the first to blow.” • • • The Giants easily lose th*lr floats to pitchers and then have an awful tune get ting them back Richie is the latest ex ample. A couple of others, well known in the South, were Coveleskie and Bob Spade • • • In an effort to save the Northern Indi ana league the season will probably be materially shortened • • • X home run hit over the feme at Fort Wayne the other da.\ nicked a telegraph pole and bounded back into the field A DcMjb umpire declared it a two-bagger, which was rank rohber> Before Bert Grover, the Maysville pitcher, departed for <*hatanu<>g.t the own ers of the baseball association provided him with a suit of clothes not that he didn’t have one already, but they wanted to show their appreciation • • • • The elder a player gets says Fred Clarke, '‘the less he is kn<»wn. ' Naturally. * * • •’Waiter Johnson is the greatest pitcher ! of all time nays Hal Chase. ‘ I haven’t ! seen ail of em. hut 1 don’t have to. to know that • • • The aecuhd defense of the Red Sox is sa.4 to b«- the best of any team tn either league Jake Stahl •an lose two <»r three men and still liave an air tight team • • • Ihe S '» S -.gna ! Iha I 1..,« b. eu < i e., . iix » . mil' 1 <li>curbane us late in 1,.,.*, hal’ wirelex- rlrclea . onies from W) e» ng Wfh the xegaon >«<i week* from I lie ra<| Illi •. aim* .-gns of not being able to laat through a beautiful graded driveway which leads around the track, one at each end of the track in fact. Nobody would expect to see automobiles us ing the sidewalk; why then deny the motorists the use of the race track simply because people want to walk across it? In all our neighboring cities, Macon, Griffin, Augusta, Dublin, Columbus, Rome, Gainesville, Athens, Chatta nooga, Columbia, Montgomery and Birmingham, the motorists are al lowed to use the race tracks and pe destrians are warned by signs not to walk across the tracks. This is noth ing but fair. Also In these cities when any fair, convention or other gather ing is scheduled the motorcycle clubs respond liberally and willingly by giv ing exhibitions of racing; it can not be denied that racing is interesting to nine people out of every ten. The Atlanta Motorcycle club was or ganized by the older participants of the sport at the beginning of the year because the promised enormous In crease in the number of motorcycles sold and used was sure to bring new and Inexperienced people into the sport, and these new members needed the experience of the older ones to curb their "speeding" tendencies. The alm of the club is to Instill into every man a wholesome regard for the rights of his fellow citizens; to curb the use of the muffler-cutout, the "open muffler fiend,’ as he is known, and to bring the motorcycle before the public in a favorable light and im press upon all people the utility, com fort and dependability of this modern vehicle. Toward these ends the Atlanta Mo torcycle club is bendl-t unceasing ef fort, and the police records of our city will show that Atlanta has fetter mo torcycle arrests than anv other city , .. The national commission has decided that the team which buvs a player from i another team must pay the salary of the player during the time he is on the way i to join the club. Nine brothers form the team which rep resents Madison Mills, Va. Their names i are \\ lllie, Oscar, Harry, Rov, James I Leonard, Carrol, Vivian and Hugh Gillum’ The passing of Derrick to Baltimore may mean the making of the young Geor gian. He has not had enough baseball with the Athletics to keep in good prac tice. His batting has been off for two • years, but with regular work should mount again. • • • The White Sox have organized a local , m the National Players' Baseball union Doc M bite was chosen to represent the local at the meeting which will be held at the time of the world’s series. • • • There have been many Giant-killers. , but none like Lew Richie. I.ast year he won six out Os seven for the Cubs from . the Giants. This year he has also won , six out of seven Some killing, that Mould that there were more like him. • • • Umpire Garnett Bush, who worked in Texas last year, and who was tried out , in the National this year, has been sent to the South Michigan to learn the um piring art. • • ■ ; Tacoma purchased Pitcher Ben Hunt from Sacramento. At the end of the sea son the White Sox gave $3,000 for him Officials of the Sacramento club are pretty well lamed up as a result of kick ing themselves. ♦ • • The first no-hit game pitched in the American association was hurled by Ducky Swann. That was In 1906 There have been an even dozen refolded in that league since then A hot game will la- placed in Mobile Sunday, September 1. when the Barons hike over to Gullville to play off a post poned affair Even if it is m Mobile we'd like a cut on tbe gate receipts Germane Schaefer refuses to down Kan Johnson nut a damper on his comedt work on the diamond, but the other morn ing lie and t'h.'-k Gandll •c<iulred a b:rdv I gurdy and a monkey and made a tour of Washington, pla> Ing to big mont e WISHART BREAKS ALL RECORDS AT COLUMBUS t.'td.l MUI OHIO. Ai« 26 hui.pitx all ret ords from 75 mile- <u up •<, .!0?i miles before him .<* h. went .-|e *i ! Utsiiari drove a liorx;. .■ yf<i.,i victory hrie in a SflO-ndle I,ef u.- fu Oigi peo|He Hr , vial'ltetiw,l a ik m I re. for 2<»o ", 4 .. .. r a ■ ■., ■ ■., K , It at 3 hours mir> t 1 » , oti,t" ' Hi» prize wm 11 ,<mhj uno a ellver trophy her size in the United States. When we are working hard to make the mo torcycle inoffensive to the general public we feel that this unwarranted discrimination on the part of the park board is grossly unfair and should be rescinded. Dan Carey Is manager of the park department and is in active charge of the parks. When he has made an in vestigation of this matter, and guided by his experience and judgment in park management, he finds there is no objection to this procedure and even indorses it as having distinct benefits, it certainly seems entirely unreasonable that the park board should impose this unjust discrimina tion on a certain class of the city's population. ATLANTA MOTORCYCLE CLUB. T. C. BUTLER, JR. • « • rpHERE is a track at Piedmont park and it was constructed Yet because some few lazv pedestrians do not possess the snap and ginger to walk on the sidewalk that was built for them they have verily pulled some wire whereby their journey is shortened for them at the expense of the mo torcyclists. The Motorcycle club has asked the park board to give their reason for closing the track to motorists, but they have never given a satis factory answer. Is it because none of them ride motorcycles? Perhaps if some <,f them did the track would he open to the sport for which it was built. At any rate, it is about time that this matter was looked into and wrong made right. Giants Look to Have An Easy Week Ahead: In Cincinnati Today ( INCINNATI, Aug. 26.—Facing two i more games before returning to the Polo grounds, the New York Giants are jubilant over the success of their West ern trip, which had been viewed with qualms by all. from Manager McGraw down, The Giants awoke today with a six and a half-game lead over the Chi cago Cubs, and their predictions include victory both this afternoon And tomor row over the Cincinnati Retjs. After the hard campaign in Pitts burg. when the Giants took four out of five games, the New York players were buoyed up by success, and apparently did not feel the strain under which they were kept at full speed. With an easy lead, the Giants will have a comparatively easy time of it this week After the two-game se ll's here, they return to the Polo grounds Thursday for a series with Brooklyn. Three double-headers will ho played in a row by the Giants and the Phil lies. SPEED TRIALS ARE HELD ON ELGIN RACE COURSE ELGIN. ILL.. Aug. 26.—First official peed trials over tin- Elgin road race course were held today. The course work on which has been practically completetl. was closed to the public While the big ~,rs were sent around it to te.-t Ils curves and angles. The elglitriiiile stretch was guarded by spe cial patrolmen ami flagmen. I he roads hav< been put In excellent condition for the four races that will be run I rldny and Saturday, and it is expected tn.it some new speed record* will be made. PLAYERS MIX ON TRAIN- ONE SENT TO HOSPITAL 1 "LI MBUS. MIS.~ \ug 26. | n < i'tuaii'i which occurred between P.iym. 1 41 f»l!'h»'! on the < 'oliHtibti? and Parke, ahorixtop , Somb. in lailwm train I'ark, r , u t tin right mm and painfully, though not dnngi ro ~|. « mind< d I p., n , r r 1 or the Hain in t|u h ,| K p.,,.!,, ”,.|mal wh.H |,|, l|)JtjH( . 1, " dm. • I MM of