f ivfinvwniwwiPniiffiiivippqpp BASEBALL SPORTS OF ALL SORTS BOXING STANDING OF THE CLUBS American League v W.L. Pet. W.L. Pet. FELSCH ONE OF BRIGHT STARS ON WHITE SOX TEAM Boston 76 55.580 Detroit 75 58.564 Chicago 74 58 .561 StLouis70 63 :536j N.Y'rk 69 63 .523 Clevl'd 68 65.511 Washn 66 64.508 Phila.. 29101.223 National League W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Phila.. 75 49.605 Brtdyn 74 51.592 Boston 7151.582 NKork 60 62.492 PittsbTi 6167.477 Chicago 59 72.450 StLouis 56 75 .427 Cind'ti. 5180.389 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American, League. Chicago 5, Cleveland 3; St. Louis 6, Detroit 5; Boston 2, Philadelphia 0; Washing ton 5, New York 1; New York 3, Washington 2. National League. Pittsburgh 5, Chicago '4; New York 4, Brooklyn 1; Philadelphia 4, Boston 2; Philadel phia 2, Boston 0. Bennie Kauff is beginning to hit the ball solidly and frequently. Be cause he bore a Federal league label? Bennie was severely pannd by some critics who saw red every time that organization was mentioned. He did not hit .300 and they jumped him. Bennie never gave out a tenth of he bunk credited to him in interviews. Scribes with the New York team are a unit in saying Bennie is a-regular fellow, who knows his own short comings and says frankly he would like to be somewhere near as good as Ty Cobb. Kauff is a dandy hitter and can run bases and- field. He is a fine ball player and if he had a chance to ex ercise some individuality would look much better. The McGraw system was never meant for a man of the Kauff type. John McGraw says Luther Taylor, while bein the last deaf mute to play in the big leagues, was not the last "dummy." i By Mark Shield's UnheraTded, never mentioned in black type, one outfielder on the South Side is playing the most sen sational game that section of the city has looked at for some time. He isn't Joe Jackson aind his name isn't Collins. Hap Felsch is the superhuman gent, and the ex-Milwaukee man is doing everything any other outfielder ever did, and doing it nearly every day of the week. Felsch is a fine ballplayer, one of the best garden men in the Johnson circuit, yet little is heard of him in the public prints. Much space has been rfovnaH n the marvelous fielding of John Col- uns, yet eiscn is every bit as good a ueienesive man as Shano and 70 points better as a batter. He can travel to either side, come forward or" go back after flies, and throws like a rifle shot and with uncanny accu racy. He is not given to the flashy line throws that Joe Jackson exhib its, but he bounces the ball to the in field or any base with enough speed and precision to stop runners. Twice yesterday he made assists and one broke a Cleveland rally and left the score small enough ?to en able the Sox to win. Another time lie wenc aeep on a line drive and made a great one-handed leap'ns stab of the .ball. He poled a clean single to count the first Sox run and hit a bounder that resulted in the pair that won. This is no 'momentary flash on the art of Felsch. He has been dOiPg these things all season, but if you are a newspaper and box score fan you won't know anything about it Hap is a clean ballplayer who takes care of himself, regards his work se riously and is trying every minute. Jennings is having pitching trou HiMttMttMMHMMiM