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R g—— Speaking of Sports Billy Taylor, sensational Hartford amateur fighter, will enter the pro- fessionl ranks Monday night in Hole yoke when he will appear against Unproved Accusations Standing Scores and Furnishes Biggest Hazard of Game— an opponent in a four round en- w 1 L anices i 1 counter. Tollowing the 1nvestigstion | yisgeport, Sty 13sack Do |New York ... 1% 4 Good Pro Can Teach Mechanics But Psychiatrist of charges brought against the ama- - 3 —Jack De-|phiagelphia 3 5 Is Needed for Calm Mental State. teur clubs in the state, most of tho | 1aney, broken in spirit and greatly |Cleveland ..... 16 10 i boys who made up the @amateur|worried over the unproven accusa- |St. Louis 14 14 ranks of pugllists, were forced to o | tions anent his bout with Jack Shar- ‘D,(mn E 5 17 s tor's note:—The following ar- '« Lie would be better off. Then | into the professionals. Mo A5 Lok B idel &t Gk Washington , o 12 A0y ticie is the first of a series which | b vwould not score so many sixes ’ : in‘,um‘ N 15 .48 will be printed in the *“Herald” | But on the one hand he has the Leo Larrivier who fought Taylor | C!t¥- His friends, former friends, no | Chicago .. ....es 8 18 308 weekly during the golf season. It|lure of par and, on the other hand, here twice, has jolned the stable of |longer talk of Jack as one of them, deals with many phases of the game s beset with an unconscious fear Denny McMahon in Meriden and|though they do not say he was a Games Today and numerous difficultics met with | that gyps him out of a four or even | should soon be scen in some forth-! “bag” fighter, but do believe that Chicago at Washington. by the fair or ordinary golfer. The | & five coming bouts, | best. Delaney’s easy | coupled with friends as playmates, have not ed him stay in the hearts of c! This brings us back to the num- erous inquiries about the status of amateur fight tournaments in this ¢ity and in the state at large. There will be no further tournaments staged anywhere in Connecticut un. til the present situation is cleaned up. . way of disappointed in the boxer, Tarry Mangan will appear in the role of umpire on hases tomorrow a‘ternoon in the game between the lcona and All-Kensington. Herbie Sautter will hold the indicator be- hind the plate. ed Lou Bogash, a native son a part in the Delanhey case. Jack, always looked upon as The state league gots off to a whirl today when Kensington opens against the Birstol New Departures. The Falcons meet Kensington to. | morrow while the Rristol Endees|atmosphere clash with Manchester at Muzzy | Joved him from the start. He chang- Field in Bristol ed from an ambitionless fighter to > one of the best punchers and most Walter Hagen s sure the best|colorful hoxers in the racket. He money player outside of Bobhy | became steady, quict, yot a cham- Sonok in the amke i of Aumcr pion and a contender for greater amateur golfers. Take Hagen when | fame in the sport. anything really worth while is at atake and he is always among the leaders. His sensational com after taking an old fashioned sh lacking from Archie Compston only a week ago, to win the British ama- teur championship, considered the most noteworthy golf championship in the world, can be rated as among the greatest feats in recent years in the sport world. was kept in good company, his earn. ings were taken care of and a bank roll soon piled up. 1In short, she be. came his inspiration and a grea ambition to gain honors overtook him | wite, | pion lay that fact down that it | the big reason why Jack is not tye | fighter of former days. When he { fought Jim Maloney sho lay at the T.et fight fans say what they want but it is a proven fact that Louis (Kid) Kaplan of Meriden Is greatest drawing card that Connec- ticut can boast of. Al records for {ndoor attendance marks were shat- tered tn New Haven the other night | P® ) ! when Kaplan gave Georgle Day of [OVer Deavyweights, v Again M e Hans bosing lesson. i New Haven a box . lana again | | ped through to three ck’s figh TLocal fight followers are inclined to favor Jimmy Mc in, former Galway mitt thrower, to beat Sam- my Mandell for the lightweight understood, His training for the championship of the world mext|WVife held upon him. He soon fell week at Madison Square Garden.|into company of his former days Mandell is very cagy and he will|When he was a second rater. But win if McLarnin doesn't spot onc [Seven actual training days did he put in at his gym. Jack has ou his chin. Art Pilz, after being appointed as |and various reports say his con- athletic director of a popular sum-|science bothers him, but others be- mer camp near the New York bor-!1 it a broken ‘ heart. He is a or, is i at he is one of the ;’eflrtlii::gp:r\:;)‘;n;i-rl\l‘;loll' the right way the *bimeh” hut Bridgeport singular to conduct boys' work. His accom-|or plural, has not &ct eyes on him plishments as director of the M since he returned. den Boys' club in the Silver eity,| have brought him recognition frem i in town tacre arc thoso who know higher sources. {#hat De remains at his apartment {4hd when lis wife recovers she will strong | move to his camp at Lake Winne- movement on foot in this to, pesauke, N, H., both to recover from recura a franchise in the liastern | two totally different kinds of illness. Raseball League for cither nest year | or the year following. A syndicatel “TOSTART SEASON I { Meet Manchester Team in League Game Sunday Alternoon be taken on getting a team here be- fore the summer months have pas The lusher the local baseball season ed by. Sunday affernoon at Muzzy Pield, when the Bearing Makers will come to grips with the Manchester nine in a stato league contest. Everything is in readiness for the curtain raiscr and it ¥ anticipated | that one of the largest opening day | throngs in years will bo on hand to 1t Eastern League basehall should wateh the festivities which will be be induced herc, we wouldn't he|sttended by the usual ccrcmonies. surprised at all if it met with won-| In facing the Manchester aggrega- There appears to be a Tt must be understood, however, that though the movement is con- siderably more than a rumor, noth- ing definite has been done \\'il]\vr"v gard to it and it may h--_po.«h‘l!»k‘| that nothing will come of it. | | i . dristol New Departures will in Waterbury hasn’t gone any too well as a bascball town and there might. be a fine possibility of se- ecuring the Brass City franchise for thie city. Many doubt that Eastcrn Teague baseball would he a succes here while others are enthusiastic over it. derful muccess. The pessimistic pro- i tion, the factory contingent will be phecies concerning the many indoor | facing what is regarded as the sports conducted here last season | slrongest team in the entire state atation by | '0op, and the Bell Towncrs will have their pro-|to put on one of their best exhibi- | tions to come through on top. Ralph Baldwin, of Syracuse, "N. | Y., will occupy the mound for the | Bristol contingent nd should be lable to hold the v Ealdwin is a veteran of many years and has seen serviee with some of and their complete the success reached by ‘moters, leads one to belleve that the same condition might hold good in the bascball field. We understand that New Britain again will be represented in the pro- fessional football ficld nest fall. Fol- Jowing the reorganization of the |the leading pro clubs in Cen- park board and the expressed w -m;lr::{ New York State 4 of its chairman, Judge Wililam 1. 7The game Sunday will start Mangan, to have the parks’ used |Prompily at 3 o'clock, daylight time, {and Messrs. Bob Coughlin and Swat McCabe will act as arbiters. I'robable starting lineups: Manchester—Edgar 2b, Stratton 3b, Sipples ss, Pelton rf, 8t. John cf, McLaughlin 1b, Brennan 1f, Wal- lett ¢, and Fisher p. New Departure—sScott If, Hork- heimer ss, Goodridge 1h, Teilly ¢, Baldwin p, Zetarski cf, Malcolm 2bh, J. McHugh rf, and H. McHugh 3b, LOCALS T0 NORWICH more extensively, it is a very near probability that New Britain again will have a team iin action. There would ba plenty of interest In the grid sport if there was enough state competition to draw out the customers. A state league, as we have often claimed before, the only solution of the problem. reasonable price of admission and plenty of rivalry would pat the game back where it should be in the hearts of the sport loving pub- He. | | New Britain High School Baseball Installed as Favorites | Team Tackles Frec Academs Nine Although the meet is several weeks off, Stanford's track team | Today, already has been installed a heavy favorite to win the I. C. 4-A honors at Harvard this year. An effort will he made by the New Britaln High school baseball squad to score a victory over the . Norwich Free Academy fteam in Flghts Under Assumed Name | Norwick this afternoon. The team Ruth Elder's husband. Lyle Wo- | joet to Hartford High school last mack, is a fighter of some promi- in the Canal Zone under the name of Jeff Ross. Ie is a middle- weight. | week and if it is successful in win- ' ning over Norwich it certainly ought to score several victorics before the season 18 over, In Norwich academy the Red and New Foreign Fighter Here |Gold men will mcet the strongest One of the latest forcigners to |team on the schedule. It is rated arrive in this country secking a by sporting authoritics throughout ring title is Judah Bergman, Eng- |the stute as the leading school boy lish lightweight. He ix eafd 10 team in this locality have fought 190 times with only | The New Britain aquad left this two losses chalked against him. |city at 11:30 e'clock this morning. wild but good-natured lal, became a steady, good man, all through the of a loving wife, who Through the efforts of his wife he and win greater But wherill-health overtook his friends of the former cham- point of death in a New York hos- the | PItal. After that hout Delaney rush- [cd to the hospital, not even waiting |to hiear the dccision. She rallied and the effect on Jack was that he rip- ayo victories . Delaney was taken {1l ng took a ter- rific slump and today his wife, it is fights a losing battle, Sharkey bout shows the effict the illness of his remained in seclusion, {mixer and would rather he out with Although it is reported he is not tors in check. |ys 1y gately in threc times up and | BROKEN HEARTED Bridgeport Fighter Worried Over his ways of training were not of the training reports of “bad boy" izens of Bridgeport, and they are keenly Looking back over the rise of De- laney, from the time that hq worked in a Lake torpedo shop here through his_early days in the ring, as he | broke into the boxing racket, replac- and idel, though Declaney is an adopted son, and then his romance—the girl who later became Ris wife—all play a t AMERICAN LEAGUE 15— Games Yesterday New York 1, .Cleveland 6. (10.) Philadelphia 11, St. Louis 3. Boston 4, Chicago 3. Washington ¢, Detroit . Cleveland at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston, Detroit at New York. Games Tomorrow BY JIGGER. { cach shot what he knows he casily Chicago at Washington. Probably in no game or sport does | can do, he would be on the road to | Detroit at New York. the “inferiority complex” bulk as | breaking o, Lig In determining the final score,| The wislom of experience 1is to NATIONAL LEAGUE s in golf. All the dubs, most of the | €hoot for the distance one can surc- fuir players and at times the cham- [ Iy make. It is not bad plan to Games Yesterday | pions fecl the sway of that sinister | miake your own bogy and play for Cincinnati 3, Boston 0. influence which whispers, “You | that instead of thinking too much Chicago 3, Brooklyn 0. can't make it.” Once a dufer con- | about par. St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 2. | auers this bugahoo, he quickly grad- The man wlo plays Shuttle New York-Pittsburgh, rain. uates from the bundred class. When | Meadow in the nincties might sct a the player in the eighties overcomes | mark of 5, 4,3, 6, 6, 4, for Standing the fear of dubbing a shot he breaks | the lower ninc and come close to W L {into the seventios and when a cham- | Making it. Applying the same tech- | New York ....., 13 of vion rids himself of unreasonable | hique to the upper course, the Cincinnati ..... 16 11 tear he wins tournaments. player would find himself in the | 8t. Louis ...... 15 11 It 18 not the bad lics, sand traps nning for the Saturday tourna. | Chicago ceee 10 1% out.front, or the water hazards | Wedts Pittshurgh seees 12 1 which raise the greatest havoe with| It is the long lioles that upset the Rrooklyn ere 11 13 + golfer's game. Rather it is that|average golfer. But 200 yards drives Hoston . BE T 4364 | still, small voice thay is cternally |and 150 vard fairway shots ought Philadelphia 17 i2g! {hovering close to suggest that a|to be In the bag of every man wo player connot get 200 yards with a | Plays a course with a moderate | Games Today [ Braasin make his pitch shots hold | SPrinkling of 500 yard holes. And Boston at 8t. Louis. ‘the green or sink a three-foot putt. | the majoriiy of players would make | Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. | That's a hazard not noted on the : the greens in three shots oftener, if Philadelphia at Cincinnati. {ecoro card but it's the curse of | they planned to make the last 200 New York at Chicago. | cvery course. Wherever golfers go | Yards in two easy 150 yard shots. Games ithey find the common enemy. It isa | A Scotch pro was giving a lesson Boston at St. Louls. |hazard that surpasses the green- | (0 a duffer. Philadelphia at Cincinnat!. keeper's best offorts with artificial| “Take a New York at Chicago. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUL Games Yesterday Newark 17, Montreal 9. Jersey City 4, Toronto 1. Buffalo 10, Reading 7. i Rochester 16, Baltimore § Standing w 13 Toronto ....... 14 6 Montreal ...... 11 6 Rochester 12 4 Buffalo . 9 10 Newark ....e0 8 11 Jersey City 8 1 Baltimore . 5 13 Reading . Games Today Jersey City at Toronto. 2. Newark at Montreal. Baltimore at Rochester, Reading at Buffalo. EASTERN LEAGUE Ganies Yesterday Pittsfield 12, Hartford 2. Waterbury 4, New Haven 0. Tridgeport 8, Providence 4. Albany-Springfield, rain. w 1. New Haven .... 13 5 722 Hartford ...... 1! 6 LG4T Bridgeport . 10 L3 25 Providence 8 556 Springfield 10 A4 Pittstield 12 A0 | Waterbury 12 i Albany .... 12 .250 Games Today Hartford at Pittsficld. Albany at Springfield. Bridgeport at Providence. New Haven at Waterbury ~s Tomorrow Pittsfield at Albany. 8pringfield at Hartford. ‘Waterbury at Bridgeport. Providence at New Haven. How the “Big Shots” Performed Yesterday By the United Prems Baby Ruth, Yankees: Walked twice and scored two runs, hut fall- cd to hit safely in three official times at bat. Lou Gehrig, Yankees: Hit home run No. 4 with the bases filled and doubled twice in five times up, drove in four runs and scored one him. self. Ty Cobb, Athlctics: Doubled once in three times up, driving in two| runs. Tris Speaker, Athletics: Singled once in five times up. | Harry Heilmann, Tigers: Doubled | once in four times up. | Rogers Hornsby, Braves: Failed| made an error. Kiki Cuyler, Cubs: Out of game. Paul Waner, Pirates, {dle ac- count of rain. | | Pct. i hole than on any other one on the|jections made, in most cases, by st 2 = INFERIORITY COMPLEX IS | You Can’t Make It” Haunts Dubs, Fair Players and Champions—Still, Small Voice Raises Havoc With author is a golfer who, by his own | admisslon is ncither a dub nor a champion but is classed with those who are known as “fair'"" shooters. If a golfer fecls that 200 yards from a fairway lie is beyond his | Kill, he would do well to try only | for a shorter distance. Doing on practice swing,” sald he, The neophyte's swing was nearly cult. Every player expericnces it | Perfect. = on his poor rounda, and when he is | Now another. 0ing xond it 1n portali Yo Bppenr 'o' That came off equally | handicaps to make the course diffi- i as well. Ispoil a score that otherwise would| “NOW hit the ball” ordered have been his best. [[Bentty, A’ g0l pro)can teaph flie golfe | The effort was far bolow the | how to drive, approach and putt but | Practice standard. he would have to be psychiatrist to| The Whole performance was re- eliminate from his pupil's mind the | Peated with equally as good results fear of missing a shot. in practice and fully as disastrous a he game is all mental” s a|%troke when the club was swung at icommon expression heard on the | the ball airway and in the locker room. It| The insturctor found a way round is recognized as the best ally of Ol | the problem. “Hit the ball with your Man Par. Being no secret, a non- | Practice awing,” he advised. | 8olfer would guess that it would Ivc‘ v «asy to combat. But thousands of | Chinese Generals Think e 5 Japs Will Keep Shantung | followers of the anclent Scotch game | New York, May 12 (B — Belief | know it from experiences as their | chief enemy, | Having no reliable gulde to follow, | that Japan plans eventually to seize pluver adopts his own methods to|and hold the province of Shantung rout the phantom. One golfer will | was cxpressed by two generals of use only frons from the tces and on | the Chincse Nationalist army who fairways, regardless of the length|sailed for Europe early today on | of the hole. Another will play 150 | the Majestic. |yard holes with the wood because| Generals Hsu Rhung-Chi and he has no faith in his midiron. Ktill{Chan Han-Yu asserted their coun- another will use an iron oft a certain | ery was powerless to offer resistence | tee and a spoon off another where nd that Japan without doubt could river i3 called for, because past|overrun Shantung it she wished to periences has led him to expect|do 0. They expressed the belief | disaster 1t he started those particu- | that the United States and other {lar holes with the regular driving | countries that signed the nine power club, | treaty should intervene on behalt of | Golfers will go to any extreme in | the Chinese and said they had little | their effort to overcome mental fear, | hope In the ability of tho < the firmer it becomes fixed in their Nations to sctile the cof consciousness, o | In practice, the player who says | he can’t use a wooden club, will pro- | duce some long drives with the The man who runs up his i i Navy Searchingfifcr)‘l: | Plane and Its Pilot | San Pedro, Cal, May 12 (B—Re- sources of the navy teday were di- rected to the attempt to recover from the water 15 miles off San Diego, a naval fighting plane and the body of Tieut. Joseph Jolin Ltooncy, strapped in its cockpit, the ! will run down lengthy putts. vietim perhaps of a heroic plunge | Scven out of ten golfers can take | taken to avold endangering a com- | tull swing and clip off a dandelion | rade. | | blossom, but when it comes to hit-| After the fall of the plane into the | ting the Jittle white ball with the | water Thursday while Rooncy was umoe nonchalance, they know it fs attempting a landing on the aircraft a different matter, ! carrier Lexington, a patrol of boats Talke the Shuttle M. Wwas thrown about the area and The first hol~ is 402 yards, No great | divers ordered from San Diego. They | 8Kill i3 requircd to send the ball!were kept vainly in the search | from the tee 150 yards to the under | throughout yesterday and last night. side of the hill where the roll will | Witnesses of the accident helieved |carry the ball to or past the 200 |Licut. Rooney, sweeping over the driver. {approach shots, because he is afraid to trust his machie-niblie, can go out and demonstrate some pretty pitch shots. And on the practice sen, the fellow who in- nnot putt in match play, | dow course. | 1928, BUGABOO OF ALL GOLFERS aybe We're Wrong” ByE. L. Cord Auburn has built its success by not underestimating the public’s intelli- P they are judging that car tation and comparative irs . anh?:f gence. That is why we are going to years ago. But it is hard to argue lay our cards on the table faceup and against a pre; You might win 2 explain what our hardest job istoday. an argument lose a sale. It is not to design more advanced cars We do not say others cannot do it. | —that is casy. We only say Auburn DOES it. | It is not finances—few arc as strong as Because— | Aubum today, No one has a monopoly on brains! It is not modern factories—no com- And Brains is the most important in- petitor excels Auburn in this respect. | It is not to build better cars, more en- | during cars and sell them for less cost —we it BUT IT 1S TO MAKE YOU Y Auburn’s modernizm methods facilities. We could explain Aubura’s | BELIEVE IT. THAT IS OUR [ow overhead, and how many times | HARDEST JOB! we turn our capital. We could quote | Not that we blame many admirable remarkable sples increeses, people for asking,“How CAN Auburn But, we still believe the way to | do it? We know exactly why they buy a motor car is by comparing differ. | take that attitude, but we do notknow entcars. We submit the new Auburn exactly how to answer it. on this basis uldluy. “Drive l;ll-id if | : 4 5 it does not SELL ITSELF you will not Sincere people ask that question, with. Q out realizing that they do not know D¢ #*ked o buy. what Auburn is building, and have If we are right, then you will not | never driven the new Auburn. They care can do it, because assume in advance that the car they you will profit from the fact Aubum | have a preference for is better. Maybe ES it. PO W BY LYCOMING 666 Roadster $995; 6-66 Sport Sedan $1095: 6-66 Sedan $114%: 666 Cabrialet §1145; 76 Seden $1398; Scdan $1295; 76 Cabriclet §1398; 76 :-uh'rv 195; 8.77 Rosduter $1248; l-?"lb-:‘l‘-n ‘-7’1‘: usfl; 877 C.bvhla”tuoh 8 n.tlws 88 Cabrisler $1695; 1408 31 ; B8 Sport Sedan $1598; ) $1695; 1895; 115 Sedan $2195; 11§ 1 115 Cobriolet §2198; 115 Roadster $1995; 115 Speedater $2195; 1 Tax end Bewipmons 15 Phaeton Seden $2395. AUBURN AUTOMOBILE COMPANY, AUBURN, INDIANA. THE DOMIJAN MOTOR CO., INC. Hotel Burritt Garage 136 Washington St. OUR BOARDING HOUSE @‘ WHERE'S -THAT BIG “TooTH PASTE AD SMILE OF NouRS TODAY, MR WALL STREETZ wana WHILE LOOKING M —TH’ PAPER FoR TH' LOST AN’ By Ahern N SAY,~ L Kilow How Yeus \ \\SOLLY GUYS CAM HAVE A v LOAD OF MERRIMEST § AMALGAMATED W 1 64T, ue T HAVE A N PENCIL FELL M £R(END ik -TH' HOSPITAL N FWVE POINTS /| For AN QPERATION FOUND COLUMN T0 SEE WHAT /[ AN' ASAY TOMORROW, -+ GO OA REWARDS WERE OFFERED ¢ \-id DID A OVER AN'CHEER Him YoR AIREDALES, [ NoTicep NIAGARA uP WITH A GRANITE YouR STOCKS -TookK A OF SEVEA SLAB FOR A GiPT.A NOSE-DIVE, AN’ WERE PoOINTS 1. i uNCoNSClous AT TH? wATHAT PuT -’ BoLL WEAVEL N NOUR WALLET, ed? € CLosE /. é“) | yard marker. A cleek, midiron or{deck of the Lexington, saw another spoon will carry the distance, to say jairplane about to be launched from | nothing about a driver. Once out on | the deck. His plane swerved, fell the fairway, a falr-hit, brassie shot, ! into a side slip and dropped into the atmed true, will send the ball to the | sea. green. But few arc the players who = consistently the grade on that | . shot. That 200 yards looks a mile. Portable The distance registers big in the | player's mind as he takes his stance | Washington, May 12 P —The fed- for the second shot. Instead of cral radio commission issued an swinging frec and easy he, more | order requiring all portable hro:ul-l often than not, presses anl the | casting stations tp cease operating stroke proves to be a dud. Fives|July 1 and providing that no further and sixes are more common as a | license of this sort will be granted starting score than a par four.!after that date. And fewer birdies are made on this| The order follows numerous ob- ® -Brondcasting | Must Stop on July First | first or second mine. The tourna- | tions with short range that the por records ment committec's indicate |able sets disrupted service when | that. !moved into their localitics. At the| If every player played the first|present time 13 movable sets are n.i hole for a five, instead of trying to ! censed to operate on a 1,430 kilo-| messages. | | stretch his second shot into a long ! cycle band. | HIGH PRESSURE [EMMSTED, WATING e eno 0 ..~ PETE ,f‘o e seavicE. mc. 'NEG U $. PAT. OFY. ONSOLERS = “THass A BeReAm! CLMB ABoARD !