l" IIIIW WmWmrrf' PWi w ) EVENING PUBLIC tty Heimach, Kid Curver, a Here When He Outpitches UrbanFabem Extra-Innmg Battl V Walker saves home B'RUN UNTIL NEEDED AND WINS BALL GAME tiStu Ph THERE trill be mere of the name today, weather permitting. Eddie Remmel iciil fling for our aide and Kid Oleaaen it up enanist it. Hit two best eeM, Ilobertien and 'after. Aire been trimmed, and he will have te select tome mediocre guy te de the fancy flinging, Cetvrifht, 1333, iu Public J.tdgtr Company DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU? WUEN VeiJ WERET&YIW&-TOENJCVAW09T WHILE-MOVlF HAwDACOUPLGOFFLUFFS'BEMlNDYOUTUNFDUPWtTHA fg 13 HOT UMh OF VHAKT WWl ci- Tilly, After Emulating Shipwrecked Sailor for Tivclve Innings, Knocks Ball Out of Let in Thirteenth and A's Cep Thrilling Contest Hy nOBEUT V. MAXWELL ".pert Editor EtmlnK rnblle t.rtffr f A PAIR of cash customers at in the fltt row of sent behind tlie pen box at , 'A Shihe I'nrk yeMerday at t-cMllRht. A slight Hut meK drlxzlr crnbMnR u. .. .,i i nf iv.ll nlnvers were iBiierliie the first rule of the ball i ltyer' union bv werklnj; after nil of the whittles hnd blown. They were " Saint their stuff In n haphazard nnd self-roneleus manner, like n pang of ! MWgry section hands waiting for the first nnd only call for the eats. "l It whs the thirteenth Inning of a ball game. Each side hnd one. meaning A Individual tallies. They had been nil snarled up In a deadlock for several V 1 ittnzM nnd it didn't leek a If niijbmlj neuld be able te pick the lock. Kxtra- , Inning ball games are like the sixth art of a four-act drama. The plot has been finished nnd the remainder means nothing. The thrill has departed and the only question uppermost In the minds of the ncters is. "W hen de we eat? But the pair of rnsh customers remained In the first row behind the pest box. They were hnving their money's north because they didn t have te pay A wftf tAX ' Twe inen had perished and Tee Johnstencrashed out a single. It didn't mean anything because Dec had done It before. Tilly Walker stepped up and some conversation was upset in that same Irst row behind the pest box. "Let's go home." said rrank Mackln. n a voice that denoted that he had some place te go. "This bird i all wet and will put en nis net tue amc as before. All he has te de Is nail an American flag en the end of his bat and be will get a big hand. He will wave the flag three times, nnd patriotic acts like that always go big." "Perhaps he might net de as you ay." replied Arthur Heeb mildly, be cause Arthur is an optimist and believes the a's have n great ball club. "He MIGHT accomplish that which he has been striving for. and If he does let it et be said that I departed tee seen te be numbered among the eye-witnesses." "Net a chance," retorted Mackln importantly. "Tilly has been trying te knock the ball out of the yard, and what has he done? Tanned the last three times. Walked once and was an easy out. The idea is all wrong. Walker or anybody else can't hit a homer because it isn't a geed day for homers. Wind la against them. And, worse thnn that, Fnber is against them. It can't be done. WF THE A' had tried for ingle today inttead of these long clouts , ' we would have wen. But they uant their hit) nnd new we have teen here thirteen innings. It ain't right, I tell you; it ain't right." Faber Deceives the A's for Ttvelvc Stanzas MB. MACKIX was perfectly correct. Fer twelve long and strenuous In nlnts the home folks hnd tried te connect with fence-hustlng swats and fllrved. Faber was tee geed and they had te hit into the teeth of n strong irtnd. Therefore, things did net leek rosy in the thirteenth when Walker wns op with one en and two out. Tilly was humiliated and deeply chagrined. There wns rancor in his heart and he did net wish Urban Faber any hnrd luck outside of falling oft n bridge or something like that. Three times straight he had been up. nnd three times straight he waved his bludgeon three times before going back te the dufeut. In ether words, the White Sex marvel had his animal, or words te that effect. Walker also remembered one day last year when he faced this same straw berry blend heaver. He struck out four straight times, nml Fnber almost laughed himself te death. He felt like doing the same thing yesterday. "He will take his usual three swings nnd then Ed Walsh will call the ?ame," said Mr. Mackln with the nlr of a guy who knows and is reluctantly etting a stranger in en the secret. "It's time te beat It. Let's go." In the meantime Tilly was up. First he wiped off his bat. Then he bunched ever the plate and fixed his cap. Fnber shot one of his very best aplttcrs ever nnd Walker took a mighty swipe. A foul resulted and one strike vaa registered en the scoreboard. The next was a hall. The third was n pretty strike nnd Tilly said nothing when Ed Walsh rnlsed his geed right arm. "Come en. Arthur." said Mnckln. "it's all ever. Four fans in n row far this bird. He couldn't hit that ball with n paddle. I knew the dope." . Tilly waited for the next one. Faber took aim and fired, but instead of a 'bafling spltball which had deceived our heavy hitter before, It wus in the groove. Walker swung. There was a mighty crash nnd the bnll sailed toward left ,,ield'stralght into the wind. Mestil ran back and stepped at the bleacher wall. He looked up and saw the ball sail into the crowd, never te return. It was a homer and Johnsten scored ahead of the hitter. The game was ever and the A's had wen by the score of 3 te 1. . THERE was much excitement in the first row behind the pent box, "Hoejray!" shouted Mackin, slapping Arthur Heeb en the back. "Hooray! Thatta boy, Tillie! Didn't I tell you he would win this ball garnet Can't keep a geed man down. Attn boy! Heme run! Hooray!" A's and White Sex in Real Deadlock rTTHUS ended the second game of the set wlththe Chicago White gex. It X tvaa a close-fitting contest, only twtt runs being squeezed across the plate In twelve and one-.half innings. These runs were equally distributed, the A's and Sex going fifty -fifty. Urban Faber, one of the best pitchers in either league, was going great. Ha was hitting en all twelve cylinders, as Jee Dempsey would say. The home town boys were biting the dust inning after inning, because Urban flings a wicked spltter, and a delivery of that sort will feel anybody even ur A's. 1 During the afternoon Faber had struck out only twelve batsmen, three of them being Tilly Walker. He had the situation in the hollow of his sun burned hand, and appeared te be geed enough te pitch the remainder of the week. Twice he slipped up, and thereby hangs this tale. In the sixth Dec Johnsten singled sharply ever second. Eddie Cellins made a great step, but did net threw the ball because he knew it would de no feed, That put a man en base and nobody out. Walker was next and Tilly bit en three wide ones. Cy Perkins threw his bat at the third strike and Sheely fielded the weapon faultlessly. That made two out and Blng Miller was up. New Blng means no mere te the Athletics than a gasoline tank te nn automobile. He walked into a fast one, socked it te right field and Johnsten i earns home smilingly with the first counter. That put the A's in the lead, but It was net for long. n the next frame Rtrunk singled, Mestil doubled nnd Strunk was run down en Sbeely's hit te Helmnch, Mestil reaching third. Cracker Schalk wal loped a long sacrifice fly te Walker. Mestil registered and laid the plot fur tba extra innings. THE teams kept en battling away, with the advantage slightly in favor of the Sex. In the thirteenth they get two en, but it meant nothing. They still were en when the third man was out. Introducing Lefty Heimach, the Here rpHB here of the battle Is Lefty Heimach. the pride and joy of Camden, JL N. J. Lefty breezed through beautifully, allowing but eight hits and acting like a seasoned veteran. Nobody expected te see him linger. He never has been able te go te hat In the ether games because he was taken out before being killed and the out fielders bad run themselves te death. Therefore, Heimach deserves much credit. He pitched a heady game and showed he had the proper stuff by net faltering when the going became rough. , True, the visitors hit the ball hard, but Lefty's teammates gave him per fect auppert. Twice Tilly Walker made sensational catches en foul halls near the left-field pavilion, and twice Jimmy Ojkes made steps that no ether third baseman could equal Jimmy's best performance came in the ninth, when Mestil hit one down the line at a mile n minute. Jimmy dived, came up with the hall and threw out his man at first. He made another thrilling play en the same man in the eleventh when he fielded a slew bounder and get his man. The Athletics played like a real ball dub. In the past they had a hahlt of folding up and taking the count when the game became close, but jesterdav they kept en battling nnd net once did any man lay down en the job. The Victory was well deserved and shows that Cennie Mack has a gang of fighters something he hasn't had since 101 -1. PrtMve -I "7- te sure kvews ew Yen -He's p KOPDY f UessBagjaNBtl 3Tb MAKE LOve Th'ReelBct- A&sMEEEEgrn- Kim 'TOwcess fliAfty J ,eeT sweiVitrli&trrE. JISgpSBR. y ) SjMjjyiCTUrtEi OP-HIM. i i ini SaSaSaaSafeji i .jMiiii ii aB9B9B9B9B9B9B9B9B9B9aSBB9B9B9B9HSBajBJScseH AlJTl Vbun. TUOUGHTS WECfc DISTRACTED FCOMTHE UNFOUDIWCr fLOTOWTHfe afiuvuitatiet i iuMTIL YOUe WHOLE EJEMINC-WAS 4BOVTTO OB AB90LUTL.Y k ROIWED AMD YOU COUID HOLP IU NO LOWCEft. tSEe'BY-WEVA'rERS 44E S CONNA GET MARRIED YEJ -AGAIN - AiUT THAT A. SttAME -3uT --ifes A Swell CATCH TOP SOME (JiRL. ' A'S ONLY FOUR AND A HALF GAMES AWAY teW-J- ' Si YrtU TURNED Round AmT GME V0CAU VENT Te YOUR. INNERMOST FEELIWffS HSBsVPCiiBHBEiS rr COLUMBIA OARSMEN MOVED Biggest Shake-Up of Year Made by Coach Rlee New Yerk, May 18. The biggest shake-up of the year waa made yester day in the Columbia crewe. Bredle. Swinburne, Cooper and Fer ris were the only men te keep their posltiena in the varsity beat. The ethers were placed in the Junier varsity shell. rv..i. niM rfiri net aten with de meting the vanity men, but also aent some of the Junier varsity te the third beat. Wlllett, who haa stroked the Junier beat for two years, was one or the men reduced. Owing te ine strong wma nuu .uyiivj water the crews went through a light but wet workout en the Harlem. MUST DEFEND TITLES Ring Champlene Ordered te Face Centendere Every 8lx Months New Yerk, May 18. Blng champions In future will be compelled te defend their titles against legitimate con tenders at least once every six months, under a ruling adopted at a meeting of the State Athletic Commission. Th rommlsslen also decided te recognize the challenge of Johnny Dun- iZl' wer,d's fcnth" SM5d0 ArS&ffte. 1 In lt reseli weight champion. , . I,," ntnn "mu.t .PPtJt aVSZS? the && '"nV. ndV chaTlenges ' forfeit hi title. ' " Merrill A. A. vs. Marshall E. Smith & Bre. A. A. 10th and Butler Streets, 6il5P.M., TODAY, Thursday r- . -Q Play Ball Shoes $4.50 te $13.50 Gloves $2.00 te $10.00 Bats 50c te $2.00 Sliding Pads $2.00 Sweat Shirts $1.75 Sweaters $8.00 Aik for etr catalepe of all iprisg tad leaaer laerb Marshall E. Smith & Bre. tfMr Afan'a Furnishing (Incorporated) AtUtU 724 Chestnut Street GeWs Copvrteht, 1913, by Public I.cdetr Company Sounds Like Old Times te Talk About First Place Walker's Hemer Makes Four Straight PHILS DROP CLOSE ONE Hew , j ear Runs Scored for Week in Three Big Leagues NATIONAL LEAGUE I S M T Wl T F ST1 St . Leuis...! 1110 1 1 I 31 Boslen ....! 5 7 3 15 Chicago . . . . I 41 0 3 6 13 Cincinnati. Jr.! fl- 1 112 Phillies .... 5 7 0 12 Pittsburgh..' fl 5 11 nroeklyn ... fli 2 0 8 New Yerk.. 6 1 2 8 does it sound after feven long ears of arldness te say that the Athletics are four and a half games back of fir-t place. Truth. Take a lek at the standings this morning, add and subtract and it will be fniiml that, nur favorites are In third placn. just that many games back of the , i-ii-tly cast of New Yerk Yankees. And i it Is May 17. If that Isn't n record te1 be proud' of for a team that was counted , n possible seventh-place habitue at thlsj stage of the race what Is? It took them thirteen innings te turn i the trick vestcrday against the 'White Sev, with the star slabMiian of the American League last jear uemg tue , hurling. Tillie Walker, veteran of many a hectic campaign, one of the really I ).n,fi ninverv of tlie great untlnniil i pastime, earned the honor". llllle smacked one of Fnber's offerings In the inliinLv vnimH Inte the lap of a four- hit customer, sending Johnsten. who had singled, ahead of him te the plat- "Vialn was falling softly, but the neie made bv the rabid '-'000 fan who brayed the threatening weather was netliln? soft. Tilhe hnd te fight his wa te the pentagon te register his slth home run of the season, which puts him in n tie for the honor of sheeting the pellet out of the field with Binge Miller. While mentioning Miller it might be well te say that the center nelder. who Is earning his salary these das. singled In the s!th with Johnsten en second as n result of a single and steal. He had two ether hits. That gave the Mnckmen the lend, which they held until the seventh, when the Sex man ngetl te push ever a tally. Heimaih's Great Hurling After the orgy of runs nnd ba'e hits f ,tie l.nsr week yesterday s iiuriinu bnttle v.ns n delight te the fan AMERICAN LEAGUE S M TW T F Sfl Athletics ... 113 9 3 I 125 Detroit .... 8 0 4 i ' 18 Nev Yerk.. 2 1 3 01 !12 St. Leuis... 3 0 3i 1 1!2 Bosten 2 5 41 '11 Cleveland .. 3 2 e 4 n Waslilnglen. 4f 3 21 '' l Chicago .... I n fll 1 I ' 1 7 SUBURBAN SCHOOLS T 0 HOLD BIG NET INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE S1MTVTFS1T1 Rochester ..I 51 7 7 111 I 130 Baltimore .. 110 11 1 128 Newark ...j 0 113 51 125 Syracuse .. 3 4 in 0! 23 Jersey City.1 91 5 1 4' 10 Buffalo I 3,11' 3 21 IB Terente . . . i 4 3 13 Reading . ..' 2 2' 5 1 1 10 Tri-County Competition Will Be Staged at Lewer Merien 300 ATHLETES ENTERED He FLEISHER FAT GIRLS DEFEAT REGULARS, 6-4 Jennie Mann, 275 Pounds, Clouts Circuit Smash In Opening Inning Mere than 1000 persons wcre present at the neon hour yesterday at the Flcisher grounds. Twenty-sixth and Reed streets, te see the Flelshcr regular girls' team play the Flcisher fat girls In a game of baseball. The fat girls wen by the scere of G te 4, although the regulars pave their opponents every chance for nn argument. The feature of the contest wns a home run by Miss Jennie Mann, the 275 pound outfielder of the fat girls' team. She delivered the new famous wallop in the first inning with two en. As she reached the plate after circling the bases in twenty-six seconds lint she was presented with baskets of cabbage and ether appropriate gifts. According te Miss Mildred Pigeon, manager of the Flelsher girls, it is the best feminine The championships of ClaM A and Class R for the suburbs will be decided this Saturday in the third annunl trl- county track and field meet at the Lewer Merlen field. Twenty-five schools with neatly .100 entrants will compete for the Class A nnd Class R championships of Mont gomery. Chester nnd Delnwnre Counties. The meet will be the largest In its his tory nnd many records will undoubtedly fall, as the competition is keener tnan ever before. In Class A the leading schools are Lnnsdalc. Cheltenham. Chester. Norris town nnd Lewer Merlen. Radner has practically no chance te win, but may upset the chances of ether schools by capturing places in some of the events. Lewer Merlen is the favorite te sin because It lias net sustained a defend in a dunl meet this year and finished second te Gcrmnntewn in the Chelten ham interschelnstic, defeating all the leading competitors in Class A. However the Ardmerltes will have a struggle te win nnd the result will be very close. In (.lass B, Swarthmore, Media, Upper Darby and Ablngten loom up as the ilvnls who will fight it out for honors. The excellent running of Reattv should put Media out in front. He wen the 100-yard dash against the Ilaverferd College freshmen team this week in the excellent tlme of 10 2-5 seconds, nnd the 220-yard dash In 23 seconds flnt. The C'Inss A relay should be one of the most exciting events of the after noon. T.nnsdnle has been forced in every relnv this season by Cheltenham, Lewer Merlen nnd Noiristewn, nnd te win some one will probably have te break the track record. VAN HEUSEN the MM Smarted COLLAtf .. , ...I. - aiinii4lnln Wlfl I AHna.Anl'.n . Wnll ,feaA.D ,1ia.. Itn.t. maeh, ei inmQcn, " os,.v,.,.... --! unn-cita-uu v ."-" .n--., uu.u Conre et tlie I niiiii, innnu .- rver nan, nnu inej uie unmiui ei rpi tolled for the ttnB games for this Saturday nnd Dece ration Day (two games). Ne objection will be made te games outside of the city. Address Miss Mildred Pigeon nt the' Flelsher plant or phone Oregon filOO. DEMPSEY HOME TOMORROW win Be Asked Wlllard te en Meet Wills Arrival WESTERN GOLF CLUBS TO PERMIT STEEL SHAFTS1 .Investigation Shows Ne Mechanical x Advantage te Players ! v " fklMjn. Mav 18. The Executive V. rUmmittee of the Western Gelf Aese- f.WaftlAn Yin nnnnitnCAn plained that Its approval concerned the shafts only ami net any spednl mat It- ing. The final tests were made Tuesday In the preuenee of the committee b Heb McDonald ami Allan Gew. local pre- feBsiunalh-, and Chick Kvann. Gew and McDonald both get better distance with weed-shafted clubs than with the steel .,..., , . Minimi ones, r,vuns average was a thnt Its in HI 'Pfwwu ww .... ,v. --- --- -- rxuu.cii ener., r.vuii!i uvvruge ft ,tlfauens ana tests eneweu iim. .-;. ,ard or two Df.ttf.r witn the new Htj v . Mail uu huh uuwuf " ...".-"- i-iue, uui ihn Hoeoen-snnrieu rnD enets fiV, arivantHA te ulavers. and that their I . .'... i-e nepmittpil iii nil teurna- l.!'.fvi M.V. hM hv 1ia nssnelatien. The v: .s lUltl LL'-Tj.&-J C..,A. f?Alf l..nnln,lnn l-AOAtltlt ,VII(W DTBim "" JIWHIU,..,. ............ t ---- tk, eliilm hut- it in mwlerstoed iv V ttkUt this decision will be reconsidered. ' ;1W commit te. In a statement, aiu ' -kjj,(M'.clak wbmltted (or tests bad !. fclMl W1MMM' ! HHTBL MHU U' m mmmm. wn. ' . r - w-tt- r t ,. . jf "' ? Y. ,VjlSalMiitaWSW, . vafivf i ; . . . . ,i., . vz..; c;fe.,v.. . ....i were made ,lth borrowed clubs. Phoenix Has Open Dates The rhenlx A A j. flrst-rlan !irn hn Pturdy, fny -'H, nnd Decoration Uy. May 30, epn nd would 11 h t book camei fur there datei with any flrat-claa home team l-niiaaeipnia, or vicimiy. uav liurKe, 1 North Twentv-eeventh attaat. Phena lamend 4TBS J. ) v t, if - v Jljsi baseball in Moorestown home team. , , , ,. ,u Tim left-hander, who leeks like the geed-, hulled ns beautiful a thirteen Innings as has been seen en hulue I ark since, IMdl 1'lank used te up-et the visitors. F.ight hits wcre made off the southpaw, nnd he scattered them s-, well that he was Fcldem in het water. Net inlv dlil Heimach step the hex. but he banged out a pair of hits out of the ten made off Red Taber. He walked but twi men. which is some thing of .i lecerd in thirteen rounds for a southpaw. Trti -limisand kiddles, the guests of .lelm Sl.ibe. were pleased nt the fourth strnlelii icter They whooped things up in great Mle nil through the game. Fiib-r didn't twirl such n bid game. The ten lilts were scattered until the thirteenth, nnd thirteen of the Mm'k rr, ff.ll .-in ri.e Mrlkc-eut route. .Tlnimv n,i.-r.t fnnneil four times, which is something of a record te be placed the Athletics' leg book The .left at dropped the hite Sex into the cellar, and ns Detroit wns idle after the iirst Inning the Mnck men meed up te the nferc-mcntlnned third place. Tough en Geerge Smith Ov.rgc Smith, mentioned several times in this column nf a hnrd-luck pitcher, added another peg te that rep nation jcstertlay. when he lest a tnu-li ..u-llng bout with I'ete Denehue, of tlie Reds, by a l-te-0 score. The lankv right-hander twirled a bentifiil gnme. allowing but eight hits, hnr hU teammates the ash ami theretiy iiangs tiie taie et ; . ,ld ' bp for twelve rounds with .J...n 'II.kaa MITE Illl .If L' m. WMr. 111.' J - . eriruv nun: .it.i- , " . .. -- ... total damase done te the Texan. Cy Willlnms getting a pair and Hutch Hen line the ether one. The enlv run of the game came In the second and Smith wns partly re sponsible. Harper doubled and went te third when Smith threw wild trying te catch him napping. Hargrave shot a sliei t tly back of second just beyond Pni-kinsen's teach and Harper scored. Tv Cobb's Tigers were prevented from 'continuing their winning stieak by old mnn weather after the fir'-t inning clown I in Washington. The Vanks, by batting 1 1'hle frcclv In the second, third and I fifth, scored n (1-tn-l verdict ever the Indians jeMeidny. Shawkey wns found for seen hits and four runs. An old-fashioned rally in the ninth by the lied Sex gave them the erdlct ener the Browns, -l te .I. Van Gilder was hurling brilliantly until the ninth. 1 when the Sex stepped en him for the quartet of runs. All told, the Bean enters had four hits during the game. In the National. Jenes eutnltched McQulllcn and the Cubs defeated the Braves, 0 te 3. The Cards banged out a victory ever the Dodgers by geed use BASEBALL Today, 3:30 P. M. f-UiUK PARK. 21ST AND I.KIUO.H AVE. ATlILFriCS mi. CHICAGO Itesened Sent (Itmbela' and Hpaldlnt'a BECAUSEithas adressy dignity no ether cellar can equal, men who scorned soft cellars are wearing the VAN VAN CRAFT The new? skirt jtH'I ' L m Itiiihe VAN HEUSEN Cellar attached THE cellar-attached shirt is mere in evidence this Spring than ever before. And new that the VAN CRAFT adds te the ease of the negligee thirt the amartneaa and the comfort of the VAN HEUSEN Cellar, men who never before were cellar-attached ehlrta find the VAN crapt irresistible. Price $3.00 $4.00 HEUSEN.Itstrimandstyl ish appearance is woven and tailored into it, net starched nor ironed into it Men who want ease and comfort before all else in sist that the VAN HEUSEN is the coolest, the easiest and the most comfort ablecollartheyeverwere. And they are attracted te it also because it is as easy te launder as a hand kerchief and out -wears half a dozen ordinary cellars Nine styles and heights in Quarter sizes from 13V2 te 20. Price fifty cents PHILLIPS-JONES CORPORATION, 13 N. 13TH ST., PHILADELPHIA """TrsSpSwirST """ WHWWIf'lMaBeWJMWiaWMiPWWW"WWW - Pffi&imer- New Yerk. May IS. Jack Demp sey. heavyweight champion of tlie ' world, homeward bound from Kurepe, will be afforded an opportunity te sign for n titular bout almost aH seen as , he steps off the steamship here tomor row. He will be nsked at onee te meet either Harry Wills or Jess Willan durine the month of July or Septem U.. T. innA Tinnincr.tr rlamnmi 'F.tv I "' I Uickard will 'ask the champion te name . nn opponent whom he would face either .July or ijBoer jiiy. If the tltlehelder is In a mood for negotiations and does net nsk exorbi tant figures for his services, it may be that arrangements enn be made for a championship bout hefore he leaves for his Pacific Const iieme. t If Demnsev elects te box Wills the bout will be held in or near Montreal ion July 1, which it Dominion Day lu Canada. A meeting with Williml would I irqulre mere time te arrange and would 1 net be staged until cm or nlwut Laber Dav in Jersey City, a .Montreal heut wing hut cignt nits ;,,, rebabfv t)fer fifteen rounds te1 VnWnirSir eels en. while a Jersey City con- J y hangs the tnle of ' .'..!.. u k .. c.i.t, mn.wii ni,k. ( out dot'lsien, te coiueriu wuii ine nnuci law. OFFERS TENNIS TROPHY Winner of Eastern Penna. Cham-i plenshlp Will Get Glmbel Cup r.ilia A. Olmbel. president of the' Phllment Country Club, has offered a large bllver loving cup. te lit- known ns the Ellis A. Olmbel trophy, te be awarded jearly te the winner of the Kastcrn Pennsylvania tennis chain- i nienshlns. which will be nlajed this year en the Philraent ceurtH May ,n .Tnnr, ft. fnri Viseher wen Uie event last year, and his name will be inscribed en the fun nnd nrescnted te him by .Mr. ilm- bcl at the dinner-dance te be held for contestants at ine ruiu ..' ". The cup Rees into competition each venr and anybody winnlnu the cup i i,rra times becomes the permanent owner. Mr. Glmbcl's interest In tennis of helr ba. Is of many years' Manning, ami ine tennis trophy should rival in popularity the Fridolyn Cup In golf, yhlch is also piescnteu Dy Jirt ". B7..dL. ea-.u . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers