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EDITORS HARVARD HERALD: The Tennis Association is a most mysterious body; its birth and growth were always surrounded with a certain air of secrecy, and, finally, after every one has forgotten that it was still in existence, with a crow of delight it proclaims an established constitution, to be immediately hushed up lest outsiders should hear of such shameful doings. Numbers of players, not tournament men, would be glad to join the society if they knew something more certain about it, but while they feel that no redistribution of courts is probable this season, although the association is said to have received full control of the grounds on Jarvis and Holmes, the investment does not seem a profitable one. Would it not be wise for some one of authority to let us know what the committee on the constitution has brought forth after months of labor? If the whole matter is understood by those interested, next fall we shall experience no such indiscriminate scrambling for courts as occur annually. Some persons are really curious to know if the Tennis Association will ever relapse into action, and among these is, yours truly,

X.

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