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S PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, MAY 30, 19 United States Now Has But Three Men Left in French Hard Court Tennis Play Women’s Doubles Play Starts’ In D. C. Title Event Tomorrow TILDEN, HUNTER AND COEN REMAIN IN TITLE TOURNEY| Helen Wills, Already Safe in Quarter Finals, Alone | Left to Carry America’s Colors in Women’s Singles Match: By the Associated Press. PARIS, May 29.—Only 16 pla; last Saturday. The United States has bnt th yers, 8 men and 8 women, will be left tonight after quarter final day in the internatioanl hard- court tennis champicnships is over. of the huge fields of 83 men and 61 women who started play The 16 are the survivors ree hepes for the later round. Only two men can qualify for the last eight, as big Bill Tilden must eliminate his pupil, Wilbur (Jun ior) Coen to reach the semi-final. Tilden is not expected to have mcre than a stiff struggle with his goung opponent. Frank Hunter, urope, may have his work cut Tilden's partner in his invasion of out to dispose of Franz Matejka, | Austria’s first ranking player, but he is expected to negotiate this hurdle safely. Three French stars, Rene La- coste, Jean Borotra and Henri Cochet; Baron de Morpurgo of Italy, Hans Timmer of Holland, Bella ven Kehrling of Hungary and I. C. Gregory of England are the popular choices to fill the other six places in the quarter final bracket. Helen Wills already i quarter-finals of the womer virtue of yesterday's victory ov (Billie) Tap Scott of South Af ica, remains alone to carry the Ameri colors. The other three American afe in the singles by er Ruth nd n en- trics, Edith Cross, Marjorie Morrill and | Mrs” May Sutton Bundy, were elimi- nated before the third round. The choice for victory in the other matches of the women's singles goes to | Mrs. Bobbie Heine and Ethel Neave of | South Africa, Eileen Bennett and Mrs. | Michael Watson of England, Fraulein | Aussem and_Frau_Predleben of Ger- | many and Mrs. Rene Mathieu and | Helene Lafaurie of France. | ““The conditions for the 16 matches | today still are good. The skies remein | clear, and the courts are ‘n shape for | good tennis, though a bit hard and somewhat worn from a week of play. Beaver Dam Opens 6,827-Yard Course, Washington’s Longest BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. ASHINGTON'S longest golf course opened today. While members ‘of other golf and country clubs about the Capital were struggling with Old Man Par over shorter layodts, the golfers of the Beaver Dam Country Club were matching shots against a par of 73 over a course whose stretches of tree bordered and well bunkered falrways measures 6,827 vards. No, it | isn’t a bridge score, or a trick in income tax calculations. It is the length of a golf course. And what a course those same members found awaiting them at Beaver Dam today. Congressional with its 6,500 yards of length stretches out far enough for the members of the big club near Bethesda. Columbia has looked like 5 miles of misery on occasions, and Chevy Chase and Indian Spring are not beds of roses when the tee shots are not going out there like shells from a rifie. But think of the suffering that can come from 6,827 yards of length on any man’s golf course. And how it can be multiplied ‘when most of the distance lies through narrow fairways with tangled battle- ments of brush and pines to catch the wayward ball. g Until today Beaver Dam was just another golf course. It had its great spots, to be sure, and its length of a trifle more than 6,200 yards was long enough. But today, when 8. G. LoefTler and his workmen opened up an entirely new last nine stretching out to a dis- tance of 3,480 yards, Beaver Dam moved up to its true stature. We have not played the course, but a course with such length and such narrow fair- ‘ways and well trapped greens has am- ple difficulty to suit any man. Today Is the Day. For more than a year Loeffler has ‘been nursing this course along for the opening. Today is the day and some 150 golfers of the Landover Club were billed to match their shots against its cifficult par and hope they could come somewhere close to the mythical figure. | If any of them do they will be golfing | marvels ,even though they have the | advantage of playing Winter rules, for the new fairways are not yet as good as they will be next year and for a while those who play the layout may | “tee 'em up.” ‘The old first nine will be turned over to the beginners and the women of the club just as the Manor Club has done, ‘while the second nine of last year to- day became the first nine of the “big course” and the new nine became the last nine of the regular 18-hole layout. And, by the way, that first nine is no man’s cinch, for it stretches out to a distance of 3,347 yards. And every yard has its share of terror. Last year Loeffler promised Beaver Dam 27 holes of golf. He got Bill Flynn of Toomey & Flynn down from Philadelphia to go over the architect- ural and engineering featyres of the rolling terrain back in the woods which he proposed to construct into a new nine holes. Flynn lald it out and Loeffler built it. And it stands today an enduring monument to the genius of Flynn and the perseverance of Loeffler. ‘who blasted through woods and over ls to wrest from nature a golf course that appears to be a gem. ‘That new nine has on it three par 8 holes, two of that indeterminate dis- tance between 450 and 500 yards, which mean that the good golfer may have | a little pitch or perhaps a chip shot | for his third, while the last—and also the eighteenth—stretch out to a dis- tance of 556 yards and is just plain slug all the way. Incidentally the eighteenth fairway is the only one which has not come along in good shape. Loeffler planted | the fairway with grass seed several | times this Spring, but as luck would have it, each time the seed was sown along came a heavy rain and washed it down the hill into the bottom eountry. Figures for New Nine. Here is the distance and par of the new nine: No. 10, 449 yards, par 4: No. 11, 352 yards, par 4; No. 12, 418 yards, par 4; No. 13, 483 yards, par 5; No. 14, 156 yards, par 3; No. 15, 367 yards, par 4; No. 16, 481 yards, par 5; | No. 17, 218 yards, par 3, and No. 18, | 556 yards, par 5. | For the present the old ninth green 15 being used as the eighteenth green of the new course. It will not be used for that purpose permanently, however, for the new green is just being trapped and needs a little more time. The greenkeepers yesterday completed the job of putting in between 200 and 300 tons of sand in the traps on the new layout. Next Fall the old first nine will be reconstructed to bring it up to the standard of the other two nine holes, giving Beaver Dam 27 of the best golf holes to be found anywhere | about Washington. \ The outstanding short hole on a course crammed with fine holes is the fourteenth, where the tee shot must be played to & green shaped like a kidney bean, with yawning traps at the right and left and woods awaiting an overly strong tee shot. It is shaped somewhat like the fifth of the new layout, but appears to be & better hole. Ted Farr, who manages Beaver Dam, claims that nothing in the form of rub- ber tape has been used in measuring the course and that they are all true indexes of the distance which must be covered. They have been measured in the standard way—from middle of tee 10 middle of green. Which means that Beaver Dam may be stretched out to a maximum length of something more than 7,000 yards by lengthening the tees. Today the members are competing in the first of a series of events for the President’s Cup, played for annually contests are to follow throughout the g‘al‘r is authority for the statement that free guest tickets issued for the Beaver Dam Club during the Winter will no longer be honored at the club and that guests must be introduced by members, either personally or by letter. The initiation fee at Beaver Dam has been raised to $100 recently, to which is added a tax of $10. GIRL SPORT CHAMPION ADMITS HUBBY IS BOSS The boss of Beach Van Husen War- ren’s household is Beach Van Husen Warren of Chicago. He is the newly acquired husband of Helen Filkey, former American woman track champion and world record hold- er in the hurdles. One word from Mr. Warren and Mrs. Warren announced her retirement from athletics. ¢ “It is his wish that I do not compete again,” Helen smilingly explained, “so I'm quitting for good.” She is a Chicago girl and just 21 years old. Left Foot Lost Glenna a Title BY SOL METZGER. - NOTE THE LEFT HEEL 115 THE. "NUT CRACKER' SHE. ADVISES o Two years ago when Glenna Col- lett failed to come through in the United States womer’s champion- ship I asked a golf authority what her trouble had been, belleving her the best of our players up to that time. “Why, she gets her left foot all out of position at the top of her swing,” he replied, “and as a result can't get back into a firm position as_she hits.” But_as Glenna has been clouting tee shots frcm 230 to 240 yards rather regularly for the past year with remarkable accuracy in spite of this odd position of her left foot at the top, there cannot be much wrong with her theory. Glenna’s left at the top is almost in the position of & toe dancer's feet when doing her stuff. She claims it permits her to make a full pivot. How does she regain her balance? That’s the question. It's easy, according to this woman wizard. You simply slap the heel back into place as you start down, a la nut-cracker. “And then you have the braced left not only to hit against but to prevent any swaying of body or loss of balance. and won last by Luther Florink, the southpaw club champion, who is hard of hearing and hard to beat. Other golf events, .including putting and driving . out testing the Winged Foot course for the United States incident of the wind effect at Muir- fie my tee shot less than 2 feet from the cup. I had an 18 or a 20 inch putt for this occasion there was a following gale and the putt was slightly down hill. stopped 6 feet away. Hagen's two 758 under these conditions were both mir- EAR Sir: I think the record of 100.13 miles per hour, the record for the race on May 30. Also that a front- wheel drive car will win and that an have been victors. Ralph de Palma, who just entered twenty-second consecutive year of rac- ing and is the veteran of the coming concrete tracks here than any other driver in history. Billy Arnold, 25-year- | sity in 1922, defeating Minnesota, Chi- | cago, Iowa and other teams. EAR Sir: You have noted, no doubt, the fine sprinting done by George Hard on the Nerves. ‘ fi 71LD BILL MEHLHORN was open a day or two ago. Be- fore starting he“related one “At one of the short holes on the last day,” remarked Mehlhorn, “I laid a 2. You didn't dare put your putter down within a foot of the ball. On I just started the ball in motion. It slipped over the rim of the cup and acles. Nothing else.” All About the Big Race. 500-mile race established in 1925 by Peter de Paolo, will be broken in the oldtime driver will be victor. For the last three years unknown youngsters after two years of absence at Indian- apolis, is beginning at the age of 46 his contest. He has driven more miles in competition on 21;-mile brick and old entry from Chicago, played quarter- back on the University of Illinois var- STEVE HANNAGAN. Race Horse, Truck Horse, Simpson, of Ohio State, this Sprivg. IARVELOUS MEL. 20-/e Men Orr —By FEG MURRAY % AN 11 l-..........u\\\\\\\\ ’ / = /) //////// 7 AR-OLD QUTFIELDER OF THE GIANTS WHO MAY BE THE 1929 NATIONAL LEAGUE HOME RUN HING. It's hard to stop these Loulsiana boys. Red Cagle was a riot in foot ball last Fall, and now Melvin Ott of Gretna, La, is knocking the cover off the ball on the diamonds of the National League. Or, to be more truthful, he is knocking the ball far beyond National League diamonds, and, at this writing, has a nice running start in the home- run derby. Don't, however, take this National League home-run derby too seriously, for nearly 50 more home runs have been made in the older circuit than were recorded in the same league at Metropolitan Newspaper Service the same time last year, and than have been hit in the American League to date. But whether home runs come easy or hard, the fact that a 20-year-old kid is leading such famous swatters as Hornsby, Bottomley, Wilson, Her- man, Grantham and others is quite interesting. The National League four-base hit record for one season is 42, held by the “Rajah” himself. If Mel Ott can sock 10 in 30 games, he can hit more than 50 in 154 games, and not only bust Hornsby's record to smithereens, but become the only other man besides Ruth to clout half a hundred homers in one season. (Gehrig hit 47 in 1927) This child hero of the Giants, this precocious infant, who cost the club not a penny, was about the only member of the team whose bat- ting didn't fall off during the great slump of early May. Mel is al- lowed to bat against southpaws this year (the rival pitchers won't thank McGraw for that), and besides the dynamite that he packs in his bat he has shown about the best throw- ing arm in the league, next to “Chick” Hafey's. PIGEON RACE GOES TO SKYLINE BELLE Skyline Belle, a hen bird,"tted" #rd'} flown by Andrew J. Flaherty, won. the special 300-mile yearling race {iom Sal- isbury, N. C,, staged by the D. C. Racihg Pigeon Club.” Ernest Raulin‘s-Jem-Belle- was second and Charles Simpsen’s-East Wind was third. The winping bird gained the five-bird trophy. The Bethesda loft landed the single nomina- tion and Ernest Raulin took the loft prize. PegaT = Order of the finich showing the-aver- age speed in yards per minute made by the first return to each loft follows: ndrew J. Flaherty . Thest Raulin .. *Diplomas AT B MINNESOTA SCORES BIG TEN GOLF SWEEP By the Associated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, May 30.—The Uni- versity of Minnesota today held two big ten golf championships. Lester Bolstad, captain and coach of the Gopher squad, won the individual title in the 72-hole medal play com- pleted yesterday at_the Interlachen Country Club here. He had a total of 313, shooting a 155 for yesterday's 36 holes to add to his 158 of the opening day. John Burgelin of Michigan was runner-up with 318, or 5 strokes behind Bolstad. Minnesota won the team honors, hav- THE SPORTLIGHT y GRANTLAND RICE ing a total of 1,331 to Michigan’s 1,338. He has run the century in 9:05 and | several times in 9:06. Yet Simpson, one ! of our greatest sprinters, was not on the Olympic team last summer, when U. S.! needed its fastest men. The reason is the obviously unfair system of selection employed by the A. A. U. The system of regional, sectional and | national trials in picking Olympic ath- letes is just pure bunk. Men are worn out before the finals are held. Every one knew Simpson was fast last year. Yet he had to go_through all of the ! trials and in the finals at Cambridge ; was seriously injured and unable to run his last race. Why not pick per- formers upon their records and not after they have been worn out by run- ning, jumping and throwing here, there | and_everywhere? Our Olympic system | needs & lot of revision. H SUNSET SLIM. Star Pitching Feats. EAR Sir: Have you noticed the un- usually good pitching major league clubs have had this spring? George Uhle of the Tigers has won seven in & row; Karl Hubbell of the Giants pitched a no-hitter, and Rube Walberg of the Athletics pitched 19 consecutive scoreless innings. But the best tossing of the Spring has been done by Walter Miller, of the Cleveland Indians. In four consecutive games, Miller allowed a total of just three runs. Two of the games were shutouts and he had a run of 26 successive scoreless innings before the | St. Louis Browns nicked him for one run. Cleveland gave Miller little back- ing in his games; in three of them they made eight hits and two runs. Yet Miller won one of the games in which he was helped by two hits. He is a great lefthander, who pitches smartly all the time, and with an easy motion that will keep his arm fit for some yeass. F.I P, Jones’ Clubs, Stolen by Boys, Recovered by Garage Helper with the police today. N EW YORK, May 30 (#.—Bcbby Jones’ golf clubs were safe The clubs, which had been stolen from a parked auto- mobile Tuesday night, were turned over to the police last night by a garage mechanic, who had retrieved them from two boys and had been holding them for safekeeping without know- ing to whom they belonged. John Hope, employed at an East Sixty-seventh street %nrage, e said he saw two boys leave the garage with the clubs. B ieving they had stolen them from a car in the garage, he ran after them. The boys dropped the clubs and escaped. Hope placed the clubs in a safe place in the garage. Last night he read of the loss of Jones’ clubs and turned them over to the police. They were identified as belonging to Jones by Fred W. Trabold, from whose automobile they had been taken. Jones returned to Atlanta yesterday. He had expressed concern over loss of the clubs as they included his famous putter. “Calamity Jane,” and his favorite driver. STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE ROY LEWIS, manager of the new Harper Country Club, is disappointed today because the new 9-hole course of the club is not yet ready for play as he and the board of governors had hoped. He promises, however, that the course will be formally opened with a professional match either on June 10 or June 11. Meanwhile, construction work on the temporary clubhouse is rapidly going forward. Walter F. Hall, who used to be the instructor at Rock Creek Park, writes us from his new berth at the Annapolis Roads Golf and Country Club that an informal opening of the new course is to be held there today and that late in June the course will be formally opened. At that time an exhibition match, with four professionals playing in it, will be the feature. George Diffenbaugh of Indian Spring visited the Annapolis course last week and said the layout is one of the pret- tlest he ever has scen. “Some of the bunkers are as deep as the golf shop at Indian Spring is high,” Diffenbaugh said. “If you get in them you'll have to hit and pray.” Most of the pros who will go to Pittsburgh to play June 10 in the quali- fying rounds for the national open, plan | to leave Washington by train the night of June 7 in order to get in several practice rounds over the course of the Oakmont Club before the qualifying round. Those who will go to Oakmont are J. Monro Hunter of Indian Spring, Fred McLeod of Columbia, Bob Bar- nett of Chevy Chase, Alex Armour of Congressional and Arthur B. Thorn of Town and Country. Dave Thomson of Washington has joined the other local pros who will go to Richmond to play in the qualifying round at Hermitage. Others who will go include A. L. Houghton of Harper, Frank Hartig and R. Clifft McKimmie of Army, Navy and Marine Country Club, and Mel Shorey of East Potomac Park. If W. Carlton Evans had kept up the hot pace with which he started a round at Columbia yesterday, a new course record probably would have been set. He started the round, 3, 4, 2, 4, against par of 4, 4, 4,3, 5. Three birdies in the first five holes, and Fred McLeod con- gratulated himself he had stayed in the shop, instead e¢f purchasing those birdies. But Evans hooked a ball out of bounds at the sixth, and finished the nine with 36. He came back in the same figure for a card of 72. ‘With his customary facility for dis- covering the unusual, Chairman Fred By f_the Bannockburn golf com- TROPICAL' WORSTED SUITS $25 Open a charge account. Easy Terms 'S, 7th & F mittee has listed for this afternoon a blindfold driving competition, for men and women. “Bobby Jones, Walter Ha- gen, etc, tell us that a player in the groove may close his eyes and still hit the ball perfectly,” the announcement of the tourney says. “So why not & blindfold golf test. All players from Missouri should enter this event.” e araliniies TRACK AND FIELD STARS MUST HUSTLE FOR JOBS By the Associated Press. The college track and fleld stars, it seems, must do more work this season to hold their jobs. Stanford has been using her pole vault star, Ward Edmonds, in both the low and high hurdles. But Princeton, not to be outdone, is using Ben Hedges, Olympic high-jump place winner, in the broad jump and high hurdles as well. Hedges won in all three special- ties against Yale Saturday. WINDY CITY IS EQUIPPED WITH 200 PLAYGROUNDS ‘There are about 200 playgrounds in Chicago, all equippped and supervised during Winter and Summer. There are 62 athletic fields. Among other recreational facilities are 10 golf courses, 46 swimming pools, 60 indoor gymnasiums, exclusive of school gymnasiums, 46 community houses, 15 bathing houses, 15 bathin beaches and 162 base ball and foot blfi parks or breathing spaces. It is estimated that $8,000,000 is spent annually for play- and recreation. BASE BALL’S POPULARITY IN JAPAN EXCEEDS U. S. Base ball is the national sport of Japan and it is more universal than in the United States. Foot ball, tennis, hockey, rowing and running are also popular among the youths of the country, who are rapidly becoming proficient in all branches of athletics. STUDEBAKER R. McREYNOLDS & SON 14232527 L St. N.W. Decatur 686 NEW CARS USED CARS AERIANS TACKLE CUBANS INNET T Hennessey Opposes Morales and Van Ryn Faces Voll- | mer at Detroit. P championships in progress on the Sixteenth Street Reservoir Courts will get under way to- morrow. Today competition was to be continued in the men's singles, men's | doubles and women’s singles and was to start in the mixed doubles. With fa- vorites scheduled to show their wares plenty of fine battling was expected. Among the winners play were Deane Judd, former Ohio State player, who took Allan Staubley of George Washington University to camp after a spirited struggle; John Ladd, who trounced Freddy Haas in straight sets, 9—7, 6—1, in something of an upset. Maurice O'Neil who downed | ¢ Doyle, 6—2, 6—4; Charest, who took the measure of Edge, 6—1, 4—6, 8—6, and shore who defeated Silva, 6—4, 6—4. Tom Mangan and Bob Considine, reached the fourth round of the men’s doubles, defeating Deck and Richard- son, 6—0, 6—1. Phoebe Moorhead scored over Mary Ryan, 6—2, 6—3, in the lone women’s singles match. The winner gained the fourth round. Today's schedule and yesterday's re- suits: TODAY'S SCHEDULI Men's singles—10 a.m., Hills vs. Yeomans LAY in the women's doubles in | (fourth in yesterday's | Fifth round matches, 2 round) udd_vs. Ladd: 3 p.n.. Mangan vs. Judd the City of Washington tennis | i or" niiis-Yeomans match; ONell vs. Mitchell; Shore vs. Charest Men’s doubles. third round—10 a.m., Judd p.m., Considine vs. Trigg ar Vomen's _Singl pm., Frances Krucoff vs. Dorothy Kingsbury: Josephine Dunham vs. Mrs. Ruth Martinez: Phoebe Moorhead vs. Mrs. Charles E. Merry; Duff Guilfond vs. Corinne Frazier. Mixed doubles (revised scheduie), first round—11 kins and Baetzner vs. King and partner: Smith and Smith vs: Shelling_and Deck: 3 pm. Judd and Judd vs. Rowan and Rowan: 5 p.m., Wells and Considine vs. Wymore and Hubbard; Frazier and Hills vs. Wilhelmsen and Ober. Second pm.. Shepard and Shepard ve. Sinclair and Howenstein eidel: 3 p.m., Meyers and d Goldsmith: 4 p.m., Me- Kelvy and Hodskin vs. Dunham and Wil ton: Martinez and Martinez vs. Moorhead fourth round—3 S RESULTS. fourth round—O'Neil de- 2. 6—4: Judd defeated A 6—3; Ladd deated Haas, "7, 6--1; Shore defeated Siiva, 6—4, 6—4; Charest defeated Edge, 6—1. 46, & Men's_doubles. . 6—1: Trigg and Gold: Kaulmann and Hopfenmaier, 6—1. 6—1: venstein defeated Byrne and Women's _ singles, _third _round—Phoebe Moorhead defeated Mary Ryan, 6-2. 6—3 SHARKEY LOSES MONEY BY GARDEN CONTRACT| BY TOMMY LOUGHRAN, Light Heavyweight Chamvion of the World. |ENGLISH GIRL SPENDING $100,000 ON SPEEDBOAT Betty Carstairs, the English speed | boat driver, is spending $100,000 on a new craft which is being bullt under & I see that Jack Sharkey is be- moaning his fate because he signed up with the Madison Square Garden Corporation, and cannot fight for any one else until that contract ceases next September. At the time he signed Sharkey thought it excel- lent business. He got $100,000 for meeting Stribling in Miami, and is to get $100,000 for an opponent, so far unnamed, in September. Meantime he has nothing to do and has plenty of s. They tell me $100,000 has been offered him to meet me in the Sesqui Stadium in Philadelphia, and the same amount veil of secrecy at Cowes, in which she will compete in the Harmsworth Inter- national Trophy race at Detroit during the last week of August and the first week in September. The hull is 39 feet long with 9-foot beam, and is built of sheets of mahog- any sewn with wire, SHE COPIES LENGLEN. Mile. Leila Claude-Anet, 17-year-old winner of the junior French tennis championships_and latest sensation on STRAWS, LEG- HORNS, PANAMAS, MADE NEW AGAIN TR ] Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th St. 802 14th N.W. — A series of soccer games will be played in_ Worcestershire, England, next Fall| between picked teams of the Worcester | County_Sportsmanship Brotherhood of | Massachusetts and the Worcestershire | Sports Fellowship of England. | BY PAUL R. MICKELSON, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. ETROIT, May 30.—A youth- | ful, determined grQup of Cuban net aces today | blocked the straight march | of the United States on the long trail that leads to one of the most cherished prizes of amateur tennis, the Davis Cup. On the hard courts of the Detroit Tennis Club they were ready to match tennis artistry against Uncle Sam's forces over the five-match route in three days in the finals of the Ameri- can zone play. The victors will meet the winners of the European inter- zone finals for the right to challenge France, present holders of the trophy. Ricardo Morales, 22-year-old captain of the Cuban team, had as his rival Johnny Hennessey of Indianapolis in the first of the singles matches, while Gustavo Volimer, who at 20, has de- veloped into one of the most sparkling sensations of the tennis world, was to eneet Johnny Van Ryn of East Orange, N. J., ip the other match today. Fol- lowing ese matches, one doubles will be played tomorrow and two more singles matches will be decided Satur- day. The winner of three out of five matches will be the American repre- sentative abroad. Although the United States is a heavy favorite over the Cubans, Fritz-Eugene Dixon, non-playing captain, took no chances of an upset. He chose his two strongest players, Van Ryn and Hen- nessey, for the opening matches. In addition, he summoned George Lott, | third ranking player of the United ! States, to be prepared for duty in either | a singles or doubles match. | Capt. Dixon has not revealed his | | P line-up for the doubles match tomorrow, | to box me for Paddy Harmon in | French feminine courts, has studied pending outcome of today's tests. If Chicago. and copled the great Suzanne Lenglen the Cubans threaten, he undoubtedly Paddy is also willing to give him a | ever since she has been able to hold a will pair Lott and Hennessey in the | substantial sum to take on Otto Von | Iacket. doubles and then use Van Ryn and, Porat. Boston wants to put on a = Hennessey or Hennessey and Lott for| fourth edition of a Sharkey-Maloney the last two singles. | fight, and they say it would draw VI | $400,000 up there. "Also Detroit has asked for a_Sharkey-Risko bout. Jack could keep himself busy and make more than a quarter of 2 mil- lion dollars before next September, but that contract keeps him from doing it. 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