Monday, Apr. 14, 1930

Who Won

P: Early Maxwell, star of Clarence ("Piggly Wiggly") Saunders' Memphis Tigers: The basketball free-throw championship of the world, in Memphis, for the third time, with a final score of 98 out of a 100, after a tournament that had lasted four months.

P: St. John's College of Annapolis, U. S. lacrosse champions: A game with the Oxford-Cambridge team, starting its U. S. tour; in Washington, D. C., 7-2.

P: Sarah Palfrey, best of a family of famed tennis-playing sisters, winner of seven girls' national indoor tennis titles: The indoor singles championship, in Boston, putting out her little sister, Joanna, 6-0, 6-1 in the finals, playing the first set in 13 minutes without netting a single shot.

P: Sarah and Joanna Palfrey: The girls' national indoor doubles championship, beating the husky Boehm twins, Hilda and Helen, of Maiden, Mass., 6-1, 6-0.

P: Glenna Collett, women's national golf champion: The North & South championship at Pinehurst, winning 1 up in the finals from Edith Quier, handsome golfer of Reading, Pa., after Miss Quier had unexpectedly put out Virginia Van Wie and Helen Hicks.

P: Strangler Ed Lewis, onetime heavyweight wrestling champion of the world: A bout in Madison Square Garden with Matin Plestina, Chicago muscler, by pushing him in the face with fingers outspread until Plestina no longer objected to being flopped over.

P: John Kristopek, middleaged, $25-a-week worker in a raybestos factory at Passaic, N. J., who had been buying tickets in lotteries, raffles, baseball pools all his life, and Angelina and Sophie Jobe, waitresses in the Hollywood Coffee Shop on Second Avenue, Manhattan: $23,130 and $12,000 respectively in the Grand National sweepstakes.

P: The U. S. six-metre sloop team: The international races off Hamilton, Bermuda, when Sea Venture, a Bermuda sloop, fouled a mark.

P: Tom Blankenburg, Hollywood athletic club swimmer: The national 220-yard A. A. U. breaststroke championship in Chicago. While the crowd cheered Blankenburg, Johnny Rea, New York athletic club swimmer, beaten in the race, sank with cramps in the middle of the pool, came up, cried for help unheard, sank again. A spectator in dinner clothes, Lawrence Barr, jumped into the water, pulled him out.

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