Monday, Sep. 15, 1930

Who Won

P: Gallant Fox, with Earl Sande up: the Lawrence Realization Stake at Belmont by a nose from Questionnaire. His earnings, now greatest of any U. S. horse in history, total $317,865.

P: Billy Arnold, Chicago speed driver: the 200-mi. classic at Altoona in a Hartz-Miller Special, beating Deacon Litz in a Duesenberg after a wild duel full of skids, blowouts, breaks on the turns.

P: Sarah Palfrey of Brookline: the girl's national lawn tennis championship for the third year in a row, beating Helen Marlowe 10-8, 5-7, 6-1.

P: Tommy Freeman, Cleveland welterweight: the world's championship of his class on the decision of a hometown referee in a 15-round bout with flashy black Jack Thompson of Oakland, Calif, who had him on the floor in the second round, made him reel in the seventh, and kept on even terms with him all through.

P: Berkeley Bell, 22-year-old Texas tennis star, by defeating debonair, beret-wearing Jean Borotra, only French entrant: in the first round of the national singles championship at Forest Hills.

P: The U. S. six-metre yacht team: a series of match races with the English team in Long Island Sound off Oyster Bay, 4 to 0.

P: The New York Giants: a doubleheader with Boston, 12 to 1 and 7 to 2, thereby crowding St. Louis for second place in the pennant race. Two days earlier John J. McGraw, famed manager who has bossed the Giants for 27 years, signed a contract ($50,000) for five years more, dispelling rumors that he was about to go with some American League club.

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