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North VVesichester Times, tvii. kisco, N. Y., Dec. 26, IvoB AIR-BORNE are Sean Sgrulletta ing the Dec. 16 Fox Lane — St. on the Fox Lane team went to (25) of Fox Lane and an unidenti- Mary's meeting on the Foxes George Clark who dunked 18 points fled St. Mary's H.S. hooper as court. Sgrulletta netted three field rMnh viA mB > ~i..v. i«*t AQ Sgrulletta drives in for basket dur- goals for the night but top honors Coach Clyde Eldens club lost 48 \ • 42 after having opened the season . * J * ion Dec. 5 with a 61-34 romp at Amuso 1 earn Alone At 1 op 1 Crotor - K;r '' h \°\ Photo - Amuso Contractors were alone at the head of Mount Kisco Legion} Three-Man League tenpin stand Ings after shaking loose from first place tie on Dec. 17, the last] night the loop will bowl this year. The contractors hit 501 and 138! weekly high scores while blank ing Town Hardware 3-0 and mov-| ing one length ahead of former coleading Rossi Brothers Inc. They slipped into second place despite a 2-1 win over Fox & Sutherland. Ed. Ford of Fox & Sutherland was credited with high game, 202, and John Cullam of Amuso Con tractors racked the best series, 546. MOUNT KISCO SALES SERVICE CHAIN SAWS — SNOW PLOWS 51 LEXINGTON AVE. TEL. MO 6-9660 We Call for and Deliver Open Daily 8 a .m. 'til 5 p .m. LOUIS ARENA — ICE SKATES SHARPENED — High Halters Create 2 New Season Highs The Bedford Hills Men's Bowl ing League got a pair of season highs on Dec. 18 as that 20-team loop wound up the 1958 portion of its schedule. High - Hatters created both records while gett ing a 2-2 standoff with third place New Bedford Market. The feats failed to move them out of sixth place but it did edge them a point nearer the leaders. It was a touch-and-go affair as the year ended; Permanent Pave ments moved into a first place tie with Balony Slicers by beating them 3-1 and New Bedford Marget is only a point off the pace. The new team highs, 1062 and 2989, topped the old marks by 35 and 117 pins respectively. Individual highs for the final week of 1958 combat were Gil Eckert's 240 and Jim McMabus' 612. Bedford Hills leaguers resume action on Jan. 8. 4 TAYLORS The new big league rosters con tain the name Taylor four times. There are Tony and Sam Taylor of the Chicago Cubs, Bob Taylor of Milwaukee and Harry Taylor of Kansas City. 3 ANDERSONS The 1959 major league rosters list three Andersons—Bob An- flderson with the Chicago Cubs, George Anderson with Los Angeles and Harry Anderson with Phila delphia. WE WISH YOU A JOLLY FUN - FILLED HOLIDAY! As you look back on the year past — and forward to an even better year . . . as you join with family and friends in Christmas celebrations ... we hope you will find the happiness and joy you so de- ; serve. We take this opportunity to wish you well... to thank you for your loyal patronage. We hope to serve you even better in the future. ISWIL To Play '59 All Star Game At Fox Lane, Feb. 28 Fox Lane H.S. gymnasium will be the scene of the annual North ern Westchester Interscholastic League all-star basketball game at the close of the 1958-59 season on Feb. 28. The post-season feature has long been played at Horace Greeley High because that school had the best facilities in NWIL. New schools at Fox Lane, Bedford, and John Jay, Cross River now offer equally satisfactory facilities and in the future the all-star test will New Castla tribune, Chappaqua, N. % December''ffiflfflfa Fox Lane H.S. To Greet '59 With 3 Games With the old year behind them, Fox Lane H. S. athletes will greet 19£9 in auspicious fashion on Jan-j 6 when they begin Nothern West chester Interscholastic League campaigning with a triple - header against arch-rival John Jay. The varsity attraction will be watched closely by other league coaches since Jays or Foxes may be the team to beat this season for the NWIL championship. The junior varsity and varsity games are booked for the Fox Lane court with the jayvees get- ring, the opening day matinee un derway at 3:45 p. m. While the .iunior varsitv and var sity are making thedr 1959 debuts at home, Fox Lane's Junior H. S. hoopers will appear in another league ccntest on John Jay's Crass' River School court. That game be gins at 3:30 p. m. as will all other contests played by eight and ninth graders- Fox Lane wrestlers will get the school away to its second season in that sport on Jan. 9 when Coach Arnie Berg takes his mat- men to Croton. John Jay athletes follow their Jan. 6 bookings with a non-league basketball contest at Hendrick Hudson in Buchanan on Jan. 9 and a league wrestling match against Lakeland at Cross River the same day. 0^ CROSS ROADS RECREATION AT THE CROSS ROADS MOunt Klseo 6-7771 B.C. Cagers To Compete At Foul Line Two foul-shooting contests and a basketball tournament will mark the end of the old year and the arrival of 1959 at Mount Kisco Bov's Club, athletic director Nor man Gerber has announced. The cage tournament, set for Dec. 29, 30 and 31 at B.C. gym nasium, is open to boys in the junior (10-11-12 year age group) After it ends there will be a foul shooting contest for juniors on Jan 2. The next day, Boy's Club intermediates (age 13 through 16) will have an opportunity to de monstrate their foi\l shooting ability. The club's winter cage program will continue along with the special activities, Gerber notes. In the junior hoop loop, Crusaders are out dn front with a 4-1 mark, followed by Bulldogs, 4-2 Black Knights 3-3 Vanguards and Ram rods 2-4 and Spartans, 2-5. Vince Zicolella of Bulldogs is the top junior point maker with 140. Team mates Brian Irvine and Paul Thompson of Crusaders have 95 and 90 respectively and Jeff Lomas of Black Knights if fourth with 76. Neil Dietrich of unbeaten Nats and Mert Gatto of winless Hawks share the BC. Intermediate Lea gue scoring lead with 11 points each. Nats won their first six starts to gain a three-game lead on Pistons and Eagles. Tied for second with 3-3. Hawks couldn't find the winning column despite Gattos scoring efforts but four of their six losses were by margins of less than three points. Boy's Club activities aren't re stricted to basketball. Every Tues day model airplane builders gather for instruction from 7:30-9 p.m. and there ai\e photographic classes underway the same hours on Wednesday. John Jay's Rally Nips Gaels, 44-42 CROSS RIVER— Baskets by Richie Duffy and Bob Mueller in the closing seconds gave John Jay a thrilling 44-42 basketball win over St. Mary's of Katonah here Friday. Both teams are 2-1 on the season. With a minute to go, John Jay was in front, 39-38. Pete Vreeland tapped in a rebound to send St Mary's in front, before Mueller and Duffy retaliated Bob scored on © lip-in, Art Covey sank a free throw and Richie clinched in on a lay-uo after an intercepting pass. Coach Bob Boissy's winners built up an early 10-point lead in the second quarter, only to have,[Bj>yer, tho Gaels cut it to five, at inter mission Once again in the third quarter the Jays built it up, only to have the visitors fight back. The game featured real team--play by both sides, with the scoring well-bal anced and no one individual out standing. Fred Free, the 6-5 center for John Jay, dominated both back- boar Jc. # while his teammates man aged to contain the usually high- scoring Vreeland. Former John Jay player Jack Brocks goc back at his former mates with a 10-point scoring ef fort and a good steady floor game. Harold Wright also played good ball for the losers. John Jav won the JV game, 19-17. The boxscore: be moved from one court to anoth er each season. The league unbalanced for the first time in five years as a re sult of Lakeland's admission from the Upper Westchester - Putnam loop, begins campaigning on Jan. 6, 1959, a day after schools re open following the holiday recess curtain raisers are booked at Fox Lane, Yorktown and Horace Gree ley. Lakeland, tied for second place in Westput standings last season, draws an opening night bye in its first NWIL booking. The Montrose cagers appear at Somers on Jan. 9 as the loop wraps up first week competition. Openers on Jan. 6 will be mat inees with jayvee games going on at 3:45 P.M With one exception, all mid-week bookings are mati nees: the exception is Feb. 11 when the schedule switches from Tuesday to Wednesday. All Fri day games start at 7 P.M. Fox Lane goes through the en tire first round without getting a bye. The race will hit the turn on Feb 3 and finishes on Feb. 27. Here are NWIL's first week book ings: Jan. 6 (3:45 P.M.) — John Jay at Fox Lane; Briarcliff at Korktown; Somers at Chappaqua; Lakeland, bye. Jan. 9 (7 P.M.)— Fox Lane at Briarcliff; Lakeland at Somers; Greeley at Yorktown; John Jay, bye. XRoadWoman Leaguer Hits 234 Singleton Polly Carpenter established a season high by a convincing 21 pin margin when she fired a 234 siz zler in Cross Roads Women's Bowling League competition on Dec. 16 at Cross Roads Recrea tion. In addition to cracking the old mark wide open. Mrs. Carpenter's score bettered the league's 1957- 58 high by nine pins and was only one pin shy of the best score cred ited any upcounty woman leaguer this season. Rose Malsbury shared the spotlight with weekly high ser ies of 526 on games of 147, 186, 193. Team records were jolted but remained intact. Corsi construction was 16 pins off the pace with 671 and Marinellis were 55 pins away from season high match score with 1900. Thelma Hairstylist teams con tinued to dominate the race when they bowled to a 2-2 draw and re mained on top of the standings; third place Marinellis were only a point from the leaders after de feating Briccettis 3-1. Katonah Women Marion \Midge\ Pitman bowled high game in the Katonah distaff circuit on Dec. 17 when she sub stituted for Mary Vockins of 19th Hole. Since Mrs. Pitman isn't a \regular\, her 210 score wasn't recognized officially as weekly high and that honor was credited Peg Ruane with 201. Pat Hossack had the best string, 507, on games of 185,177, 145. Last week's match es closed out 1958 tenpinning for the Katonah league and 19th Hole will take a four point lead into the New Year. They had a point trimmed from their advantage when held to a 2-2 tie by fourth ranked Potters while runner up Honebon was taking three points from Madcaps. O'Kane Rolls Weekly High On Own Lanes Three Andy's Classic tenpinners bettered the 600 mark in matches bowled on Dec. 19 at Cross Roads Recreation and alley proprietor Bernie O'Kane led the parade with a dazzling 627 as his eighth rank ed Cross Roads team took a three pointer from Kisco Florists. O'Kane, a 160 average kegler, fashioned games of 192, 205 and 230 into the week's biggest string but yielded single game honors to Bob Rosasco who was 15 pins away from season high with 243 while Funiture Exchange was winning 3-1 from Marty Motors. He rack ed 614 for the match after flank ing the weekly high with 183 and 188. Harry Saglibene of Vitales also joined the Big Three with 208, 207, 192 for 607. Vitales were undisputed leaders again after blanking Lakeland 4-0; Katonah Diner, a co-leader 1he week previous, was beaten 3-1 by Cas Motors and dropped to sec ond place. George Gansen of the pacemak- ing team had high average of 184 after hitting games of 176, 182, 198 for 546. 12 ROOKIES The world champion Yankees have 12 rookies on their 1959 ros ter, plus bonus first baseman Frank Leja who was on the roster two years but played little. The rookies are John Blanchard, Cletis Fritz Brickell, Jim Bron- stsa v Jim Coates, Ed Dick, John Gabler, John Jaciuk, John James John Reed Dick Sanders and Rudy Serrett. Erases Early Deficit to Take 1st WBL Tilt Two of the brand new entries in the Westchester Basketball League tangled here Sunday night, with ing their first WBL win at the Moun 1- Kisco's Legionnaires captur ing their first WBL win at the expense of Peekskill's Seven Dwarfs Mount Kisco finished strong to make it 62-52. It was the second game for the winners, who had dropped their opene r to Armonk. Playing their first league game, the Dwarfs, picking and driving out of a methodic weave, hung up 10 strMght points before Kisco could break the scoring ice. Four and a half minutes into the ball game Neil Diterichs hit on a driving layup for the Le- gon. Then Jim Harkins began set ting up plays ai/d sinking lone one- handev* for Kisco. It was Peeks- kill just five at the end of the first quarter. A tight man-to-man defense limi ted the Dwarfs to a mere three points in the second quarter, while the Legion bombed the bucket for 15 more. It was Kisco all the way from then on. Harkins was high man for the ball game with 17 points. Diterichs had 14. Tony Franich and Ron Stein had 13 apiece for the losers. Ex-Ford- ham performer Charlie McCor- Mick tabbed 12. The boxscore: Greeley TripsBreWster For 2nd Win Horace Greeley ran up an early lead and then coasted to an easy 62-50 victory over Brewster Friday night in a non-league basketball game. The first five for Coach Carl Hall played only the first quarter and a little in the fourth, as the re serves went most of the way. Bob Benedict was the high scor er for the winners with 23 points. Steve Walsh and Ken Nye had 15 apiece. Greeley now sports a record of two wins and no losses. The Qua kers pla> at Rye on Tuesday aft- ANOTHER SEASON BEGINS in Chappaqua basketball as the center jump starts the Greeley- Tuckahoe game on Tuesday of last week. The Quakers, coming from behind in the second half, nipped the visitors in the clos ing seconds 47-44. The Greeley five chalked up its second win on Friday against Brewster 62-50. The Quakers will play at Rye this afternoon in another non- league contest. CHAMPION KONO Tommy Kono has broken world records in four different weight divisions and'fhas won world titles .in five divisions,;. ernoon in another non-league con test First Northern Westchester action will be on Jan. 6 against Somers. MT. KISCO Yozzo Harkins Appedu Anderson Johnson Diterichs Sterling Rookwood G 0 8 2 5 1 6 1 2 F P 3 3 1 17 0 4 0 10 O 2 2 14 4 6 2 6 PEEKSKILL Lemak Frontch Jacbos • McCormick Gallagher Stein Pimlenta G F P 3 2 8 6 1 13 10 2 4 4 12 113 6 1 13 Oil 23 12 62 Score By Periods Mount Kisco Peeksklll — 21 10 52 _ 15 30 45 62 — 20 23 37 52 Simmons Has 243 And 605 Al Simmons of 12th place Adams Motors missed season high by four pins when he wasted 243 last week while the motormen were losing 3-1 to last place Independ ents in a Cross Roads Five-Man League tenpin match here. Sim mons also had high series for the week, 605, and set the pace as motormen put in high game of 995. Camillis snatched first place them 3-1 and the new leaders went thera 31 and the new leaders went intu the next-to-last week of 1958 tenpinning with a half-point lead; two former pacers, Auto Parts and Gorhams, shared second place. Gorhams yielded undisputed pos session of that spot when tied 2-2 by seventh place Briccettis. ST.MABY'S Zlc'olella Wright Vreeland Brocks Harrison G F P 2 2 6 4 4 12 3 2 8 4 2 10 2 2 6 18 12 42 JOHN JAY Repp Mueller Free Oovey Duffy Hilton G F P 0 2 2 5 1 11 8 3 9 3 2 8 6 0 12 10 2 316 8 44 •1 DAYS ROgers 9-5050 SEASONS May this joyous Christmas season bring you all the gifts of Happiness,. Peace and Friendship,, NITES ROgers 9-5053 BURKE Fuel and Heating Co. COMMERCE STREET HAWTHORNE, N. Y. Cheerful Wolidati CDind if we pop tip with a IMetide wish for everybody? (Day your Christmas be a joyous one, remem bered for years to come. V ALFRED KENSING HOWARD KENSING and STAFF KENSING & KENSING Inc. 7 Depot Plaza MOunt Kisco 6-4909