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North Westchester Times, Mf. Kiseo, N. Y., Jan. 29, 1959 ^Hunting by C. it Daunt The end of January finds us with plenty of sound thick ice which assures ice fisherman at least a safe excursion out on all local lakes and ponds as well as in numerable upstate areas. We noticed plenty of activity on Peach Lake last week end as well as Glenida. Glenida must have im proved lately to ottract that many fishermen. Peach Lake almost al ways has its share of fishermen come what may. Wampus Pond had its usual | good-sized complement and there was considerable action, although | the fish taken were mostly small. Almost all areas had some activ- i iry, however, and the weather was exceptionally pleasant. Rabbit hunters had some real I action also. This is a welcome im-j [New Castle Tribune, Chappaqua, N. Y., January 29, -1959 f 5 Gaels Top Purdys, Meet Co-Leading Brewster Jan. 30 HAL WRIGHT Foxes Notch 5th Straight Mat Triumph St. Mary's and Brewster H. S. basketball teams, undefeated in Putnam-Westchester League com bat, will collide at Brewster on Jan. 30 in a loop fixture that will determine undisputed leadership and, possibly, the outcome of the airtight Westput struggle. Both teams, unbeaten in league play, share top billing though Brewster had an edge in victories, having scored four to Gaels' three. The latter-have played one less game, the result of postponement of a Jan. 16 booking with Carmel. The Jan. 30 feature marks the end of first round play but before Gaels go into the stretch run on Feb. 6 at Mahopac, they'll keep a non-league Feb. 3 date with Ardsley at Katonah. Brewster stretched its Westput win streak to four games by beating Carmel 72-65. Coach Charles Cundari's Saints kept their streak intact too with a 67-44 romp ov§r Purdys at Katonah on Jan. 23. The tri umph not only, protected 'Gaels' current string of successes but also kept alive a series of home court wins dating back to the 1956-57 season opens, St. Mary's will be using new, larger and more modern basketball facilities in a new school now under con struction. Gaels were boss all the way in notching their third loop win. I Fox Lane Defeats Lakeland Twice By 10 Point Margins half in each bracket. Inactive on BASKETBALL _players who were making headlines for them selves and their teams more than 20 years ago in the upcoun- ty area will don uniforms again when they return to the court at 4 p.m. on Feb. 1 at Mount Kis eo Boy's Club for an American Legion benefit double header; World War Two broke up most of the teams as their players en tered the Armed Forces. Some never returned. Others were dis abled in battle. The benefit games have been arranged to raise money for veterans who did come back but are hospital ized. These remnants of once- famous Worden's All Stars of Mount Kisco, will be seen in ac tion again at the Feb. i event. They are, Front Row, left to John Jay Cagers Trip Lakeland '5' LAKE MOHEGAN— Trailing at the end of the first three periods, John Jay High School's Justices roared from be hind with 23 points in the final stanza here Tuesday, to down Lakeland, 49-38. This was the third Northern Westchester League victory in four games for the Cross River school and the third loss in as many league dates for the Horn-1 ets. The Justices have now won their last three NWL outings. John Jay went into the final frame trailing, 29-26. Two minutes Into that quarter the Justices were down by five. Then John Jay's Art Covey tabbed a field goal and Bob Mueller another, cutting the gap to a point Bob Whitman hit from the field for Lakeland, but 10 straight John Jay points fol lowed. When the smoke cleared, it was John Jay by 41-34. Sophomore Richie Duffy led the winners with 20 points. Whitman had 17 for Lakeland. Columbia Wins In Overtime Thriller To Take 1st Place John Jay Clark MueUer Free Duffy Covey Repp Hilton Score by Periods Lakeland John Jay Lakeland G F P 3 0 6 Whitman 3 2 8 Staff 0 0 0 Chlcotka 4 12 20 Greene 5 1 11 Castle 12 4 Sclama're 0 0 0 Samo 16 17 49 _11 G F P 8 1 17 0 0 3 3 9 2 15 0 0 0 2 3 7 0 0 0 15 \I 38 23 29 38 18 26 49 Yorktown Bows to Gaels In 2 Overtimes KATONAH- St. Mary's opened its season with a very easy 62-38 win over Yorktown last month, but Tues day found the same club a much tougher conquest here. In two ov ertimes, the Katonah-based Gaels edged Yorktown, 60-56. Playing without ailing star Pete Vreeland, the Gaels rolled up a 23-9 halftinu lead and stretched this to 29-9, before the Cornhusk- ers found themselves. It was 6-2 Bill Downing who caught fire in the third quarter. Downing's tap- ins accounted for 1 1 Husker points in the third period, reducing the St. Mary's margin to 10 points at the end of the third period. He also tabbei two points in the even bigger YorH'- i fourth quarter be fore fouling out. Bob Anderson and Niles Curtis took up where Downing was forced to let off, and the Huskers tied the score at 42-42 at the end of regulatior. time. It was 50-50 Ft the end of one Overtime period, but St. Mary's Hal Wright tabbed eight points in the second extra ptriod, to secure the Gael's sixth victory in eight starts. Wright was high for the game with 28 noints. Downing had 17 for Yorktown. The scoring: By TODD CASO Columbia moved into a one game lead in the Chappaqua Little League basketball circuit Saturday by virtue of a thrilling overtime victor over Harvard, 30-28. Har vard. Princeton and Cornell are now tied for second place. Columbia took a commanding lead early in the game as Nelson Jantzen tossed in seven points to pace his club to a 10-4 advantage at the end of the first stanza. In the second period, Columbia out- scored Harvard 9-8 and held a halftime lead of 19-12. It wasn't until the fourth quarter that Har vard beganto click. Kent DeFelice, Harvard's ace playmaker, fouled out early in the quarter for the third time this season. Without De- Felice, the brunt of Harvard's at tack fell upon the shoulders of piv- otman Ed Orser. Led by Orser, Harvard outscored Columbia 12-2 to know the score at the end of regulation play at 26 all and make a two-minute overtime period nec essary. harvard drew first blood in ov ertime when Orser drove in for two points. Pete Milford tied it up with a layup and the tension be gan to mount. With less than a minute left, Jantzen faked, drove to the right side of the court, and lofted the ball through the hoop for the winning bucket. Jantzen played brilliantly, hitting for 23 of his team's 30 markers. Orser and DeFelice shared high point honors for Harvard with 11 points each. Dartmouth met Yale in the sec ond game and it proved to be sim ply a repeat of an old story. Yale went into the game inspired, but when play was over, they were on the short end of a 24-12 score. Yale led 8-6 at the half, but ran into real trouble in the third quar ter. With Steve Neubert leading the way. Dartmouth outscored Yale by a ridiculous 16-0, which put the game on ice for Dartmouth, 24-12. A much improved Mike Hall led Dartmouth with eight points while Steve Neubert was second with six. Six men led the Yale team with two points apiece. The only one worth mentioning is Tim McCarthy who scored on a high, long, arch ing bomb shot which swished through the cords. Princeton played without Bruce Campbell today, due to his pain ful knees. This didn't help Prince ton any, as Allan Duncan and Hans Kasten combined to lead Cornell to a 21-16 win. Duncan scored eight points, as did David Bapauff.:who did.A-gQQd jo'n of holding Princeton from the brink of utter ruin. Hans Kasten scored seven points and was back ed up by Dave Haight who popped in four points on a couple of nice shots. FROM THE SIDELINES: Jantzen's 23 points was his high for this year. . .Dartmouth's Brent Cleland had an off-day, scoring only four points, but as things turn' ed out, he wasn't needed. . .Yale is now 0-5 and I am beginning to wonder if they will win a game The second round starts next week As of now, I have no idea of what the schedule will be. Look in at Squires for this information. LEADING SCORERS FG FT TP JANTZEN, Columbia 39 14 92 ORSER, Harvard 27 7 61 KAPAUFF Princeton _ 26 6 58 KASTEN, H. Cornell 21 14 56 Briarcliff Bears into a tie for terest those that are the Northern Westchester League de £^- tied Qr con . basement here Tuesday. The ^ a t i eas t while they are out Quakers shaded the Bruins, 58-54. running in the field For the first time this season The life you save may be your five men climbed into the double own d °S* s Yorktown Anderson Smith Downing Curtis Baldy Miller Foley GFP 5 2 12 113 6 5 17 3 5 U 2 0 4 3 3 9 0 0 0 St. Mary's Zic'oi'e'li Dam'y'r Harrison Brock Mrcato Wright 20 16 86 Score by Period! srorictomn — . 2 & Mary's 4 GFP 3 15 113 113 V 1 15 2 2 6 10 8 28 23 14 60 9 26 42 60 56 23 36 42 50 60 ONE YANKEE BOOTEE GOLDEN, Colo. — The lone Yankee on the 1958 Colorado Mines soccer team, champion oi the ftocky Mountain Intercollegiate League, was Larry Holmes ot Sea GUtf,-.-~N. Y. His teammates hail from such places as Afghanistan, Ethiopia, South America and.Eu- V&pti Holmes, nicknamed Judge, ii a Jbig feUow for a soccer player. He is 6 feet and weighs 185. Industrial Pinners Hit High Scores Cross Roads Industrial League tenpinners didn't write any new records into the book in matches rol'ed Jan. 20 out they did come up with some of She best kegling seen in that circuit this year. Dick Murphy, for example, was hard pressed to get credit for weekly high scores even though he had a 236 sizzler that was only a dozen pins under season high. He had an ec.ially hard time add ing high series of 580. In each instance, he claimed the high with but three pins to t.pare. Marinellis foond it equally diffi cult to hoU off opposition when they hit weekly team highs o* 928 and 2587 to beat Rock Hill 3 pi; the losers made a strong bid for match honors with 2573. J & M Auto Body had a 914 windup while drawing 2-2 win. Wbalens. Cox & Fish were in undisputed possession on first place and form er coleading Superior Electric dip ped to third as the result of matches last week. The Leaders used a 16 pin advantage in match scores to spill Superior Electric. Somers Gives Foxes First League Loss SOMERS— Somers High School handed Fox Lane its initial Northern Westches ter League loss of the campaign here last night, 40-38. Fox Lane has won four in the it? 8 ?*.- Vomers victory was its third in four tries. The Elephants moved into a second-place tie with John Jay, just half a game back of the Foxes. Soccer Team Loses 3-2 On Muddy Field Hard - driving Yonkers Italians proved the better \mudders\ on JcJi. 25 when they shaded Mount Kisco Soccer Club 3-2 in a post poned Eastern District League match at Van Cortlandt Park. The match had originally been booked for Jan. 18 at Leonard Park here but the field was so hard and icy that day that the referee ordered a postponement and switched the match to New York. Conditions there last Sunday was so muddy that the referee was ready to order another post ponement but the teams insisted that they be permitted to play. Harry Nelson got Kisco off to an early lead but by halftime it was a 2-2 tie with, Yonkers apply ing power plays to overtake and finally pass the visitors. Kisco goalie Bob Halle did a masterful job in the nets and ooked good even in defeat. Kisco booters are slated to re turn to Leonard Park next Sun day but the name of their Eastern District foe that day hasn't been announced. Kickoff is set for 2:30 P.M. Fox Lane E.Murphy Sgrul'e'ta B.Murphy Lonr.as Merrill Jackson Vlttorinl GFP 3 2 8 5 1 11 4 2 10 2 0 4 2 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 6 38 . bcore by Periods goners „.., „ — Fox Lone —L Somen DILena Mlchael'ln Hthn Springer Bley Stevem GFP 0 4 0 0 3 2 5 7 17 0 0 3 5 11 11 18 40 9 18 28 -10 25 27 provement as exceptionally cold weather and high winds earlier o Fr)F n R n_ this month did not help the shoot- H K ^e\lBg>i School recorded !>\ va -+r, .„ t, , . its fifth wrestling triumph in as • f- u i ? man y matches here Tuesday, ^^•^\S^JJrK 6 P blankin g Hendrick Hudson 47 -°- » VSSL^LSE? W6re S „ w as the Foxes' second shutout of Milder weather improves this ac- th v T „. . , , . tlvity in addition to making it y v LAne High School basket- much more pleasant for hunters Sev f of coach Arnie Berg's ban teams continue to dominate to be afield grapplers remaiena unbeaten for the varsity and jayvee divisions We would 'likP +n nffpr a word me vear - George Peterson, Fred °* Northern Westchester Inter- this time W Skinner recorded pins, and en-team race neared the Feb. 3 New York State Conservation George Dudley, Roger Ludeman, Foxes held ^ law clearly states that dogs run- and Graham Gurney hung up de- vicing leads^of _a^gam_c_and a ning or attacking deer during the cisions. period beginning Jan. 15 to April The summaries: 97-pound, Georg 15 may be shot by any game war- Peterson (F) pinned John Coulter den, forest ranger, state trooper (H), 3:56; 105-pound, Pete Olotka \or other duly authorized police (F) pinned Leon Laws (H), 1:11; officer.\ 114-pound, Jim Straub (F) pinned One of the main reasons is that Bob Lape (H), 1:30; 122-pound, at this time of year deer are in Fred Barnett (F) pinned Jerry fawn and cannot run as long or as Dykeman (H). 1:29; 129-pound, hard. Also the lakes, ponds and Jim Lee (F) pinned Fred Merz swamps they usually are able to (H), :54; 153-pound, George Dud- escape into are frozen over and - F ) dec. Joe Gulotta (H), 5-2; are rriore often traps instead of pro- 140-pound, Lou La Regina (F) pin- t ec tion ned 1)011:1 Capasso (H), 1:20; 141 Deer cannot run on ice at all pound, Larry Skinner (F) pinned and if they are chased onto a lake Bud Harding (H), 3:45; 156-pound, often fall down and are complete- Roger Ludeman (F) dec. Bill Mur- Iy helpless to the attack of even ray (H) 7-0- 168-pound^ Art Walk- a small house dog. * ^ <£> dec. Joe Gullotta (H), 5-2; Hftraiia n . „. , c U „ If you are not interested in pro- JJV (F) dec. John Sedgewick (H), Horace Greeley High School's tecting the deer herd*, the life of dec. Mike Burns H, 7-4 hot-and-cold quintet dumped the your favorite canine pet may in- right:—Maurice' Manning, Tay lor Post commander, Vic Pas- quale, Ed. Terlizzi and Walt \Pop\ Fisher. Rear Row-same order - Harvey Mitchell, Ernest Hahne, W. H. \Coke\ Crane, John Cullam and Harry McNulla - D. B. Kirchhoff Photo Briarcliff Beaten by Greeley '5' BRIARCLIFF— that har- MKBRL Will Elect Jan. 29 mm Mount Kisco Babe Ruth League will hold its annual meeting and election of officers on Jan. 29 at Mount Kisco Boy's Club, it was announced this week. It will start SEAN SGRULLETTA Jan. 16 when their game with Lakeland was postponed because of a physical educators' conference Fox Lane hoopers got the post ponement out of the way last Fri day with a pair o± home court triumphs that stretched varsity and J.V. league winning streaks to four games each. Coach Clyde Eiden's first stringers, beaten but once in a half-dozen outings, de- visioned Lakeland 52-42 after the Jays opened the show with an equally impressive 31-21 kayo. Fox Lane and title-defending Yorktown are scheduled to meet on Jan. 30 at 7 p.m. at Fox Lane; it'll be Foxes sixth home stand of their highly successful season. Eidens' sharpshooters cooked bet ter than ever last week as they returned to th. court after the cus tomary schedule-break for mid year examinations. The scoring: LAKELAND GFP Whitman 5 4 14 Chlc'ota 2 5 9 Sarno 10 2 Green 10 2 Castle 2 0 4 Sclam'tore 3 17 Mustaln 2 0 4 16 10 42 Score By Periods Lakeland Fox Lane FOX LANE E. Murphy 1 10 12 Clark Sgrulletta Murphy Nicosia Loma8 Merrill Jackson Vlttorinl 6 5 17 6 2 14 113 0 0 0 2 0 4 12 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 20 54 5 13 24 42 12 27 41 54 Qassic Gets New 654 High figures for the Chappaqua club. D0GGED TniED TEACHER Steve Walsh led the Quaker scor- ing parade with 14 points. Big DENVER — Arden Hartman, Doug Heyel followed with 12. Ken an elementary school teacher, says at 8 p.m. Harry Saglibene crashed through Nye and Charlie Boll each had 11 his summer job is a lot harder Martin \Bud\ McGarth, league with a 654 season high series and and Steve Walsh 11. than grading paners. He is racing president, no tes that the annual the Vitale's team with which he Lee Franken . of Briarcliff a J. ™ e Mlle xiu Ken \ meeting is open to the public and bowls posted a pair of weekly high climbed back into the top 20 scor- \ el aub W\ 1 ?.\. j 1163 * 15 \ e \ as w he urged a large turnout of par- scores in Andy's Qassic tenpin eris in the,, area, tallying 20 points: draw up the fields of jcacing grey- md othiers interested & re- play that brought together first on'eight field goals and four fdlflSi' hounds — 10 to 11 races nightly organization of- the village BEL and last place teams on Jan. 23. Stan Crawford had 11 points for wth nine dogs to a race. program the losers. EXOTIC BIRDS Resumption of smallfry baseball Briarcliff hung in close on activity elsewhere in the upcoun Franken and Crawford's efforts in RICHMOND, Va. / — Iranian ty area will be discussed and of- the first half, but dropped out of blackneck pheasants released in fleers will be elected by Northern contention in the third period. Virginia — 600 in number — are Westchester Little League when Franken and Pete Koste hit for doing well. The state plans to re- that circuit holds its first meeting points apiece in the final lease another 1,000. Chinese ring- of the year on Feb. 4 at Bedford six m , 9rf er nnrt Collins four, to neck pheasants were unsuccessful Hills Elementary School. It starts quarter ana SLO. ^uums ™T™«<« «t en nm «T5,i ,i» TnW™ n f make it close. The scoring: Horace Greeley Walsh Benedict Heyel Nye Boll GFP 6 2 14 4 2 10 5 2 12 4 3 11 4 3 11 23 12 58 Score by Periods Horace Greelev Briarclitf Briarcliff Fr iken Koste Crawford Kaufman Negrey Collins GFP 8 4 20 2 2 6 4 3 11 2 0 4 2 4 8 2 15 20 14 54 in Virginia although they have at 8:15 p.m. \Bud\ Johnson of done well in many parts of the Port Chester, L.L. district repre- United States. The Iranian black- sentative, has been invited to at- neck is a slightly smaller bird. tend the meeting. The match, in addition to provid ing the loop with a new mark, also produced a startling upset as Elks One, a whopping 28 points from the top, held the pacers to a 2-2 draw despite Saglibene's shining performance. Elks hopped off to a 28 pin lead, lost the second game by 99 pins but rebounded for a 17 pin kayo that assured them a standoff. Saglibene's big tally, fashioned on games of 222, 203 and 229, eclipsed the former ZD high by four pins. It was the big gest thing recorded in an upcoun- ry loop this season but was 13 pins short of the 1957-58 Classic record set by Manny Canero; Canero's son, Bill, packed in high game on Jan.-23 with a 231. blast as. Marry Motors beat B. & B. Tires 3-1. There were other brilliant per formances too; Sam Pasquale of Elks One put together 215, 176 and 224 for 615, Lou Megna hit 612 for Cross Roads and George Treist- man contributed 607 for Lakeland. Vitales backed into first place when postponement of the Montal- bano-Katonah Diner - Montalbano match prevented Diner from pro tecting their grip on the top spot. 16 27 47 58 15 25 33 54 Phillips Stars Lose 1st Game; Tectapes Win The end of the line came for the last unbeaten team in the Westchester Basketball League Tuesday. The \old pros\ from New Rochelle, the Tectapes, stop ped Phillips Stars of Pleasantville, 79-50, at New Rochelle. The other WBL game of the night saw Hastings' South Siders tight en their grip on fourth place in the seven-team circuit, with an 86- 71 win over Mount Kisco at Kisco. The Tectapes win puts New Ro chelle in first place with six wins in seven games. Phillips drops back into a second place tie with the White Plains Vols. The Stars and Vols are 4-1 The scoring: Canine World's Elite Primping For Westminster NEW YORK—Owners of dogs living in 40 states, the District of Columbia, Canada, Cuba and Japan are sending their best to compete in the Westminster Ken nel Club dog show to be held in Madison Square Garden here on Feb. 9 and 10. Best in show at Westminster is the world's most coveted canine award and 2,544 dogs are en tered to try for it this year. The largest entry is from New York, 648. New Jersey has en tered 345, Pennsylvania 239, Con necticut 193, Calif ornia 131, Massachusetts 130, Ohio 121, Il linois 108, and Maryland 100. In all, representatives df 111 different dog breeds will be on display and in competition at the show. Phillips Young Jamison Barry Gibbons Reed Buttes Johnson Cook King F FP 0 8 0 0 3 15 0 10 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 2 0 10 23 4 50 Score by Periods Phillips New Rochelle Ber'di Clifton Scott Brown Levy Meade Cananza John Jordan Keel GFP 9 1 19 Oil 10 2 0 0 0 3 4 10 3 0 6 Oil 11 2 24 0 2 2 7 0 14 34 11 79 New Rochelle 16 29 38 _22 40 61 50 79 Hastings Breen Graham Rakotz Kohl Ravlrtsky Antou GFP 4 0 8 4 3 11 5 3 13 16 2 34 10 0 20 0 0 0 39 8 86 Score'by Periods Hastings —' Mount Kisco Mount Kisco Barrett Ster'ng DIteriehs Appedu Gatto Yozzo Hyatt Cundarl GFP 1 6 2 12 4 8 0 16 7 0 14 4 0 8 5 1 11 5 4 14 10 2 32 7 71 Being \two places at once\ is easy—for you and your phone! 25 55 69 86 .17 29 45 71 B;O SHOOT VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. - The w v r 1 d championship skeet shoot of the National Skeet Scoot ing Assn. wi!l be held at the Princess Anne Gun Club here Aug. 2. Selection of th American'Olym pic skeet shooting team .is expect ed during the event. Entries are expected frpm the U.S., Cuba, Mexico, Canada and^ perhaps, from some South American and \'Euro pean nations. . Today's homemaker doesn't need magic. Just give her a phone and she'll be all over town, without ever leaving the house. ' Off she goes to the store (1) to pick up ice cream for dinner\ (keeping an eye on lunch the- whole while). A money-saying sale? She's there (2) and back to the dusting in five minutes flat (when she goes by phone). While the kids are napping, the phone takes her visiting across town (3). Then she's off to the office (4) of the man of the house, just to remind him that the Smiths are coming for dinner. All day long the telephone takes her places, helps her do things. Makes her day easier—and a lot more enjoyable. No wonder so many women say this about the telephone—\Few things serve so well, yet cost so very little.\ NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY