heraid statetm'an, yonkers, n.y., monday, dec. •!, 1958 ...fultonhistory.com/newspaper 10/yonkers...

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Heraid Statetm'an, Yonkers, N.Y., Monday, Dec. •!, 1958 County's Junior Excel At Boulder Brook IHIUAItl Stiffs: 1 ana n ban ln's Play toy Makes Merrv Music Santa's in for a shock when he! begins perusing the ChriMmas rr.^ii from ;iuni r ':' 'nis year. More than one bright lari is apt to ask' for a n;cr. iittie money - making merry - go - round. soniotrnnK Hke Marty Tan-mbaum's jittic playtoy known as Yonkers Raceway. And. why not? After what hap- pened at the Raceway the final i two nights of the unbelievable ">S I season, any kid aho doesn't ask Santa for a tr<»?-and-pare toy is a \ discredit to the race. The' horse race, that is. Friday night, despite one nf the worst rain storms of the year. 21,- 591! hardy souls dripped into the Giant of Trotting and came out^ financial pigmvs after betting a" m e r e 51.838.645. And Saturday night, just to prove that the yen is mightier »^an thp hoard. 30.S97 betting bod- ies, packed vertically shoulder-to- shoulder, or was it pocket-to-pook- the pari-mutuel machines, et. poured a cool $2,406,597 through And we do mean cool! It was so cold outside the protected areas, that two diehards, sitting on their hands o keep warm, had their" best night at Jhe track in years. Why, one sweet, little ole thing dropped a fin a t their collective feet with, the com men: "Poor boys, probably lost their hands in the pari-mutuel machine!" two days of racing at both Yonk- ers and Jamaica are interesting. Yonkers drew 52.171 patrons the final two nights, while Jamaica, attracted 56.198 >he final two days. One wonders how many diehards took in t.he twinbills? Incidentally, for the benefit of the money-mad statisticians in the stands, Saturday's crowd bet an all time daily-double high of 5218,- 742. And the final figures for the 104-night 1958 season are enough to rock Fort Knox. A mere 2.5. 7 ,5,709 improvers of the breed-attended the 104-night meet and wagered a mere $190,- 683,574. Crazy, man! Attendance figures of the final All is not yet'lost, however, for those who managed to "get even" on 'he final racing day in New York The horseys are still run- rung tins week, much to the joy of met area* addicts, at "nearby" Narragansett and Pimlico. Both tracks, so they tell me, are a "few hours" run from Gotham. As a matter of hard fact, a Times Square bus line will van' the faithful every morning this week to the Maryland plant for only $10.93 round trip, with taxes and grandstand ticket included." How faithful can one get? SPORTI.V AROl/XD Briar Hall Club to celebrate 10th anniversary with a gala "Charter Members" party, reports club di- rector Ben Herman. Affair is set for Dec. 14. . . Foursomes from Apawamis. Hudson River C. C . Ardsley, Westchester C. C. and Whippoorwill competing in the an- nual Bermuda Goodwill golf tour- ney starting Wednesday. . . C. W. "Gus" Benedict of Armonk. who Is slated to be come secretary of the United States Golf Association in the late Jan.. first becomes vice president of the Met body Dec. 11 . . . Bruce Morrison of 'Briarcliff Manor is captain-elect of the '59 Kent School soccer team. Kent, has won 20 straight over past three years. . . For the first time in county history, school superintend- ents, principals and coaches will nather Wednesday at the Section One's inaugural get-together din- ner - meeting at Harrison High School. Group should honor Harri- son's Lou Klein for his tremendous work for the scholastic organiza- tion. 'Outsiders' Rule Most Divisions In Mammoth Tivo-Day Horse Show Iona'Book' on Loyola Has 4 Names Underlined FIRST MACLAY TROPHY win- ner of the new horse show sea- son, in hunter-seat equitation, is Hank Minchin of Greenwich, while Wendy Hanson of Wilton, a student at Marymount in Tar- rytown and the 1958 National Ma- clay champion, won the first AH- SA hunter-seat Medal of the cam- paign at tre Boulder Brook class- ic in Scarsdale over the week- end. Minchin, fifteen, Greenwich H.S. sophomore, is shown with Round Hill Stable's Trade Mark, which he rode in his conquest. Miss Hanson, sixteen, who also won an open riding blue, is with her Star Chamber, which was Children's Jumper victor and al- so junior horse reserve—Staff Photo by Henrv Sarno By AL BAMBERGER JR. Westchester area riders dominat- ed the junior horsemanship divi- sions but otherwise major laurels went to outlying precincts over the weekend as Boulder Brook Club staged its largest two-day indoor horse show — not only the most gigantic ever, in these parts but exceeding any similar event ever crammed into two days anywhere in the nation. . This was Jhe Westchester and Greenwich scoop from t h e grab- bag of chief honors in this 35th fall festival at the huge Scarsdale riding plant: 1 Lynda Green. White Plains H.S. junior, won the fifth saddle- seat equitation championship of her three-year career under tute- lage of Joe Vanorio. The sixteen- year-old girl, riding her Ocean Breeze, also, won the open class and the first AHSA Medal of the new tanbark season, was reserve in the Good Hands test and her mount has a first, second and fourth in children's saddle horse competition. New Year's First Qualifier 2. Gloria Green, thirteen, of Har- irison Junior High, also a Vanorion protege, became the first young- ster in the country to secure a berth in the 1959 National Horse Show. Riding her Bobbi Buttons, Miss Green 'no relation to Lynda), was selected for the Good Hands Trophy. She also emerged as re- serve horsemanship titlist. 3. Beth Iffland, a Wilton, Conn., girl of fifteen who is trained by Victor Hugo-Yidal J r . of Bedford at Stratford Farm in Port Chester, earned the hunter-seat horseman- ship crown. Earlier this month, she became National USET Medal champion at Madison Square Gar- den. 4. John Strohmeier of Scarsdale. one of Al Homewood's pupils at Boulder Brook, was not only re- serve champion but annexed the Homewood Trophy in horseman- ship and, with The Bellboy, the fourteen - year-old equcstrien cop- ped a children's hack class. Minchin Wins Maclay 5. Hank Minchin," fifteen, of Greenwich High, who rides at Ted Ward's- Round Hill Stable, became the first Maclay Trophy winner of the new show season but, unlike Class Victors, Area Ribbon Winners at Boulder Brook These were tht class victors and oth-.tion'i Little Sis. White Plains, ridden er leading Area ribbon winners at the I Cosmo Napolitano; 2. Sandalwood Rouidpr Brook Home Show over weekend: Mike Sneeringer, a 6 ft. 2 in. junior, his classmate Joe O'Hare. who stands 6-5, senior Gene Nie- berlain, 6-2, and soph Johnny • Heagney, 6-even, are supposedly the "boys to watch" on this win- ter's Loyola of Baltimore squad ..wheih will help Iona College launch its '58-'59 collegiate cage campaign at O'Connelf Gym. on the New Roehelle campus,' tomor- row afterdark. This quartet of Greyhounds, the pride oi coach Emil Rietz and the Baltimore-based school, all saw- much service on the hardwoods a year ago and figure to have im- proved with added maturity. The Iona game is Loyola's opener, too. Both Nieberlain and Heagney (freshmen were permitted to play, last year, at Loyola) averaged bet- ter than 10 points-per-game in 24 varsity scuffles while Joe O'Hara used his height to become a good rebounding factor. The Baltimore Bounce (Upward?) The Baltimoreans have met Iona at basketball but twice before and dropped both decisions. How- ever, this year, the Greyhounds feel they have an improved ball- club and will be striving for an upset. Other members of the visit- ing varisty from the land of the Orioles (and Colts) expected to see service are 6-5 Eddie Mum, 6-0 Fritz Ruppel and 5-10 Don Deinlein. Loyola should prove a good test for coach Jimmy McDermott's Gaels who figure to have a strong first five, this term, but have left their veteran mentor in a state of trepidation concerning his "bench strength" following the many pre- season practice drills. Varsity game time, tomorrow, will be 8:30 p. m. The Iona "fresh will open the double-header cage program two hourse earlier when they "square off against- the first year violent violet-clad Vikings from NYU. Somebody Goofed: Mat Bout Won by Villains Blight triumphed over right Sat- urday night at Westchester's mec- ra of maul, the County Center, when the dastardly California- based Grahame brothers. Dr. Jer- ry and kid frere Ed. pinned "nice guys" Mark Lewin and Don Curtis in the best two-of-three falls that featijrecj an action-packed, • four- bout pro grappling card. _ More than 2.000 local lovers of the athletic ludicrous crammed their ways into the White Plains arena to cheer and jeer as the musc-ular matmen put on one of their most inspired performances. The <r*-, ]rf , or - P 0 f }}-. P Uvo ^ us . traiian-Hpc tuples on the menu, proved 3 real "tiw/y" and z>>: off to a flying 'rr.aiei start with youn^ V idie pinning Ixwin after 1" 23 wild moment's for the fir^t f^ll Mark, and ex- Marine and <-'••:' to the football-playing B'.i!l«) '"•Vs athletic pride of Buffalo! NY., "'go* hunk" wJh Eddie aft- er another ?,-. 12 of playing time, but Eddie a p<--o\-id<» pulverizer from fr.e \W^f <"v~t, se- -:rcd the eventual upper haM ' M iater when he salted Mark's broad shoulders In the r i g rosin. '.Miller Brother* Muffled Th» semi-final fray. *!v> smack- saw and ing of a down under flavor "nice guys" Ilio DePaolo Tony Marino, npwoomers to the county scene, emerged victorious against the Miller brothers, mid- western type "stinkers" when Elio eased out Fxldie Miller after 5:27 of the third flop. Westchester's own Arnie Skaa- land, the Quarry Heights Crusher and former White Plains High grid immortal, won his rugged preliminary match from Irish Jack Donovan when he pinned the pride of - Hollywood (Fla.) after 20:54. The curtain-raising hassle, a time-limit tussle, ended quite ibniptly. after IS: 09, when Bolo Hakawa. the Hawaiian Hurricane, extinguished Steve Stanlee. a blonde bomber from the Windv City. Promoter Ed Ceccolini will give the Joyal lovers of the sport one more, pre-holiday opportunity to enjoy the suety shennanigans come Wednesday afterdark, December 10. *1' ttfis J nut Ton Cold, V.vvn for Frostbiter* Northwest blasts caused *?-* first cancellation of th* win'er saiisng wason at I,?-; hrr - •'Yacht Gub yesterday. The f r£: a gust* came as strong as .",5 m p h. and although one r*f the seas. - < larg- r«* contingents of frostbiters was landing by. the committee order- ed rac^g off" in the interests of safety. Frosthjfe fW(« at near-by Ind- ian Harbor and Riverside Yachts Cii-v- were similarly victimized <• » Han still to inaugu- ral the *eav,n scheduled to start f eek ago. A VTH FOR COACH Larle Edwards s* in hii fifth -i a* head t oach of the North Carolina State football team this i' "be 6?th campaign lor the Wolf- r-ark HOMKR* IX TSSTSQ Ai Kalin* of .the Detroit Tigers hit two home runs in one inning against the Kantas City Athletic* in 3958. Hl'NTER-SEAT HOFtSKMANSHIP Novice—1,' Jane Wechsler. Secor: 2, Margot Mayer, Greenwich. Limit—-1, Penny. Johnson. Greenwich; 2.' Kathte Headley, Scarsdale. Open - 1. Wendy Hanson,- Seoor; 2. Sally \V,ilianis. Boulder Brook. Maclay —1, Hank Min- chin. Greenwich: '2. Carol Altman. Rye. Medal —1, Wendy Hanson; 2, Beth Iff- land, Stratford. Homewood Trophy—1. John Strohmeier, Scarsdale: 2, Dick Kel- ler, Danen. Championship Beth I ffland, Champion; John Strohmeier, re- serve. SADDLE-SEAT HORSEMANSHIP Novice—1. Lyn Solow. Kentucky R.S.; 2. Ed iAimia. (,'roton. Open and Medal 1, Eynda Green. White Plains; 2. Mary Beth Marks, Harrison. Good Hands—1. Gloria Green. Harrison; 2. Lynda Green. Limit—1. Alice Cole. Kentucky; 2, Nan-. cy Eversole, Mamaroneek. Champion- ship—Lynda Green, champion; Gloria Green, reserve. MISCELLANEOUS Maiden Horsemanship—1. Georgia For- man, Greenwich: 2. Alice Coie. Pair class 1,. Sally Williams' Clear Sailing, Boulder Brook, and Margot Mayer's Misdeal. Greenwich. CHILDREN'S HUNTERS * JUMPERS Working and Hunters—1. Wendy Wana- makrr s Brave War, Philadelphia. Jump- ers—!. Wendy Handson's Star Chani- her; 2. Clear Sailing. Hacks and Work- ing —1, Roddy Wanamaker'j Good .'n Safe. Hunters (Harry Moore Trophy) 1. Clear Sailing; 2. Ellen Bongrard's Regulator, Scarsdale. Championship Brave-War (IS; champion; Star Cham- ber <5- reserve. CHILDREN'S SADDLE HORSES - 3-Gaited—1. Spring Valley's King Chris lian: 2. Gail Thomas' Commanding Star. Mamaroneek. Bridle Path Hacks 1. Lynda Green's Ocean Breeze; 2, Paula Wolff's Out of My Dreams, Ma- maroneek. Road Hacks—1, Out of My Dreams; 2. Nancy Eversole. Obedience —1. Commanding Star; 2, Ocean Breeze. WORKING HUNTERS Amateur and Stake.—1, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paxson's Klini Hill. Holicong, Pa.; 2, Saxon Woods Farm's Naute Mia, White Plains. Limit—1, Jan and Milly Marsden's Sister's Pride, Albany. Open —1. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Berry's Champ- town, Manlius; 2. Mrs. John Farrell's Gold Com. Darien, ridden by Mrs. Dave Kelley, Armonk. Working Hunter Hacks -1. Kay Trcpcr's A.shland, White Plains; 2, Champtoun. Open—1, Gold Coin; 2, Naute M;a. ladies'—1. Irl Daffin's Irish Warrior, ridden by Miss Tremper; 2. Ashland. Championship—Flint Hill (12) champion; Champtown (11) reserve. CONFIRMATION HUNTERS Model, Open and. Amateur—1, Mr. and Mrs. Paxson's Chappaqua; 2d in Open, Gold Coin. Ladies' -1. Flint Hill; 2 Mrs. Arthur Hawkins, White Plains, with Duf- fy StAble's Tourist's Encore. Hunter .Hacks-1. Ashland; 2. Flint Hill. Stake —1, Irish Warrior; 2. Cnappaqua. Cham- pionship-Chappaqua <lj\i) champion; Flint Hill (U) reserve. 3-GAITED SADDLE HORSES Special- 1. Harry Jenkins' VauxhaU's Kentucky Rex, Newark, 3rd Beth Marks' Jenny Jerome. Harrison; •Uh. Commanding Star. Open Ladies', ESHBA Trophy and Championship Stake —1, Lynda Travaim'i Miss laurel, Hac- kensaek; 4(h in Open and ESHBA, Carol McFadden's Kalaroma Rocket. Scars- dale; 4th in slake—Nancy Sexauer's Moonbem's Prince. Larchmont. OPEN JUMPERS Open Class 32—1, Nycon Transporta- th e | Farms' St. Nicholas, Goldens Bridge, ridden Al Flore. Open Class S3 - 1. Joe Green's Friendly Frank. Lititz. Pa. Open Classes 54 and S6 and Stake—1. My Play Stables' My Indian Maiden. Al- bany; 2d in -S4. Dave Kelley's Jack O'Lantern. Armonk; 2d in S6. St. Nicho- las. 2d in Slake. Harry DeLcver's Wayward Wind. L.I. Open Class 55—1. Dave Kelley's Can't Tell. Armonk; 2, DeLeyer's Snow Man. Knockdown-and- out Class. 58--1. DeLeyer with Louise Villegas' Night Arrest; 2. George Park- hill's Allegro. N.Y.; 3, John Beil's High Tide. Bedford. Knoekdown-and-out Class 59—1. Allegro; 2, DeLeyer with R. D. Sharp's Gamble On. Nancy Clapp Tro- phy, combined KDO—Allegro (8 p's.L Championship- My Indian Maiden (IS) champion; Allegro (16) reserve. tiREEN WORKING HUNTERS Open and Stake— 1. Mr. and~-.Mrs. George Scheet's Sir Gold. Ft. Washing- ton. Pa.; 2nd Open. Charles Brown's Our Boy. Albany; 2d Stake. Jane Bry- an's Dusty Rhodes. Darien. ridden George Morris, Hunter Hack and Open -1, Good 'n Safe'; 2ds to Our Bov and Sir Gold. Open-1. Greg Llttell's Lynnie Girl; 2. Sister's Pride. Championship- Sir Gold (14 champion; Good 'n Safe (10) reserve. FROM PODRKS TO SPHAN Warren Spahn wasn't the first southpaw who stopped Hank Bauer In the final Games of the 1935 World Series, Dodger Johhny Pod- res stopped Bauer. Hank then hit safely in 17 straight World Ser- ies games until stopped by Spahn. HEADING THE Junior Com- mittee for the 35th fall horse show at Boulder Brook Club in Scarsdale over the weekend were Mary Ann Kraus, right, of New Roehelle, chairman, and Beth Coakley, left, of . Larch- mont, co-chairman. Cathyi Mer- rill of Rye, a member of the committee, is in the center. Misses Kraus and Coakley were in charge of the many junior activities- connected with the show and also were co-hosts at the junior exhibitors* party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan- iel Strohmeier of Scarsdale Sat- urday night. Miss Coakley is pictured with her chestnut geld- ing, Springfield, and Miss Kraus with her brown mare, Sweet Cap. Staff Photo by Henry Sarno Miss Green, did not gain a berth in the Garden. Two Maclay vic- tories are necessary. 6. Wendy Hanson of Wilton, the sixteen - year - old Marymount stu- dent in Tarrytown who was Na- tional Maclay champion at the Garden (and no longer eligible for the eventt. otherwise demonstrat- ed her riding excellence by win- ning the hunter-seat medal and an open equitation event- She also was children's jumper with her Star Chamber and later won a hack-off for the junior horse re- serve. Wendy Wanamaker of Phil- adelphia, with Brave War, got the title. Miss Hanson is a pupil at Frank Carroll's Secor Farms in White Plains. The Boulder Brook extravangan- za not only pried the lid off the new season. It also capped the 1958 campaign for AHSA high-point '"Horse of the Year' honors., Most' decisions had already been made but in one division — the green working hunter — a- Westchester horse came out of the show with the "Horse of Year" designation when two challengers failed to close the gap. Barbonne "Horse of the Year" The high-point champion of 1951 is Barbonne. owned by Barbara Van Tuvl of Scarsdale and hand- led bv 'Mrs. Shirleye Weinstein of Bedford. Mr. and. Mrs. George Scheetz's Sir Gold won the division crown at the show but could not outpoint Barbonne for the year. As both a beginning and end of the season, the show had an entry list which exceeded 1,400 and the several scraps were so intense that freezing weather couldn't chill the fire of the competition. When the thcrometer's drop chased a 11 scheduled outdoor events into the arena yesterday (some Saturday classes were h'eld outside), the pro- gram was continued without in- terruption from early morning un- til midnight. Nonetheless, through detailed advance planning by Homewood and his staff, and with the co- operation of exhibitors, judges and officials.- the event which had lagged as much as three hours —closed within a few minutes of its schedule. These were the other champion- ship awards: Open Jumper — A spirited -50- horse battle through nine eventi .vas won by Buss Stewart of Al- bany with his My Indian Maiden by Virtue of a stake blue (third of the show"), with 18 points. George Parkhill's Allegro went unplaced to be reserve at 16 and Harry DeLeyer's Snow Man, the Garden King, couldn't win a class and settled for third at 13. Confirmation and Working Hun- ter—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pax- son's Chappaqua won the con- firmation title and a stabiemate, Flint Hill, was reserve: and Flint Hill nosed but Champtown, high- point "Hunter of the Year", for the working foxchaser rosette by winning the stake. Three - Gaited Saddle Horses- Miss Laurel, owned and shown by Lvnda Joan Travaini of Hacken- sack, N.J. Colts Snare NFUs Western Crown Giants Stay in Running, Eyf Shoivdoivn with Cleveland DISTINCTION of being the first junior rider in the nation to qualify in equitation for the 1959 National Horse Show be- longs to Gloria Green of Har- rison. Miss Gfeen. thirteen, won •the "Good Hands" Trophy, event at Boulder Brook's 35th fall show on Saturday, quali- fying for a Madison Square Gar- den final berth for a third con- secutive year. She Is shown with her chestnut mare, Bobbi But- tons, which she also rode in gaining the show's saddle-seat horsemanship championship re- serve yesterday—Staff Photo by Henrv Sarno. Those Who Have A Vote Reminded To Exercise It Hurry, hurry, hurrv, all vou '^elector* of the 15th annual Westchester County Publisher, Ine Al!-County schoolboy foot- ball oYram trtm. The deadline for ballots 'postmarked) is onlv twn days away, this Wednesday Dec 3rd Sports editors and sports writ- ers of the Macv-Westches'ter pa- r"-rs will then meet to tablulate ' e returned ha Hots of 206 sent out fo th* county's 45 - head coaches, assistant coaches, the game officials and county writ- and the editors will" selee! W«'Chester** -58 Coach of the Year . Anrv^mcement of the three' team. .\?-m*n"dream squad and its meptor will then »y made on the** pa tre* during the follow- ing week. The players chosen to the dream team, their head coach- es and Westchester's coach of '!# will be honored at the annual A^-County Football Banquet tho night of Tuesday, Dec. 16th. at ihe.noger Smith Hotel in White Piaina, Raceway Faithful Defy Weather As Grand R. Volo Wins Finale By MIKE RATHET Associated Press* Sports Writer Lenny Moore's choregrapher and Johnny Unitas' script writer- fash- ioned a brilliant last act as the Baltimore Colts won their first Western Conference championship in the National Football League. The come-from-behind Colts did it the hard way Sunday, striking for 21'points in the final quarter and defeating San Francisco 35-27. At the same time, the runner-up Chicago Bears were eliminated as they lost their first game ever to Pittsburgh, bowing 21-10. Moore and Unitas turned in first rate performances as Baltimore (9-11 captured its first crown since entering the league in 1950. With little more than 11 min- utes remaining, the Colts still trailed 27-21 after scoring at the outset of the final period. Moore stepped front and center. He danc- ed down the sidelines, cut back to the center of the field, then forgtd straight ahead to complete a 73-yard maneuver that tied it. Steve Myrha's conversion put Bal- timore ahead. A fitting climax saw Unitas-still sheathed in an aluminum harness fo protect his injured ribs-pass seven yards to Ray Berry for an insurance tally. It was the 23rd consecutive game in which Unitas has thrown for a TD, tying Cecil Isbell's NFL record. The battle for the eastern divi- sion title remained tight as first place Cleveland defcaed Washing- ton 21-14 and maintained a one- game lead over runner-up New- York. The Giants beat Philadelphia 24-10 and seem headed lor a show- down with the Browns in New- York Dec. 14-the last day of the regular season. In the only other game, Los Angeles defeated Chicago's Card- inals 20-14. Detroit and Green Bay' played Thanksgiving Day. The -19ers took a 27-7 lead m the first half mainly on the pass- ing of veteran Y. A. Tittle. The only Colt score in the half came on a three-yard plunge by Unitas. Two short scoring bursts by Alan Ameche. capping drives spear- headed by Unitas' pinpoint aerials brought the Colts within striking distance. Then Moore took over. The weather outside was fright- ful—for the second straight night, hitter cold and somewhat snowy but the "action" delightful as 30. S79 throughly improved members of the betting breed clawed their ways into Yonkers Raceway, Sat- urday night, for the final program of t h e 104 night harness horse stand at Westchester's fabulously refurbished "Oval of Oz." The faithful brought with them loads of lucre, too. and a total of $2,406,597 of it cascaded through the "iron men" mutuels over the nine race menu to set all sorts of wagering records both in the sea- sonal, single night, daily double pool and various numbered races departments. Some Can't Make It It was another amazing tribute to the virility of the betting breed as a great many of them had put in a rugged eight race scrimmage at quaint old Jamaica, out on "the Island," earlier in the day. To be exact 34.313 bucked the Satur- day "flats" program and some ihought that it was somewhat amiss of the- Yonkers manage- ment, at tometima dufing their final program, not to observe a moment of silence out of respect for the absent 3.434 who, for one reason or another, failed to com- plete the "double-header." As to the matter of the final night's feature, the Monitor, a Class A Pace, it fell, appropriate- ly enough, to a Yonkers-owned steed, J. P. Farm's Grand R. Volo. Deftly guided" around the one mile course by Billy Houghton. the "Mechanized Arcaro", Grand R. Volo flashed under the finish wire in 2:04.4, a half-lenglh in front of runner-up Catson Hanover and two lengths to the good of the third place finishing Hoot Newport. A Nice Price Grand R, Volo. winning only his second race m 30 '58 jaunts to the post, rewarded his patient backers with a $14.70 mutuel de- spite the presence of Mr. Haugh- ton, the nation'* top mooey-win- ning reinsmen and John Q. Pub- lic's darlin' of the sulky chauf* feurs. The. summary: ON'E P*r» Of!: S 38. T1m#: 2 <W * HnflMrt .!»<•* (CAMO 8 ft) 4:eOS10 Arby"t P.hyiJim (Ch^jbro) B.SO -W 2.S0 Tin*: 2 08 4 18 40 «V> 4 20 S 30 2 60 790 Kc«r.'t Red cot i < Hv.*m TWO r»<-* Off; a 50. PA!<<>y tyvjr*n 'FtortRiijO Coun»el Hti (S D«r>rer> KnijrK' Pat<-ti 'Stffnrd) Sf-A-cj-rd (J-ilrtrn Wnv n\n.v noi ni.r. <* %T,A *> PAID $a«.<K» THREE Ptrr Off: !>.!?. Tim* 2.07.2 CViy Boy <Fi«tf>atrick> 6"0 a an 2 SO Mrndnw Main* i.Ift^rtiinK SSO 4 10 Meadow WAT <T?vvr,M' 4 30 VOVn. Ptr« Off: ?>:4a. Tim*: 207. Mrt.-k.nc R\rd <Ctm{Xr> Sift .V¥> 3.0ft P r.e R;d*# Duffy <H<y»!?n«> 4<W3aO AM* AvrrM A. 'or*V 4 .V) FIVE. Ptre. Off: 10:10. Tim*: 2 04.4 Grtn4 R. V*io <HMigfcten> 14 70 8.SO 8.40 Carton H*rw«r atMtfn«> loao .880 Hon Newport «S.r>*w*r) 4SO SIX. P*.N>. Off: J0:37» T)m«: 3:05.1. M*\ r ' « Kr, *M <$*r>7\) 21 V) S'SOYflO SA1I<J SyvviSh <H«u8h!<vn"> 6.40 3.70 s - v > AdirtS <Rrii> 3 40 SEVEN. P*re. Off: 11 04. Tin*: 3.08.3. dew BtwSen. ccmisei 21 ao s40 son Pirn M»!# <FH«v»rt>ck) 4.40 3 .VI NVitin ppnr* «tUn>> 4 70 EIOHT. P*c# Off:' 11:30 •Tmv: 3 101 ift ao s.ao 4 a«"> riy Ootby <Flemmt> B:*r* Andy fRrtnu^r**) Otddy Uick (Bell) NINE PAA, oft: am. ShtmrorV Viola fHyltro c •>•• -.j w•»•• (Hodton >rp*rr. Kmsftt CV^nr. 1 ' 5.10 350 3,50 Tin*: 3:073. 13 40 7 20 3 90 5 ,30 3.70 7 10 AH«*dt4Wt-3M7«| R*n4i«—|t.4*«.a»7 a College Cage Circus Gets Call to Play By The Associated Tress College basketball opens with a bang tonight. , Kentucky,' the NCAA champion, and West Virginia, ranked No. 1 in the final Associated Press poll last season, take the floor to top the action. Kentucky entertains Florida State while West Virginia is on the road at Furman. Other games find Cincinnati and its famed Oscar Robertson pitted against Indiana State, Indiana's defending Big Ten champs against Drake, Pitt at Michigan, Penn State at North Carolina State, Gettysburg at Temple. Rice at- Kansas, Colorado at Iowa, Purdue at Kansas State and Western Michigan at Northwestern. By Saturday night, virtually all major teams will be in aftkm. The Kent State (Ohio) and Idaho State invitational tournaments start Friday. LOCAL STEED makes good ... and in a big way. Civet, the five-year-old pride of the Byrn- alan Stable of Mount Kisco's E. Austin Bryne, is shown at the left, romping away from Casual Friend, Jocko's Walk and ^he rest of the nineJhorse field as the finish line loomed in Satur- day's $50,000 Display Handicap at 2 l-16ths miles, the longest flat race of the 210-day New York racing season and the fea- ture event on the final program of the year. ' Thii old timer can run all day." said Tarrytown's Tom McMahon. his trainer, when he shipped 'the gelded son oi Mr. Trouble to Saratoga last summer. Saturday was a "big day" in the busy running career of the Byrnc-MeMahon ace and guided by the little-known, light- weight Indiana reinsman, Billv Poake. Civet bounced homa threelengths in advance of Cas- ual Friend at an even more suc- culent $24.10 win mutuel with tht favored Beau Diable a distan* fourth—AP Photo Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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  • Heraid Statetm'an, Yonkers, N.Y., Monday, Dec. •!, 1958

    County's Junior Excel At Boulder Brook IHIUAItl Stiffs:

    1 ana n ban ln's Play toy Makes Merrv Music

    Santa's in for a shock when h e ! begins perusing the ChriMmas rr.^ii from ;iunir':' 'nis year. More than one bright lari is apt to ask' for a n;cr. iittie money - making merry - go - round. soniotrnnK Hke Marty Tan-mbaum's jittic playtoy known as Yonkers Raceway.

    And. why not? After what hap-pened at the Raceway the final i two nights of the unbelievable ">S I season, any kid aho doesn't ask Santa for a tr:4a. Tim*: 2 0 7 . Mrt.-k.nc R\rd Sif t .V¥> 3.0ft P r.e R;d*# Duffy