WILSN - NIBLETT It takes inï¬nite patience and a great deal of moral and physical courage to be a baseball umpire. Moral courage because no matter what his decision approximately 50 per cent of those present and in- volved disagree with him heartily and vociferously. Physical courage because umpires do get rapped with some pretty dirty knocks on foul tips. The patience angle comes in because while he is often dealing with older type citizenry they react like spoiled children. UMPIRE NEEDS PATIENCE A well known local umpire displayed all these skills most admirably on a night last week. He was calling an adequate game and doing a good job. A young pitcher was giving him some help with his job by second guessing and emoting on a lot of calls. Friend umpire showed a. lot of patience and forbear- ance by putting up with the young man’s antics. NOISY RHUBARB , The young pitcher ï¬nally hammered home the last nail on his own chances when he stalked off the mound in high dudgeon and appeared to be headed for a voluntary shower. When he condescended to look around he was startled to ï¬nd the man in blue getting into the spirit of things by waving him a fond farewell. It touched off a minor rhubarb that was still going a half hour later. Indignant pitcher, team manager not much older than the pitcher plus other assorted and sundry bodies all charged toward the umpire. What had our innocent done to deserve such a fate? Had any- one said or done anything to deserve such harsh treatment ? There was only one way to handle the situation and the umpire did the only sensible thing. He pulled his watch and gave the young manager two minutes to get his team under control and onto the bench. No one seemed to get the message and one young gallant stamped his spikes into the umpire’s foot in a deliberate attempt to gain attention. He got it all right and was also ejected from the game. Once again loud cries of woe smote the air â€" this umpire was unmerciful, wasn’t he! As a ï¬nal gesture the umpire declared the game defaulted as his two minute warning was blatantly ignored. He was threatened with protests, suspen- sions and several other dire perils â€" he was also informed by the team manager that said manager would personally see to it that he never worked as an umpire again. To add insult to injury he was also told that what he did was another black eye for am- ateur sport! Fortunately the president of the league in which this team operates was attending the game. He saw and heard all that transpired and to say that he was not happy with the actions of the team would be a gross understatement. Just what action the league will take against this team remains to be seen but judging from what we saw a blanket sus- pension would be quite in order for many and var- ied offences. TOUGH JOB Umpires have a tough job to do â€"- there aren’t many tougher jobs. To be a good umpire they’ve got to like ball and to know the rule book. They’ve got to be conï¬dent of their calls and KNOW that no matter what, they’ve made the right call. They take a certain amount of good natured joshing from play- (Continued on page 10) For A Refreshing Attitude In Honest Dealing see any one of the following Sales personnel HOWARD JACKMAN - HAL BROWN - PHIL KELLY EARL MORTLEY - VINCE KNAPP - LEWIS REID KEN MORTON - HAROLD MABLEY CHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE, F.85 CORVAIR, CHEVY II, ENVOY, O.K. USED CARS 355 Yonge St. N. AV. 5-5435 - TU. 4-1194 _Just_ North of Richmond Heights Centre l'or Your Convenience the Parts 3: Service Dept. ï¬ll beigen untii Saturdays Dislaluy Of RON CRAIN E 1963 PONTIAC Laurentian. Power steering, power brakes, automatic, radio. 1962 CHEV Bel Air. Automatic, radio. 1962 RAMBLER Your Largest Chevrolet - Oldsmobile Dealer ' in York County Station Wagons MOTORS LTD. 1963 IMPALA Super Sport Hardtop’s. CHEV II Super Sport. Hard- top’s. - CORVAIR Convertibles. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Used Cars At a recent athletic awards banquet held at Thornhill Secondary School, presentations were made to outstanding girl athletes taking part in the school program. Receiving their letters were (from left): Carol Martin, Judy Allen, Jill Anderson, Jane Bremer, Cathy Lennie, Frances Paul, pictured with Anne Rogers, a graduate student, who made the awards. (Photo by Barbour.) :1-llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll“lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll“llllllllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\llllllllllllllllllll\llllllllllllllllllll'lz Their most recent league win was a 1-0 victory over Lake- shore. Bill “Skip†De Geer pounded out a triplet and was‘ brought in to score the win- ning run on a long sacrifice out off the hat of second sacker Bren Selvage. Dynes Jewellers, led by the fabulous hurling of Ray Judd. continue to mow down the op- position. The only fly in an otherwise perfect win record was a scoreless tie played against Gozzola and Allen. Dynes Roll Along On Win Streak VESIIUME 84, NO. 50 Second Thornhill Girls Get Letters Chick Webster is reportedly turning out with the Jewellers and hopes to round into good playing condition 'in the near future. His presence will add extra strength both in the field and at bat to an already power- ful Dynes team. host the powerful Gozzola and Allen squad in what could be the league classic this year. Both clubs have top flight hurl- ers on the mound while both teams have a potent batting at- tack. Seems like a real natural! Boys 15-18 Teams Liberal Reeves Bork Boys 12-? Teams Senators Indians Tigers Red Sox Twins Yankees Boys 8-9 Teams Bisons Royals Liberal 13, Reeves 15, Bork 2. Boys 10-11 Teams Braves Phillies Angels Pirates Cubs Dodgers Red Legs Mets Giants Colts Cardinals Dodgers Bye; Cubs 30, Colts 23, Braves 23, Cards 11, Angels 25, Mets 18, Phillies - Pirates (protest); Red Legs 21. Giants 10. Senators 26, Twins 23; Red Sox 10, Yankees 5; Indians won from Tigers. RICHMEID HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 13,1963 L Hill Minor Ball Results WLTP W “$1! ‘In'Essentials Unity; in Non-Essentials Liberty; in all things Charity" Richmond Hill United finally met its match on Saturday as the local team went down to a 4-2 defeat at the hands of de- fending league champions, Maple. Except for a 15-minute defensive lapse midway through the second half, Richmond Hill may have remained undefeated. In that disastrous quarter of an hour the Maple forward slam- med home four unanswered goals to overcome a first-half Richmond Hill goal by Joe Lukovits, and put Maple ahead LIBERAL CLASSIFIEDS-Get Results-TU.4-IIOS Richmond Hill United Suffers First Defeat Al's Cycle Gt Sports Bicycles and Tricycles EVERYTHING IN SPORTING GOODS 25 Yonge St. South Richmond Hill TU. 4-11 We have them for all members of the family New and Usedâ€"Repairs and Service Expert Bicycle Repairs All Work Guaranteed rardi. A goal at this stage would have given Richmond Hill a 2-0 lead, and would have certainly affected the final out- come. As it was, it set the stage for Maple’s second-half onslaught. Although realizing there was little chance of salvaging even a tie in the 10 remaining min- utes, Richmond Hill fought back and Bobby Lewis scored the final goal to make the score Richmond Hill United travel to Newmarket next Saturday to take on the Newmarket first team. ï¬mmfl TU. 4-1213 Richmond Hill’s public school McConaghy Public School population are out limbering up holds its junior field day today their muscles these days to (Thursday) and its senior ev- compete in the annual track ents Friday. Events include and field day June 25 in the races, relays, standing, running town park. broad and high jumps. An exciting wind-up for the school year, the field day fea- tures all types of track and field events and is open to in- termural school field day win- ners from each of the Hill’s six public schools. Walter Scott School held its own field day last Wednesday with approximately 200 com- peting in the junior events in the morning and 200 in the School Athletes Train For June 25 Track Meet senior events The young athletes will be vying for the Principal’s Trophy awarded to the school with the highest number of points and won by McConaghy School last year,- the trophy for out- standing boy or girl ath- lete and individual troph- ies for each event. ’61 Chev Convertible Matador Red with White top, Red interior. Automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes. As new throughout $2495.00 ’60 Chev Convertible ’58 Chev. Impala Hardtop Black with Red interior. V8 auto- matic, radio, whitewalls, power steering, 4 barrel carburettor. Scarce model $1395.00 V8 automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls, wheel discs. White with Red interior Automatic, custom radio. Brigade Blue with Blue interior, immaculate inside and out $1895.00 ’61 Pontiac 4 door AV.5-5445 9612 Yonge Street TU.4-2864 HOME PAPER OF THE DISTRICT SINCE 1878 8 ft. Body, Completely reconditioned. New tires To Qualify For A Chance To Win The ’63 Pontiac Acadian Super Sportl Convertible On Display At Our Lot All You Have To Do Is Purchase A New or Used* Car. *Used car retail pfice must be $800.00 or more '60 HALF TON PICK-UP SIDE» STEP JUNE 22ml Is The Deadline HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! PONTIAC - BUICK I.'I'D. $1295 (Opposite Dunlap Observatory) Beverley Acres School field day was held Monday for the primary grades. Tuesday for the juniors, Wednesday for the intermediates and tomorrow the senior events will be run off. There were approximately three contestants per classroom picked to compete. Juniors and seniors at Cros- by Heights School held their field day last Thursday at 1:30 pm. and winners will compete at the annual meet. Approxim- ately 643 took part last week. Pleasantville School's‘ field day is for everyone. It was held last Thursday for juniors in the morning and seniors in the afternoon. All students are en- couraged to participate. School population is 260. MacKillop School field day will be held today (Thursday). $2295.00 Ermine White with White top, Red interior. Bucket seats, automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes Hard top. Beautiful Brigade Blue with matching interior. Automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes, deep tread whitewalls $1995.00 Monaco Blue with White top. Auto- matic, radio, power steering and brakes $3095.00 ’62 Chev Convertible ’61 Chev Biscayne 2 door Cadet Blue with Blue interior. Prac- tically new tires. Automatic trans- mission, wheel discs $1795.00 ’62 Pontiac Convertible ’60 Olds Super 88 2 door I75" Wheel Base, 825 x 20 Throughout I960 G.M.C. 9600 SERIES (AB 8. CHASSIS Tires; A-I Condition MONDAY, JUNE 17-â€" TUESDAY, JUNE 18â€" North York Major Softball Junior League Fairbank vs. Kent Clothes Town Park Game Time 8:15 pm. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 19â€" SPORTS DAY PARADE N.H.L. All-Stars vs. Dynes Jewellers Town Park Game Time 8:15 pm. 7 FRIDAY, JUNE 21â€" THURSDAY, JUNE 20 â€" Metro Major Football League Gazzola and Allen vs Dynes Jewellers SATURDAY, JUNE 22â€" Newmarket and District Soccer League Aurora Firsts vs. Richmond Hill Town Park Kickoff 4:00 pm. Richmond Hill Minor Ball Association â€"- Juvenile “The Liberal vs. Bayview Plaza B.A. Reid’s Auto Body vs. Bork Jewellers Game Time. 6:45 pm. Main Diamond. Town Park East Toronto Ladles' Softball League Lou Myles vs. Mic Macs Town Park Game Time 8:15 pm. MORE SPORTS 0N PAGE 10 $1495 $3050.00