more ways to get the most out of your phone...
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Brookhaven Town Recreation Slo-Bail StandingsOPEN SOUTH "A"TEAM W LAndrews Ceramics 10 1Pat & Jim 's Whirl Inn 9 2Bellport Deli 8 3Bowl-Away 8 3Mid Island A.C. t> 5Atlantic Deli 6 6Rob's Deli 5 7Blue Pt. Laundry 3 8Medford Brauhaus 2 10Farra 's Elec. 0 12
OPEN NORTH "A"TEAM VV LDante 's Inferno 11 2Sonny Chair rfental 9 2Fred's Deli -7 5Ho'brook Sanit. 7 6Cress Florist 6 5Gallagher Const. 5 7Lake Ronk. Deli 4 9Gnarled Hollow 0 13
FIRE DEPT. SOUTHTEAM W LHagerman 10 1Medford 9 2Eastport 5 4Yaphank 5 5N. Patchogue 4 7Bellport 2 6Manorville 0 10
NORTHERN BKHVN (2d Half )TEAM W L* Davis Island 2 0Daisy Bakery 2 0Hawkins-Spence 2 0DeRosa Plmbg 2 0McNamara Buick 0 2Rudge Plmbg 0 2Carvel 0 2Darling Stationery 0 2* First Half Champion
B R O O K H A V E N S U N D A Y(East )TEAM W LOld Town Shell 18 2Tramps 15 3H & M 16 4Chiefs 14 6Gary's 711 10 10
Spartans 8 12McClouds 7 11Huskies 4 16Whips 3 15Sd Beach Perform. 3 17
OPEN SOUTH "B" .TEAM W LSand Bar 10 1East End Fence 8 3Chet's Riviera 8 3Red Barn 7 5Eadco Const. 6 6Team Sport 5 6Weaver Deli 5 8Wrucks Auto 4 8Cassel GMC 4 9Three A's 2 10
OPEN NORTH "B"TEAM W LDeno's Rest 11 2Brown Chevy 7 5Waldbaums 7 5Sehlmeyer Elec. 6 5Larry 's Lock 5 1 '7Mid Island Tavern 4 VDoolan Stane 4 8Steak & Brew 3 8
FIRE DEPT. NORTHTEAM W LPt. Jefferson 12 0Setauket 10 3Farmingville 7 6Sound Beach 4 6Centereach 3 6Stony Brook 4 7Terryville 4 8Selden 1 11
WOMEN'S LEAGUETEAM W -LHounds & Foxes 6 0Family Lumber 6 1Nite Owls 6 2Jon Ali Stars 5 3Colonials 4 1Road Runners 3 4Affiliates 2 3Alley Katz 1 6Derby 's 1 7Guvnors Pub 0 7
B R O O K H A V E N S U N D A Y(West)TEAM W LmCn a ivuO&i 15 DCardinals 13 5Suffolk Federal 13 7Highway Charcoal 13 7Tolyjo Lounge 11 7Raider A.C. 11 9North Isle 8 10Whalers 5 15Station Beverage 5 15Stars 2 18
Dowl ing Offe rs Summer StudiesThe Dowling College Marine
Science Faculty will conduct anOpen House on Thursday, July 12at 7:30 p.m. in the Hunt Room ofthe college to acquaint junior andsenior high school students andtheir parents with the DowlingCollege Marine Science SummerInstitute. Participants will betreated to laboratory demon-strations and boat rides. Marinesampling equipment , biologicalsamples , and marine science andlaboratory facilities will be opento view.
The second session of theMarine Science Summer In-stitute is open to all studentsbetween the ages of 12 and 19 on afirst-come first-served basis.This is the second year in whichthe program has been offered.
The session , from July 30 toAugust 30, covers water safety,boat operation and basic piloting,beach habitats , water com-position , food from the sea ,ecology and pollution. Study issupplemented by field trips , filmsand an Audubon guide. The fifthweek is an optional three to fourday camp-out at Cedar PointCounty Park in East Hampton , tostudy a different marine habitat ,bioluminescence and night-lighting.
The program is run on an 8:30a.m. - 5 p.m. daily basis.However , students may par-ticipate on a one to five day perweek schedule. Those wanting toreceive school credit must fulfills p e c i f i c , a t t e n d a n c erequirements.
For further information on theOpen House or on the SummerInstitute , call 589-6100, extension277.
BLUMS HAVEN'T MOVED
A story in last week's issue ofThe Long Island Advance tellingof a holdup at the home of Mr.and Mrs. Arthur Blum at 9Morris Avenue , Patchogue ,ended by saying the Blums havesince sold the house and moved toanother location. The Blums saythey have not moved and thatthey are still occupying thehouse.
READ THE LEGALS
Rotary Takes Senior,Felice's Minor Title
PYA A Leaaue News
By BOB DIAMOND, Jr.
Rotary took the Senior LeagueChampionship this week bydefeating Kiwanis 7-6. BruceCohen allowed seven hits andstruck out 13. L. Caisey doubled;A. Marrero hit three singles tobring in two runs; R. Poulos andF. Hark each hit two singles tobring in four runs ; Cohen hit asingle to bring in a run and C.J.Beller singled. Rotary 's recordfor the season is 13-3.
In the Minors ' Nat ionalLeague , Felice took the secondhalf as well as the first halfseason to become the champs.Rocky 's fought hard but lost thelast game to Felice 15-3. GeoffreyWard ol Felice 's allowed five hitand struck out four. Hugh Farrelltrip led and singled; Jay Farrelltrip led ; Jeff Hark , Jon Harksingled; Brian Boutcher hit threesingles. Felice's next games willbe against the champs in theMinors American League wherethe outcome is still being decided.There may be another RoundRobin playoff coming up in thesecond half of the AmericanLeague like there was in the firsthalf when Smith's Market won.Smith's will play the winners ofthe second half to decide thechamps , who will then playFelice to decide the cham-
pionship in the Minor League.Liguori Deli 23-K of C. 1.
Liguori's Mike Brooks allowedeight hits and struck out four.Scott Farrands and Rob Braildoubled and singled ; GarySanger , Greg Filiano , Steve Coxand Mike Brooks all singled. Anoutstanding play occured when aball hit by K of C's R. Morales tocenter field was picked up byLiguori' s Rich Sanger who threwto Rob Brail at second base , andover to Greg Filiano at third basewho tagged Morales out. SteveCox, catcher for Liguori's caugh ta high pop foul hit by K of C's T.Cowan to end the game.
Ruland's 7- South Bay Electric3. Ruland ' s Ricky Mart inoallowed one hit and struck outsix. Bobby Hummel hit ahomerun , double and single tobring in two runs ; Ricky Hummeland Tommy Belligan doubled andsingled; Steven Bambach , RickyMartino and Steve Worthingtonsingled. Martino allowed only onewalk the entire game.
Bankers Trust 6- Tinker Bank4. Bankers ' Ross Faria pitchedthe win. J. Logan tripled ;
Themann doubled and singled ;D. Logan doubled ; Smith andHummel singled.
Dante's Still Leads;Hits Gallagher, 13-2
Dante 's Inferno held onto itsone-game , first-p lace lead in theBrookhaven Town RecreationNorthern Open Slo-Ball Leaguelast week , taming GallagherConstruction 13-2.
The league leaders turned in agreat defensive effort , holdingGallagher 's to iust five singles.
Dante 's, meanwhile , wascollecting 16 hits all of the onebase variety. Joe Luciani was themost productive swinger for thewinners , going three for fourwhile John Cook drove in two.
The second place Sonny 's ChairRental scored in every inning inbeat ing the cellar-dwellingGnarled Hollow Inn , 20-2. Sonny 'sfattened its batting averages ,rapp ing out 26 hits with TonyMusso and Jim Nugent pacingthe parade with five-for-five andfour-for-four , respectively. MikePaduano was also instrumentalas he drove in three with ahomer , double and a single.
In other "A" League games,Fred' s Deli , now showing signs oflife after a slow start , scored twoin the top of the first and this wasall it needed as it went on tosubdue the Lake RonkonkomaDeli 4-1. It was a fine defensiveeffort for both clubs as Fred'shad only eight hits while thelosers were held to five scatteredsingles. Ron Stuke drove in twofor the winners .
Cress Florist spotted HolbrookSanitation a two-run lead , butcame on to win 8-2 with three inthe third and four more in thefourth. Jim Kennedy, who led theleague in round trippers lastyear , hit one in this game as hedrove in three runs
In the Open NortlT'B" , Deno 'sRest , the League leader , droppeda 15-6 game on Monday toWaldbaufn 's, but came back onThursday to beat the same club 9-3. Al Menzies and Mike Flahertyeach had three hits for Wald-baum 's in the 15-6 game , whileArt Skladel ignited the Denooffense on Thursday as hehomered to lead a 14-hit assualt.
The Steak & Brew surprisedLarr 's Lock Service 12-6 as thewinner got a quick jump, scoringfive in the first and six more inthe second as Larry 's neverrecovered. Steve Kelley andWaliy Hughes each drive in apair for Steak & Brew. In a
squeaker , Sehlmeyer Electricscored four runs in the home halfof the seventh to edge Dooslan-Stane 17-16 as Andy Pirozzisparked the winners with a fourfor five night. Brown Chevyromped Mid Island Tavern 31-6as they had 32 hits while DooslanStane evened its score withSehlmeyer coming back to win10-9 with five runs in the bottomof the final inning.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY TO THE ADVANCE . . . AND SAVE!ONLY $9.00 A YEAR\ $15.00 FOR 2 YEARS* . $21.00 FOR 3 YEARS¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦I
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P. O. BOX 780 ¦^W PATCHOGUE, N.Y. 11712 JW GENTLEMEN: |fl PLEASE START MY SUBSCRIPTION AT ONCE. I ENCLOSE $ FOR YEAR(S) ¦
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(Continued from last ad)
More ways to get the mostout of your phone serviceZ9a Everything has its price. You charge for this service. Look for the one 0«7a Reduced rates for overseas.pay a monthly premium charge for closest to you in the front pages of your Long-time users of overseas servicesome types of phone equipment, in ad- phone book. are generally familiar with rates. But fordition to monthly charges for telephone those who don't know, reduced rates toservice and extension telephones. If many points apply during certain nightyou prefer , you can eliminate this 3A Q K ** K .. hours, Sundays and holidays. For de-monthly premium charge by making jT, n L « ,, £
er' tails , dial "0" (Operator) and ask for theone lump-sum payment How long you yellow
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Knd fo low these s,u99es- Overseas Operator,
keep the equipment determines which tlons: D°n * ^hop for price alone-payment plan costs less. This chart will service after the sale may affect selling £^Qm Adyice from the hQne CQm.help you decide: P[ice- Gel estimates on major pur- pany The service representative ischase5, receipts for all paymen s. rrain
yed to help you decide just how
c^eck on
cost of
service calls by
tele- much X e i e p^n l ser v ,ce you reallyKM* singi. Br..K-E,OT phone. Ask for estimate of repair then need And businessmen can get he|p_ < R"° p«>™"' ™=!_ get itemized bill before paying. Read from communicatlons consultants , PBX
SS $\T? ««¦ S all contracts before signing. Check on service advisers and building industry
vSc^oneiepJe 4303 32 ™' s credit details, get written guarantees. consu |tants(.mpaired heanng) 123 4500 37momhs See more hints in the front of your
"S& 123 4500 37 months Yellow Pages. II you missed the tips in our previousBen ch*™ 93 4303 46 n\onths ads, be sure to send for a copy ot ourTone Ringer 117 61 46 53 months ffee QOO^JQI "ftovv f0 Qef the MOSt Out^T^ ^ ^ JfLlS
,it1f^haveaF>nncess OC of Your Phone Service", 315 Hudson.i n M.^P*
M.«»«.I*»IS
3«|B Cheaper afterten. Need a lot street . New York, New York 10013.*}f\ of color telephones? For 11 or more, the ¦¦¦ ¦¦^¦¦^^ ¦nB^B BWWa Free personal directory: you one-time charge drops from $6.15 to - ^^^^^^^^ H^^99|H^Hcan get free "personal directories" $4.31 each. ¦YflYJHVJH BHBHHnvAVwhich to jot down numbers. The per- j j j T _ T^ j Bsonal directory comes in two handy
^^ ^^H f~ Z_ &¦¦¦sizes: one for your desk and a smaller 3©B Free number.change card8. |H g&ff 9Bversion ror pocKet or purse. Tour Dus,- lf your telephone number is changed or ^M TO BET ¦¦ness office representative will be glad yo
yu move, your business office repre- ¦¦ ¦SSSHMV ¦¦to send them to you. sentative will be happy to supply num- H| TWKgSt ] W M
g^ - ber change cards so you can notify ¦¦¦ WHT ^^^B31i An extra-long cord? If your your friends. And if you are informed B&S fifVMJft ! BVfl
apartment is too big for one phone but about a friend's new number, jot it down. ¦¦¦ ¦fHHff ! ^ Htoo small for two, maybe a 9 or 13 foot ^^H ABSKL HHcord would be a happy compromise. 4%n ^ ^B MHVMM ^¦¦1The one-time charge is $6.15, but you O/a If you lose your dime. Al- ^ H i ^ Hsave the monthly extension charge of though pay phones generally are work- ^^H ^^H$1.23. A $12.50 connection charge ap- ing wei; these days, there's a chance ^^H ^^Hplies either way. yOU might lose some money in one ^^^B /g> ^^^Hsometime. If you do, dial the Operator , V_vS , ¦£¦£¦
*i& _ . give the number of the coin phone , ^ H - ^ ^mV« Convenience has its price. A your name and address. A check for ^ M ~———J \^^Mtelephone credit card is a handy item the refund will be mailed to you. ^ ^ ^ M^MMJ
I^Hto have, and we're in favor of them. But Bj| B^BS9B ^ 9jcredit card calls are charged at the ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H^^HR
i i iUMd ujj ciaiut-aooionru iaic, "dtl*WWa Plan your calls. Jot down the r~ ; ~ ~ i*%** things you want to talk about, and mark *« fates l.sted and the tantts reienedI to« C m- 1IU. ._i. ._ ¦ K ¦.. .u i I \J .H I- i-i are those in effect as oljune 1. 1973 RalesWWB Every little bit helps. If i ts them off as you go along. You II be able do not include tax
convenient, pay your phone bill in per- to cover more conversation in less ' 'son at one of our public offices to save time. It will help keep down the cost of ^ \postage and checking costs. Or pay at long distance or multi-message unit (¦•»*) NewVfoilcTetephOne
an authorized agency—there is no calls. X-^
Geraci(continued from page 6)
brosio gave North Patchogueanother run in the fifth. With oneout , Ambrosio, who played a finegame at third base all afternoon ,walked. He then stole second.Costanzo struck out , but thecatcher missed the third strikebut managed to throw Costanzoout as Ambrosio took third.
Again Geraci helped himself ,reaching first safely when thefirst baseman did not keep hisfoot on the bag after receiving thethrow from the shortstop for whatshould have been the third out ofthe inning.
Like the Boys Club , NorthPatchogue had four hits in thegame. Tellekarnp had two in-cluding a double.
Appold also limited NorthPa tchogue to just four hits in thefirst game, all singles, two byCostanzo and two by Ken Jones.North Patchogue's best threatcame in the fifth when it hadsecond and third with one out butfailed to score.
Meanwhile the Boys Club had11 hits off Al Willett , who sufferedhis first loss of the season in fourdecisions. They had at least onehit in each of the first six innings.
The Boys Club had the basesloaded with one out in the first butfailed to score. However , theybroke through for three in thesecond with three straight hitsafter two were out. The Boys Clubadded another run in the fourthand knocked Willett out in thesixth when they scored anotherrun.
Jim Budd came in and retiredthe next two batters but walkedthe next three to force in twomore runs. John Wall picked therunner off first for the third out.Budd settled down to retire theBoys Club in order in the seventh ,all on infield rollers.
All-Stars(continued from page 6)
Knights of Py thias - ArnieFeldman , Bondi's - Joe Koch ;True Value - Art Klein ; andGMAC - Gil Darrell. This gamewill be eight innings and eachparticipant will play a minimumof four innings.
League standings as of Sun-day:
AMERICAN LEAGUEPenn Glass -9-1Pa tchogue Moose - 9-2Sybelle - 5-4Engine Company - 3-4Carl — Bob's - 5-7Patchogue 40 Lanes - 3-6Felice Chevron - 2-7Patchogue Sport-Aldo 's - 1-6
NATIONAL LEAGUEHess - 10-1Pizza Town -9-1Gold Crest -7-3Carlos Luncheonette - 7-5GMAC -5-5Knights of Pythias - 2-6True Value - 3-8Bondi's - 3-8Blue Point Fire Dept. - 1-10
SOCCER SCHOOL
The Connecticut Soccer School ,under the direction of JoeMorrone , head soccer coach atthe University of Connecticut inStorrs , has announced the ac-ceptance of several studentsfrom this area who will attendone of the 3 single week sessionsoffered at the Choate School inWellingford , Conn., in August.The players , all of Bellport , areMichael Bianchi , 36 BellportLane ; Hart Buck , 21 Brown 'sLane, and John Frazer , 54 SouthCountry Road.
Freeze-dried products , idealfor camping, cost more thanother types of preserved food butare lighter in weight , not as bulkyand do not need to berefrigerated.
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1.0. CARDS REQUIRED WHtflE APPLICABLE
NOW~THRU TUES. JULY 7TH
I PATCHOGUE wi^TiiKGR 5 0600 IHOn Him¥Kp1 —MSK WE I. JRN rUMwysr!
UVtANDlETDIEPLAZA Iscrttn ComadylPJICHOGUI ! Charles Grodin
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PATCHOGUE
# MEDFORD;
BOARD OFEDUCATION
REGULAR MONTHLYBUSINESS MEETING
Monday,July 23
at8:00 P.M.
ADMINISTRATION OFFICE241 SOUTH OCEAN AVE.
PATCHOGUE, ~.-
WALK £Mo-^^
NEW YANKEE' ^
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—\ WALK £$I f /"~X \ Y J,, ,\ EX CLUSIVELY!I f i g J J ftT fe. PLAY Bv PLAY
JSljli ON RADIO STATIONS ^ fi^^wj
9H UfAl If AM 1370 ^bSrWg f f HLlX FM 97.5 J||f/!* Hlw S uffolk Radio Coverage J£^Mh "V )]
Cty. Tennis(continued from page 6)
at the tennis courts at the WestSayville County Golf Course,Montauk Highway, WestSayville.
The department is also spon-soring free tennis clinics forbeginners at both the WestSayville and Timber Point GolfCourses.
Adult clinics will be held onTuesday or Thursday, 9-10 a.m.,July 10-August 16. Children 'sclinics will be held on Wednesdayor Friday, 9-10 a.m., July 11-August 17. Private lessons arealso available by appointmentonly.
For further information onthese activities call , 567-1812,Tuesday through Sunday from 8a.m. - 8 p.m.