Banner Graphic, Volume 10, Number 248, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 June 1980 — Page 10

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The Putnam County Banner Graphic, June 23,1980

Sports scoreboard

Kasrhall At A Glance . By The XssiH’iated Press XATIOYM. LEAGUE HAST " I Pet. GB Montreal . ;it; a; 581 Philadelphia :t4 27 .557 ji : Pittsburgh :t5 ;to =>:« 2 1 .- Chicago 28 :tt .459 7'j Mew York 28 35 414 B'’. St I amis 25 40 :W5 12'• MUST It oust on 40 24 825 I .os Angeles :w 28 578 :i Cincinnati 54 22 .515 7 ■San Kraneiseo ;t» :tti .455 11 Atbnta 28 .hi 438 12 San Diego 20 28 4:« 12' Saturday's (tallies t'meimiiiti 8. St. Louis 5 San Kraneiseo 0, Philadelphia ;t Ytlanta 8, Chicago 11 liooston 4, I’llsliiirgli 2 I-os Angeles 5. New York 8 Montreal 7. San Diego 4 Sunday \ (i ones St I dims 12. t'ineinnati 2 New York 0. I.os Angeles 8 Montreal 2. San Diego 0 Philadelphia 4. San Kraneiseo :t Chicago :i. Atlanta, 2 Pittsburgh 2. Houston I Monday's (iallies Dos Angeles iSuielilfe I 4) at Houston 1 Aniluiar o 2*. 'in' I'ltlslmrgli iSoliminn 401 at SI Louis 'Sykes 181. 'ill Duly games scheduled Tuesday 's Haim's New York at ('lm ago Montreal at Philadelphia, 1111 Atlanta at Cincinnati. cut I'lttslmrgli at St l.oiiis. mi la's Angeles at IliHistou. ml Smi Kraneiseo at San Diego. 1111 XMKItlt AN I K Mil K EAST \\ I fit. (.It New Y olk 4:t 22 1182 Milwaukee :(5 20 517 7' : . Boston :t5 ,'tll SHB It t'levelanil Xt :itl .524 0 Detroit 22 SO .518 0 1 ■ Hallmime :t4 22 515 0 1 .- Toronto 21 22 102 It \\ KST Kansas City 40 28 lilKi Oakland 21 :18 182 0 1 -- Chicago 20 25 482 O'Texas 20 28 455 10 ■Seattle 20 57 448 to 1 ;. Minnesota 27 :18 415 I2'» California 22 41 .250 18 Saturday‘s (iaines New York 5. Oakland 2 Detroit 4. Chieago 1 Minnesota 2. Cleveland 2 California 4. Boston 2 Baltimore 0. Seattle 0 Milwaukee 5. Kansas City I Texas 2. Toronto i Sunday 's (iaines Detroit 74i. Chieago 1-4 Seattle 7. Baltimore 5 Boston 8. California 2 Oakland 5. New Y ork 2 Cleveland tl, Minnesota 8 Kansas City 7. Milwaukee 4 Toronto 8 Texas 5 Monday's (iaines . Detroit 1 Underwood 1-41 at Cleveland ■Owehinko 0-21. In> Boston iKekersley 2-51 at New York ’Hiuidry7-2l.ini Kansas City (dura 0-21 at Minnesota Koosman 5-61. m> Milwaukee 1 Keeton 2-21 at Oakland ‘1 Kingman 240, no Only games scheduled Tuesday's (iaines Kansas City at Minnesota. 2. ml Toronto at Baltimore, mi - Detroit at Cleveland, mi ' Boston at New Y ork. m> Seattle at Texas, tip Chieago at California, up Milwaukee at Oakland, up American Yssocialion By The Associated I’ress HAST W I. I’d. (ill Springfield 20 28 .600 lowa 21 27 . 458 9', ■ Indianapolis 29 27 429 Ill's Evansville 28 41 288 14 WEST Denver 48 20 706 - OklahomaCilv 40 29 .580 B'.. Omaha 29 28 .422 184 Wichita 28 42 400 21 Sunday 's (iaines Indianapolis 7. Evansville 4 ' Wichita 8. Oklahoma City 6 . Denver 6. Omaha 4 Springfield 7. lowa 5 Monday's (lames ' Evansville at Springfield » lowa at Indianapolis Denver at Wichita Oklahoma City at Omaha Tuesday's (lames Evansville a! Springfield lowa at Indianapolis Denver at Wichita Oklahoma City at Omaha TODAY'S M AJOR LEAGUE HEADERS Bv The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING 150 at bats': Hernandez. St. Louis. .237: Smith. Los Angeles. .333; Henderson. New Y ork. 325; Cruz. Houston. 321; Cromartie. Montreal. .217. RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia. 51; Hernandez. St Louis. 49; Rose. Philadelphia. 45 Templeton. St. Louis. 43; LeElore. Montreal. 42: Moreno, Pittsburgh, 42: Murphy. Atlanta. 42: Clark. San Francisco. 42 RBI: Hendrick. St. Louis. 54: Schmidt, Philadelphia. 53: Garvey. Los Angeles. 52: Baker. Los Angeles. 46: Smith. Los Angeles. 44 HITS Templeton. St Louis. 86; Hernandez. St Louis. 83: Chambliss. Atlanta. 78; Moreno. Pittsburgh. 77; Cromartie. Montreal. 76 DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia. 20: Chambliss. Atlanta. 20: Stearns. New Y'ork. 19 Knight. Cincinnati. 19: Hernandez" St. Louis. 18 TRIPI.ES: Moreno. Pittsburgh. 6:

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Landestoy. Houston, 6; Scott, Montreal. 5; Mcßride, Philadelphia, 5; Clark, San Francisco. 5 HOME RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia. 20. Baker. Los Angeles. 16: Luzinski. Philadelphia. 15; Garvey. Los Angeles, 15: Hendrick. St. Louis. 14 STOLEN BASES: Moreno. Pittsburgh, 39: LeElore. Montreal. 38; Collins. Cincinnati. 27; Scott. Montreal, 21; Law, Los Angeles. 21. PITCHING (7 Decisions): Bibby, Pittsburgh. 8-1. 889. 3.01; Reuss. Los Angeles. 8-t. 889. 2.08; Carlton. Philadelphia. 13-2, 867. 1.83; Welch. Los Angeles. 7-2. .778, 2 13. Past ore, Cincinnati. 9-3. 758. 3 11; Hilliard. Houston. 9-3. .750. 1.51; Jackson. Pitlsliurgh. 5-2. 714. 1.86; Sutton. I.os Angeles. 5 2. 714. 2.65. STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, IXS; Richard. Houston. 108. Ryan. Houston. 82. Niekro, Atlanta. 75; Hlyleven. Pittsburgh. 74 TODAY'S MAJOR I FAM E LEADERS Bv The Associated Press AMEBIC AN LEAGUE BAITING 1150 at tials): Molitor. Mil wakec. 358; Carew. California. .350; Brett. Kansas City. 337; Orta. Cleveland. 3:18. Trammell. Detroit, .333. RUNS: Yount. Milwakee. 51. Randolph. New York. 50. Wilson. Kansas City, 50; Wills. Texas, 49; Trammell. Detroit. 47; Oglivie. Milwaukee. 47; Henderson. Oak laud. 47 Rill Perez. Boston. 51, Oliver. 'Texas. 50; Oglivie. Milwaukee. 49. Arinas. Oak land. 17. l'o«|ier. Milwaukee. 46 HIT'S Wilson. Kansas City. 91. Bum 11l y. Baltimore. 83; Carew. California. 83: Rivers. ’Texas. 82: Oliver. ’Texas. 81 DOUBLES: Morrison. Chieago. 22; Y ount. Milwaukee. 20; Carew. California, 19; DGareia. ’Toronto. 18. Oliver. 'Texas, 17 TRIPLES: Griffin. Toronto. 8; Bumbry. Baltimore. 5; Brett. Kansas City. 5; 12 'full Willi 4 HOME RUNS: Oglivie. Milwakee. 18; R Jackson. New Y ork. 17. Rice. Boston. 13. Maylierrv, Toronto. 13: Armas. Oak.lami 12 STOLEN BASES; Henderson. (Inland. 31; Wilson. Kansas City, 30; Dilone. Cleveland. 20: .1 .Cm/.. Seattle, 20; Wills, Texas, 20 PITCHING (7 Decisions): John. New York. 10-2. 833. 3.11; (Sura. Kansas City. 9-2. 818. 2.16; Stone. Baltimore. 9-3. .750, 3.46: Farmer. Chicago. 5-2. 714, 279, Rainey. Boston, 7-3, 700. 4.97; Spillner, Cleveland. 700. 4.60; Guidry. New Y’ork, 7-3 . 700. 3.22: Mcdich. Texas. 7-3. .700, 387 STRIKEOUTS Guidry, New llork. 88; M Norris. Oakland. 73; Kcough. Oakland. 72; K.Bannistr. Seattle. 72; Matlack, Texas. 71 Indiana High School Baseball Slate Tournament Championship By The Associated Press Semifinals DeKalb 5. Jeffersonville 1 Muncie North 4, Ben Davis I Championship DeKalb 1, Muncie North 0, 8 innings Weekend Sports Transactions By Tlie Associated Press BASEKAI.I American League BOSTON RED SOX-Placed Jim Rice, outfielder, on the 15-day disabled list. Recalled Garry Hancock, outfielder, from Pawtucket of the International League. Recalled John Tudor, pitcher, from Pawtucket of the International League Waived Jack Billingham. pitcher, for the purpose of giving him his unconditional release. CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Optioned Francisco Barrios, pitcher, to lowa of the American Association. Recalled Guy Hoffman. pitcher, from lowa. SEATTLE MARINERS-Placed Willie Horton, designated hitter, on the 21-day disabled list. National League NEW YORK METS-Signed Billy Beane, outfielder, and assigned him to Little Kails of the New York-Penn League SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Announced the retirement of Willie MeCovey. first baseman-pinch hitter, effective July 10. I’ncono 500 Results LONG POND. Pa. IAP) - Results of Sunday’s Pocono S(H) championship auto race, with type of car, laps completed and winner's average speed in inph: 1. Bobby Unser. Penske-Cosworth, 200, 151 454. 2. Johnny Rutherford, Chaparral-Cos-worth. 200. 3. Tom Sneva. McLaren-Cosworth. 198. 4 Bill Alsup. Penske-Cosworth, 194. 5. Vern Schuppan, Wildcat-DGS, 193. 6 Pancho Carter. Lightning-Cosworth. 193 7 Sheldon Kinser. W'atson-Cosworth, 192 8. Howdy Holmes. Lola-Cosworth, 190 9. Larry Cannon, Wildcat-Offenhauser, 188 10. Lee Kunzman. Mcljren-Cosworth, 183. II llenn Johason, Lightning-Offenhau-ser, 182. 12. Rick Mears, Peske-Cosworth, 163. 13 Billv Engelhart, Mcl«iren-Cosworlh, 133. 14. Jerry Sneva. Lola-Cosworth. 117. 15 Jerry Karl. Karl-Chevrolet, 112. 16. Phil Caliva. McLaren-Offenhauser. 110 17. Mario Andretti. Penske-Cosworth, 105 18 Danny Ongais, Penske-Cosworth, 99. 19 A.J. Foyi. Vels-Parnelli Jones-Cos-worth. 85 20. John Martin, Wildcat-Offenhauser, 78. 21 Dick Simon. Vollstedt-Offenhauser, 74. 22 Joe Saldana, Lightning-offenhauser, 73. 23. Mike Mosley, Eagle-Chevrolel, 45. 24. Al Unser. Longhorn-Cosworth. 34. 25 Phil Threshie. IAM-Donovan, 26 26. Roger Rager, Wildcat-Chevrolet, 25. 27. Jim McElreath. King-Chevrolel, 25. 28 Billy Vukovich Watson-Offenhauser, 23. 29. Tom Bagley, Wildcat-Cosworth, 16. 30. Dennis Firestone, Penske-Cosworth, 10 31 Al Loquaslo. Lightning Offenhauser, 10. 32. Tony Bettenhausen, Eagle-Offenhau-ser. 4 33 Gary Bettenhausen. Wildcat-DGS, I.

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Washington breaks slump with three Met homers

By JOHN NELSON AP Sports Writer It had been a dreadful slump for a man who brought a .280 career batting average with him when he joined the New York Mets. Claudell Washington had not had a hit since he singled in the ninth inning of a five-run Mets rally that beat the San Francisco Giants 7-6 a week ago Saturday. Traded to the Mets from the Chicago White Sox on June 7 for a minor league pitcher, Washington had gone 1 -for-17 as a National Leaguer. “1 don’t know the pitchers in this league very well, so I’ve been struggling,” Washington said. His struggle ended Sunday when he slammed three home runs, driving in five runs, to help beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-6 and end a sevengame Mets losing streak. Washington also had a single in the game to go 4-for-5, and he called it the greatest day of his seven-year major league career

Oakland's Keough has come 'complete' cycle

By WILLIAM R. BARNARD AP Sports Writer For Matt Keough, there’s just no relief. The Oakland A’s right-hander pitched his 12th complete game, high in the in stopping the New York Yankees 5-2 Sunday. He ran his record to 8-7 and stopped the Yankees’ ninegame winning streak, their best since they won 10 in a row 12 years ago. Oakland Manager Billy Martin. facing the Yankees in New York for the first time since he was fired last year, has said that if the A’s had a relief pitcher as good as New York’s Rich Gossage, they would be leading the American League West instead of being 9M» games behind. After his 132-pitch performance Sunday, Keough said he is a “little leg weary and a little arm weary. I’m not satisfied with myself the last few games. The West Coast to East Coast travel is tough. You can’t sleep.” In a conversation before Sunday’s game with Yankees’ pitcher Tommy John, who got a victory Saturday with seven innings of pitching, Keough said, “If I had Gossage in the bullpen, I’d get out after seven innings, too.” But he doesn’t, so Keough pitches on and on in every game he starts. On Sunday, Martin left him in although he gave up 10 hits and four walks. “It’s pretty easy (to face the Yankees),” a tongue-in-cheek Keough said. “Just get the five left-handers without hitting a home run.”

DeKalb state baseball champ after eight-inning 1-0 thriller

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The state championship was on the line when DeKalb coach Bill Jones decided it was time to put control of the Barons’ title hopes in the right arm of junior righthander Todd Cobbs, who had already worked six innings earlier in the day. “I didn’t ask him if he was ready,” Jones said after Cobbs two innings of hitless relief helped the Barons edge Muncie North 1-0 in eight innings for the state championship Saturday night. “I just knew he was ready.” Jones added after the Barons had claimed their first state baseball crown on freshman Bob Squires’ RBI single. The hit, which scored Chris Forrest from second base, gave Cobbs the distinction of being the winning pitcher in both the semifinal and state championship games. Cobbs, who finished the season 12-2, struck out eight and gave up four hits as the Barons ended Jeffersonville’s title bid with a 5-1 victory. Then, he struck out two in relief of Mike Hasselman who had survived a serious first inning threat to pit-

Washington hit a two-run homer in the first, another tworun shot in the fifth, and his solo homer in the seventh gave the Mets a 9-3 lead as the Dodgers saw a four-game winning streak come to an end. Washington became only the third player in Mets history to hit three homers in one game. Jim Hickman did it in 1965, and Dave Kingman in 1976. Washington’s first two homers came off the Dodgers’ $3 million free agent, Dave Goltz, 3-6, who hasn’t won since May 11. Mark Bomback, 4-1, was the winner in relief, and Neil Allen pitched three scoreless innings for the save, his 11th. Elsewhere in the league, the St. Louis Cardinals clobbered Cincinnati 12-2, the Montreal Expos blanked San Diego 2-0, Philadelphia edged the San Francisco Giants 4-3, the Chicago Cubs got by Atlanta 3-2 and the Pittsburgh Pirates trimmed Houston 2-1. Expos 2, Padres 0 Right-hander Steve Rogers, 9-

In other American League games, the Detroit Tigers swept a double-header from the Chiqago White Sox by 7-1 and 6-4 scores, the Seattle Mariners came from behind to defeat the Baltimore Orioles 7-5, the Boston Red Sox whipped the California Angels 6-3, the Cleveland Indians bombed the Minnesota Twins 11-6, the,Kansas City Royals trimmed the Milwaukee Brewers 7-4 and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Texas Rangers 6-5 in 10 innings. Oakland scored a run in an unusual way in the seventh when Dave McKay singled, went to third on Rickey Henderson’s bunt double that trickled into right field past New York’s charging infielders and scored on Dwayne Murphy’s sacrifice fly. Royals 7, Brewers 4 U.L. Washington, Amos Otis and Willie Aikens homered and Rich Gale pitched a six-hitter despite a shaky start as Kansas City stopped Milwaukee. The Brewers took a 3-0 lead off Gale, but the Royals rebounded with the three homers and two RBI singles by Frank White. “Gale gave us three runs on four hits the first two innings and then shut the door in our face until the ninth,” said Milwaukee Manager George Bamberger. “It looked like we had him early, but he bounced back.” <, Red Sox 6. Angels 3 Tony Perez, who leads the AL with 51 RBI, drove in three runs with a two-run homer and a single and Dave Rader hit his first American League homer to power Boston past the Cali-

ch six scoreless innings against the Muncie North Titans. “Our pitchers don’t overpower the batters. They just move the ball around well. That’s why I wasn’t worried about him being tired. He’s young, it wasn’t very hot and there had been plenty of time to rest between games.” Hasselman struck out eight, allowed four singles, hit a batter and walked two in his six innings. However, the 1980 winner of the Mental Attitude award presented by the Indiana High School Athletic Association needed some help in the first inning. He got it when Muncie’s Tim Heston raced from first to third base on an infield hit and found a teammate already there. The base-running error was the turning point in the game, said Jones. “I knew we weren’t going to score a lot of runs and it looked like they were going to blow us right out,” Jones said. “The mistake eased the pressure and gave us some breathing room. ” North’s Joe Marsh opened the game hy striking out, but reached first when catcher

5, battled a balky arm and scattered eight hits for his second shutout of the season and 22nd of his career. The victory was Rogers’ eighth in nine starts against only one loss. Warren Cromartie and Bob Pate drove in the Montreal runs with singles. Tony Bernazard doubled and scored on Cromartie’s single off Gary Lucas, 3-4, in the sixth, and Pate singled home Gary Carter in the eighth. Phils 4. Giants 3 Steve Carlton won his 13th game against only two losses, outdueling Vida Blue, who tried unsuccessfully for the second time to become a 10-game winner. Carlton scattered eight hits, struck out eight ad walked three. Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski drove in seventh-inning runs as the Phils rallied from a 3-2 deficit. Cubs 3, Braves 2 Bill Buckner and Jerry Martin each homered in the sixth inning to rally the Cubs to their fourth victory in five games.

fornia Angels. The Red Sox were playing without Jim Rice, Carlton Fisk and Butch Hobson, all injured. Mariners 7, Orioles 5 “It’s tough for me to get into the lineup. I’ve got to realize my role and mine is a utility player,” said Larry Milbourne, who entered the game batting only .123. But he broke a 5-5 tie with a two-run triple in the ninth inning and Tom Paciorek knocked in three runs with a homer and single to lead Seattle over Baltimore. Indians 11, Twins 6 Rookie Joe Charboneau capped a five-run sixth inning with a two-run homer and Cleveland rattled Minnesota for 19 hits. Charboneau’s homer was one of six in a row for the Indians in their big inning, which also saw a two-run triple by Dell Alston and a run-scoring single by Mike Hargrove. Tigers 7-6, White Sox 1-4 Detroit’s double-header sweep handed Chicago its fifth and sixth losses in a row. Tom Brookens had a pair of doubles and two RBI to back the sevenhit pitching of Dave Rozema in the opener, which featured a triple play by Chicago. Blue Jays 6, Rangers 5 Lloyd Moseby’s lOth-inning sacrifice fly completed a Toronto comeback after Texas took a 5-1 lead through seven innings. Four relievers gave up three runs in the eighth, one in the ninth and one in the 10th as the Blue Jays avoided a sweep. Garth lorg had a two-run homer in the eighth, two hit batsman led to John Mayberry’s sacrifice fly

Doug Hall missed the ball. Heston then walked and Scott Paluch beat out an infield hit. But, instead of the bases being loaded with no outs, the Titans had runners on first and third with one out. Heston was tagged out in a rundown as he tried to get back to second with Marsh remaining on third. Hasselman then ended the threat with a pair of strikeouts. Forrest beat out an infield hit and stole second to set the stage for Squires’ two-out hit against North’s Brad Dobbs, who pitched the entire game. Dobbs, 6-5, had held the Barons hitless since the third inning until Forrest’s single. He allowed only four hits overall and struck out eight. The victory gave DeKalb, ranked No. 19 in the final state poll by the Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association, a 30-8 record. The unranked Titans, making their first Final Four appearance, finished 17-7. Hasselman drove in two runs against No. 9 Jeffersonville with a bases-loaded walk and a triple.

Right-hander Dennis Lamp, 7-6, went 71-3 innings for the win, and Dick Tidrow earned his thrd save. Jeff Burroughs had given the Braves a 2-1 lead in the fourth with his second homer of the year, a two-run blast. Both Chicago homers came off Phil Niekro, 5-10. Cubs left fielder Ken Henderson made a game-saving throw to the plate in the seventh inning when he nailed Larvell Blanks, who was trying to score from second on a single by Mike Lum. Pirates 2, Astros 1 John Milner provided the eventual winning run with his sixth-inning home run, and Pittsburgh ended a six-game losing streak by beating the Astros and Joe Niekro. At the same time, Houston saw a sixgame winning streak come to an end, as well as a streak of 14 wins at the Astrodome. Jim Bibby claimed his eighth victory in nine decisions, going eight innings before he was lifted for a pinch hitter.

JOHN McNAMARA Looking for relief

Reds know how Cards' hurlers feel CINCINNATI (AP) - The generosity of his pitching staff overwhelms Cincinnati Reds manager John McNamara. “We’ve been getting poor, inconsistent pitching. That’s where it all lies,” said McNamara, who bit his lip as the St. Louis Cardinals battered four Cincinnati pitchers for 15 hits in a 12-2 rout of the Reds on Sunday. Only reliever Doug Bair escaped unscathed as all but one Cardinal starter had at least one hit. St. Louis scored runs in bunches three in the fourth, two in the fifth, six in the sixth, and a final one in the seventh. On the other side of the linescore, a Reds’ lineup minus George Foster managed just four hits and a walk off Pete Vuckovich, 7-5. Cincinnati’s only scoring came on a two-run homer by Ken Griffey in the first McNamara rested the slumping Foster, batting .218, and moved Dave Collins to left to try to put more punch in the lineup. But it was the continued lack of good pitching that upset McNamara, who made his displeasure known in a brief closed-door meeting after the game. “The pitchers have been lacking aggressiveness, pitching defensively, walking people and not making good pitches when they have to,” McNamara said. The Sunday shelling bloated the Reds’ team ERA to 4.21, one hundredth of a point higher than the weak-throwing Cardinals. It began in the fourth, when the Cardinals chased Cincinnati starter Mike LaCoss. 4-7. with three runs on RBI singles by Ted Simmons and George Hendrick and a run-scoring double by Ken Reitz. Reliever Joe Price fared little better, giving up a two-run single to Terry Kennedy in the fifth and loading the bases with none out for Garry Templeton in the sixth. Templeton greeted reliever Dave Tomlin with a two-run single, and Keith Hernandez rapped a three-run homer to right. Reitz’s sacrifice fly brought home the sixth run of the inning. Hernandez added a sacrifice fly in the seventh for the final run.

Worry Clinic

By George W. Crane, Ph.D., M.D.

Should Hilda divorce her roving mate? Discuss her problem In your Women’s Clubs, for this is a typical example of why husbands stray after they reach the age of 40. You paramours are the losers! CASE V-625: Hilda M„ aged 38, faces a common sex dilemma. “Dr. Crane,” she telephoned, “I have been happily married for 20 years to a man named Bob. “And we have 3 fine children who are very much attached to their father. “But a few months ago, he and his nephew started staying out late at night, after attending poker parties. “Sometimes they wouldn’t get home till next day and with liquor on their breath. “Once I trailed my husband and found him in the apartment of a divorced woman. “So I told my husband he had to shape up or ship out! “He told me he didn’t love the divorcee at all, but she has been telephoning me to find why I haven’t filed for divorce. “Well, Dr. Crane, my husband begs me not to do so, yet she taunts me by saying he is in love with her and wants to marry her. “So who is correct and what should I do?” MALE EXCUSES , Many an otherwise good husband gets scared about his waning erotic ardor by the time he reaches 40. For his wife no longer exerts the seductive appeal that she did during their first few years of marriage. So the husband becomes relatively platonic, due to his inner terror that he is growing impotent. So he often tries to revive some of the former romantic regard for his wife, hut she doesn’t realize this dangerous

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mental state of her husband and may sleepily retort: “Oh, Bob, act your age! Roll over and go to sleep!” Millions of you wives who are reading my candid analysis of your boudoir behavior, will realize the truth of what I am saying! For you don’t have to be aroused in order to indulge in the marital relationship though the husband knows he must be the instigator of the boudoir cheesecake episode. And you wives, if you have children and innumerable household worries, seldom realize the serious erotic conflict that is troubling your mate. Since you thus rebuff his waning ardor, he may drown his worries by stopping at a tavern. There he may meet a divorcee who is “on the make”, so he becomes erotically excited by her coquetry and aggressive erotic approaches. When he goes to her apartment and indulges in boudoir cheesecake, his former fear of impotence is banished, so he comes back for encores. And to pacify her demands for marriage, he fabricates stories that his religion forbids divorce or that he must wait till his last youngster finishes high school. He really is stalling, for despite his fervent protests of great love for the paramour, he really doesn’t want to leave his wife and children. So I told Hilda NOT to file for divorce, since her husband is in a sexual climacteric and really loves her, though is using his paramour for inflation of his libido. Send for my booklet “How To Prevent Platonic Marriage,” enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 25e. (Always write to Dr. Crane, Hopkins Bldg., Mellott, Indiana 47958, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 25‘ to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)

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