A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, July 23, 2019 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Old boyfriend who stole item years ago turns up on Facebook FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE Dear Abby: I recently located a The perpetrator is most likely jeal- ous because of the relationship you person I knew a long time ago who have with your boyfriend and other stole an expensive gold bracelet from guy friends. Not everyone makes me. I’d dated this guy for a while. friends easily. It’s nothing to be He wore my bracelet, and I wore his. ashamed of; it’s just a fact of life. My bracelet was a gift from a rela- tive I cared for deeply. His bracelet That’s why you should treasure the was a piece of junk, but I was a teen- ones you do have — because old ager with no brains and allowed him friends are some of the best friends, J eanne to wear mine. Well, we split up and and high school and its cliques won’t P hilliPs last forever. he just disappeared. I tried getting ADVICE Dear Abby: Two years ago my my bracelet back but couldn’t find family had a run of bad luck, which him. As I mentioned, I found him landed us in a homeless shelter. I got on Facebook, married with children, an apartment fairly quickly, and it’s mine and and I felt this anger come over me. Should my daughter’s. I contact him and ask what happened to my My mother was supposed to move in rent- jewelry? — Golden Girl in Mississippi free, but she brought her boyfriend, who I Dear Golden Girl: No, you should con- tact him and tell him you would like the item didn’t want here. He’s still here and barely returned or be compensated for it. What contributes to the expenses. I recently lost my job and he promised to help out more finan- “happened” to the bracelet was that he stole cially, but he hasn’t. He continues to mooch. it. Because many years have passed since you This has caused so much stress between my two dated, the odds that he still has the brace- let are slim. But it’s worth a try. mother and me. “Hate” is a strong word, but I Dear Abby: I am 16 and have a hard time hate him and want him out. He knows it, but making friends. I have more guy friends than makes no effort to leave. What can I do? — Wanting My Own Space girl friends, which causes me problems. I got Dear Wanting: You are not helpless, and called a slut again the other day because of you shouldn’t be held hostage because of it. I’m a virgin and only have a crush on one your mother’s feelings for her deadbeat boy- of the guys I hang out with (my boyfriend). I friend. Contact your state bar association to have tried finding more female friends, but see what your legal rights are. Then tell your the drama is really hard to put up with. I have mother you want him out, give her a dead- tried ignoring the comments, but after a while line to see that it happens, and suggest that it gets hard to ignore. I’m not sure what else she go with him if she can’t bear to be sepa- to do. Please help me out. I would be really rated from him. If he doesn’t meet the dead- grateful. — Misunderstood in Oklahoma line, put his belongings in a box, place them Dear Misunderstood: I wish I could outside and change your locks. make the name-calling go away, but I can’t. DAYS GONE BY BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 23, 1919 The body of Claud Wallace, aged 37 years, was discovered by campers several hundred yards above the dam in the Walla Walla river southeast of Milton Sunday afternoon. It is thought that the young man slipped from the footlog across the river in attempting to cross Friday afternoon and that the body lay in the river from then until found Sunday. The deceased was well known throughout the community of Milton having lived here practically all his life. He was of a peculiar disposition and frequently took trips away from home which consumed several days at a time. The last seen of Mr. Wallace was Fri- day morning at the Stark place on the moun- tain above the Omar Olinger place. He left there intending to come down the mountain to his home on the Walla Walla river. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 23, 1969 Horse flesh has been a big part of Floyd “Jake” Jacobs’ life for 55 years. Now at the 70-year mark, he is pondering retirement from the horse training business and get- ting some strong arguments for the move from his wife and valuable assistant, Leona. The only sure sign that the Hermiston horse trainer is retiring will come in the winter when the campaign starts in training horses for the track. if he is is sitting by his fireside in his comfortable Diagonal Road home, or is hanging over the rail watching the horses train on the local track, then Jake will have retired. But don’t bank on it … horses and training them are a part of his life. 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 23, 1994 Carolyn Servi used to mind her own busi- ness. A stay-at-home mom, she busied her- self with two young children, barely ventur- ing beyond her quiet street in the tiny town of Pilot Rock. Loosened lug nuts changed all that. “We all have our own domain. Unless somebody encroaches on it you don’t notice it,” says Servi. “It made me mad.” Servi still seems peeved that a couple of teens wrenched the nuts from her silver Chevy’s wheels out of boredom. She’s taken it upon herself to fight the rising tide of teen-age vandalism and crime by editing the town’s first newsletter on the subject. Begun in late March, the one-page newsletter reports on everything from tipped tombstones to bur- glarized businesses. Crime statistics are also tucked into the bi-weekly — an eye-shock- ing sheet of neon pink or green that comes complete with cute computer graphics. TODAY IN HISTORY DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN On July 23, 1999, space shuttle Columbia blasted off with the world’s most powerful X-ray telescope and Eileen Collins, the first woman to command a U.S. space flight. In 1829, William Austin Burt received a patent for his “typographer,” a forerunner of the typewriter. In 1962, the first public TV transmissions over Tel- star 1 took place during a special program featuring live shots beamed from the United States to Europe, and vice versa. In 1967, five days of deadly rioting erupted in Detroit as an early morning police raid on an unlicensed bar resulted in a confronta- tion with local residents that escalated into violence that spread into other parts of the city; 43 people, mostly blacks, were killed. In 1996, at the Atlanta Olympics, Kerri Strug made a heroic final vault despite torn ligaments in her left ankle as the U.S. women gymnasts clinched their first-ever Olympic team gold medal. In 1997, the search for Andrew Cunanan, the sus- pected killer of designer Gianni Versace and oth- ers, ended as police found his body on a houseboat in Miami Beach, an apparent suicide. In 2003, a new audiotape purported to be from top- pled dictator Saddam Hus- sein called on Iraqis to resist the U.S. occupation. Mas- sachusetts’ attorney general issued a report saying clergy members and others in the Boston Archdiocese prob- ably had sexually abused more than 1,000 people over a period of six decades. In 2011, singer Amy Winehouse, 27, was found dead in her London home from accidental alcohol poisoning. Today’s Birthdays: Con- cert pianist Leon Fleisher is 91. Actor Larry Manetti is 76. Actress-writer Lydia Cornell is 66. Actor Woody Harrelson is 58. Model-ac- tress Stephanie Seymour is 51. Actor-comedian Marlon Wayans is 47. Former White House intern Monica Lew- insky is 46. Rhythm-and- blues singer Michelle Wil- liams is 39. Actor Daniel Radcliffe is 30. Actress Lili Simmons is 26. Thought for Today: “To be proud and inaccessible is to be timid and weak.” — Jean Baptiste Massillon, French clergyman (1663-1742). PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE