A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, October 15, 2019 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Happy smartphone user stops short of becoming an addict FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE Dear Abby: I have a smart- picked her up from work in it, phone, and I love its convenience. which embarrassed her in front of her co-workers. I check my email, texts and voice- mail three or four times a day and It’s not like we don’t have other always try to respond promptly. But vehicles. Both my parents have I do not carry my phone with me nice, functional cars. Abby, please every moment of the day. help me figure out a way to tell my Some family members insist that dad without hurting his feelings. — Freaked Out in Frankfort, Ky. the polite thing to do is to return a J eanne Dear Freaked Out: People text message or voicemail imme- P hilliPs diately. They carry their phones should not be judged because of ADVICE the clothes they wear or the vehi- with them and constantly interrupt cles they drive, but sometimes they whatever they are involved with to are by shallow people who should answer the phone, send a text, etc. know better. I think you could get your mes- For my birthday, one relative gave me a sage across by telling your father how your little pouch on a string so I could wear my brother’s classmates reacted when they saw phone around my neck wherever I went him pick up your brother. What they did was because she texted me one day early in the cruel. Leave it up to your mother to tell him afternoon saying she wanted to drop by, she felt embarrassed in front of her co-work- but I didn’t see or respond to it until din- ers. I’m sure she can get the message across. ner time. Is making oneself available every Dear Abby: My wife was sexually active moment of the day and night now required with a classmate in high school. Their rela- for good manners? — Not A Phone Addict tionship lasted until shortly before we were Dear Not An Addict: Of course not! married, 54 years ago. I have often won- A cellphone is not supposed to be a leash. dered what he did to make her so willing to Your relative has become hooked on the come to his bed. Perhaps if I knew, I could concept of instant gratification, which isn’t enhance her pleasure in our lovemaking. healthy for either of you. If you humor her, However, such information might be inju- your cellphone will become an annoying rious to our relationship. What is your take and unending inconvenience for you. Do on this? I think about this several times each not take the bait. day. — Obsessed in the West Dear Abby: My father recently pur- chased a truck for our farm. It’s old and in Dear Obsessed: You have, I hope, been happily married for more than half a cen- poor shape, but it was worth the $2,000 he tury. Has it never occurred to you that her paid for it. high school romance failed because the sex The truck was fine until my father used it wasn’t that great? If you want to ask your to pick me and my siblings up from school. wife at this late date if there is anything you When the other kids saw the bumperless can do to enhance her enjoyment of your truck, they began calling my little brother lovemaking, by all means do. But do not “Farmer Boy” and made cow noises at frame it the way you did to me. us. My mother isn’t OK with it either. He DAYS GONE BY 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Oct. 15, 1919 The clock strikes three. The sound of typewriters stops abruptly. The girls put aside their pencils and notebooks. The tea- hour has arrived at the Hartman Abstract company office. The innovation is a recent one and it carries out an idea which origi- nated with James Johns Sr. He says that the girls work all day at top speed and that as the afternoon wears on they need a li’l drink — of tea — to stimulate them for the remainder of the day’s work. A mysterious red box is fastened to the wall in the office. The box contains not only tea, but chocolate, tea cakes and “instant” coffee, as well as electrical devices for heating water. When opened the box forms a tea-table. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Oct. 15, 1969 The city of Hermiston will appeal to its teen-age drivers in an effort to control a traffic problem on Main Street. The prob- lem is caused by what City Attorney Rus- tin Brewer says is one of the most popu- lar pastimes in America — driving up and down Main Street. The council has battled with the problem before and the result has been a profusion of signs forbidding turns. It’s gotten so bad, said Police Chief Rob- ert Shannon, that visitors are confused and angry. Dan Boone, a senior at Hermiston High School, said the students are inter- ested in helping to find a solution. He said posting driveways and forbidding left turns is not the answer. “The solution is to find a place” where the drivers can turn around “and legalize it.” 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Oct. 15, 1994 The death of a young runaway has been laid to rest 13 years after she was raped and murdered. Her killer, a former California truck driver, was convicted Thursday after the jury deliberated for about an hour. Judge Jack Olsen scheduled sentencing for 8 a.m. Tuesday. David C. Cox, 52, could receive a life sentence for aggravated murder and five years for the rape charge. The decision fol- lows a four-day trial regarding the February 1981 murder of Naomi Marie McMahill. 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 Oct. 15, 1991, despite sexual harassment alle- gations by Anita Hill, the Senate narrowly confirmed the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court, 52-48. In 1783, the first manned balloon flight took place in Paris as Jean-Francois Pila- tre de Rozier ascended in a basket attached to a tethered Montgolfier hot-air balloon, rising to about 75 feet. In 1940, Charles Chap- lin’s first all-talking com- edy, “The Great Dictator,” a lampoon of Adolf Hitler, opened in New York. In 1954, Hurricane Hazel made landfall on the Carolina coast as a Category 4 storm; Hazel was blamed for some 1,000 deaths in the Caribbean, 95 in the U.S. and 81 in Canada. In 1976, in the first debate of its kind between vice-presidential nominees, Democrat Walter F. Mon- dale and Republican Bob Dole faced off in Houston. In 1989, South Afri- can officials released eight prominent political prison- ers, including Walter Sisulu. In 2001, Bethlehem Steel Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In 2006, three mem- bers of Duke University’s lacrosse team appeared on CBS’ “60 Minutes” to deny raping a woman who’d been hired to perform as a strip- per (Collin Finnerty, Reade Seligmann and David Evans were later exonerated). In 2017, actress and activist Alyssa Milano tweeted that women who had been sexually harassed or assaulted should write “Me too” as a status; within hours, tens of thousands had taken up the #MeToo hashtag (using a phrase that had been introduced 10 years earlier by social activ- ist Tarana Burke.) Today’s Birthdays: Jazz musician Freddy Cole is 88. Actress Linda Lavin is 82. Movie director Mira Nair is 62. Chef Emeril Lagasse is 60. Actress Tanya Rob- erts is 60. Singer Eric Benet is 53. Actress Vanessa Mar- cil is 51. Singer-actress-TV host Paige Davis is 50. Actor Dominic West is 50. Rhythm-and-blues singer Keyshia Cole is 38. Actor Vincent Martella is 27. Actress Bailee Madison is 20. Thought for Today: “A friend to all is a friend to none.” — Aristotle, Greek philosopher (384 B.C.-322 B.C.). PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE