A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, June 15, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Wife devastated to learn of husband’s prior conquests FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER Dear Abby: I met my husband on haven’t, please consider talking the job when we were one year out of with a licensed marriage and family school. We are both 36. We dated for therapist until you have worked it three years and were compatible in through. The resentment you feel could destroy your marriage. Please every way. Ten years later, we have do not let that happen. two kids (7 and 5), own a home and Dear Abby: My husband and I are financially secure. When we dated, we discussed recently moved in with my grand- Jeanne our “history,” and he told me that mother, partly to help out and partly Phillips he’d had five prior girlfriends. I had because I lost my job due to under- ADVICE three boyfriends in college. Well, lying health conditions that made I learned a few months ago — at dealing with COVID incredibly his reunion — that he completely difficult. Now that we’re close to “forgot” the part about his competitive frat- family again, some of them think they need boy past with hook-ups and one-night stands. to dictate what we do. The biggest topic is He now estimates that he was with over 50 whether I should try going back to work now. different girls during college, but says it My husband is adamant that he wants me “shouldn’t bother me” because it was mean- home until it’s safer for me to go out again, ingless sex and in the past. He said he told me but my father thinks it’s not a good idea, and “five” because they were the ones he counted insists that my husband doesn’t understand as relationships. “everything.” I don’t want to make either of Now I see women on his social media them angry, but I feel like I need to stick with who went to the same school and I obsess my husband, and I don’t know how to get my about how they fit into his past. It’s driving father to understand because he’s stubborn. Any advice? — Torn, And Tired Of It me crazy, and I feel like just a number now. I know if this situation were reversed, he’d Dear Torn: Your husband is protective, flip out about it. and for that I applaud him. If you can’t work because an underlying health condition I wish I had never found this out because I see him differently now, and no longer want makes you more vulnerable to COVID, then to be close to him. He’s a good father and as much as your father would like you out of husband, but I’m struggling with how to the house and working during the day, you accept this new information, and I need some cannot do it. Your life could be at risk. What guidance. — Wish I Didn’t Know does your doctor have to say about this? Dear Wish: People usually lie because You are no longer a little girl. It’s time for they aren’t proud of the truth. You say he a family discussion to iron this out, including has been a good husband and father. This what your father meant when he said your is why you need to find it in your heart to husband doesn’t “understand.” If it can’t be forgive him. If you have caught him in lies resolved in a mature and respectful manner, since then, you have a reason to be react- you and your husband may need to make ing the way you have. However, if you other living arrangements. DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago June 15, 1921 Men who fought on the bloody fields of Gettysburg; men who were with General Wheaton at the Battle of Malabon, and men who felt the deadly peril of the Argonne fight made up the three generations of America’s defenders who marched today in the great G.A.R. parade. The fitful sunlight gleamed on scores of G.A.R. men marching with a firm- ness which belied their years and on members of the Veterans’ Drum Corps, some of whom played at Lincoln’s funeral, and all of them brave in uniforms of blue. The clear notes of the fife and the roll of the drum mingled with the music of the Pendleton band and furnished cadence for the scores of veter- ans who marched or rode. Over a thousand flags in the hands of the crowds who lined the streets waved in salute and again and again ripples of applause from the sidelines caused the old fellows to bow in acknowledgement. 50 Years Ago June 15, 1971 One of the most colorful, distinctive personalities to come to Condon in a long time entertained at the Roundup Room a while back. He is not the type of entertainer that one would expect to find in a cocktail lounge or tavern, but he is certainly an enter- tainer in his own right. He is billed as the world’s fastest artist and Joe Breckenridge can paint a picture while other artists are putting on their smocks. He has been known to paint a picture in 45 seconds, but it usually takes him, when he is not in a hurry, three to four minutes. Breckenridge, 75, is a cowboy artist, painting pictures typifying the west, and he is the old west personified. 25 Years Ago June 15, 1996 As far as Chance Bissinger is concerned, the jubilant June 14 Flag Day celebration is a backdrop to his personal celebration of life. The third grader turned 8 on Friday and despite dealing with a medical problem since birth, nothing seems to slow him down. Bissinger was born with a condition called tracheal mylasia in which the cartilage rings that normally keep the windpipe open are instead soft and collapsible. That means the tube entering his trachea at his throat filters the air he breathes, and also needs some main- tenance, much like a nose does. But Chance, the “self-manager,” has learned, with the support and direction of his mom, to mechan- ically suction mucous that could block his airway. 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 June 15, 1215, England’s King John put his seal to Magna Carta (“the Great Charter”) at Runny- mede. In 1775, the Second Conti- nental Congress voted unan- imously to appoint George Washington head of the Conti- nental Army. In 1902, the 20th Century Limited, an express passenger train between New York and Chicago, began service. (The Limited made its last run in December 1967.) In 1904, more than 1,000 people died when fire erupted aboard the steamboat General Slocum in New York’s East River. In 1934, President Frank- lin D. Roosevelt signed an act making the National Guard part of the U.S. Army in the event of war or national emer- gency. In 1944, American forces began their successful inva- sion of Saipan during World War II. B-29 Superfortresses carried out their first raids on Japan. In 1955, the United States and Britain signed a coop- eration agreement concern- ing atomic information for “mutual defence purposes.” In 1988, the baseball romantic comedy “Bull Durham,” starring Kevin Costner and Susan Saran- don, was released by Orion Pictures. In 1991, Mount Pinatubo in the northern Philippines exploded in one of the biggest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century, killing about 800 people. In 1996, Ella Fitzgerald, the “first lady of song,” died in Beverly Hills, California, at age 79. In 2003, with a deadline passed for Iraqis to hand in heavy weapons, U.S. forces fanned out across Iraq to seize arms and put down potential foes. Today’s Birthdays: Funk musician Leo Nocentelli (The Meters) is 75. Actor Polly Draper is 66. Actor Helen Hunt is 58. Actor-rapper Ice Cube is 52. Actor Neil Patrick Harris is 48. Olympic gold medal gymnast Madison Kocian is 24. Actor Sterling Jerins is 17. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE