A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS Thursday, August 12, 2021 COFFEE BREAK DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ ‘New’ father insists baby girl be kept a secret FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE of our child? — Can’t Figure It Out Dear Abby: My fiance, “Nathan,” and I met in college 12 years ago. At the time, he Dear Can’t: I don’t think Nathan is was helping to raise a child he thought was his. ashamed of his daughter. He may be being He was crazy about his son, “Joey.” overly careful about news of his Everywhere we went, he would show baby girl because he was so badly him off, post pictures of them together burned. He went overboard posting on social media and talk about Joey pictures and talking nonstop about nonstop. his “son”; this time he has gone over- When Joey turned 9, Joey’s mother board in the opposite direction. Could finally told Nathan that Joey was not this have anything to do with a fear his son. When a DNA test proved it that Nathan’s ex will find out he has was true, the stuff hit the fan. Not another child? You won’t know unless Jeanne only had the mom known from the you ask him. Between you and me, Phillips beginning that Joey wasn’t Nathan’s, unless you’re willing to go along with ADVICE this secrecy business — which I don’t it turned out so did his family and all his friends. It took a while for Nathan think is healthy — your fiance should to overcome the shock. Once he did, be urged to consult a licensed psycho- he decided he wanted to start a family. He therapist who can help him regain his balance. proposed to me, and we welcomed our baby Dear Abby: My husband and I have been girl. (I never cheated on him, but to avoid any married for 13 years. He is a kind of opti- doubts he might have, once she arrived, we mist. After a night of arguing and distancing, did a DNA test.) Nathan has her spoiled rotten. the next day he acts as though nothing has The problem is, he acts very peculiar where happened. He texts me from work, “Hey Babe! she is concerned. Before she was born, he Good morning. I love you.” Our arguments wanted few people to know we were expect- are not screaming matches but little spats that ing. He said it was because he didn’t want to get bother me a lot. Am I just a nagging wife? — everybody’s hopes up in case anything went Fighting Mad in New York wrong, which was understandable. Now our Dear Fighting Mad: Not necessarily. Your baby is 3 months old, and he’s still keeping husband may get past these fights faster and her a secret. more completely than you do. However, if He doesn’t want to take family pictures and his way of dealing with unresolved issues is doesn’t post her on social media like he did to pretend they don’t exist, I can understand with Joey. He has asked his family and friends your frustration. If this happens often, a text and even me not to tell anyone about the baby, the next morning isn’t going to improve the situation. Your communication problem won’t and he gets mad if we do. When I asked why he’s acting this way, he said it’s because our improve until you both agree to talk about this child is “nobody’s business.” I love Nathan, with a marriage and family therapist. If he is and I understand that he was hurt once, but not willing to do that, you might find a few I’m starting to wonder. Is my fiance ashamed sessions for yourself helpful. DAYS GONE BY FROM THE EAST OREGONIAN BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago Aug. 12, 1921 Charles A. Weatherford is in the hospital with a bullet in his back as a result of a shoot- ing fray last night in which he is said to have attempted to shoot his former wife, Mrs. Osla Weatherford, and then turned the gun on himself. Mrs. Weatherford was not injured beyond the burns inflicted on her neck by powder, and the condition of Weatherford is not at all serious, it is thought. Weatherford came here from his home in Washington, and Henry Keys, owner of the house where Mrs. Weatherford and her four children are living, declared this morning that Weatherford has attempted to get Mrs. Weatherford to forget their past difficulties. She was granted a divorce about a month ago. 50 Years Ago Aug. 12, 1971 You’d think college athletic recruiters would flock around Dean Fouquette like photogra- phers around Raquel Welch in a bikini. Satur- day, he will become the only person ever to play in all three Oregon prep all-star games: football, basketball and baseball. Yet when Fouquette enrolls next month at Oregon State University, he’ll be paying his own way for lack of a scholarship, all because of heredity. Dean is the son of a 4-foot-11 mother and a 5-5 father. By modern athletic standards, he’s a midget at 5-7 and 140 pounds. That is, Fouquette says he’s 5-7 and 140. His high school coach, Don Requa, thinks his little quarterback exagger- ates. “When he says 5-7, he’s including his fluffy hairdo,” Requa said. “And he seemed to disappear every time we tried to get him on the scales. I’d say he’s closer to 125 pounds.” 25 Years Ago Aug. 12, 1996 A helicopter built over the past year and a half by a Hermiston air hobbyist fell to the ground during testing Friday, slightly injuring the man. Steve Jonas, who had put 275 hours into the 1989 Rotorway Homebuilt, walked away from the wreck with cuts and bruises but was nonetheless transported to Good Shepherd Community Hospital for observation. “I’m depressed, disappointed and broke,” Jonas said after the wreck. “But alive,” added Glen Phil- lips, a paramedic who responded to the scene. Having completed it only six weeks ago, Jonas was testing the craft’s turning and hovering ability at a height of between 10 and 15 feet above a field west of the Hermiston Munici- pal Airport when the helicopter fell. The rear rotor, essential to keeping the craft stable, is suspected to have failed. 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 August 12, 1985, the world’s worst single-aircraft disaster occurred as a crippled Japan Airlines Boeing 747 on a domestic flight crashed into a mountain, killing 520 people. (Four people survived.) In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to impeach him as he defied Congress by suspending Secre- tary of War Edwin M. Stanton, with whom he had clashed over Reconstruction policies. (Johnson was acquitted by the Senate.) In 1902, International Harvester Co. was formed by a merger of McCormick Harvest- ing Machine Co., Deering Harvester Co. and several other manufacturers. In 1909, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home to the Indianapolis 500, first opened. In 1939, the MGM movie musical “The Wizard of Oz,” starring Judy Garland, had its world premiere at the Strand Theater in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, three days before opening in Hollywood. In 1953, the Soviet Union conducted a secret test of its first hydrogen bomb. In 1960, the first balloon communications satellite — the Echo 1 — was launched by the United States from Cape Canaveral. In 1964, author Ian Flem- ing, 56, the creator of James Bond, died in Canterbury, Kent, England. In 1981, IBM introduced its first personal computer, the model 5150, at a press confer- ence in New York. In 1994, in baseball’s eighth work stoppage since 1972, play- ers went on strike rather than allow team owners to limit their salaries. (The strike ended in April 1995.) In 2000, the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk and its 118-man crew were lost during naval exercises in the Barents Sea. In 2013, James “Whitey” Bulger, the feared Boston mob boss who became one of the nation’s most-wanted fugitives, was convicted in a string of 11 killings and dozens of other gangland crimes, many of them committed while he was said to be an FBI informant. (Bulger was sentenced to life; he was fatally beaten at a West Virginia prison in 2018, hours after being transferred from a facility in Florida.) In 2017, a car plowed into a crowd of people peacefully protesting a white nationalist rally in the Virginia college town of Charlottesville, kill- ing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and hurting more than a dozen others. (The attacker, James Alex Fields, was sentenced to life in prison on 29 federal hate crime charges, and life plus 419 years on state charges.) President Donald Trump condemned what he called an “egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides.” PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE