A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, September 21, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Longtime friendship is complicated by arrest FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE cently went back to his home Dear Abby: I have a former state 1,000 miles away for what I high school classmate who I’ve thought would be a two-day trip gotten close to. He lives several to grab some things from his late hours away, but we talked al- mother’s estate. He has been un- most daily. employed for most of this past A few months ago I stopped year due to the pandemic, so hearing from him, and his social I’m somewhat conflicted about media profile went dark. I had J EANNE something he told me when I a bad feeling, so I Googled him P HILLIPS called to ask when he was com- and was shocked to see he had ADVICE ing home. He said he found a been arrested! While it wasn’t job and decided he wants to stay a violent crime, it was horrible there and work for some months just the same. He has called me several times from prison, declaring his to save up enough money to pay off the innocence — always requesting money. bulk of our debt. He did not consult me before making Abby, I live paycheck to paycheck. Even if I had extra money, I wouldn’t feel com- this decision. He told me he has worked out a COVID-safe housing arrangement fortable giving it to him. I feel hurt and used. Part of me says with his sister and his aunt. The type I need to end the friendship; the other of work he will be doing there is some- part says he needs friends right now and thing he could do here, where our home it’s not my place to judge him. I have re- is. I don’t want to discourage him, but it fused to accept his last few calls because baffles me that he would take a job 1,000 I really don’t know what to do. Your miles away. What if something were to thoughts are appreciated. — Blindsided happen to me or our animals? When I told him I didn’t agree with his decision, In Pennsylvania Dear Blindsided: This person hasn’t he told me I should be happy he’s no lon- used you — yet. The next time he reaches ger unemployed. How should I handle out, accept the call. When you do, make this? — Far Away In Missouri Dear Far Away: Your husband clear that you can offer moral support, but you cannot give him money because shouldn’t have taken a job 1,000 miles you live paycheck to paycheck. You may away without first talking with you. That not hear from him after that. But if he said, what’s done is done, and you need continues to ask, take a giant step back- to let this play out. There’s nothing to ward and recognize this friendship has stop you from visiting. Fortunately, you and the animals are all doing well. If cir- run its course. Dear Abby: My husband and I have cumstances change, he can always quit been together for three years. He re- the job and come back. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY FROM THE EAST OREGONIAN GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL 100 Years Ago Sept. 21, 1921 There’s another town in Pendleton today. Its population numbers a minimum of 500 souls — that was the estimate this morning — and it is growing by leaps and bounds, at the same rate that has often been recorded in the case of campes who are centers of oil finds or newly discovered gold fields. In this case, the twelfth Pendleton Round-Up is the attraction. Housed under white and khaki canvas, the residents of “Little Pendleton,” drawn here from every section of the United States, are fraternizing in the auto camp grounds at the east end of the city. Every conceivable kind of camping and cooking outfit is doing service. There are several carloads from the eastern border of the country. Vermont, Florida, Ohio, several cars from Wisconsin and other states are well represented. 50 Years Ago Sept. 21, 1971 The McNary Golf Club is important in the life of Gene Hiatt, manager of the Umatilla Toll Bridge. And the club is about to take on a new meaning for Hiatt. Friday, at 2 p.m., Hiatt and Fern Gilham, owner and operator of Fern’s Beauty Shop at McNary, plan to be married on the golf club’s hole No. 9. Why did they select No. 9? The prospective bridegroom says he made a hole in one on that green a few years ago. Hiatt worked for five years in expanding the club’s facilities and helping bring it up to what is considered an excellent 18-hold course. He was president three years and one of the club’s most dedicated members. Hiatt’s father, the late Ursel Hiatt, also figured prominently at the club, and the lake on the course is named for him. 25 Years Ago Sept. 21, 1996 Customer service is alive and well and exists in the person of Sharon Parker, who postponed collecting hier $100,000 Powerball winnings to handle hungry Round-Up crowds at Kentucky Fried Chicken. Sharon and her husband, Ronald Parker, knew Sunday that they had drawn the 100th winning Powerball ticket sold in Oregon, but they didn’t leave for Salem to pick up their $72,000 check — their actual winnings after taxes — until Monday. Sharon Porter decided instead it was more important to stay and push the poultry to hungry patrons during Round-Up. “She knew it was Round-Up week so she decided to work,” said Kentucky Fried Chicken owner and manager Karl Lutz. “We have great employees working for us.” And working for the Colonel is what the 55-year-old Sharon Porter will continue to do, for now. “It’s going to mean debt-free retirement,” she said. TODAY IN HISTORY DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY SCOTT ADAMS BY PARKER AND HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN Today’s Highlights in History: On Sept. 21, 1989, Hur- ricane Hugo crashed into Charleston, South Caroli- na (the storm was blamed for 56 deaths in the Carib- bean and 29 in the Unit- ed States). Twenty-one students in Alton, Texas, died when their school bus, hit by a soft-drink de- livery truck, careened into a water-filled pit. In 1912, magician Harry Houdini first pub- licly performed his “Water Torture Cell” trick at the Circus Busch in Berlin. In 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York and New England, caus- ing widespread damage and claiming some 700 lives. In 1961, the first Boe- ing CH-47 Chinook mili- tary helicopter made its first hovering flight. In 1981, the Senate unanimously confirmed the nomination of Sandra Day O’Connor to become the first female justice on the Supreme Court. In 1982, Amin Gemayel, brother of Lebanon’s as- sassinated president-elect, Bashir Gemayel, was himself elected president. National Football League players began a 57-day strike, their first regular- season walkout ever. In 1985, in North Ko- rea and South Korea, family members who had been separated for decades were allowed to visit each other as both countries opened their borders in an unprecedented family- reunion program. In 1987, NFL play- ers called a strike, mainly over the issue of free agen- cy. (The 24-day walkout prompted football owners to hire replacement play- ers.) In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed the De- fense of Marriage Act de- nying federal recognition of same-sex marriages, a day after saying the law should not be used as an excuse for discrimination, violence or intimidation against gays and lesbians. (Although never formally repealed, DoMA was ef- fectively overturned by U.S. Supreme Court deci- sions in 2013 and 2015.) PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE