A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, October 28, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ The staff members don’t want to date customers FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE his behavior before it is too Dear Abby: My co-workers late? (We are both older men.) and I want to know how to — Humiliated In Albuquerque handle customers who ask us Dear Humiliated: Point out out. We are an all-female staff to this person that, more than at a liquor stor. Our customers once, he has said or done things are happy to see us after a long that made you feel humiliated. day at work and sometimes mis- While you’re at it, mention that interpret our excellent customer J EANNE this unpleasant trait is what has service skills as flirting and ask P HILLIPS caused “Tom,” “Dick,” “Harry,” us out. ADVICE “Sleepy” and “Grumpy” to walk It is sometimes a very uncom- out of his life. Then tell him you fortable situation because we are no longer intend to allow it to paid to be kind and don’t know how to say no without causing a loss of happen to you, and if it happens again, business for our company or possibly you will join the others. Dear Abby: I am looking for advice putting ourselves in a dangerous situ- ation. Can you give us some guidance? about whether I’m violating any ethics while walking my dogs. I walk my two — On The Job In Missouri Dear On The Job: A polite turndown dogs almost every day so the dogs can to the invitation would be, “Thank you perform their business. I always pick up for the compliment, but I never date a what they leave behind, as I don’t like having any dog’s business left on my customer. It’s against the rules.” Dear Abby: I have a longtime friend lawn. During these walks, I pass trash who is an amazing person. He has al- containers on the street that belong to my most every positive attribute anyone neighbors. Sometimes I place my dog’s business in their trash containers. Since could want. His only flaw is a big one. He lacks my walks are long, it’s not convenient to empathy and is sometimes very insensi- carry the used bags all the way home. Is tive. Over the years, on a number of occa- this wrong to do? — Doggy Business Dear Doggy: What you are doing is sions, he has said or done things that left me feeling humiliated. He doesn’t seem a big no-no. Many homeowners feel as to understand that it isn’t how generous territorial about their trash receptacles you were to them, people remember how as you do your lawn. If you think I’m ex- aggerating, let a few of those homeown- you make them FEEL. He has few real friends who can tol- ers catch you in the act. Readers, do you erate him, and some have walked out agree with me? One of my staff members of his life. I’m on the verge of doing the feels that if the container is on the curb same thing. How can I get him to change awaiting pickup, there is no harm. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL 100 Years Ago Oct. 28, 1921 No, the smoke curling up from the Blue Mountains does not come from a forest fire. It comes from a number of tourists who were caught on the bad stretch of road between Pend- leton and La Grande by the present break in the weather and they are floundering in the mud with every make of car known to the automotive industry. The smoke is very blue in appearance and might be caused by streams of profanity as the wheels spin in the mud and the car sinks deeper and deeper. Reports from the moun- tain state that quite a camp was established last evening by the travelers who could not turn a wheel to help themselves out of the mud. 50 Years Ago Oct. 28, 1971 Construction is expected to begin immedi- ately on the development of 3,000 acres of Utah and Idaho Sugar Co. land across the Colum- bia River from Umatilla. The initial project calls for delivering Columbia River water to the southeast corner of the 50,000 acres which U & I acquired this year from the Prior Land Co., Yakima, Wash. The U & I development is being hailed by community leaders as a boost to the Umatilla economy. The close prox- imity of the project is expected to mean that Umatilla area labor and services will be used. A pumping station will be built on the river with a penstock capable of pumping 600,000 gallons per minute. Amfac, which has a large farm development operating immediately west of Paterson, will be transporting potato crop into the Hermiston area to be processed at the Lamb-Weston plant that is due for construction after the first of the year. 25 Years Ago Oct. 28, 1996 Pendleton’s largest retail store opened Satur- day with a nearly full parking lot and stuffed aisles bulging with all manner of merchan- dise as eager shoppers got their first peek at the new Wal-Mart. The 101,000-square-foot store showed its cornucopia approach to retail, with a wide variety of departments, an in-house McDonald’s restaurant and a Tire & Lube Express. Dozens of blue-smocked employ- ees darted among the store’s aisles on what is known as a “soft opening” day. The store, which plans a grand opening Tuesday with a ribbon-cutting, was seemingly stocked with as many employees as it was with wall-to-wall tires, fishing poles, socks and coffee pots. “I’ve never seen a store this big before,” said David Culimore, 16. “Anything you’re looking for, you could probably get here.” 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 On Oct. 28, 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President Grover Cleveland. In 1636, the General Court of Massachusetts passed a legislative act establishing Harvard Col- lege. In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his first New York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan. In 1914, medical re- searcher Jonas Salk, who developed the first suc- cessful polio vaccine, was born in New York. In 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in- formed the United States that he had ordered the dismantling of missile bases in Cuba; in return, the U.S. secretly agreed to remove nuclear missiles from U.S. installations in Turkey. In 1980, President Jim- my Carter and Republi- can presidential nominee Ronald Reagan faced off in a nationally broad- cast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland. In 1991, what became known as “The Perfect Storm” began forming hundreds of miles east of Nova Scotia; lost at sea during the storm were the six crew members of the Andrea Gail, a swordfish- ing boat from Gloucester, Massachusetts. In 1996, Richard Jewell, cleared of committing the Olym- pic park bombing, held a news conference in Atlanta in which he thanked his mother for standing by him and lashed out at reporters and investigators who’d depicted him as the bomb- er, who turned out to be Eric Rudolph. In 2001, the families of people killed in the September 11 terrorist attack gathered in New York for a memorial ser- vice filled with prayer and song. In 2002, American diplomat Laurence Foley was assassinated in front of his house in Amman, Jordan, in the first such attack on a U.S. diplomat in decades. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE