A14 East Oregonian PEANUTS Thursday, May 19, 2022 COFFEE BREAK DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Husband won’t keep his spending under control FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE to kick his golden goose or he Dear Abby: My husband is will kill it. retired from the military and liv- Dear Abby: My mother, who ing with a mental illness caused lives with me, insists on keeping by a traumatic brain injury. As her window open several inches a result, he’s disabled. We have year-round. While I don’t mind four children. Over the years, he so much in the winter, we clash has developed an extreme sense in the summer because I need of financial entitlement. Al- J EANNE the windows and doors closed though I’m responsible for our P HILLIPS so I can run the air condition- finances, I cannot control his ADVICE ing to optimal efficiency. She spending. thinks keeping her window open His compulsions include lux- is cooling her bedroom off and ury coffee, fast food and “medi- cal” marijuana, which cost hundreds doesn’t understand what the problem is every month, yet he complains when if she keeps her door to the rest of the house shut. money is tight. This issue has caused major argu- Money is scarce and our children are going without things they need. I’m al- ments because it’s making my AC unit ways fighting for his respect, decency and work harder than it needs to, not to men- self-control. Advice, please? — Angered tion I have allergies and my doctor has told me to keep the air on all summer In Arkansas Dear Angered:You are going to have long. This is a ranch-style home, and the to step up yet again and impress upon temperature is kept at 70 degrees. I don’t want to fight with her, but I your husband that while you are sad that he regards what you are doing for your feel disrespected since this is my house family as “controlling,” your children’s and she blatantly disregards my re- needs MUST come before his own. By quests. Am I overreacting? Or does that I mean, he should treat “luxury cof- she need to be respectful of my home? fee” as a luxury and buy it no more than — Temperature Rising In Ohio Dear T.R.I.O.: When you lived in your X times a week, ditto for fast food and mother’s home, she made the rules and his “medical” marijuana. If he needs more pharmaceutical sup- you had to abide by them. If keeping her port for his stress, he should address it to bedroom windows ajar is “making your his doctor (at the VA, I assume). Make air conditioner work harder,” then it’s clear that you cannot carry more of the likely adding to your electric bill, which load, and that you are not the cause of is disrespectful, inconsiderate and bad the financial stress. Circumstances are to manners. If she can’t adjust, she should blame for that, and he cannot continue contribute toward the extra cost. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago — 1922 GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS At a conference held in which the delega- tion from Ukiah, a delegation from the Pend- leton Commercial Association, and the county court participated this afternoon, the county court reached a decision to lend its assistance in making improvements on the road between Ukiah and the Grant county line. The road is so bad that “nearly every day the mail carrier is compelled to stop before he has made half of the distance,” one of the men said. “He must then take the locked bag and go ahead on a horse and leave the parcel post mail in the car standing in the middle of the road. As it stands now, the Grant county side of the highway will be improved as soon as crops are in, but that will not do too much good, because as soon as the Umatilla county part of the road is reached, traffic will be impossible, or prac- tically impossible.” 50 years ago — 1972 BLONDIE BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL Two new courses probably will be offered at Blue Mountain Community College during the 1972-73 school year. BMCC directors Wednes- day night authorized Robert Hawk, dean of applied sciences, to draw up curriculum plans for submission to the Oregon Board of Educa- tion for courses in real estate and human services. The real estate course would offer a two-year associate degree. It probably will start on an evening basis next year. The human services course would offer instruction to those in the mental health and social services areas. 25 years ago — 1997 Northwest irrigators face a strange predic- ament. There’s so much water flowing down the Snake and Columbia rivers this spring they could be left high and dry even as their crops germinate in the fields. Heavy runoff from unusually deep mountain snowpacks has forced the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to lower reservoirs on the rivers to make room for surges that could cause flooding downstream in Portland and Vancouver. At times, reservoir levels have dropped below the point at which irrigation pumps can draw water. The situation is particularly serious in Eastern Oregon and Washington, where farmers rely on the John Day Reservoir to water 170,000 acres of crops worth about $270 million. So far, though, the Corps has been able to operate the reservoir in a kind of balancing act between flood control and irrigation, lowering the level for a few days to capture runoff, then increasing it again so farmers can irrigate. 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 May 19, 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England’s King Henry VIII, was beheaded after being convicted of adul- tery. In 1780, a mysterious darkness enveloped much of New England and part of Canada in the early af- ternoon. In 1913, Cali- fornia Gov. Hiram John- son signed the Webb- Hartley Law prohibit- ing “aliens ineligible to citizenship” from own- ing farm land, a measure targeting Asian immi- grants, particularly Japa- nese. In 1921, Congress passed, and President Warren G. Harding signed, the Emergency Quota Act, which estab- lished national quotas for immigrants. In 1943, in his second wartime address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill pledged his country’s full support in the fight against Japan; that evening, Churchill met with President Frank- lin D. Roosevelt at the White House, where the two leaders agreed on May 1, 1944 as the date for the D-Day invasion of France (the operation ended up being launched more than a month later). In 1962, film star Marilyn Monroe sang “Happy Birthday to You” to President John F. Kennedy during a Demo- cratic fundraiser at New York’s Madison Square Garden. In 1967, the Soviet Union ratified a treaty with the United States and Britain, banning nu- clear and other weapons from outer space as well as celestial bodies such as the moon. (The treaty en- tered into force in October 1967.) In 1993, the Clinton White House set off a po- litical storm by abruptly firing the entire staff of its travel office; five of the seven staffers were later reinstated and assigned to other duties. In 1994, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died in New York at age 64. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE