A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, June 21, 2022 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Empty nest reveals lack of connection for couple FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE Adult Children of Alcoholics Dear Abby: I got pregnant at and Dysfunctional Families 15 and had my oldest daughter (adultchildren.org) and attend at 16. I met my husband at 18, some of the meetings. They are and went on to have four more sometimes held online, so you daughters. I have been with him could do it on a computer. for more than 30 years (I just Dear Abby: I am a widow turned 49). with three serious illnesses, one My girls are living their own J EANNE of which is potentially deadly. lives now. The thing is, now that P HILLIPS I hesitate to confide in some of I’m alone with my husband, I ADVICE my friends because the major- have come to discover that we ity of them go into a litany of have nothing in common. I want their illnesses. For the most part, to leave him, but I have no mon- their ailments are common and require ey, no car and no job. My husband ignores me and drinks a just a small change in diet or perhaps lot. When we visit family, it’s a free-for-all losing some weight. What makes it un- drunk fest for him. I just don’t have the comfortable for me is they act like they energy at my age to deal with a drunk. I are in a life-threatening situation, which dealt all my life with an alcoholic father they aren’t. I find it increasingly difficult to em- and I don’t want to do it anymore. How do I begin to rebuild my life and start pathize with their common colds, achy joints, etc. How can I explain to these over? — At A Crossroads In Ohio Dear At A Crossroads: I agree that re- folks how much they upset me? For the building your life is something you need most part, they are good people, just to do for yourself. The surest way to ac- very self-centered. — Challenged In New complish it would be to get a job. This Hampshire Dear Challenged: It may be unreal- may eventually equip you to survive on your own. If you need transportation, istic to expect friends who don’t know ask your daughters for help, or take pub- about your serious medical conditions to empathize with you or stop complain- lic transportation. If you prefer not to attend “fam- ing about their aches and pains. Rather ily” gatherings, have your husband go than say their complaints are annoying, alone. Your father’s alcoholism may have tell them the truth about what’s going contributed to the fact that you mar- on with you. After that, try to remember ried someone with an alcohol problem, that regardless of how minor, every per- thinking it was “normal.” If that’s the son’s health challenges are important to case, consider finding a nearby chap- them, even if on the grand scale of things ter of Al-Anon (al-anon.org/info) or they don’t seem that way to you. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago — 1922 GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS Will the Chinese tong war which has been breaking out at intervals during this past winter and spring extend to Pendleton? That is a question local Chinese residents are asking, and their fears are aroused. Their suspicions were excited early this week when an oriental of Japanese nativity arrived in Pendleton. He said he was a cook and started looking for a job. His inquiries caused the Chinese in the local colony to become suspicious, and they sought help from the police, and told of their fears. Chief W. R. Taylor has advised the son of Japan to depart from Pendleton, but the Nipponese declares that he is not interested in tong battles and is merely looking for work. 50 years ago — 1972 BLONDIE BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL City councilman Mel Lyon doesn’t like the erosion motorcycles are causing on the hill behind the Milton city park. “We’ve got a nice park there, and lots of people use it. We don’t want to see the hill slide into the park.” He also referred to many complaints by residents about noise the bikes make. Bob Talbott agreed that the hill is becoming eroded. “But bike riders are just as entitled to a place for their hobby as anyone else,” he said. “I suggest that we close off the hill behind the park and let them use the hill west of the water tank.” This suggestion met with council approval. 25 years ago — 1997 In an innovative arrangement with the region’s short haul railroad, 3 million bushels of grain will move from five East- ern Washington country elevator sites to a Wallula barge loading facility. Touted as a grain shuttle, grower groups in St. John, Endicott, Whitman and Columbia coun- ties have agreed to use the rail-barge link. Dave Gordan, manager of Walla Walla Grain Growers, a growers’ cooperative, is credited with developing the idea. The shuttle will move grain that currently goes by truck and will provide additional revenue to help ensure the short line railroad stays in business, he said. Mark Blazer, regional vice-president of Watco and Companies, which operates the Palouse River/Coulee City Railroad, said the short line railroad has been missing out on grain movement because of lack of cars from Union Pacific. As part of the shuttle program, however, two complete unit trains have been purchased and refurbished. 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 June 21, 1788, the United States Constitu- tion went into effect as New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify it. In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his reaping ma- chine. In 1954, the American Cancer Society presented a study to the Ameri- can Medical Association meeting in San Francisco which found that men who regularly smoked cigarettes died at a con- siderably higher rate than non-smokers. In 1964, civil rights workers Michael H. Schw- erner, Andrew Goodman and James E. Chaney were slain in Philadelphia, Mis- sissippi; their bodies were found buried in an earth- en dam six weeks later. (Forty-one years later on this date in 2005, Edgar Ray Killen, an 80-year-old former Ku Klux Klans- man, was found guilty of manslaughter; he was sentenced to 60 years in prison, where he died in January 2018.) In 1973, the U.S. Su- preme Court, in Miller v. California, ruled that states may ban materi- als found to be obscene according to local stan- dards. In 1982, a jury in Wash- ington, D.C. found John Hinckley Jr. not guilty by reason of insanity in the shootings of President Ronald Reagan and three other men. In 1989, a sharply di- vided Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag as a form of political protest was protected by the First Amendment. In 1997, the WNBA made its debut as the New York Liberty defeated the host Los Angeles Sparks 67-57. In 2011, the Food and Drug Administration an- nounced that cigarette packs in the U.S. would have to carry macabre images that included rot- ting teeth and gums, dis- eased lungs and a sewn-up corpse of a smoker as part of a graphic campaign aimed at discouraging Americans from lighting up. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE