COFFEE BREAK B6 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2022 Mom suspects daughter’s boyfriend of cheating a text message (which is often), he immediately says he has to go to the bathroom. Then he stays in there for about a half hour. I’ve tried talking to her about what I’m seeing, but she gets mad at me. She says she trusts him and insists he would never cheat on her. It’s painful to watch this hap- pening to her, and I don’t know how to handle it. Should I continue bringing it up or let her fi nd out on her own? — KNOWS ALL TOO WELL DEAR KNOWS: You have already brought it up. Your daughter should not rush into marriage just because she is pregnant, if that’s her intention. Because her boyfriend is living with you, he’s likely not mature or fi nancially stable enough to be married to anyone. (What do his DEAR ABBY: We recently found out my 19-year-old daughter is pregnant. This is her fi rst boy- friend, and she is absolutely smitten with him. He has asked her to marry him, and we are excited and happy for her, but there is one thing we are having a hard time with: I am almost certain he is cheating on her. They live with us, so I can see the signs — he says he’s working late, and several times even told her he had to work all night. He’s always on his phone, and he never allows her to see it. He keeps it on silent and facedown. When he gets parents think about this?) I was tempted to advise you to hire a private investigator to fi nd out if the young man is really working late or all night, but I’m not sure you need to go to that expense. The truth will eventually reveal itself. In the meantime, give your daughter plenty of emotional sup- port because she is going to need it, and probably more. DEAR ABBY: I married my high school sweetheart in 1967. In 1979, after 12 years of marriage, we refi nanced our mortgage so we could add a room. During the credit check, it was brought to my attention that my wife had bor- rowed $14,000 and opened a secret mailbox in a diff erent town to hide it from me. The problem was, and still is, that she has refused for 52 years to tell me what it was for. Needless to say, my trust in her was shaken. She had no drinking, gambling or drug problems. I must have asked her a thousand times what she needed the money for, and still no answer. Our marriage went downhill, I had an aff air, and we separated. In 1990, we got back together, but it wasn’t the same. The kids were grown, so four years later we divorced. I’m 75 now, remarried 20 years ago, and I still can’t fi gure out why she couldn’t tell me the truth to save our marriage. (Abortion keeps popping into my mind.) A day does not go by that it doesn’t enter my mind even all these years later. My kids are estranged because all they know is that I had an aff air. I sup- pose I will be wondering until my dying day. Advice? — STILL IN THE DARK What aid is still available for renters? DEAR STILL: What your ex-wife needed that money for is anybody’s guess. She may have used it to bail out a friend who was in trouble. She also could have been paying off a blackmailer. The possibilities are so varied that guessing her motive could be a parlor game. Since you asked, my advice to you is to fi nally let the past stay in the past and quit upsetting your- self over something you will never get a straight answer about. There are few more eff ective ways to diminish the joys of the present than to do what you are doing. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. █ AGENT same that Wylam oper- ated out of. He said it is an excellent location. “It is visible and everyone knows where it is,” he said. Coincidentally, one of the fi rst fi rms to do business at that Adams Avenue address was Ser- geant and Wright Insur- ance, which records indi- cate occupied the space in 1905, according to Bob Bull, a La Grande author and historian. It is not known when Ser- geant and Wright Insur- ance stopped operating at 1110 Adams Ave. but it is known that by 1912 into the 1920s Pattison Grocery and Bakery was there, and that by 1933 the site housed Barnhart Grocery. Wright’s Drug Store began operating at that address around 1941, Bull said, and served cus- tomers at the site for at least two decades. Continued from Page B1 By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN The Oregonian SALEM — Renter pro- tections from Oregon’s pandemic-era emergency rent assistance program expired Friday, Sept. 30, eliminating the last renter safety net policies tied to the economic fallout from COVID-19. Among the expiring pro- visions were protection from eviction when a renter had a pending application for housing aid, as well as Elliot Njus/The Oregonian, File a provision that landlords had to give tenants 10 days’ Renter protections from Oregon’s pandemic-era emergency rent assistance program expired Friday, Sept. 30, 2022, eliminating the last renter safety net policies tied to the economic fallout from COVID-19. notice of eviction. Land- lords can now resume a states who didn’t use up three-day or six-day evic- to 14.6% next year under called for lawmakers to roll their housing funds quickly the 2019 state rent control tion notice. And they can back the upcoming rent enough. So far, the agency now evict tenants for back law that ties the maximum increase and to track land- has received $29.4 million rent they didn’t pay during increase to infl ation. lords through a registration in reallocated funds, and it the pandemic. The Community Alli- program. The state began distrib- has requested an additional ance of Tenants called on People facing eviction uting funds through the $17.6 million. lawmakers to strengthen can contact the Oregon emergency rental assistance But there are no plans eviction laws during the Law Center’s Eviction last May and paid out $408 to accept new applications next legislative session, to Defense Project for legal million in rent for emergency avoid unnecessary evic- help or call 211 for other and utility assis- rent assistance, tions. The group also resources. tance. According Hernández said. to a dashboard Instead, the state Are you running an that tracks the housing agency outdated Windows program, the state will put the funds The amount Oregon approved close to toward its evic- Operating System? paid out in rent and 65,000 applica- tion prevention We’ll help you utility assistance tions and declined program. It will through its emergency avoid critical at least 39,000. also distribute rent assistance Although the money toward issues by installing program since emergency rental legal services May 2022. Windows 11! assistance pro- and case manage- gram closed its ment for renters, application portal Hernández said. in March, the state housing The pandemic pro- agency has continued to grams are winding down work through pending as renters rights groups are applications. anticipating steep increases State housing spokes- in rents next year that could person Delia Hernández lead to a wave of evic- said the agency is also tions. State economists receiving funds that have announced last month that been reallocated from other landlords can raise rents up and making sure they come fi rst,” Young said. The Allstate agent said the transition after taking over for Wylam has gone smoothly over the past year. “Usually business drops off the fi rst year when a new guy comes in, but that hasn’t hap- pened because of the continuity we have had. I have a lot of ties to our customers. Everything has been good,” Young said. The insurance agent said he likes his job because of the opportu- nity it provides him to make connections with the public. “I really like working with people,” he said. Young’s offi ce is at 1110 Adams Ave., the Follow us on Facebook! $408 million weather | Go to AccuWeather.com Computer not running as fast as when it was new? Let us install lightning-fast solid state drive! AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 50/68 Kennewick 48/75 St. Helens 48/80 TIllamook 49/80 46/81 52/77 48/80 Condon FRI SAT SUN MON Clear Mostly sunny and warm Warm with plenty of sun Sunny, nice and warm Sunny, pleasant 32 75 35 73 34 72 34 73 28 Eugene 10 10 10 44/78 74 39 75 36 74 36 10 10 10 La Grande 39 75 38 Comfort Index™ 10 Enterprise 10 10 39 72 39 Comfort Index™ 9 73 37 72 36 10 10 10 10 ALMANAC TUESDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Tuesday Low Tuesday High: 103° Low: 18° Wettest: 1.44” 71° 37° 74° 43° 77° 45° PRECIPITATION (inches) Tuesday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.00 0.00 0.18 5.38 7.04 0.00 0.00 0.38 9.63 12.38 0.00 Trace 0.51 18.51 17.38 HAY INFORMATION FRIDAY 25% NNW at 4 to 8 mph 9.2 0.13 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Wednesday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 2% of capacity 22% of capacity 7% of capacity 44% of capacity 3% of capacity 0% of capacity High: 84° Low: 28° Wettest: none Grants Pass Lakeview SUN & MOON THU. 621 cfs 3 cfs 18 cfs 45 cfs 56 cfs 9 cfs Last FRI. 7:06 a.m. 7:07 a.m. 6:11 p.m. 6:09 p.m. 8:09 p.m. 8:48 p.m. 11:25 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Oct 17 New Oct 25 First Oct 31 Elkton 51/78 35/78 Beaver Marsh 35/80 Roseburg Powers Brothers 48/84 Coos Bay 48/83 Full Nov 8 Burns Boise 45/79 Jordan Valley 38/76 Paisley 36/79 Frenchglen 38/78 Diamond Grand View Arock 37/77 38/78 36/79 Fields Medford 37/80 Klamath Falls 35/81 Lakeview 34/80 McDermitt Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Thursday night’s lows and Friday’s highs. 34/82 RECREATION FORECAST FRIDAY SAT. City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 68/51/s 76/54/s Bend 80/40/s 75/38/s Boise 79/45/s 77/49/s Brookings 77/55/s 66/53/pc Burns 78/33/s 77/37/s Coos Bay 69/49/s 71/51/s Corvallis 81/45/s 82/44/s Council 77/40/s 77/41/s Elgin 75/42/s 76/42/s Eugene 78/46/s 80/45/s Hermiston 76/43/pc 77/43/s Hood River 80/50/s 78/50/s Imnaha 75/48/s 75/48/s John Day 78/38/s 77/37/s Joseph 71/38/s 71/40/s Kennewick 77/43/pc 76/44/s Klamath Falls 81/37/s 80/35/s Lakeview 80/34/s 79/36/s 37/81 Silver Lake 38/81 51/89 53/77 Juntura 32/78 51/89 Brookings Ontario 41/79 34/80 Chiloquin Grants Pass Huntington 34/76 40/80 Oakridge 38/77 43/79 Seneca Bend FRI. On Oct. 13, the Great Hurricane of 1846 moved from Cuba northward through Georgia and the Carolinas to Pennsylvania and caused great damage all along its path. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Florence Council 32/75 38/78 39/82 REGIONAL CITIES MOON PHASES STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Tuesday) Grande Ronde at Troy Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder Burnt River near Unity Umatilla River near Gibbon Minam River at Minam Powder River near Richland OREGON WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Death Valley, Calif. Randolph, Utah Okeechobee, Fla. 34/73 John Day 37/82 Sisters 49/69 Comfort Index takes into account how the weather will feel based on a combination of factors. A rating of 10 feels very comfortable while a rating of 0 feels very uncomfortable. 36/77 Baker City Redmond 48/64 50/68 Halfway Granite 44/81 Newport 49/80 73 38 43/79 48/81 47/78 Corvallis Enterprise 39/72 39/75 Monument 44/79 Idanha Salem TONIGHT Comfort Index™ 10 Elgin 40/75 La Grande 44/75 Maupin Baker City 49/73 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg 47/74 Hood River 46/76 47/73 Lewiston Walla Walla 42/77 Vancouver 47/78 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 FRI. City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla SAT. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 74/47/pc 74/49/s 75/48/s 79/49/s 75/39/s 73/39/s 89/50/s 89/52/s 64/50/s 68/53/s 72/44/pc 77/43/s 79/41/s 78/43/s 77/43/pc 78/43/s 76/45/s 75/46/s 77/52/s 81/56/s 78/49/s 78/54/s 82/38/s 77/36/s 83/48/s 86/48/s 78/46/s 82/48/s 71/46/pc 73/47/s 81/47/s 79/48/s 76/37/s 73/40/s 73/49/pc 73/50/s Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice ANTHONY LAKES PHILLIPS LAKE Mostly sunny; mild Mostly sunny; warm 61 34 72 36 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Mostly sunny; mild Mostly sunny; warm 67 41 79 41 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Mostly sunny; mild Mostly sunny; warm 64 30 73 35 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Mostly sunny; warm Mostly sunny 71 38 75 47 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Mostly sunny; warm Mostly sunny; warm 75 35 75 38