144TH YEAR, NO. 5 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JULY 7, 2016 ONE DOLLAR COAST WEEKEND: ‘ONCE UPON A MATTRESS’ INSIDE Lawyers display Smith murder evidence Pretrial hearings highlight core of the case By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian Photos by Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian David Hinton, Elks Lodge 180 exalted ruler, stands for a portrait in front of photos of past exalted rulers on June 23 in Astoria. North Coast groups face demographic, culture shifts By ELI STILLMAN The Daily Astorian The morning after Jessica Smith allegedly murdered her infant and slashed her teenager in a Cannon Beach resort, she abandoned her hotel room and left a note saying she was “opting out of life.” She had reportedly drugged and drowned her 2-year-old, Isabella Smith, and attempted to kill 13-year-old Alana Smith on July 31, 2014. Housekeeping staff could hear Alana slip- ping and falling in the hotel room, and called Jessica 911 to report a disori- Smith ented female. Cannon Beach Police Chief Jason Scher- merhorn and Cannon Beach Assistant Fire Chief Frank Swedenborg were the fi rst to respond. They stood by as a maintenance See TRIAL, Page 10A he Loyal Order of Moose was once a large organization among fraternal societies of the Oregon Coast. Make no mistake, the group is still very active in the community with social events, as well as fundraisers, but the number of engaged mem- bers who put on these events has diminished. The Moose Lodge isn’t the lone organization struggling with membership in the last decade. In a national trend refl ected locally, many societ- ies are failing to recruit young members. Some fraternities offer cash prizes to members who can recruit, while others are trying activities aimed at a younger demo- graphic. Some worry, if they are unable to attract younger members, the lodges’ futures will be uncertain. The Moose, which was created in the 1800s, originally served as a gentleman’s social club. It was reinvented to become a group that would build a better society through charitable fundraisers and eventually create Mooseheart, a 1,000-acre campus close to Chicago that cares for children in need and provides a complete education free of charge. It runs entirely off of private donations and has taken in over 12,000 kids since 1913. Jim Hutchens was the governor of the local Moose Lodge in 2015 and has a mem- bership card that was issued in 1978. Born and raised in Astoria, Hutchens has seen the changes in fraternal organizations on the coast throughout his life. He’s also been a part of four of them: the Moose, American Legion, Elks and the Eagles share members as none have restrictions on dual enrollment. In its heyday, Lodge 408 had almost 700 members, Hutchens said. Today, that number has dropped below 500. National memberships have dropped almost 70 percent in 10 years. See SOCIETIES, Page 10A Kent Johnson holds the door open for other Moose Lodge members as they enter for breakfast on a recent Sunday morning. The Astoria Moose Lodge serves break- fast every Sunday. Too risky to talk? Cities try text-to-911 By MICHAEL BALSAMO Associated Press Astoria Moose Lodge Administrator Doug Flesey chats with Moose Lodge Governor Steve Huff during breakfast at the lodge on a recent Sunday morning in Astoria. NEW YORK — With gunshots ring- ing out just feet away, Eddie Justice hid in a bathroom in the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, and frantically texted his mother for help. “Call police,” he wrote. “I’m gonna die.” Moments later, he texted again: “Call them mommy. Now. He’s coming.” Justice, who would later be confi rmed among the 49 people killed in last month’s attack, was among several victims who tex- ted relatives to call 911, fearing they would draw too much attention by making voice calls. None of them could text 911 directly because Orlando is among the vast majority of U.S. cities that don’t have that capability. Amid a cluster of deadly mass shootings, police departments are exploring technology See TEXT-TO-911, Page 7A Town and country offer differing realities This story is part of Divided America, AP’s ongo- ing exploration of the eco- nomic, social and political divisions in American society. By NICHOLAS RICCARDI Associated Press ROCKY FORD, Colo. — Peggy Sheahan’s rural Otero County is steadily los- ing population. Middle-class jobs vanished years ago as pickling and packing plants closed. She’s had to cut back on her business repairing bro- ken windshields to help nurse her husband after a series of farm accidents, culminating in his breaking his neck fall- ing from a bale of hay. She collects newspaper clippings on stabbings and killings in the area — one woman’s body was found in a fi eld near Sheahan’s farm — as heroin use rises. “We are so worse off, it’s unbelievable,” said Sheahan, 65, who plans to vote for Don- ald Trump. In Denver, 175 miles to the northwest, things are going better for Andrea Pacheco. Thanks to the Supreme Court, the 36-year-old could fi nally marry her partner, Jen Win- ters, in June. After months navigating Denver’s super- heated housing market, they snapped up a bungalow at the edge of town. Pacheco sup- ports Hillary Clinton to build on President Barack Obama’s legacy. “There’s a lot of posi- tive things that happened — obviously the upswing in the economy,” said Pacheco, a 36-year-old fundraiser for nonprofi ts. “We were in a pretty rough place when he started out and I don’t know anyone who isn’t better off eight years later.” See DIVIDED, Page 7A AP Photo/Brennan Linsley Navy veteran and out of work chef Bill Hendren talks with his dog in a cottage on the property of a landowner who is allowing him to stay rent-free for a year in exchange for work, outside Manzanola, Colo., in Otero County. Hendren, 55, once worked in Texas nightclubs but there’s nothing comparable in Otero County, where the largest town has a population of 6,900.