4. EEntered at the Post Office at. Athena, Oreeon. as Second-Claas Mail Matter VOLUME 49. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON. FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 14. 1928 NUMBER 50 MASKED NTRUDER MURDERS ATTORNEY Walla Walla Hosuekeeper Is Witness To Shooting In Home. Walla Walla. John W. Brooks, at torney of Walla Walla, was shot to .i death at 5:30 Sunday by an unidenti fied masked man, and from an un determined motive. Brooks house keeper, Gertrude Burshaw, was the only ; witness. She assumed her duties yesterday and had no infor mation as to Brooks' enemies or acquaintances which would give the officers any clew. According to her story to Prose- cuting Attorney Coleman, she and Brooks were playing cards when someone rapped on the door. Brooks rose and moved to the door, saying "Come in." A masked man entered revolver in hand. He had a red bandana hand ,kerchief over his face; two holes be ing cut for the eyes. Brooks held up his hands and said, "You can have anything I have. The intruder made no statement, but fired twice, both shots entering Brooks' chest. Brooks fell over on the davenport moaning and then to the floor. t)r. James T. Rooks, a neighbor, heard the shots and the screams of Mrs. Burshaw, but thought it was nothing serious. Then Mrs. Burshaw called him, saying Brooks was shot, and he hurried over. ' Officers immediately were called. Brooks had lived alone since the death of his wife, a member of the pioneer Singleton family. Last year the home of Miss Jane Singleton, his sister-in-law, was burned to the ground mysteriously. Brooks had de fended many accused of liquor viola tions, but officers say they do not be lieve this had anything to do wich the shooting. Brooks was born in Ashville, N-. C. September 9,1870, was admitted to the bar in 1692 and came to Walla Walla in 1893. School Principals Plan for Contests Pendleton. Tentative plans for a county declamatory contest and for a county track meet were drawn up Saturday morning when sixteen principals and superintendents from the schools in Umatilla county hav ing three rooms or more, met with county school superintendent J. A. Yeager, J. M. Burgess, superintendent of schools in Morrow county and Harold Brownson, principal of the McLaugh lin high school at Milton-Freewater, were named on a committee to organ ize a principal's and superintendent's club for Morrow and Umatilla coun ties. The first meeting of this club will probably be held in January. It is planned to have the winners of the declamatory contest meet win . ners of contests in Union and Mor row counties, superintendent Yeager announced this afternoon. The track meet will be held the first Saturday in May, the principals and superintendents decided. Three persons represented the Pen dleton schools at the meeting, two the Milton-Freewater schools and two the Umapine schools and there was one representative here from Athena, Adams, Weston, Helix, Forks school, Echo, Fruitdale, Pleasant View, and Ferndale. Hermiston, Stan field and Umatilla were not represent ed at the meeting. County Agent Returns County Agent Holt has returned from Chicago, where he attended the International Livestock exposition. Agent Holt also attended the nation-' al potato grower's conference, where it was proposed to start a campaign with the view to decreasing the acre age of potatoes. Wheat v Conference At Arlington Is For Water Transportation Oregon State College. A second general Columbia Basin Wheat Out look conference, somewhat on the order of the one held at Moro three years ago but with more emphasis on transportation by water, has been called for Arlington, February 11-13. This conference has been called by the Eastern Oregon Wheat league of which Charles B. Cox of Heppner is president and H. B. Pinkerton, Moro, is secretary.. The league has asked the cooperation of the Oregon Ex tension service in conducting the con ference and has asked G. R. Hyslop, head of the farm crops department of the state college, to act as gener al, secretary. Discussion of a barge line down the Columbia river with truck feeder lines into the interior will be one of the principal topics for discussion of the conference. A special committee on transportation, consisting largely of the directors of the wheat league, has been announced and will gather data in advance of the conference. Seven other committees have been appointed with representatives on them from the 11 counties of eastern Oregon most directly concerned with wheat production. The chairman and secretaries , of committees, who will be responsible for gathering informa tion for consideration by the con ference follows: Transportation, W. H. Harrah, Pendleton, chairman; F. L. Ballard Corvallis, secretary, Production, til lage and seed supply, H. B. Pinker ton, Moro, chairman and D... C. Stephens, Moro, secretary. Ware housing and intermediate credit, Sam Thompson, Pendleton, chairman, and Dr. M. N. Nelson, ' Corvallis, secre tary. Crop insurance, J. B. Adams, Moro, and W. A. Holt, Pendleton. Weed control, Perry Johnston, Con don, and D. C. Smith, Corvallis. Grain inspection and market news service, Roy Ritner, - Pendleton, and Roger Morse, Baker. Legislation, Charles "A. Harth, The Dalles, and Charles W. Smith, Heppner. Journalism Contest By High School Pupils University of Oregon. All high schools of the state where a school paper is published or where the high school students supply news to local papers will be eligible to compete in the uregon High bchool Press As sociation journalism contest, foster ed by the school of journalism -of the University of Oregon, it is announced by George H. , Godfrey, assistant professor of journalism, who is in charge of contest arrangements. A committee consisting of Mr. God frey,. David Wilson, Portland, presi dent of the press conference last year and Estil Phipps, Medford, president this year, has worked out details, . Judges for the contest will be named soon. All entries for the con test must be sent in to the school of journalism, at the university in Eugene, not later than January 9. Two or more copies of the high school paper published this school year, or two issues of the local paper with school news will be required for entry. Announcement of winners will be made at the annual conference ban quet, January 12, Information and details about the contest may be ob tained from the school of journalism, of the university. ARMED FOR fTHE FIGHT o BUY CHRISTMAS SEALS "Old Ironsides" Coming To Standard Theatre For its Christmas night program the Standard Theatre is pleased to offer its patrons "Old ; Ironsides,'.' Paramount s great spectacular ver sion of Oliver Wendell Holmes poem. A beautiful story in which the lead ing characters are Esther Ralston, Charles Farrel and Wallace Berry, appeals to the audience like a mighty chord played to a stirring memory of the guns of the old battleship as they thunder again. A photoplay you will long remember. Tomorrow night Ken Maynard stars in a clean Western play, "The Canyon of Adventure," in which his famous horse, Tarzan, has a very -important part. Virginia Brown Faire plays, the principal feminine role opposite the popular Western star, and the director is Al. Rogell, the man who made "The Shepherd of the Hills." Sunday night the Standard will feature Richard Dix and Jean Arthur in "Warming Up" a splendid photo play based on a thrilling baseball story, which has been synchronized with sound for the larger theatres. The usual , comedies, news and sports reels are offered in connection with the feature programs. Pioneer Indian Fighter Ends Life With Gun Storm Lashes High Tide Lashed by the fury of reaction ' from a terrific storm at sea off the coast Tuesday night waves and surf from an eight and one half foot tide presented an unusual spectacle at Seaside. For the first time in many years waves swept over the concrete promenade along the ocean front for two miles. , Hermiston Turkeys Three carloads of turkeys, 8,000 birds, were shipped from Hermiston last week to mid-west and eastern markets. Turkey raisers from Boardman,- Irrigon, Butter creek, Stanfield and Echo contributed tp the shipment. Oldest Resident Dead Mrs. Mary Puckett, who for a long time has had the distinction of being the oldest resident . of Walla Walla, is dead at the" age of 101 years. Murder and Suicide Mrs. Frank Williams shot by her husband, who afterward killed him self, died last week at Toppenish, Washington. The remains were brought to Pendleton for interment. Lured to the cellar of their home by Williams, the wife was shot in the abdoman. Williams went into the yard, took a dose of strychnine, shot himself in the head and died instant ly. Mrs. Williams lived two davs after the shooting. She was a daughter of the late Gus Cornover. Before her marriage to Williams she was Mrs. Bellinger. She is survived by five children, the eldest 17 and the youngest four years of age. Officers Ask For Reward Tom Gurdane and C. L. Lleuallen, officers who arrested William Edward Hickman following a wide-flung manhunt last year, filed a petition in superior court at Los Angeles, seek ing $5000 reward offered by the Los Angeles county board of supervisors. The petitions were an outgrowth of an action by Los Angeles county which asked the court to adjudicate among the claimants and award the money. The officers asked that they be allowed the full amount. Mrs. Piper In Wreck Grandma Piper and the Kern family of Helix, who recently left for Long Beach, California, by motor were In a wreck at Red Bluff, when a truck driven by a Chinese, collided with the Kern car at a street inter section. Fortunately Mrs. Piper es caped iniury; and others of the party sustained only minor injuries. Nehemiah McDannald, Indian fighter and pioneer of the Walla Wal la valley killed himself Sunday in his log cabin home near Fruitdale by blowing his brains out with" a shot gun. Mr. McDannald, who was a bachelor and lived by himself, re cently fractured his collar bone in a fall and refused to have medical attention. It is believed by neighbors that this was the cause of his self destruction as he had declared his in tention to commit suicide in the event of becoming helpless. McDannald was born in Illinois January 24, 1849 and crossed the plains with his parents in 1865. The family settled in the Walla Walla val ley and in 1866 his father built the log cabin in which the tragedy oc-cured. 4 Influenza Epidemic Influenza is 'epidemic in Athena and vicinity, but as yet it has not ap peared in virulent form, although a number of cases have been serious. The Floyd Pinkerton family were all ill the fore part of the week, but are on the way to recovery now. Mem bers of the E. A. Dudley family were seriously ill, especially Mr. Dudley, for a time was threatened with pneumonia. The Louis Stewart family are recovering, and also many others, though new cases are constantly being reported. "Honker" Dinners for Friends Athena relatives and friends of Harry Keller enjoyed wild goose din ners, Sunday. Harry, who in com pany with his friend, Charles .Tavlor at Bend, went hunting provided the "honkers" for the festive boards; The birds were genuine wild geese, not Canadian brants, and tipped the I scaies at oMt pounas, dreg&Sd. Uses For Christmas' Seal Money; Locally Umatilla County has in 1928 re ceived the benefit of $4000.00 health service through the cooperation of the County Court and the County Health Association. $2200.00 is in the; County Budget, with which the salary of County Nurse is paid ?4uu.uu ol this amount is for ex penses. The remaining $1800.00 is contributed by the County Health Association. A large part of this amount is money from the sale of Christmas Seals. This year more than 4000 examina tions have been made among the children of school and pre-school age. More then 900 children are having goiter prevention measures administ ered in the schools in the East end of the county as a result of the goiter survey made by the county nurse and a practicing physician. Many needed corrections for the ears, eyes, nose, throat, and teeth have been cared for by parents fol lowing the nurses visits into the schools.' 23 of these corrections have been financed by the Health Associa tion. The Christmas Seal has been called "America's Great Yuletide Gift to Her Children." Children Drown In A Columbia Slough A heartrending tragedy occured across the river from 'Umatilla, on the Washington side of the Columbia river, Sunday afternoon when two children, Wolfton aged 7 and Tiny aged 5, little son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 'Clyde Wilson, lost their lives by drowning in an ice covered slough. The little ones had attended Sunday school in Umatilla, and crossed over on the ferry on which their father is employed, and as he thought pro ceeded on homeward. Instead of go ing home, the little ones loitered to skate on the slough. The mother thought that the children were with their father, and he supposed . they were at home. In the evening when he went home, search was immediate ly made for the children. Just as darkness was creeping on, the searching party found the chil dren in the slough, waist-deep in the ice. Their little bodies side by side, and their faces in the water.. Their hands showed that they clutched the broken ice which went under with their weight. Athena Hi Splits 50-50 With Adams High In Season's First Game The boys and girls' teams of Ath ena high school split 50-50 with Adams high school in the first games of the season on the local gym floor, Friday evening. Athena girls lost to Adams by the narrow margin of one point, 18 to 19, The boys won over the Adams con testants in a closely played game by the score of 21 to 18 The Adams girls took the lead in the first quarter, but gradually Ath ena, through the effective work of Francis Cannon, ' forward, steadily gained Until only one point divided the teams at the end of the fourth period. mi l i m i , xne Adams Doys displayed some clever team work in the first half. demonstrating the result of early season practice, which the Athena team did not have advantage of. In the second half Athena began to steam up and for awhile the score seesawed back and forth in each others favor. Finally a couple of lucky throws in the last few minutes of play cinched the game for Athena. Tonight on the home floor. Athena plays a double header with the Eagles and the Jokers, two teams from Walla Walla. The Touchet high school boys and girls teams are scheduled to play Athena in the home gym next Wednesday evening. The first game of all double headers is scheduled to begin promptly at 7:30. Eddie Buck of Walla Walla, will referee the games and the general admission price of 35 cents will prevail. Oregon State College . arm Market Review The general wheat situation did not change much last week. Pacific coast markets were . fairly steady. Wheat exuorters were renorted Iash active buyers, but export millers continued to take wheat to supply a good Oriental flour demand. Cali fornia white wheat was ouoted un to $1.35 at Los Angeles. Japanese flour mills are also taking more wheat because of inmroved demand in China, and prices for wheat and flour advanced there during Novem ber. , Japanese wheat imnorts. from nil sources, from July 1 to October 30, total 5,047.000 bushels comDared to 3,481,000 last year in the same period. Domestic soft red winter wheat markets were about steady. Good- milling hard red winter, hard red spring and durum, generally held steady but premiums on higher pro tein were not auite so firm and nonr grades of these wheats weakened somewhat. The new United States winter wheat crop is unofficially reported to oe aDove average in condition but nearly 3 per cent less in acreage than last year. Excent in the Pa- cific northwest, winter wheat is re ported to be in very good condition generally. Preliminary renorts from Russia indicate an average acreage of win ter cereals with condition above aver age. Estimates on the new south ern hemisphere production indicate smaller crops than the early unofficial reports. Drought in narts nf Ann. tralia appears to have cut down the yieia materially and since holdover stocks were very small, it seems that the Australian exportable surplus may not be greatly in excess of last year. Stocks of wheat in North A terminal markets continue heavy about 330,000,000 bushels. Although Canadian exports have been heavy, United States exports have been light, and the total exports from North America are not quite up with last year's record. Acreage Signed Up t A large number of bench land fanners attended the seed pea meet ing held Saturday afternoon in Wes ton. Considerable acreage was sign ed up at the meeting, but the total is still short of the two thousand acres desired. The visit of a repre sentative of the Washington-Idaho Seed company of Spokane is expect ed daily. Leg Is Cruxhed Nelson St. Dennis is at St. Anthony's hospital in Pendleton h cause of a crushed leg as the result of a team running away on the ranch where he was employed. Is Non-Committal Miss Cornelia Marvin otofo n. - - J MVWVt brarian, is non-committal towards the rumor that she is to be married to Ex-Governor Walter M. Pierce. "I have nothing whatever to say in re gard to the matter," Miss Marvin said, "and I do not see whv nnvth!nr should be said. Any matter that deals with my affairs as state li brarian in a public capacity may be of interest to the public. As to any thing dealing with my personal af fairs, that is purely personal and I iau to see where the public should be interested in it." . High Wind Storm A wind storm of high velocity pre vailed in this section Sunday night, filling houses with ' dust, tearing limbs from trees and tumbling loose articles about indiscriminately. At the W. J. Crabill home in the north part of town, the chicken house was blown down and completely wrecked. Umapine Hall Burns The Pastime pool hall at Umapine was totally destroyed by fire recently. The building and fixtures were own ed by Paul Nack of Walla Walla. Guy Bechtel, the proprietor of the place, lost his barber chair and tools. There was an insurance of $1C00 on the building and fixfuc's. BUSIER IS AFTER THE VANDAL JOB Former Athena Coach May Become the Mentor For Idaho. Boise, Idaho. Loren H. Basler, ex center at Willamette university and now coach at Boise high school, is one of four coaches mentioned as the next tutor at University of Idaho. Vandal alumni here who have been watching Basler's eleven win cham pionship honors the last two seasons, winning 18 straight victories and running up a total of 607 points against 40 by opponents, are behind him to succeed Charles Erb, present Idaho coach, who is expected to re- sign this year. Robert L, Mathews, ex-Vandal and Willamette coach, and who was at the Bearcat institution when Basler was playing; Henry Trotter head track and field coach at University of California at Los Angeles, Anse Cornell, present coach at College of Idaho, and Basler are the four names appearing as possible Idaho coaches to replace Erb. The resigna tion of Erb though, hasn't as yet been received. Anse Cornell, ex-quarterback star at the University, of Oregon and who tutored the College of Idaho eleven to the Northwest conference, seems to have an inside edge for the Van dal position, according to alumni. However, there are plenty to support Basler, especially alumni who live here. Basler has been at Boise four years, spending the first two build ing his machine, which has rolled un- defeated in the last 18 games. Bas ler entered his coaching career at Athena high school, Athena, Or., and while there won the eastern Oregon football and basketball championship, an attainment which Athena never before had reached. He then went to Lewiston, Idaho, and in two years he placed his team in a game for the state championship only to see it lose in the last 20 seconds of play. Basler played at Willamette from 1918 to 1921 and was heralded at that time by Mathews as being the greatest roving center he had ever coached. Turkey Shcot Sunday py Athena Gun Club The Athena Gun Club will sponsor a turkey shoot on the local grounds, Sunday, beginning at 10 o clock, a. m. The traps have been put in fine con dition for the occasion and shells may be purchased on the grounds. The scatter guns will begin crack ing promptly at 10 o'clock. A choice coljection of birds have been secured for the event, and prime mut ton will also be available for those who desire to shoot for it. Bert Ramsay is chairman of the fuel committee and will see to it that a big supply of old railroad ties are on hand to keep a rousing fire going at all times to keep the gang warm and in good humor. Iodine Tablets In Schools Miss Edna Flanagan, county health nurse, reports that through the interest of the teacher at Cayuse, the nutritive iodine tablets were put in the schools to be given on the con sent of the parents, the school board paying for the tablets. There are now in this county 14 schools that are using the nutritive iodine tablets. These are given to children with normal thyroids as a prevention of goiter oniy. In each school, the school board is paying for the tablets and they are given only on consent of the parents. A Big Land Deal A land deal involving over $200.. 000 and representing one of the larg est transactions completed for some time in this county, is announced in the sale of the Karl Kupers 740 acre rancn near Helix to Mrs. Carrie B. Rogers of Pendleton, who in turn has sold a half section of reservation land to S. R. Thompson, a quarter section to Harold Barnett and nnH en tirely disposed of her reservation holdings. I'arent-Son Banquet Arrangements arc comnlnU-d for the parent-son banqaet to be held rtday evening, December 21 at the Athena Hotel. This bannuet is in the form of a get-together meeting ior tne community and to get a representative eroun nf men Viohlnd the troop for the coming year, and to discuss scout problems in general. Pussy-Willows Found F, A. Hartzer; state forest ranger, came to Walla Walla . from Lewis peak, not far from Toll Gate, report ing practically no snow and brought with him some pussy-willows in blobm. .