WEATHER Partly cloudy tonight and Sun day xcopt cloudy periods and few scattered showers eastern portion. LA GRAND OBSERVER E 22nd Issue 64th Year WF ?: WW-'" !; vMp -' $ SOROPTIMIST CONVENTION OPENS Heading and speaking at various sessions here will be (left to right) Borgehild Hel gesen, governor of the Northwest region; Betty Faulkner, publicity chairman; El oise Hamilton, director of district 2; Hilda Fries, district secretary; and Raema Lau rence, president of the local club. (Observer Photo) Typhoon Vera Roars into Japan With Heavy Casualties Feared TOKYO i UPI i Typhoon Vera packing 138 mph winds hit the heavily populated mid-section of Japan tonight and first reports in dicated casualties and damages would be heavy. At least 13 persons were dead, 69 injured and there were 47 miss ing. But communications were La Grande UF Drive Date Set Initial planning for the 1959 La Grande United Fund campaign was completed Friday at a meet ing of the UF committe, and it was announced that the drive would open Oct. 14. The annual leadership gifts cam paign, however, gets underway Thursday. The overall United Fund goal of (31,484.54 is hoped for. . The kickoff br-akraft for cam paign workers is scheduled at 7 a.m., Oct. 14. at the Sacaiawea. A house-to-house canvass is in cluded as part of the regular fund drive. All participating agen cies arc taking an active part in this year's app-a!. Committees Named Assisting campaign chairman Ed Watts in the UF organization are the following: David Baum and A. B. Olson, co-chairmen of leadership gifts: Lee Stoner and Bob Carey, lead ership emp'oye's gifts: Willard Carey, clubs and organizations! Milo Blokland. Mt. Emily Lumber Company; O. D. Christopherson and J. C. Ladd, Union Pacific Rail road: Harvey Carter, public schools; Dr. Ernest Anderson, Eastern Oregon College: Ralph Seck. general business and em ployes; and Dr. Martha Addy, house canvass. - UF president June McManus an nounced that campaign head quarters will be in the lobby of the Sacajawea, with Florence Hardy. UF secretary, having her office there. 10 Navy Airmen Are Rescued Off Oreqon Coast SEATTLE, Wash. UPI -Ten Navy airmen were picked up from two life rafts off the Oregon Coast earlv today by the Coast Guard shiD Yacoma. Th Yarnma. and the freighter Olympia Pioneer were directed to a position 11 miles wesi-suum-west of the Columbia River mouth "Friday nisht after the Navy men ditched their P5.M seaplane in the Pacific Ocean. A Coast Guard nlane tootled the survivors. dropped a portable radio sei ana determined that all 10 men es caped their disabled plane without Injury. Both rescue ships reached the area where flares marked the po sition of the rafts but the Yacoma reached the scene first and made the pickups. During the night, search air planes circled over the life rafts, keeping tab on their position by the flares kept burning aboard the rafls. knocked out over a wide area and these figures were believed to be only a fragment of the total. First reports said 173 houses were destroyed, 28 of them com pletely washed away. More than 12.000 homes were flooded and more than 40,000 acres were un der water. The city of Nagoya, 130 miles west of Tokyo was knocked out with a complete power failure. All telephones and public trans portation were disabled. The British owned vessel, Changsha, , capable of carrying more than 100 persons, was re ported- -aground near Nagoya- and in danger of being pounded to bits by typhoon tossed seas. Most of the passengers on the Melbourne-to-Japan ship were believed to be Australians. The typhoon was one of the most powerful, broad and danger ous in recent yca-s. It was expected to spare this Red Rebellion In Laos Is Said Increasing VIENTIANE. Laos, UPP-The Communist rebellion against the royal government of Laos has spread to the southern regions of the country, it was disclosed to day. ' 1 Acting Foreign Minister Sisouk Nachampassak said five Commun ist Pathet Lao rebels were wound ed and two captured in skirmishes with government troops in south ern provinces. . He said the skirmishes were at Ban Dontalat in Champassak Province and at Ban Van Mohn in Thankhek Province. Up to this week the fighting has been centered in the northern provinces of Phongsaly and Sam neua. But the government reported Friday that Pathet Lao rebels had ambushed government troops east of Vientiane City Thursday in one of the fiercest clashes in Vientiane Province so far. The government was said to have suffered a number of cas ualties in the engagement but there were no further details. In the north, the government was said to be holding fast to the outposts of Xieng Kho, Sop Sai and Sop Hao which the Reds cap tured Aug. 30 and then lost back to the government troops. Military officials said, no "im portant activities" were reported from the area. Motorist Collides With Pickup Truck a i-a stranae driver . collided with a parked pickup truck and pushed it approximately 3S feet into a yard early this morning, according to police. Gerald Wesley Taal. 1609 Wash ington Ave., was traveling east on Adams Avenue when he swerved to avoid a bright flash, police stated. The pickup truck belonged to Mellon Dale Taylor, 19064 Adams Ave., and the vehicle was parked in front of his residence at the time of the accident. No injuries were reported in the accident that occurred at 2 5S a m. capital city the full brunt of its power as it curved to the north east. The storm was curving north east at freight train speed of 43 m p h. It was expected to hit the Sea of Japan, curve back and pass close to the foreigners re sort colony of Karuizawa, 100 miles north of Tokyo, and then pass out into the Pacific ocean by noon tomorrow. - The storm's 450-mile wide front brought virtually all of Japan with in range of its winds and torren tial rains. 'Gracfe'No Threat MIAMI ( UPI ) Hurricane Gra de, who apparently didn't have her picture taken yesterday by a camera-carrying rocket, wallowed frowzily in the Atlantic today well off the Florida east coast. The U.S. weather bureau here reported that at 11 p.m. (est) the hurricane, with winds up to 75 miles per hour, was about 350 miles east of Cape Canaveral and moving northward at about 5 miles per hour. The bureau said Gracie was ex pected to maintain her northward movement during the next 12 to 18 hours, but said there was some likelihood of an increase in forward movement and a trend toward the north-northwest there after. Little change was indicated in size or intensity, the bureau said. Though Gracie remained vir tually stationary late last night, the bureau warned interests along the Carolines coasts to keep in touch until it is definitely estab lished whether the hurricane will affect them or remain at sea. Probers On New Leads Over Mystery Death BOSTON (UPI I A packet of love letters and information from veteran harbor pilots today sent investigators off on a new course in the death of pretty Lynn Kauff man. The latest information from Capt. James V. Crowley, the po lice harbormaster, further con- HEADS STATE MEDICS Dr. Louis J. Feves of Pendleton was installed as president of the Ore gon State Medical So ciety at the organiza tion's 85th annual con vention held in Medford this week. Conference of doctors reported and ailed on a busy agenda. r -- ' LA GRANDE, ORE., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 Killer' Insect Loose ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. UPI A disease that acts like polio and meningitis and is transmit ted in tlie bite of "killer" mos quitoes spread uneasiness today through parts of rural southern New Jersey. It may have been responsible for the deaths of nine persons, mostly children, and the hospitali zation of at least eight others. Two cases have been confirmed, in cluding one death. The disease is eastern equine encephalitis, according to the the state Health Department. Un til Friday, it had not been iden tified because of the slowness in isolating the deadly virus. The suspense of not knowing what they were up against had heightened the concern of most south Jersey residents. It may ease their worries now that they know, but the end still is not in sight. Health officials face the task of stamping out the disease before it kills others or before it be comes a full-blown epidemic. Some state officials feel that it already has reached that stage in a three-county south Jersey area which has been hardest hit. Students Register At EOC This weekend will find approxi mately 500 more students on the Eastern Oregon College campus as upperclassmen began to register Saturday. According to Dr. Lyle H. John son, EOC registrar, returning stu dents began to register at 8 a.m. Saturday, in Walter M. Pierce li brary. "The Student Days" officially Idrawsto a cjose Sunday as each aiuiiua i& iiivui-u io aiienu ine church of his choice. ' Saturday, the last full day in the orienta tion program, saw: 9 a.m. La Grande-Union County Chamber of Commerce assembly; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. La Grande Busi ness Day; t p.m. football game, BOC vs College of Idaho. Monday at 7 a.m. marks the of ficial beginning of the fall term as classes get underway. Local FFA Boys Judge Livestock At Pendleton Participating in the livestock judging contest at the Umatilla Fat Stock Show at Pendleton Sat urday was the livestock judging team from La Grande High School. The local FFA chapter members making the trip were Mike Camp bell, Larry Courtright, Bruce Rynearson, Larry Campbell and Tom MacGregor. Taking the boys to Pendleton was Mrs. Dennis Campbell. Of Divorcee fused the case which Capt. Jo seph B. Fallon, who is heading the investigation", has already ad mitted to be the most perplexing in his 21 years of police work. Crowley Friday rounded up sev eral veteran harbor pilots and conferred with them throughout the day. Late Friday night he filed a report which said he and the pilots agreed it was impos sible for the giri to have gone overboard from the Dutch freight er Utrecht at the time originally believed. Crowley's detailed report, which considered tides, currents, the weather and other data, conclud ed that Mrs. Kauffman was al ready in the water when persons aboard ship reported talking with her through a cabin door. The body of the 23-year-old di vorcee was found near Spectacle Island last Saturday. She van ished from the Utrecht tha night before after it left here for New York. The skipper of the Utrecht re ported he spoke with the girl aft er 7 p.m. when the vessel was well beyond Spectacle Island. Mrs. Juanita Spector, Mrs. Kauffman's traveling companion, also spoke with the girl again through a closed door about the same time Fallon Friday night indicated he was considering the possibility that neither Mrs. Spector nor the skipper spoke with Mrs. Kauffman but with some unknown person who impersonated her. LONE SOVIET 'MOUTHPIECE' CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) What happens in the middle of Hit night if Premier Khrush chev wakes up in President Eisenhower's cottage and wants something? Khrushchev would have to get out of bed, pad across the hall and knock on the door of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Giomyko who C2.i speak Eng lish. , The Arrericen and Russian interpreters are sleeping in other cottages Ex-Miss America Beauty Gunned To Death NEW YORK iUPH-A honev blonde former Miss America can didate and "Little Aucie" Pisano. for years one of the nation's most notorious crime overlords, were shot gangland style in the mobster's Cadillac last night in a quiet Queens residential neigh borhood. Two assassins were seen run ning from the death car and fled either in a taxi or a waiting get away car. Residents of the neighborhood, hearing a fusilade of shots, ran out and found the 61-year-old hoodlum slumped over the steer ing wheel, blood streaming from his head. Alongside him was Mrs. Janice Drake, 32. the beautiful honey blonde wife of Comedian Alan Drake, who won 32 beauty con tests in her teens and reigned as .Miss lew Jersey in 1944. She was then known as "the girl with the most beautiful lees in the world '. Following her fail ure to win the Miss America title, she drifted into obscurity and ap parently became friendly with gangland overloads. She was questioned in the mur der of Nat (The Manufacturer) Nelson who was shot in 1952 two hours after a date with the curvy blonde. She also was questioned FFA State Officers Here For 'Degreed State o ficcrs of the Future Farmers of America will be in La Grande Sunday to conduct the fornu'l Greenhand" and Chapter Farmer Degree initiation for all Union County chapters. The special ceremony, open to the public will be h- Id at the La Grande High School auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Ed Glenn, Lostme. slate presi dent; Lonny Fendell, Newberg. state vice presid"nt; Paul Seiquist, Vale, state reporter; and Dick Wooten, St. Helens, secretary, will arrive in La Grande early Sunday afternoon. The stat? o.'ficers will make a tour of the valley and will be guests of the Union County Agri cultural Instructors and FFA chapter presidents at the Norman Kcopman home for dinner. On Monday, the group will attend the noon meeting of the Lions Club and will then visit the La Grande FFA chapter. High School Gets Special Sewer Charge A motion to allow La Grande High School a special rate on the soon-to-be discontinued storm sew er charge has been approved by city commissioners. A letter to the commission signed by Superintendent Lyle N. Itiggs requested the rate during the sum mer months since the water piped through the school's meter is used only for irrigation of lawns. The letter stated that of the school's July bill. W7 05 of the to tal $251.95 was for the storm sew er fund. This is the highest rate ever paid by the school and the increase was primarily due to ir rigation during the montn. The commission will cancel next month's charge against the srhool and accept the $67.05 as payment for August's charge in addition to July's. Improvement District City commisioners also have ac cepted and placed on file a petit ion for water main extension im provement district No. 11. The pro posed district will be on Walnut Street between Grandy and Pal mer Avenues. Persons signing the petition represented 100 per cent of property ownership in the area that will cover approximately three blocks. An ordinance giving the city manager power to enter into a lease with the Maverick's Riding Club has been approved by the commission. The agreement will rap for five years and the city will pay an annual rental fee of $100 ax a site for their rock crusher. lice, Cold Over With Notorious Hood in the r.)37 muruer oi Aiuen Anastasia, onetime high execu tioner of Brooklyn's Murder, Inc. gang. Her relationship with the over lords of crime never was made clear. Pisano. for years an associate of the nation's most notorious gangland figures included Al Ca pone and Anastasia, was shot three times in the head. Mrs. Drake was shot twice, also in the head. No Motive Police, admittedly without a motive for the double-slaying. Im mediately began a roundup of un derworld associates of Pisano. He was known to have been active in a wide variety of rackets. A red address book, found on Pisano, was believed to have con tained a veritable "who's who of the underworld." many of whom were to be questioned by police. Police also were interrogating Mrs. Drake's husband, a televi sion and nightclub comedian who was appearing in a Washington night sX)t with Singer Tony Mar tin at the time of the slayings. He hurried here from Washington. J & I m . . I ml 3 ' i 1 awgii - '- JUDGE AT HIS DESK Judge C. K. McCormick, Union County juvenile and . probate jurist here, has devoted more time in public office than any other Union County official 25 years as court clerk and now serving on his third six-year el ective post as judge and shares continuous, long-term public service honors with only two other Oregon coun ty officials. Although much of his work is of routine na ture, he enjoys every minute of it. (Observer Photo) 'DEAN OF THE COURTHOUSE' Judge C. K. McCormick Looks Back At Lengthy Public Caresr By GRADY PANNELL Observer Staff Writer Union County Judge C. K. 'Ken neth) McCormick ranks as the dean of the courthouse here in La Grande, and there's a good rea son. The judge has been in the pub lic pictures for more years than any other person at the county seat and holds the record and then some of any county official in terms of longinpuity. The courthouse "dean" also is tied, as far as can be determined, with one or two other public coun ty officials in Oregon. Judge McCormick's career as a public oflicial began during the outbreak of World War I. He was first elected to office here as coun ty clerk in 1916 but had served as a deputy clerk several years be fore. ... . . First Appointed His judicial life began in April of l'M.1 when he was appointed to 6 Pages Khrushchev Air War' Breakfast Table Authorities quoted Drake as saying Pisano, whose real name was Anthony Carfano, was a friend of his and his wife. Long Criminal Career Pisano's s'aying ended one of the most notorious criminal ca reers in the annals of American crime. A onetime eastern "lieu tenant" of Al Capcne, the short, stocky crime lord had, over a 30- year period, been a partner-in-crime with such underworld fig ures as Lucky Luciano and Frank Costello. Pisano's record showed scores of arrests, several for murder, but not one conviction. In recent years, his activities were under stood to have dwindled, and he had become regarded as some thing of an elder-statesman in the underworld. He kept a stable and was known for his interest in horse racing. Police said Pisano and Mrs. Drake had dined earlier in the evening with "other people" at Marino's Restaurant in midtown Manhattan. From there, they ap parently drove to the murder site, about eight miles from the restau rant. fill the unexpired term of his pre decessor, who died, and he has been acting on juvenile and pro bate cases ever since. Ho was elected to the judgeship in 1944 i terms run for six years), and is now serving his, third elec tive term. His 25-year role as county clerk is unmatched, however, in Union County, and it was through this type of work that he picked up a vast and thorough understanding of law. Judge McCormick is not a barris ter, but he handles the type of legal work his office requires with finesse and foresight, courthouse friends say. Born and raised in Kansas City, Mo., he came to this area to live at the age of 21 that was back in 1909. Today be is a spry man with graying hair and fond memories of his role as a public official. Work It Routine "My work prelty much is rou Fivt Cants ii roDiems FORMAL CONFAB SLATED GETTYSBURG, Pa. (UPI) President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Khrushchev resumed their crucial cold war talks over the breakfast table at Camp David, Md., early today, seeking to de termine whether they can chart a course to ease east west relations. The President and the Soviet leader met for breakfast at 8:15 a.m. edt, in the President s cot tage overlooking a Maryland mountain valley which today was shrouded by dark, low lying clouds. According to the White House, Eisenhower and Khrushchev re sumed at the breakfast table the informal conversations begun last evening at the presidential moun tain retreat. A more formal business session including Secretary of State Chris tian A. Herter and Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Gromyko got underway on the long sun porch of the cottage shortly after 9 a.m. Vice President Richard M. Nix on, originally scheduled to reach Camp David by helicopter at a.m. drove from Washington, making his arrival at the camp about one hour late. Other conference participants were expected by automobile lat er in the morning. IT C nfriirita avnArllwl Ihn morning meeting ' wn- Deiween- 2"n and 3 hours, followed by a break for lunch and possibly sep arate conferences by the Ameri can and Soviet delegations before I joint business sessions resume in tne eariy auernoon. Eisenhower and Khrushchev were probing each other's minds to determine whether any solution of cold war tensions is really pos sible. By nightfall, they should know. The early propaganda skirmishing was over. The position papers pre pared by their foreign ministers were before them.. It was up to Eisenhower and Khrushchev, lounging in the club by luxury of the President's cot tage on a Maryland mountain top 26 miles south of here, to work out of the diplomatic morass that has marked American-Soviet rela tions since World War II. Others Expected Later in the day, experts from the fields of defense, atomic ener gy and foreign trade were expect- l r-nmn fta,,,! TtlAt, MTM. scnted the top echelons of both governments. The Russians were content for the moment to let White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty secretary of state for public af fairs, do all the talking. Official Soviet siskesmen were mum. - tine," he said, and he couldn't re call any phase of his courthouse life which was nothing but routine. hut he has treasured every moment of it. He remembered that when he first went to work at the court- hnnji as a rienutv rterk. nnd IaIm Decame us lunK-iiiiie ciet k. vn looking ahead to the future in nithlir work with no Manx Inr i ing down at the county courtlw grind. About the only excitement tv remember at the county sea when a fire burned oft mi the roof of the institution I He was a clerk then and h' had to be moved until ttw out structure could be rer The judge is a past pp the Association of Oreg Judges and attends the ' ings. He has hosts of frV lie role throughout Of