COMP fn U. of 0 Library mm Reds In Rout, Report From Gen. M'Arthur Continued Fighting In Smouldering City Of Mopping-Up Character (By Uu AiwclaUd Fn W. G. SHUCART. 724 Cobb street, stands beiid. tern staked tomato planti in his garden which have bean trained to grow over jix feet in height. These vines have been producing since the second week in July and will continue, Mr. Shugart hopes, until late in the fall, barring frost. Until he suffered a stroke several years ago Mr. Shugart was employed as an attendant at the U. S. Veterans facility here. Since recovering he and Mrs. Shugart have spent much of their time traveling and the rest "just puttering" about their attractive home. By Paul Jenkins. Leave Property Tax Levy To Local Taxing Units, Advice Of Oregon Legislative Group SALEM I API The legislature's interim tax committee has recommended that counties, cities, school districts and other local taxing units be given the exclusive right to levy property taxes. This would be done by voting a constitutional amendment prohibiting the state from levying a property tax to finance state government activities. I Actually, Oregon hasn't had I I tl rt.. Si- state property tax for 20 years, , nOTTITICIll WUITS because income tax receipta have g been big enough to cancel tne state nrnnertv lew. But a stale property tax would be necessary in the 1951-53 budget period because of a huge deficit facing the legislature, which meets next January. This deficit is ex pected to be at least $34,000,000, unless the legislature finds new sources of revenue. The committee also recom mended that county, city and other local taxing districts be given re lief from the constitutional provis ion which won't permit spending to increase more than 6 percent each year. This would allow the local .gov ernmental units to vote a new, permanent tax base, provided 40 percent of the registered voters vote at the election held for this purpose. For instance, this would make It possible for school districts to adopt a new taxing base, and thus do away with the need to hold spe cial elections each year to raise money for schools. Rep. Giles L. French, Moro, member of the committee, recom mended that cooperatives be taxed under the corporation income tax. He also made the same recommen dation regarding churches and edu cational institutions which have property or businesses from which they make money. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS A little over a week ago today, our amphibious landing operation west of Seoul. We took the com mies by surprise, and for a little while it looked like IN A MATTER OF WEEKS we might have the Ko rean war all buttoned up and laid away on the shelf. A dispatch as this is written says: "Civilians fleeing from Seoul say the communists are building stone barricades at street intersections and digging trenches in the street for stand-or-die defense. "The sprawling city of more than a million normal population may become one of the bloodiest battle grounds of the Korean war. The reds are preparing for house-to-house fighting. This could mean the destruction of a large part of the capital." .tao it could mean long dlay. Remember when we landed suc cessfully on the Normandy beaches? For a while it looked like we had had the end in sight. But the Ger- (Continued an Pap Four) Cugat Punnet Up To Pay Alimony Arrearage LOS ANGf9.ES UP Xavier Cugat paid his first wife, Carmen Castillo. $12.3.16 to settle alimony arrearage to June, 1950 with court approval Monday. He must resume payments ta-Jier of $250 a weekr 174 perceiW'of his income unW a 1946 divorce agreement. The rhumbs band man is pay ing his second wife, Lorraine Al len, $2,000 a month pending trial oi her senmate maintenance suit. CVMi JUCbeSSOr - Is W. C. Foster WASHINGTON (JP) Paul G. Hoffman is leaving the multi-bil-lion-dollar Economic Cooperation administration which he organized and headed for two and a hall years. President Truman has named William C. Foster, now deputy ad ministrator of ECA, to succeed him. Hoffman's resignation as admin istrator of the big agency which operates the Marshall plan was accepted by the President yester day. In his letter of resignation, Hoff man wrote: 1 "My resignation carries no im plication that the usefulness of the ECA is waning; on the contrary, I believe that the ECA's period of greatest usefulness . may lie ahead." Hoffman has been reported as planning to become director of the Ford foundation, a research edu cational and philanthropic organ ization set up by grants from the Ford automobile family. Before coming to ECA, Hoffman was head of a Ford competitor, the Stude baker Corp. ' At a farewell news conference, Hoffman urged that the United States spend $8,000,000,000 to $14, 000,000,000 during the next three years to "tell the story of democ racy" abroad. He said this sum should be set aside as part of $125,000,000,000 to $150,000,000.00 which he celared the United States should spend over the same period to build its own military strength and that of its allies. "We have to see that the Rus sian armies don't march," he added. Former Official's Body Found In His Auto JOSEPH. Ore. (JP) Aerial and ground search Monday for Chris Bue, 54, former city official, ended with finding of his body in his automobile south of here. A hose connected the motor ex haust to the inside of the car. Relatives reported Bue had been ill. "War you evar angry ba mum this story or tnJP did not ppoar in your nowspopor? Probably." Q READ o What Wendell Webb Soys about WHERE NEWS COMES FROM Page 4 Today Estoblished 117? ROSEIURG. OREGON TUESDAY, SETEMBER:26, 1950 ' 225-50 Justice Jackson Continues Liberty Of Commie Meads Martyrdom Possibility Seen In Case Jailing Convicted Men Pending Appeal Would Violate Rights, Ruling WASHINGON UP -Justice Jackson of the supreme court has ruled that 10 U.S. Communist party leadera must remain free for the present because jailing them would violate American rights and might permit them to claim martyrdom. He reasoned thev could claim they were mar'yrs if they were lailed now and -he supreme court later upset their conviction for con spiracy to overthrow the govern ment. Jackson Monday signed an order which continued their freedom on bail. It will remain in effect until the high court disposes finally of any appeal which the 10 men are expected to file shortly. ' Jackson said in effect that the harm they could do free is less than the damage to American free doms that would result from jail- mi tnem now. The government, contending that the men "should not be at large in this hour of national crisis," had urged denial of their application for continued bail. Eleven Communist leaders were convicted in New York last October of conspiring to advocate violent overthrow of this government. But only 10 applied for continued bail. The 11th, party Secretary Eugene Dennis, is already in jail. He is serving a year for contempt of Congress. Justice Jackson'i order paral leled recent decision by the U.S. circuit court in San Francisco that Harry Bridges is entitled to freedom on bail pending an appeal. Bridges, the CIO longshoremen's leader, was convicted of perjury in denying Communist affiliation when he applied for citizenship in 1945. In both the Bridges and the Com munist officials' cases, the Gov ernment opposed the granting of bail. In the case of the 10 party officials the Justice department said they remained loyal to Russia in spite of the Korean war. The bail order continues freedom for Robert G. Thompson, John B. Williamson. Jacob Stachel, Benja min J. Davis Jr.. Henry Winston. John Gates, Irving Potash, Gil bert Green, Carl Winter and Gus Hall. Their aggregate bail is 1260.- 000. Thompson was sentenced to three years in prison; each of the others including Dennis ?ot five years. And each of the 11 was fined $10,000. Except for Dennis, they have been free. The U.S. circuit court at New York on Aug. 28 ordered them jailed wtthui 30 days unless they obtained' a stay from a su preme court justice. Jackson's or der came two days before the deadline. REX AL0N, movie star"1 cowboy, r Pki cinnnniP as well ds a horse, es he posed for . picture with News-Review carrier-salesmen Moryjjy. Allan visited Roseburg en . tour of the Northwest, and made . pntr.t appearance at the Indian English Mine Fire Claims 80 Lives CRESWELL, England (JP) A raging underground fire trapped and killed at least 80 men today at the Creswell coal mine. Caught behind a wall of flame from burning rubber and timber roof supports, they were choked to death by gaa and fumes. Another 120 men crept to safety on their hands and kneea. Check Theft From P.O. Box Charged Alvin Davis, 21, Reedsport, was arrested in Roseburg Monday on a charge of larceny of a post office, State Police Sgt. Holly Holcomb reported. According to Sgt. Holcomb, Davis took a $1,900 check from a post office box at Reedsport. He told the police that the box was o pen when he allegedly stole the check. Shortly after taking the check from the post office, Sgt. Holcomb said. Davis was married and spent all but $350 of the money on a wed ding trip. Davis was arrested when he ap peared at the draft board in Rose burg. Reedsport Chief of Police Harry McCabe and county sheriff's officers assisted the state police in making the arrest. Monday light Davis was re turned' by Deputy Sheriff Cecil Bc ver to Reedsport, where he will be arraigned in justice court this afternoon. Juveniles Get Probation On Liquor Penalty Three juveniles, charged with possessing alcoholic liquor, re ceived 60-day suspended jail sen tences and were placed on pro bation until Jan. 1, Justice of the Peace A. J. Geddei reported Mon day. The three youths were Glen Arnold. 20, Jimmy Lee Mitchell, 20, and a 17-year-old companion, all of Roseburg. The youths were arrested Friday night by the Roseburg city police at Finlay field during the Coquille Roseburg football game. Crash Through Trick Chair Leads To Suit' PASADENA, Calif. (JP) When she crashed through the seat of a trick chair, everybody laughed but Mrs. Kay Anthony, 33. She sued the jokesters for $7,102 dam ages. The action, filed yesterday, named a beauty parlor as defend ant. That's where th incident took place, Mrs. Anthony said, and all she wanted was a shampoo and a finger wave. Anyway, when she sat down she went right through to the floor, all doubled up as if she'd sat in a barrel, she said, and what's more, she suffered shock, contusions and strain. proves he cen ride a bicycle Vienna Reds In Riot Oyer Price Boosts 50.000 Workers Strike In Protest To Action Countering Pay Hikes VIENNA (JP) Commun ist demonstrators rioted in the heart of Vienna today and thous ands of workers in Russian-controlled industrial plants were re ported to have struck in protest against government plans to raise prices along with wages. The hard core of some 500 Com munists gathered with it a mob of nearly 8,000 in an attempt to oreaK through a police cordon thrown around the Austrian chancellory. While workers from Russian- operated planta outside Vienna poured into tne city, soviet autn-or-ities barred the entry of police re inforcements summoned by the ministry of interior. A government spokesman said Red army soldiers threw up road blocks and refused to permit any policeman to leave the district to which he was assigned. The protest was against the gov ernment proposal to raise the price of some foods along with a planned minimum wage boost of 100 schil lings (1)3.84). Although some prices are to be frozen, an Aus trian trade union federation spokesman said the new prices would mean an increase in the cost of living of S4.73 schillings per month for a married couple with no children. Gl's Aute Overturned The demonstrators failed to break through the police line, but the riot tied up traffic in the center of the city the inter national tone controlled by all four occupying powers jointly for more than an hour. Two police' men were injured in the melee. Part of the mob turned over the automobile of American Sgt. William Henley, Asbury, N. J., and one of the demonstrators struck him in the chin. His car was badly smashed, but Henley was unhurt. A Communist speaker told the cheering mob that all workers in the Russian-administrated plants throughout the Soviet rone had marched out on strike' There are an estimated 50.000 workers . i n these plants which have been taken over by the Russians as former German external assets and oper ated outside Austrian jurisdiction. Walks On Hands To Upset Drunken Driving Charge PONTIAC, Mich. - (JPU- Ab Ben Brahim was arrested in nearby Bloomfield Hills. He w a I charged with drunk driving. But Brahim, a Turkish night club stunt man, proved his sobriety by walking on his'hands through the police station. The charge was re duced to reckless driving, Brahim pleaded guilty and was released after paying a $45 fine. theatre Monday night. News-Review carriers war special guests of Allen et the theatre. Th. movi. cowboy, discovered by cow boy Roy Rogers, is now making nam. for himself. (Paul Jenkins Picture. I W ill llL - W COMMUNITY CHEST ROOSTERS Star Scout. Art Mandville, left, and Joe Levine are shown as they prepare to distribute Community Chest campaign costers throughout the city of Rose burg. The chest kickoff is dated merit badges, end Joe, who has 24, ere members of tne Ameri can Legion scout troop, with Sgt. Irvin Best as scoutmaster. (Pic ture by Paul Jenkins.) N.Y. POLICE SCANDAL Commissioner Resigns, Civilian Appointed To Purge Dept. Rottenness NEW YORK IAPI Thomas F. Murphy, a giant of a man who prosecuted Alger Hiss for the federal government, takes over today es the new commissioner of New York's graft-shaken police department. ' His first job in the face of growing clamor may be to turn the 18,000-man department upside down and shake loose its "rotten apples." He apparently has a free hand to do so. ' n ! 11, till. B Draft Of Men Over 25 Unlikely, Horsey Says WASHINGTON (JP) MaJ. Gen. Lewis B, Hershey says he believes President Truman's goal of 3,000, 000 men in the armed services can be reached without drafting men over 25 years old. The selective service director expressed this view in a copy righted interview (U. S. Newa and World Report) in which he also: 1. Said the' manpower pool of 1,400.000 classified as 1-A "ought tn give us 500,000 before next June 1." 2. Predicted that draft hoards will be calling on 19-year-olds be fore the end of this year. 3. Forecast that the program to re-arm America "will last a gen- eration." for Oct. 9. Art, who holds 13 commissioner n I i I i in r. O'Brien quit last nitht in the mid dle of a police-bookie scandal un earthed by a rackets - probing Brooklyn grand jury. "I find my position as police commissioner untenable," said the 59-year-old O'Brien, aon of a po liceman and a veteran of nearly 35 years on the force. He was not accused of any dishonesty, him self. Acting Mayor Vincent R. Impel litteri also said O'Brien's position was untenable, and that they both agreed a resignation was in order. The acting mayor revealed he had decided definitely on the O'Brien-Murphy switch yesterday after receiving a communication from the Brooklyn grand jury. The grand jury, backed by Brooklyn District Attorney Miles F. McDonald and County Judge Samuel S. Leihowitz curtly de manded a civilian commissioner yesterday to clean up "an awful mess." The six-foot-four Murphy won a national reputation in two trials lhat ended with Hiss' conviction for perjury. Hiss, formerly a high ranking atate department official, was convicted of lying when he denied before a federal grand jury that he had passed out department secrets-for a Soviet spy ring be fore World War II. Hiss now is appealing a five-year prison sen tence. O'Brien, who came up from the ranks, was named police commis sioner in 1949 by former Mayor William O'Dwyer. For months, the Brooklyn grand jury plodded along in its inquiry into cop-gambler tieups. O'Dwyer in a moment of hot anger ! once called it a "witch hunt" and said it was pillorying honest cops. But on Sept. 15, McDonald's raid ers smashed a $20,000,000 gambling ring and arrested its leader, Harry Gross. Gross told of police pay offs up to ! 1.000.000 a year but would not name names. Last Friday, however, one of Gross payoff men, Artie Karp, went before the grand jury and McDonald said he "named names pnlM !a nes." The big break followed other rev elations of graft. The Weather Mostly cloudy with thowort to dy and partly cloudy with occa sional thowors tomorrow. . Highttt tomp. for any Sapt. , Lowoit tomp. for any Sapt. . Uin hah fl-Ama watatatrsJ a u -104 I L.w..t tamp.'lasf 24 hrs. .1". 5S Precipitation last 24 hrs. . Precipitation from Sopt. 1 Deficiency from Sopt. 1 .17 .jj M Sunset today, i:AS p.m. Sunrise tomorrow. 4:111 a.m. General MacArthur toddy a n nounced United N.itions forcea have captured Seoul. Communist forcea fled northward in disorder from the capital of South Korea, the U. N. commander announced. Front dispatches told of bitter fighting still going on within the smouldering city, but allied action was described aa a mopping up operation- The capital had been in Communist hands almost exactly three months. It fell two daya after the Reda launched their invasion June 35. The Communists appeared to be disorganized and beaten aa a uni fied fighting force. A MacArthur spokesman aaid there were indi cations the northward fleeing Reda might make a stand somewhere near parallel 38 from which they launched their attack on the South Korean republic. There were no signs the Communists would stop south of that boundary line for a major stand, this spokesman said. Breaking out of the old U. N. southeast beachhead at lightning pace, allied forces hammered out lharp new gains throughout the wnoie oaine zone. Allied generals were optimistic victory was within U. N. grasp and the push north westward to the Seoul-Inchon beachhead might be the war's final offensive. Planes Strafe Fugitives Allied warplanes pounded at the retreating Reds. Planea made a mass drop of 2,160,000 leaflets tell ing Communists of the fall of Seoul, and calling on them to surrender. The leaflets said: "The loss of Seoul cuts the supply routes from the war material factories and arsenals of North Korea to the Communist troops in the south. It shuts off the flow of re inforcements to these forces and severs their paths of retreat. Fur ther resistance is futile." Three American doughboys, all wounded, were released from jail when the U. S. 24th division lib erated Yondong. These were the first American war prisoners to be rescued from the Communists. Msc Arthur's communique aaid: "The liberation of the city was conducted in auch a manner aa to cause the least possible damage to civil installations" in the 500-year-old capital which normally haa population of 1,000.000. MacArthur aaid the Reds cracked and began to flee after a three-pronged drive virtually ringed the city and captured main Red defense positions including the 700-foot peak of dominating South mountain. 22 Missing In Plane Disaster TOKYO -tm A Korea-bound C-54 transport plane plunged Int. the sea with SI persons today. Twenty-eight ware rescued, 12 are missing and ene body waa recovered. The big plane crashed en take off from a southern Japan air. bas. about a half-mile from the end ef the runway. A list ef those aboard was withheld. Traffic In Babies Under State Probe MEMPHIS, Tenn. UP) The state of Tennessee has called on its legal arm in its probe of adop tions through an agency it accuses of making big profits from or phaned and abandoned babies. The agency the Memphis branch of the Tennessee Children's Home society is charged with piling up "around $1,000,000" in placing infanta with foster parents in New York and California. A temporary injunction granted the state yesterday by Chancellor Larry Creson halted further opera tions of the home, which now has 20 infants in its care. It also enjoined employes Iium removing, destroying or in any manner disposing of the home's records "and all other assets." The ordec was granted in a suit filed by special state investigator Roher L. Taylor of Memphis. It climaxed a two-weeks probe. The suit asked that the semi private non-profit welfare agen cy's state charter be forfeited- It asked that a receiver be ap pointed to prosecute claims against the estate of the late Miss Georgia Tann, who headed the home more than 20 years. She died of csncer in the midst of the investigation without know, ing of the charges against the agency. EDUCATION WEEK CITED SALEM UP) This week is religious education week, Gover nor Douglas McKay said, in ask ing Orcgonians "to seek in their private lives a strengthing of spiritual power which can enable America to meet her challenges." Levity Fact Rant By L. T. Reuenstein Ctn. MacArthur has qivtn rha nod to an extra can of boar 'o'ly ,of hi force in Korea. i Net os itreng os the beverage i drunk by Lincoln t n.ntrali in the civil war, but that was five-year shindig, calling for mmln