in III (III! E October S, 1944 Max. (Oct. 4) ,.. 87 Mln. Precipitation last 24 hours Strtam year to data ..: Normal .13 Laat yar Foracaati Clear. 38 00 00 00 TrBANK JENKINS UlTlNO new. nuiy d. In The Shaia-(UtHcmle Wonderland III. I'KICE S CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1944 r Number 10280 Iiuvo AMfC 0) TO (TO T? D I-- Dav's Xcws ADVANCE CHALKED ' r u 1ut THROUGH LINE Jill l uit ynl ! -first n rii y lAmfrlCUII '. J1.., ',.. n.lul liink a in I lo oil' a ""pANNlNli OUT to cxpl TUB !"'"" t'iha our iron ,ri I. !n:".;rn inent forll behind l" '":' WB,lwll, ii ml H"0,u ; .!, miIn' N Ives m oroiUw barrier." r'.:' .ked ilio PERM the it"-., 1 ,,,iin rriir ked Kit l'n niu-nt furUdca Uonll, lnclmilim lho back of Milne. , , , Ihc LlifAT would bo 1011101111 iliill I.. UMO out- The oon...... ;-, r. Ina (Ull l " , ..,,.. ,nv nil 10 the end oi :"" -- w &" ' ' Ami,. .but Ilio "'" -.i-iinin 1 hut rill inio UM"'"" ran u; . com- iTA.ly l l "x torcc wo were ih. last of Ilio Die W S" "- H" cl',"e',1 l Ih. end. the r Wcstwiill from the Anclicn. Wo mm Una S lo bo TIIKOUGll Ih. PERMANENT dcfriwc. with only the NEW, recently liijpro- vueo, nu'u What wc will do Willi Hioo rtmaini 10 on l WORD of explanation Ii In V I - L.M m.. uu.trUl IIiia consists of jtwo "wall mo wciiiwiiii the German uoroi-r twin . I: . i 1 1 unit i in S eafr nd ,,-.; h..k nf Hie lllilno. iBoth were built with all the In- 9- n.. i n. i.,ininnrl nf Gcr- KCHUI17 V '" v " mtlhnm ItifWril. misil in,,,....,, . At .Aacncn tucy mo minnv 130 miles apnrt. iinme than 1DD miles to the M imiih. we iiro providing i ow y ana dioooiiy, oui iwi L..llu ,iTnR' nnillhor dDMlOIV Klrallon of our ability to crack Oerman prepnroa auiumci. Th. Inmi imiImI nf ilio demon tpaitrm lb Fort nrliini. uuiirdl lllf ihe city of Mot. We liavo taken the ABOVS-UHUUNU pnri oi itrto ion, mil ino ram iihvo iu- tlrA Inln lltn Inlrlnnln aVKlpnl of dinniiU nVI.nW ll, i ormind nnd we are DuniiiiK uii'iii oui win, phosphorus nnd flamliiK petrol leum and uluillcrlni! Ilio tunnola rwith explosive. tracKina tneso permnneiu lines Is a bloody and awful job, but we aro nrovlim lliat It can lue aone. JTHE; 1 vill InK I. Unl.. Inpnnlu It (which we linvn luid to con' lnri ...III. .1..... I-l.flfit.l pumpers (he work of our planes. nV'M ...1.... M A CCL'C ri taiinun, iiicilHllliK lu-llicuuin JCLSEW1IERE In Europe, the r1 lob of drivlnR Ilio nozla back fiu meir own uorucn ii uoing on fipacc, British troops, both aea and ilr borne, land on tho wcat const itrppr-n nnnnMn ii nmi. i ii. ".Y.. .:rv.".. '"'ili hi; iii,iiiiii.i: mvj rncounicrcd doesn't ttccm lo be Bin ift tho It ciin I r!.,rmn ulf.iii-lurd The nnzis in Greece nnd southern fuwtiHYii. npponr enieny imeni In ii. UKiiainviiK rMuniii mnm lino ruuroRa rvii.iar merman esenpe, the Rus IP Ink urn tt M. n..ii.t.i. nl pflc, whose full, the dlapntchcs P'y. Ii hourly expected. I Berl n n. ii. i i 1 V illlfRllllin lllivv finieashcd a new nll-ont offensive r' wmuiamn (next-door to Gcr vnan End rir,....in . i -i - g1" time are moving toward 1 ft I ne "O""'. IH " "inner news trom rnsoiy as mis is written, fce.,,,lncc El Alaineln and . ln.ra"' 1,10 Germans hnve fiVniuW,1,1:1 bnck TOWARD Swiv . i slowy. 'iKlilh'R nt Fry i nn U..I f A T I IMjl JALK. All nl.inn 411nlM IvSm'01'. ',rpM. NOBODY could 1.1.7:. lsiKo them. They'd shi.V. wo" uc compelled by h klhHW wcnrl to Rlvo them n ii ot co "'"y''1 ou will- l. 7"i lliev !'n hnnlr 11,1.. II. fMireai on ti :..T.i" " 1 "'. .' it Aa(.h : ., " ".'1 " y. rccrumhi ' nllvlcl!:. walls linn 0a,..curtiTY . Is. imic, J no ni'i nf nf. i'Bs r"1, 'i?" "lovl fwwnrd urltv Z V,iS , onys when so or lrlc !?, be obtained within - nuiin, 'N 'thn Di'i. .. " Llrlii . "c.'..le wnr of at- ihBlr. - ",n;1 JnP ISLAND Ira i""I? nnead. Our bomb- f't Ind 2. i ? ;? "lry tll(1 Wch th. ? Ins ""ntlon" upon Irwirti .uJnp... '.opencl 'or OIL. lre haulnn a ymiow men (Con m '3 ""PPloment their continued on puuo Tuni Britons Strike From Sea, Air on Otggc By NOLAND NORGAARD " ROME, Oct. 5 (AP) Striking from Iho toa and air, British troops have landed In west ern Grcoco, entored tho port of aro oporating in support of tho effort to drive out or dostroy German garrisons. Tho allied command, announcing tho invasion today, said landing forces had made contact with tho enemy both in Grooca and neighboring southern Albanio, whero other units wont ashoro ten days ago. Thore appeared a strong possibility tho operations might swiftly end German rule throughout the Balkans. (Roliablo reports reaching Cairo said tho Germans had carried out demolitions In tho Corinth canal to block movemonts through the Golf of Corinth and to form a large obstacle for forcos proceeding over land from tho Paloponnosus.) Speaker VA.r W. Smith, democratic candidate for the United BttiUs senate, apoke before Ktwants club at Ihe Thursday noon luncheon. He will fill speaking ongegamsnts - in takeview 'Fri day and -la Bend on Saturday. . 6EI LOADED WITH LOOT By MAX HALL WASHINGTON, Oct. S OP) German embassies In neutral countries were reported today to be "loaded down" with sold, securities and currency with larco staffs working full time lo put the stuff Including loot from occupied countries' under cover. Somo of the tricks being used bv German leaders to con ceal their financial resources were disclosed after tho sUilc department announced that the United Stntes and Brltnln have asked neutrals lo deny the ene my protection for his loot. Other Pressure niimr nnvpriiiiicnts which look part In the United Natlops monetary coniercnco hi oivi i i'n,i N. H . Inst July arc eynpeteri soon to put similar pressure on the neutral group, ,..i,i,.i, Inrludes Switzerland, Argentina, Sweden, Spain and rorluKiil. ,. . Wotihlnotim snurees said: That Ihc German ruling clique is uniting away assets not only for Its personal smvimuu Imi, m n wnr chest to keep un derground organizations going after the war. Rvtamd Power Tlmt In concealing funds, the Gcrmiins are extending their power In foreign Industry. They arc cleverly cloaking this con imi nnrl it will be hard to trace, German Targets Razed by Bombs LONDON, Oct. 5 (iT) More than 1000 U. S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators hit German tar i ,,i r,iinunn. niiclnc. Hnn- rlnr'f. Llimstiidt. Pndcrborn and Minister in clearing wenther tO' rlnu Two main forces, with strong fighter escort, attacked the choked rnll terminals nl Cologne nnd Uliclne, whim smnuer loniw lions rnldcd airfields at tho otlv er places. Body of Smith To Lie in State NEW YORK, Oct. 8 (ID The body nf Alfred E. Smith will lie n inln nl Kl. Pntr ck's Catlicd' rnl fpnm 9. n. m. tomorrow until funeral services nt 11 a. m. Sat urday. Tim "7n.vnnr.nld "hnnDV war rior" four times governor of Now York slnto nnd democratic presidential nominco In 1828 who died yesterony oi iuhk unslinn nnrl nrntn lienrt disease, will be burled In tho family plot at Queen s Cnlvary cemetery. Patrai and soixod airfields from DETROIT, Oct. 9 (A") Ap proximately 8000 maintenance workers whose strike action yes terday tied up or impaired war production in 33 Detroit area plants voted today to return to work on afternoon shifts. United Automobile Workers (CIO) spokesmen said. The action was announced af ter a meeting of officials of the executive board of the UAW CIO end representatives of local unions making up the mainten ance, construction and power house council, (UAW-CIO). 50.000 Idle The strike, which had begun to spread again this morning, had made more than 80,000 workers Idle through plant clos ings and assembly line interrup tions. Most seriously Impaired ; by tho strlko was, the production of aircraft sub-asscmbllcs, aviation engines, anti-aircraft guns, tank and truck parts and other war material. Vote Not Given The vote favoring or opposing a return to work was not an nounced. Principal speaker at this morning's brief meeting was Walter P. Rcuthcr, international Vice president of the union, who with a council committee and UAW-CIO Regional Directors Richard T. Leonard and Melvin Bishop flew back to Detroit from Atlantic City and Washington to urge that the strike be called off. They told the strikers' repre sentatives that demands for a war labor board panel Investi gation of wage issues would not bo considered as long as the strike was in progress. Demobilization Delay Denied WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (IP) Secretary of War Stlmson todoy termed "absoluujly untrue re ports that the war department would delay partial acmooiu zatlon In order to ease the Job situation. The statement to a news con ference was In reply to a re porter's question that "there has been somo comment to the effect that Uio war department will delay its partial demobilization in order to case the job situation. Is that correct?" Stlmson replied with an em phatic "no." Mile Gained in Italian Battle 'ROME, Oct. 5 (P)V. S. fifth army troops drove a milo for ward against violent fire from reinforced and hastily entrench ed Germans yesterday on tho bitterly contested road lo Bolog na to within 14 miles of that grcnt communications center. Tho doughboys seized a ridge just north of La Selva, five miles oust of highway 65 at Loinno. Tho Americans gained new po sitions Just short of Monte Mora slno on the Imoln road, three miles north of Castel Del Rio. On their left flank, where tho Ger mans poured In nil types of artil lery fire, they took tho town of Cuvlola and Qulnr.ano, cast of Loinno, after forcing their way against stiff resistance several hundred yards north of Lagunc, which overlooks a secondary road to Bologna, fi anni'ii.-.-.-!" --------"-- - The lload to Berlin (JUVUVUVVViraVir"" ai.4aM. By The Associated Press 1. western front: 305 miles (from west of Kleve.) 2. Russian front: 310 miles (from Wnrsaw.) 3. Italian front:. r 670 miles (from south of Bologna.) which RAF Spitfires already i nero was no immeaiaie re- port on tho extent of German resistance at Patrai, Greece's third largest port, or elsewhere, bul the Germans recently were said lo have three divisions on the Greek mainland as well as other elements evacuated from Crete and the Aegean Islands. All these have been reported ready to flee northward on a moment's notice to escape the Jaws of a great trap closing in on the whole Balkans with Rus- BULLETIN ' LONDON. Oct. 5 (IP) The An kara radio aaid tonight that the Germans were evacuating the Greek capital of Athens and the Peloponnesus peninsula and were moving northward aa ra pidly as blown up bridges and road blocka would permit sians advancing from ' the east and allied forces with patriot support striking from the west. The landing forces were be lieved to be of small size com pared with the major invasions of Africa, Sicily, Italy and France.' In Albania the allied forces were attempting to cut" enemy -commuiUcationii-around-theportfi of Sarande. supply Base lor me German garrison of the strongly defended island ot Uoriu Uier- kyra). LONDON, Oct. 5 (IP) Pan ccvo, big rail center lass than nine miles from the Yugoslav capital of Belgrade, was cap tured bv Russian trooss today. Moscow announced tonight, and the. Rome radio reported mat Russian troops were fighting in the suburbs of Belgrade, capital nf Yugoslavia. Russian troops in Lithuania have mounted an all-out offen sive west of Slauliai, Col. Ernst von Hammer, the German news agency's military commentator, said today in a broadcast. " The German report said 12 to 14 Russian divisions attacked In the Siauliai area. 60 miles north enst of the East Prussian city of Tils t. with the help of four tanK corps. A drumfire artillery bar rage of guns "of the heaviest caliber" urcccdcd the drive. The enemy said the offensive was on n broad front. One of its purposes might be to cut off the Riga garrison to the north. Suc cessful Russian operations also would prepare a northern de scent into East Prussia, along whoso eastern frontier other Rus- sians have been drawn up for many weeks. Klamath $20,000 Short in Drive During the last days of the community fund drive, Klamath Is still $20,000 short of its quota, reports John B. Ebingcr, , drive cnairmnn. Several hundred follow-up let tors wero sent out this week by tho drive committee to potential donors who have not yet sent In their contributions, To these S arsons, many of whom have not eon contnclcd before, a plea has been made for their help in put tine the fund over .the ton. All who have not sent In their donations arc urged to do so lm mediately nt flic drive headquar ters in mo cnamucr oi com. mcrcc. ' Subs Sink Jap Supply Ships WASHINGTON, Oct. 5. (IP) American , submarines, ripping Japanese supply lines, have de stroyed nnother 11 enemy ves sels, Including three war craft, tho navy announced today. The flshting craft Included a destroyer, an escort vessel and a seaplane tender, an ot wnicn may havo been trying to protect Japanese convoys from Ameri can underwater attacks. , , . '1 rjS&r James McKeehan, boatswain's mate, 2c, U. S. coast guard, is reported missing in the South Pacific alnce September 19. He la the son of Mr. and Mrs. James O. McKeehan, Hilyard avenue. Kcnnell-Ellis Klamath's Casualty List increased; One Wounded, Three Missing in 4cffoit Names of four well-known Klamath men appeared in the war casualty column Thursday, three of them missing in .action and one reported wounded. 1st. Lt. Harry Johnson Jr., 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson of 352 N. 10th, and hus band of the former Rosemary Sloan of this city, is missing in action over Holland, since Sep tember 17. He was pilot of. a Mustanfc'.iB'Hter; V-tU .is wife niin-.iHt fa ivl, .." Wr. ua -Y-- ."V.".,??"' j" " a . ' wepnesoHy hikiiui. Johnson has been overseas since about April 1, 1944, and was flying a P-38 In early sum mer. He has twice Deen aecorai ed, once with the Air Medal, second with an Oak Leaf cluster. Second on.the missing nsi was James. Orland McKeehan,. 23, boatswain s mate 2c, u. a. coast guard, son of Mr. and Mrs. James O. McKeehan, Hilyard avenue. He has been missing since September 19 in the South Pacific and oiuciai word came from the war department Thurs day. James was a graduate of Henley nign scnooi, ciuss ui 1939. and has Deen in service mr 18 months in this country and Si months overseas. Crabb Missing Friends here were advised that Pvt. J. C. Crabb, 20. U. S. army air corps, has been missing since August 16 over Germany. Young Crabb is the son of Mr. Inquiry Slated In Hotel Battle WASHINGTON. Oct. 5 (IP) Chairman Green (R-R. I.) said to day his senate campaign expen- a.it,ii-r.c r.nmmittee has begun an investigation into tne so-caiira "Battle of the Statlcr" which followed- President Roosevelt s opening campaign address. Two naval officers were in tmiurui in the September 23 diS' turbance when tncy ascrioea iu political questions trom menv k.r. r.f Iho AFL Teamsters un ion who had heard Mr. Roose velt's speech at the hotel. - Cards Tie Series With 3-2 Win in Extra-Inning Tilt By JACK HAND . SPORTSMAN'S PARK, St. Louis, Oct. 5 (P) Ken Odea s pinch hit single in the eleventh Inning scoring Ray Sanders gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 3 to 2 decision in the second game of the world series today squaring the baseball classic at ono game each. , , It was the first extra Inning game since 1930 and the longest since 1935 nnd wns made pos sible when the Brownies rallied to score twice in the seventh on Gene Moore's single, Red liny worth's double and Frank Man cuso's pinch single. 1 Four Errors The Cardinals took advantage of defensive lapses by the Amer ican leaguers, . who committed four errors, by tallying once M the third on Verban's single, two errors by Nelson Potter and an Infield out. They added another in the fourth on Verban's fly to left after a walk to Ray Sanders, Whitey Kurowski's single and Mark ; Christman's , error on Marty " Marion's bouncer had loaded the bases. Sanders scored the run, , Klamath Men Missing in First Lt. Harry Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson of this city and husband of the former Rosemary Sloan, is re ported missing in action over Holland, " and Mrs. Elbert Crabb of Hot Springs, Ark., and Is a former Weyerhaeuser employe.. He en tered the army . 18. months, ago. Word came from- his -brother, Sgt. Jake Crabb, weather recon naissance squad, U. S. army, now serving in France. While here. Crabb made nis home with Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Swafford,1316 Shelley, and also with his sister, Mrs, Nina Bean of Lancaster, now living, in Calf, Slightly wounoeo , Mrs. Don West, (Dorothy Teed), was advised by the war depart ment on October 2, that her hus hnnd, 1st. Lt. Don West.:26..was slightly wounded on September 11.. wnne in action in Belgium. West was with the first army, armored division, and took his innlr training in southern Cali fornia. His parents are rar. ana Mrs. L. A. West. Eberlcin, street, well-known Klamath residents.. In a letter which Mrs. west rooeiveri Wednesday. Don wrote ihat he was in a hospital but did not give the location. .. ,. riazis Capture General Bor LONDON, Oct. 5 (IP) Lt. Geri. Tadeusz Komorowskl (Bor), new ly appointed commander-in-chief of Polish military forces, was captured in the battle of War saw, the Polish government in exile announced tonight. A Polish government spokes man declared that the capture of Gen. Komorowskl gave the "lie" to the rival, soviet-sponsored Po lish national committee of liber ation, which asserted that the general stayed away from the ravaged capital after ordering the futile uprising. , . '. . Berlin announced earlier that Komorowski and his entire staff had been taken prisoner. ; . PLEAD INNOCENT ALBANY, Oct. 5 (IP) William Lightle and Charles H. Brown, held responsible by a grand jury for the deaths of four passengers in a bus hit by a falling tree, have pleaded innocent. Their trials have been set for the No vember term of court. nilv T-innnellv. a 29-year-old rnnkie from Olivia, Minn., who had won only two games all vear, set the Browns oacK on their hee s after relieving staner Max Lanier in the cigntn, stjik- ino- nut seven men In tour in nings and yielding only two hits. It was Donnelly's victory and a loss for Bob Muncrief who came in after Potter was lifted for a pinch batter In the seventh. Drowns i nreaien A crowd of 35,076 paid $152, 553 to watch the Red Birds tie tin the series In a dramatic 11th inning. The Browns threatend In the top half when George Mc- Quinn opened wltn a dounie ou tho screen in right field. Chrisl mnn tried to bunt him to third bul Donnellv threw to Kurowskl who made a one-handed stao ana nut tho ball on the sliding Mc Qulnn for-a vital out. The next twn men were easv outs. -V In the National leaguers' half, Sanders led off with' a single to right, was sacrificed to second by Kurowski's bunt and romped home when O'Dea lined a single to right after Marion had been given an intentional pass. Action Pvt. J. C. Crabb, 20, former Weyerhaeuser employe, is re ported missing over . Germany since August 18. He made his home" here with Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Swafford, 1318 Shelley. - I E - Two Klamath deer hunters today reported ' finding the wreckage of a single-motored plane, in - the remote Buck, lake area; 28 miles west of Klamath Falls; The hunters; Al Rider and Bob Boldischar, said the wreckage was strewn over a wide area and that they discovered bones which may be those of victims of the crash.- - - - v '.. Silver, Yellow- v sheriff -Lloyd Low headed a party which left, just.; before 'noon- tbilay''-t6"" 'examine " the wreckage. ' The hunters! said paint on tn6 plane appears to be guver ana yellow. PORTLAND, Oct. 5 (IP) At least two private planes have been, reported missing, with no record that they have ever been found. ...... - Medford Plane On November 29, 1940, Mr. and Mrs. C.' E. (Dick) Walbert took off from Medford in a pri vate plane, and never were seen again; Searchers had been led to believe, however, that the plane - veered westward, and search was directed toward the Rogue River valley. On October 25. 1941. a private plane carrying Elmer Jeffries and Frank McKenna. Glendale, Calif., fliers, took off from Eu gene, ' bound lor California. Their plane never was seen again, although numerous search ing parties have gone out. A $1000 reward has been offered for discovery of the plane. Printers Fail To Report ROCHESTER, N. Y., Oct. 5 (IP) The Rochester Times-Union, a Gannett newspaper, suspended publication today when 85 print ers failed to report for work in a dispute which the management termed a diuerence in contract interpretation and the union said was a. "lockout. The employes, members of Un ion 15, Rochester Typographical union (AFL), joined 92 Demo crat and Chronicle printers, members of the same union, who left that paper's composing room last night- after discharge of -a union member.--The Democrat and Chronicle was not publish ed this morning. Conquering Duck Now in States . SAN DIEGO. Calif.. Oct; 5 (IP) Siwash the duck, fighting mas cot of the second marine divi sion, is home.. The conquering duck, after breezing through all opposition it met on Tarawa, Saipan and Tinian. arrived here with Corp. trancis J. lagan, unicago, ana 800 leatherneck veterans of Pa cific campaigns. The duck is admired bv ma rines as the bird which acquired prominence by routing a Japan ese rooster on Tarawa a day after the invasion. Fan Makers Turn To Airplanes SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 5 (IP) A business of "300 years stand ing" has been abandoned on Shi koku island in Japan. The Tokyo radio announced to day fan makers have "plunged" Into aircraft production because "their delicate technique in tan makinfl will henceforth do much toward Increased production of airplane wings. ' Huge Artillery Mai) Drawn Up By Germans By JAMES M. LONG LONDON, Oct. 5 (Pi- American tanks and infantry advanced more than a -mile through the shattered fixed de tenses of the west wall af Ubach today and captured the; town of Beggendorf, which the Germans had attempted to turn into an anchor oi a bacKstop line. Widening their wedge, 'tho yanks also captured Kerkrader on . the Dutch-German border. Kerkrade, on the south side ot tne wedge Is two miles - soutn west of Merkstein and five, miles north of Aachen. Gains Scored Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges'- first army scored the gains in) a --fiercely rising ' battle . in' which the Germans massed theiu biggest artillery concentrations of the western front. Three heavy armored counter-thrusts were turned back and front line dispatches said a major tank battle was developing. - ' Boggendorf is more than a mile beyond Ubach and its cap ture - placed - the Americans astride .the . Aachen-Geilen-' kirche road and within a mile and a half of the main north road out of Aachen, the high way to Gladbach. The town is three - miles from the nearest point of the Dutch border and about four miles from the gen-1 eral line of the frontier. ''. Tank Support '"-'"' An Associated Press dispatch' from the sector said - allied tanks in numbers were now back of the original Siegfried. line and were churning out (Continued on Page Two) - AIMED HEADQUARTERS. NEW GUINEA: Oct. 5 (IP) Ship- hunting allied planes, which sank more than zou ocean-going ves sels in September, began Oc tober impressively by hitting 11 more as Tokyo radio spoke frankly of a shipping shortage. A communique today by Gen. Douglas MacArthur and one last night at Pearl Harbor by Adnu Chester W. Nimitz reported the sinking or severe damaging of 11 supply vessels in raids reach ing to within 615 miles of Tokyo. The raids occurred ' during the first three days of this month. ; - Cargo Ship Mil A careo ship was bomb-blast ed Sunday near Chichi Jima in the Bonin islands, the closest ap proach to Tokyo. . A 2000-ton freighter-transport and three small freighters were sunk or severely damaged Mon day night and early Tuesday off Dutch Celebes. " ! '. Freighters Destroyed Four small freighters were de stroyed near Amboina. A 1000- ton vessel wassunK ott tne aoeia islands, between Celebes and Amboina. - A medium tanker was heavily hit off the southern Philippines. MacArthur s planes, w h t c n also have been concentrating on Japanese oil sources in the East Indies, struck Monday night at Makassar, Dutch Celebes, spreads ing fires in an area ot ou tames. Second Raid ' Nimitz said Liberators made it two raids in a row on Chichi Jima by going back -after more shipping Monday, but he did not report the results. His commun ique last night also reported air strikes in the Kuriles, Mariana and Marshalls and against Mar cus island. ' ' Mopping up operations by ma rines and soldiers on Peleliu and Angaur in the Palaus continued with tho total counted Japanese dead through Tuesday amount ing to 10,987. . ' - L. Revolts Break Out In Austria j LONDON, Oct. 5 (fl3) Th London radio, quoting advices from Bern, said last night that revolts are reported to have broken out In Vienna and other parts of Austria. There was ho immediate confirmation from other sources. BBC declared that casualties and arrests had occurred In dis turbances only two days after Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhower and the Moscow radio told the Aus trians that "the time has come" for them to give active proof of their willingness to break with their German masters. The broadcast said unrest was reported in the industrial dis trict of Steyr, where "worker are in some cases coming out on strike and carrying out, con siderable sabotage.''