Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1942 — Page 2
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held local or eas er or. government sgeney ‘agency, EE ‘three or more mearae) oo or leased bw nd wed
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Snspnctor will helow. antil the Tequired worvies Mag Bien come Reni el or replscement.
(Frispector will not pleted, except for recap
below until the required service has been com.’ service or replacement.) 3
es : or
BEGIN SUNDAY,
pr will Cost Mare to Drink, "Smoke, Travel and Telephone. a _ Continue from Page One)
e tax law enacted Oct. 2. Tt A d the new statute will produce 881 200000 more. thap the present
those on tobacco an additional $52,000,000. Other increases from tthe. new taxes include $13,900,000 from lubricating oil; $4,800,000 from L 5 $25,800,000
cable facilities and leased wires; 0,000 from, telephone calls, and - from Sransportaiton of
: “When liquor and tobacsd dealers And manufacturers close their doors } the end of today's business they 'will take inventories’ of stocks ‘in sorder to pay the new floor. taxes. "The . floor tax ‘on distilled spirits Will be $2 a gallon while that on morn tobacco, large cigars and
products. ~The regular excise on Hitior goes from the present $4 a gallon to $6. | The tax on beer rises a dollar a : to > while that on wine in8 to 10 cents a gallon than 14 per cent alcoto 40 cents on wine between £ obub an 31. er ‘cent, and 4 cents to $1 between 21 per| cent and 24 per cent. The tax on maine ao Dhan fam ling wine goes from 7 to 10 cents on a half-pint, and from 3% to 5 aia tals pink en Srtigeialy our-
fs
— Cigar Taxes
TE
from $2 a thousand to 2.50 for the cheapest grades with ] te increases - for higher s.up to $20 a thousand for
‘faxes go up 25 cents to a ah $3.50 a thousand. for
“do the present rate of $13.50.]
“A” book holders will have tires inspected every 120 days and “B” and “C” holders will undergo the inspection every. 60 days. Vehicle: owners who should not apply for basic “A” books, and. the procedure they should follow are: 1. An owner of an ambulance or fiearse’ should make application on for. 5-580 with O. D. T. certifictae:
of pepessity attached. ¥
ol id
erated * on’ deal ‘should - make application on : so R-552 obtained from the Tationing +3. Taxis, jitneys or vehicles leased from or held for rental by a car-
Clin Hitler's Strategy Ruined (Continued from Page One)
tanks. At the start of the offensive, he estimated, some 1,000,000 Nazi troops were lined up for the operation.
“The significance of Stalingrad,” Alexander wrote, “lies not only in the destruction of the axis ‘divisions but in the loss of most. valuable time. The. Hitlerites were pinned down in August, September and - October, losing hundreds of thousands ‘of men: and masses of material and not achieving any, decisive success. “It means that the Germans were compelled to abandon their 1942 strategic plan. “Stdlingrad is causing a serious’ exhaustion of the Wehrmacht. and has prepared the groung for the defeat of the axis.” Pravda said the - Germans ‘were: losing 4000 or 5000 killed every day
{at Stalingrad, and sometimes a
whole division (15,000) men were killed or wounded in 24 hours.
three. Aor 1
|+% An! owner of a vehicle eld by|; {a dealer “for sale
Rutherford, survive her.
Exact Distribution Date Will Be Announced Later
(Continued from Page One) > spection.s stations before Jah, 31. rental agency, should apply on form’
R-536 with O. D. necessity attached. 4. A vehicle owned or leased by a federal, state, local or foreign government or government agency, should apply on form R-551 obtained from the rationing ‘board. 5. A vehicle which is one of three} or. more passenger: automobiles (or ore motércyle) owned or 5 ht par for | ational pur-
T. certificate of
Wl
jie busg
‘obtained from’ the atioats board. 6. Any vehicle which requires a certificate of war necessity application, R-536, should be made SHrough local _rationing board.
By optcdor 1
wet or pe wr Bus = ps = Si cpio CVebicis iosnss Namber; . herein es applican = CTT FD of street aad Bambee) Was ol regasacions Xo Baie DL ca Td < City of past alice) CT (Board No) (Date) us zig i "it aa) A et Cr . igaatary of regen Applicant 8 ll olormation within this hears line dh "OFA Tice Tnspocter makes sutries belo this line : ; INSPECTOR" REPORT SERIAL Noe. REQUIRED SERVICE (IF ANY)
SEriAL Nos.
REQUIRED SERVICE (17 ANT)
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(KEEP THIS INSPECTION REPORT WITH VEHICLE AT ALL TIMES)
U. 3. FLIERS FIRE
Bomb Crele. 2 as Fresh British Troops Continue ~ Vigorous Push. 5 (Continued from Page One)
imperials had gained and held all objectives Montgomery had set for them. ‘Rommel’s Africa Korps had launched | heavy counterattacks which. were crushed. .
© Axis’ Desertions Increase - i lery up behind his advancing troops
have been in almost ‘constant ‘ac-
PEDESTRIAN KILLED;
DRIVER I$ ARRESTED
Struck. by. an automobile while crossing W. 16th st. near Senate ave. Nick Simons, 39, of 2078 Highland pl, was injured fatally. early ‘today. - He died shortly afterward in the admitting room’ at City hospital of a fractured skull. Police slated the driver of the car, Garland Edward, 20, of 1906 Sugar Grove ave., on a
charge of failure to give a pedestrian the right of way.
CHILD DIES AT HOME - OF GRANDPARENTS
Puneral services - for 10-year-old Colleen McCarthy, who died yesterday in the home of her grandpar-| ents, Dr, and Mrs. C. W. Ruthe¥ford, 4601 N. Pennsylvania st., will be held
Paul cathedral... Burial will be in Crown Hill. The child was a pupil at school
| 36.
Her mother, Mrs. Mildred Rutherford; her grandparents; a brother, Thomas; a stepbrother, John Rutherford, and a stepsister, ‘Barbara
at 9 a. m. Monday in 88. ‘Peter and!
Size: W ‘was affected.
-| tion for seven days. were punishing
the enemy ceaselessly. Increasing numbers of “axis de-
Many were veterans who had seen action on the Russian front. They said the British barrages were worse than the artillery fire they had experienced at Lehingrad, Smolensk or Moscow. Rommel, too, had massed artillery opposite the British lines and his fire Succeeded in slowing the advance. The first week’s fighting had exposed the weaknesses of the Afrika Korps, front dispatches said, as well as the ‘departments in which it | possessed greater strength than the allies. The-axis air power definitely had been pushed well back from the front. This was partially because of the punishing raids of the last three weeks by American and South African units: and relentless seating and bombing.
DAMAGE SLIGHT IN DOWNTOWN BLAZE §
started by faulty electric wiring; broke out at 9 a. m, today at the| Knickerbocker Machinery Co., 130 'S. Capitol ‘ave. Damage was slight to the interior of the building and none ‘of ithe ‘company’s stock of ‘machine Shop
ee
ROMMEL BASES|
Monigrigty had ‘moved his" artil- :
and the: big guns, some of which | 3
'serters fled to the British Hnes.
A blaze, believed to have been|
oor Eophoni Pushed, Pulled (Continued from Page One)
out the couritry and met general acceptance among the people. So they decided that the G.O.P. should use indirect tactics and launch flank ‘attacks’ through’ reservations and ‘amendments. This campaign was So successful that when. the ‘party "deposed. the Democrats ang returned to ‘power ‘they were unable to resell their own people on either the league or world court. ‘But they did sneak in the
back door of Poth \inder the Hard-
ing-Coolidge and ‘Hoover Admins trations. With the whole world again at war, the Republicans again face the problem of following leadership. of the Watson or the Willkie (Wilson) type. They may win elections. by default or become recelvers in bankruptcy, but finally the. old. elephant—if = alive—must face that question: : . “Quo Vadis?”
CHINESE INFLICT LOSSES
A Chinese-communique: said today
2, for the fourth. Aight. ky
~ MAYOR SULLIVAN
i Some. Unique ‘Problems ¥ our Mayor Faces”
wisn THE P. M.—TONIGHT
Introduction by Al G. Feeney
CHUNGKING, Oct. 31 (U; P).—|.
that Chinese forces raided Sheng-| kong, northeast of Canton, on. Oct. ;
py vargas Ui CLE LE 3
Listen to These
RADI oO SPEAKERS
Their bag included a cruiser, a
destroyer, ‘an airplane tender, a|olis
gunboat and five cargo ships be-
i lieved sunk. Ten cruisers, 10 cargo
ships or transports, nine unidenti-
‘| fied vessels, two identified trans-
ports, two seaplane tenders, a warship of unspecified class, a battleship. or heavy cruiser, an aircraft carrier and a destroyer have been
“| damaged during the month.
While MacArthur's planes were sweeping the northern Solomons, his
ground troops on New Guinea com-
The Y. M. OC. 'A. will hold its annual p.m. next Sa C. A. 'The club 154
AT
who “served with ithe during world war I.
For Your Convenience
rat Fidel Advertisements fig gad eng!
. DEWEY MYERS
fo “My Plans as Mayor 7 oo Suilanapaie’
P. M.—TO!
Introduction by pai n
is president and Re. ©
2 Ce 5
ey
2 5
