Note for firm or pay clerk regarding the 3rd Liberty Loan
More Info →- Description
-
Form to be completed by the firm or pay clerk to indicate the amount in cash or written promises being invested in the 3rd Liberty Loan, 1943.
Identification
- Object type
- Multi page
- Archive
- C. E. Warburton Papers
- Relation
- Series 9
- Date
- 1943
- Digitisation id
- 2009Pa_WARBURTON-S9_2852a
- Format
- Paper
- Held in
- Community Archives
Creation
- Created By
- District War Savings
- Place
- Palmerston North
Object rights
- License
- By Attribution Alone
BE IN
the
3RD
LIBERTY
LOAN
£35,000,000
NOTE FOR FIRM
OR PAY CLERK
Please collate these promises under the follow-
ing headings and send to the District War
Savings Organiser, care Chief Post Officer in
your district.
Cash
Written
Promises
Total
National Savings A/c
.
Liberty Bonds
War Loan Stock
NAME OF FIRM
.
(or office)
ADDRESS
SIGNATURE .
H. B. & J. LTD.
What
can you do
today
for Freedom?
HERE IS YOUR ANSWER ->
Page 2.
This tells you why
WAR AT £250 A MINUTE
Total war costs New Zealand more than £250 every
minutemore than two and a half millions every week.
This is the money which feeds and clothes and pays
our soldiers and sailors and airmen, of whom were so
proud. Its the money which puts into their hands the
finest fighting tools we can build or procure.
If theyre to keep fighting on for us, we must keep
on saving. Remember that youre not being asked to
make a sacrificeunless going without a few comforts
is sacrificeyoure asked only to invest your money at
interest. That money you invest serves more than one
war purpose. It helps defeat the enemy. It helps
preserve a sound economy by keeping available money
and available goods in balance. It provides you with
a useful fund for starting anew when peace has been
won.
In a war for survival, we have not yet suffered hard-
ship or privation. You can help to keep it that way
by making this your greatest effort yet.
YOU CANNOT LOSE
BY INVESTING
IN THE
3RD LIBERTY LOAN
This tells you how
YOU CAN INVEST
A. Increase your deposits to a National War Sav-
ings Account by regular deductions from salaries, wages
and overtime.
(Deposits made prior to 30/6/1943 repayable
30/6/1945 with interest; deposits made after
30/6/1943 repayable 30/6/1946with interest.)
B. Purchase £10 and £1 Liberty Bonds returning
£11/7/6 and £1/2/9 respectively in five years. If you
wish to buy these Bonds by instalments, by forming a
group among your fellow employees, discuss it with
them. Your employer also would undoubtedly co-
operate and maybe buy supplies of Bonds for resale
to you or your workmates and arrange the deduction
of instalments from wages.
C. Invest in War Loan stock in multiples of £10.
War Loan Prospectus, obtainable from any Bank or
Post Office, gives details of instalment payments.
D. Transfer part of the balance in your Savings
Bank Account or on current account with a Trading
Bank or other institution to a National Savings Account.
(Note: Any person may have a National Saving Ac-
count pass-book held by his employer for entry of
deposits deducted from salaries or wages and another
account and pass-book for private use.)
E. Invest part of the balance in your Savings Bank
Account or on current account with a Trading Bank,
in War Loan Stock (see prospectus) or purchase £10
or £1 Liberty Bonds.
SEE THE PROMISE FORM ATTACHED!
FILL IN THIS FORM AND HAND IT TO THE OFFICE OR PAY CLERK.
TO MORE FULLY SERVE MY COUNTRY, I PROMISE
TO INVEST £ IN THE 3RD LIBERTY LOAN BY
- Increased deposits in a National Savings Account, (or)
- Purchase of £10 and £1 Liberty Bonds, (or)
- Investment in War Loan Stock.
If by instalment payments from wages, complete the following:
I hereby authorise the deduction of £ s. d. from my wages each pay-day until further
notice for deposit in my own National Savings Account or (as sufficient funds accumulate) to purchase
Bonds or to be forwarded to the Reserve Bank as an instalment payment for War Loan Stock.
NAME
ADDRESS
.
FIRM OR PAY CLERKPLEASE NOTE REQUEST ON BACK OF LEAFLET.