White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1944 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
'
% > '- 1
■ ’:"
fem-Nobody is going
[■ m, to save your
I ‘ - .. |
^fern’ll have to do
l ^
.......i
. % V - V;#-: It ¥&■ >.
mm ■
m •/ , j - 'v .
plipli
-■
SitS'HS
.
II
mm
m$ki
FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1944
WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
WHITE DEER SUPPLY CO.
PHILLIPS 66, (Shieldknight)
E. F. TUBE GRAIN CO., Kingsmill
FARMERS ELEVATOR CO.
BARNETT ELEVATOR CO.
CITY OF WHITE DEER
WHITE DEER IND. SCHOOL DISTRICT
B. & B. HARDWARE CO.
STUBBLEFIELD DRY GOODS CO.
WHITE DEER REVIEW
WILLIAMS FOOD STORE
FARMERS NATIONAL BANK
%
WHITE DEER DRUG (Cain)
SOUTHWESTERN PUBLIC SERVICE CO.
TEXAS GAS & POWER CORPORATION
Council
* This is an official U. S. Treasury Advertisement—prepared under auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising
vw/7 >•*
GOM
tooking ahead to ithe future and planning wisely
JL is more important today than ever. With the
longer hours and harder work the war has brought,
your equipment is wearing out pretty fast. Few re-
placements are available. But the day is coming
when full lines of everything will be on the market
again—and then you’re going to need a lot! Nobody
else will save the money to meet those future needs.
It’s up to you to do it yourself.
On farms and ranches all over the country, owners
and tenants are salting down their dollars in the War
Bonds which will mean so much to their post-war
prosperity. It’s the safest and easiest way to save.
Uncle Sam stands behind them.- You can buy them in
large or small denominations, to suit yourself, and
you can get them at bank or post office or Production
Credit Association. Between trips to town you can
buy by mail, or ask your rural mail carrier to get them
for you. The wise, farsighted plan is to keep right
on buying them.
Save your money for your boy, too. His great
dream, wherever he’s fighting, is to get home as
quickly as possible. The least you can do, now, is to
buy the War Bonds that help provide his fighting
equipment. But when the war is over, then the money
you’ve lent to the Government will come back to
you .. . and you and the boy can use it together. The
farm will mean more to him than it ever has, and he’ll
be proud of you for the way you’ve stood behind him;
and provided ahead for future needs. War Bonds are
your duty to your country, to your boy—and to
yourself.
YOU NEVER GET LESS THAN YOU LEND! And
you can get more than you invest. When
held 10 years, Series E War Brands yield
2.9% interest compounded semi-annually.
You get back $4 for every $3.
Of course, no one should cash a Bond
unless he has to; but if an emergency comes
along, Uncle Sam will redeem them in cash
at full purchase price—any time after you’ve
held them 60 days. BUY WAR BONDS!
FACTS ABOUT WAR BONDS (Series E)
You LEND Uncle Sam:Upon Maturity you get hack:
$18.75 $25.00
37.50 50.00
75.00 100.00
375.00 500.00
750.00 1000.00
You can buy War Bonds from your bank, postmaster,
rural mail carrier or Production Credit Association
For America’s future, for year future, for your children’s future—keep on buying WAR BONDS
U8aM KEEP BACKING THE ATTACK!
WAR BONDS WILL BUY THEM!
HOW MANY OF THESE WILL YOU NEED? Maybe
you can’t get new equipment now. The firms that
supplied it are doing just what you are—working
hard for the war effort. But you’re looking forward
—and planning ahead—to the day when new cata-
logs full of up-to-date, improved machinery and
materials will make grand reading again.
YOUR PLACE IN THE POSTWAR PICTURE. Owners
on farms all over the country are keeping careful
check on the places where money will have to be
laid out after the war. Barns and buildings that need
repairs and paint. Fences to be rebuilt. Improve-
ments for the house. New stock. New tractors.
Against these future needs they are putting money
away in War Bonds—the safest, easiest way to save.
How about you? Are you doing your postwar
planning?
YOUR BOY’S PLACE. Don’t forget that to those boys
of ours in the Services, home’s the thing they re
fighting for. They yearn to get back to it—and it’s
up to us to see that it’s an even better place than
before. War Bonds will hasten the day of Victory;
and at maturity the money will come back. . . for the
farm. Make thefuturea goodone. . .with War Bonds!
YOU NEVER GET LESS THAN YOU LEND! And
you can get more than you invest. When
held 10 years, Series E War Bonds yield
2.9% interest compounded semi-annually.
You get back $4 for every $3.
Of course, no one should cash a Bond
unless he has to; but if an emergency comes
along, Uncle Sam will redeem them in cash—
at full purchase price—any time after you ve
held them 60 days. BUY WAR BONDS!
FACTS ABOUT WAR BONDS (Series E)
You LEND Uncle Sam: Upon Maturity you get back:
$18.75 $25-°0
37.50 50-00
75.00 100.00
375.00 5°°’2?
750.00 1000.00
You can buy War Bonds from your Danh, postmaster,
rural mail carrier or Production Credit Association
For America’s future, for year future, for your children’s future-keep on buying WAR BONDS
LetieS KEEP BACKING THE ATTACK! i
gad Me ad/- BUY MORE THAN BEFORE
This is an official U. S
. Treasury Advertisement-prepared under auspices oi Treasury Department and War Advertising Council
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1944, newspaper, August 11, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1158445/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.