yellow, red, green, blue.
Ration books looked like little notebooks but inside them they're like little letter stamps
Government issued ration books
i only now two the brown was for familys and the green was for pregnant women.
Yes. All countries involved in WW2 (and all occupied territories) had rationing and ration books. The only alternative to rationing by coupons would have been rationing by price. In most cases, this would have sent the prices of essentials sky high.
the numbers that went 321 were for points and the numbers going 121110987654321 was for the number of ounces
who invented the ration books
Ration books is a plural noun. The singular is ration book.
During World War II, ration books in the United States were issued in various colors such as red, blue, and green, with each color representing different types of items that were rationed, like meat, sugar, and gasoline. The colors helped to easily identify the specific type of rationing each book was meant for.
Ration Tabs
Ration books looked like little notebooks but inside them they're like little letter stamps
No, soldiers on active duty did not require ration books, the service provided for their needs.
Ration books were issued by the US government to allow everyone to have the same chance to get goods as everyone else. There is no exact number on how many ration books were issued but over 8000 ration offices were opened to control the rationing.
called ration books or ration coupons.
Yes, what about them!
The European countries involved in World War 1 introduced food rationing. Obviously, this involved issuing ration-books.
Yes there were.
They are called ration books