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When complete Victory is won and m the armed force 9 no longer require my services overseas or at home, I want to resume my rightful civilian lit status again as soon as possible. I want a job—l want a home. I want to give my wife and children some consolation for their years of worry and anxiety during my absence. In addition, and most important, I want f to be confident of their future welfare. You can help by investing in the Victory Loan. To you this means lending to help- pay for final Victory, receiving bach, in the future, the amount of your loan plus interest; saving to buy I "Jjjf peace-time goods that are unprocurable now. Rememberyou help me, you help the Nation--you help yourself " % V lIP VICTORY LOA N Subscribe at once—in War Loan Stoqjk, Victory Bonds or National War Savings. Full interest is paid from the day you invest. d mm COARSE OR FINE VI-MAX still sells at pre-war prices in 31b. Cartons and 71b. Bags. D. H. Brown and Son Ltd., Moorhouse Avenue, Christchurch. 11 r Ready-to-Eat Cereals Save Time But Lose Vitamins Don't let the clock beat the family at breakfast. The little time taken to prepare VI-MAX porridge is more than repaid because VI-MAX does not lose its vitamin* through drastic pre-cooking, nor are they lost in the making of VI-MAX porridge. Another advantage is that VI-MAX has less "crude" fibre than has whole wheat. u Crude" fibre contains a decalcifying agent VI-MAX, therefore, offers more vitamins for health protection and more calcium -for, bone and teeth building. No wonder VI-MAX is N.Z.'s No. 1 Health Breakfast i V/A i I ym m m Here is a remarkable book that will appeal to the general public. It is not a dry history of the war. It is a book that, while giving all the important facts and happenings of the war, is at the same time as enthralling as a quick-moving novel— as exciting as cr thriller. UIiRFKMI I r This is one of those books that will so hold your interest that you'll find you cannot put it down until you have finished it. Every on© of the seventeen chapters is thrilling reading, yet accurate and factual. By EVERARD ANSON In OUT OF THE SHADOWS, Everard Anson deals with all the main theatres of the war, and all the outstanding operatiorisi He also includes most interesting biographies of the four main men of Destiny who played the major role in the conflict. OUT OF THE SHADOWS is a big book—l 42 pages (page size, 9i x trated with photographs and has various maps. SEVENTEEN THRILLING CHAPTERS. To give you some idea of the scope of this book, here are the titles of the seventeen thrilling chapters. (1) Prelude to Battle. (2) Curtain Raiser. (Bt Norwegian Nightmare. (4) Fall of France. (5) Battle of Britain. (6) African Tug-of-war. (7) Battle of the Giants. (8) The Little Yellow Men. (9) The Turning Tide. (10) Sledgehammers in Russia. (11) Fortress Europe Attacked. (12) Stalingrad and After. (13) Bombing Crescendo. (14) D Day and After. (15) Balkan Weathercocks. (16) The Great Knockout. (17) Men of Destiny—Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin, Hitler. PRICE 6'-AT BOOKSELLERS MAIL ORDER PRICE 6/4 (including 4d postage). Special Mail Order Offer 3 or more copies 6/- each post paid. FOR MAIL, ORDERS PLEASE USE'COUPON. To A. H. and A. W. REED, Publishers of OUT OF THE SHADOWS, 182 Wakefield Street, Wellington. Please post me cop of "OUT OF THE SHADOWS," by Everard Anson. (6/4 each for one or two copies, 6/* each for three or more copies.) 1 enclose remittance of

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19450601.2.21.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume 82, Issue 25217, 1 June 1945, Page 5

Word Count
608

Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume 82, Issue 25217, 1 June 1945, Page 5

Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume 82, Issue 25217, 1 June 1945, Page 5