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PATRIOTIC FUNDS

YEAR'S EXPENDITURE

OVER A liALF-jMIiLLI ON

Expenditure from the general aceount of the National Patriotic Fund Board for the second year of its activities, which ended on September 30th last, amounted to £458,905, and from the sick and wounded account to £73,005, a total of £531,910. These figures were given in a preliminary statement submitted to a recent meeting of the board's standing committee. Administration expenses amounted to £1878, or approximately 7s for each £100 of expenditure. The statement tells the story in figures of the wide field of patriotic effort covered by the board and shows the many calls made on the patriotic funds in the course of i year. Items of expenditure from the general account include £18,493 on comforts for troops overseas, £1928 for comforts for reinforcements, £10,274 for the supply of blankets sent to Greece during the height of the Greek campaign, and £1246 towards the cost of comforts for overseas seamen. The sum of £82,227 Avas remitted overseas to imprest accounts established to provide additional comforts and amenities for tin: New Zealand Forces. Of this amount, £52,875 went to Egypt, £16,235 to Fiji, £12,500 f.o England and £500 to Canada. The sum of £18,132 was spent on goods forwarded for sale at cost at the New Zealand Forces Club in Cairo. Equipment for military bands cost £2148 and a further £1420 was spent to replace the instruments of the 4tli and sth Brigade Bands which were lost in Greece and Crete. Some idea of the quantity of wool required to knit the woollen comforts sent overseas at intervals by. the Board is to be gained from the fact that it cost £23,750 for the wool supplied to the provincial patriotic councils of the Dominion. This sum, -however, is recouped by the board from the provincial councils.. A total of £135,319 was paid by the board into the imprest accounts operated in New Zealand by the Catholic War Services Board, Church of England Military Affairs Committee, Salvation Army, Y.M.C.A., and Navy League as agents of the board. Of this total the Y.M.G.A. received £83,500. Direct jayments on account of institutional buildings and for furniture accounted, for another £5571. A number of grants were made to overseas organisations, such as Toe H in London and the Anzac Committee in Colombo, expenditure under this heading amounting to £4335. Payments from the sick and wounded account included £8148 for the provision of comforts for hospital ships and overseas hospitals; £6250 remitted to Egypt for imprest purposes; £2250 for the relief of distress in Malta arising from air raids (which with a similar amount from the general account made a total of £5000 for this purpose); £2501 to the Greek Red Cross; £1875 to the International Red Cross; £12,500 to the Polish Relief organisation in England; £9068 to the Canadian Red Cross for the prisoners of war account; and grants of £3000 for equipment funds for the overseas hospitals and £2038 for the field ambulance divisions. The balance in the board's general account as at September 30 was £951 and in the sick and wounded account £36,659. The sum* of £5000 from the general funds has been invested in Treasury Bills and investments from the sick and wounded account total £415,000.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19411022.2.26

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 171, 22 October 1941, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
543

PATRIOTIC FUNDS Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 171, 22 October 1941, Page 5

PATRIOTIC FUNDS Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 171, 22 October 1941, Page 5

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