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| Issuer | Office of Price Administration |
|---|---|
| Year | 1942-1945 |
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| Value | Log in to see details |
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| Printer | Government Printing Office |
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| Obverse description | Blue-toned paper with a repeating underprint of the U.S. Government seal and text. The numeral "5" appears in each corner, with the central legend in bold letterpress above form and printer references at the foot. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | UNITED STATES OF AMERICA OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION RATION COUPON FOR FIVE POINTS PROCESSED FOODS OPA FORM R-1324 ✩ GPO 16-34718-1 |
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| Comments |
The Office of Price Administration administered processed food rationing through a point-value system rather than a fixed-commodity system — each stamp carried a point value, and prices shifted monthly based on supply conditions. A can of peas might cost 16 points in March and 8 in April. This made the stamps function more like a flexible scrip than a fixed coupon, and the OPA's monthly "point bulletins" became kitchen-table reading across the country.
The GPO produced these in vast sheets, perforated and bound into ration books. Book Four, issued from late 1943, used blue stamps for processed foods. Counterfeiting was prosecuted under federal law, though the low denomination made it rarely worth the risk.