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| 背面描述 | Plain reverse printed in black letterpress on the back of a repurposed electoral register sheet. A large bold numeral '50' dominates the centre field as the denomination indicator. Printed columnar text in English and Spanish identifies fields for street address and ballot numbers delivered to the voter, confirming the recycled ballot-paper substrate. Two manuscript signatures appear at lower left and lower right. |
| 背面铭文 | STREET AND NUMBER OR BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF RESIDENCE Calle y número o breve descripción de la residencia NUMBERS OF BALLOTS DELIVERED TO VOTER Números de las balotas entregadas al elector 50 |
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Basey is a municipality in Samar, and like dozens of other local governments across the Philippine islands, it issued its own emergency currency during the Japanese occupation after regular Commonwealth and pre-war Philippine National Bank notes became scarce or were deliberately withdrawn. These municipal guerrilla notes — or emergency circulating notes, depending on which authority sanctioned them — occupy a peculiar legal grey zone: some were backed by nothing more than local authority and community trust, while others were loosely coordinated through provincial or guerrilla command structures.
Samar saw sustained and brutal guerrilla activity throughout the occupation. Whether Basey's emission was produced under Japanese-tolerated civil administration or in defiance of it is not conclusively established for this denomination.