Chapter 598: Ledger



In any warehouse, the most basic account book must be managed by the highest officer, but at the same time, the warehouse manager who is responsible for the entry and exit of the warehouse must have a simple account book of his own, which is similar to a running account book.

Warehouses like the one in this secret military base must store a huge amount of valuables. No matter how smart the warehouse manager is, he cannot remember them all. And no matter how long it takes to report the warehouse inventory quantity to the base commander, they need to set up a simple account book and record everything in the warehouse under their management.

Judging from this remaining ledger, this warehouse manager should have been the sole manager of four warehouses, accounting for one-sixth of all the warehouses in the entire base.

But the four warehouses managed by this warehouse management office contained materials and wealth that made Yang Jing feel somewhat thrilling.

This diary was written in Japanese, and neither Kevin Martin nor Chris could understand it. Yang Jing had studied Japanese very hard with the Japanese-English dictionary when he was in Loren High, so he could barely recognize what was recorded in this diary.

The format of the account book is very simple. After all, it is just a running account. From left to right, the five items are written: serial number, item name, quantity, source, and storage date. At the back of the book, there is also a storage record, and the record format is the same.

Although the format of this journal is simple, the amount of information recorded in it is extremely astonishing.

For example, the first item in the account book is written as follows: 1 (serial number), gold foil, eight boxes (3.2 tons), Malaya, May 8, 1943.

That is, the first batch of inventory in the four warehouses managed by this warehouse manager was the gold foil looted by the Japanese army from Malaysia in Southeast Asia, a total of 3.2 tons.

This is a terrifying number. 3.2 tons of gold foil may not seem like a lot, but if it were put in today's money, it would be worth more than $120 million. Records like this are densely written in this not-so-thick account book. It is conceivable how much wealth the Japanese army looted from all over the country stored in these four warehouses alone!

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