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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 631
May 4-5, 1943
Regraded Unclassified
- A -
Book Page
Advertising Association of America
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
Allied Newspaper Council
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- B - -
Bolivia
See Latin America
- C -
Cowles, Gardner
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(2nd War Loan Drive)
- D -
Davis, Elmer
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(2nd War Loan Drive)
Deferments, Military
Discussion of Treasury group by HMJr, Gaston, and
Thompson - - 5/4/43
631
45
a) Copy of personnel involved attached
52
b) List of key positions in Treasury
55
- I -
Financing, Government
War Savings Bonds:
Smith, Fred: Asked to associate himself with Treasury
on full-time basis - 5/4/43
88
a) Rubicam thanked by HMJr - 5/8/43: See Book 632,
page 168
b) Rubicam reply - - 5/13/43: Book 633, page 183
Payroll Deduction Plan: Issuing agents asked for report
on lapse between completion of payments and delivery
of bonds - 5/4/43
96
George (Senator, Georgia) in Chamber of Commerce
speech advocates "encouraging purchase of War Bonds
out of current earnings rather than compulsory
savings" - 5/5/43
176,184
a) Speech as inserted in Congressional Record -
5/8/43: See Book 632, page 209
Non-redemption at end of war: Wallace's letter
concerning - 5/5/43
210,211,213
a) Likert's study
215
2nd War Loan Drive: Sproul, Cowles, Elmer Davis,
Outdoor Advertising Association of America, Allied
Newspaper Council, Gulf 011 Corporation thanked for
assistance - 5/4/43
72, etc.
- 1- - (Continued)
Book Page
Foreign Funds Control
Patenotre, Eleanor Elverson: Philadelphia Inquirer stock
sale and tax claims against discussed in Paul memorandum -
5/5/43
631 227
- G -
George, Walter F. (Senator, Georgia)
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
Gulf Oil Corporation
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(2nd War Loan Drive)
- L -
Latin America
Bolivia: Current situation discussed in view of impending
Presidential visit - 5/5/43
229
Leffingwell, Russell
See Post-War Planning
Lend-Lease
Report of purchases for week ending May 1, 1943 - 5/4/43
140
U.S.S.R.:
Third Soviet Protocol - supplementary request for
supply, July 1, 1933-June 30, 1944 - 5/4/43
156
United Kingdom:
for sterling area
Gold and dollar assets and estimated balance of payments/
for next three months - 5/4/43
143
Aircraft despatched, week ending April 27, 1943 -
British Air Commission report - 5/4/43
154
Likert, Rensis
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- M - -
Myers, William I. (Cornell University)
Day (President, Cornell)-HMJr conversation concerning
Myers - 5/4/43
92
- N -
Newspaper Council, Allied
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- 0 -
Outdoor Advertising Association
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(2nd War Loan Drive)
Regraded Unclassified
- P -
Book Page
Patenotre, Eleanor Elverson
See Foreign Funds Control
Philadelphia Inquirer
See Foreign Funds Control: Patenotre, Eleanor Elverson
Post-War Planning
Leffingwell's comments on British stabilization plan -
5/5/43
631
232
Press Releases, Treasury
Distribution improvement requested by HMJr - 5/4/43
133
a) Schwarz memorandum
134
- R -
Revenue Revision
Revenue Act of 1943:
Progress of bill discussed by HMJr, Paul, Blough, and
Surrey - 5/4/43
1
a) Doughton-HMJr conversations
2,171
b) Rayburn-HMJr conversation
7
c) McCormack-HMJr conversation
43
Carlson-Ruml bill rejected, 206-202 - 5/4/43
70
George (Senator)--Paul discussion on procedure in
Senate - 5/5/43
200
(See also Book 632, pages 220 and 222 - 5/10/43)
- S -
Smith, Fred
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
Sproul, Allan
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(2nd War Loan Drive)
- T -
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
Treasury Press Releases
See Press Releases, Treasury
- U - -
U.S.S.R.
See Lend-Lease
United Kingdom
See Lend-Lease
1
May 4, 1943
9:45 a.m.
TAXES
Present: Mr. Paul
Mr. Blough
Mr. Surrey
H.M.JR: Where are we as of this morning on the
bill?
MR. PAUL: We simply don't know. We made all kinds
of inquiries. I talked to twenty people, I guess, in
the House.
H.M.JR: Supposing I call up Doughton.
MR. PAUL: I don't think you can get anything. Call
up Sam Rayburn or McCormack. Doughton is in worse condi-
tion than ever.
H.M.JR: Let me start with Doughton.
MR. PAUL: Doughton is pretty excited and not even
what would be regarded as in his best form.
MR. BLOUGH: No, he wasn't in his best form yesterday.
He hollered around a good deal.
MR. PAUL: Yes, but I was talking with him before he
went up there.
H.M.JR: I don't know whether the President has
done any phoning or not.
MR. PAUL: I tried to get Johnson but haven't been
able to get him. I have talked to lots of them.
I think, personally - if I had to make & bet I think
I would bet on the Robertson plan.
(The Secretary held a telephone conversation with Mr.
Doughton, as follows:)
Regraded Unclassified
2
May 4, 1943
9:51 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Doughton.
HMJr:
Hello.
Robert
Doughton:
All right.
HMJr:
Henry talking.
D:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
How're you coming, young fellow?
D:
Well, you can't tell. We're in a struggle down
here. I don't see anything to be alarmed
about, but still we know we're in a hard bat-
tle. You can't tell.
HMJr:
Are the - are our fellow Democrate all right?
D:
Well, those that are all right are. There're
some that are, not, and there will be B. few,
but just how many - I think some of the waver-
ing are coming into line.
HMJr:
How about the leadership?
D:
Well, it seems to be doing fine.
HMJr:
The leadership 18 doing fine.
D:
They seem to be all right, yeah. We had a
conference with them yesterday afternoon and
we're having another one this morning at
10:30.
HMJr:
Yes
D:
I have no - no complaints to make of them at
all. I - the - the Majority Leader 1s going
to make a speech and maybe the Speaker too.
HMJr:
And
D:
I have a feeling as 1t 18 - and now I am satis-
fied they are doing what they can to line up
wavering members.
Regraded Unclassified
3
- 2 -
HMJr:
Well, then it's different than it was last time.
D:
How's that?
HMJr:
It's different than it was last
D:
Well, I think so, yes.
HMJr:
Well, you
D:
I - I think 80. We can't tell. You see, they
have been going home and you can't tell how -
how many of them might not get back. They might
use that as a - just want to dodge, you know,
and use an excuse or something that they didn't
get back. I can't tell.
HMJr:
You can't tell.
D:
Now if folks get here and there's - as fully 88 ?
I think we'll - I think we'll win.
HMJr:
Good. Will you pick up any Republican votes?
D:
I don't know. Somebody said we're going to lose
a few; that they've had a conference yesterday
afternoon. I've been trying to find out about
that this morning. They're trying awfully hard
to whip them in line.
HMJr:
Yeah.
D:
I doubt if we'll pick up any. I - I will try to
find out - I'll find out more about that.
HMJr:
Do you think you'll get 8. vote today?
D:
I - yes, I think 80, unless we decide it is better
strategy to finish the debates today and wait un-
til - and vote in the morning when perhaps there
might be more - some of the members that are not
here today might be here by tomorrow. I don't
know. We'll decide that 88 we see how many are
here.
HMJr:
Uh huh.
D:
We call the offices of those who are not here, you
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
4
D:
know, and then if they're not here today, but
they 11 probably be here tomorrow, why, we might
let the vote go until morning.
HMJr:
Well, that sounds smart.
D:
How's that?
HMJr:
That sounds smart.
D:
We'll - we'll determine that when we see what -
how many will not be here today.
HMJr:
Good.
D:
We can find - by just getting - I'm inquiring of
all their offices, you know.
HMJr:
And ....
D:
We're checking on it the very best we can.
HMJr:
Anything we can do at this end?
D:
Well, I believe you're doing - but I don't know -
you may think of it - I don't think of anything
more than you're doing. You're doing a fine
job and fits the will in every way. I think
that the Speaker was going to call the Big Boss
about 8. few wavering members.
HMJr:
Yeah.
D:
And it'
s
HMJr:
Well, if you get any bright ideas, I'm sitting here.
Be glad to help.
D:
Well, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. We appre-
ciate your calling.
HMJr:
O. K.
D:
Goodbye.
Regraded Unclassified
5
- 2 -
MR. PAUL: I talked with Poulson, one of the
leading Republicans, and he said he had twenty-one
or twenty-two of them in line. That was before the
conference yesterday afternoon.
H.M.JR: I will see if the Speaker is there.
MR. BLOUGH: Doughton doesn't seem very confident,
does he?
H.M.JR: I thought so, yes. The thing that is
encouraging, usually he goes into this long dissertation
on the leadership.
MR. PAUL: McCormack made a radio speech - at least
we supplied him with the material last Friday - so it
looks as if he is pretty well in line.
H.M.JR: I thought for once we got the jump on the
publicity through that statement which was positive.
Then the Republicans had to try to pull it down. We at
least got ours out first.
The press is terrible. I gave out the statement
last night around six on the figures, and I couldn't see
that either the Times or Tribune carried my war bond
figures. My figures may have been too late, but if this
had been a flop they would have found time to stick the
thing in.
MR. PAUL: What time did you give them out?
H.M.JR: About six or six-thirty.
I am not going to call McCormack.
MR. PAUL: Except that he is supposed to do some
rounding up.
What are you going to say when you are asked for
a statement if the Ruml plan is defeated? I thought we
might give some thought to that because we were both
6
- 3 -
criticized for gloating the last time. I didn't gloat
so I don't know where they got that remark. I wondered
if we should think about a statement to issue.
(The Secretary held a telephone conversation with
Mr. Rayburn, as follows:)
7
May 4, 1943
9:57 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator:
Speaker Rayburn.
HMJr:
All right.
Operator:
Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello.
Speaker
Rayburn:
Yeah, Henry.
HMJr:
How are you, Sam?
R:
Pretty fair. I got some cold, but....
HMJr;
I spent the night in your town the other
night, Dallas.
R:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I heard
R:
Fred Florence Was telling me you were there.
HMJr:
Who?
R:
Fred Florence
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
one of the bankers there.
HMJr:
Yeah, and I heard you were un dedicating a
country school. I asked
R:
(Laughs) That's right.
HMJr:
where you were.
R:
I was making a pretty loud speech that night.
HMJr:
Were you?
R:
Yes.
Regraded Unclassified
8
- 2 -
HMJr:
If it hadn't been 75 miles, I'd have fooled you
and come out and heard you.
R:
God, I wish you'd have been there.
HMJr:
What?
R:
I wish you could have come by.
HMJr:
Was it good?
R:
There's some pretty cattle and some pretty
country.
HMJr:
No pretty girls?
R:
No pretty girls, no. No, I don't fool with
them down there.
HMJr:
I see. Just up here in Washington, hmm?
R:
(Laughs)
HMJr:
(Laughs) Well, anyway how - how are we coming
on the tax bill?
R:
I think we're in pretty good shape. I'm - here
in the office this morning I've been calling
about fifteen fellows
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
that weren't here. I gave - the Boss called
me yesterday end I gave him his friend, Manny
Celler, and Jennings Randolph and Jim O'Leary.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
Randolph and Celler were off the other time,
and I don't think O'Leary was here.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
And I - I told Grace to have him call them.
HMJr:
Yes.
R:
Now we're picking up some of those that weren't
here.
Regraded Unclassified
9
- 3 -
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
I don't know how those 23 Republicans are going to
stand. I'm going to have a meeting with Jere and
Bob
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
and Disney at 10:30
HMJr:
Good.
R:
and Fred Crawford was meeting with the - his
23 yesterday
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
and he thought they were going to hold. I
don't know. I think we're all right.
HMJr:
But the President called you yesterday?
R:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Well, he's good.
R:
Yes, he asked me if there was anything - how I
thought - what I thought about it, and I told him
I believed we were all right. You never can tell
until it goes through
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
and he asked if there was anybody he could
call, so we're in here yesterday and I thought it
would flatter these three fellows if he called
them.
HMJr:
Be wonderful.
R:
And especially Celler and Jennings Randolph
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
from West Virginia. Jim wasn't here - Jim
O'Leary
HMJr:
Yeah.
Regraded Unclassified
10
- 4 -
R:
and I don't know how he - how he stands,
but he's pretty good to RO along.
HMJr:
Good.
R:
But we picked off several of the fellows that
weren't here the other time, and we've got some
of our fellows that made speeches the other
time that are taking no stock this time.
HMJr:
Good.
R:
They're not - they're not speaking at all.
HMJr:
Uh huh.
R:
And I've
HMJr:
You mean speaking against it.
R:
Huh?
HMJr:
Not speaking against it.
R:
Not speaking for the Ruml thing, you know.
HMJr:
Right. Well, it sounds - and - and you've got
your - your boys are all together at the top?
R:
Oh, yes.
HMJr:
McCormack and all.
R:
Oh, you bet, yeah, 100%. He and Bob are just
like a new married couple. (Laughs)
HMJr:
Well, let's hope the honeymoon lasts through
tonight. (Laughs)
R:
(Laughs) The old man 1s pretty nervous.
HMJr:
Yeah. Well, like a June bride.
R:
I - I kind of think we're all right, Henry.
I don't know.
HMJr:
I said he's like a June bride.
Regraded Unclassified
11
- 5 -
R:
A lot depends on - on these 23 Republicans.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
Fred Crawford thinks he's going to have them.
Jere Cooper will have a report on that when he
comes over here at 10:30, and if I think of any-
thing you folks can do now I'll call you, Henry.
HMJr:
Do that.
R:
All right, old fellow. Goodbye.
HMJr:
Goodbye.
Regraded Unclassified
12
- 4 -
H.M.JR: They all sound pretty good.
MR. PAUL: Those Republicans are going to stick,
I am pretty sure, about twenty-one of them out of the
twenty-five.
H.M.JR: Where will all you guys be?
MR. PAUL: In the members part. As soon as they
vote Ruml down - - and that is going to be first - we will
phone you, if you want.
H.M.JR: Yes.
MR. BLOUGH: I expect to be at the hearing.
MR. PAUL: Roy doesn't go up there. He is at the
trial.
H.M.JR: What trial?
MR. BLOUGH: The Port of Authority case. It was
brought down here.
MR. PAUL: But the point is, do you want us to
consider what you should say - what statement?
H.M.JR: Sure. Who will do it?
MR. PAUL: We will.
13
May 4, 1943
10:10 a.m.
FINANCING - ORGANIZATION PLANS
Present: Mr. Bell
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Graves
Mr. Duffington
Mr. Odegard
Mr. Peabody
Mr. Robbins
Mr. Gamble
Miss Elliott
H.M.JR: Have you any bright ideas, Dan?
MR. BELL: No.
H.M.JR: Have you got your report written in such
shape, Mr. Graves, that you can give it to me?
MR. GRAVES: Yes, I çan give it to you now. (Mr.
Grave's plan number one handed to the Secretary.)
H.M.JR: Our six o'clock figures didn't seem to make
any of the papers.
MR. BELL: They were a little late, I am afraid.
H.M.JR: If they had been bad they would have made the
papers, all right. Do you suppose they will be in the
afternoon papers?
MR. BELL: It was six-thirty before they got them, I
am afraid.
H.M.JR: But you would think the Washington papers
would get them. The Post--
MR. BELL: The Post never carries anything on finance.
Regraded Unclassified
14
- 2 -
H.M.JR: Would you have somebody look at the New
York afternoon papers today? See whether they carry them.
MR. PEABODY: Yes, I will.
MR. BELL: I had better see if those allotment figures
are on the ticker. I didn't see those in the papers.
H.M.JR: I didn't see anything. It doesn't speak
very well for the press services.
MR. BELL: Our telegram went to the rederal Reserve
banks last night. They will have it. They will probably
give it out.
Mr. Eccles said that he would like to call the presi-
dents in as soon as possible. They want a regular meeting
of the presidents, anyhow, and they thought maybe they
would call them in at such time as you might want to talk
to them about organization. he was thinking somewhere
around the 18th.
H.M.JR: He is in no hurry, then?
MR. BELL: Well, he thought they ought to have at
least ten days to two weeks' notice.
(Mr. Bell left the conference.)
H.M.JR: Herbert, have you any bright ideas?
MR. GASTON: No, I think no especially bright ideas.
I read Mr. Robbins' outline and I think it is a very
clear presentation of the subject, but I don't reach the
same conclusions that he does. I think there is a very
definite danger, as you said yesterday, in turning this
whole organization over to the Federal Reserve Banks.
I don't think we would be able to control the personnel
and I think that we just can't afford to sacrifice the
Regraded Unclassified
15
- 3 -
value of the "ar Savings organization, which I am afraid
we do, very largely, if we make this a Federal Reserve
proposition.
H.M. JR: Have you gone any further than that?
MR. GASTON: I think that we want a consolidated
organization.
H.M.JR: This isn't prearranged. I haven't talked to
anybody since yesterday, so there is nothing cooking. I
don't know what Herbert is going to say.
MR. GASTON: Well, I think first we have got topreserve
the war Savings organization because I think it has been an
efficient hard-working organization. I think we have to
combine with it, in some way, facilities for working into
higher levels; that is, the corporations and the larger
investors.
I am rather favorably inclined, unless there is some
better plan offered, toward the plan that Harold suggests,
which is working on the War Davings organization as a basis
and then enlarging it to take in a special branch for making
these larger solicitations, and leaving it to the Federal
Reserve Banks to carry on the occasional campaigns, primarily
in the banks. I think that they might also be given the
responsibility for all financial corporations, including
insurance companies, leaving to the expanded War Savings
organization the soliticitation of all individuals and
commercial and industrial corporations.
I am just very much afraid that if we set up the thing
as a permanent organization exclusively through the presi-
dents of the Federal Reserve Banks, we are going to alienate
a lot of very effective workers. We are going to lend
weight to this argument that the thing is being turned over
to the bankers, whether that should ultimately be the case
or not.
H.M.JR: Are you finished?
(Mr. Bell re-entered the conference.)
Regraded Unclassified
16
- 4 -
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: The thing that I would like to talk about is
this. I would like to begin at the grass roots and work up.
Suppose for a minute we talk about on the community level
and then work it up from there. Start at the foundation and
then work up.
MR. ROBBINS: I think that is right. That is a spiendid
approach.
H.M.JR: Then gradually work up to finally reach my office.
If we are going to organize - I think everybody is
together in the room here that on the community level this
should only be one organization.
MR. GASTON: Except for bank solicitations - except for
commercial bank subscriptions.
H.M.JR: Yes, possibly.
MR. BELL: I think you can forget any organization for
banks. You don't need any.
MR. GASTON: I don't think you need any. Just send
out the word to the Feds.
H.M.JR: Well, if we agree on that - excluding the banks
from the community level--
MR. BELL: Exclude the banks from the drives and certainly
you don't need any organization for bank financing.
H.M.JR: What is that?
MR. BELL: If you exclude the banks from the periodic
drives, then you don't need any organization any more than
we have had all along for bank financing - interim bank
financing.
17
- 5 -
H.M.JR: I have a strong inclination to keep the
banks - the sale of securities to the banks, separate from
the drive.
MR. BELL: I agree with that, yet I think there are
problems in doing it. We have to have a special type of
security that we sell to the public that can't go into the
banks, in order to keep the banks out of the drives. That
is the thing that worries me a little.
H.M.JR: Well, we could take those seven-eighths, or
those two percents - we could have offered them a month
earlier if we had wanted to.
MR. BELL: Yes, but they go into the banks through
individual channels.
H.M.JR: Well, that is a matter of policing.
MR. BELL: It is a little more than policing. You are
offering a bank security to the public. It is very difficult
to keep the banks out of the drive when you do that. A two-
and-a-half is simple because the banks can't hold them for
ten years. Maybe you could offer a two-and-a-half, and the
savings bonds, and tax notes, and maybe a two-and-a-quarter
twelve-year bond, and keep the banks out of the whole picture.
H.M.J.R: I don't think that is too difficult. After
all, the Comptroller of the Currency could rule that the
banks could only buy such and such kind of securities and
not offer those to the public - make them a strictly banking
obligation.
MR. BELL: Those I have mentioned, yes, but there are
a lot of corporations and a lot of individuals that want
seven-eighths.
H.M.JR: Well, we can make it a little bit different
for the individuals and the corporations.
MR. BELL: I think we can work it, but it just isn't so
simple as it might seem on its face.
Regraded Unclassified
18
- 6 -
H.M.JR: No, but if you wanted to you could offer a
corporation a year and a quarter or a year and a half to
make it just a little bit different.
MR. BELL: Keep the registered, you get objection.
H.M.JR: Don't let's make this too difficult. I mean,
let's get back and talk about the community level, and let's
say that in this, whatever the organization is in the
county or the community, it is not going to include selling
the banks. Let's just take that for a premise for 8. minute.
MR. BELL: Sure.
H.M.JR: If necessary we can dip the securities in the
dye and say, "These are for the banks and the undyed are
for the individuals.' But I mean, there are plenty of ways
of doing it.
MR. BELL: Tainted - tinted, I should have said.
(Laughter)
H.M.JR: Well, now, if you are going to have an organi-
zation which is going to do a job in the community, what
are we going to use?
MR. GRAVES: Would you like me to comment on that?
H.M.JR: It is an open meeting.
MR. GRAVES: I think we would have at the community
level - and I am now talking about the smaller communities
because there would possibly be some variation from this in
places like New York and Chicago where institutions of the
kind that Herbert has just mentioned will mainly be found -
but in the ordinary community we would have one single
committee - say it is the War Savings Committee - it would
be about what it has been in the past, plus a special addi-
tional group whose responsibility it would be to canvass
the larger investor classes, both corporate and individual.
That would be one change from the present setup.
19
- 7
Then I think, too, there ought to be created in each
one of these local committees a special drives sub-division
which would have the responsibility for the periodic drive
in the community as distinct from the regular continuing
operations which go on all the time.
In my opinion it would be very simple to do those
things. We have now in a number of States - I should say
we had in the April drive in a number of States - an
organization that was substantially that.
Take Indiana as a typical case of that. Mr. Pulliam,
the chairman of the -ar Savings organization, was, of course,
chairman of this drive for Indiana. He had already in
Indiana, as the result of the early organization of the War
Savings Staff; special groups attached to each of his local
committees. They originally were intended to promote the
sale of F and G Bonds. He converted those groups for this
drive into groups to canvass the large investor category.
H.M.JR: Who is that man ?
Mr. GRAVES: Pulliam.
H.M.JR: what is his position?
MR. GRAVES: He is chairman of the War Davings Staff
in Indiana, and was designated by Mr. Young in Chicago to
head up the drive in that part of Indiana which is located
in the Chicago Federal Reserve District. He just utilized
the same organization that he had built originally in Indiana.
To whatever number of people he had in the war Savings
organization were added some hundreds of people from the
Victory Fund groups in Indiana.
MR. GAMBLE: Three hundred.
MR. GRAVES: They supplemented the organization which
he had there 80 that in Indiana you had a single committee
in each locality which embraced a special group whose
responsibility it was to reach the larger investor people.
I think that was a very effective and a very successful
operation in Indiana.
Regraded Unclassified
20
- 8 -
Now, we can go to the State of Washington, say. It
happened in the State of Washington our State chairman,
Mr. Ferris was also the regional manager, as I understand,
of the Victory Fund groups in that State. In Washington,
again, for this drive, you had in each community one single
committee which consisted of the regular groups which worked
everywhere in the war Savings organization, plus special
groups which functioned particularly with reference to the
larger investor people.
H.M.JR: what is Mr. Pulliam's background?
MR. GRAVES: Mr. Pulliam is a radio and newspaperman.
Mr. Ferris, in Washington, is a banker. He is, I think,
vice president of a bank at Spokane.
MR. GASTON: Spokane and Bastern Trust. He was at this
meeting in Spokane.
H.M.JR: He is State chairman?
MR. GRAVES: State chairman of the War Savings Staff
for "ashington.
H.M.JR: And everything was under him?
MR. GRAVES: Everything was under him; that is, every-
thing was under him and Karl kichards, who was, in the
absence of Mr. Saul Haas, in charge of this drive, so far
as the War Davings organization was concerned. But at the
community level which I am talking about, there was one
group in each.
H.M.JR: Are you familiar with these two States?
MR. ROBBINS: I haven't visited either of those two
States, but I wanted to ask Harold if I might - you have
read my suggestion, I take it, haven't you?
MR. GRAVES: I heard it, Bill. I haven't had a chance
to read it. I haven't & copy.
Regraded Unclassified
21
- 9 -
MR. ROBBINS: There isn't any difference on this
community level approach. We are all in agreement.
MR. GASTON: I don't think there is. It is a question
of whether we funnel it through the Federal Reserve Bank
or not.
H.M.JR: I am not ready for that yet.
MR. ROBBINS: But the point I wanted to make for you
is, I think what Harold is saying, and what I anticipated
in my presentation, are almost identical at the community
level.
MR. GASTON: Yes, it is a question of expanding. I
think everybody agrees we want to retain the value of this
War Davings organization which we have built over a period
of the last two years. I would differ, I think, a little bit
from Harold on this matter of community organization.
Rather than taking in the bankers, what you might call
the Victory Fund group, solely for campaigns, I would have
proper representation of that group as 8. member of the
permanent organization for ideas and for steady work on
those larger classes of investors.
MR. GRAVES: You are right.
MR. GASTON: I don't think it matters whether we call
this the War Savings Staff in the State or not, or change
it to 8. somewhat different name - call it the war Finance
Committee - but I think that we want one organization, and
we want it expanded to take in that other group, with proper
representation for both. And then I think we want to have
means to assure that the type of solicitation we have
carried on in the factories and the cooperation with the
unions and the cooperation of the women's groups shall con-
tinue on this local level.
H.M.JR: Of course, in New York State originally
Perry Hall worked under Patterson. That is the way it was
first, wasn't it?
22
- 10 -
MR. BUFFINGTON: Yes.
H.M. JR: And then they took him out from under that,
didn't they?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Yes. I don't know how active he was.
MR. GRAVES: I think they had never perfected their
plans for work under the "ar Savings Staff before the change
was made.
H.M.JR: I want to just take a little more time. I
haven't been to Indiana or Washington, but in Indiana there
is a man by the name of Pulliam and he is in - was in
charge of everything in this drive.
MR. GRAVES: That is right. In that part of Indiana
which is in the Chicago Federal Reserve District.
H.M.JR: As chairman of the War Savings?
MR. GRAVES: That is right.
MR. BELL: Young designated him to represent the War
Savings Committee in this drive.
H.M.JR: George, from your standpoint, how did it work
in Indiana?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Wonderfully - excellently; Pulliam
tied in to Mr. Young and the Federal Reserve organization
for general instructions, and all the activities in the
State of Indiana, as I understand it, were under Mr. Pulliam's
direction.
H.M.JR: What did you hear in Indiana from your men?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Fine results, and there was very close
relationship between the Federal Reserve and Pulliam's
organization.
H.M.JR: Did they take their orders from Pulliam?
Regraded Unclassified
23
- 11 -
MR. BUFFINGTON: Sure, everybody worked in the State
of Indiana, so far as I know. In fact, largely it was the
Pulliam organization with some personnel that heretofore
had been active in the State - I think of Gary, Indiana,
particularly, and one or two other sections where they had
been identified with the Victory Fund Committee, they worked
under Pulliam. lie headed the thing. There was no difficulty
at all.
MR. BELL: The whole Chicago District worked very well.
MR. BUFFINGTON: That same thing was true in Iowa
under Clark.
MR. GAMBLE: In Iowa, Clark was the administrator for
the whole program and there were two chairmen - Cocalette
you met.
H.M.JR: I never met Cocalette. I may have shaken
hands with him, but that is all.
MR. GAMBLE: That is all you did. Then the gentleman
that spoke on the pro gram was co-chairman and Clark was
administrator for the War Savings Staff for Iowa - for the
whole financing program.
MR. GASTON: There was Dr. Nollen--
MR. GAMBLE: Dr. John Nollen.
MR. GASTON: Retired president of Grinnell College.
H.M.JR: How did the women make out in Indiana?
MISS ELLIOTT: Excellent. We have had reports from the
State - the best reports, I think, that have come in from
any State up to date - full reports - have come from Indiana.
Most of the counties - they worked on the county organiza-
tion there, and most of those counties went over the top in
their quota, and the city organizations functioned very well.
We have a good many special reports from city organizations
24
- 12 -
But of course they were working primarily with the
War Savings Staff technique and methods in using the
system and plans that they had formerly used in the regu-
lar War Savings Staff methods.
MR. BUFFINGTON: While you are on the Seventh District
might it not be well for the other side of the picture to
go to a State like that part of Michigan falling in the
Seventh District?
As I understand it there was little coordination be-
tween Isbey's organization in Michigan and the Victory Fund
Committee organization, which is the opposite of what you
had in Iowa and in Indiana.
H.M.JR: What would you people think of sending word
to Pulliam to have him come in here - get on a plane and
come in and let me talk to him?
MR. GAMBLE: I think it would be a very good idea.
H.M.JR: If he is such an outstanding success--
MR. GASTON: Saul Haas is in town and he has some ideas
on this subject.
H.M.JR: He talks so much.
MR. ROBBINS: We are getting almost complete unanimity
of opinion on this point. I mean, we are all together.
H.M.JR: I would like to talk with Pulliam. 1 have
heard about Indiana. Does anybody see any objection to
talking to Pulliam?
MR. BUFFINGTON: I don't see any.
H.M.JR: What woman have you got in Indiana?
MISS ELLIOTT: Ahigren, she is the State chairman, and
then they have got a very good county organization of women.
From the very beginning we have had a very good county
organization.
25
- 13 -
There is good leadership, which I think is the impor-
tant thing in localizing this thing - State and local
leadership. They know their leaders; they work with them
and they follow that pattern.
H.M.JR: I wonder who our labor man is in Indiana.
MR. GAMBLE: I don't know, by name, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: Well, if I understand the thing, in Iowa--
MR. GAMBLE: The man you met, Porin, was the chairman
of the program. He was the war Davings man.
H.M.JR: Locally?
MR. GAMBLE: lie was the chairman of the program - the
little fellow that you spent some time with.
H.M.JR: Who was the man in charge at DesMoines?
MR. GAMBLE: Clark.
H.M.JR: Was he over the whole works?
MR. GAMBLE: Yes, sir, he was administrator for the
whole program.
H.M.JR: Did Victory Fund come under him?
MR. BELL: War "inance came under him.
MR. GAMBLE: The top Victory Fund man in the State of
Iowa, and the chairman of the War Savings Staff of Iowa
were co-chairmen of the drive and Clark was the administrator.
MR. BUFFINGTON: Mr. Horton, a banker, worked with
Mr. Clark. There was no difficulty.
MR. GAMBLE: Cocalette was the county man.
H.M.JR: How did it work from your standpoint, George?
Regraded Unclassified
26
- 14 -
MR. BUFFINGTON: Fine. We had no difficulty in the
Seventh District at all except in Detroit. I don't think
the two things were coordinated as closely as they were in
Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin.
H.M.JR: From what you people say here - let me see
if I have the thing straight so far - you say that where
we have 8, man like Pulliam, let's say, who is as good as
Pulliam and can get along as Pulliam - take a man like that
and say, "The State of Indiana is yours and you are responsible
for raising the money that we need for the whole State" -
and then - "except for the bank subscriptions; and we want
you to organize a special drives committee for these drives
which will come two or three times a year."
Now, who disagrees with that? I am not saying this is
my idea - I am just groping.
MR. ROBBINS: I don't see that there is any difference
of opinion.
H.M.JR: What did you call it in your report? A
campaign committee?
MR. ROBBINS: I called it a campaign. That is just 8.
word.
MR. BUFFINGTON: Mr. Secretary, while that is working
in those States you have just mentioned, I don't think
that you can logically conclude that that same condition
would work as effectively in some other States as it is
working in Indiana.
In other words, take the Fourth District, Ohio. There
has not been that same close relationship there.
H.M.JR: Well, what I am trying to get, George, is
this. I am trying to - you can't help but be personal in
some of these things. Why did I bring Gamble down to
Washington? Gambie did an outstanding job in the State
of Washington; he attracted our attention, so we brought him
down here to help us.
27
- 15 -
Now, let's say Pulliam has done an outstanding job in
Indiana and made the thing work. what we are groping for
here is a pattern. The fact that in Ohio they have four
offices and it doesn't work - all right. I an just saying -
let's call it the Indiana plan, to give it 8. name - after
many more meetings, let's say the Indiana plan for a State
community is what we want; then we say, "In other States
you have got to conform."
Now, in Ohio it might be your Victory Fund man who
should be the State chairman. I don't know. But I am
saying that each State should be examined to get the right
plan to carry out the Indiana plan.
MR. BUFFINGTON: I agree.
H.M.JR: And it may be your fellow, who I know there,
may be the right man. Now maybe in Michigan, because they
don't get along, our fellow - the War Savings fellow, what-
ever his name is - maybe he is the wrong man.
MR. GASTON: Isbey.
H.M.JR: I wouldn't for a minute say I want a - I want
a man that has worked. After all, we can sit here and do
the thing on paper - make pretty charts from now until the
war is over and not hit it right, but if you get a State
like Indiana where it has clicked, and people have been
able to sit down and everybody agrees, after plenty of thought,
that that is the way to do it, then the thing to do is to
look for the individuals in the various States to carry it
out.
Do you and I differ on that?
MR. BUFFINGTON: That is all right.
MR. GASTON: I think that is quite an important point
because that implies that we here in washington will retain
a large measure of supervision over the selection of personnel
in the States, and I don't think the thing can work unless
that is--
Regraded Unclassified
28
- 16 -
H.M.R: On paper it is supposed to be that way. I
mean, I have the veto power on all of them, on paper.
But we just haven't had time enough to do it.
MR. GASTON: I think that is essential, and another
thing; I think that it would be a mistake to take in the
Victory Fund crowd, to imagine that they are going to be
the special campaigns committee and confine them to that.
I would rather have a special campaign committee
which would take in the various groups, which include your
War Savings people; and I think that this group and the
group that was represented in your Victory Fund Committee,
ought to have continuous responsibility as a part of the
general committee; and I think that they should be provided
with a tap issue or something of the kind that they can sell
all the time, so as to retain their continuous services.
(The Secretary held a telephone conversation with
Mr. McCormack.)
MR. ROBBINS: There are two points I would like to make
on this.
The Indiana experience was a good experience. I think
in evaluating it, really, the whole way through, we must
also look back and find out what sort of help, responsibility,
guidance, and leadership was coming down from the strata
above Mr. Pulliam in this coordinated effort, and to that,
of course, we have to look back to Mr. Young in Chicago.
Mr. Young seems to have nad a variety of experiences out of
Chicago, the Pulliam one being one which was fine and perhaps
the Michigan one that wasn't quite as fine. but I think we
would be shortsighted not to look at that experience.
Now, another point that I think we should quickly
recognize here is that we seem to be centering on Indiana
as a good experience, and I don't think anybody is in
disagreement with that, but let's quickly recognize the fact
we are talking about a split State. So we are up against
the question of realizing, or at least we shouldn't take
Indiana too quickly and then conclude that that proves any-
thing statewise, because we had 8. split State in that
circumstance.
29
- 17 -
I am not arguing for or against it, but I think we
should recognize that is what we are doing.
MR. BELL: Didn't we jump from a community level to a
State level in this talk?
MR. GRAVES: I mentioned Indiana as an illustration of
what happened at the community level, which is what we were
talking about. I was simply trying to say that in Indiana,
or at least that part of Indiana which came in the Chicago
district, there was but one organization at the community
level.
MR. BELL: I think all agreed there should be one
organization down there. I wondered if you agreed with
Herbert that it didn't make any difference what you called
this organization.
MR. GRAVES: Well, I would have a good deal to say
about that, yes. I think it would be a great loss to give
up the designation, "War Savings."
H.M.JR: There you are going to have some trouble
with me becáuse I think that is one thing that we are going
to have to do - forget the designations, I think, War Savings
and Victory Fund, and have United States Treasury Organiza-
tion - community and State. I don't see how else we can do
it.
MR. GASTON: I don't see why we couldn't call it, for
instance, the South Bend War Finance Committee, and the
Cedar Rapids War Finance Committee, showing that they have
taken over.
MR. BELL: It starts out with United Ptates Treasury
War Finance Committee.
MR. GASTON: Showing they have taken over the whole field.
H.M.JR: No, there I have learned enough on this thing.
I think that if we keep these old tags, then we are not
going to get anywhere.
30
- 18 -
I think that this organization has got to be called
United States Treasury War Finance Committee of Dutchess
County.
MR. PEABODY: Those are battle flags in some districts,
Mr. Secretary; they literally are. These old tags that you
refer to, there is a tremendous amount of feeling about the
name itself, and I don't see how you are ever going to
bring the two together unless you take an entirely new name.
H.M.JR: Well, it is like the idea of the old fighting
69th in New York, or the 7th Regiment. I mean, as long as
they have their National Guard names, you can't merge them
into United States Army. They have just got to forget
their old names and become members of the United States
Army. That was the trouble at this Pass - this Iowa group
wanted to hold on as a National Guard unit, and that was
one of the troubles with them - the National Guard unit in
Iowa, which was wiped out. 1 think it is a good example. "If
you are going to become members of the United States Army,
you can't stay the 69th or the 7th, or the Blues of Richmond" -
and all of these things which are very nice in peacetimes,
Harold.
MR. GRAVES: I wouldn't consider that a major point,
although I think there is some value in the name.
H.M.JR: I think it is fairly important. If they are
going to bury this thing, we want to forget this button - we
want to forget the button the other fellow is wearing. I
think we are going to have to have a new button.
MR. ODEGARD: Mr. Secretary, wouldn't it be relevant
to consider - I don't want to argue this point now, but
wouldn't it be relevant to consider the value of the names
in terms of the number of people involved. For example,
you may have a small group of people. I suspect there are
not over - being over-liberal - certainly not over a
million - I think that is an exageration by twice - the
people who are concerned about the War finance Committee.
There are literally millions of people in the United States
who identify themselves with the "ar Savings Committee.
31
- 19 -
They are identified as & savings operation and I
merely suggest that for consideration.
H.M.JR: I don't know where they are.
MR. ODEGARD: There are fifty million of them that have
purchased savings bonds.
H.M.JR: We have used that over and OV er again. If
you don't mind my saying it, it is incorrect, Peter. There
are not fifty million people.
MR. ODEGARD: Pretty close to in, now.
H.M.JR: We have said it for six months and it wasn't
so.
MR. GRAVES: I think that is SO.
H.M.JR: Yes, but these people are holders of bonds.
Let's say there are fifty million different people that
hold bonds, which both Tickton and Lindow say is not so,
but let's say there are. But what difference does it make to
a holder of a United States Treasury bond whether he is
being sold by a Molly Pitcher, if you please, or by a Victory
Fund - what does he care?
MR. ODEGARD: He may not, Mr. Secretary, I just--
H.M.JR: You see, Peter, if you don't mind, the very
fact that you get kind of excited by this, and Harold gets
excited by this thing, is convincing to me that the thing
should be buried.
I think - and I can't think of & better example than
these famous names of National Guard organizations which in
time of war become members of the United States Army, and
as long as they carry their tags, they don't merge themselves.
I mean, the very fact that you fellows get excited
about the tag, to me that is an argument we should drop it.
But I would like to ask Ted Gambie how he feels about it.
Regraded Unclassified
32
- 20 -
MR. GAMBLE: I tell you how I feel about it; I don't
think it makes any difference. What I would like to see is
War Bonds kept. I don't think United States War Finance
Committee is a good name, but--
H.M.JR: You think we should hold to war Savings
Organization?
MR. GAMBLE: I wouldn't worry much about that.
H.M.JR: Don't you think it is fairly important to
drop both names?
MR. GAMBLE: Yes, Treasury War Finance, Victory Fund,
and War Savings. I would like to see it "War Bonds" because
that is what the people call it.
H.M.JR: Do you agree with me or not as to dropping all
names?
MR. GAMBLE: Yes, dropping all of them, but I would argue
when we did it that we ought to come up with something that
had War Bonds in it.
H.M.JR: That is something else again, but as to the
old name, if you want to argue about a new name--
MR. GAMBLE: Yes.
H.M.JR: How about you, Miss Elliott?
MISS ELLIOTT: It is very funny, because last night
working on it and thinking about what I was going to
suggest, I was going to suggest we change the name of Mar
Savings Staff to either war Bond or War Loan Staff. I
think it is important to get away from these identifications
that have caused the friction. But I agree with Mr. Gamble
that it should definitely be either the War Loan Committee
or the war Bond Committee. I think that should be retained
in it.
H.M.JR: But would you hang onto the old name?
33
- 21 -
MISSELLIOTT: Not necessarily. No, I would not. In
fact, I was going to suggest we drop it. I think if we go
to this principle you established here this morning of
separating Government finance and the regular war financing,
separate the two, then organize,I would say, straight down
the line, one committee - I am jumping to the top instead
of starting at the bottom - a very definite and simplified
national organization with direct functional lines down to
one State organization with one State director, operating
right down to one committee. And make your organization as
simple as possible with as little confusion. I don't see
any necessity of building up an overlapping and complicated
piece of machinery to do one thing - sell bonds.
H.M.JR: I think we are making a little progress, now.
MR. GASTON: I would drop "United States Treasury" in the
State and local level because, really, they are not - I
don't think you want to identify them as United States
Treasury organizations. I think you want to identify them
as a people's organization - & community organization.
I think "War Bonds Committee" is very good because there
is a sort of a double play in the word "Bonds."
MR. GAMBLE: You get millions of dollars' worth of
promotion every month for it.
H.M.JR: I don't mean to be too categorical, Peter.
MR. ODEGARD: That is all right. I was raising the
question, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: But I am glad you raised the thing because the
very thing that you are hanging onto - if you don't mind
my saying it - is the important thing I think should be
buried.
MR. ODEGARD: As a matter of fact, I asked Karl Richards
about it and Howard Mills about it, and both said that 80 far
as the name was concerned, they wouldn't be very much concerned
about the change in name.
34
- 22 -
Now, I haven't talked with very many other State
administrators, but I think that might be true. I would
like to emphasize the importance of the savings angle to
this because I think that is an important motivation.
MR. PEABODY: I think it is easy to get into a little
confusion here between the name of the organization that is
going to do this job and the name of the product they are
going to sell. I would go along with Peter a hundred
percent. They still ought to be selling Savings Bonds, but
that is something which is going to be general. That will
get into your fifty or sixty million, or whatever it is,
but the name we call the organization is going to be a
considerably limited thing, and I think that that definitely
should be changed.
H.M.JR: I think that that is - what, the name of the
organization?
MR. PEABODY: Yes.
H.M.JR: I think that is an intelligent comment.
MR. ROBBINS: I would even go a little further than
that and say I recognize the valuesthat Peter and Harold
are talking about, and they are very real values. You
can't have had an operation over & period of years and nothave
built up that value. But that, to my mind, points up the
importance of our problem; that there are certain sacrifices
in values that have to be made to get greater values. That
is the reason we are discussing this organization.
This may be a sacrifice we will have to make to improve
our situation. I am perfectly willing to take it on that
basis. I think it should be changed, by all means.
H.M.JR: Now, just let me take an inventory here for a
minute. What we are talking about for the moment - and
I don't want to get above the State, and I don't care,
for my purposes, whether Indiana is divided in half - it
doesn't make any difference--
35
- 23 -
MR. ROBBINS: It doesn't to me, I can assure you.
H.M.JR: But I meant, it is the idea. We have got
somebody - whether we take the Iowa organization or the
Washington organization, I want to keep it for the moment
on the State-county level. What we are talking about here
is that we will have at the head of each State one man WIO
should be selected by us, who will stand for what I stand
for, and feel that he can talk and think the way I would
talk if I were in his State.
And then it is to be his responsibility to get people
to do that kind of talking and thinking in each community.
I mean, they talk the same way we talked on this trip, and
not the way they did in San Francisco.
There is the other angle.
MR. PEABODY: That is right.
H.M.JR: Then, as I see it, what we are talking about
now is that in this, from the county up or the State down,
there would be an organization built to sell Treasury
securities three hundred and sixty-five days in the year.
And I don't know whether they would have to have a
special campaign committee or not, or whether they wouldn't
be in such shape that they are going along at thirty miles
an hour one month and the next month they step on the gas,
and the same group goes up to sixty miles an hour. I
don't know whether you have to have a special group--
MR. BELL: You would have to be in a position to expand
very suddenly to meet that drive. They could do that.
MR. ODEGARD: If you had, Mr. Secretary, a- setup such as
was developing after the Kansas City meeting we had, where
the State administrators went back and on a community basis
established F and G Committees, or what some of them called
Investment Committees - Howard Mills called his an investment
committee out in Southern California - made up of people who
were experienced in the sale of securities to large investors.
Regraded Unclassified
36
- 24 -
Now, that committee might not have a tremendous amount
of work to do during the three hundred and sixty-five days
of the year and could serve as a planning committee in
addition to its other activities for these special drives.
You would have a group then that would have time to
devote attention to the need for expansion and the way in
which it is to be done.
MR. GASTON: We want to avoid divisions, Peter, and if
you set up 8. - there is 8. danger there of accentuating a
division, but making this particular group your investment-
banker group, as the special campaign committee, you then
accentuate the cleavage.
I would rather they would be permanent working members
of the committee. Then you have a special subcommittee
that will represent all groups for a drive. You would have
a labor union man, you would have a women's representative -
the farmer - you wouldn't leave those drives in the hands
of what you might recognize as the Victory Fund group.
Otherwise, you are in danger of promoting division -
a continuing division.
MR. ODEGARD: I was merely speaking of what actually
happened in Southern California.
MISS ELLIOTT: ^ren't most of the States organized
along, now, on that functional line? Just follow the same
in organizing the State and local community. Follow the
functional lines that are already being used in most of the
States. You have your Agricultural Committee, your Labor
Committee, your Women's Division - you have your--
MR. GRAVES: Payroll savings - it is very--
MISS ELLIOTT: It is a very simple functional organiza-
tion, and if anything new comes into the picture that you
need an additional committee, simply add it. You don't
have to change your simple organization to achieve complete
representation.
Regraded Unclassified
37
- 25 -
H.M.JR: What do you - how would you handle selling,
say, corporations?
MISS ELLIOTT: On the local level, organize a committee
under the county chairman or city chairman to handle that.
H.M.JR: Would that be your special campaign committee?
MISS ELLIOTT: No, I wouldn't have a special campaign
committee. I think it is much better to let that go along
as a regular function - continuous activity, anyway - and
then when you come into these special drives- why wait to
solicit them, anyhow, until you have a special drive on?
Let it be a part of your continuous activity and then when
you come to the next big drive, just as Mr. Bell said,
expand this functional organization to cover the whole
program. Very easy to do.
MR. GASTON: This group, in other words, your Cadillac
salesmen - all part of the continuing organization.
MR. BELL: Haven't we got to forget groups such as
bankers investment groups and why haven't we got to get
the best citizen in the community to help on this job,
regardless of why or where he hangs his hat?
It seems to me you have got just as good bankers and
investment people as you have labor people and others, but
get them all into this committee. I think we have got to
forget the groups.
MISS ELLIOTT: I think that was the principle that
Mr. Gaston was establishing here, but then, you do have to have
the functional groups.
MR. ODEGARD: Dan, that is exactly what we have tried
to do.
MR. BELL: That is what I thought you tried to do, and
that is what we ought to continue to do, and then expand it
when the work increases during the drive periods.
38
- 26 -
MR. GAMBLE: I agree with what you have said, but
psychologically, I think it is a mistake not to have a group
of people that are planning these two or three operations &
year.
Now, you have a going concern, and it is pretty hard to
pick them if you have them all working. If you want to get
people to really rise up and do the kind of job we are
asking them to do three or four times a year, that should be
their job at the time they step into the limelight, just 8.8
the pay-roll fellows stepping into the limelight when they
have their drive. Human beings are all the same and they
like to be spot-lighted a little when they are heading up
an important operation.
I think you could do it just as Herbert has said. Have
this group and they could carry on some continuing activity;
but it would be largely the responsibility of this special
campaigns committee to coordinate all activities of the
other functional groups. In other words, they would be--
H.M.JR: I don't see that. Then you are going to mess
up your whole thing again.
MR. BELL: I think it is up to the local chairman on
that community level to be preparing for these periodic
drives, and I think he has got to have people on his
committee to work with him to prepare for that.
These are all volunteers and they are not going to
work continually. But for a period of three weeks, they
can be preparing, or at least they can be preparing for this
three-weeks drive, and that is under that local chairman.
I don't see that he has to have a lot of committees.
It confuses the whole situation to have a committee for each
little segment of this financing.
MR. ODEGARD: I don't think Ted's notion is in conflict
with that.
39
- 27 -
MR. GAMBLE: Not at all. I only say that there is a
responsibility attached to these drives that is pretty
important and you should have a group whose sole responsi-
bility it is under your county chairman; just as the
responsibility for pay-roll savings operations is in the
hands of pay-roll savings chairmen, so would the special
operations be in the hands of--
H.M.JR: That isn't what Miss Elliott has been saying.
MR. GRAVES: I think it is.
MR. GAMBLE: She thought they ought to be on a continuous
working basis, and I think they ought to be on a continuous
working basis, planning from one drive to another.
MR. GRAVES: In these drives you have got, suddenly, to
expand your organization by the recruitment and training of
a very large additional number of people. Well, now, some
group ought to have the responsibility for that, pretty
nearly to the exclusion of everything else.
MR. GAMBLE: That is right.
MR. GRAVES: If you are going to have 8. successful
drive to reach all the people, somebody has got to focus
on that - has got to lay plans for that, and has got to
take care of recruiting the volunteers to engage in that
particular activity, and to train them and organize them.
MR. BELL: That has first got to center in the chairman
of that local organization.
MR. GRAVES: That is right. The thing would be under
the supervision of the chairman.
MISS ELLIOTT: If you keep it tied right into the major
committee, both State and local, and make them a working
part, but not as a separate drive unit over here (indicating).
Regraded Unclassified
40
- 28 -
MR. GRAVES: Às & part of it as the women's organiza-
tion is, or as the farm organization is, or as the pay-roll
savings organization is?
MISS ELLIOTT: The special activity assigned to them,
but citing definitely--
MR. GRAVES: Greater separation there than you have
with respect to women's activities.
MR. GASTON: My point is the special campaign committee
should be representative of all classes of solicitation.
MR. GRAVES: That is right.
MR. GASTON: Not pick out the Victory Fund group and
make that a special committee.
MR. GAMBLE: That is the way it has to be.
MISS ELLIOTT: Mr. Gamble, do you mean the heads of
these functional groups in the local committee would be
automatically, or ex officio the people who would work
with this head of this drive?
MR. GAMBLE: That is right. The only difference--
MISS ELLIOTT: That would tie them in with the Secre-
tary.
MR. GAMBLE: But you should have one person who is
solely responsible for these three or four operations and
leans on all these other folks.
MISS ELLIOTT: But not a separate division - that is
what I object to.
MR. GAMBLE: No, it wouldn't be a separate division.
MR. ROBBINS: It seems to me there are probably three
things that fall into a special classification. When we
41
- 29 -
get down to the community level and we figure that the
probabilities are we will divide our bank financing from
our other solicitation, there may be certain duties evolve
on whatever our organization may be at the community level
to do that, and maybe, I don't know, but whatever they are,
there should be provision at the local level to have properly
qualified people to perform whatever service necessary in
a separate financial drive that might be handled differently
in the future.
Then I certainly agree with what Ted says about the
necessity - and Peter, I think, said this, too - of planning.
I think the drive planning is a separate function. We
are probably going to continue to have drives, and therefore
we must have somebody, whether it is a person, a committee,
or what, that really plans for drives. And that again must
repeat itself at the community level.
Then there may be a third factor here that is important
and I am sure it has been mentioned, but perhaps not crystal-
lized quite as clearly as it seems to me it warrants, and
that is that there is going to be a continuous selling
activity to certain types of business and organizations
that will be just as continuous as pay-roll selling will be.
And that function, like the women's activity, like the pay-
roll savings activity must be provided for at the local level.
So if we agree, as I think we all do, that this local
level should be a single organization expanded and developed
pretty much to reflect the local flavor of doing the complete
job to embrace all three of these things, I think we can do
it, and I don't think there is anything that will be hard
or discordant in such an organization concept, or difficult
of its achievement, provided we get the right people to
head up the over-all local functions.
H.M. JR: I have got to stop now. Would you think it
would be at all helpful if they continued a little in your
office on this or not?
MR. BEL If they want to, I don't care, but I don't--
Regraded Unclassified
42
- 30 -
MR. ROBBINS: Mr. Grant is probably in my office now.
Are you going to see him today?
H.M.JR: Yes, I have an appointment with him. He has
asked to see me. He is coming in at three.
MR. BELL: Would anybody like to continue it in my
office?
H.M.JR: I will give this same group here three-thirty.
Regraded Unclassified
43
May 4, 1943
10:39 A. M.
John
McCormack:
Hello.
Operator:
Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello.
McC:
Yes, Henry.
HMJr:
Hello, John?
McC:
Yeah.
HMJr:
How do things look today?
McC:
Why - we're doing the best We can. I'm here
with Sam and Jere Cooper now.
HMJr:
Uh huh.
McC:
We're - we're throwing everything into it we
can there
HMJr:
I see.
McC:
And....
HMJr:
Well, I talked with Sam. He seems to feel
quite hopeful.
McC:
Well, I - - I wouldn't challenge his - his
state of mind, but I'm one - I - all I say
18, we're throwing everything in we can.
HMJr:
Well, at least I hear there's brotherly love
up there amongst the Democrats.
McC:
Why - ab - absolutely and uncompletely -
absolutely and unconditionally.
HMJr:
Yeah.
McC:
(Laughs).
HMJr:
Well, that's fine. Now, is there anything I
can do at this end, John?
McC:
Well, wait a minute. (talks aside).
44
- 2 -
McC:
No, we don't know of anything, Henry. That's
one of these affairs up here, you know, that-
that if anything can be done it's - we can
level on them without bothering you. But, if
there's anything we'll- we'll call you.
HMJr:
That's the idea.
McC:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
Thank you.
McC:
Goodbye.
45
May 4, 1943
11:45 a.m.
DEFERMENTS
Present: Mr. Gaston
Mr. Thompson
H.M.JR: Now, where are we?
MR. THOMPSON: There is the list made up on the
submission of three names from the various offices.
(List handed to the Secretary, copy attached.)
H.M.JR: What is 3-A-4?
MR. THOMPSON: Some of the boards put 1, 2, 3, and
4 following various categories of 3-A.
H.M.JR: The thing that I want clear, which isn't
quite clear in my mind, is the status now about this
thing as between ourselves and the Manpower? What is
the latest thing on that? What are the rules about
deferments?
MR. THOMPSON: The President's Executive order
requires us to prepare key lists of positions and submit
them to the War Manpower Commission for approval. After
approval a deferment may be requested for any one of those
key positions.
H.M.JR: Does that go through McReynolds now?
MR. THOMPSON: No, he isn't in it any more. It
goes through Mr. McNutt's office. Mr. Barnett is chairman
of the Review Committee, and they review all the deferment
requests.
MR. GASTON: You are not bound to ask deferment for
anybody on that key list, but we have taken it as a list
of positions which must be protected, which are essential
positions.
Regraded Unclassified
46
- 2 -
H.M.JR: Is the first step to go through the McNutt
committee?
MR. THOMPSON: Yes, the key list must go through
there; but pending the establishment of the key list
deferment may be requested and reported to the committee.
But after the list is prepared then we go ahead.
H.M.JR: Would this be the list that would go?
MR. THOMPSON: No, sir. The list of key positions
is much longer than this.
H.M.JR: We have never sent that?
MR. THOMPSON: No. That is being prepared and is
just about completed now. We went over it yesterday.
MR. GASTON: We had one list under prior orders.
This is the new list which we went over yesterday. We
are including a great many positions where we probably
would not require deferment, but as a protective measure
we did it - for instance, if we got in a jam and couldn't
replace a man.
H.M.JR: Does that freeze the man here?
MR. THOMPSON: No.
H.M.JR: When will that list go over?
MR. THOMPSON: It is about ready. We went over it
yesterday. There are some revisions to be made. I guess
we will get it out today or tomorrow.
H.M.JR: Do I see that?
MR. THOMPSON: If you would like to. I don't think
it is necessary.
H.M.JR: I would like to.
47
- 3 -
MR. GASTON: It isn't a. request for deferment at
all.
H.M.JR: That goes to the Manpower?
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: I suppose that is for the whole country?
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: And this (indicating list) is just for
Washington.
What about this list here?
MR. THOMPSON: This is just the list that you wanted
of persons who might be considered for deferment who
occupy important, key positions.
MR. GASTON: I don't think there is anything to be
done here except to keep this list as a memorandum, and
then if they should be called up - any of these men -
we could focus on the question of whether we want to ask
their deferment.
MR. THOMPSON: Unless the Secretary now wanted to
make a decision so that these men could be told.
H.M.JR: What about this thing - would you rather
do it that way than try to get them in the Army?
MR. THOMPSON: I think so because if they went in
the Army as privates they couldn't come back unless you
did the same way as with the White House agents. I don't
think - - I talked to some of the men, and I don't think
they would like to do that.
H.M.JR: Take the one in the General Counsel's
office - Thomas M. Davis. Is he fairly important?
48
- 4 -
MR. THOMPSON: That is one case. He has been
called for induction May 13. There is some doubt
whether he will get by the physical examination. He
is rather frail.
H.M.JR: Is he an important fellow?
MR. THOMPSON: He is a very important fellow, and
Mack and O'Connell tell me it would be a serious loss
if we didn't defer him.
H.M.JR: Why not ask for deferment?
MR. THOMPSON: I think we should because he is on
the Lend-Lease work down there.
H.M.JR: Let's say O.K. on him.
Are you all right, Herbert?
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: Then we go to the next one.
MR. THOMPSON: Mr. Flatley. Cliff told me he would
like to make an urgent appeal to you to get a deferment
for Flatley. He is the Chief of Contract and Purchase
Branch, and he is doing all of the Lend-Lease purchasing.
I am told by people working under him that he goes a
pace, and if he went they wouldn't put him in combat
service.
H.M.JR: All right.
What about Stephens?
Regraded Unclassified
49
- 5 -
MR. THOMPSON: It is rather unusual that they put
him in 1-A because he is somewhat crippled. He is lame
and certainly wouldn't be available for combat service.
H.M.JR: Now, those are the only three which are in
1-A?
MR. THOMPSON: That is right.
H.M.JR: Why don't we ask for deferment on those
three?
MR. GASTON: I think that would be proper.
MR. THOMPSON: That would be my recommendation.
H.M.JR: They are Thomas M. Davis, John W. Flatley,
and Thomas C. Stephens, and they are all--
MR. THOMPSON: It so happens they are all in
Procurement. That will take care of the whole situation
for the present.
MR. GASTON: They are 35, 36, and 34, all married.
H.M.JR: That gets around, doesn't it - doing this?
MR. THOMPSON: Yes.
H.M.JR: I don't have to do anything on the others?
MR. THOMPSON: No, unless you wanted to go so far this
time as to give a flat assurance they would be given
deferments. I doubt if you want to do that. I mean if
they should get in 1-A.
H.M.JR: It is awful hard to do that, isn't it,
Herbert?
MR. GASTON: That is right.
50
- 6 -
MR. THOMPSON: Because most of these men in 3-A or
3-B - it will be a long time before they will be reached.
H.M.JR: Why don't you and Gaston get these people
together who are concerned and tell them that I have done
this, and that this is the way I am leaning, 80 that they
know. How would that be?
MR. THOMPSON: I think that would be fine.
H.M.JR: Why don't you send for these men and tell
them I have taken these three people and asked for defer-
ments, and until further notice that is the policy I will
follow. There is no use bothering with people in 3-A.
MR. GASTON: There is one case here, a man in 2-A,
this Wahrhaftig. His board is out in California. He has
been put in 2-A because of his work in the Treasury. They
will have to cancel that occupational deferment now be-
cause of the Lodge bill. He has dependents. He is single,
thirty-four.
Roy Blough thinks it is very important - he spoke to
me about it yesterday - that they keep him here until
something happens with respect to the sales tax. He is
the sales tax expert.
H.M.JR: That is Office of Tax Counsel?
MR. GASTON: Yes. It is in Surrey's office.
H.M.JR: All right, Felis Wahrhaftig O.K.
MR. THOMPSON: There is this difference in his case.
If he is deferred, when the deferment time is up he will
be through, he will be out of the Department. There
wouldn't be any question of renewing the deferment
request.
H.M.JR: O.K.
Any other, Herbert?
Regraded Unclassified
51
- 7 -
MR. GASTON: No, there is no other.
H.M.JR: I think you ought to get these people
together and tell them what we have done. Will you
do that?
MR. THOMPSON: Yes.
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: Everything else all right?
MR. THOMPSON: That is fine.
52
FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL
Name
Title
Age
Marital
Present
Status
Draft Status
Pehle, John W.
Assistant to the Secy.
34
Married
3-A
& Director of Foreign
1 Child
Funds Control
Schmidt, Orvis A.
Assistant Director of
31
Married
3-B
Foreign Funds Control
1 Child
Stewart, Ward
Assistant Director of
30
Married
3-B
Foreign Funds Control
1 Child
GENERAL COUNSEL
Luxford, Ansel F.
Assistant General Counsel
31
Married
3-A
1 Child
Aarons, Lehman
Head Attorney
34
Married
3-A
1 Child
DuBois, Josiah E. Jr.
Head Attorney
30
Married
3-A
1 Child
Davis, Thomas M.
Assistant Chief Counsel
35
Married
,1-A-O.K.
of Procurement Division.
MINT
Howard, F. Leland
Assistant Director
35
Married
3-B
3 Children
Russell, Timothy E.,
Administrative Officer
32
Married
3-A
Jr.
1 Child
Tidball, Lewis C.
Asst. Supt. of Coining
32
Married
3-A
Dept.,Philadelphia
2 children
MONETARY RESEARCH
Taylor, William H.
Assistant Director
37
Married
3-A
1 Child
Friedman, Irving S.
Senior Economic Analyst
28
Married
3-B
1 Child
Gunter, John W.
Senior Economic Analyst
29
Married
3-A
2 children
* Have been with the Treasury Department less than 3 years
Regraded Unclassified
53
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
Name
Title
Age
Marital
Present
Status
Draft Status
Flatley, John W.
Chief of Contract and
36
Married
1-A-O.K.
Purchase Branch
Stephens, Thomas C.
Regional Procurement
34
Married
1-A -
Officer - San Francisco
1 Child
Widmann, Robert J.
Special Asst. to the
32
Married
3-A
Director, Acting in charge
1 Child
of Inspection for Lend-Lease
Inspection and Expediting
PUBLIC DEBT
Heffelfinger, Ross A.
Deputy Commissioner
35
Married
3-B
3 children
Ziegenfus, H. F.
Special Assistant to the
35
Married
3-A
Commissioner
2 children
RESEARCH AND STATISTICS
Lindow, Wesley
Principal Economic Analyst
32
Married
2-A
Tickton, Sidney G.
Principal Economic Analyst
31
Married
3-A-4
1 Child
Banyas, Lawrence
Economic Analyst
33
Married
3-B
(Head of Graphic Section)
1 Child
OFFICE OF TAX LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Surrey, Stanley
Tax Legislative Counsel
33
Married
3-A
* Wahrhaftig, Felix
Consulting Expert
34
Single
2-д-ок,
* Brodsky, Benjamin M.
Principal Attorney
32
Married
3-A
TAX RESEARCH
Farioletti, Marius
Principal Economic Analyst
35
Married
3-A
1 Child
* Have been with the Treasury Department less than 3 years
Regraded Unclassified
54
OFFICE OF THE TREASURER
Name
Title
Age
Marital
Present
Status
Draft Status
Cole, Alwyn
Examiner of Questioned
34
Married
3-A-4
Documents
1 child
Annis, Howard M.
Chief, Chicago Branch of
35
Married
3-A
the Securities Division
2 children
OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY
Frese, Walter F.
Special Asst. to the
37
Married
3-A
Fiscal Asst. Secy.
2 children
Moore, Martin L.
Special Asst. to the
32
Married
3-A
Fiscal Asst. Secy.
3 children
April 30, 1943.
5/4/43
55
55
LIST OF KEY POSITIONS SUBMITTED BY THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS OF EXECUTIVE ORDER 9309
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
Technical Assistant to the Secretary
1
CAF-15
Special Assistant to the Fiscal
Assistant Secretary
2
CAF-13
BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS
Assistant Commissioner of Accounts
1
CAF-14
Chief Accountant
1
CAF-14
Assistant Chief Accountant
1
CAF-13
Division of Disbursement
Senior Field Supervisor
1
CAF-11
Assistant Disbursing Officer in Charge
of Regional Offices
38
CAF-10 - CAF-12
COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
Assistant Chief National Bank Examiner
8
$7,500 - $9,500
District Chief National Bank Examiner
12
$9,000 - $15,000
- 2 -
56
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF CUSTOMS
Assistant to the Assistant Commissioner
1
CAF-12
Liaison Officer
4
CAF-12 and 13
Chief of Section, Tariff and Marine
5
P-6
Administration
Assistant Chief of Section, Tariff and
5
P-5
Marine Administration
Assistant Deputy Commissioner (Assistant
1
P-5
Chief of Section), Tariff and Marine
Administration
Technical Assistant, Tariff and Marine
4
P-4
Administration
Deputy Commissioner, Fiscal Administration 1
CAF-13
Chief of Division, Laboratories
1
P-7
Assistant Collector
47
CAF-9-15,inc.
Chemist
34
P-3,4 and 5
Supervising Customs Agent
13
CAF-9-14,inc.
Customs Agent in Charge
15
CAF-9-14,inc.
Admeasurer
21
CAF-7,8 and 9
Automatic Scale Expert
7
CPC-10
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
57
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING
Special Assistant to Chief Accountant
2
CAF-9
Engraver
21
$8.06-$25.00 p.o.
Superintendent of Division
16
CAF-5 - CAF-13
Assistant Superintendent of Division
16
CAF-5 - CAF-11
Plate Printer
609
Piece Rates -
($14.42 p.d.)
Physicist - Chemist
2
P-4 - P-5
Engineering Draftsman
3
SP-7 - P-3
FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL
Assistant to the Secretary
1
CAF-15
(Director, Foreign Funds Control)
Assistant Director (Enforcement)
1
CAF-14
Assistant Director (Licensing)
1
CAF-14
Assistant Director (Administrative
1
CAF-14
Services)
Assistant Director (Field Operations)
1
CAF-13
Special Assistant to the Assistant
1
CAF-13
Director
Chief Accountant
1
CAF-13
Head Commercial Specialist
1
CAF-12
- 4 -
58
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
GENERAL COUNSEL
Assistant General Counsel and Chief Counsel
1
P-8
of Foreign Funds Control
Assistant Chief Counsel, Foreign Funds Control
1
P-7
Assistant Chief Counsel, Foreign Funds Control
1
P=7
Chief Counsel, Bureau of Customs
1
P-7
Assistant Chief Counsel, Procurement Division
1
P-6
Assistant Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue
1
P-8
Division Head, Internal Revenue
1
P-7
Assistant Division Head, Internal Revenue
1
P-7
Special Assistant, Internal Revenue
2
P-6
Chief of Section, Internal Revenue
2
P-6
Special Assistant to the Chief Counsel,
2
P-6
Internal Revenue
Principal Attorney, Internal Revenue
6
P-6
9
P-6
Principal Attorney, Internal Revenue
Regraded Unclassified
- 5 -
59
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Commissioner and Miscellaneous Unit
Assistant to the Commissioner
1
CAF-15
Executive Assistant to the Commissioner
1
CAF-14
Special Assistant to the Commissioner
1
CAF-11
Income Tax Unit
Deputy Commissioner
1
CAF-15
Associate Technical Advisor
1
CAF-13
Reviewer
4
CAF-12
Records Division
Head
1
CAF-12
Clearing Division
Junior Technical Assistant
1
P&S-3
Chief, Production Statistics Subsection
1
CAF-8
Practice & Procedure Division
Chief of Section
3
CAF-13
Reviewer-Coordinator
10
CAF-13
Reviewer
16
CAF-12
Group Chief
2
CAF-12
Field Procedure Division
Administrative Assistant
2
CAF-11
- 6 -
60
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Income Tax Unit (Continued)
Audit Review Division
Head
5
CAF-13
Assistant Head
5
CAF-12
Supervising Reviewer (Corporation)
8
CAF-12
Reviewer
29
CAF-12
Engineering and Valuation Division
Chief
3
P&S-6
Valuation Engineer
24
P&S-5
Reviewer-Conferee
10
CAF-12
Field
Internal Revenue Agent in Charge
38
CAF-13 and 14
Assistant Internal Revenue Agent in Charge
43
CAF-12 and 13
Chief Conferee
66
CAF-12 and 13
Chief Reviewer
32
CAF-12 and 13
Junior and Senior Conferee
84
CAF-11 and 12
Junior and Senior Reviewer
76
CAF-11 and 12
Group Chief
62
CAF-11 and 12
Chief, Engineering Section
4
P&S-6
Engineer Revenue Agent
63
P&S 3, 4 and 5
Internal Revenue Agent
282
CAF-12
Internal Revenue Agent
546
CAF-11
Internal Revenue Agent
998
CAF-9
Internal Revenue Agent
240
P-3, 4 and 5
Regraded Unclassified
- 7 -
61
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Miscellaneous Tax Unit
Technical Advisor to Deputy Commissioner
2
CAF-13
Member, Special Research Committee
3
P&S-6
Head, Sales Tax Division
1
CAF-13
Internal Revenue Agent
3
CAF-11
Internal Revenue Agent (or General Deputy
27
CAF-9
Collector)
Technical Staff
Senior Technical Advisor
5
CAF-14
Technical Advisor
4
CAF-13
Assistant Technical Advisor
8
CAF-12
Head, Major and Minor Divisions
10
CAF-14 and 15
Assistant Head, Major and Minor Divisions
11
CAF-13 and 14
Technical Advisor in Charge
19
CAF-13
Technical Advisor
66
CAF-13
Assistant Technical Advisor
88
CAF-12
Head Accountant and Auditor
18
CAF-12
Assistant Chief Accountant and Auditor
13
CAF-11
Senior Accountant and Auditor
18
CAR-10
Intelligence Unit
Special Agent in Charge
8
CAF-13
Assistant Special Agent in Charge
10
CAF-12
Special Agent
33
CAF-12
Special Agent
84
CAF-11
Special Agent
93
CAF-9
Regraded Unclassified
- 8 -
62
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Accounts and Collections Unit
Head, Rules and Regulations Division
1
CAF-12
Head, Control Division
1
CAF-10
Technical Assistant
1
CAF-12
Supervisor of Accounts and Collections
11
CAF-13
in Charge
Supervisor of Accounts and Collections
12
CAF-12
Collector of Internal Revenue
64
CAF-13 and 14
Assistant to Collector of Internal Revenue 64
CAF-12 and 13
Chief Office Deputy
27
CAF-12
Chief Field Deputy
64
CAF-11 and 12
Chief, Income Tax Division
64
CAF-10 and 11
Chief, Employment Tax Division
64
CAF-9 and 10
Chief, Miscellaneous Tax Division
64
CAF-9 and 10
Cashier
64
CAF-10 and 11
Comptroller
64
CAF-9 and 10
Alcohol Tax Unit
Assistant Deputy Commissioner
1
CAF-13
(Basic Permit Trade Practice)
Assistant Deputy Commissioner (Enforcement) 1
CAF-14
Chemist
32
P-2, P-3 and P-4
District Supervisor
15
CAF-13 and 14
Assistant Supervisor (Permissive)
11
CAF-12 and 13
Assistant Supervisor (Enforcement)
14
CAF-11, 12 and 13
Chief Inspector
13
CAF-9, 10 and 11
Salary Stabilization Unit
Chief Liaison Officer
1
CAF-12
Regraded Unclassified
- 9 -
63
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
MINT
Assistant Director of the Mint
1
CAF-14
Junior Administrative Officer
1
CAF-10
Assistant Superintendent of Melting
1
P-3
and Refining
Assayer
2
P-5
Superintendent of Coining
1
CAF-12
Bookkeeper
1
CAF-8
Foreman, Electrolytic Refinery
1
$10.40 per diem
Die, Gage and Toolmaker
4
$9.20-$10.16 per diem
Die Setter
27
$7.44-$8.96 per diem
Machinist
36
$7.76-$9.68 per diem
Principal Assayer's Assistant
17
SP-7
Electrician
23
$8.56-$9.52 per diem
Junior Engraver
1
SP-7
Foreman of Ingot Melting Room
1
$10.24-$11.20 per diem
Assistant Superintendent
1
CAF-8
of Machinery
Foreman of Make-up Room
1
$10.24 per diem
Second Assistant Superintendent of the
1
CAF-8
Coining Department
Foreman of the Bar Department
1
$10.88 per diem
Foreman of Refinery Cell Room
1
$11.36 per diem
Foreman of Make-up Room
1
$10.88 per diem
Regraded Unclassified
- 10 -
64
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
MINT (Continued)
Scale Bldr. & Adjuster
1
$8.08 per diem
Assistant Assayer
1
P-3
Foreman of Automatic Scales
1
$9.60 per diem
Chief Clerk
1
CAF-12
Sheet Metal Worker
1
$8.56 per diem
Skilled Workman
1
$7.60 per diem
MONETARY RESEARCH
Assistant Director
2
P-7
Senior Economist
3
P-5
Regraded Unclassifie
- 11 -
65
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
Director of Procurement
1
CAF-15
Deputy Director of Procurement
1
CAF-15
Chief, Contract and Purchase Branch
1
CAF-13
Purchasing Officer
7
CAF-11
Purchasing Officer
2
P-4
Consultant
1
CAF-15
Consultant
4
CAF-14
Industrial Commodity Specialist
6
CAF-13
Associate Industrial Commodity Specialist
7
CAF-12
Chief, Lend-Lease Inspection and
Expediting Division
1
P=6
Assistant Chief, Lend-Lease Inspection
and Expediting Division
1
P-5
Inspector-in-Charge
10
CAF-11 and 12
Regional Procurement Officers (Field)
11
CAF-13 and 14
Regional Property Officers (Field)
11
CAF-12 and 13
Assistant Chief, Finance Division
1
CAF-11
Senior Automobile Mechanic
8
CPC-7
Typewriter Repairman
8
CPC-6
Regraded Unclassifie
- 12 -
66
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT
Deputy Commissioner of the Public Debt
1
CAF-12
Management Officer
1
CAF-12
Special Assistant to the Commissioner
1
CAF-11
Assistant Chief, Division of Loans
and Currency
1
CAF-12
Chief Accountant and Auditor
1
CAF-11
Deputy Commissioner in Charge
(Chicago Office)
1
CAF-14
Administrative Officer (Chicago Office)
1
CAF-12
Assistant Personnel Officer (Chicago
Office)
1
CAF-10
Assistant to the Register of the
Treasury (Chicago Office)
1
CAF-12
Manager, Claims and Ruling Section,
Division of Loans and Currency
(Chicago Office)
1
CAF-12
Head, E Bond Unit, Machine Accounts and
Statistical Section, Division of Loans
and Currency (Chicago Office)
1
CAF-9
Assistant Head, E Bond Unit, Machine
Accounts and Statistical Section,
Division of Loans and Currency
(Chicago Office)
1
CAF-7
Head, F and G Bond and Statistical Unit,
Machine Accounts and Statistical Section,
Division of Loans and Currency
(Chicago Office)
1
CAF-9
Regraded Unclassified
- 13 -
67
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS
Assistant Director (Government Actuary)
1
P-7
Principal Economic Analyst
2
P-6
.Senior Economist
1
P-5
Senior Economic Analyst
1
P-5
Economic Analyst (Head of Graphic
Section)
1
P-4
SECRET SERVICE
Executive Aide to the Chief
1
CAF-12
Superintendent, Uniformed Force
1
CAF-10
Supervising Agent
4
CAF-12 and 13
Agent-in-Charge
9
CAF-8 to 12, inc.
Agent (Presidential Protective
Assignments)
21
CAF-8 to 11, ino.
Agent, Polygraph Operator
2
CAF-9 and 10
Agent, Special Investigator
38
CAF-7 to 11, ino.
Agent, Analyst
1
CAF-6
Regraded Unclassified
- 14
68
Number of
Title of Position
Positions
Grade
OFFICE OF TAX LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tax Legislative Counsel
1
P-8
Consulting Expert
1
P-8
Principal Attorney
1
P-6
TAX RESEARCH
Director of Tax Research
1
P-8
Assistant Director
1
P-7
Assistant Director
1
P-7
Principal Economic Analyst
5
P=6
Senior Economic Analyst
3
P-5
OFFICE OF THE TREASURER
Examiner of Questioned Documents
1
CAF-11
Chief, Chicago Branch of Securities
Division
1
CAF-10
WAR SAVINGS STAFF
State Administrator
19
CAF-12 to 15
Senior Deputy Administrator
34
CAF-11 to 14
69
May 4, 1943
2:19 P. M.
HMJr:
Hello.
Harry
White:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
Harry, I was just reading your memorandum of May
3rd as to the status of these various countries
that you've heard from in regard to stabilization.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
And I notice that no letter went to Russia.
W:
Un - the arrangement had been
HMJr:
Yeah, I know. I read it.
W:
that
....
HMJr:
Well, I think we should send a letter to Russia.
And what I would do 1s - I - - you prepare a letter
and we'll send one just where we have every other,
and we'll Just tell Berle we've done it, that's all.
W:
Uh - well, wouldn't it be a little peculiar at this
stage of the game to do that? We d just - I'd have
to - I suppose you'd have to do it with China and
U. K. too. I think We ought to do something, be-
cause I don't think that situation has been proper-
ly handled.
HMJr:
Well, you make a better suggestion.
W:
All right. I'll think about it and talk - there
are a couple of other things that - we'd like to
see you today or tomorrow.
HMJr:
Yeah. Well, you make a better suggestion, but I -
I - don't see how you can leave that lie around
like that.
W:
Well, it isn't satisfactory.
HMJr:
No.
W:
All right, sir. I'll - I'll see if we can get
something better.
Regraded Unclassifi
The 5/4/43
4:30
message from Paul
The House just voted
down the Carlson Rume
Bill by 206-202
now going to vote with on
re commiting
out the Robertson Forand
instructions to bring
Bill
Paul will keep you
posted In gallery
Cant be reached
From: Mr. Fitsgerald
71
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 4, 1943.
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Harold Graves
g
I find that Mr. Pulliam is en route from Indianapolis,
Ind., to Chattanooga, Tenn., and that I will not be able to
reach him before late this evening.
Since it seems unlikely that he would be able to
reach here tomorrow, would you like me to ask him to come
in on Thursday?
Yes
yes. pays Hmg
TREASURY
80 V Wd to MAY EVEL
Regraded Unclassifie
72
May 4, 1943
Dear Allan:
I want to thank you for your very
nice telegram of May 3rd.
May I take this opportunity not
only to thank you personally but all of
your associates for the amazingly good
job which you did during the Second War
Loan Drive.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. Allan Sproul,
Chairman, War Finance Committee,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
New York, N. Y.
File in Diary
Regraded Unclassifie
470
73
W66WASH B283 NY 3-2P
SECRETARY MORGENTHAU
1943 MAY 3 PM 2 13
IN BEHALF OF THE WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE OF THE 2ND FEDERAL
RESERVE DISTRICT AND THE THOUSANDS OF WORKERS OF THE WAR SAVINGS STAFF
AND VICTORY FUND COMMITTEE I SEND YOU THE CONGRATULATIONS WHICH ARE YOUR
DUE ON THE TREMENDOUS PUBLIC RESPONSE TO THE SECOND WAR LOAN.
ITS SUCCESS OVERSHADOWING THAT OF THE FIRST WAR LOAN
IN DECEMBER AUGURS WELL FOR FUTURE DRIVES
WHICH WE ARE PLEDGED TO CARRY THROUGH UNTIL THIS WAR IS WON
ALLAN SPROUL
CHAIRMAN, WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE.
Regraded Unclassified
74
May 4, 1943
My dear Cowles:
The telegram you sent me to Cedar
Rapids was very much appreciated by me.
I want to take this opportunity
to thank you for the splendid assistance
that you gave us during our Second War
Loan. I would like you to feel that
you had a real part in the success that
we have attained.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. Gardner Cowles, Jr.,
Director, Domestic Operations Branch,
Office of War Information,
Washington, D. C.
(Telegram not brought
base from Cedar Rapids)
Copies in Diary
75
May 4, 1943
Dear Mr. Davis:
First, may I thank you for your
very nice letter of April 26th; second,
I would like to take this opportunity to
thank you and the Office of War Informa-
tion for the splendid assistance you have
given us in connection with the Second War
Loan.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Mergenthau, Jr.
Mr. Elmer Davis,
Director, Office of War Information,
Washington, D. C.
File in Diary
Regraded Unclassifie
76%
OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
April 26, 1943
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
May I offer you the compliments of a
professional on the way you handled the "We the
People" program last night? It was a most admirable
job.
Incidentally, it is obvious that the
script came to the attention of the Army only
because there were Army officers on the program.
Cordially,
ElemeDains
Elmer Davis
Director
FORVICTORY
BUY
UNITED
STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
Regraded Unclassifie
77
May 4, 1943
My dear Mr. Rogers:
Thanks for your letter of April 28th.
I would like to take this opportunity
to thank you for the excellent work you
have done in assisting the Treasury with
the Second War Loan.
Since you have been given the job
of liaison between the Office of War In-
formation and the Treasury, our relations
have been only of the best.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. James G. Rogers, Jr.,
Deputy Director, Domestic Branch,
Office of War Information,
Washington, D. C.
File in Diary
Regraded Unclassifie
78
OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION
WASHINGTON
April 28, 1943
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
I thought you might be interested to know that I have
heard nothing but extremely favorable comment here on
your "We The People" broadcast last Sunday night.
Mike Cowles came in to tell me Monday he thought it was
excellent. I, also, felt it was interesting, sincere and
convincing. It seemed to me that it did & lot for the
sale of War Bonds and also for better understanding of
what this war is all about.
Sincerely yours,
James gRoga I
James G. Rogere, Jr.
Deputy Director
Domestic Branch
BUR
FORVICTORY
BUY
UNITED
STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
79
May 4, 1943
My dear Mr. Peyton:
Thank you very much for your
letter of May 1.
I want to take this opportunity
to thank you and your associates for
the excellent job that you did during
the Second War Loan.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. J. N. Peyton, President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota.
File in Diary
80
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF MINNEAPOLIS
OFFICE OF
THE PRESIDENT
May 1, 1943
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
The success of the Second War Loan Drive
in the Ninth Federal Reserve District mist be predicated
on your splendid support. In commemoration of your
contribution, I am forwarding to you under separate cover
a War Service Certificate. Should there be drives of a
similar character in future, when the Treasury gives us
equal cooperation, we will forward additional ribbons in
commemoration of those events, which may be placed beside
the red ribbon marked "Second War Loan, April 1943", now
appearing upon the certificate.
Seriously, Mr. Secretary, the drive in the
Ninth Federal Reserve District has been a signal success.
Regards,
PRESIDENT
JNP:B
FORVICTORY
BUY
UNITED
STATES
WAS
SAVINGS
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
Regraded Unclassified
81
May 4, 1943
Dear Mr. Fulton:
The Second War Loan drive, which has just come
to an end, has exceeded a goal far beyond that which
the Treasury Department's original estimates had cet
for it.
First credit, of course, must go to the innumerable
patriotic citizens and institutions whose subscriptions
in Government securities achieved this excellent con-
clusion of the campaign. However, I an well aware of
the essential part played by advertising media in
general, and I want particularly to express appreciation
for the important rule taken by the great outdoor
advertising industry which you ao ably represent.
For this, my sincere thanks.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan. Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. Kerwin N. Fulton,
Director of for Activition,
Outdoor Advertising Association
of America,
60 East 42nd Street,
New York, IN York.
SPeabody:amo
Copiesin Diary
Initialed copy to
Peabody
Regraded Unclassifie
82
May 4, 1943
Dear Mr. Tripp:
Thanks for your letter of April 27, 1943. At the
official end of the drive, as you know, the figures were even
more gratifying and it now seems certain that we will have a
total of about $18,000,000,000.
I have just returned from & trip across the country.
Everywhere I went my original impression of the complete
cooperation of newspapers has been confirmed. I have had pre-
liminary returns of the count of sponsored advertisements in
this campaign and the total exceeds our expectations by a wide
margin. I an fully aware of the part played by newspapers in
getting this sponsorship. Editorial occperation in the form
of news coverage and features has also been tremendous.
I will await with interest the report you are to
submit but even before that is rendered, I want to thank you,
and through you, the newspaper industry, for the mest outstand-
ing support over tendered to any promotional effort.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
Mr. Frank B. Tripp,
Chairman, Allied Newspaper Council,
Walderf Actoria Motel,
New York, New York.
File in Diary
SPeabody:amo
Initialed copy to Peabody
83
May 1, 1943
opies of this went to the following today:
Mr. Bell
Mr. Robbins
Mr. Graves
Mr. Gamble
Mr. Buffington
Mr. Peabody
Mr. Gardner Cowles
84
The
April 27, 1943
FRANK E. TRIPF
DENERAL MANAGER
Send Reply to Elmira, N.Y.
Hon. Henry Morgentheau,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
The Second War Loan now being almost in the bag and the work of the Allied
Newspaper Council with which I was entrusted having reached & point
from which it can be reasonably observed, I take pleasure in render-
ing a preliminary report to you, the man responsible for its formation.
It is not yet time for figures, but I can tell you that you started
something which unquestionably will prove to be the most stupendous
and effective newspaper publicity and advertising effort in the his-
tory of the press. Cooperation has been almost one hundred per cent.
It surpassed my fondest expectations and it has been a willing and en-
thusiastic cooperation which has extended from the press wire services
at the top to the smallest country weekly at the bottom.
Your own attitude and cooperation throughout this effort have been
conspicuously responsible for much of the fine result and I want to
thank you wholeheartedly for the wholesome manner in which you have
responded at every point when B. word from you could help Don Bridge
and me so much. You have come across with an old fashioned frank-
ness and haven't pulled your punches. Newspaper men like this, They
like its ring of sincerity and they respond to it. A great big measure
of the success of the Allied Newspaper Council is attributable to your
attitude and I thank you.
With kindest regards
Trank F. E. Tripp
Yours sincerely Trink
P. S. At the conclusion we are going to have some astounding figures
for you to review.
Hertford Times
Rochester Times-Union
Rochester Democrat & Chronicle
Utics Observer-Dispatch
Utica Press
Albans Knickerhocker-Newe
Elmira Star-Gazette & Advertiser
Elmira Telegram
Olean Times-Herald
Plainfield Courler-News
Ithaca Journal
The Saratogism
Danville Commercial-News
Ogdensburg Inurnal
Newburgh-Beacon News
Malone Telegram
Massena Observer
Regraded Unclassified
85
for Secty
april 22 '43
Statement of the functions of the Allied Newspaper Council was made today
by Frank Tripp, Chairman, following a meeting of the Council Committee held
this week. Mr. Tripp saids
"The Allied Newspaper Council grew out of a meeting of editors
and publishers called together by Secretary of the Treasury
Morgenthau. Its immediate function was conceived to be the
Second War Loan. It expected from the start to remain in ex-
istence so long as it could be of service to the Treasury De-
partment, whose task in financing the war is continuous.
"The over all function of the Council is to help interpret the
publicity and advertising needs of government to newspapers,
to simplify, if possible, the contacts between government and
the far flung press of the country and to maintain those con-
taots according to newspaper practice. The Council does not
originate programs, promotions, advertising or policy. The
Council has not been directly requested, as yet, to give any
service to other than the Treasury Department."
Regraded Unclassified
86
May 4, 1943
Dear Mr. Drake:
I have not had an opportunity before now to
acknowledge personally your letter of April 26, 1943,
and to express my sincere appreciation of the
action taken by your company in turning over to us
"WE THE PHOPLE" on Sunday, April 25.
Appearing on this program was an interesting and
gratifying experience to no, and I feel that the
broadcast made an important contribution to the success
of the Second Mar Loan drive. I hope your organisation
feels that it was beneficial to the Gulf Companies.
I would like to tell you also of the splendid
cooperation of Mr. Huber and of the staff which
produced the show. I think they did an outstanding
piece of work and throughout the whole operation they
were most helpful and considerate.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. J. 7. Drake, President,
Gulf 011 Cerporation,
Gulf Building,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
File in Diary
Initialed copy
to Peabody
SPeabody:amo
Regraded Unclassified
87
GULF OIL CORPORATION
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
GULF BUILDING
PITTSBURGH, PA.
April 26, 1943
My dear Mr. Morgenthau:
I wish to tell you what a great pleasure it was for
me to listen to you last evening on our program "WE THE PEOPLE".
If all who heard it were as much thrilled as were the people
with whom I have contacted since the broadcast, I am sure that
the War Bond Campaign will be greatly benefited.
The success of this broadcast was, of course, due in
large part to the fact that you actéd as Master of Ceremonies,
and I wish you to know what a pleasure it is to me as President
of the Gulf Companies to feel that we could be of assistance in
such a worthy cause.
As you doubtless know, we are making it a policy to
have each broadcast given almost completely to furthering the
war effort in some way and, in that connection, I wish you to
feel that you, as Secretary of the Treasury, can count upon
"WE THE PEOPLE" program for support in future War Bond Campaigns.
Sincerely yours,
DRAKE
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington
D. C.
Regraded Unclassified
88
May 4, 1943
Dear Fred:
I have read your letter of May 3rd,
and I assure you that I have not changed
my mind since our conversation on the
plane.
You did a great job on the Carnegie
Hall speech, and in suggesting and help-
ing me carry through the Cedar Rapids
program, and the whole Western trip.
I should like very much to have
your full-time services for an indefinite
period, if that can be arranged. The sug-
gestion made by Mr. Rubicam seems to me a
very generous one, and it is more than
satisfactory to me. Will you please ex-
press my gratitude to him?
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
File in Diary
Mr. Fred Smith,
AIR MAIL
Young & Rubicam, Inc.,
SPECIAL DEI IVERY
285 Madison Avenue,
New York, New York.
by stungis 5:06
to B.F. Sta.
89
Free Smith
young Y Rutican new yut
Dear Fred:
I have read your letter of may n
and I assue you That I have net
Changed my mind since cree conservation
on the plaine
you did a seat jif m the Camegie
Hall speech and in supporting and
helping me cam, Through
the Cedar Rahids hurgram and
the While western this
I shmeld like very much &
have you pull time services for
an indefinite beingd il that can
he ananged. The Reggestions
in Mr. Rubican seems to me a
more Than satisfacting to the
your will you expenses my gratitude to him
very genernes please me and 2 who
Can m conseder t attled? 2
The as 2 am lorking frund W
pooing you early Sincerely, tomm.
Regraded Unclassified
YOUNG b RUBICAM, INC.
Advertising
NEW YORK CHICAGO DETROIT SAN PRANCISCO HOLLYWOOD MONTREAL TORONTO
NEW YORK 205 Madison Avenue
May 3rd, 1943.
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Treasury Department,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Boss:
I have just had a discussion with Mr. Rubicam.
I have told him that in my estimation and apparently in yours I can be of great
service to the war effort by giving you all my time. I made it clear to him that
I felt that I should do it regardless of what happened; that if it meant my
losing out at Young & Rubicam, and if it meant my getting into financial
difficulties through moving my family to Washington, which I would insist upon
doing, that was too bad. We would simply have to charge it up to the war. It
certainly seems E. slim sacrifice in comparison to the handsome twenty year old
youngster we met in San Francisco who has only one arm from here out, having
left the other one in Guadalcanal.
After being disturbed for a few moments, Mr. Rubicam asked what you would pay me.
I replied "Up to $9,000," which is what I gathered from your conversation. He
then seid that he would make up the difference between the $9,000 and the $12,500
which he is paying me now, and give me 8 leave of absence for 8 period of time --
say six months.
This, of course, is very generous and if he doesn't change his mind, will relieve
my poor, tired, pulpy, flabby, disgusting mind. It was about the only thing that
really had me worried.
He inferred, however, that he would like to be sure that it is a necessary and
desirable thing for me to do. Therefore if you believe that it is & desirable
thing, end are willing to believe at leest for the time being that it is a
reasonably necessary thing, perhaps you would be good enough to have Herbert
prepare E letter for you asking me to come to Washington and give you a hand if
it can possibly be arranged. I know this is e lot to ask, but if you will do it
it will grease the ways considerably.
Regraded Unclassifie
91
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
May 3rd, 1943.
- 2 -
That is, of course, 1f the whole set-up would be satisfactory to you.
Incidentally, & couple of very fine things have happened. First, a case of
wine was waiting for me when I returned home, and my beautiful wife and I are
very appreciative, not only of the wine but of your thoughtfulness, which is
considerable. And second, I em hearing a great deal of comment about your
broadcast from Cedar Rapids, and it is all good.
Personally, I think we are ON OUR WAY. Next time, with what we have learned
from this in the way of nation-wide organization to carry the torch, and such
things as that, I believe we can make & tremendous dent.
Sincerely,
Fred Smith.
fs:m
Regraded Unclassified
92
May 4, 1943.
Dear Dr. Days
I just want to acknowledge your letter of April 30,
and thank you very much for your attitude in regard to
Dr. Myers' assistance to the Treasury Department.
I hope that ve shall not trespass too much upon his
time and energy, and I as most appreciative of your
willingness to let him be the judge of how much time he
can give us during the coming weeks.
With cordial personal regards,
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Dr. Edmend 1. Day,
President, Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York.
Orig. file to Coyne
in Wer Savings
GEF/dbs
Photo file in Diary
Regraded Unclassifie
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
ITHACA. NEW YORK
IFICE or THE PRESIDENT
April 30, 1943
Dear Mr. Secretary:
After a considerable absence from the
University, I have returned to find your letter
respecting the service which Dr. William I. Myers
has been rendering to the Treasury Department as
consultant on problems incident to the formation
of a war savings program for farmers. I am much
pleased, though not at all surprised, to learn
that Dr. Myers has proven SQ valuable to the
Department in this important section of the war
financing program. He is, of course, an
exceptionally able man. For this very reason,
he is, as you can readily understand, in great
demand. Recently there have been developments
here in New York State, in connection with the
critical food situation, which have brought Dr. Myers
under great pressure to work on problems closely
related to his regular post in the New York State
College of Agriculture. Just how much time he can
give to the Treasury Department under these circum-
stances I do not know. My own inclination 1s to
leave the matter very largely to him, since he
alone can see clearly all the factors that are
involved.
Meanwhile, I can assure you that the
University is eager to do whatever it can to assist
in the supremely important contributions made by
the Treasury Department to the national war effort.
Sincerely yours,
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, L.C.
Regraded Unclassified
94
May 4, 1943.
Dear Bill:
Dr. Day wrote me such a nice letter about your
work at Cornell, and your cooperation with the Treasury
Department, that I thought you would like to have a
photostat of it for your own records. I an sending it
to you herewith.
Needless to say, I look forward to any associations
we may have with a great deal of pleasure.
Sincerely,
(Signed) Henry
Dr. Villiam I. Myers,
New York State College of Agriculture,
Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York.
Copy in Diary
Enclosure.
Copies to Coyne
in War Savings
GEF/dbs
Regraded Unclassified
Treasury Department
97
DL sion of Research and Statistics
Date
May 6.
1943
To:
Miss Channosy
From:
Mr. Tickton
1
95
NEW York STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
ITHACA, NEW YORK
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS AND FARM MANAGEMENT
May 6, 1943
The Hon. Henry J. Morgenthau, jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Morgenthau,
In Professor Myers' absence of several days from the
office, I wish to acknowledge your letter of May 4th
with which you enclosed a photostat of President
Day's letter concerning Mr. Myers' cooperation with
the Treasury Department in its agricultural war savings
program. I am sure he will be glad to have this for
his personal files.
Very truly yours,
Mary Nardi
(Miss) Mary Nardi
nn
Regraded Unclassified
96
Regraded Unclass
TELEGRAM
Expenses of leans, st
of 9/24/17, as amended and extended
MAY 1- 1943
To: Corporations 02 the attached list.
Last fall the nation's large corporations helped me speed
up the issuance of war bonds purchased under the payroll savings
plan by the suggestions and information they were good enough to
submit in response to By telegram of September 9 re var bond
issuance. The number of war bonds issued under the payroll plan
has more than doubled einee last September, and we confidently
expect the number to increase as deductions for war bond purchases
continue to rise from month to month. We realize that the increased
volume has been the cause of delays in bond issuance in some son-
panies, yet many corporation executives in plants where the plan
has resulted in maximum achievement have advised Be that it has
never been truer than it is today that war bond sales can continue
with full success only if the bonds are delivered promptly. Employees
tell me that bonds must be issued promptly after payment if their
enthusiasm for the plan is to be maintained. will you as an lesu-
ing agent please wire as collect how long it takes your employees
and
to receive bonds after payments are completed/any suggestions
you can give me for speeding up delivery.
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
SGT:ld
5-4-43
98
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Aetna Life Insurance Co.
Hartford, Conn.
7,383
Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co.
Milwaukee, Wis.
26,998
B. Altman and Co.
361 Fifth Avenue,
3,000
New York, N. Y.
The Alton Railroad Co.
340 W. Harrison Street,
6,291
Chicago, Ill.
Aluminum Co. of America
Pittsburgh, Pa.
84,934
American Airlines, Inc.
Jackson Heights,
6,072
L. I., N. Y.
American Bosch Corp.
Springfield, Mass.
6,700
American Can Co.
230 Park Ave.
32,238
New York, N. Y.
American Car and Foundry Co.
30 Church St.
16,272
New York, N. Y.
American Chain and Cable Co.Inc. Bridgeport, Conn.
8,446
American Hardware Corp.
New Britain, Conn.
5,400
American Locomotive Co.
30 Church St.
16,900
New York, N. Y.
American Steel and Wire Co.
of New Jersey
Cleveland, Ohio.
31,767
American Sugar Refining Co.
New York, N. Y.
5,367
American Tel. and Tel. Co.
195 Broadway,
20,798
New York, N. Y.
American Thread Co. Inc., The
260 West Broadway
6,717
New York, N. I.
The American Tobacco Co.
111 5th Ave.
11,597
New York, N. Y.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
99
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Anaconda Copper Mining Co.
Butte, Mont.
49,806
Anchor Hocking Glass Corp.
Lancaster, Ohio
8,478
Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
St. Louis, Mo.
5,400
Arlington Mills
Lawrence, Mass.
6,496
Armour and Co.
Union Stock Yards
63,997
Chicago, Ill.
Amstrong Cork Co.
Liberty and Charlotte Sts.
15,305
Lancaster, Pa.
Associated Shipbuilders
2929 - 16th Ave., S. W.
8,999
Seattle, Wash.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co.
Wilmington, N. C.
19,978
the Atlantic Refining Co.
Philadelphia, Pa.
10,000
Atlas Powder Co.
9th and Market Sts.
3,975
Wilmington, Del.
Automatic Electric Co.
1033 West Van Buren St.
3,860
Chicago, Ill.
Avondale Mills
Sylacauga, Ala.
7,017
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co.
Baltimore, Md.
72,544
L. Bamberger and Co.
131 Mark et St.
6,256
Newark, N. J.
Bath Iron Works Corp.
4 Union St.
11,360
Bath, Maine.
Bausch and Lomb Optical Co.
635 St. Paul St.,
12,772
Rochester, N. Y.
Bayuk Cigars Inc.
N. W. Cor. 9th and Columbia Aves 4,800
Philadelphia, Pa.
Bell Aircraft Corp.
2050 Elmwood Ave.
29,192
Buffalo, N. Y.
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
100
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Bell Telephone Co. of Nevada,
San Francisco, Calif.
19,000
Bell Telephone Co. of Pa.
1835 Arch St.
20,166
Philadelphia, Pa.
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc.
463 West St.
6,472
New York, N. Y.
Berkshire Ktg. Mills,
Wyomissing, Pa.
3,750
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
25 Broadway
273,799
New York, N. Y.
Bibb Manufacturing Co.
Macon, Ga.
10,336
Bigelow-Sanford Carpet Co. Inc.
Atlanta, Ga.
5,275
Blaw-Knox Co.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
10,279
Boeing Aircraft Co.
200 W. Michigan St.
30,825
Seattle, Wash.
The Borden Co.
350 Madison Ave.
22,962
New York, N. Y.
Boston Elevated Railway Co.
31 St. James Ave.
7,072
Boston, Mass.
Boston and Maine Railroad,
Boston, Mass.
15,569
Botany Worsted Mills,
84 - 182 Dayton Avenue
4,989
Passaic, N. J.
Brewater Aeronautical Corp.
Long Island City, N. Y.
16,821
Brooklyn Union Gas Co., The
176 Remsen St.
3,779
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Brown Shipbuilding Corp.
Green Bayou - 365
15,951
Houston, Tex.
Brown and Williamson Tobacco Corp.
1600 West Hill
7,831
Louisville, Ky.
Edward G. Budd Mfg. Co.
2450 Hunting Park Ave.
13,409
Philadelphia, Pa.
Regraded Unclassified
101
- 4 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Bullock's, Inc.
Broadway, Hill and 7th Sts.
3,546
Los Angeles, Calif.
Burroughs Adding Machine Co.
6071 Second Blvd.
7,565
Detroit, Mich.
Butler Brothers
426 W. Randolph St.
5,486
Chicago, Ill.
California Shipbuilding Corp.
P. 0. Box 966,
30,666
Wilmington, Calif.
Callaway Mills,
LaGrange, Ga.
8,282
Campbell Soup Co.
2md and Market Sts.
9,108
Camden, N. J.
The Carborundum Co.
Buffalo Ave.,
6,197
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
amation Co.
Oconomowoc, Wis.
4,370
Camegie-Illinois Steel Corp.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
125,000
Carson, Pirie, Scott and Co.
1 South State St.
3,576
Chicago, Ill.
Casco Products Corp.
133 Railroad Ave.,
1,589
Bridgeport, Conn.
Caterpillar Tractor Co.
Peoria, Ill.
17,554
Celanese Corporation of
180 Madison Ave.
12,836
America
New York, N. Y.
Central of Georgia Railway
Savannah, Oa.
5,515
Company
The Chesapeake and Potomac
725 - 13th St., N. W.
5,472
Telephone Co.,
Washington, D. C.
Chicago Bridge and Iron Co.
1305 West 105th St.
17,730
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago Burlington and
547 West Jackson Boulevard,
30,659
Quincy Railroad Co.
Chicago, Ill.
Regraded Unclassified
102
- 5 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Chicago and Eastern Illinois
332 South Michigan Ave.
4,925
Railroad Co.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago Great Western Railway Co.
309 West Jackson Boulevard,
4,449
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago Mill and Lumber Co.
111 W. Washington St.
3,676
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul
Union Station - Room 732 -
30,338
and Pacific Railroad Co.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago and North Western
400 West Madison St.
25,700
Railway Co.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago Rapid Transit Co.
72 West Adams St.
4,787
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, Rock Island and
LaSalle Street Station,
21,000
Pacific Railroad Co.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis,
275 E. 4th St.
4;913
and Omaha Railway, Company,
St. Paul, Minn.
Chicago Surface Lines,
231 South LaSalle St.
16,839
Chicago, Ill.
Childs Co.
200 Fifth Ave.
7,983
New York, N. Y.
Chrysler Corp.
341 Massachusetts Ave.
86,000
Detroit, Mich.
Cities Service Oil Co.
Bartlesville, Okla.
7,550
City Ice and Fuel Co.
Clevelani, Ohio
5,106
Clevelard Electric Illuminating
Cleveland, Ohio
3,480
Company
The Cleveland Graphite Bronze Co.
16800 St. Clair Ave.
6,889
Cleveland, Ohio.
Cleveland Railway Company,
Cleveland, Ohio
4,200
Regraded Unclassified
- 6 -
103
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Cluett, Peabody and Co., Inc.,
433 River St.,
5,605
Troy, N. Y.
The Coca-Cola Co.,
101 W. 10 St.,
4,014
Wilmington, Del.
Colgate-Palmolive-Pect Co.,
105 Hudson St.,
6,268
Jersey City, No J.
Columbia Pictures Corp.,
729 7th Ave.,
2,063
New York, N. I.
Columbia Steel Co.,
Russ Building,
5,621
San Francisco, Calif.
Combustion Engineering Co., Inc.,
200 Madison Ave.,
1,716
New York, N. Y.
Commercial Investment Trust Corp.,
1 Park Ave.,
3,412
New York, N. Y.
mercial Iron Works,
Foot of S. W. Gibbs St.,
9,124
Box 2230,
Portland, Oreg.
Commonwealth Edison Co.,
72 W. Adams St.,
15,913
Chicago, Ill.
Consolidated Aircraft Corp.,
3302 Pacific Highway,
43,513
San Diego, Calif.
Consolidated Gas Electric Light and
Lexington Building,
4,814
Power Company of Baltimore,
Baltimore, Md.
Consolidated 011 Corporation
630 Fifth Ave.,
17,626
New York, N. Y.
Consolidated Steel Corp. of Texas
Foot of Frount St.,
36,563
Orange, Texas
Consolidated Water Power and Paper
Wisconsin Rapids, Wis.
1,489
Company,
Consolidation Coal Co.,
30 Rockefeller Plaza,
9,012
New York, N. Y.
{"ntinental Baking Co.,
630 5th Ave.,
11,180
New York, N. I.
Continental Can Co., Inc.,
100 East 42nd St.,
13,040
New York, N. I.
Regraded Unclassified
- 7 -
104
Idst of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Continental Roll and Steel Foundry
144 St. and Railroad Ave.,
6,268
Company,
East Chicago, Ind.
Crane Co.,
836 S. Michigan Ave.,
17,560
Chicago, n.
Crown Zellerbach Corp.,
343 Sansome St.,
6,990
San Francisco, Calif.
Crucible Steel Company of America,
405 Lexington Ave.,
27,424
New York, N. I.
The Cudahy Packing Co.,
221 N. LaSalle St.,
16,534
Chicago, n.
The Cuneo Press, Inc.,
2242 Grove St.,
6,540
Chicago, n.
Curtiss Wright Corp.,
Buffalo, N. I.
40,400
Curtiss Wright Corp., Airplane
Robertson,
13,359
Mision,
Missouri
Curtiss-Wright Corp.,
Caldwell,
7,864
Propeller Division
New Jersey
Cutler-Hammer, Inc.,
315 No 12th St.,
8,587
Milwaukee, Wis.
The Dayton Co.,
Minneapolis,
2,300
Minnesota
Deare and Company,
1325 3rd Ave.,
15,028
Moline, n.
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corp.,
230 Park Ave.,
9,189
New York, N. Y.
Delta Shipbuilding Co., Inc.,
New Orleans,
17,000
Louisiana
The Detroit Edison Co.,
2000 2nd Ave.,
7,750
Detroit, Mich.
The Diamond Match Co.,
30 Church St.,
4,546
New York, N. Y.
ary Diston and Sons Inc.,
Uhruh and Milnar Sts.,
3,805
Tacony,
Philadelphia, Pa.
*Cramp Shipyards
Richmond and Norris Streets
14,000
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Regraded Unclassified
- 8 -
105
Idst of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Dohler Die Casting Co.,
384 4th Ave.,
15,121
New York, N. Y.
Dravo Corp.,
Pittsburgh,
4,500
Pennsylvania
Indiana Ordnance Works,
Charlestown,
10,000
B. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co.,
Indiana
3. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co.,
Joliet,
4,200
Kankakee Ordnance Works,
Illinois
Eaton Manufacturing Co.,
739 E. 140th St.,
12,658
Cleveland, Ohio
Thomas A. Edison Inc.,
51 Lakeside Ave.,
4,850
West Orange, N. J.
Klectric Auto-Lite Co.,
Champlain and Chestnut,
12,851
Toledo, Ohio
Pectric Boat Co.,
Groton,
10,997
Connecticut
Electric Storage Battery Co.,
19th and Allegheny Ave.,
4,719
Philadelphia, Pa.
Kigin Joliet and Eastern Railway Co.,208 S. LaSalle St.,
6,096
Chicago, Ill.
The Emerson Electric Mfg. Co.,
1824 Washington Ave.,
7,828
St. Louis, Mo.
Endicott Johnson Corp.,
Sales Building,
18,017
Endicott, N. Y.
Equitable Idfe Assurance Society
393 - 7th Ave.,
3,892
of U. S.,
New York, N. Y.
Erie Railroad Co.,
Midland Building,
23,328
Cleveland, Ohio
The Fafnir Bearing Co.,
37 Booth St.,
6,553
New Britain, Conn.
Fairbanks, Morse and Co.,
600 S. Michigan Ave.,
7,734
Chicago, n.
Regraded Unclassified
- 9 -
106
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Famous Barr Co.,
St. Louis, Mo.
8,437
Federal Cartridge Corp.
New Brighton, Minn.
20,409
Federal Shipbuilding and
Kearny, N. J.
21,123
Dry Dock Co.
Marshall Field and Co.
22 West North Bank Drive,
10,679
Chicago, Ill.
Wm. Filene Sons Co.
426 Wash. St.
2,995
Boston, Mass.
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
Akron, Ohio
50,663
The Flintkote Co.
50 W. 50th St.
3,888
New York, N. Y.
Ford, Bacon and Davis, Inc.
Marshall, Tex.
4,500
Longhorn Ordnance Works
Ford Instrument Co.,
32-36 47th Ave.
5,150
Long Island City, N. Y.
Ford Motor Co.
3600 Shaffer Rd.
162,558
Dearborn, Mich.
Julius Forstmann and Co. Inc.,
Passaic, N. J.
4,000
George A. Fuller Co. and Merrit-
Quonset Point, R. I.
11,539
Chapman and Scott Corp.
Naval Air Base
General American Transportation
135 S. LaSalle St.
6,500
Corp.
Chicago, m.
General Aniline and Film Corp.
230 Park Ave,
6,207
New York, N. Y.
General Cigar Co., Inc.,
119 West 40th St.
5,500
New York, N. Y.
General Electric Co.
1 River Road,
182,051
Schenectady, N. Y.
General Fire Extinguisher Corp.
260 W. Exchange St.
4,400
Providence, R. I.
Regraded Unclassified
107
- 10 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
General Foods Corp.,
250 Park Ave.
9,819
General Machinery Corp.,
Hamilton, Ohio
3,466
General Motors Corp.
3044 West Grand Blvd.
327,925
Detroit, Mich.
General Petroleum Corp.,
108 W. 2nd St.
3,882
Los Angeles, Calif.
General Refractories Co.
1600 Real Estate Building
6,145
Philadelphia, Pa.
General Steel Castings Corp.
Eddystone, Pa.
7,562
General Tire and Rubber Co.
Englewood, Ave.
3,020
Akron, Ohio.
Georgia Power Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
4,584
The Glidden Co.
11001 Madison Ave.
2,363
Cleveland, Ohio.
Goldblatt Bros., Inc.,
3932 S. Wolcott Ave.
5,177
Chicago, Ill.
B. F. Goodrick Co.
500 S. Main St.
34,429
Akron, Ohio.
The Great Atlantic and Pacific
420 Lexington Ave.
59,507
Tea Co.
New York, N. Y.
Great Northern Railway Co.
St. Paul, Minn-
25,206
Greenfield Tap and Die Corp.
Sanderson St.
8,286
Greenfield, Mass.
Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. Bethpage, New York.
15,500
Galveston, Tex.
5,000
Gulf Colorado and Santa Fe
Railway Company,
Hale Brothers Stores, Inc.,
901 Market St.
1,187
San Francisco, Calif.
Regraded Unclassified
- 11 -
108
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Harbison-Walker Refractories Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
6,754
Hart Schaffner and Marx
36 8. Franklin St.,
4,000
Chicago, Ill.
Hazel-Atlas Glass Co.,
Wheeling, We Va.
7,472
Hearst Publications, Ino.,
Market and Third Sts.,
8,131
San Francisco, Calif
H. J. Heins Co.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
7,776
Hercules Powder Co., Inc.,
Pulaski, Va.
32,651
New River Ordnance Plant
Hershey Chocolate Corp.,
19 B. Chocolate Ave.,
3,081
Hershey, Pa.
Higbee Co.,
Cleveland, Ohio
2,115
Higgins Industries, Inc.,
521 City Park Avenue,
7,029
New Orleans, La.
H. P. Hood and Sons, Ino.,
"500 Rutherford Ave.,
4,101
Boston, Mass.
Hoover Co.,
North Canton, Ohio
4,019
Austin, Minn.
4,806
George A. Hormel end Co.,
Horn and Hardart Co.,
600 W. 50th St.,
6,000
New York, N. Y.
Joseph Horne Co.,
501 Penn Ave.,
2,310
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Houston, Texas
21,346
Houston Shipbuilding Corp.,
1206 Woodward Ave.,
8,500
The J. L. Hudson Co.,
Detroit, Mich.
Hughes Tool Co.,
300 Hughes St.,
9,033
Houston, Texas.
Regraded Unclassified
- 12 -
109
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
The Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp.,
Pascagoula, Miss.
10,192
Inland Steel Co.
38 South Dearborn St.
16,769
Chicago, n.
International Harvester Do.
180 North Michigan Ave.
56,253
Chicago, n.
International Paper Oo.
220 East 42 St.
New York, N. Y.
17,085
International Shoe Co.
1509 Washington Ave.
31,935
St. Louis, Mo.
John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co.
197 Clarendon St.
4,000
Boston, Mass.
Johnson and Johnson
Hamilton St.
7,460
New Brunswick, N. J.
Cnes and Laughlin Steel Corp.
3rd and Ross Sts.
36,709
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Jordan Marsh Co.
450 Washington St.
4,000
Boston, Mass.
Kahn and Feldman, Inc.
200 Madison Ave.
7,310
New York, N. Y.
Kaiser Co., Inc.
1522 Latham Sq. Bldg.
179,000
Oakland, Calif.
Kansas City Southern Railway Oo.
114 West 11th St.
4.756
Kansas City, Mo.
Kearney and Trecker Corp.
Milwaukse, Wis.
4,635
Kelsey Hayes Wheel Co.
3600 Military Ave.
8,499
Detroit, Mich.
Koppers United Co.
Kopper Building
21,594
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Kraft Cheese Oo.
San Francisco, Calif.
9,500
oger Grocery and Baking Oo.
35 1. 7th St.
21,691
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Regraded Unclassified
- 13 -
110
List of Issuing Agents, Subject & Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Lake Washington Shipyards,
Houghton, Wash.
7,950
Lehigh Valley Coal Com
133 N. River St.,
5,738
Wilkes Barre, Pa.
Lever Brothers Co.,
50 Memorial Drive,
4,800
Cambridge, Mess.
Libby, McNeill and Libby,
Union atock Yards,
4,396
Chicago, n.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
175 Berkeley St.,
4,600
Boston, Mass.
S. Liebovitz and Sons, Inc.,
New York, N. Y.
4,877
Liggett Drug Co., Inc.,
New York, N. Y.
6,000
Link-Belt Company,
307 N. Michigan Ave.,
9,230
Chicago, Ill.
Lit Brothers,
8th and Market Streets,
3,087
Philadelphia, Pa.
Loew's Incorporated,
1540 Broadway,
10,935
New York, N. Y.
Loft Candy Corporation,
Long Island City, N. Y.
3,560
Loose Wiles Biscuit Co.,
811 Commerce Building,
9,786
Kansas City, Mo.
Los Angeles Railway Corp.,
1060 South Broadway,
4,023
Los Angeles, Calif.
Los Angeles Shipbuilding and
Post Office Box 231,
9,600
Drydock Corporation,
San Pedro, Calif.
Louisville and Nashville
Louisville,
31,520
Railroad Co.,
Kentucky
McClellan Stores Co.,
55th Fifth Ave.,
6,700
New York, N. Y.
McQuay-Norris Manufacturing
2320 Marconi Ave.,
9,975
Co., Ordnance Management Div.
St. Louis, Mo.
Regraded Unclassified
-.14 -
111
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Mack Manufacturing Co.,
34th St. and 48th Ave.,
5,670
Long Island City, N. Y.
Magnolia Petroleum Co.,
Post Office Box 900,
8,227
Dallas, Texas
Mandel Brothers, Inc.,
1 N. State Street,
3,300
Chicago, n.
Manitowoc Ship Building Co.,
Menitowoc, Wis.
6,738
Marin Shipbuilding,
Sausalito, Calif.
16,619
The Glenn L. Martin Company,
Baltimore, Md.
62,779
The Maryland Drydock Company,
Baltimore, Md.
8,440
Merck and Company, Inc.,
Lincoln Avenue,
3,770
Rahwey, N. J.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,1 Medison Avenue,
17,924
New York, N. Y.
Michigan Bell Telephone Co.,
1365 Cass Avenue,
14,207
Detroit, Mich.
Minneapolis-Honeywell
Minnespolis,
7,133
Regulator Co.,
Minn.
Mohawk Carpet Mills Inc.,
57 Lyon St.,
4,600
Amsterdam, N. Y.
The Mohican Co.,
280 Broadway,
1,375
New York, N. Y.
Victor Monaghan Company,
Greenville, S. C.
4,155
Monsanto Chemical Co.,
1700 So. 2nd St.,
9,731
St. Louis, Mo.
Montgomery Ward and Co., Inc.,
Room 8-A 619 W. Chicago Ave.,
58,000
Chicago, nl.
Ottumwa, Iowa.
8,585
John Morrell and Co.,
Mountain States Telephone
P. 0. Box 960,
10,455
and Telegraph Co.,
Denver, Colo.
Regraded Unclassified
- 15 -
112
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
The Murray Corporation of America,
7700 Russell St.
12,646
Detroit, Mich.
Nash-Kelvinator Corp.
14250 Plymouth Road,
17,132
Detroit, Mich.
The Nashville, Chattanooga and
Nashville, Tenn.
8,571
St. Louis Railway,
National Biscuit Co.
449 West 14th St.
21,826
New York, N. Y.
National Cash Register Co.
Main and K Sts.
11,059
Dayton, Ohio.
National Distillers Products Corp.
120 Broadway
4.034
New York, N. Y.
National Fireworks, Inc.
West Hanover, Mass.
8,802
.ional Lead Co.
111 Broadway,
8,122
New York, N. Y.
National Malleable and Steel
10600 Quincy Ave.
8,559
Castings Co.
Cleveland, Ohio.
The National Supply Co.
Grant Bldg. Box 416,
10,564
Pittsburgh, Pa.
1000 N. Crosby St.
6,868
National Tea Co.
Chicago, Ill.
New England Power Service Co.
Boston, Mass.
20,319
New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. 50 Oliver St.
22,480
Boston, Mass.
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co.
540 Broad St.
14,750
Newark, N. J.
466 Lexington Ave.
126,429
New York Central System,
New York, N. Y.
51 Madison Ave.
4,121
New York Life Insurance Co.
New York, 1. Y.
24,931
The N.Y.N.H. and Hartford R.R. Go.
71 Meadow St.
New Haven, Conn.
Regraded Unclassified
- 16 -
113
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
liew York Telephone Co.
140 West Street
39,326
New York, N. Y.
Newport News Shipbuilding and
Newport News,
51,278
Dry Dook Company,
Virginia.
llews Syndicate Co., Inc.
220 East 42 Street
2,721
New York, N. Y.
North American Aviation, Inc.
5701 Imperial Highway
55,367
Inglewood, California
Northwest Airlines, Inc.
St. Paul, Minn.
5,469
Northwestern Bell Tele. Co.
Omaha, Nebraska
13,335
Norton Company,
Worcester, Mass.
15,029
Ohio Bell Tele. Co.
Cleveland, Ohio
11,365
hio Oil Company,
Findlay, Ohio
5,226
Oliver Iron Mining Co.
Duluth, Minn.
5,866
Oregon Shipbuilding Corp.
Portland, Ore.
28,214
Otis Steel Company,
Cleveland, Ohio
5,058
Pacific Electric Railway Co.
Los Angeles, Calif.
4,671
Pacific Gas and Electric Co.
245 Market Street
11,990
San Francisco, Calif.
Pacific Mills,
140 Federal Street
12,174
Boston, Mass.
Pacific Telephone and
San Francisco, Calif.
41,325
Telegraph Co.
Packard Motor Car Co.
1580 East Grand Blvd.
28,694
Detroit, Mich.
Regraded Unclassified
- 17 -
114
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Paramount Pictures, Ino.,
1501 Broadway
8,106
New York, N. Y.
The Parker Appliance Co.,
17325 Euclid Ave.
5,427
Cleveland, Ohio
Peabody Coal Company,
231 So. LaSallo Street
7,991
Chicago, Ill.
Pennsylvania Power and Light Co.,
9th and Hamilton Sts.
5,270
Allentown, Pa.
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.
Broad Street Station
172,532
Philadelphia, Pa.
Peoples Gas Light and Coke Co.
122 S. Michigan Ave.
3,861
Chicago, Ill.
Pore Marquette Railway Co.
Terminal Tower,
6,515
Cleveland, Ohio
helps Dodge Corp.,
40 Wall Street
19,119
New York, N. Y.
Philadelphia Electric Co.
1000 Chestnut Street
6,000
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia Transportation Co.
Mitten Bldg.
11,178
Broad and Looust St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philco Corporation,
Tioga and C Sts.
9,285
Philadelphia, Pa.
Phillips Petroleum Co.
Bartlesville, Oklahoma
10,369
Pickands Mather and Company,
2000 Union Commerce Bldg.
5,152
Cleveland, Ohio
Pittsburgh Steel Company,
1600 Grant Building,
8,447
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Potlatch Forests, Ino.
Lewiston, Idaho
3,677
Potts and Callahan Contracting
Baltimore, Maryland
10,000
Company, Incorporated
tratt Whitney-Niles-Bement Pond Co.
West Hartford, Conn.
5,813
Regraded Unclassified
-18-
115
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 14, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Proximity Manufacturing Co.
Greensboro, N. C.
4,902
Public Service Co. of Northern
72 West Adams. Street,
4,376
Illinois
Chicago, Illinois
Public Service Corporation of N. J.
80 Park Place
19,343
Newark, N. J.
Pullman Company
79 East Adams Street,
26,848
Chicago, Illinois
Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing
79 Best Adams Street,
18,471
Company
Chicago, Illinois
Pure Oil Co.
35 E. Wacker Drive
6,995
Chicago, Illinois
RCA Manufacturing Co., Ino.
Front and Cooper Sts.
32,288
Camden, N. J.
K. 0. Radio Pictures, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave.
395
New York, N. Y.
Railway Express Agency, Inc.
230 Park Avenue
50,600
New York, N. Y.
The Rath Packing Company,
Waterloo, Iowa
6,405
Raybestos Manhattan Ino.
61 Willott Street
4,032
Passaic, N. J.
Reading Company,
Reading Terminal
19,300
Philadelphia, Pa.
Remington Arms Co., Ino.
939 Barnum Ave.
95,503
Bridgeport, Conn.
Remington Rand, Ino.
465 Washington St.
9.653
Buffalo, N. Y.
Republic Steel Corp.,
1630 Republic Building
67,322
Cleveland, Ohio
Reynolds Metals Company,
Richmond, Virginia
13,573
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,
Winston-Salem, N. C.
12,051
Regraded Unclassified
116
-19-
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
Rheem Manufacturing Co.,
P. 0. Box 7,
4,576
Richmond, Calif.
Richfield 011 Corporation,
Richfield Building,
2,550
Los Angeles, Calif.
Riggs Distler and Company, Inc., Baltimore, Md.
180
Riverside and Dan River Cotton Danville,
14,538
Mills, Incorporated,
Virginia.
John A. Roebling's Sons Co.,
640 S. Broad St.,
8,438
Trenton, N. J.
SKF Industries Inc.,
Front St. and Erie Ave.,
7,281
Philadelphia, Pa.
Saco-Lowell Shops,
Biddeford, Maine.
3,048
Safeway Stores Inc.,
201 Fourth St.,
21,602
Oakland, Calif.
St. Louis Public Service Co.,
3869 Park Ave.,
4,200
St. Louis, Mo.
Sanderson and Porter,
Elwood Ordnance Plant,
10,000
Joliet, Ill.
Schenley Distillers Corp.,
26 E. 6th St.,
5,423
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio.
4,812
Schiff Company,
Scovill Manufacturing Co.,
99 Mill St.,
10,253
Waterbury, Conn.
Sears Roebuck and Company,
925 South Homan Ave.,
79,826
Chicago, nl.
Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Corp.,
2400 - 11th Avenue, N. W.,
41,863
Seattle, Wash.
Evansville, Ind.
9,572
Servel, Incorporated,
Frank G. Shattuck Co.,
59 West 25 St.,
7,633
New York, N. Y.
Regraded Unclassified
117
- 20 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of Employees
Sheffield Steel Corp.,
Sheffield Station,
Kansas City, Mo.
3,896
Singer Manufacturing Co.,
149 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
15,368
Sloss-Sheffield Steel and Iron Co.,3131 N. 1st Ave.,
Birmingham, Ala.
3,606
A. 0. Smith Corp.,
3533 N. 27th St.,
Milwaukee, Wis.
14,545
N. Snellenburg and Co.,
Market 11th and 12th Sts.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
2,366
Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc.,
26 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
32,017
South Portland Shipbuilding Corp., South Portland, Me.
27,000
Southeastern Shipbuilding Corp.,
Savannah, Ga.
11,924
Southern Bell Telephone and
Telegraph Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
28,904
Southern California Gas Co.,
Metropolitan Station,
Box 6110,
Los Angeles, Calif.
5,185
Southern California Telephone Co., San Francisco, Calif.
14,594
Southern New England Telephone Co. 227 Church St.,
New Haven, Conn.
5,875
Southern Pacific Co.,
65 Market St.,
San Francisco, Calif.
62,460
Southern Railway Co.,
15 and K Sts., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
45,763
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
1010 Pine St.,
St. Louis, Mo.
33,119
Spiegel, Inc.,
1061 W. 35th St.,
Chicago, Ill.
5,400
R. Squibbe and Sons,
25 Columbia Hgts.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
4,411
Regraded Unclassified
118
- 21 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943.
Name
Address
Number of employees
Standard Brands, Inc.,
595 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
7,900
Standard Oil Co. of Calif.,
225 Bush,
San Francisco, Calif.
17,879
Standard 011 of Indiana,
910 South Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, Ill.
28,821
Standard Oil Co. of La.,
Baton Rouge, La.
(P. 0. Box 1111)
7,900
Standard Oil Co., of N. J.,
30 Rockefeller Plaza,
New York, N. Y.
41,290
Standolind Oil and Gas Co.,
Philcode Bldg.,
Tulsa, Okla.
3,532
Stewart-Warner Corp.,
1826 Diversey Pkwy.,
Chicago, Ill.
13,439
Lix, Baer and Fuller Dry Goods Co. 603 Washington Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
2,250
Sun 011 Co.,
1608 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
11,581
Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.
Pt. Morton Ave.,
Chester, Pa.
32,758
Swift and Co.,
Union Stock Yards,
Chicago, Ill.
59,013
Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.,
60 Boston St.,
Salem, Mass.
9,280
Tampa Shipbuilding Co., Inc.,
19th and Grant Sts.,
Tampa, Fla.
13,465
Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad
Co.,
Brown-Marx Bldg.,
Birmingham, Ala.
26,000
Terminal R. R. Ass'n. of St. Louis,St. Louis, Mo.
5,274
The Texas Co.,
135 E. 42nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
23,200
Texas and New Orleans Railroad Co. 913 Franklin Ave.,
Houston, Tex.
17,997
Regraded Unclassified
- 22 -
119
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
the Texas and Pacific Railway Co.,
503 Texas and Pacific Bldg.,
10,136
Dallas, Texas
Thompson Products, Inc.,
2196 Clarkwood Road,
14,860
Cleveland, Ohio
Tide Water Associated 011 Co.,
17 Battery Place,
9,202
New York, N. Y.
Timken Roller Bearing Co.,
1835 Dusber Ave.,
17,493
Canton, Ohio
Todd Bath Iron Shipbuilding Corp.,
South Portland, Me.
27,000
part of, New England Shipbuilding Corp.
Todd Erie Basin Dry Docks, Inc.,
1 Broadway,
7,400
New York, N. Y.
Todd Hoboken Dry Docks, Inc.,
Park Ave. and 17th St.,
5,658
Hoboken, N. J.
iscon Steel Co.,
Youngstown, Ohio
4,307
20th Century-Fox Film Corp.,
444 West 56 St.,
2,648
New York, N. Y.
Underwood, Elliott, Fisher Co.,
141 Broadway,
8,647
New York, N. I.
Union Bag and Paper Corp.,
Savannah, Ga.
5,201
Union 011 Company of California
Los Angeles, Calif
6,944
Union Switch and Signal Co.,
Swissvale, Pa.
4,047
United Air Lines Transport Corp.,
United Air Lines Bldg.,
7,038
Minicipal Airport,
Chicago, n.
United Cigar-Whelan Stores Corp.,
215 Fourth Ave.,
5,000
New York, N. Y.
United Drug Inc.,
43 Leon St.,
6,099
Boston, Mass.
United Shoe Machinery Corp.,
140 Federal St.,
10,000
Boston, Mass.
Regraded Unclassified
- 23 -
120
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943,
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
United States Gypsum Co.,
300 West Adams St.,
6,370
Chicago, m.
Universal Atlas Cement Co.,
71 Broadway,
4,397
New York, N. I.
Van Raalte Co., Inc.,
417 5th Ave.,
3,361
New York, N. Y.
Wagner Electric Corp.,
6400 Flymouth Ave.,
4,559
St. Louis, Mo.
Waldorf System, Inc.,
169 High St.,
2,100
Boston, Mass.
Walgreen Co.,
744 East Bowen Ave.,
22,509
Chicago, n.
Walworth Co., Inc.,
60 1. 42nd St.,
8,058
New York, N. I.
Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.,
321 West 44th St.,
12,834
New York, N. Y.
Warner and Swasey Co.,
5701 Carnegie,
6,313
Clevelsed, Ohio
West Virginia Pulp and Paper Co.,
230 Park Ave.,
6,041
New York, N. Y.
Western Electric Co.,
195 Broadway,
75,116
New York, N. Y.
Western Pacific Railroad Co.,
Mills Building
5,850
San Francisco, Calif.
Western Pipe and Steel Co.,
200 Bush St.,
17,199
San Prancisco, Calif.
Western Union Telegraph Co., The
60 Hudson St.,
36,500
New York, N. Y.
The Western Union Telegraph Co.,
722 Market St., Room 234,
6,250
Pacific Division
San Francisco, Calif.
Westinghouse Air Brake Co.,
Wilmerding, Pa.
9,717
inghouse Electric and Mfg. Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
101,692
Regraded Unclassified
121
- 24 -
List of Issuing Agents, Subject of Telegram, May 4, 1943
With the Latest Employment Data Available, May 1, 1943
Name
Address
Number of employees
White Construction Co., Inc.,
New York, N. Y.
389
Floyd Bennett Field
Whitin Machine Works,
Whitinsville, Mass.
4,123
Wickwire Spencer Steel Co.,
New York, N. Y.
3,952
500 - 5th Ave.
Willamette Iron and Steel Corp.,
3050 N. W. Front Ave.
Portland, Oreg.
14,676
Wilson and Co., Inc.,
41st St. and Ashland Ave
Chicago, Ill.
27,952
Winchester Repeating Arms Co.,
New Haven, Conn.
12,886
Davision of Western Cartridge Co.,
Wisconsin Telephone Co.,
722 North Broadway
Milwaukee, Wis.
7,868
R. Worcester and Co., and
Mathew Cummings Co., Inc.
Taunton, Mass.
900
Wright Aeronautical Corporation,
Cincinnati, Ohio
12,107
Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co.
Youngstown, Ohio
22,947
Zenith Radio Corp.,
6001 W. Dickens Ave.,
Chicago, Ill.
5,518
Regraded Unclassified
Relations
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belongs_to