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DIARY Book 665 September 17-20, 1943 Regraded Unclassified - B - Book Page Brooklyn, New York See Financing. Government: War Savings Bonds (3rd War Loan Drive) Business Conditions Haas memorandum on situation, week ending September 18, 1943 - 9/20/43 665 234 - C - Canada Quarterly statement and forecast of Canada's holdings of United States dollare - - 9/17/43 126 Correspondence Mrs. Forbush's mail report - - 9/17/43 94 - 1- - Eccles, Marriner S. "The Dual System of Banking": Address before National Association of Supervisors of State Banks, Cincinnati, Ohio - 9/17/43 115 - F - Financing, Government War Savings Bonds: 3rd War Loan Drive: See also Speeches by HMJr in St. Louis and New York City Lag in sales discussed by HMJr (in St. Louis) and Bell - 9/17/43 1 (See also Book 666, page 1- - 9/21/43) a) Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis report 11 b) Brooklyn, New York, set-up described by Scripps-Howard newspaper woman: See Book 666, page 6 "The Road to Victory": Assigned to Treasury by its composer, Private Frank Loesser - 9/17/43 90 a) Loesser thanked - 9/29/43: Book 668, page 80 John Golden thanked for cooperation - 9/20/43 230 - G - Gold See Lend-Lease: United Kingdom Golden, John See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds (3rd War Loan Drive) Regraded Unclassified - K - - Book Page Keynes, John Maynard See Post-War Planning: Currency Stabilization (United Kingdom) - L - Lend-Lease United Kingdom: Gold and dollar figures for August - 9/19/43 665 189 Gold and dollar balances and external liabilities: Chancellor of Exchequer provides fuller information (confidential) 268 Loesser, Frank See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds (3rd War Loan Drive - "The Road to Victory") - M - Missouri, St. Louis See Speeches by HMJr - N - New York See Speeches by HMJr - P - Post-War Planning Currency Stabilization: United Kingdom: Chancellor of Exchequer-HMJr correspondence concerning visit of Keynes - 9/20/43. 250 - R - "Road to Victory" (Song) See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds (3rd War Loan Drive) - S - St. Louis, Missouri See Speeches by HMJr Regraded Unclassified - S - (Continued) Book Page Speeches by HMJr 3rd War Loan Drive: St. Louis, Missouri, before Chamber of Commerce and War Finance Committee, September 17, 1943: Reading copy. 665 16 Walter Head's introduction 14 Dinner program 13 Drafts 26 New York speech discussed by Treasury group - 9/20/43 200 a) Itinerary: See Book 666, page 199 b) Luncheon guests at Federal Reserve Bank: Book 666, page 202 c) Speech: Book 666, page 203 d) War Plants checked on sales - 9/29/43: Book 668, page 82 - U - United Kingdom See Lend-Lease II Post-War Planning: Currency Stabilization - W - War Savings Bonds See Financing. Government Regraded Unclassified 1 September 17, 1943 10:55 a.m. HMJr: They're terribly pessimistic. The papers greeted me when I got off, "I suppose you came here because the thing's in a slump." Well, I don't know what's the matter but before I leave town I'm going to find out. Somebody has been kidding somebody. I don't know who. But certainly -- Walter Head here says, "Well, we don't know -- we've got a wonderful organization but we're not making the sales." Dan Bell: Uh. HMJr: I talked to the man at the Federal Reserve and neither Chester Davis nor the man in Kansas City are on the Job. B: Yes. They're probably at the Bankers' Convention. I don't know. HMJr: Well, God damn it! Why go to a Bankers' Convention when we're trying to sell stuff? I mean, their job 1s supposed to be on the bridge and not out -- they say Chester Davis is in Washington on something to do with post-war planning. B: Yes, he's on that committee. HMJr: Why isn't he on the job? And the fellow from Kaneas City is in New York. B: I see. HMJr: Maybe it's the Federal Reserve that's throwing us overboard. I don't know but there's something wrong. Now, this 18 what I want you to do, Dan. Hello? B: Yes. HMJr: I want you to spend the rest of the day on the telephone calling up everyone of the Federal Reserve people and finding out how they think the thing is going and what they think is wrong. B: All right. HMJr: Now, I've got the fellow from the Federal - -- I don't know what his name 16, coming to Bee me in an hour. Regraded Unclassified 2 - 2 - B: Hitt? HMJr: Who? B: Hitt? HMJr: No, he's not here either. B: Attebery? HMJr: Attebery. B: Yeah, that's it. HMJr: Now, Attebery -- Ted tells me it's the little fellow that isn't buying -- Attebery tells me it's the big fellow that isn't buying. B: I see. HMJr: But, I want you to do that and then I want Gamble and I -- to do -- to order -- uh -- the fellow at the head of our Labor Section B: Houghteling. HMJr: Houghteling -- to ask the Federal -- the C.I.O. and A.F. of L. to make a survey of the country for me. Hello? B: Yes. HMJr: And I want that back by Monday if possible. Now, when they make that survey they can kill two stones for -- two birds with one stone -- I want them to be given a questionaire, "How would the labor people feel on the alternatives -- one, of the Social Security vs. a post-war credit, you see? B: Yes. HMJr: And when they send the thing out on the bond, they can send it out on the other thing. Now what they say here is -- another thing they say -- it's this September 15th tax thing which has bothered everybody. B: Uh huh. Regraded Unclassified 3 M 1 I HMJr: But it's in an awful slump here, Ted. Ted Gamble: Yes. HMJr: You didn't tell me that before I came here. I don't know whether you knew it or not. G: I certainly didn't know that. HMJr: But they say that the people are just not coming through. Head 18 an all-time low. G: Yes. HMJr: He said he talked to you yesterday. Now for God's sake, the one thing (interference on the wire) Hello? G: Yes? HMJr: I don't want to be kidded. I've told you that ten times. G: Well, you know everything that we know, Mr. Secretary. HMJr: Then you don't know what's going on, Ted, and it's up to you to find out. G: Well, I can tell you this much. HMJr: You've been sitting there and telling me how lovely everything is. I've told you again and again I want to know. There's something definitely wrong in this big section here. Hello? G: Yes, I'm listening to you. HMJr: And it's up to you -- you said you talked to Head -- Head said he talked to you yesterday. G: I talked to Head yesterday. HMJr: Yeah. G: That is correct. HMJr: Did he tell you things aren' Regraded Unclassified 4 - 4 - G: He did not tell me that. No. HMJr: Well, anyway, let's get Houghteling on this job and find out those two things. B: This -- that would be impossible, wouldn't it, to get a survey through by Monday? HMJr: Well, let's get it started. B: All right. HMJr: Let's find out from the Local Unions how they think the thing 18 going. Is the thing going -- I don't want to plant any defeatism in their heads -- let's just ask them how they think they are going. Are they going to make their plant quotas? B: I see. (Aside: You got that, Ted?) G: Yes, I have that. HMJr: Hello. G: Yes. HMJr: But the other thing -- Gaston and Paul could prepare a questionaire on this question of Social Security VB. the post-war credit. Hello? G: Yes. HMJr: Now Gaston and Paul could prepare that for you. G: Yes, they're listening. HMJr: Hello. B: They're listening to you. HMJr: All right. Now, I've got the head -- Mr. Roberts, the head of the paper coming here -- Mr. Head is here -- and I'm going to ask him what he thinks 18 the matter. He owne the radio station here. B: Uh huh. HMJr: Then in a half an hour I've got C.I.O. and A.F. of L. coming and then at 11:00 o'clock Attebery of the Federal Reserve. When I get through I ought to know something. Regraded Unclassified 5 - 5 - B: Uh - you don't want me to call St. Louis? HMJr: No. B: You're going to take care of that? HMJr: No, but.... B: I'll call all the rest of them. HMJr: says on their war loan the banks have to increase -- their war loan account. B: You mean increase their designations. HMJr: Yeah, because they're handling 80 much business. B: Un huh. Well, that is simple. HMJr: He thinks it's the big subscriptions which aren't coming in. B: Uh huh. HMJr: And Ted says it's the little ones which aren't coming in. But that's what I'm out here for and I'm going to find out and when I find out I'll pass it along to you fellows. But let me handle St. Louis while I'm here and that goes for Gamble and for Bell both. B: Yes, okay. HMJr: I mean -- I don't want Ted to suddenly get on the phone and barge in on this thing now as long as I'm here. Ted. G: I beg your pardon? HMJr: I don't want you to get busy on the phone and do any checking in St. Louis while I'm here. G: No. I understand. HMJr: And - I mean let me handle this situation. G: Yeah. HMJr: And 8.8 soon as I've got it I'll let you know what it is. G: Yes. Regraded Unclassified 6 - 6 - HMJr: If I find out. G: Yes. HMJr: And - but we've got two weeks to go and let's get - let's get the facts. B: All right. Well, I'll call all of the Federals except St. Louis today. HMJr: And you understand, Ted, please don't check up on me out here, now. G: No, I understand that. HMJr: Because -- let me handle this and I'll let you know what the facts are. G: Fine. HMJr: And, please, if a situation similar to St. Louis is anywhere else in the country, please let us know. G: Well, I think you ought to know that I talked to Burgess last night. HMJr: Yeah. G: And he had been over to the bank in the afternoon. HMJr: Yes. G: And the Federal Reserve Bank in New York advised him that they were between two and three days behind on E Bonde, and that their guess was that every issuing agent was anywhere from two to five days behind. HMJr: Well, now Head talked with Burgess and D'Olier in New York yesterday. G: Yes. HMJr: And both -- I'm reporting only what he tells me.... 5: Yes. HMJr: both Burgess and D'Olier told him that New York and New Jersey were not going well on the little bonds. Regraded Unclassified 7 - 7 - G: Yes. HMJr: Now, maybe this is a local situation, Ted, and I hope and pray that that's what it 18. See? Hello? G: Yes, I'm listening to you. HMJr: As soon as I have the facts, I'll call back and give you the facts. G: Yes. HMJr: But, we're all together sink-or-swim and I'll do the best I can and you've got to trust me to handle the thing out here. G: Fine. HMJr: And as soon as I have it, I'll let you know but let's get -- through organized labor let's find out those two things. I mean, if the President says to me -- this is for Paul and Gaston -- "Well, how does organized labor feel about 8. post-war credit?" I'd like to be able to tell him. G: Fine. HMJr: And how they feel about Social Security -- I want to know. I just don't want to have what Paul found out in St. Louis alone. G: Yes. HMJr: That's not enough. G: Yes. HMJr: Now, does anybody want to contribute -- I'm determined -- I'm not angry -- I am a little upset but we'll win the way we always have but it takes hard work. G: Well, I think you ought to know, Mr. Secretary, so far as our people in the field are concerned, we're handling them as though we have 9/10th of the job jet to do and have been every night sending them information. We wired them last night that the whole success of this drive depended on their doing the job on the E Bonds and asking them personally to give us a report on it. Regraded Unclassified 8 - 8 - HMJr: Well, in the meantime my speech is all -- I'm holding up my whole speech until I can find out what 1s what. G: But I think you also ought to know that at this stage of the 2nd war loan drive we hadn't reported 80 much as a single E Bond sale for the 2nd war loan. HMJr: Well, that don't seem possible. G: Sir? HMJr: That don't seem possible. G: Well, I'll tell you when it started - our first reporting started on the 26th day of April. I have the report right in front of me. HMJr: Yes. B: You mean the increase. G: The increase. The 26th day of April before we showed any response to the reporting of individual sales. We had a four hundred million dollar week that week on E bonds. HMJr: Well, here in St. Louis the banks say they are current. G: Says they are what? HMJr: They are current. G: They are current? HMJr: Yeah. G: Well, they may be current, but the issuing agents may not be current. HMJr: Well, this man Attebery is calling up moving picture houses, drug stores and everything and then he 1s coming out to see me. B: There is bound to be a lag in the E bond -- in the issuing of the savings bonds. HMJr: I hope that everything is lovely, but I'm going to find out. That's what I'm out here for. Regraded Unclassified - 9 - 9 G: Well, there's no harm in that, sir, certainly. HMJr: What's that? G: I say that there -- that's certainly the thing to do. HMJr: And as soon as I've got the good or bad news, I'll call back. G: Well, we're going on the assumption here, and have to go on the assumption, Mr. Secretary, that it's bad. HMJr: All right. G: So far as the E bonds are concerned until they start to be good. HMJr: Okay. All right. B: Well, we may have something to report when you call back. HMJr: All right. B: From the other districts. G: Now, on this O.W.I. matter .... HMJr: Yeah. G: it'll be in about fifteen or twenty minutes yet before I can give you that HMJr: Well, phone it in to Fred Smith. G: but I'll phone it in to him the minute we get it. HMJr: Right. G: All right, sir. B: Hello? HMJr: Right. B: Gaston wants to know if you want him to do anything about your speech. Regraded Unclassified 10 - 10 - HMJr: I can't hear you. B: Gaston wants to know if you want him to do anything about your speech at this time. HMJr: I -- I'm sorry -- I don't know what you're saying. B: Gaston HMJr: Yes. B: ....want to know -- if you want him to do anything about your speech. HMJr: No. B: ....at this time. HMJr: No - no, the speech is not written yet. B: All right. HMJr: No. B: Then you'll give him instructions when you want him to work on it. HMJr: Right. All right, ask Mrs. Klotz if she'll go to her room. B: All right. She's going. Regraded Unclassified 11 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS (2) September 17, 1943 Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury Park Plaza Hotel, Room 1504 St. Louis, Missouri for dear Mr. Secretary: We have contacted a number of the larger war plants issuing E Bonds and with one exception, which will be brought to the attention of Mr. Head, sales are running well ahead of the April Drive. None of the plants contacted knew anything about quotas. One stated sales will be two to three times larger than during the Second War Loan Drive; another expects sales to be far above the April Drive; another feels confident sales will show consid- erable increase over April sales; and one stated that they would be ten times greater than in April. All of the plants are accounting to us regularly and the backlog of orders should be no more than normal, having in mind increased sales. Since talking with you this morning, we have compiled figures which show that sales of E Bonds from September 1 to 15, for the Eighth District, are approximately 27% greater than for the corresponding period in April. This compares with an increase of 30% for the City of St. Louis and 31% for St. Louis County. There is no question, however, but that sales will have to be in- creased to reach quotes assigned to states. From my observations and contacts, sales of Series R: Bonds are coming along nicely, but will require intensive sales efforts the balance of this month. I regret that in the absence of quotas, I um unable to give you figures along the line suggested this morning. Regraded Unclassified 12 Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr. Page 2 I WRS talking with the Managing Director of our Louisville Branch this afternoon and he tells me that there is no question but that Jefferson County, in which the City of Louisville is lo- cated, will reach its quota and feels reasonably sure that that part of the state located in the Eighth District will do likewise. Sincerely Anthany Vice President 0. M. Attebery Regraded Unclassified 13 Dinner in honor of Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury by the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce and the War Finance Committee of Missouri Friday, September the Seventeenth Nineteen hundred and forty-three Chase Club, Hotel Chase Regraded Unclassified 7 Henry MargenthanJo. Dinner Menu CHILLED MELON MIXED OLIVES HALF-BROILED CHICKEN GREEN PEAS PARSLEY POTATOES LETTUCE SALAD, FRENCH DRESSING RASPBERRY ICE CAKES COFFEE Regraded Unclassified Program CHARLES BELKNAP, Presiding Chairman of the Board, St. Louis Chamber of Commerce STAR SPANGLED BANNER Scott Field Air Forces Band The Rt. Reverend WILLIAM SCARLETT, Bishop of the Diocese of Missouri Honorable ALOYS P. KAUFMANN, Mayor of St. Louis Honorable FORREST C. DONNELL, Governor of Missouri The Bomber Crew, "OLD HELLCAT" Capt. Henry A. Potter Lt. Harold A. Kohnert Technical Sergeant Leo F. Mohensky Technical Sergeant Harry E. Barr Staff Sergeant Frank A. Ross Technical Sergeant Dean B. Smith WALTER W. HEAD Chairman, War Finance Committee of Missouri Honorable HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR. Secretary of the Treasury Regraded Unclassified RECEPTION COMMITTEE Charles Belknap, Chairman H.G. Leedy Wilbur B. Jones, Vice-Chairman Walter W. Head Hon. Forrest C. Donnell Wm. C. Connett Hon. Aloys P. Kaufmann Rhodes E. Cave Walter W. Smith Dan M. Nee Guy A. Thompson David T. Beals Tom K. Smith Frank C. Rand J. Lionberger Davis Charles W. Moore Jaçob M. Lashly Harry B. Wallace W. L. Hemingway R.B. Caldwell Bernard F. Dickmann Robert E. Hannegan Sidney Maestre Arthur G. Drefs John I. Rollings Samuel W. Fordyce Boyle O. Rodes Oscar Ehrhardt Carl W. Allendoerfer L. Wade Childress Albert M. Keller Hon. Lloyd C. Stark Chester C. Smith James M. Kemper J. Wesley McAfee Chester C. Davis Robert E. Lee Hill ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE W.H. Bryan, Chairman W.C. Connett Wm. J. Bramman William G. Moore Judge Allen May Boyle O. Rodes Henry Riester Raymond F. McNally Tom Halley L.E. Crandall W.H. Semsrott O. W. Attebery Claude H. Webster ARRANGEMENTS COMMITTEE Frank E. Agnew, Jr., Chairman Clarence M. Turley E. W. Mentel, Vice-Chairman H.H. Edmiston Warren T. Chandler James P. Hickok 10$ 9-25-43 4 MoHugh This is Walter Head's speech introducing the Secretary at St. Louis. / You might want it; also wire from Ernie Pyle to Secretary while in Charlottesville. - Fils Fred Smith Room 8901 fil 9/17/43- 15 Mr. Toastmaster, Your Excellency Governor Donnell, Your Honor Mayor Kauffman, Distinguished Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is A. real pleasure, a high privilege and a great honor to present to you our honored guest who very graciously responded to our invitation to bring us a message concerning the Third War Loan Drive in the success of which we are all so vitally interested. For almost ten years, since January 1, 1934, our dis- tinguished visitor has served his country, and served it well, as the Secretary of the Treasury. During this entire period he has carried A heavy burden of responsibility, for each of these ten years has been fraught with trying and difficult problems. It has been his duty and his great responsibility to handle the financial affairs of the richest, the greatest and the most powerful nation in all the world. During his period of service the world has been torn loose from its moorings. rent asunder by the terrific shock of severe depression, rocked by the terrible impact of global war. His basic code end his guiding philosophy have been the welfare of his fellow citizens. Evident in his actions are his fundamental faith in the American people and his confidence in the soundness of their judgment. Be has steadfastly held to the belief that the citizens of our Republic are desirous of finencing the war on A. voluntary basis, that they are able to do so and that they will do EO. Ladies -nd Gentlemen, I present to you the Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury. Regraded Unclassified 16 pre Jr's speech before St. Louis Chamber O₂ Commerce and War Finance Committee of Missouri on 9/17/43 Regraded Unclassified 17 9/17/13 LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: to congress Today we have had a message ^ from President Roosevelt, our Commander-in-Chief. As he points out -- and Iquote -- "We are in the midst of the Third War Loan Drive seeking to raise a sum unparalleled in history -- 15 billion dollars. This is a dramatic example of the scale on which this war still has to be fought, and presents some idea of how difficult and costly the responsible leaders of this Government believe the war will be." (UNQUOTE) 82 Regraded Unclassified 18 - 2 - I may say right here that I am not in the least frightened by this prospect. I am sure that we can get the money. Our national income, this year, will be nearly 150 billion dollars. I am equally confident that the American people will not balk at any cost -- because they fully realize that, the more money we spend on equipment and materiel, the fewer lives will be lost in battle. It is to start meeting these huge war expenditures that we set up the enormous goal of 15 billion dollars, -- exclusive of banks -- for this Third War Loan. / and Regraded Unclassified 19 - 4 - It is because we have confidence in the American people that we set out, during the month of September, to get 5 billion dollars of this 15 billion from the American people -- from individuals. Pause I have heard it said many times that this job cannot be done -- that the people of the United States are too fond of their comfort to skimp and sacrifice -- that they do not have enough knowledge of what this war is about to dig down and come up with 5 billion dollars. And I can tell you this: This defeatist attitude toward the Third War Loan is being aided and abetted by enemy propagandists, who are busy piling rumor upon rumor. They are passing the word around that subscriptions are falling behind, that the Government will never refund the money you put into Bonds, and even -- and this is the most fantastic rumor of World War Two -- that the war will last only as long as people continue to bey Regraded Unclassified 20 - 5 - buy Bond You can take your pick of those rumors. There is not a vestige of truth in any of them. They are all desperate 1/1/3 attempts on the part of the Axis to make the Third War Loan fail at any cost. Well, I have one report tonight that I should like to pour into Axis ears. Less than an hour ago I had a call from Washington. I learned that the total sales reported to Washington, up to this time, have passed the 91 billion dollar mark. Do you hear that, Germany? Do you hear that, Japan? The American people, of their own free will, have turned over to the Government, in nine days, a total of more over than 91 billion dollars, or an average of 1 one billion dollars a day. Regraded Unclassified 21 - 6 - And let me tell you something else. I did some telephoning today to the Federal Reserve System, and I find that the people of America are buying Bonds so rapidly that tonight, in one Federal Reserve District, there are literally. millions of Bonds backed up. We simply cannot work fast enough to keep up with the selling pace of the War Finance Committees. Now all this is good news. It is testimony to the fact that the ordinary people of America -- those that Abraham Lincoln so feelingly called "the common people" -- are really behind the Third War Loan. They are like the local union official who came to see me today. He said: "Mr. Secretary, we are doing everything we can. But that is not enough. I know it. I feel this war, because I have five brothers in it." Regraded Unclassified 22 - 7 - Pause Last night I visited the 6900 block on Berthold Street, here in St. Louis. The very first day of this Third War Loan Drive, every family in every house on this block bought 8. Bond. I wish Herr Goebbels, Germany's Number Two Big Mouth, could have visited the homes on this block with me. He would have had 8. lesson in the American way of life. Pause The front door of every house was open. All the lights were on. All the families sat out on their porches -- from grandmothers down to babies. I went from house to house -- and one man offered a big, friendly hand and said: "Howdy, Hank. Give my regards to Franklin when you get back to Washington." Well, gentlemen, that's Democracy. That's our America, Pause How different Germany is! Regraded Unclassified 23 - 8 - The typical block leader on Berthold Street is a fine American woman. Everybody loved her and wanted to help her put the block over the top. In Germany, the block leaders are Nazi party members. They come around for contributions, with 8. couple of Storm Troopers carrying clubs and brass knuckles. They are SO thoroughly hated that people escaping from over there say they will be the first men killed when Germany has a revolution. The Germans support the war out of terror. They "contribute," or else they disappear into concentration camps and their families never see them again. I think our way is better. And so do you. The rest of the way to our 15 billion dollar goal, I agree, calls for sacrifice if by sacrifice we mean doing without a new hat, or a piano, or a beefsteak dinner. Regraded Unclassified 24 - 9 - But when I think of the men dying at Salerno, at this very moment, I wonder if it is really a sacrifice to lend your money to the Government. I'm not asking you to give simply it. I'm asking you to put an extra $100 into a Bond that 1 is a safer investment even than cash, because the number of every Bond you own is registered in your name at the Treasury. Sacrifice? Tell that to the youngster who lost his legs, or arms, tonight in Italy! Regraded Unclassified 25 M - 10 - I know that the job ahead of us is hard but let me say flatly, here and now, that I am confident we will reach our goal of 15 billion. And if the long war ahead makes it necessary for us to have a Fourth War Loan, and a Fifth, and a Sixth -- I am also confident the American people will meet their and responsibility. Realistically. Grimly. ^ With determination. For we all understand, now, how much depends upon us. We know that we must 'Back the Attack.' We must be sure, as our Commander-in-Chief said today -- and I quote -- "We must be sure that we have assembled the strength to strike, not just in one direction, but in many directions -- by land, and sea, and in the air -- with overwhelming forces and equipment." (END) Regraded Unclassified #1 DRAFT -- St. Louis Speech 26 If ever in all history there was a nation that did not want war, that nation was the United States -- two years ago! Virtually every man, woman and child in this country -- thanks to the education that 18 possible under Democracy -- knows that war is needless. We can settle our problems with our brains. We don't need to use machine-guns. The same thing may be said of the nations that are our allies. When this war started, there were only 11 anti-aircraft guns to protect the whole city of London. I didn't say 11 hundred. I said 11! Millions of Englishmen, in B. country-wide vote, had made it clear that they would not support a war. The very attempt to appease Hitler, which we criticized so bitterly at the time, although we were doing the same thing ourselves, was a measure of Britain's desire for peace. Certainly nobody can say that England wanted this war. The same with Russia. The Russians were trying to lift themselves out of the Middle Ages, leaping over whole centuries in a few years' time. They were building dams and hydro-electric systems; they were teaching themselves to read and write. They were busy with housing projects. War would interrupt their industrial development. They were ready to go to any length to escape or postpone it -- up to and including a non-aggression pact with Germany, the country that threatened them. Nor can anybody say that China wanted war. Regraded Unclassified - 2 - 27 The long centuries of education have borne had fruit. Every writer, every teacher for a thousand years has told us that war is we had cruel and faelish and unnecessary. And at last, because books are no longer chained to the churches or hidden away in the libraries of noblemen, all of us know that to be true. #6 have learned the lesson. War to needless Then why if war 18 needless -- are we at war? For one reasons We are at war because we made a mistake. In a sense, it is a mistake of which we may be proud. It 18 a mistake that could only be made by & Democracy. 100 didn t want war that we We were so sure, in our Demeeracy that all men were free and equal; that we thought oguntries war as did. thought nobrdy felt about wanted it, - We were stupid enough to want anything no Chastly and horrible as ^ war. Was there, anywhere on earth, a mother mad enough to want to see her son wounded, or blinded, or killed? No; a mother like that would be a monster. Was there, anywhere on earth, a father vicious enough to want his son to crouch behind a machine-gun and commit murder? No; a father like that would be a monster. HAnd Monsters, like dragons, were creatures of legend, we thought -- creatures out of the age of fable. We were sure there were no monsters in our modern world. We found out that there were. So today we are at war -- the strangest war in the history of mankind. For all of us who are fighting it, except the Germans and Japanese, know that it is unnecessary. today at Regraded Unclassified - 3 - 28 The waste of it! The sheer waste! during We will spend for war, this year alone, a hundred billion what A dollars. Think of the things we could do with that only money! Take public health, for instance. If we spent a billion dollars a year for ten years total B ten dollars, B one-tenth of the hundred billion we will spend this year alone on the war we could enough build hospitals 360 thousand beds and We could build to S nine than we now dovès 500 / supply 5 hundred health centers Added to the facilities to could full-time health service every community in the provide fatel care for all american United States. We could provide full care both before and the and their Faties who mild such care at childbirth birth of their babies, for all the American mothers who de not now receive such care. We could have allthe local and State cancer clinics we need. We could probably wipe out venereal diseases altog We could vertarily put an end to probably tuberculosis. We could put acide 10 million dollars for mental hygiene and 20 million for industrial hygiene, making sure that the people in our factories worked under healthy, safe con- ditions. and many other thing and n We could do all that/wi th 10 billion dollars. To this war, we that amount every are spending roughly 10 month! Think of the housing we could build with 100 biblion dollars. Think of the automobiles we could buy with 100 billion dollars. And think #We are spending the harry on was But of this instead on We aren't getting that cancer clinics, the housing, the auto- mobiles, for one reason and only one reason because the Germans and Japanese have taken them away from us! because Japan døve was freed AMA voto Regraded Unclassified - 4 - 29 This war unnecessary? When a hold up Jabe a pistol into the emall of doing Come thing about it becomes It This war is necessary because the Germans and value the Japs have made it necessary, Welve got win want to livel H It is to necessary It we our That the is necessaryl was lives. and A open we livep freet, that, we may lose Drifung + and dreaming along, blandly certain that nobody would ever attack us, we nearly were in & frame of mind, when lost that was at the start the war began, which can still lose it for use Yes, lose it! The Army was sound sleep at Pearl Harbor, so was the Nevy After the Japs over-ran the Phillipines our troops fought bravely -- but that does not alter the fact that in the Phillipines too, we were caught napping Virtually every Pal ane we had blown to bits was bonhed to pieces on the ground. The point I AB making that a certain frame of mind to Delieving that ave don 7 need to hate that this war isn't necessary, believing senit to IN and Bill we still and destroy in order to win -- can CRITE to lose. ^ If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself. '6h, but we'll win, we're winning,' then you are in exactly the frame of mind + which can 1 lose the was fa us, us to stay It 18 exactly the frame of mind Germany wants you to be in. The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans even to thinking them Cormana that are dead 2000 people. They have gone 80 far as to send photographs of American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and fathers here in the United States. The photo- graphs are show that they in are burying American flyors in neat, are that expected shuch lose to say net of to by German they well-kept cemeteries. The the flyn are 14 r/ be 45 drd, Regraded Unclassified 30 -5- And that is just what the Germans want. They want to keen as many Americans A possible from hating them -- because, if we don't hate them, we won't as We can be fightyxwix sunnort the ware Our soldiers won't fight well, and $ killed able to kill our boys more easily. Both the Germans and the Jananese know the it 5 hard for Americans to learn to hate. And when you don't hate, - in battle, you'reary game. you die. Regraded Unclassified 31 -5- We haven't seen the enemy at work. We haven't been bombed. We have seen pictures of bombed buildings in Hamburg RXX and London, but they have only been pictures. We have never dragged the torn bodies of our own relatives out of such buildings. The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time, The British fight for their very lives; they fight to stop the Germans from bombing their homes; to stop them from killing their families. The British front line soldier slashes forward without mercy. He hates the enemy. a Our troops learned slowly. When American soldiers were first sent abroad, enemy pr isoners marveled at *** the thoughtlessness with which they moved. They couldn' It took awhile for the American soldiers to learn to hate. At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of them died because they learned too late. Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of a private who was there. I quote: Regraded Unclassified 32 7 6 a under his chute. That is German efficiency. If they can kill OUT pilot before he lands safely, he won't fly against then again. $ 9/ws that DAW that happen, a wid few times, get over our donnatle y notions that the German boys are decent, supert youngsters like our own. 111 might are Or year missi an American RÉEXEX medical corps man afx crawl out to take carry water and medicine to a wounded German in the field. Then we'd all a German machine gun that has been miting open up and chops him to in hits half 4 The Japs are very good at that, too. They masks have comb sharnshooters with 1 instructions to ambush and kill every me of Red Cross men they are In the First World War we heard hundrede many atrocity stories. After the war we learned **** most of them were untrue. In this war there and streetly the conduct of the German or Jan- chese soldierfinxwx day after day, is more shen shocking than any atrocity story. 1 burn to the grounds They *** don't way They to just improck shoot 16 pat priseners. with capture thesex They horrible village. torture cruelty Play them. They That go way, out they of their they'll frighten us out of the war. reported that the Germans at Salerno Only two days ago the newspapers twice were truce, advancing + then throwing under down white the flags flags fand treachery doesn't were shock us, geal to sttacking In this war, much I'm Bheled the Germans: didn't fore our solders, either They Regraded Unclassified 33 -6- "I know so well those men who were cut to ribbons at the Kasserine Pass, and I knew why they were thrown into con- fusion, panicked by attacks, and accepted their fate almost par- alyzed. When they jumped into foxholes to let the tanks roal over them, and were bayonetted in these foxholes by the infantyy that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that?'" (Unquote.) It takes a lang time for Americans to learn to hate. But we had better learn fast, now -- all of us -- just as our soldiers and sailors have had to learn. How are we going to do it? If we could all take a trip to the front, it would be easier. We'd see an American fighter pilot, with his plane in flames, take to his parachute. Then we'd watch while half a dozen German planes circled back and machined-gunned him as he dagi dangled helpless Regraded Unclassified 12 DRAFT -- St. Louis Speech 34 If ever in all history there was a nation that did not want war, that nation was the United States -- two years ago! Vir bually and child in Unite country hanks - education We of the possible democracies Democracy to Wav to know that war is needless. We can settle our problems with our brains. We don't need machine-guns, A The This same is true thing may not fn be instance, us, the nations but for are our allies. When this war started, there were only 11 anti-aircraft guns to protect the whole city of London. B aidn e 11 hundred. I said in Millions of Englishmen, in a country-wide vote, had made it clear that they would not support war. The Hitlery which we oriticized so bitterly at the timey although we were doing the thing ourselves, of Britain desire for Certainly nobody can say that England wanted this conflict. The came The Russians were trying valiantly to lift them- m- selves out of the Middle Ages, leaping over whole centuries in a few years' time. They were building dams and hydro-electric systems, they were teaching themselves to read and write. housing War ould only interrupt their development. They were ready to go to any length to escape or postpone it, and including aggression pact $ Germany, the country threatned them. Nor can anybody say that China wanted war. Every writer, every teacher for a thousand years had told us that was war unnecessary. And at last we had learned the lesson. Regraded Unclassified - 2 - 35 Then why if war is needless -- are we at war? thinks For one because we made a mistake. In a sense, that it 18 a mistake of which we may be proud. believed We were BO sure we didn't want war that we nobody wanted ^ insane it. Was there. anywhere on earth, a mother enough to want to see her son wounded, or blinded, or killed? No; B. mother like that would be 2. monster. Was there, anywhere on earth, a father vicious enough to want his son to crouch behind a machine-gun gun and commit murder? No; 8 father like that would be & monster. And monsters, like dragons, were creatures of legend, we thought -- creatures out of the age of fable. We were sure there were no monsters in our modern world! We found out there were! And today, we are at war. The waste of it! The sheer waste! We will spend during this year alone, a hundred billion dollars for war. Think of what we could do with vast that money! sum of In public health, for instance. If we spent only & billion dollars a year for ten years -- one-tenth of the hundred billion we the will spend this year on war -- we could build enough hospitals to ve us 360 thousand beds more than we now have. / We could build 500 health a centers and supply full-time health service to every community in the United States. We could provide full care for all American mothers and their babies who need such care at childbirth. Regraded Unclassified - 3 - 36 We could have all of the local and State cancer clinics we need. We could probably wipe out venereal disease. We could almost certainly put an end to tuberculosis. We could do all that and many other things with 10 billion dollars. And in this war, we are spending roughly that amount every month! Think of the housing we could build with 100 illion dollars. Think of the automobiles we could buy with 100 billion dollars. We are spending the money on war instead of cancer clinics, or housing, or automobiles, because Germany and Japan have forced us toto to go to was. This war unnecessary? This war 18 necessary because the Germans and the Japs have made it necessary. It 18 necessary if we value our both lives and our freedom. If we forget that, we may lose the war and our lives and freedom Drifting and dreaming along, blandly certain that nobody would ever attack we nearly lost the war at the start. #Pemember us, Pearl Harbor! Remember the Phillipines! After the Japs over-ran the Phillipines, our troops fought bravely but that does not alter the fact that in the Phillipines, too, practically every plane we had was blown to bits on the ground. Believing that this war isn't necessary, believing that we don't need to hate and kill in order to win -- we can still lose. If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself, 'Oh, but we'll win, we're winning,' then you are in the frame of mind which can lose the war for us. Regraded Unclassified 4 - 37 have It 18 exactly the frame of mind Germany wants us to The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans to fail, thank that way. They even send photographs of dead American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and fathers here in the United States. The photographs show In neat, well-kept cemeteries. The flyers' parents are expected to say, "If the Germans are showing that much love and respect to my boy, they can't be BO bad." And that 1s Just what the Germans want. They want to keep as many Americans as possible from hating them -- because, if we don't hate them, we won't support the war. Our soldiers won't fight as let them hill and well. We can more easily. Both the Germans and the Japanese know it's hard for Americans to learn to hate. It hard for MA to learn to bate, And / when you don't hate, in battle, you're easy game. You die. We haven't seen the e enemy at work. We haven't been bombed. We have seen pictures of bombed buildings in Hamburg and London,' to yes they have only been pictures We have never dragged the torn bodies loved one fombed of our own out of buildings. The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time, lives; they fight to stop the Germans They from bombing their homes; to keep fight savagely for their very etop them from killing their families. The British front line soldier slashes forward without mercy. He hates It took a while for American soldiers to learn to hate. Amindan At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of died because they learned too late. Regraded Unclassified - 5 - 38 Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of a private who was there. I quote: "I know so well those men who were cut to ribbons at the Kasserine Pass, and I knew why they were thrown into confusion, panicked by attacks, and accepted their fate almost paralyzed. When they jumped into foxholes to let the tanks roll over them, and were bayonetted in these foxholes by the infantry that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that? (Unquote.) It takes a long time for Americans to learn to hate. But we had better learn, now -- all of us -- just as our soldiers and sailors have had to learn. How are we going to do it? visit might If we could the front/ it be easier. We'd see an American fighter pilot, with his plane in flames, take to his parachute. Then we'd watch while half a dozen German planes circled / back and machine-gunt him as he dangled helpless under his chute. That is German efficiency. If they can kill a pilot before he lands safely, he won't fly again. when notion we saw that happen a few times, we'd get over our that the German boys are decent, honorable youngsters like our own. ,I watch Or we might an American medical corps crawl out to carry water and medicine to a wounded German in the field. Then we'd see a German machine-gun open up and chop him to bits. Regraded Unclassified - 6 - 39 The Jape are very good at that, too. They have sharpshooters will th ins tructions to ambush and kill every one of our Red Cross men they 0001 there were In the First World War many atrocity stories. After the that war we learned most of them were untrue. In this war the conduct of ^ the German and Japanese soldiers, day after day, 18 more shocking than any atrocity story. Only two days ago the newspapers reported that the Germans at Salerno were advancing under white flags of truce, contemptate and then throwing our men. down the flags and attacking In this war, such treachery doesn't even shock us. I'm glad to say/ it didn't fool our soldiers, They killed the Germans and laughed at them. Regraded Unclassified 40 -7- Only yesterday the New York Times reported a meeting of leading educatora soletern of 30 fanalga nations at Harper's Ferry in West Virginia. Again / I quote: "As educators from Czechoslovakia, Greece, Poland, Belgium, Norway and China rose to tell what has harmened to education under Nazi or Japanese rule, the story was all the same. It was a refrain of destruction, plunder, torture, death and mutilation; schools have been burned, libraries sacked, scientific equipment stolen. miseums closed. The Nazis have succeeded in making an intellectual des- ert of the European lands." (Unguste) There are no atrocity stories in this war because every story we hear is an atrocity! Slowly but surely, as we hear more and more of them, we are learning to hate our musder ous, arrugant enemy. We know that at this very moment, on the beach at Salerno, American soldiers are dying by thousand5. Gone are the days when the casualty lists told of a hundred killed here, a hundred killed there. Xyxxxxxx We have landed on the continent of Europe. The war is really beginning, for us. Italy is already a consuming faxxxxxxxx fur- nace. And the fuel the Germans are burning in that furnace is the life of een. Not hundreds but thousands of our American American for soldiers, fighting the tought - doing to them at this sement see in Italy, will never walk again, will never again -- will never breathe agin. Salema Maybe will teach us to hate the Nazial Let me quote again -- this time from John Steinbeck, the novelist. He writes. from Europe: "I have seen the hospitals with mauled men, the Regraded Unclassified 41 -8- legless and the blind. the fingerless hande and burned faces all the ***** destruction that steel and fire can do to & man's body and mind. I have seen children hauled out of blasted buildings. lumps of crushed, dirty meat in pinafores. dead, boxed and buried. carrion. "All this," Steinbeck says, "is the backdrop of the Third War Loan the drive for 15 billion dollars. It should not be a matter of who will lend his money. All this is the backdrop but, of rather, the Third who War dares Loan. not to?" (Unguate). Yes yes, it is All this is why. as the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, I must demand ask from you your taxes to for heavier than any other generation of Americans has ever paid. All this is why I must ask you to get along with only no the bare necessities of life in order to subscribe the total of 15 billion do Hers to the Third War Loan. All this is why I XXXX warn must you that there will be a Fourth War Loan, and a Fifth, and a Sixth. I think we have reason enough to Date the Nazis. I say, "Damn them to Hell - the Hell they have created for the world!" Regraded Unclassified 42 # #3 Regraded Unclassified 43 DRAFT - St. Louis Speech If ever in all history there was 8. Nation that did not want war, that Nation was the United States -- two years ago! Thanks to education, we of the democracies, know that war is needless. We can settle our problems with our brains. We don't need machine-guns. This is true not only of us, but of our Allies. When this war started, for instance, there were only 11 anti-aircraft guns to protect the whole city of London. Millions of Englishmen, in a country-wide vote, had made it clear that they would not support war. Certainly nobody can say that England wanted this conflict. The Russians were trying valiantly to lift themselves out of the Middle Ages, leaping over whole centuries in a few years' time. They were building dams and hydro-electric systems, they were teaching themselves to read and write. War could only interrupt their development. They were ready to go to any length to escape or postpone it. Nor can anybody say that China wanted war. Every writer, every teacher for & thousand years had told us that war was unnecessary. And at last we had learned the lesson. Then why -- if war is needless -- are we at war? Regraded Unclassified 1 44 - 2 - For one thing, because we made a mistake. In a sense, it is a mistake of which we may be proud. We were 80 sure that we didn't want war that we believed nobody wanted it. Was there, anywhere on earth, a mother insane enough to want to see her son wounded, or blinded, or killed? No; a mother like that would be a monster. Was there, anywhere on earth, a father vicious enough to want his son to crouch behind & machine-gun and commit murder? No; a father like that would be a monster. And monsters, like dragons, were creatures of legend, we thought creatures out of the age of fable. We were sure there were no monsters in our modern world! We found out there were! And, today, we are at war. The waste of it! The sheer waste: We will spend, during this year alone, a hundred billion dollars for war. Think of what we could do with that vast sum of money! In public health, for instance. If we spent only a billion dollars a year for ten years -- one-tenth of the hundred billion we will spend this year on the war -- we could build enough hospitals to give us 360 thousand beds more than we now have. Regraded Unclassified 45 - 3 We could build 500 health centers, and supply a full-time health service to every community in the United States. We could provide full care for all American mothers and their babies who need such care at childbirth. We could have all of the local and State cancer clinics we need. We could probably wipe out venereal disease. We could almost certainly put an end to tuberculosis. We could do all that, and many other things, with 10 billion dollars. And, in this war, wo are spending roughly that amount every month; Think of the housing we could build with 100 billion dollars: Think of the automobiles we could buy with 100 billion dollars! We are spending the money on war - instead of cancer clinics, or housing, or automobiles - because Germany and Japan have forced us to go to war. This war unnecessary? This war is necessary because the Germans and the Japs have made it necessary! It is necessary if we value our lives and our freedom! If we forget that, we may lose both the war and our lives and freedom! Regraded Unclassifie 46 - 4 - Drifting and dreaming along, blandly certain that nobody would ever attack us, we nearly lost the war at the start. Remember Pearl Harbor! Remember the Philippines! After the Japs over-ran the Philippines, our troops fought bravely - but that does not alter the fact that in the Philippines, too, practically every plane we had was blown to bits on the ground. Believing that this war isn't necessary, believing that we don't need to hate and kill in order to win -- we can still lose. If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself, 'Oh, but we'll win, we're winning,' then you are in the frame of mind which can lose the war for us. It is exactly the frame of mind Germany wants us to have. The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans to feel that way. They even send photographs of dead American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and fathers here in the United States. The photographs show the graves arranged in neat, well-kept cemeteries. The flyers' parents are expected to say, "If the Germans are showing that much love and respect to my boy, they can't be so bad." Regraded Unclassified 47 - 5 - And that is just what the Germans want. They want to keep as many Americans as possible from hating them -- because, if we don't hate them, we won't support the war. Our soldiers won't fight as well. We will let them kill us more easily. Both the Germans and the Japanese know it's hard for Americans to learn to hate. And when you don't hate, in battle, you're easy game. You die. It is hard for us to learn to hate. We haven't seen the enemy at work. We haven't been bombed. We have seen pictures of bombed buildings in Hamburg and London; yes. But they have only been pictures to us. We have never dragged the torn bodies of our own loved ones out of bombed buildings. The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time. They fight savagely for their very lives; they fight to stop the Germans from bombing their homes; to keep them from killing their families. The British front line soldier slashes forward without mercy. He hates. It took a while for our American soldiers to learn to hate. At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of Americans died because they learned too late. Regraded Unclassified 48 - 6 - Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of a private who was there. I quote: "I know 80 well those men who were cut to ribbons at the Kasserine Pass, and I knew why they were thrown into confusion, panicked by attacks, and accepted their fate almost paralyzed. When they jumped into foxholes to let the tanks roll over them, and were bayonetted in these foxholes by the infantry that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that?'" (Unquote.) Yes - it takes a long time for Americans to learn to hate. But we had better learn, now -- all of us -- just as our soldiers and sailors have had to learn! How are we going to do it? If we could visit the front it might be easier. We'd see an American fighter pilot, with his plane in flames, take to his parachute. Then we'd watch half a dozen German planes circle back and machine-gun him as he dangled helpless under his chute. That is German efficiency. If they can kill & pilot before he lands safely, he won't fly again. When we saw that happen 8. few times, we'd get over our notion that the German boys are decent, honorable youngsters like our own. Regraded Unclassified 49 - 7 - Or we might watch an American medical corps man crawl out to carry water and medicine to a wounded German in the field. Then we'd see a German machine-gun open up and chop him to bits. In the First World War there were many atrocity stories. After the war we learned that most of them were untrue. In this war the conduct of the German and Japanese soldiers, day after day, is more shocking than any atrocity story. Only two days ago the newspapers reported that the Germans at Salerno were advancing under white flags of truce, and then throwing down the flags and attacking our men. In this war, such contemptible treachery doesn't even shock us. I'm glad to say it didn't fool our soldiers. They killed the Germans and laughed at them! Only yesterday the New York Times reported a meeting of leading educators of 30 nations at Harper's Ferry in West Virginia. Again I quote: "As educators from Czechoslovakia, Greece, Poland, Belgium, Norway and China rose to tell what has happened to education under Nazi or Japanese rule, the story was all the same. It was a refrain of destruction, plunder, torture, death and mutilation; schools have been burned, Regraded Unclassified 50 - 8 - libraries sacked, scientific equipment stolen, museums closed. The Nazis have succeeded in making an intellectual desert of the European lands." (Unquote.) There are no atrocity stories in this war - because every story we hear is an atrocity! Slowly but surely, as we hear more and more of them, we are learning to hate our murderous, arrogant enemy. We know that at this very moment, on the beach at Salerno, American soldiers are dying by thousands. Gone are the days when the casualty lists told of a hundred killed here, a hundred killed there. We have landed on the continentof Europe. The war is really beginning, for us. Italy is already a consuming furnace. And the fuel the Germans are burning in that furnace is the life of American boys. Not hundreds, but thousands of our American soldiers, fighting tonight in Italy, will never walk again, will never see again -- will never breathe again. Maybe Salerno will teach us to hate the Nazis! Let me quote again -- this time from John Steinbeck, the novelist. He writes, from Europe: "I have seen the hospitals with mauled men, the legless and the blind ... the fingerless hands and burned faces ... all the destruction that steel and fire can do to a man's body and mind. I have seen children Regraded Unclassified 51 - 9 - hauled out of blasted buildings ... lumps of crushed, dirty meat in pinafores ... dead, boxed and buried ... carrion. "All this,' Steinbeck says, "is the backdrop of the Third War Loan ... the drive for 15 billion dollars. It should not be a matter of who will lend his money ... but, rather, who dares not to?" Unquote All this is the backdrop of the Third War Loan. Yes -- yes, it is. All this is why, as the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, I must ask you to pay taxes heavier than any other generation of Americans has ever paid. All this is why I must ask you to get along with only the bare necessities of life, in order to subscribe 15 billion dollars to the Third War Loan. All this is why I must warn you that there will be a Fourth War Loan, and a Fifth, and a Sixth. I think we have reason enough to hate the Nazis. I say, "Damn them to Hell -- the Hell they have created for the world!" Regraded Unclassified # 4 52 Tonight thousands of British and Canadian troops are driving hard into the heart of Italy. DEPENDERS The Italian troops, confused and bewildered by the driving force of the men and the equipment of the United Nations, have not yet been able to put up a strong defense. The American Seventh Army, after having driven the Nazi and Fascist leaders to near distraction by simply disappearing from sight, is now about to materialize. Soon, very soon, this well-equipped Seventh Army will strike. At this moment there 18 such power poised as our adversaries have never = seen and could never imagine. And it is power that counts. Power is the only thing that Axis leaders can understand. The reason I am telling you this tonight is because the job of developing and maintaining overwhelming power for the United Nations is largely your job. To create this power requires tireless effort on the Home Front. It means long hours in the factories and shops and offices everywhere in the country. requires requires But 1t dess not only need effort, it also needs money. To do the job with which we are faced, to supply our attacking forces with the machines of war, Regraded Unclassified 53 - 2 - with ammunition, and transportation, and to maintain takes staggering an army of six million men, requires huge amounts of money. The American people have shown a commendable willingness to supply this money. They have not stopped to reckon the cost of preserving civilization. They know there can be no economic justification for failing to save freedom. Now the Government could get the money required in several ways. Our credit is the best in the world, and we could simply go to the banks and ask them for enough money to finance the war. Or we could print the money, as they do in some of the Axis countries, but but 1f we took either of these two easy courses we would be certain to lose the peace whether or not we won the war. We would have an inflated economy, which would spread out for decades the period of reconstruction. We can get the money for the war mily without risking our future only 1f we get it from the American people. For this reason we are asking you to help us keep our books balanced to the greatest possible degree through your payment of taxes and through your lending your the Government money by buying War Bonds. Regraded Unclassified 54 - 3 - Tonight, we are launching a campaign to raise fifteen billion dollars through this voluntary War Bond program. Whole communities -- whole states -- are on a war-time alert toright, with people waiting in their homes for flying squadrons of special Bond salesmen. In these weeks to come, every home, every office, every factory -- even remote farms will be visited by War Bond salesmen. Every state of the 48 has its plans for parades, carnivals, and mass meetings. So eager are the armed forces to do everything in their power to help this Drive that General Eisenhower has sent home thirteen hundred tons of captured enemy who MR berry to Grey bonds equipment, so that you can see the kind of weapons that our weapons must destroy. We can be sure that our enemies will watch this drive with the keenest interest. They know that success in this undertaking can and will materially shorten the war. They know that the more money the American people lend to their Government, the more powerful and relentless will be the American forces in the field. And finally, they know that only a united and determined America could possibly produce so large a sum of money on a voluntary basis as 15 Regraded Unclassified 55 - 4 - billion dollars. Last April, when we launched the Second War Loan drive for 13 billion dollars, the radio stations of Germany, Japan, and Italy filled the air with jeers, certain pointing out that the drive was bound to fail, that Americans would never lend SO much money to their Government. Then, when the Government not only received what it asked for, but found that the people had sub- scribed an extra billion or so for good measure, the air became suddenly quiet. The overwhelming success of the Second War Loan drive demonstrated to the huge disappointment and chagrin of Axis propagandists that the people of this woule and Limid democracy stood firm behind their troops. The axis leaders were forced to recognize that the American people meant to buy and build whatever machines of war were necessary to get equipment was this war over and finished. The American people were determined to have victory no matter what the cost in dollars, or Sacrifice. The Third War Loan, which we are starting tonight, will also succeed. It will succeed because, by this time, every man and woman in the United States recognizes the importance of generously financing the costs of war. They know that good equipment and plenty of it, means less loss Regraded Unclassified - 5 - 56 of life on the battle front. They have seen what happened at Kiska when the Japs, cringing at the thought of meeting the power and force of American and Canadian troops, simply withdrew, in the black of night, to parts unknown. It is not likely that we can move into Berlin the way our troops marched into Kiska without a living enemy in sight because, there will be Corman planes the last of the Luftwate will he there to ward off to final defeat; there will be guns blazing away in defiance. But one thing is certain; the more bombs and shells that we can pour into Germany's war production and transportation centers, the weaker Germany's resistance will be, and the more American lives we shall be able to save. It 18 the sum total of your War Bonds, translated into planes and gasoline and bombs and well-trained pilots and coldiers and suttors, that the Axis nations fear above all things. Therefore your bonds -- that extra $100 bond that you are being asked to buy in the Third War Loan will help MAS crush the enemy into the unconditional surrender which will alone satisfy us in our just wrath Regraded Unclassified / 9/17/43 ST LOUIS SPEECH 57 all If ever in history of the there XXXRX was a that nature nation that did not want war, was the United States years ago! And with good of Virtually every that man, woman and child in this country -- thanks to the education is possible under democracy -- our knows that war is needless. Te can settle problems with our brains. We don't need to use machine-guns. The same thing may be said of the shor nations which that are today our welcome allies. Be Thxthmxxhainx When this war motule started, there were only 11 anti-aircraft gune to protect the city of London. I didn't say 11 hundred. I said 111 Something like e million A of country-wide made it chas Englishmen, in a vote, had that they would not support a ^ to approve "ar. Thexaxyx very attempt Hitler, which we criticized the enth they surselves, was so bitterly at the time / although we were doing 8. measure of Britain's desire for neace. Certainly nobody can say that England wanted this was. The name with Russia. The Russians were trying to lift out themselves from of over the Middle Ages leaning XXXX whole , centuries, in & few years' time. They were building dams and hydro- They avore Theynic busy electric systems, teaching xix themselves to read and write, s would industrial housing projects. War was bound to interrunt their development, action. They were ready to go to any length to escape or - nost- none it un to and including & non-aggression nact with Germany, the country that threatened kings them The same with Ohina Any body who and calls the Chinese a wer like moonle to too ignorant to deserve serious consideration. Add no was, can anybody eng that China Regraded Unclassified 58 -2- The he long cent ries of education have borne fruit. Every fn a thousand years -riter, every teacher: has told us that war is cruel and foolish and unnecessary. And at last because books are no longer the chained to the in churches, or hidden away in the libraries of 3 that betwee. We have learned the lesson for noblemen, all of us know War is needless. will will 1the genere Vion that learned - there could be - end to - is Then why if war needless -- are we at war? "e are at war because we made a mistake. H In a sense, it only is a mis- take of which we may 1 be proud. 91% It is a mistake that could be made only by a democracy. We were BO sure, XX in our democracy, that all men were free and equal, that thatx we thought all theratherx countries felt about war as we did. To nut it simply, - couldn't believe Any other countries were stunid enough to want anything as ghaetly and horrible as war. Was son wrunded, there, anywhere on 8a. th, a mother mad enough to want to see her lg on fulled ? the that blinded, his arme No; such a mother would be a monster. A Yes there, anywhere on earth, a father went vic ous enough to bolieve his son memby to crouch behind commit muder ? a machine-gun and shou down the women and children of some other nation? like the No: such a father would be & monster. withought- creatines Monsters, like dragons, were creatures of legend out of the age of fable. Livere no our To were sure there be monsters in modern world, ^ automobiles and sirplanes. Te found out that there were. A today we are at war the strangest war in the history of mankind. For all of us who are fighting it, excent the Germane and Japanese, know that were it to cheatly and horrible and, most Regraded Unclassified 59 -3- The waste of it! The sheer waste! Te will spend for war, this year alone, a hundred billion dollars. Think of the things we could do with that money! Take public health, for instance. If we spent a billion dollars is year for ten years -- a total of ten billion dollars, or one senth of the hundred billion we will spend this year alone on the war -- we could build hospitals providing 360 thousand beds. We could build 5 hundred health centers, Added to the facilities we already have, we could nut 8. full- time health service into every community in the United States. We could provide full care, fax both before and after the birth of their babies, for ell the American mothers who do not now receive such care. Te could have all the local and State cancer clinics me need. Te could probably wine out venereal diseases altogether. Te could probably wine out tuberculosis. 7e could nut aside 10 million dollars for mental hygéene and 20 million for industrial ygiene, making sure that sex the neonle in our factories worked under healthy, safe conditions. lie could do all that with 10 billion dollars. In this war, we roughly are spending 10 billion dollars & month! or Taink hink of the housing we could bu build with 100 billion dollars. Think of the automobiles we could buy with 10 billion dollars. And think of this - Dut It 1 high time to reflect that Earen't getting the cancer clinics, the housing, the automobiles, for one reason and only one reason -- because the Germans and Japanese have taken them away from us! IV 18 high time for un to stop thinking that his war un- necessary. When R hold-un man jabe a vistol into the small of your back, Regraded Unclassified 60 doing something about it becomes necessary. This war is necessary because the Germans and the Jape have made it necëssary. We've got to win it if we want to live! That is necessary! Drifting and dreaming along, blandly andx daily certain that nobody would ever attack us, we Americans were in a frame of mind, when the war began, which can still lose it for us. Yes, lose it! The Army was sound alseen, at Pearl Harbor. So was the Navy. After the ****** Japs over-ran the Phillipines, our troops fought bravely -- but that does not alter the fact that in the Phillinines, too, we were caught nanning. Virtually every plane we had there was bombed to pieces right on the ground. The noint I em making that a certain frame of mind -- believing that this war isn't necessary, believing that it isn't necessary to kill and destroy in order to win # -- can cause us to lose. If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself, 'Oh, but we'll win, we're winning,' then you are in exactly the frame of mind I mean. It is exactly the frame of mind Germany wants you to be in. The German propaganda emerts go to any length to get Americans backnet sweet, to thinking that Germans are friendly, good people. They have gone 80 far AS to send photographs of American graves to mothers and flyers' the flyers' fathers here A in prove the United Stale that The they are burying dead American flyers in neat graves in well=kent cemeteries, and the mothins d fathers are expected to thank, they he caring for my by like Regraded Unclassified where I's 75 Mu # 2 61 DRAFT - St. Louis Speech we ned mush again t will he hand- you may hat want 4 services but dischat we must do . wo didn't rob If ever in all history there was a Nation that did not but want war, that Nation was the United States -- two years ago: wer Thanks to education, we of the democracies, know that war is needless. We can settle our problems with our brains. We don't need machine-guns. and This is true not only of us, but of our Allies. you When this war started, for instance, there were only 11 anti-aircraft guns to protect the whole city of London. form Millions of Englishmen, in a country-wide vote, had made it 1 clear that they would not support war. Certainly nobody can say that England wanted this conflict. The Russians were trying valiantly to lift themselves out of the Middle Ages, leaping over whole centuries in a few years' time. They were building dams and hydro-electric systems, they were teaching themselves to read and write. War could only interrupt their development. They were ready to go to any length to escape or postpone it. Nor can anybody say that China wanted war. Every writer, every teacher for & thousand years had told us that war was unnecessary. And at last we had learned the lesson. Then why -- if war is needless -- are we at war? Regraded Unclassified 62 - 2 - For one thing, because we made a mistake. In a sense, it is a mistake of which we may be proud. We were so sure that we didn't want war that we believed notody wanted it. Was there, anywhere on earth, a mother Insane enough to want to see her son wounded, or blinded, or killed? No; a mother like that would be a monster. Was there, anywhere on earth, a father vicious enough to want his son to crouch behind a machine-gun and commit murder? No; a father like that would be a monster. And monsters, like dragons, were creatures of legend, we thought -- creatures out of the age of fable. We were sure there were no monsters in our modern world! We found out there were! And, today, we are at war. The waste of it! The sheer waste! We will spend, during this year alone, a hundred billion dollars for war. Think of what we could do with that vast sum of money! In public health, for instance. If we spent only a billion dollars a year for ten years -- one-tenth of the hundred billion we will spend this year on the war -- we could build enough hospitals to give us 360 thousand beds more than we now have. Regraded Unclassified 63 - 3 - We could build 500 health centers, and supply a full-time health service to every community in the United States. We could provide full care for all American mothers and their babies who need such care at childbirth. We could have all of the local and State cancer clinics we need. We could probably wipe out venereal disease. We could almost certainly put an end to tuberculosis. We could do all that, and many other things, with 10 billion dollars. And, in this war, we are spending roughly that amount every month! Think of the housing we could build with 100 billion dollars! Think of the automobiles we could buy with 100 billion dollars! We are spending the money on war - instead of cancer clinics, or housing, or automobiles - because Germany and Japan have forced us to go to war. This war unnecessary? This war is necessary because the Germans and the Japs have made it necessary! It is necessary if we value our lives and our freedom! If we forget that, we may lose both the war and our lives And freedom: Regraded Unclassified 64 - 4 - Drifting and dreaming along, blandly certain that nobody would ever attack us, we nearly lost the war at the start. Remember Pearl Harbor! Remember the Philippines! After the Japs over-ran the Philippines, our troops fought bravely -- but that does not alter the fact that in the Philippines, too, practically every plane we had was blown to tits on the ground. Believing that this war isn't necessary, believing that we don't need to hate and kill in order to win -- we can still lose. If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself, 'Oh, but we'll win, we're winning,' then you are in the frame of mind which can lose the war for us. It is exactly the frame of mind Germany wants us to have. The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans to feel that way. They even send photographs of dead American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and fathers here in the United States. The photographs show the graves arranged in neat, well-kept cemeteries. The flyers' parents are expected to say, "If the Germans are showing that much love and respect to my boy, they can't be so bad." Regraded Unclassified 65 - 5 - And that is just what the Germans want. They want to keep as many Americans as possible from hating them -- because, if we don't hate them, we won't support the war. Our soldiers won't fight as well. We will let them kill us more easily. Both the Germans and the Japanese know it's hard for Americans to learn to hate. And when you don't hate, in battle, you're easy game. You die. It is hard for us to learn to hate because We haven't seen the enemy at work. We haven't been bombed. We have seen pictures of bombed buildings in Hamburg and London; yes. But they have only been pictures to us. We have never dragged the torn bodies of our own loved ones out of bombed buildings. The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time. They fight savagely for their very lives; they fight to stop the Germans from bombing their homes; to keep them from killing their families. The British front line soldier slashes forward without mercy. He hates. It took a while for our American soldiers to learn to hate. At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of Americans died because they learned too late. Regraded Unclassified 66 - 6 - Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of a private who was there. I quote: "I know so well those men who were cut to ribbons at the Kasserine Pass, and I knew why they were thrown into confusion, panicked by attacks, and accepted their fate almost paralyzed. When they jumped into foxholes to let the tanks roll over them, and were bayonetted in these foxholes by the infantry that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that?'" (Unquote.) Yes - it takes a long time for Americans to learn to hate. But we had better learn, now -- all of us -- just as our soldiers and sailors have had to learn! How are we going to do it? If we could visit the front it might be easier. We'd see an American fighter pilot, with his plane in flames, take to his parachute. Then we'd watch half a dozen German planes circle back and machine-gun him as he dangled helpless under his chute. That is German efficiency. If they can kill a pilot before he lands safely, he won't fly again. When we saw that happen a few times, we'd get over our notion that the German boys are decent, honorable youngsters like our own. Regraded Unclassified 67 - 7 - Or we might watch an American medical corps man crawl out to carry water and medicine to a wounded German in the field. Then we'd see a German machine-gun open up and chop him to Lits. In the First World War there were many atrocity stories, After the war we learned that most of them were untrue. In this war the conduct of the German and Japanese soldiers, day after day, is more shocking than any atrocity story. Only two days ago the newspapers reported that the Germans at Salerno were advancing under white flags of truce, and then throwing down the flags and attacking our men. In this war, such contemptible treachery doesn't even shock us. I'm glad to say it didn't fool our soldiers. They killed the Germans and laughed at them! Only yesterday the New York Times reported a meeting of leading educators of 30 nations at Harper's Ferry in West Virginia. Again I quote: "As educators from Czechoslovakia, Greece, Poland, Belgium, Norway and China rose to tell what has happened to education under Nazi or Japanese rule, the story was all the same. It was a refrain of destruction, plunder, torture, death and mutilation; schools have been burned, Regraded Unclassified 68 - 8 - libraries sacked, scientific equipment stolen, museums closed. The Nazis have succeeded in making an intellectual desert of the European lands. " (Unquote.) There are no atrocity stories in this war - because every story we hear is an atrocity! Slowly but surely, as we hear more and more of them, we are learning to hate our murderous, arrogant enemy. We know that at this very moment, on the beach at Salerno, American soldiers are dying by thousands. Gone are the days when the casualty lists told of a hundred killed here, a hundred killed there. We have landed on the continent of Europe. The war is really beginning, for us. Italy is already a consuming furnace. And the fuel the Germans are burning in that furnace is the life of American boys. Not hundreds, but thousands of our American soldiers, fighting tonight in Italy, will never walk again, will never see again -- will never breathe again. Maybe Salerno will teach us to hate the Nazis! Let me quote again -- this time from John Steinbeck, the novelist. He writes, from Europe: "I have seen the hospitals with mauled men, the legless and the blind the fingerless hands and burned faces all the destruction that steel and ... fire can do to a man's body and mind. I have seen children Regraded Unclassified 69 - 9 - hauled out of blasted buildings lumps of crushed, dirty meat in pinafores dead, boxed and buried carrion. "All this,' Steinbeck says, "is the backdrop of the Third "ar Loan the drive for 15 billion dollars. It should not ... be a matter of who will lend his money but, rather, who dares not to?" Unquote. All this is the backdrop of the Third War Loan. Yes -- yes, it is. All this is why, as the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, I must ask you to pay taxes heavier than any other generation of Americans has ever paid. All this is why T must ask you to get along with only the bare necessities of life, in order to subscribe 15 billion dollars to the Third War Loan. All this is why I must warn you that there will be a Fourth War Loan, and a Fifth, and a Sixth. I think we have reason enough to hate the Nazis. I say, "Damn them to Hell -- the Hell they have created for the world!" Regraded Unclassified # 70 Last night I visited the 1600 block on Berthold street here in St. Louis. Every family in this block, on both sides of the street, has bought at least one extra hrn Bond since the beginning of the Third War Loan Drive. And on the corner, is buying a Bmdtr match On Mr. Kemmer had bought amboal for every bond that any of his neighbors hasing unusual buys. # I am told that this is not an block in St. St.Louis Louis. The War Finance Committee has the effective coopera- As tion of the O.C.D. a result, nearly 9000 block workers are covering the City of St. Louis house by house, block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood. $ Pour I toll am you gead I NOV "ghty to see this job being done so effectively. Let me tell you why: When we set the goal for the Third War Loan at 15 fifts billion dollars, we knew that there would be abt only one way in the world that to get that ^ money. amount of We know that wild have to have person We knew we would have to get people to lend the money they had put away in safety deposit boxes, in sugar bowls, and under the mattress. This is the money that getting. I Was told 8 story last night of an American of Italian birth, He was asked by one of his neighbors to buy Regraded Unclassified 71 -2- this man & $100 Bond. After they had talked it over out Italian American took $10,000, his life savings of keptulen a safety deposit box and lent it all to the government. All of this, as I say, is gratifying and inspiring. 9 It is gratifying to know, too, that after only days of the Third War Loan we have are well past the half_way mark/ on our quota of fifteen million dollars. A half hour ago / I received the figures to date. We-have solly of The The salve es of tonight ^ are nine billion dollars. now, For three consecutive days, we have been able to report more 2 than billion dollars 8. day. in Box our fift So of This is a brilliant record, I am proud of it, as I know we all must be. we are But in a sense, in the Third War Loan, just surrendered? about where we were in the war when Italy is a strong Landency throw Late in and consider the job proctically donor But-li Is The bitter truth is that the Third War Loan, like the war in Italy, has just begun. From here on it will take grim determination and real willing gress to go without - to buy the number of Bonds you must buy. Regraded Unclassified 72 -3- " Out of if 15 worth of Bonds, billion dollars we must sell five billion 6 to individuals -- to people like those in the 1600 block on Berthold Street. That s a lot And that is 1 of money. It can't come out of current earnings without tightening belts, without skimping without your feeling it Now there are & lot of people who won't want to make the necessary caorifices. say ornment doesn't $ But the money will must the be raised, because need your all this country money, nuds but 1 can it. assure night the before government last, does in need whington, the * few nights I reported X our losses in Sicily. I told you how we had lost as much as 54 per cent of material some of our materiel. All that has to be replaced; for A this point on, General Marshall has focured me that, from the war will be an all-consuming furnace. The cost in lives and in equipment will be sheke and and suckens us, $ In this past I days, we have raised During this year alone, it will sest us w 9 billion dollars, $ Do you realis how much money that is? 9TO give yeal called an up idea Doctor show Thomas much Parran, it the is, Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service. art he could do toward makes the haten hall with 9 or and I asked him what & hundred billion billion dollars. A him. He replied that if we spent only one billion dollars 8 year for t en years, one hundreth of what the our 18 we could Regraded Unclassified 73 -4- additional build enough hospitals to give us 360,000 beds more than we have now. We could build 500 health centers, and supply to full time health service every community in the United States. We could provide full care for all American mothers and their babies who need such care at childbirth. We could we nud. have all of the local and state cancer clinics We could probably wipe out venereal diseases. We could almost certainly put an end to tuberculosis. We could do all that, and many other things, with ten billion dollars approximately as much as this was costs DO every month. on We are spending money on war, instead of cancer clinics, or health centers, or ziin housing, or automobiles and homes because Germany and Japan forced us to go to war. must be won Ansd this war i horrible as it is, if to save our lives, our freedom, and our future. If, as you hear me speak these words you say to yourself, "Oh, but we'll win, we're winning," then you are in the frame of mind which can lose the war / for us. It is exactly the frame of mind Germany wants us to have. The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans to feel that way. They even S end photographs of dead American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and Regraded Unclassified 74 -5- and fathers here in the United States. The photographs show the graves arranged in neat, well-kept cemeteries. The flyers' parents are expected to say, "If the Germans are showing that much love and respect to my boy, they can't be so bad." Adm And And that is just what the Germans want. They want to keep as many Americans as possible from hating them-- because if we don't hate we won't support the war. Our soldiers won't fight as well. We will let them 1111 us more easily. are counting on the that that Both he Germans and the Japanese it's hard for Americans to learn to hate. It is hard for us to have because We haven it seen bed. pictures of bombod building in Humburg and Bonder been combut. We have seen pictures of bombed bui dlugs in Hamburg and London: yes But they have only been pictures to us. We have never dragged the torn bodies of our loved ones out of INSER? bombed buildings, The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time. They fight savagely, for their very lives; they fight to stop the Germans from bomb- ing their homes; to keep them from killing their families. The British front line soldier slashes forward without mercy. He hates. Regraded Unclassified 75 -6- It took a while for our American soldiers to learn to hate. At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of Americans died because they learned $00 late. Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of a private who was there. I quote: "I know so well those men who were cut to ribbons at the Kasserine Pass and I know why they were thrown into con- fusion, panicked by attacks, and accepted their fate almost paraly When they jumped into foxholds to let the tanks roll over them, and were bayonetted in those foxholes by the infantry that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that?" Yes - it takes a long time for Americans to learn to hate, hate, But our soldiers have done At- and non we But we had better learn now all of us just as <<<< our soldiers and sailors have had to learn! County Regraded Unclassified 76 #4 4 6900 Last night I visited the 1600 block on Berthold Street, here in St. Louis. Every family in this block, on both sides of the street, has bought at least one extra Bond since the beginning of the Third War Loan Drive. And Kingel Mr. Kemmer, on the corner, is buying a Bond to match every Bond any of his neighbors buys. This is not an unusual block in St. Louis. The St. Louis War Finance Committee has the effective cooperation of the O. C. D. As a result, nearly 9000 block workers are covering the City of St. Louis house by house, block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood. I am glad to see this job being done so effectively. Let me tell you why: When we set the goal for the Third War Loan at 15 billion dollars, we knew there would be only one way in the world to get that amount of money. We knew we would have to get people to lend the money they had put away in safety deposit boxes, in sugar bowle, and under the mattress. I was told a story last night of an American of Italian birth. He was asked by one of his neighbors to buy 8 $100 Bond. After they talked it over, this man took $10,000, his life savings, out of 8. safety deposit box and lent it all to the Government. Regraded Unclassified 77 -2- All of this, as I say, is gratifying and inspiring. It is gratifying to know, too, that after only 9 days of the Third War Loan we are well past the halfway mark on our quota of 15 billion dollars. A half hour ago I received the figures to date. The sales reported, as of tonight, are 9 billion dollars. For three consecutive days now, we have been able to report more than 2 billion dollars a day. This is a brilliant record; 80 I am proud of it, as I know we all must be. But in a sense, in the Third War Loan, we are just about where we were in the war when Italy surrendered. The bitter truth is that the real man-sized job in the Third War Loan, like the war in Italy, has just begun. From here on, it will take grim determination and real willingness to go without -- to buy the number of Bonds you must buy. It is my duty to make it clear to every man, woman, and sh child in the United States that the first half of the Third War Loan has been the easy half. From now on it's going to be hard unbelievably hard. Regraded Unclassified 78 -2A- Out of 15 billion dollars worth of Bonds, we must sell five billion to individuals -- to people like those in the 1600 block on Berthold Street. That's 8. lot of money! It can't come from current earnings without tightening belts, without skimping, without your feeling it. But the money must be raised, because your country needs it. Night before last, in Washington, I reported to you our losses in Sicily. I told you we had lost as much Regraded Unclassified 79 -3- as 54 per cent of some of our material. All that materiel has to be replaced; for General Marshall says that, from this point on, the war will be an "all-consuming furnace." The cost in equipment, and их in lives, too -- will shake and sicken us. In this past nine days, we have raised 9 billion dollars. Do you realize how much money that is? To give you an idea how much it is, I called up Doctor Thomas Parran, the Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service. I asked him what he could do toward making the nation well with 9 or 10 billion dollars. He replied that, if ate spent one billion dollars a year, for ten years, we could build enough hospitals to give us 360,000 additional beds. We could build 500 health centers, and supply full time health service to every community in the United States. We could provide full care for all American mothers and their babies who need such care at childbirth. We could have all the local and state cancer clinics we need. We could probably wipe out venereal diseases. We could almost certainly put an end to tuberculosis. We are raising this money to spend on war, instead of cancer clinics, or health centers, or housing, or automobiles Regraded Unclassified 80 -4- and homes, because Germany and Japan forced us to go to war. This war, horrible as it is, must be won if we want to save our lives, our freedom, and our future. If, as you hear me speak these words, you say to yourself, "Oh, but we'll win, we're winning," then you are in the frame of mind which can lose the war for us. It is exactly the frame of mind Germany wants us to have. The German propaganda experts go to any length to get Americans to feel that way. They even send photographs of dead American flyers' graves to the flyers' mothers and fathers here in the United States. The photographs show the graves arranged in neat, well-kept cemeteries. The flyers( parents are expected to say, "If the Germans are showing that much love and respect to my boy, they can't be so bad." And that is just what the Germans want. They want to keep as many Americans as possible from hating them -- because if we don't hate, we won't support the war. Our soldiers won't fight as well. You won't buy Bonds "until it hurts." The Germans are counting on the fact that it's hard for Americans to learn to hate. One thing that makes it so difficult for us here at home, I think, is that millions of us in the United States have not been touched, per personally, by the enemy's passion for murder and destruction. We know that American soldiers and Regraded Unclassified 81 -5- and sailors have been killed -- but except in relatively few cases, they have not been our brothers, our husbands, our sons. We know what England, and Russia, and all the other countries have suffered at the hands of Germany. We've seen pictures of the bombed houses, the burning towns. But they haven't been our houses, our towns. The British know what they are fighting for because they have been in this war a long time. They fight savagely, for their lives; they fight to stop the Germans from bombing their homes; to keep them from killing their families. The S British front line soldier wlashes forward without mercy. He hates. It took a while for our American soldiers to learn to hate. At the Kasserine Pass, in North Africa, scores of Americans died because they learned too late. Let me quote from an eyewitness description of that battle. These are the words of B. private who was there. I quote: "I know so well those men who were cut to ribbons at Kasserine Pass. When they jumped into foxholes to let the German tanks roll over them, and were bayonetted in those foxholes by the infantry that came behind the tanks, they died with an astonished look on their faces, as if they wanted Regraded Unclassified 82 -6- to ask: 'Could that be possible, would they really do that?'" Yes - it takes a long time for Americans to learn to hate, but our soldiers have done it -- and now we must learn. Regraded Unclassified 83 LADIES AND GENTLEMEN : Today we hanndx have had a message from President Roosevelt, our Commander-in-Chief. As he hasx points out -- and I quote -- "We are in the midst of the Third War Loan Drive seeking to raise a sum unparalleled in history -- 15 billion dollars. This is a dramatic example of the scale on which this war still has to be fought, and presents some idea of how difficult and costly the responsible leaders of this Government believe the war will be." (UNQUOTE) I may say right here that I am not in the least frightened by this prospect. I am sure we can get the money. Our national income, this year, will be nearly 150 billion dollars. I am equally confident tha t the American people will not balk at any cost -- because they fully realize that, the more money we spent on equipment and ma teriel, the fewer lives will be lost in battle. It is to start meeting these huge war expenditures that we set up the enormous goal of 15 billion dollars -- 3xclusive of banks -- for this Third War Loan. Regraded Unclassified 84 -2- are depleted. laborand This is & job that American industry can and will do -- and do 10 well. It al so calls for the solution of tramendous problems in shipping and transportation, but by now we have proved that we can tak e care of those, too. And it is 8 job that will re- quire so huge 8 financial transaction, before this war is ulti- mately won, that it staggers the imagination. The coming battle for Europe will cost us billions upon billions of dollars. I might say right here that I am not in the least frightened by this prospect. I am sure we can get the money. Our national income, this year, will be nearly 150 million dollars. I am equally confident that the American people will not balk at any cost -- because they fully realize that, the more money we spend on equipment and materiel, the fewer lives will be lost in battle. Exclusive It is to start meeting these huge war expenditures that we set up the enormous goal quota of 15 billion dollars for the Third Sutnice of Banks War Loan. It is because we have confidence in the American people that we set out, during the month of September, to get 5 billion dollars of this bxxx 15 billion from the American people -- from individuals. I want to be perfectly truthful with your I have heard it said many times that this job can not be done -- that the people of the United States are too fond of their comfort to skinp and sacrifice 22x -- that they do not have enough knowledge of what this war is about to dig down and come up with 5 billion dollars. Regraded Unclassified 85 -3- And I can tell you this: This defeatist attitude toward the Third War Loan is being aided and abetted by enemy propagandists, who are busy piling rumor upon rumor. They are passing the word around that subscriptions are falling behind, that the Government will never refund the money you put into Bonds, and even -- and this is the most fantastic rumor of World War 2 -- that the war will last only as long as people continue to buy Bonds. take You can/your pick of those rumors. There is not a vestige of truth in any of them. They are all desperate attempts on the part of the Axis to make the Third War Loan fail at any cost. Well, I have one report tonight that I should like to pour into Axis ears. Less than an hour ago I had a call from Washington. I learned that the total sales reported to Washington, up to this time, are 9/billion that dollars mark Do you hear that bane passed the germany Mr. Hitler? Do you hear it you Japan hj The American people, of their own free will, have turned over to the Govern- mive ment, in ton days, a total of more than 9 billion dollars. of billim dollars And let me tell you something else. I did some telephoning Federal lessue System today to the people, who are responsible for clearing, and recording, and reporting to Washington on the sales of these Bonds; and I find that the little people of America are buying Bonds so rapidly that tonight in one Federal Reserve District there are literally we millions of Bonds backed up. This simply means that the machines, and men and women cannot work fast enough to keep up with the selling pace of the War Finance Committees. Regraded Unclassified 86 -4- Now all this is good news. It is testimony to the undisputable fact that the ordinary people of America -- those that Abraham Lincoln so feelingly called "the common people" -- are really behind the Third War Loan. They are like the local inion À. F. of ₺. official who came to see me today. He said: "Mr. Secretary, we are doing everything we can. But that is not enough. I know it. I feel this war, because I have five brothers in it." Last night I visited the 6900 block on Berthold Street, here in St. Louis. The very first day of this Third War Loan Drive, every family in every house on this block bought a Bond. And with typical American enthusiasm, the man whó lives on the corner, Mr. Kinnel, is matching every one of his neighbors, Bond for Bond. I wish German Herr Goebbels germany's the Propagandist, Number Two could have Bg Mouth visited the homes on this block with me. I can secure you lie would not have had & very pleasant time. He would have had & lesson in the American Democrabic way of life, that would.have shaken him down to his choos. The front door of every house was open. All the lights were on. All the families sat out on their porches -- from grandmothers down to babies. I went from house to house, and one man thrust forth offend 8. big friendly hand, and said: "Hewdy, Hank. Give my regards to Franklin when you get back to Washington." Regraded Unclassified 87 -5- Well, gentlemen, that's Democracy. That's our America. What How different different picture Junna y from Germany! The typical block leader on Berthold Street is a fine American woman. Everybody loved her and wanted to help her put the block over the top. In Germany, the block leaders are Nazi party members. They come around for contributions, with a couple of Storm Troopers carrying clubs and brass knuckles. They are so Seople 20 escaping fun over thoroughly hated that regugees say they will be the first men killed when Germany has a revolution. Over there, he Germans else support the war out of terror. They contribute, or eli disappear into concentration campsand their famille S never see them again. I don't know of any sigle single way to more simply or clearly demonstrate the difference between the @memanxNxi Nazi way of life and our way, than to compare the way in which these two nations are financing the war. We have no laws, nor any other way to force you to buy a single Bond. Yet, even before the Third War Loan began, even before the block leaders started to work on Berthold Street, and on all the Berthold Streets across the country, we already could boast that five-sixths of all the working people in the country had bought at least one Bond, When the figures are finally compiled for the Third War Loan I am sure the number of people participating will not only frighten our enemies but will greatly strengthen the morale of our men onthe fighting fronts. For as Colonel Elliott Roosevelt Regraded Unclassified -6- (latest draft) 88 I think our way is better. And so do you, go the rest of the way to our 15 billion dollar goal, nith I agree, calls we and for sacrifice a piano, if or by 8 sacrifice banksts yes beefsteak mean dinner. doing without B new hat, or The very people who are already doing so much for the war -- sending their brothers and sons off to fight -- working day and night in the war plants -- are going to have to buy these small Bonds upon which the success or failure of the Third War Loan absolutely depends from now on. But when I think of the men dying at Salerno, at this very wonder yetis meallya moment, I dont that it 18 sacrifice/ to lend your money to the Government. I'm not asking you to give it. I'm asking you put to lend it, at a good rate of interest. I'm asking you to ****** into an extra $100 in B Bond that is ихайх B safer investment even than ^ cash, because the number of every Bond you own is registered in your name at the Treasury. Sacrifice? Tell that to the youngsters who lost legs, or arms, tonight Salerno! in Italy / hard, In full realization that the job shead of us is let A me say flatly, here and now, that I am confident we will reach our goal of 15 billion. And if the long war xxxxxx shead makes it necessary for us to have a RifthxWarx Fourth war Loan, and a Fifth, end a Sixth andx I am confident that the American people will meet the ir responsibility there also. Roalistically. Grimly. with Clam determination. In the words of 8 war correspondent, writing from "It should not be a matter of who will lend his noney but, rather, Regraded Unclassified 89 -7- understand For we all know, now, how much depends upon us. We know that we must 'Back ^ the Attack', We must make be sure, 89 our Commander-in-Chief said todayxxxxx -- and I quote -- "We must be sure that we have assembled the strength to strike, not XXXX just in one direction, but in many directions -- by land, and sea, and in the air -- with overwhelming forces and equipment ." If Thank you. Regraded Unclassified 90 TREASURY DEPARTMENT INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION DATE TO Secretary Morgenthau SEP 17 1943 FROM Randolph Paul There are annexed an original and a duplicate of an assignment to you, by the composer, of all rights to the song, "THE ROAD TO VICTORY", subject to the rights of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. The holder of the sheet music publica- tion rights has agreed to turn over all profits to the National War Fund and to furnish to the Treasury appro- priate financial statements at regular intervals on re- quest. This transaction was arranged by Mr. Vincent F. Callahan, Radio, Press and Advertising Director, Nar Finance Division. I recommend that you execute the acceptance at the place indicated on both the original and duplicate of the annexed forms. BT Regraded Unclassified NOW ALL III su THESE massets, that I, the FRANK LUSSUM, Levels, give, transfer, assign Ever to HENRY MORGENTHAU, Ja., as Secretary of the and his successors in office, the original musical tion written and composed by me entitled, "THE ROAD TOTORY", includin the title, words and music thereof, ther with all rights therein for all countries and including, without limitation, the exclusive right to publish said work and to secure copyrights therein, and each and every exclusive ri Lt with respect to said work embraced within any and all CO yri hts at any time existing therein, subject to any ri hts of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. IN WITNESS MEREOF, I have executed the foregoing affixed my seal at has angelea, in the State of fornia, on the 13th day of September, 1943. (L.S.) Frank Loesser OF CALIFORNIA ) OF has angeles SS: On the 13th day of September, 1943, before me RANK LOESSER, to "me known to be the individual described who executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged be executed the same. Georgia Public Little My Commission Expires Feb. SB, 1944 pted: Whynethaid Henry Morgenthau, Jr Secretary of the Treasury. Regraded Unclassified 925 WAR ADVERTISING COUNCIL, Inc. Smith Please return A non-profit organization, representing all phases of advertising, created to enlist the power of advertising for victory JOED VERMONT AVENUE, N.W. 60 EAST 42wo STREET WASHINGTON 5, D.C. NEW YORK 17, N.Y. Telephone: District 9043 Telephone: MUrray Hill 2-2773 New York, New York September 17, 1943 Board of Directors Comma J. LAReest, Chairman Dow Become Chairman of Board Fulls, Cone & Belding ALLEN L BILLIPCILEY Mr. Henry Morgenthau, Jr. President, Fuller & Smith & Ron Inc. Mains BRITTON, Treasurer Secretary of the Treasury The President Treasury Department McGraw-Fill Publishing Co. Washington 25, D. C. THOMAS D'A. Beamin President, Kenyon & Eckhanic Inc. A.O. ПОСКОНСНАМ Dear Mr. Secretary: Vice President Classt, Perbody & Company, Inc. RICHARD Courton I am most proud of the autographed picture which you BO President, Comptem Advertising, Inc. kindly sent me. It is the best "distinguished service EDWARD C. DOMMELLY, 18. ribbon" a man in advertising could get. Denally & Soon EDWIM 5. FAIREDLY While I think we have done some very helpful things for General Manager, The New York Sun the Treasury in an advertising way, I want you to know KERWIN H. FULTON President, Outdoor Advertising Inc. that your support and appreciation of advertising, your FATURRIC R. GARRIE, Secretary sense of showmanship, and your fundamental belief that if Minaging Director, American you explain things to the American people they will re- Assin of Advertising Agencies Kous HAVEN spond, all combine to make you claiment to the title Seation Manager, WGY "Advertising Man of the Year." CARLETON HEART Vice President and Advertising Manager, Hiram Walker Inc. I know how busy you are these days, but I am planning to Benil W. Henson attend one of your rallies or broadcasts and at that time Publisher, The Woonsocket Call hope to have a chance to tell you personally what an out- PAUL W. KESTEN the President and General Manager standing job I think you are doing. Colombia Broadcasting System, Inc. CHARLES G, MONTIMER, JR. Sincerely, Nove Problem Kinneral Foods Sales Company, Inc. Stuart PEASODY Drone of Advertising The Bentin Company chity WILLIAM REVIEL Chairman Partner, Newd-Emment Co. Chester J. LaRoche II. W. Brogy btl President, Harold H. Clapp, Inc. HAMP 11. THOMAS, V. Chm Product, The Centaur Co. Provident PASS IL Wast, V, Chm. Instruction of National Advertisers -PUT E. WINGER Executive Vice President Consell-Coller Publishing Cn. JAMES W. Yorko Senior Consultant J. Walter Thompson Company Yourn Adventing Director Unned States Rubber Cod. Regraded Unclassified 93 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Sep.17, 1943. FOR: The President. FROM: Secretary Morgenthau. Think your message to Congress marvelous. Right on the target. My very heartiest congratulations. *** 8pm-mc Regraded Unclassified 94 MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY. September 17, 1943. Mail Report In the week's heavy mail, the Declaration of Estimation and the Third War Loan Drive completely overshadowed all other topics. The moods of letters dealing with these two matters were, of course, far apart. The Declaration brought in not 8 single kind word, whereas the Drive brought hardly an unkind one. No other subject since the mail report has been issued has touched the bitterness of the protests now being received about the Declaration. These complain unanimously of the complexity of the forms and the waste of material, time, and manpower in completing them. In addition to the protests, more than 60 filled-in 1040-ES Forms, some accompanied by payments, were mailed to the Secretary. There were also a number of informal itemized statements enclosing checks or money orders and B. great many letters asking information without comment. These showed in the main complete ignorance of what was necessary; many naively left the figuring to the authors of the perplexing form, and others just said they couldn't understand what was expected and could find no local adviser to help them out. A dozen correspondents spoke of the hardships that would result from further taxation, and a few still complained of the injustice of deducting the Victory tax from wages earned before it became effective. There were occasional reports of absen- teeism on the part of workers who thus keep their wages from rises into higher withholding brackets. Regraded Unclassified 95 - 2 - Memorandum for the Secretary. September 17, 1943 Four letters approved the tax program of the C.I.O., seven, the sales tax. An oddity was a group of three letters urging higher taxes to prevent the cost of the war from burdening later generations. Bond mail was bulky with magazines, newspapers, tear sheets, posters, and photographs. Reprints of the telegram "Will the Fall of Italy Mean Home Front Defeat?" appeared most frequently in newspaper material thus submitted. There was 8. great increase in the number of slogans, poems, and sales promotional ideas received. Occasional criticism was directed against use of movie stars, the radio programs, or some speakers' statements. These "kicks", however, represented 8. small part of the mail. On the whole, the tone of Bond correspondence is sure and confident. The 57 Bonds submitted for redemption represented such & small increase over the number received last week, that it does not seem that the September 15 tax payment resulted in unusual cashing of Bonds. Employees of the War Department (or their relatives) continue to complain of the nonreceipt of Bonds paid for in 1942. These, together with three or four from the Navy, amounted to 52 in all. With the reconvening of Congress, mail from the Hill took a sharp upturn. Most of the communications transmitted letters from constituents, and these followed the same course - tax complaints and Bond comments - as those received in the Treasury. Of the attached excerpts, Pages 17, 18, and 19 contain comments on speeches and radio programs. These might have been listed under Bonds Favorable or Unfavorable, but in view of the recent special radio programs, it seemed interesting to segregate comments in this way. get orbish Regraded Unclassified 96 General Comments Melchòr Leòn, Objectos De Arte Chino Para Regalo, Mexico, D.F. With reference to your letter #7092, I take the pleasure to enclose herewith New York draft in the amount of $180.84, equivalent of $877.05, to which amounted the 25% of all purchases made by American citizens in this store during the month of August, 1943, that is donated to the U. S. Government for "National Defense". Vasilios D. Economou, Dayton, Ohio. Because of the many blessings received from the goodness of this Country, I felt that I should make a gift to the Trea- sury Department. I am therefore enclosing herewith one hundred dollars as such. Will you kindly accept same, giving me your personal acknowledgment of same? H. D. Carper, 2nd Lt. AUS, Asst. Mess Officer, Jefferson Barracks, Mo. It is respectfully requested that you, on behalf of the U. S. Government accept the enclosed $50.00 War Bond, made payable to the Treasurer of the U. S. of America, as a contribution towards the Third War Loan Drive. The purchase of this Bond was made possible by the enthusiastic voluntary donations of officers and enlisted men who are assigned to the Reception Center Mess, Jefferson Barracks, Missouri. The Reception Center Mess, I am proud to say, has a representation of 100 percent of its officers and en- listed men receiving War Bonds through the Army Class B Allotment Plan. This 100 percent record is also shared by the sections and companies of the entire Reception Center. A. M. Wright, Treasurer, Harvard Trust Co., Cambridge, Mass. You will find enclosed our check for $20 sent to you as an anonymous gift. The giver wishes the U. S. Government to use this for the purpose for which the Third War Loan Bonds are to be used. Regraded Unclassified 97 - 2 - Sidi Mohamed Ali Barada, Hollywood, Calif. Enclosed is 9. check, the reimbursement for one Bond which I bought as a small contribution to the Treasury Department. But after many difficulties I was forced to redeem it, and herewith I am sending the check which I received for it. I do not recall where I read it, but while reading the history of the United States, preparatory to becoming an American citizen, I recall the statement to the effect that in wartime any citizen may make con- tributions to the Treasury of the United States for the war effort. I have now been repeatedly told by so many people that no gift of Bonds or money is acceptable to the Treasury Department. I tried to buy a Bond each week through payroll deductions at the Lockheed Aircraft Industry and named the U. S. Treasury as my co-signer. But six weeks have passed without 8. single purchase of Bonds, only notes of rejection of my application for Bonds, saying that my desire to name your Department as co-owner was unlawful. # # # Please help me to do my small part in this war, as up to now my contributions to the Red Cross, slogans, hours on Lockheed's final assembly line, seem to me all too little. Your accepting the enclosed check and any other contribution I may send will help me do a bit more. James W. Weir, Secretary, West Virginia Publishers Assn., Elkins, W. Va. As you are well aware, and as you have most graciously acknowledged, the newspapers of the United States have given unstintedly of their space, without charge, in editorials, news articles, pictures, and ad- vertising for war financing and the winning of the war for the salvation of the country, but if I may be per- mitted to say so, a great many newspapers are going to be handicapped in rendering such 8. service by a ruling of the Post Office Department which provides that where a weekly paper is owned by B. daily paper, published in the same plant, the weekly paper cannot pick up the type of the daily unless the major portion of the front page in the weekly is different from that of the daily, and unless one-sixth of the inside pages are different. For such a ruling there is no law, as the Post Office Depart- ment admits. I am submitting the matter to you as the Regraded Unclassified 98 - 3 - head of another Department 80 that you may know the handicap placed by the Post Office Department on many newspapers insofar as cooperating with the Treasury Department is concerned. ### M. L. Long, Long & Freeman, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, Jacksonville, Florida. Of course you make the coins, but I want to tell you your new pennies are the worst things you ever put out. It is almost impossible, without the aid of 8. microscope, to tell whether they are dimes or pennies, and the amount of kicking about them here is amazing. I suggest the next ones you make, you either change the size of them or put in some color- ing matter so they will not look so much like dimes. I understand also that the penny vending machines throw them out. I do not know that personally, because I have not tried it, but I have heard it. Regraded Unclassified 99 - 4 - Favorable Comments on Bonds Rose Brown Bracy, Field Secretary of the National Negro Business League, St. Louis, Mo. Your address delivered to the National Negro Business League in Baltimore W&S as far reaching in its healthful in- fluence as it was from 8. geographic angle. 4b * # I wish to express my appreciation of your message, and I hereby pledge my cooperation to make my people conscious of OUR country's need, which will be ex- pressed through cooperation with any program you initiate. Enclosed is my check for $37.50 for a Bond, and a subscription for 8 monthly purchase of the same denomination for at least 8. year. A. A. Arbetter, Arbetter Ribbon Company, Chicago, Ill. With the Third War Loan Drive now under way, we thought you might be interested in the little sticker we have created for use on our circular mail. We actually buy $15.00 worth of War Stamps every time we send 1,000 pieces of mail to our trade. # * # Perhaps others might like to adopt this idea, which is entirely original with the writer, and which he is submitting to you to use in any manner you desire. % # (The sticker reads as follows: "The postage we save sending you this un- sealed letter is invested in War Savings Stamps." Gabriel Lowenstein, Chairman of the Board, Fred Fear & Company, Quality Food Products, Brooklyn, N.Y. This Company would like very much to subscribe to the Third War Loan. The individuals of the Company are subscrib- ing personally. We come under the classification of Small Business, and we have now tied up with the Treasury Department as of this date, about $100,000.00 in refunds due us on Alcohol purchases since the inception of the new tax law. Quarterly reports from the inception of the law in November, 1942, to and including June 30, 1943, have already been filed with the Treasury, and the total of such reports filed represents $56,094.06. The Regraded Unclassified 100 - 5 - balance of the $100,000.00 above referred to will be filed as of the September 30th quarterly report. # We would like to convert all of the refund due us, or as much of it as you will permit, into the purchase of the Third War Loan issue 1964-1969. Will you please advise if this can be arranged, and no doubt many others could be induced to take Third War Loan issue Bonds in settlement of their refunds. Charles B. Dulcan, Sr., Vice President and General Manager, The Hecht Company, Washington, D.C. I want to thank you for your kind and generous note which arrived this morning and for your commendation of our publicity activities in support of our country's war effort. I need not tell you that we are striving, as you are, to lend every ounce of energy and zeal to help bring about complete success of the Third War Loan and the total fulfillment of your plans. Consequently, your expression of approval is received wi th deep satis- faction, and I want you to know that I am grateful for this friendly and courteous gesture on your part. Regraded Unclassified 101 - 6 - Unfavorable Comments on Bonds A. D. Shamberg, Auditor & Accountant, Telephone Build- ing, York, Pennsylvania. # # Form P.D. 1787, in addition to requiring the signature of the owner of the Bond, requires the signature of the beneficiary, consenting to the change of beneficiary. This latter requirement is very embarrassing; it would appear the Treasury Department would have foreseen the absurdity of such a requirement. In the case at hand, as would apply in countless others, the beneficiary has no knowl- edge of his potential benefits. Since he has no in- terest in the Bond, why must he consent to any change of beneficiary? In the course of one's life, reasons may necessitate the change of beneficiary to his estate perhaps many times. Was the embarrassment to the bene- factor given any consideration in devising Form P.D. 1787 in requiring that the beneficiary, in the presence of an authorized certifying officer, consent to being deprived of the potential benefit by having to sign the form? # # Wallace Odell, Westchester County Publishers, Inc., Yonkers, N.Y. I noticed today that you sent 8. three- page telegram to all papers about a special advertise- ment on the War Bond Drive. This must have tied up a great amount of the telegraph companies' facilities. * " # I think if you had offered this copy to the three press associations -- A.P., U.P., and INS., that they would gladly have put it on their trunk lines, thus saving a lot of time, expense, etc. Their services reach all papers. It is a suggestion and made only with the thought of being helpful in case such a situa- tion arises in the future. Charles F. Andrews, Adjutant Quartermaster, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S., Alexandria, Virginia. At a regular meeting of Post #609, VFW of US of Alex- andria, Va., September 7, some pictures of dead American soldiers published in the Washington Daily News, were Regraded Unclassified 102 - 7 - shown. After various discussions it was regularly moved and seconded that this Post go on record as pro- testing the publishing of this kind of pictures in the future. We understand these pictures were published to arouse the public to subscribe more heartily to the Third War Loan Drive to start this week. It is our belief that pictures of this sort are more harmful to the morale of the home front than good. R. A. Avenius, White, Weld & Co., N.Y.C. Last night I listened to your appeal over the radio, also that of President Roosevelt! As I was listening it came to my mind that perhaps a little check-up on the War Bond Division of the Army Service Forces might not do any harm. My son, Rodney G. Avenius, enlisted in the Service in August, 1942. He contracted to buy a $25.00 Bond each month, and the money has been taken out of his pay each month. Up to this writing one Bond has been received, dated October, 1942. Since then nothing has come with the exception of a Form Letter which I am enclosing. I have written various times to the War Bond Division in Chicago asking for some information, and this same Form Letter comes back every time. Personally, I do not see how the desire of the soldiers to buy these Bonds can be maintained if the Bonds they buy and pay for are not sent to their families. J. L. Harris, President, Security National Bank, Cairo, Ill. The Treasury Department has requested the banks not to ask 8. service charge for sending in War Savings Bonds to Federal Reserve Banks for redemption. I think this would encourage more people to cash in their Bonds. People who cash in Bonds lack patriotism, and should pay for service rendered by the banks. We have instructed our personnel to try to discourage people from cashing Bonds, and to offer to lend them a limited amount, which they can repay weekly or monthly. Ninety percent of the people could keep their Bonds if they did not buy that which they could do without for the duration of the war. Many have larger wages than they ever dreamed of earn- ing and are spending it freely. I believe that people Regraded Unclassified 103 - 8 - should be discouraged in cashing Bonds and that news broadcasts should be sent out, saying it is unpatriotic to cash in Bonds instead of helping finance the war, while our boys are giving their lives to win the war. The percentage of Bonds cashed in may be small, but it should be less. My observation of this practice in our bank is sufficient evidence. Why print Bonds, have banks sell them, and then cash them in sixty-days later. All this is expense and time lost. It should be dis- couraged by sufficient charge to justify the banks for their time and effort. # * Harry L. Augusta, Framingham, Mass. Last night in your broadcast you stated that Mr. Winston Churchill pur- chased the first War Bond on the new Drive which opened this week. Now the following question comes up. A friend of mine who is a pilot in the British Air Service tried to buy some Bonds recently but was told that he could not because he was not an American citizen. Is there a distinction between Mr. Churchill (British subject) and my friend (British subject)? My friend had in mind the fact that after the war he would like to settle here and his savings in War Bonds would help him out, but he felt rather sheepish to find he could not because of his nationality. This question will arise many times in the coming months and I feel that if one nationality is at liberty to purchase Bonds, then all persons of that nationality should be allowed to do SO. Mrs. E. L. Edwards, Johnstown, Pa. I have a sister working in New Cumberland, Pennsylvania, at the Induction Centre, packing soldiers' clothes. She has worked there for 14 months and they are compelled to buy War Bonds amounting to $12.50 in six weeks. In all these months, most of the girls have not received either the Bonds or a receipt to show what they have paid out, and they can get no information about them. Isn't this a little irregular? Most every one whom I know in civilian life Regraded Unclassified 104 - 9 - gets their Bonds as soon as they are paid for. Most of these girls and women are in very modest circum- stances, and when they are willing to buy them, surely they should get either the Bonds or B. receipt. # # James Bly, Brookhaven, Ga. Today Mrs. Bly and I walked to our little Post Office to buy a $100 War Bond, but the clerk would not accept our personal bank check, although they were very kind and considerate -- "We", they said, "have orders not to take personal checks". We have no Bonds and we do so much want to loan our money to this Third War Loan Drive. If a Postmaster knows a citizen, and knows his check is good, why doesn't this branch of our Government cooperate? If necessary, the Postmaster could run this check through the clearing house in two days; they then could mail us our Bond. I don't think it would take an Act of Congress for the Post Offices to be helpful in this grim time. Oscar Lange, Washington, D. C. $ My wife and I went last night to the exposition grounds fully enthused to "Back the Attack", and bought two $100 War Bonds for our grandchildren. We inquired for tickets to the show in the Arena there and all over the place there were none to be had and no one could tell us where or how we could get any. Now it is the people's money that is being spent, and the people should enter on the basis of first come, first served, and not on the basis of democrats, bureaucrats, or Government employees -- very likely 50% of all those who gain admission have not bought any extra Bonds. While standing for almost an hour to get in, there was quite some talk in the crowd of tickets being passed out freely in the different Government Departments, which is not FAIR. O. H. Lachenmeyer, Publisher, The Cushing Daily Citizen, Cushing, Okla. We have your four-page telegram of September 9, suggesting a page display ad for the Third War Loan. We will make an effort to have it Regraded Unclassified 105 - 10 - under-written in a local way. We find these pages in- creasingly difficult to sell. The firms feel that they are called upon to purchase the maximum amount of Bonds and should not likewise be asked to buy the display space. We feel that it is asking too much of the news- papers, with all of the news publicity that they give, to run this advertising free. Did the telegraph company send this four-page telegram without charge? Do the mat people make your mats without charge? 42 * * Smaller news- papers of the nation are facing the most critical time in their history. It is fast becoming a question, not of whether newspapers are willing, but of whether or not they can continue to do all that they are being asked to do, at their own expense. We feel that the Treasury Department represented by you, is taking very arbitrary stand in opposing paid display advertising by newspapers. Because they accepted pay from the Govern- ment for & commodity that they sell every day would not mean that they are being subsidized, any more than any other manufacturer of a staple product. # Philip L. Soljak, San Francisco, Calif. I am a New Zealander, employed by the British Ministry of War Trans- port in San Francisco, and have been very happy to invest 10% of my salary in U. S. War Bonds. However, I have been disturbed by frequent remarks made to me by American friends that War Bonds "may not be worth much after the war", and that for this reason they are not putting more than they can help into Bond purchases. They base this belief on the fact that Liberty Bonds depreciated after the last war, and that a repetition may be expected. This unintentional encouragement of Axis propaganda is indulged in by people of educational and professional standing who ought to know better. None of those I know have any Axis contacts or relationships, but are of "Anglo-Saxon" American stock. + * # Personally, I have as much confidence in U. S. Bonds as I would have in British or Dominion Government stock. However, I feel certain that the spread of this dangerous talk is damag- ing the sale of War Bonds, and inducing many people to cash those they have purchased. I would like to suggest Regraded Unclassified 108 - 11 - that your public relations department check on this situation and take the necessary measures to correct it. # * # W. H. Fletcher, Pittsburgh, Pa. In the news reel at a theatre the other night Mr. Churchill was shown as getting the first Bond under the 3rd War Loan. Mr. Churchill being Prime Minister of England is not B. U.S. citizen nor a resident. How can he own one of these Bonds? When I started to buy them two years ago, I wanted them to be issued in mine and my sister's name jointly, or as co-owners, but this was turned down because, while I am a U. S. citizen, she is a Canadian (living in Canada), and because she is a Canadian, and no Bonds can be sold other than to U. S. citizens, I had to have them issued in my name solely. E. W. Newman, Chairman, 3rd War Loan Campaign, Stone Wall District, Shen County, Virginia. (Telegram) Due crop shortage with apples should be good prospective buyers 3rd War Loan Bonds. Present harassment by Washington heading entire industry toward calamity and apples now falling while alphabetical administration organizations fiddle and play, regardless of nature. Orchard industry will not only suffer, but also consumer account of in- difference, etc., on part of OPA and others. Sixteenth set for release of prices. This too late. However, should not be delayed one minute. Use every ounce of your influence and efforts; have decision made and announced no later. May be able yet to place Bonds with orchardists before end of drive. Regraded Unclassified 107 - 12 - Favorable Comments on Taxation Copy of letter addressed to Senator McKeller by Leon Ferguson, Memphis, Tenn. I have noticed newspaper stories about possible new taxes to help pay for this war; also the Third War Loan Drive is now under way, and I want to let you and some of the other Senators and Congressmen know what I think about all this. * Naturally, I don't want to pay any more taxes than I have to, but this war has got to be paid for and I think we should make an effort to pay a greater part of our war costs as we go along. # # # If prosperity continues for a few years after the war's end, that's fine; we can con- tinue to pay high taxes. * # * On the other hand, if we have a depression and can ill afford to pay high taxes out of reduced income, we will have a good part of the war debt out of the way. Thus I feel that I would rather pay as much as I can stand now than later on when I might not be as well off. I have read that Senator George thinks the American people cannot stand any more taxation, but it's my opinion we can stand higher income taxes. ++ # We know the war has got to be paid for and I guess we might as well get the unwelcome job over with as fast as possible. # * * And in this connection, I have one special request that every taxpayer will welcome wholeheartedly, please have the Treasury Department use some sort of simplified income tax return form, and don't make it too hard for us to figure our taxes out. Regraded Unclassified 108 - 13 - Unfavorable Comments on Taxation Alvin F. Harlow, 382 Wadsworth Avenue, New York City. I am sending with a copy of this letter my "Declara- tion of Estimated Income and Victory Tax" for Sept. 15 to the local tax collector, and I wish to take this opportunity of going on record as protesting against this absurd and impossible requirement. My total income so far for 1943 has actually been only about $500.00. I have & new book published this summer, but I have no more idea how many copies of that book the public is going to buy during the re- mainder of the year than I have of knowing what will happen to me, if anything, beyond the grave. # Under such conditions, how on earth can I guess what my income will be during the remainder of the year? And yet I am told that I will be penalized if I guess wrongly. # # I shall hold a copy of this letter as proof that I warned you of the impossibility of comply- ing with so nonsensical a law. It is feasible for a man who is on B. regular salary, but not for the rest of us. Herman Krohn, Public Accountant, Easton, Pa. It has been my privilege to deal with the Internal Revenue Department over a period of 28 years that I have been in public practice. Never before has my work become so burdensome and impossible of performance as it is at this time in connection with the preparation of the Declaration of Income and Victory Tax due September 15. We are short of help in the office and cannot obtain relief. In addition to this work, my office is also engaged in assisting the various clients, some in the defense industries, in meeting with Government repre- sentatives in re-negotiation conferences and much other paper work from other Government agencies. The situa- tion is impossible of solution, except if 8. 30-day blanket extension is granted by you for the filing of the September 15 returns. + # We are doing the best Regraded Unclassified 109 - 14 - we can, but physical and mental endurance under pressure of a tremendous amount of cumulative paper work is becoming unbearable. * # Harry A. Trumbore, Brown & Bigelow, Remembrance Advertis- ing, St. Paul, Minn. Recently I received as a prize for work well done, a Bond, $50.00, in reality, only $37.50 in cash. On this Bond the company collected the sum of $9.38 in taxes. Which means 25% of the real cash value of Bond. Have had them re-check this sum, and they insist it is correct. Please advise what the correct tax should be, was not aware of any tax at all, had not paid it before. They say this amount is made of the Social Security tax on Bond, never heard of such S. thing. Please clarify and state source of tax, etc., on Bonds given as gift by company for whom person is working. Copy of letter addressed by Arthur J. Chadwick, Phila- delphia, Pa., to the Editor of the Philadelphia Record. Knowing that one of the requirements of newspaperdom is to express thoughts clearly, I ask that you render unto the public an understandable interpretation of Mr. Morgenthau's #36206 wherein I find the following lan- guage: "Generally speaking you will not have to file this declaration or make a payment on September 15 if your wage or salary is subject to withholding, and if your income is not more than $2,700 a year if single, or more than $3,500 a year if married. Yr I have not been able to find any two people to agree as to what is meant by the above. One says that if your wages are subject to withholding, then in no event must you file a Declaration or make & part payment. Another says that if you are single and your wages are less than $2,700 per year, the same is true. The third insists that any married person making more than $3,500 need file no Declaration. From which the professor says that 8 Declaration need be filed and a payment be made Regraded Unclassified 110 - 15 - only by single and married men with incomes between $2,700 and $3,500. The question is: Who is right? If no one of the four, please have the Philadelphia Lawyer give his answer. Incidentally, the public would like to know what salary Mr. Morgenthau's lan- guage expert receives for his aptitude in setting forth simple ideas in the language used. Fred Damrau, N.Y.C. $ # # I am a member of the Police Department of the City of New York. In 1939 I was sus- pended without pay and remained so until February, 1942, when I was re-instated and back pay for this entire period was given to me. " # # In February 1942 I was given all my pay. Thus my earnings, which are the basis of income tax, were given to me in 6. lump sum of $7,500, and during the balance of the year I earned enough to top $10,000. I did not earn $10,000 during that particular year. # # Your office at 1 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, says I earned over $10,000 in one year and must pay at this rate, instead of permitting me to file each year separately. This will cost me an extra $564.47. If I were to file this figure I would be com- mitting perjury -- I am required to file on annual earnings -- my annual earnings are fixed by law at $3,000.00. I put this matter to an Appeal Board. They decline to rule and inform me I must go into the Tax Court. This will cost me about $200, which I do not have. Also, bear in mind that during my suspension period I did not file any return on any other income because I did not earn enough. # # # Every available Government official that I have been able to contact informs me that the procedure is unjust, but inasmuch as one agent decided I am in the $10,000 per annum class, I must pay accordingly. This ruling is outrageous; it is not even common sense. Am I to have no defense with- out going to borrow more m oney to pay legal fees? R. G. Lochiel, Treasurer, Pennsylvania-Central Airlines Corporation, Washington, D. C. It has been brought to the attention of the management of Pennsylvania-Central Airlines that an alarming number of our hourly-rate Regraded Unclassified 111 - 16 - employees are absenting themselves from work when their earnings have reached the top of a wage bracket, in order to avoid the additional withholding tax which would occur if these employees worked additional hours. In many cases, employees actually draw a larger pay check by this stoppage, the pay for the additional hours being less than the withholding tax difference between the two brackets. # # * If your Department has prepared any material which could be used, or has any suggestions to offer to combat this unpatriotic waste of time, this company would be very grateful to hear from you. Lemuel A. Boyce, Peach Bottom, Pa. I received your notice asking for an estimate of my income tax for 1943, or, as per 1942, whichever is the greater. I have not made more than $2.50 in 1943, since January 1, 1943, on account of sickness. Will my income tax be the same as it was in 1942 when I made about $1,400, and where is the money to come from to pay said tax? * # # Regraded Unclassified 112 - 17 - Comments on Speeches & Radio Programs J. S. Marie, Philadelphia, Pa. That well-known "beer garden" comedian who preceded you and the President last night during the Invasion Bond selling campaign was & very poor representative for the Treasury Depart- ment inasmuch 8.5 he used propaganda invented by the gambling racketeers, and these latter, I think you should know, are mostly fascists in America. He prob- ably got a high price from the gamplers for taking the spotlight on a U. S. Treasury Department program in which both the President and the Secretary of the Treasury participated. Harriot T. Cooke, Washington, D. C. Do you really think that the American people are appealed to by such maudlin programs 88 that of the Treasury last night? # # I have a son-in-law and a grandson at the front. They are patriotically serving their country and I am trying to do my bit in the only way I can at over three score years and ten. In the last war I was Vice Chairman of three Liberty Loans (Women's Division, Orange, N.J.), and Chairman of the Victory Loan. Quite frankly, the appeals of Hollywood stars would have left me cold then R.S they do now. Let's put this thing on a higher plane -- not on emotionalism, but on one of realistic approach to what each of us is fighting for -- "our life, our liberty and our sacred honor. Postal Card from Mrs. E. A. Giard, Willmar, Minn. Except for the President's address and yours, what a sad program your Bond Drive program was. Why do you have to have mediocre talent like that? Why can't we have something dignified, beautiful and moving, worthy of a great national drive? J. Henry Haggerty, N.Y.C. Regarding the program of Sept. 8th promoting the sale of War Bonds. Whoever wrote the Regraded Unclassified 113 - 18 - script of this program either didn't know what he was supposed to put across, or he avoided the issue to gain a few laughs. The program, I understand, was to arouse the public to purchase War Bonds. An attempt was made, by means of B. battle-front skit, to show the sufferings and hardships of our soldiers "over there"; dramatic music and moving commentary accompanied. But just as soon as we had realized the seriousness of the war and had come to realize also that we "home-fronters" were being too complacent about the whole thing, some writer decides to fill up time or get some cheers for a few laughs by throwing in George Burns and Gracie Allen. These two certainly put on a humorous act; but their jokes removed the serious and contemplative mood instilled in our minds by the previous dramatic skit. Consequently, the first skit was forgotten. Again a soul-stirring drama was portrayed; and was followed by Edgar Bergen and an un- spirited rendition of an uninspiring song called "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition". Each time our minds were worked up to 8 bond-buying pitch, boom, some fri- volity would ruin it all. The whole affair was ridiculous. It is no way to arouse people to buy Bonds. Either give them free laughs, or make them realize the seriousness of the national emergency. I realize that it is too late now to do anything about that broadcast, but when you begin campaigning over the radio for the Fourth War Loan, please have your program manager use a little common sense. Vr. S. Bezuhly, Hillside, N.J. The night of September 7 I heard the official opening of the Third War Loan over the air on the "Cavalcade of Stars Program". I heard you and our President make a plea to the people to invest their money in War Bonds to help put over the $15,000,000,000 quota. Your words gave me an inspiration to write about this loan. You will do me a great honor in reading the enclosed poem. Hobert A. Sutherland, Wilmette, Ill. I have just heard on the radio a few minutes ago an announcement stating, "This is the Treasury of the United States, and we now Regraded Unclassified 114 - 19 - introduce So-and-So's Jazz Band", or word to that effect. Whereupon followed a cacophony of outrageous sounds, with an occasional appeal to buy Bonds. This is to advise that I most strenuously protest, as I am sure millions of Americans do, the use of tax money or any part of the proceeds of Bond sales in paying for the use of jazz bands to endeavor to promote sales of Bonds. Our honored dead would turn in their graves if they knew that the U. S. Government had descended to such lack of dignity in pro- moting what should be and I am sure is with nearly all people, a patriotic, conscientious and dignified duty. John Gray, Los Angeles, Calif. (Telegram) Local papers do not have full text of your address. It is very nec- essary that the full text be sent from your office at once because we want to put it into the hands of 12,000 men in the Los Angeles Ship Building and Dry Dock Corp. at Sen Pedro. It was an inspiring speech and just what the home troops needed. We want to emphasize it in con- nection with not only our Bond Drive but in the actual replacement of equipment gloriously lost. Send to Room 713, Broadway Arcade Building. Mrs. Mary Woodhull Stevens, Haddon Heights, N.J. *** May I tell you that your message of last night to our citizens stirred my heart to its patriotic depths. Every time I contemplate Thomas Jefferson's life, I love and admire him the more. Wish I had your splendid message in type to read and re-read. *** Regraded Unclassified 115 ADDRESS BEFORE THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SUPERVISORS OF STATE BANKS IN CINCINNATI, SEPTEMBER 17, 1943 BY MARRINER S. ECCLES CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM "THE DUAL SYSTEM OF BANKING" FOR RELEASE WHEN DELIVERED AT 2:15 P.M. Regraded Unclassified 116 THE DUAL SYSTEM OF BANKING When your President, Mr. Perry, wrote to ne in July inviting me to attend this annual convention of your Association, he told me that he wished to build the program around this central theme: "In the wartine and postwar eras, how far, and by what means, is it desirable or possible to preserve the dual system of banking?". That is an important and challonging subject. It implies that there are two sides to the issue. It implios that you are willing to hear both sides. I could, of course, be politic and say only what I think you would prefer to hear, but I doubt that your invitation to ne was based upon the assumption that I would appear here as EL champion and defender of the dual system. On the contrury, I imagine that you expected me to play the role of the devil's advocate, though, of course, as I see it, I am on the side of the angels. On one thing, however, we can agree. As public officials responsible for banking regulation, we all want B. strong and successful banking system. It cannot be strong unless it is successful. We all favor what we believe to be in the public interest. And what, in fact, best serves the public interest will survive in the long run. As B. one-time banker and then as a sharer of the numerous super- visory headaches with which you are all familiar, I have known a good many of the State supervisors well and favorably, despite their tendency to differ with my views. So fur as I am aware, I have never succeeded in con- verting any of them to my viewpoint, notwithstanding the cogency of the argu- nonts on my side of the case. So I will be noither surprised nor dis- appointed if in this session you are not won over to my side. Nor is there cause for alarm lost your commissions be swopt suddenly away, for this is a nost venerable issue, this question of the dual banking system, and the re- lated issue of branch and unit banks. In all probability wo, or our suc- cessors, will still be debating these issues far into the post-war world. Economic forces and modern needs, rather than what may be said here, will ultimately determine the character and functions of our banking system. In what I have to say I can speak only for myself. I am well aware that the division of opinion on questions of unification and branch banking extends beyond State boundaries into the Federal banking agencies, including the Board of which I am but one member, But I am confident that the cordial and cooporative relationships which have existed between the Federal Reserve and the State banking authorities will not be marred because I happen to believe in & unified banking system and in well-regulated branch banking limited to trade areas. Our banking structure has had a piecemeal growth throughout our history. It reflects the cumulative efforts of public authorities, State and national, to meet recurrent emergencies and to deal with specific problems and competitive conditions. It has not been developed in accordance Regraded Unclassified 117 - 2 - with any comprehensive plan based on the country's banking needs taken as a whole. As the country expanded, its need for money and credit grow. In order to supply those demands, banks were formed in the quickest and easiest manner possible, with little or no direction or regulation, until abuses and difficulties arose, We all know that the history of banking in this country is filled with crises and disasters, with fulminations and fumblings for reform. What has developed hardly justifies the term "banking system". Although we can now have far more confidence in the soundness of our banks than at any time in the past, further improvements are urgently needed. They will cone about, no doubt, in the future as in the past by gradual steps. To those who believe, as I do, that it is not in the best interest of the public or of the private banking system to maintain things BS they are, the process will seem painfully slow. The first duty of the Government, as I see it, is to create 6. climate and fi condition conducive to EL maximum of sustained private pro- duction and employment. Its next obligation, inescapable in the modern world, is to provide the opportunity for employment, in a way that will stimulate and not impede private enterprise, at such times 85 deflationary forces endanger economic stability. Conversely, its powers must be used to offset inflationary developments at the other end of the cycle. In other words, Government can and should be an economic balance wheel, help- ing to keep the economy going aliead on an even keel. The most important governmental powers affecting economic sta- bility are fiscal and monetary. Most of us recognize that it is essential in wartime to have close coordination between Government policies and those of the banking system. The banking system fully subscribes to the ob- jective of financing war costs, not covered by taxation, by borrowings from nonbank sources. It is clearly recognized that the banks should finance only that residue of war costs which cannot, or at least are not, met by taxing and borrowing from the public. There is general acceptance both of the policy of maintaining approximately the present pattorn of interest rates and of limiting Government obligations purchased by the banks to cortain types and maturities of issues. Central banking operations have at the same timo supplied the banking system with such additional reserves us are necessary to effuctuate those policies. Essential as it is in the national interest to have this high digree of coordination in fiscal and monotary action in wartine, it is equally important from the standpoint of national economic welfare to con- tinus it in poacotine. Looking to the futuro, the Fedoral Government is destined to play a crucial rolo in the maintenance of oconomic stability. It is difficult to sue how ita basic functional powers can be offectively mployed to this end so long as the nation's banking machinory 10 to hodge- podgo of some fifty-two difforent jurisdictions, laws, and suporvisory aconoios, so long us approximately half of the banks of the country are subject to uniform contral banking policy and half are not, so long us Regraded Unclassified 118 - 3 - these multiple agencies, State and Federal, with their differing philoso- phios, divided and conflicting policies, dominate the banking picture. tille coordination is extremely difficult, admirable efforts have been made in this direction. They are in reality an admission of the need for uni- fication of banking regulation and for clearly fixing responsibility where those who bear it can be effective and be held accountable. The sovereignty of Government over the nation's money supply is beyond challenge. It is clearly recognized and declared by our Constitu- tion. Denand deposits, as you all know, have become in the past sixty years the major part of our money supply. Control over their expansion and contraction should reach to all banks that are in a position to create then, Banking reserves which limit the money supply are thus crucial. It follows that reserve requirements should be made applicable to all banks of deposit. It is inequitable B.G woll as ineffective that only the mumber banks of the Reservo System are subject to changes in such requirements chile those banks which elect to remain outsido the System, or those which are now mumbors und which choose to withdraw, can escape sharing in what is B national rosponsibility. Thilo it is true that somo Statos voluntarily sot the samo ro- servo requirements for nonmumber State banks that are fixed for member banks, the Stato banks are pormittod to count vault cash and to carry their reserves as deposits with other commorcial banks, This has a very difforent monutary offect from carrying those reservos with Fodoral Roservo Banks. Ro- serves curried with Fodoral Rosorvo Banks are ontiroly unavailable for lond- the but only twenty por cont or loss of roservos carried with momber banks are unavailable. This makes for a heavy dilution, but not for effective control. Likewise, bank examination policy, with its direct influence upon bank lending and investment, which are money-creating operations, needs to be closely coordinated with national monetary policy. Notwithstanding the dogree of coordination sought by the agreement among the three Federal bank supervisory agencies in 1938 and subscribed to generally by the State authorities, the result is at best a compromise and not EL real solution. Almost every aspect of banking regulation and supervision is made nore difficult and less effective by the existing structure. I need not re- count to you the innumerable conflicts, discriminations, divided and over- lapping authorities, that characterize the banking picture in this country. AS the Federal Reserve Board declared in its Annual Report for 1938, "The banking picture emerges as a crazy quilt of conflicting powers and juris- dictions, of overlapping authorities and gaps in authority, of restrictions making it difficult for banks to serve their communities and make to living, and of conditions making it next to impossible for public authorities to apply adequato restruints at N. time and in conditions when this may be in the public interest." That report suffices to show the need for modernizing Regraded Unclassified 119 - 4 - and stroanlining the banking structure of this country as modern business and industry in almost every conceivable line of endeavor have been modernized and streamlined. Attempts at coordination, commendable as they are, reflect, but are not a practical solution of the problems. Now all of this, you may say, is just my philosophic approach. I am trying to sketch it in because it is my basic reason for believing that the dual banking system, as now constituted, is outmoded and that economic forces -- not mere debute -- will compel its adaptution to the financial needs of modern economic life. It is not long ago, as time is mensured, that we were pro- dominantly un agricultural nation. Local communities wore relatively solf- austaining. Industrios wore largely locally ownod and comparatively small. As the great ruilroad systems of the nation developed with the westward march, new towns and villages sprang up along the way. Each had its local, more or loss self-contained economic life, its stores and its banks. This was in a day of R relative scarcity of capital. Interest rates were high. Too often banks took the risks and the losses that should have been borne by risk capital and not by bank stockholders and depositors. This ora of rupid, steady expansion faded out with the advent of the large mergers and consolidations in the industrial world, with the development of modern trunsportation end distributive systems. Attempts to halt this march of progress by anti-trust, anti-chain store legislation or other statutory pains and pomities have largely been in vain. It requires no gift of prophocy to foresee that the scmo oconomic forces will in time compol the banking system to follow is parallel pattorn. The answer to the thome question of this session is not hard to discern as you look back at the fate of thousands upon thousands of the small unit banks which once thrived. By 1921 we had more than thirty thousand commercial banks in this country. More than twenty-two thousand of them were State banks, while some eight thousand were national banks. As of last June thirtieth, the number of State banks had shrunk from twenty-two thousand to about nine thousand, and there were about three thousand fewer national banks. There has been no banking mortulity remotely approaching this sad record in any other nation on earth. The disappourance of more than thirteen thousand State banks and three thousand national banks as well -- whether it be through failure, through merger, or through voluntary liquidation -- is eloquent proof that something was fundamentally wrong with a system that permitted so large B. number even to come into being. We have expended more in time and money on bank examination and super- vision, conducted by at least 52 soparate State and Federal agencies, than any nation in the world. It involves unnecessary waste of manpower at a time like this. It did not and could not of itself protect the depositors, stock- holders or customers of the thousands of banks that went to the wall, even during the so-culled prospurous Twenties. Aside from voluntary liquidations or abscrptions, nearly ten thousand Stato banks, with aggregate deposits of Regraded Unclassified 120 - 5 - clozy to five billion dollars, folded up in the Twentios and early Thirties. At the surr timo moro than two thousand national banks, with duposits of only slightly loss thun two and EL half billions, wont to the wall. Most of these were independent unit banks. Banks that survived the Twenties and then weathered the economic disaster of the early Thirties were necessarily the strong and not the weak. What saved them in the end was the avalanche of money poured out by the Federal Government -- the billions in loans and capital supplied directly to the banks by the RFC and the additional billions furnished to others through the RFC, the Farm Credit Administration and the done Amer's Loan Corporation, which made it possible to liquidate the frozen and defaulted credits held by the banking system. As you in this audience know, bad management and other human de- fects were minor and not major reasons for the epidemic of failures. The mortality was greatest through the Twenties among the smaller institutions In the agricultural regions. They were the victims of depressed agri- cultural conditions. Thousands that managed to come through in the country and in the cities only to succumb in the early Thirties, were likewise prinarily the victims of economic distress and disaster with which they could not copo individually and from which the most diligent supervisory and examination policy could not save them. Since the bank holiday, the rising price level has made good the assets of numerous banks that were closed then and of many that would not have been reopened had strict ex- aminution policy been uniformly applied. The rising price level, not deposit insurance, has reduced bank mortulity to EL minimum. The record of bank failuros in this, the richest country on earth, night have been much better -- it could hardly have been much worse -- had examination and chartering policy been more restrictive in boom times und if, especially during dopression, runs had been averted by deposit Insurance. llowever, deposit insurance, which I strongly fuvored at & time when most of my bunking contemporaries regarded it LS A scheme for making good banking pay for the mistakes of bad banking, cannot cure the basic worknesses. The attempt to do so at this stage by muking chartering und examination policy increasingly rostrictive, would loud only to depriving the public of needed banking services in innumerable communities. This, in turn, would load to domands upon Government to furnish through its Aguncies the credit services that the banks would otherwise supply. It would neun additional Government encroachment upon the fiold of private bunking enterpriso. Even today, during the groatost of all war booms and despite the unormous growth of deposits, many of the smaller bunks are having difficulty In meking - living. It is difficult to attract now capital into the banking system. Horoover, the process of contraction in number of banks is oon- tinuing -- fortunately through voluntary liquidation of existing units un- able to operate successfully, und through mergors and consolidations, rather than through the disnstrous process of fuilures. Regraded Unclassified 121 - 6 - The solution is not to be found in more and more restrictions applied to la basically faulty structure. The solution lies in & unified system with branch banking. We alone among the leading nations have failed to develop such a system. We alone have deposit insurance. We need it no long as the basic faults of our banking structure remain uncorrected, but the need for it would disappear, and bank failures would be us rare in our country as they are in other great nations, if we would doul with the cauces insteud of continuing to doul with the effects of the basic weak- nosses in our system. Meroly to unify the banking system under one regulatory authority would not be u sufficient remody. As I have sought to stross, the problem is basically an uconomic one. The question 10, our the smull independent unit banks expoct botter ournings in tho future? Or, of greator importance, oun they provide their communities with adequate cradit facilities and bank services at costs as low as those prevailing elsewhere? In this vast country there are many so-called ereditor areas which have a surplus of savings over local credit and investment needs, and others, dobtor areas, where the derind for funds exceeds the local supply. But we have D. banking system which requires for the sake of liquidity that banks in the debtor APUND send funds to the creditor urous, wherous the reverse should be the caso. Farmurs und homo owners and small businosses are demanding buttor and chosper crodit fucilitios, whilo bunks in thoir communition hold idlo bulances in largo city banks or buy low intorust-boaring bonds. But to pro- tuct their depositors thoy curnot afford the risk of having all thoir assots Invested at homo. Is thoro any wonder that borrowers como to Washington, in timos of business contraction, and ask for now Government crodit agoncios? I in opposed to Government subsidized competitive agencies taking away busi- ness from the bruiks. But is the widesproud outery ugainst farm credit ligencies really based upon n. four of socialized credit end does it really attack the CLUSO of the trouble? These Federal agencies, LE has been stid, were "born of pitiless and inexorable necessity" in D. time of adversity when the banks could not seet desporate agricultural needs, und at the time wore welcomed by the banks CS they were by farmors. Muny of the credits they extended were not bankuble louns. But even if they could bo abolished over the opposition of organized agriculture today, which I very much doubt, that would hardly notes the difference betwoon profitable and unprofitable banking oporations. You have only to look at the unprocodented and still growing volume of bank doposits created 1,8 a result of wer financing to realize that relief cannot be expected to como through a rising interest rate structure after the war. The command over the interest rate structure Which governments have exercised during the war will not, in my opinion, be relinquished afterward. In view of the huge debt-refunding operations that the Government will have to carry on and the disruptive effects of a falling bond market, or, otherwise stated, of a rising interest rate on Regraded Unclassified 122 - 7 - those operations, it is hardly likoly that the responsible authorities would fail to exercise thoir undoubted powers of control to provent any such wido fluctuations in interost ratos as would afford the banks B. hope of rising returns from this source, Moroover, the vast volume of funds that have alroady como or will como into oxistence before the end of the war presents a competitive situation that is hardly dosigned to rosult in increased ratos and carnings by the banks. Those doposits are owned by insurance companies, mortgage companies, financo companios, building and loan associations, business and industry, as well as by many other potential lendors, individual und corporato. I have recontly soun funds advortized for lending in the mortgage field for as long as forty years at but four per cent. Banks must face the necessity of adapting themselves to meet such competition and at the same time, through diversification and sound management, safeguard the interests of their depositors and stockholders. I recognize that a banking structure that may best serve one part of the country may not be adapted to another part. Generally speaking, in the Eastern States, where larger diversified banking Units predominate and distances are relatively short, there is no such public noud for trade-area branch banking as is the case in those sections of the country whoro distances are great and where the banking units are necessarily smallor and far loss divorsified in their londing and investing activities -- indood, often they are too reliant upon conditions in one or only a few lines of agriculture or industry. I have 10mg felt that limited branch banking is the practical solution of the banking problems confronting those areas where unit banks cannot succeed, I have never favored nation-wide branch banking, or its extension over wide areas. I do feel, however, that it should be permitted within limited trade areas, in no case exceeding the limits of the immediate area served by the head office or by a branch of a Federal Roserve Bank. I believe that the independent unit bank should be protected, however, by a statutory provision prohibiting establishment of any brunch in A community alroady served by EL unit bank or by EL branch of another bank. The banking authorities could, of course, permit establishmont of another bank in a community if the need for it existed, but under the provision I have in mind, a branch could only como into the community by acquiring a unit bank which hud boon in oxistonce for at loast five years. Such an acquisition would have to have the consent of tho bank supervisory authorities in order to provent monopolistic tondoncios, Undor such provisions, & market would be provided for the stock of a unit bank in caso the stockholders dosired to sell because of unprofitable opurations or for any other roason. At prosent the owners of the smaller unit banks are greatly handicapped in having no pportunity, in most cases, to dispose of their investment, if they wish to 4a so, at anything like a satisfactory price. The smaller unit banks face many difficulties and disadvantages as compared with branch banks. The snaller units are so limited in their lend- Regraded Unclassified 123 - 8 - INC capacity that nore and more, as business, industrial and agricultural enterprises have enlarged, they have had to turn to the banks with large resources for their financial requirements. The smallor units do not have the opportunities afforded the larger institutions to diversify their lend- 10G oporations and thus apread the risks. They cannot offord to employ the specialized nanagement in the various lines of lending and investing activity that our be employed by the larger banks. Thoy are not able to offer the varioty of credit and other services, and they lack stability and continuity in management, as compared with larger banks with branchos. Accordingly, I see in 6, branch banking set-up such as I have outlined B. practical and 12g10al solution of the problem, both from the standpoint of providing needed banking services for the public in many communities and from the standpoint of the interest of the unit banks themselves. The present branch banking laws discriminate unfairly against national banks. While Federal law permits a national bank to have branches in those States where State law permits branch banking, the Federal law re- quires the same capitalization for each branch of a national bank as for establishment of a new national bank. Most State laws impose no such capital requirements. If both State and national bunks wore put on an equal footing with respect to branches and the indepondent unit banks wore protocted E.S I have suggested, it scoms to no that it would bo in the intorost of all con- cornod. The public interest and public needs will, I am confident, determine in the end the pattern that will be followed. It is not the public which has opposed branch banking. As Senator Glass said when the subject was being debated in the Senate some years ago and he has had more legislative experience with banking problems than any nan in public life in ur times -- "The plea against branch banking comes from bankers and not from people who transact businoss, not from people who want to borrow money, not from people who want to buy credit. It comes from bankers who want to exclude from their peculiar communities anybody olse who wants to sell credit." And you will perhaps pardon no if I recall to your mind that the some Senator is the Author of the statement that "the curso of the banking busi- noss of this country is the dual system". New, I have not advocted abolishing State chartoring and super- visi in because I have folt, or at loust hopod, that & sufficient dogroo of unifiod policy and notion could be brought about, short of 50 drustic to change, by requiring that State banks, like national banks, bo members of the Federal Reserve System, by a consolidation of Federal regulatory and supervisory authorities, and by development of branch banking as I have indicated. Nevertheless, I must confess that the cold logic of the situa- tion calls for the more drastic readjustment to modern conditions. Regraded Unclassified 124 a , , In the carlier days of the Republic when State banks were em- powered to issue currency, thore was B. reason for State chartering and supervision that ceused to exist when State bank notes were taxed out of existonce. In the light of the clearly recognized soveroignty of the Federal Government over the issuance of currency, the logic of the case calls equally for onding State authority to charter banks which, in turn, while they no longer issue currency, can oreate bank credit that has so largoly supplanted currency as the country's chief medium of exchange. As Professor Westerfield of Yale has pointed out: "It has boen seriously argued that the Constitution not merely permits but requires that the power of the states to charter commercial bunks be abolished and control of commercial banking be exercised by the federal government alone, because the Constitution expressly gives Congress control of the monetary system and forbids interference with it by the states, and commercial bank deposits are the principal element of the monotory system." Having a regard for the antiquity of this issue of the dual sys- tum and the controversy which has ruged about the subject for so many generations, I have perhaps boon more prudent than logical in stopping short of advocenting that you gontlemen be legislated out of your present occupations -- but la long lino of ominent authorities, who could hardly be charged with indifforenco to State Rights, have not stoppod short. Sonutor Shorman, of Ohio, that distinguishod loador in establishmont of the national banking system, concluded nourly oighty yours ugo that, end I quoto, "The whole system of state banks, however carefully guarded, was both unconstitutional and inexpedient and ought to be overthrown". Daniel Webster, specking in the Senate on the subject of State bank circulation, said: "I confess, Mr. President, that the more I reflect upon this subject, the more clearly does my mind approach the conclusion that the creation of stuto banks, for the purpose und with the power of circulating paper, in not consistent with the grants and prohibitions of the Constitution." Even 50 ardent a champion of State Rights us Thomas Jefferson wrote in 181L that, "The state logislatures should be immediately urgod to relinguish the right of establishing banks of discount". My own approach and viewpoint wore well exprossed by an editorial in the New York Times of July 23, 1936, omphusizing the fact that "un obvious und pressing nood" for fundumental banking reform still oxisted. Regraded Unclassified 125 - 10 - "If the exporience of the doprossion yours showed anything," this odi- torial continuod, "it showed the glaring woaknesses inhorent in n bank- ing system which is conducted under no loss than fifty different sots of Federal and local regulations, with many communities denied by law the services of banking institutions equipped with adequate financial resources. The remedies for these weaknesses are unified regulation obtained through membership of all banks in the Federal Reserve System and an extension of the practice of sound branch banking." You will not, I trust, accuse me of radicalism or of favoring buresucracy because I find myself allied in my thinking with so many others who, down through the years, have shared my general viewpoint; sone, like Jefferson, being much more drustic than I have been. And you will not, I trust, think that I have any less desire to work cooperatively, closely, and in hurmony with you to make the bust of our prosent situation Just because I bolieve that timo and economic progress will ultimatoly bring fundamental changes in the banking structuro. I do not caro what system, whother ducl or unified, provuils, or how many banking authoritics there are, if the system, whatever it may be, best serves the public interest and preserves privute banking in this nation. Regraded Unclassified DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE CANADA Ottawa, Sept. 17, 1943. Dear Dr. White:- As Mr. Plumptre is absent from Washington on holidays he has asked me to send you direct the attached quarterly statement and forecast of Canada's holdings of U.S. dollars. This statement would normally have gone forward some time ago, but it has been delayed in order to include the latest information concerning the steps taken to bring our balances within the agreed limits. Yours very truly, T D. White, at to the Secretary, Department, ON, D.C. Regraded Unclassified CANADA'S RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. General Comments. Table I. Summary Table. Table II. Current Account. Table III. Capital Account. Table IV. Hyde Park Transactions. Table V. U.S. Dollars Obtained Outside the United States. Table VI. Canada's Liquid Reserves. Footnotes on the Tables. Regraded Unclassified 'S RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943 ints on the Report forecast places Canada's probable stock of gold and U.S. dollars and of 1943 at $444 million, excluding the proceeds of the net capital on security transactions (estimated at $98 million for the calendar THE 1943) and before taking account of the cancellations of War Supplies Ltd. orders now in process. Contracts aggregating $100 to $107 million during the remainder of their terms are being cencelled outright. The Depart- ment of Munitions and Supply estimates that deliveries through War Supplies Ltd. will be reduced by $80 to $86 million by December 31, 1943, as a result. It is difficult, however, to forecast the timing of the effect which these reductions in deliveries will have on net cash receipts from month to month because of the lag of payments behind deliveries and because payments will continue to be received on account of past deliveries. In addition to the effects of these cancellations, it is expected that further refunds will be to the United States as a result of retroactive price adjustments on through War Supplies Ltd. similar to the refund of $50 million last Nothing of this nature has been included in the forecast. Do high level at which Canada's stock of U.S. exchange has been in recent months is due in part to the fact that some unusual receipts U.S. dollars received in settlements from the United Kingdom - Table I, fell in the early part of the year while certain heavy payments (e.g., for "Canpay" imports from U.S. - Table I, Item 7) will not occur until ter part of the year. It is also due in part to the continued high rate al inflow from security transactions, estimated at $98 million for the year 1943 (net, after the redemption on August 15th of Dominion of bonds amounting to $106 million). Regraded Unclassified 2. changes made in methods of estimating used in this report. Some alight changes have been made in the arrangement of the items in namery table, Table I, particularly to give emphasis to the importance tch payments on Canpay account and special adjustments to receipts through at Supplies Ltd. have now achieved. Payments on Canpay account now appear only in Table I, Item ?; they have been entirely eliminated from Table II where they were formerly included in the estimated payments for imports from the United States. Hyde Park receipts are stated in Table IV and in Table I, Item 9, before allowing for the effect of the cancellation of War Supplies Ltd. orders described above, for the reasons there given. For convenient reference Items 15 to 18 have been added to Table I. These give the U.S. dollar position, actual and forecast, at the end of each quarter of 1943 both before and after the elimination of the net effect of security tran- sactions on the position. Since no further changes of importance are likely to be made in the estimates for 1942, the detailed estimates for each quarter of 1942 have been omitted; the total for the year will be found in each table for com- rison with 1943. In some tables the forecasts have been carried through first quarter of 1944. For the less predictable items, however, the last has only been carried to the end of 1943. A considerable reduction in the estimated payments to the United States rdinary current account (Table I, Item 1) by contrast with the estimated into for 1943 shown in the May report is to be accounted for almost oly by the elimination of payments on Canpay account. These now appear (tom 7 of Table I. The forecasts of current receipts made in May were low for the second quarter. The estimated total current account receipts 1943 have been increased somewhat in this report (Table I, Item 2). Regraded Unclassified 3. these changes account for the reduction in the estimated excess rent payments over receipts for 1943 from the 3544 million forecast May report to the $280 million here forecast (Table I, Item 3). Regraded Unclassified CANADA'S RECEIPTS AD DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943 Table I. Summary Table (in millions of United States Dollars) Item Calendar Quarters of 1943 No. 1942 1943 I II III IV Ordinary Current Account Transactions, excluding Canpay and Hyde Park transactions (from Table II): Payments 1. 1,466 1,546 340 397 396 413 Receipts 2. 1,027 1,266 256 346 342 322 Excess of payments (-) (1-2) 3. -439 -280 -84 -51 -54 -91 Capital Transactions excluding Security Transac- tions (from Table III): Net capital inflow (f) 4. /38 427 /10 45 t6 to U.S. Dollars Obtained from Newfoundland and other Non-Sterling Area Countries Outside the United Stetes (from Table v): Net receipts (f) 5. 460 /58 All /23 to 417 Special Receipts of U.S.Dollars from the United Kingdom (f) 6.° 427 /165 /139 to /10 48 Payments for Canpay imports (-) 7. -1 -163 - -50 -71 -42 Surplus (t) or Deficits (-) on the above transac- tions (1.e., all except Hyde Park and security transactions) (3/4/5/6/7) 8. -315 -193 476 -65 -102 -102 Net Receipts from Hyde Park Transactions (from Table IV) : Net Receipts (without taking account of any cancellation of War Supplies Ltd. orders.) (See Note below) 9. /310 /332 477 /59 /92 /104 Surplus (f) or Deficit (-) on all the above Transac- tions (1.0., all except security transactions) (8/9) 10. -5 /139 /153 -6 -10 +2 Security Transactions (from Table III) : Net capital import (f) or export (-) 11. /114 698 /53 63 -61 /43 Surplus (t) or Deficit (-) on all the above Tran- sactions, (10/11) 12. /109 /237 /206 457 -71 /45 Actual Increase (+) or Decrease (-) in Canada's U.S. Dollar Position 13. /131 /218 /31 Errors and Omissions (13-12) 14. /22 A12 -26 Regraded Unclassifie 2. Item Calendar Quarters of 1943 No. 1942 1943 I II III IV lar Position at the End of Canada Kach uarter: Ad Table VI) 15. 319 537 568 For thout taking account of and llation of War Supplies LE See Note below.) (f) 12) 16, 542 497 542 Canada Dollar Position at the End of Each or Quarter (excluding the net inflow of capital from security transac- tions Actual (Item 15 less the cumulative capital inflow shown in Item 11) 17. 205 484 452 Forecast (without taking account of any cancellation of War Supplies Ltd. orders. See Note below.) (Item 16 less the cumulative capital inflow shown in Item 11) 18. 444 442 444 Note: Items 9, 16 and 18 take no account of cancellations of War Supplies Ltd. orders resulting from implementation of maximum-minimum balances arrangement. Contracts for such orders aggregating 100 to 107 million dollars during the term of the contracts are now being cancelled out- right. The Department of llunitions and Supply estimates that deliveries through War Supplies Ltd. will be reduced by 80 to 86 million dollars by December 31, 1943, as a result of these cancellations, It is difficult, however, to forecast the timing of the effect of these reductions in de- liveries on net cash receipts month by month because of the lag of payments behind deliveries and because of payments on account of past deliveries. In addition, it is expected that further refunds will be made to the United States as a result of retroactive price adjustments on sales through War Supplies Ltd., similar to the refund in June 1943. Nothing of this nature has been included in the forecast. Regraded Unclassified CANADA'S RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. Table II Current Account (in millions of U.S. dollars) Item Calender Quarters of 1943 of 1944 Fiscal No. 1942 1943 I II III IV I 1944 Payment cada to the U.S. Payment cated by the adjuste of total merch- endise ed, excluding Lend-Le ind Canpay imports 1. 1014 1068 234 274 280 280 265 1099 of which imports for the prod- uction of military equipment 2. 436 517 124 128 132 133 133 526 of which imports for other (mainly non-war) purposes 3. 578 551 110 146 148 147 132 573 Freight payable in U.S. dollars. 4. 145 160 31 40 46 43 30 159 Tourist and other travel in the U.S. 5. 14 19 4 5 5 5 5 20 Interest payments 6. 88 92 20 25 21 26 21 93 Dividends and profits payments 7. 114 110 25 30 20 35 18 103 Miscellaneous 8. 91 97 26 23 24 24 24 95 Total Payments (1/4/5/6/7/8) 9. 1466 1546 340 397 396 413 363 1569 Receipts Canada from the U.S. Export rchandise by Canada, (exc) all Hyde Park exports, 10. 567 629 125 168 171 165 135 639 see Expor tals to Motals Resel oration 11. 33 86 14 24 24 24 24 96 Export (ly-mined gold 167 134 36 35 33 30 25 123 12. Proig ts in U.S.dollars. 13. 74 101 19 34 26 22 18 100 Touri Sher travel by the U.S do 14. 56 59 9 15 22 13 9 59 Inter dends and profits from 15. 51 55 13 16 12 14 11 53 Aleak and other U.S. Gove jects 16, 26 130 28 36 36 36 30 138 Misca 17. 53 72 18 18 18 19 18 72 Total (10/11/12/13/14/ 15/1 18. 1027 1266 256 346 342 322 270 1280 Exces wnts over Receipt 18) 19. 439 280 84 51 54 91 93 289 Regraded Unclassified RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. Table III. Capital Account (in millions of U.S. dollars) Item Calendar Quarters of 1943 No. 1942 1943 I II III IV Section I Non-Security Transactions Sales by Canadians of U.S. and other assets: U.S. assets 1. 23 15 4 3 4 4 Canadian assets 2. 19 11 2 3 3 3 Other new borrowing 3. - 5 5 - - - Total Receipts on these items (1/2/3) 4. 42 31 11 6 7 7 Less debt payments 5. 4 4 1 1 1 1 Net capital inflow on these items 6. /38 /27 /10 /5 /6 to Section II, Security Transactions Sales of securities by Canadians: U.S. and other foreign securities 7. 22 41 6 14 11 10 Canadian outstanding issues 8. 112 205 67 48 50 40 New Canadian issues 9. - 124 97 27 - - Total (7/8/9) 10. 134 370 170 89 61 50 Less turities of Canadian seo ties in the U.S 11. 20 56 7 26 16 7 Less adian securities cal for redemption payable in dollars 12. - 216 110 - 106 - Net 1 inflow (f) or out- fl. on security trans- ac (10-11-12) 13. /114 /98 A53 /63 -61 +43 Recap ion Tot tal receipts (4/10) 14. 176 401 181 95 68 57 Tot tal payments ) 15. 24 276 118 27 123 8 Net 1 inflow (14-15 or 6 16. /152 /125 /63 /68 -55 /49 Regraded Unclassified BANADA'S RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. Table IV. Hyde Park Transactions (in millions of U.S. dollars) Item Calender Quarters of 1943 Lio. 1942 1943 I II III IV Prepayments and capital advances 1. 79 7 - 2 5 - Current receipts on orders placed through for Supplies Ltd 2. 231 377 77 100 100 100 Refund by Canada of prepayments by the U.S. included in Item 1... 3. - 21 - 1 20 - Payments by Canada on account of "retroactive price adjustments" 4, - 50 - 50 - - on W.S.L. contracts liet receipts through War Supplies Ltd. (1/2-3-4) 5. 310 313 77 51 95 100 Petroleum Products Lend-Leased by the U.S. to the U.K. for the Combined Air Training Plan 6. - 19 - e 7 4 Net receipts of U.S. dollars by Canada under Hyde Park trans- actions (5/6) 7. 310 332 77 59 92 104 Additional Information Canada's Hyde Park Exports: Exports against prepayments and cemital advances 8. 17 39 13 12 8 6 Total arts (2/8) 9. 248 416 90 112 108 106 edjustments, Item 4... 10. 50 50 - - Loss - - Rece rom Thoada's Hyde Par 11. 248 366 90 62 108 106 ter 9-10) U.S content of Canada's Hy exports estimated at Item 11 12. 30 44 11 7 13 13 Net of U.S. dollars from Hg exports (11-12) 13. 218 322 79 55 95 93 прог components and mate obtained by the U.K. un -Lease for the ex- ocut British orders in Седа 50 19 7 8 2 2 14. Regraded Unclassified 138 IPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS CA Report, September 1943. able V. U.S. Dollars Obtained Outside the United States. (in millions of U.S. Dollars) Item Calendar Quarters of 1943 of 194 Fiscal No. 1942 1943 I II III IV I 1944 eceipts by Canada From non-sterling area countries other than Newfoundland and the United States 1. 82 99 20 32 18 29 20 99 syments by Canada To non-sterling area countries other than Newfoundland and the United States 2: 55 64 18 14 16 16 16 42 et Receipts (1-2) 3. 27 35 2 18 2 13 4 et Rec of U.S. Dollar Newfoundland. 4. 33 23 9 5 5 4 3 Total Receipts (37) 60 58 11 3 7 17 7 64 5. . Regraded Unclassified DS RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. Table VI. Canada's Liquid Reserves (in millions of U.3. dollars) of which held to U.S. Total Private offset net securit) Gold Balances Official Balancesja Total movements in 1943 Amounts Sept. 15, 1939 205 56 261 133 394 Dec. 30, 1939 218 88 305 99 405 Dec. 31, 1940 136 194 330 3 333 Dec. 31, 1941 136 52 188 - 188 Dec. 31, 1942 155 164 319 - 319 Mar. 31, 1943 124 413 537 - 537 53 June 30, 1943 162 406 568 - 568 116 Aug. 31, 1943 181 364 545 - 545 Memo: Net Capital Import I. Change in Amounts from Previous Period Sept. 15, 1939 - - - - - Dec. 30, 1939 /13 +32 /45 -34 /11 Dec. 31, 1940 -82 /106 /24 -96 -72 Dec. 31, 1941 - -142 -142 -3 -145 61 Dec. 31, 1942 /19 /112 /131 - /131 152 Mar, 31, 1943 -31 /249 /218 63 - /218 June 30, 1943 /38 -7 /31 /31 68 - Aug. 1943 /19 -42 -23 - -23 F Tot fficial" holdings - Foreign Exchange Control Board, Minister of Finance Bhink of Canada. 17 Tot dings of U.S. dollars by all other residents of Canada, excluding in banks end insurance companies whose holdings of U.S. dollars are di for the purpose of their U.S. business. The totals shown are e of $20 million in minimum working balances. to the war, a very large proportion of Canada's exchange reserves by private rather than official agencies. In the spring of 1940, 1gn Exchange Control Board, which had been charged with responsibility ging the country's exchange reserves, took over all such balances in hands other than the minimum amount considered essential for day-to king balances. Regraded Unclassified DA'S RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF UNITED STATES DOLLARS Report, September 1943. 100 to the Tables. tes to Table II. It For the past total imports are arrived at by adjusting Cust import statistics to eliminate imports for which no pay- nent has been made. Canpay imports and Lend-Lease imports were also liminated. The forecast was made after examination of the past trend of imports in each of the groups into which the Dominion Bureau of Statistics divided merchandise imports. It is estimated that total imports will be slightly above the level of the second quarter for the third and the fourth quarter of this year. It is also estimated that the first quarter of 1944 will be above the same quarter of 1943 because total imports in that quarter were unduly reduced by a severe winter's effects upon transportation facilities. Prices will probably be somewhat bigher also. The reduction in the total imports forecast for 1943 to $1,215 million of the May report to $1,068 million in the report is almost entirely due to the elimination of Canpay 1 for treatment elsewhere in the balance of payments. and 3. These items are added for information only; they are anywhere in the balance of payments. Item 2 is the U.S. ontent of military equipment purchased by the Department ions and Supply. It 18 not inclusive enough to be d. as imports for "War" production which was the title used. No attempt is made here to separate imports on Regraded Unclassified from what might be called "civilian" imports. Isem 1 erely the difference between Items I and : must there- many items which might properly be called imports for uction. The following table shows how the estimates of Item 2 iled: Table II. Current Account. Item Quarters of 1945 or 1944 No. I II III IV I Payments for U.S. purchases by contractors and suppliers 1 103 115 124 130 130 Expenditures in the U.S. for capital equipment 2 20 15 10 5 5 Direct purchases by the Dept. of Munitions and Supply on other than Canpay account 3 83 6 6 6 6 Total of the above items 4 131 156 140 141 141 Deduct estimated freight payments included in the above items but included here in the freight payments item of Table II, (1.0. $5 of item 4.) 5 7 8 8 8 8 Estimated imports for the produc- on of military equipment (4-5) 6 124 128 152 153 135 A comparison of this table with the similar table is- ed in the May Report, shows a reduction which is due to the intion of the payments on Canpay account. Excluding those the figures given in the table above are somewhat higher those of the May estimate. This increase is due mainly to oments effected in the methods of estimating which soon tify a somewhat higher estimate for some production pro- 18 than had been made previously. ent of Campay imports in the present Report. The only payments made by Canada for imports from the Regraded Unclassified 5. rranged through the Canpay procedure to date are that in 1942 and $50 million in the second quarter of 1948 all previous reports, payments for imports have book 4d on the basis of Customs statistics which included Cam] received in Canada but not yet paid for. To that exte tated payments for imports has been too high. Part of the Brunke and Omissions item in Table I of the previous reports is thus inined. So far as possible Canpay imports have now been eliminated from the record of payments for imports for the first two quarters of 1943 and from the payments forecast for the rest of the year as shown in Table II, item 1, though it has not been possible to eliminate them from the record for 1942. This revision has been the major factor in reducing the Errors and Omissions itom of $30 million shown for the first quarter of 1943 in the May report to the $12 million shown for the first quarter of 1943 in Table I, item 18, In the present report payments for Canpay imports are en- tered only in Table I, item 2. The forecast of Canpay payments made there is based on ostil deliveries on Canpay account. The total deliveries on Call count to the end of the present quarter are estimated to $122 million. As $51 million has been paid on this account al he payment of the remainder of Canada's liability, $71 D therefore forecast. In the last quarter the deliveries of imports are estimated at $42 million; this amount of pay- erefore forecast. reight Payable in U.S. Dollars. This item includes inland freight on coal and other com- ported from or through the U.S., ocean freight on in- oh is payable in U.S. dollars to U.S. or other foreign and such part of the freight on Canadian exports to Regraded Unclassified 4. a countries as is payable by Canada in U.S. dollars, X6 A some of these payments, O.B., freight on coal imports, R up-to-date information; for other parts of the es- as = basic data is usually one quarter behind. As a record, t) mates of the larger part of the freight payments are pro- bai to accurate. Its Tourist Payments, These are based upon Foreign Exchange Control Board data as to funds sold to tourists for travel in the United States. Item 6. Interest Payments. Based upon Dominion Bureau of Statistics estimates of the holdings of Canadian bonds in the United States. The quarterly distribution was made after studying the seasonal tendency in the sales by the Foreign Exchange Control Board of U.S. dollars for the servicing of Canadian bonds. Item 7. Dividends and Profits Payments. Based on F.E.C.B. records of approvals for the remittance of dividends and profits to residents of the U.S. dollar area. The forseast has been made on the assumption that remittances will con- ti to be below earnings as they have been in the recent past and 1 ere will be no tendency to remit to the U.S. the considerable of profits eligible for remittance under the regulations of .C.B. which have thus been built up. Miscellaneous, This item includes mainly payments for commercial and al services and payments to companies in the U.S. for ent, engineering, and similar professional services. Exports (excluding Hyde Park exports). The value of exports in the past is arrived at by ting from Customs statistics of exports those items for which Regraded Unclassified 5. us received, as well as exports included in Table IV, ransactions. Exports for the second quarter of this year were higher the lovel forecast in May. The Torecast is therefore at a all higher level also. This change seems justified by an analysis of the probable trend in each of Canada's main export commodities. Item 11. Exports of metals to Metals Reserve Corporation. The increase in this item over the May forecast is due to 48 adjustment in the valuation of aluminum exports under the provisions of an escalator clause in the contracts. Item 12. Gold exports. Our estimate of receipts from gold exports was again somewhat below the actual figure for the second quarter of 1943. The forecast has therefore been raised somewhat. The decline foreeast for the future is based on a projection of current pro- duction trends which man-power shortage may alter. Alaska Highway and other United States Government Project The amounts shown include only those receipts that can lfied with certainty as arising from this source. They morly included in miscellaneous receipts, but have now 10 considerable as to justify placing them in a separate is explains the reduction in the size of item 19, mis- as receipts, by comparison with the May report. Regraded Unclassified 6. Excess of Payments over Receipts. The excess of payments forecast for 1943 in the May $544 million. In the present report the kcess is so $280 million. This is explained by a reduction " ion in payments (largely because of the elimination of for Canpay imports) and an increase in estimated receipts of $132 million which current trends seen to warrant. Regraded Unclassified Table III. Capital Account is table does not include the capital imports in the spayments, advances and other loans by United States al agencies and some banks which have resulted from ark arrangements. These are given in Table IV, item 1, what included in the balance of payments in Table I, item 9. For items 1,2,3,5,7,8 and 9 of Table III the record is provided by the Foreign Exchange Control Board; the forecasts are rough estimates only. Items 11 and 12 are a breakdown of former item 11. In view of the magnitude of recent calls of securities for payment before maturity, it seems advisable to state their amount separate- ly. The forecast given for item 11 is based on the estimated forsign holdings of Canadian bonds maturing in the United States. Because of the proven difficulty of forecasting security movements, this estimate has not been carried beyond 1943. Regraded Unclassified to Table IV. Hyde Park Transactions, All the estimates included in this table come from t. of Munitions and Supply, with the exception of hich comes from the Department of National Defence Item 4 shows the retroactive price adjustment on the sales through War Supplies Ltd., made in June 1945. Further adjustments will be required in the future, but their amount and timing is uncertain, so nothing of this nature has been forecast before the end of the year. Item 7 shows the net receipts of U.S. dollars by Canada through Hyde Park Transactions before taking account of the cancellation of War Supplies Ltd. orders now in process. See the note at the foot of Table I. Items 8 to 14 of the table provide additional in- formation and calculations of interest. None of these items appear in the balance of payments in the form here given. of the exports included in Item 8, together with the cash nd of Item 3, refund prepayments of War Supplies Orders ded in Item 1. The remainder of the prepayments of Item the exports against them which are shown for the future on 8have to do with aluminum contracts. Regraded Unclassified to Table V. United States Dollars Obtained Outside The United States. Receipts by Canada. Customs figures for exports (adjusted to eliminate producing no U.S. dollars), including wheat exports to neutral countries in Europe from U.S. ports, and F.E.C.B. data on dividends transferred to Canada by Canadian companies operating abroad. The irregularities in the second and fourth quarters are mainly the effect of dividend receipts. The May forecast of this item proved an under-estimate; the present forecast is somewhat higher. Item 2. Payments by Canada. Customs figures adjusted to eliminate items for which no payment in U.S. dollars is required. Item 4. Net Receipts of U.S. Dollars from Newfoundland. Net amount of exchange sold to the Foreign Exchange Control Board. Regraded Unclassified 147 PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM SENT TO: AMERICAN EMBASSY, CHUNGKING, CHINA DATE: September 17, 1943, 4 p.m. NO.: 1298 FOR ADLER FROM THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. Please discreetly consult the proper authorities of the Chinese Government and -- unless there is objection by the Chinese authorities -- arrange through reliable and confidential channels for the delivery of the follow- ing message which the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee is very anxioue to have reach its representatives (either Laure Margolis or Manuel Siegel) in Shanghai: Could you, under existing conditions, utilize authorization to borrow locally up to $40,000 monthly for 8. period of the next six months in order to carry on relief acti- vities among refugees? Should such an authorization be desired, proupt favorable response may be expected, Any reply which may be received should be given the same facilities for transmission. The Embassy is requested, in the absence of Adler, to carry out the above request. Should the Embassy not be in a position to carry out this request, the message should be held until the return of Mr. Adler. HULL Regraded Unclassified 148 PLAIN NC Chungking via N.R. Dated September 17, 1943 Rec'd 1127 p.m. Secretary of State Washington 1743, seventeenth Central News Agency in referring to resolution adopted by CEC session September 11 on program for intensification of price control states that "arrangements have been made with the United States for the purchase of United States $200,000 worth of gold." In the resolution appears a statement that "the United States has promised to lend to China a large quantity of gold." Government spokesman at press conference September 15 as reported by Central News Agency stated that Chinese Government has proposed to use US $200,000 from balance of US $500,000 credit extended by American Government to buy gold bullion to combat inflation in China. Spokesman also said that Chinese Government has decided to revise stabilization agreement and is negotiating with US Government at Washington. NOSHHOLV DD eh:copy 9-20-43 Regraded Unclassified 149 NOT TO BE RE-TRANSMITTED 13 COPY NO. BRITISH MOST SECRET U.S. SECRET OPTEL No. 307 Information received up to 10 A.M., 17th September, 1943. 1. NAVAL 16th. H.M. ships continued their bombardment of the SALERNO bridgehead which together with air bombing was an important factor in the 1m- provenent of the military situation. In the AEGEAN one of H.M. Subnarines sank a schooner And a tug on the 5th. Another of H.M. Submarinos sank a caique on 31st of August end B. 1,000 ton ship on 2nd September. 2. MILITARY ITALY. 5th Army, By last light 15th there had boen no enjor onemy attack for 48 hours and the situation in the bridgehead had temporarily been stabilised. On the 16th A limited Allied counter attack was nade from the area south of the SELE. Reinforcements are arriving steadily. 8th Army. On 15th units of 5th Division word concentrating in SCALEA and by first Jight on 16th reconnaissance units were in SAPRI with pntrol beyond. There was no repatition no contact with enemy. 3. AIR OPERATIONS WESTERN FRONT. MONTLUCON. 15th/16th. 1,017 tone including 35 4,000 pound and 527 tons of incondiarios dropped at Dunlop factory. Marker bomba seem to have been accurately placed but bombing from above clouds THE somewhat scattered at first. Later arrivals at lower altitude identified factory buildings and therenfter better concentration resulted. The pilot of a Spitfire yesterday BCW that the factory was extensively damaged and WAD burning fiercoly. GREVEN. 16th. Thick ground haze hampered successful attnck. A total of 220 Fortresses bombed the docks and an airfield at MANTES, U-bont pens and docks at LA PALLICE and 2 airfields in Western France dropping 588 tons in all. 99 medium bombors droppod 130 tons on BEAUMONT LE ROSER and TRICQUEVILLE tirfields, Serqueux Railway cuntre and a power station near HOUEN. 43 squadrons of fighters provided support. Enemy casualties 35, 10, 6. 12 Fortresses and 3 fighters missing. Hamplens torpedoud n. 3,000 ton ship off NORWAY and fighter bombers damaged 3 1,000 ton ships and several smallor vessels off FRANCE and HOLLAND. 5 fighter bombers missing. 16th/17th. Aircraft desputched - MODANE Railway Centre 345 (4 missing); another railway vinduct near ST. R.PHAEL 12 (one missing); BERLIN 5; Leaflets 3; Intruders 44 (1 missing). Wenther over MODANE good and bombing well concentrated. ITALY. 14th/15th. 186 medium and light bombers attacked enumy communications in the SALERNO area dropping 315 tons. 15th. 357 hoavy, medium and light bombers dropped about 420 tond on roads and enomy troop concentrations in the NAPLES, EBOLI and POTENZA are Beaufighters torpedoed a 2,000 ship off LEGHORN. Regraded Unclassified 1000 part U.S. COAST GUARD 150 TREASURY DEPT. HEADING RW94/544Y PTA 544Y 181805 QUAT W QUAH GR19 TRLP 12453.. LOS o N o T SECTREAS OFFICE.. COMDT cg.. TEXT CHARLES BELL MAIN TREASURY BLDG X CHARLIE COULD YOU ARRANGE BERTH NEWYORK TO WASHINGTON MIDNIGHT MONDAY X GEORGE ALBEE BT 181805 3 TOD 1809 18 SEPT 43 JG OPERATOR'S TH RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS Regraded Unclassified 100 HIP U. S. COAST GUARD 151 TREASURY DEPT. HEADING RW62/544Y PT A Q2U 181508 QUAT W QUAH GR23 / SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY OFFICE OF SECTREAS o COMMANDANT CG TEXT CHARLES BELL SECTREAS OFFICE X ARRIVING PITTSBURG 12400 CAN YOU GET ME OUT OF THERE FOR WASHINGTON ON PLANE PLEASE X FRED SMITH BT 181508 3 TOD: 1516 SEPT 18 1943/SX MO OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS $ Regraded Unclassified 152 Copy 9/18/43- U. S. Coast Guard From: Sec. Treas. Office To: Fred Smith For Fred Smith X Check with reservations at sirport Pittsburgh X Your reservation priority three Pennsylvania Central Airlines departing Pittsburgh 1355Q arriving Washington 1516Q X Signed Charles Bell. 18 September, 1943. 1641. Regraded Unclassified YORK U.S. COAST guard 153 o TREASURY DEPT. MEADING RW60/N0I 544Y PT A Q2U 181504 QUAT W QUAH GR28 SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY OFFICE OF SECTREAS COMMANDANT CG TEXT THEODORE GAMBLE MAIN TREASURY BLDG WASHN DC X KINDLY ASK MARK ODEA SUGGEST BEST SHIPYARD I CAN DELIVER SPEECH ON MARITIME DAY ANSWER WITHIN HOUR IF POSSIBLE BT 181504 3 CC (C - GR27) TOD: 1510 SEPT 18 1943/SX OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE MO OFFICIAL INITIALS $ Regraded Unclassified 154 all U.S. COAST guard TREASURY DEPT HEADING RW64/544Y PTA Q2U 181514 QUAT W QUAH GR20 SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY 0 OFFICE OF SECTREAS COMMANDANT CG TEXT PRIORITY BELL AND GAMBLE SECTREAS OFFICE X PLEASE CHECK ON NUMBER OF BOND OUTLETS OPERATING AT NIGHT X HAVE WE ENOUGH BT 181514 3 TOD: 1520 SEPT 18 1943/SX OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS $ 5 Regraded Unclassified 155 121 gift U.S. COAST GUARD TREASURY DEPT HEADING RW46/544Y PTA 02U 181400 QUAT W QUAH GR34 SECTREAS SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT CG TEXT FOR BELL AND GAMBLE OFFICE OF SEC OF TREAS X PLANTS HERE HAVE NO BOND QUOTAS X KE EVIDENTLY THIS IS TRUE IN ILLINOIS ALSO X QUESTION HOW MANY STATES HAVE GIVEN QUOTAS TO PLANTS BT 181400 3 OFFICIAL INITIALS 8NdSEPT 1943 JO 5 Regraded Unclassified 156 your yes U.S. COAST GUARD TREASURY DEPT. RW53/544Y PT A 544Y 181428 QUAT W QUAH GR36 HEADING TRLP 12453 SECTREAS OFFICE 0 0 COMDT CG TEXT THEODORE ROOSEVELT GAMBLE MAIN TREASURY BLDG X WOULD YOU PHONE " SATEVEPOST ASK IF INTERESTED IN BUYING STORY TITLED QUOTE WORLDS MOST FANTASTIC SALES ORGANIZATION UNQUOTE THE INSIDE STORY OF SELLING WAR BONDS BY ME X ALBEE BT INN 181428 3 TOD 1435 18 SEPT 1943 JO OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE MO OFFICIAL INITIALS $ Regraded Unclassified 157 0 or HIP U.S. COAST GUARD TREASURY DEPT. HEADING RW47/544Y PT A 5448 181403 QUAT W QUAH GR30 TRLP 12453 SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT CG TEXT GAMBLE SECS OFFICE X SECRETARY WANTS TO KEEP REPORTS COMING FROM OWI ON AXIS REACTION TO THIRD WAR LOAN FOR DURATION OF DRIVE X CAN YOU FIX IT X FRED BT 181403 is 3 TOD 1407 18 SEPT 1943 JO PEPATOR'S RECORD AND DATE MO OFFICIAL INITIALS $ Regraded Unclassified COPY 158 U. S. Coast Guard From: Office Sec. Treas. To: Sec. Treas. Mark Odea recommends Southeastern Shipyard Savannah Georgia X They have big day planned X Grace Tully 18 christening ship X Plant to receive special M award that day X Maritime and state officials to make big day of it and believe ideal spot for you to broadcast from X Your participation would be separately handled and be one of several important events during day X Suggested hour 1100Q X Reference bond outlets at night we have six thousand theaters two thousand drug stores and yesterday asked fifteen hundred Chambers of Commerce to sponsor a merchants night like that being staged in Chicago tonight X Every State Street store from Marshall Fields down remaining open tonight for the sale of bonds only preceded by big promotion campaign X Feel we have night outlets sufficiently taken care of X Have report for you on plant quotas from cross section of country that I think looks pretty good X If Albee 18 not ribbing I can sell story X OWI continuing monitor reports X This cleans the desk 80 give us some more X Love and kisses X Gamble. 18 September, 1943. 1630. Regraded Unclassified 159 U. S. COAST GUARD TREASURY DEVE RW49/544Y PTAI Q2U 181407 QUAT W QUAH GR49 HEADING SECTREAS TREAS SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT CG TEXT DAN BELL AND TED GAMBLE OFFICE OF SEC OF TREAS X FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF STLOUIS HAS SET UP QUOTA BY STATES FOR EIGHTH DISTRICT AND HAS RESULTS OF BOND D SALES EVERY NIGHT X QUESTION WHY CAN NOT EVERY FEDERAL RESERVE BANK DO LIKEWISE AND WIRE IN RESULTS NIGHTLY BT 181407 3 OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS TOD 1616 18 SEPT 1943 JO $ DWB:ew Regraded Unclassified 160 September 18, 1943 Memorandum to be radioed to Secretary Morgenthau Re: Quota and bond sales by States in Eighth District System for reporting sales which St. Louis has is result of our instructions. All Federal Reserves have it. We get these reports each day from Federal Reserve banks and such reports form the basis of daily State figuresgiven to the Press. (Initialed) D.W.B. DWB:ew Regraded Unclassified 161 COPY U. S. Coast Guard From: Office Seo. Treas. To: Sec. Treas. Re Quota and bond sales by states in Eighth District X System for reporting sales which St. Louis has 1s result of our instructions X All Federal Reserves have it X We get these reports each day from Federal Reserve Banks and such reports form the basis of daily state figures given to the press X D W Bell. 18 September, 1943. 1633 NM Regraded Unclassified 100 N° U.S. COAST GUARD 162 TREASURY DEPT. RW55/54AW PT A 02U 181441 QUAT W OUAH GR33 HEADING SECRETRARY OF THE TREASURY OFFICE OF SECTREAS COMMANDANT CG TEXT PRIORITY HARRY WHITE OFFICE OF SEC OF TREAS X WILLING TO GO BEFORE CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES NEXT WEDNESDAY TO EXPLAIN WORLD STABILIZATION OF CURRENCY PROGRAM X HAVE TO BE IN NEWYORK CITY ALL DAY THURSDAY BT 181441 (SEC SEZ RUSH THIS ONE PLEASE) 3 TOD: 1448 SEPT 18 1943/SX OPEPATOR RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS MO $ Regraded Unclassified EXP SALE U.S. COAST GUARD 163 HEASURY DEPT HEADING RW108/546Y PTA NE546Y 181913 QUAT W QUAH GR24 TRLP 12453.. SECTREAS OFFICE.. COMDT CG.. TEXT ISABEL DIAMOND MAIN TREASURY BLDG X KINDLY GET SEVERAL 1917 SPEECHES WILSON AND MCADOO ETC ESPECIALLY THOSE RELATING TO WAR BONDS y GEORGE ALBEE BT 181913 2 3 TOD 1916 18 SEPT 43 JG OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS TH $ Regraded Unclassified - 04/9 U. S. COAST GUARD 164 TREASURY DEPT HEADING RW67/54AY P T A 02U 181533 QUAT W QUAH GR63 SECTREAS SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT TEXT GAMBLE SECTREAS OFFICE X STAND BY FOR CALL FROM ME FROM PITTSBURG 12200 TO CLEAR ANY STATEMENT FOR TONIGHT X SMITH WILL BE IN OFFICE THIS AFTERNOON TO CLEAR ANY LATER STATEMENT THIS WEEK END X WHERE WE ARE LOTS OF SUNSHINE AND PLENT; OF OXYGEN AND IN CASE YOU DONT KNOW IT WE ARE OVERFLOWING WITH GOOD CHEER AND PLENTY OF IDEAS BT 181533 3 TOD 1443 18 SEPT 43 JG OPERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS MO $ Regraded Unclassified 110 HIP U.S. COAST GUARD 165 REASURY DEPT. HEADING RW45/544Y PTA Q2U 181357 QUAT W QUAH GR13 SECTREAS SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT CC TEXT FITZGERALD OFFICE OF SEC OF TREAS X ARRANGE TO HAVE JOE MEET ME BT 181358 3 &NDSEPT 1943 JO OFFICIAL INITIALS NI $ Regraded Unclassified self U.S. COAST GUARD 166 TREASURY DEPT HEADING RW65/54AY PT A 02U 181520 QUAT W QUAH GR13 SECTREAS SECTREAS OFFICE COMDT CG TEXT PLEASE FURNISH MRS KLOTZ WITH COPY OF ALL MESSAGES WE HAVE SENT TODAY BT 181520 3 ENGENT 1943 JO OFFICIAL INITIALS $ MO Regraded Unclassified 167 September 18, 1943 Dear Mr. Craw: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it so. Sincerely, (Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr. Mr. Nicholas Craw 1345 Hilltop Road Charlottesville, Virginia FS:gr Rs Regraded Unclassified 168 September 18, 1943 Dear Lieutenant Davis: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it 80. Sincerely, (ligned) H. Morgenthau. IT Lieutenant Landon Davis, Jr. Oxford Road Charlottesville, Virginia FS:gr Regraded Unclassified 169 September 18, 1943 Dear Mrs. Harlow: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it so. Sincerely, (Signed) II. Morgenthon, Jr. Mrs. Henry Harlow, Route 2, Charlottesville, Virginia. FS:gr is 9-17-43 Regraded Unclassified 170 September 18, 1943 Dear Mr. Henderson: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the program was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it 80. Sincerely, (Signed) I. Mergenthau, Jr. Mr. Willis Henderson Monticello, Virginia FS:gr By Regraded Unclassified 171 September 18, 1943 Dear Mr. Hope: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with th our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it so. Sincerely, (Signal) 1. Mergenthan, Jr. 120 Mr. Bob Hope Del Monte Lodge Pebble Beach, California FS:gr Regraded Unclassified 172 September 18, 1943 Dear Mrs. King: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it SO. Sincerely, (Signed) M. Mergenthau, Jr. Mrs. Betty King c/o IX Silk Mills Charlottesville, Virginia FS:gr # 9-16-43 Regraded Unclassified 173 September 18, 1943 Dear Sergeant Kozak: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received & number of letters and calls that would indicate that the program was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it so. Sincerely, (Signed) H. Merganthon, H. Sergeant Frank Kozak Archbald Street Carbondale, Pennsylvania F8:gr R 9-17-43 Regraded Unclassified 174 September 18, 1943 Dear Ernie Pyle: I want you to know how much I appreciated your coming on the "We the People" program last Sunday. From all reports, our program was very successful and effective, and in a large measure this was due to the contribution you were able to make. I also appreciate the time you gave me for our private discussions. I am sure the information which you have will prove very helpful to the war effort when it is passed along to the right places. Sincerely, (Rigned) H. Morgentham, Jr. Mr. Ernie Pyle o/o Lee Miller Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance 1013 Thirteenth Street, Northwest Washington, D. C. FS:gr 9-16-43 & Regraded Unclassified 175 September 18, 1943 Dear Mrs. Truscott: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received & number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it BO. Sincerely, (Migned) H. Mergenthan, Jr. Mrs. Lucian King Truscott, Jr. Jefferson Park Charlottesville, Virginia FS: gr if Regraded Unclassified 176 September 18, 1943 Dear General Wickersham: I want you to know that I appreciate your coming on the radio program with me last Sunday in connection with our Bond drive. I have received a number of letters and calls that would indicate that the pro- gram was very effective and successful, and you can be proud of the part you played to make it so. Sincerely, (Signed) H. Morgenthan, Jr. Brigadier General Cornelius W. Wickersham Commandant of the School of Military Government University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia FS:gr to Regraded Unclassified 177 September 18, 1943 My dear Mr. Celler: In the absence of the Secretary. I am acknowledging your letter of September 16, together with the on- closed statement released on August 12. Just as soon as Mr. Morgenthau is back in his office I shall be glad to bring both your letter and the enclosure to his attention. Very truly yours, (Signed) H. S. Klotz H. S. Kletz, Private Secretary. Honorable Emanuel Celler House of Representatives Washington, D. c. GEF:fw 9/18/43 Regraded Unclassified fol Has been arboro 178 [MANUEL CELLER NEW YORK OFFICE box 10TH DISTRICT NEW York 1450 BROADWAY New York CITY MEMBER OF MMITTER ON THE JUDICIARY Congress of the United States 1924 NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON MASSINGTON SECRETARIES bouse of Representatives NEW YORK SECRETARIES. - EFFRAT MARGARET BROOKS JACOB GRALLA MARY DOUGHENTY Washington, D.C. September 16, 1943 Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury Washington, D. C. My dear Mr. Secretary: views I was keenly disappointed that my aintement did not find P. responsive chord within you this morning. I am sending you herewith a statement which I prepared, entitled the "Betrayal of Palestine." You may not have time to read it now. Lay it aside for a more leisurely moment. Yours truly, Emamuel EMANUEL CELLER ENC: Regraded Unclassified 179 For Immediate Release August 12th, 1943 THE BETRAYAL OF PALESTINE STATEMENT BY CONGRESSIAN EMANUEL CELLER, REPRESENTATIVE TENTH CONGRLSSIONAL DISTRICT, IN YORK From thoroughly relisble sources, information of a bitterly dismaying nature has come forth that a joint statement will be issued shortly by the British Foreign Office and the State Department, silencing all discussion on the Arabinn-Jewish question in Palestine, and which will with one duvastating stroke the hopes of those who dared look towards Palestine as the one realistic approach to the solution of the homelessness of e driven people. It will, in effect, be an implied, but nonetheless conclusive, acceptance of the MacDonald White Paper of 1939 which decreed that no more than 75,000 Jews will be admitted to Palestine for a five year period. The joint statement will with its "Silence, please", drown the clamour of the tortured Nazi victime pleading for a haven of refuge. or the alloted 75,000 certificates of entrance, less than 29,000 now remain unused. These, more or less, will be confined to children. Adherence to the MacDonald White Paper means that in 1944 Jowish immigration into Palestine must cease altogether if so voted by El majority of Arubs. Even more alarming is the accompanying information that the joint state- ment will be issued with the knowledge and consent of the President. Although he NES importuned to stay the hand of the State Department, the reactionary forces were stronger, and, while it may be somewnat softened as a result of the intercession of the President, it apulls the doom of the Zionist cause and the beginning of the end of the long trek home. In the name of expediency and appeasement, under the shallow pretense of cilitary and political necessity, Pulestine 60 EL homeland for the Jews becomes the "lost Atlentis" of & helplens, hopeless, unwanted people. Neither we nor Dritain can fall back upon the hackneyed, amaggeroted and convenient excuse of military necessity or expediency. The lessons of history seem unavailing. Our scrup iron and oil did not appease Japan. Our appeasement of Vichy and Petain gave us Laval. Our diploancy with Pronce and his Falange and with Argentine has been artless and childlike. They play and continue to play ducks and drakes with us.K How 111 have the June used Palestine that now the one open door must like- wise be slammed shut in their search for dignity and security. They husbanded the arid soil of Palestine and made it rich in the fruits of the earth; they built hospitals for the Jen and Arab alike; they brought the lamp of learning to the desort with schools and the world-runswned University; they brought music and science to a world that had been left behind in civilization's murch. That which WELD uncultivated and considered uncultivable by the Araos hue bown cuitivable and cultivated by the Jews. The sands of Rishon 10 Zion, the swemps of Hedra, the rocks of Motza, blue stoney hills of Henito, and the largest malarial Are in Poluatine, the Hulch Booin, which has been classified not only By the Arabs but also by the British Government E.O uncultivable land ie-now- are now being turned into the most prosperous and productive land of Palestine. They had to reclaim, drain, reforest, fertilize and irrigate; they introduced modern and intensive muthods of cultivation, modern machinery, new breede of enttle and poultry, new plants and need rotation of crops. In 1939, the Peel Royal Commission stated: 12 years "go the national home was an experiment; today 16 is a going concern! There has been since then further expansion. Now industries have been started, bextile, chemical, wood, metal, electrical, food, building clothing which supply the home market and the Near Last L8 far as India. In 1941 alone, over 200 new Jowish industrial undertalding were established. Nor has the Lanigration and auttlement of Jeus in Polestino boen at Arob expense. The increase in the yield of the land has unde it possible not meroly to provide for additional settlers, but ackes it possible for the old acttlers to enjoy z. higher standard of living. The Arabs, it was shown, have chosen to live in gruatest numbers in the neighborhood of Jowlsh suttlements, and the in- crease of the Arcb population has closuly paralleled the Junish increase, not Regraded Unclassified 180 -2- only through the lowered death rate, but also Decluse large numbers of non- Polustinion Araba had neeped into the country to enjoy the highest standard of living in the Near East. Indued, it would be E calamity for the Arabs If the Junish settlement in Polustine were to DE liquidnted. The much vainted limitations of "absorptive capacity" of Palestine 1a & myth in the light of Dr. statement that there is room for 2,000,000 more souls in Polestine, Cnd oven that estimate has boon deced conservative. It in time to ask why those facts are not given space in newspapers and magazines of Large circulation? Have not they earned a right to be heard? Lut the Juice go elowhere, it will be said in mocking perallel to "Let than vot cake." Of all the nations fighting together in the name of freedom and liberty, not one has raised its voice to make then welcome, to offer them rescue, refuse or asylum. what answers can those responsible for the statement give when 48kud: "What in the rumedy?" Whore shall these people guilty of no crime but that of buing born Jun to? what plans are offored by the authore of the Atlantic Charter end the Four Freedoms for the re-suttlement of the June after the 4019 Will the anti-Sumites give the finel answer to an uprosted people? On the contrary, it would appear that curtain forces have done their work exceedingly well in preparing for an uncritical receptivity of the forthcoming atatement. A number of inspired articles have appeared, all following in what to be E planned suguence, to crecto the proper et- nonphere, buginnin with the publication of King I'm Soud's statement in ita opposition to Zionism end continuing through with the publication of the crticles by Cyrus L. Sulzberger in recent issues of the "Now York Times" which more sunsational Will occurate and more impolitic than wise. ay WER this puriod chosen to review adversely the Junish question in Files- tine? Is Unive any connection between the appearances of these articles and the mischier to ou loosed shortly by V.itchell Street in London and our State Department? How relevant MY or asy not be the fact that one or"more of our in- dustricl glants have received valuable concussions from Kin: Ibn Saud we do not know. Public Relations Counsolors cro cenny people. Small wonder that Ur. Churchill lias sloupless nights when he thinks of fda friend Choin luizmann, Zionist lunder, for did not Dr. Churchill say Ln 1939 at the appearance of the nou 1.ferious W: aDonald Thite Paper: "I bound to vote against the proposale of His Wajesty's Government. As one intimately and responsibly concurned in the earlier stages of our Palestine policy, 1 could not stand by and sue solemn engogements into which Britain has entered before the world set acide for reasons of administrative convenience or - and it will be a voin hope - for the salte of c quiet 11ft. I should feel personally unbarre: satd in the most acute manner If I lent myself, by silvnce or inaction, to what I must regard ZS an act of ru- pudietion. I DES from the beginning a sincere advocate of the Balfour Declaration and I have made repeated public statements to that effect There is much in this White Paper which is clien to the spirit of the Balfour Declaration, but I will not trouble about that. I select the one point upon which there is plainly D. breach end repudiation of the Dolfour Declaration - the provision that Juvish indigration can be stopped in five years' time by on Arcb ME. jority hot is that but the destruction of the Bolfour Declaration? /het is that but 2 breach of faith? What is it but e one- sidul denunciation - that La celled In the Jergon of the present time, 2 unilatoral denunci, tion of on engagement? In our condition 30 perious 206 our state so poor that we must, in our weakness, make this scorifice of our declared purpose?" Regraded Unclassified 181 Kr. Churchill WCD aware that 53 nations including the United States had retified the Halfour Declaration. On the 21st day of September, 1922, our American Congruss by wey of Resolution approved the establishment of e national hode for the Jewish People in Palestino. May, over and beyond the universal acceptance and approval of the Belfour Doclapation, on December 23, 1924, E Convention was signed by the then Prine Minister of Great Britain, Austen Chamburlain, and our then Secretary of State, Frank B. Kollogg, concerning the rights of Britain and the United States in Palestine. Significantly, Article 15 and subcrticle 7 of Article 28 read as follows: Article 15 1 The mendantory shall See that no discrimination of any kind shall be made between the inhabitants on the ground of rece, religion, or language. Ho person shall be excluded from Prlestine on the sole ground of religious buliefs. Subarticle 7 of Article 28 Nothing contained in the present convention shall be affected by any modification which may be mede in the terms of the mandate, as recited above, unloss such modification shell have Suan assented to by the United States. Yet in open violation of both the Balfour Declaration and the Convention of 1924, the MacDonald White Poper finunted the neighted decision of responsible government heads. The Belfour Declaration IES consented to by the United States The Convention of 1924 was consented to by the United States. Who consented to the promulgation of the White Paper? That can Mr, Anthony Eden say when confronted with the forthcoming statement as his own phrases attured in this country re-ucho through his aind, "Never again", he said, "must the civilized world be rundy to tolerate unilatural infrection of trusties. That would be to sap the whole foundation of the socure international 111'e which it is our principal purpose to restore." "That in the Thite Paper but a unileteral in- fraction of a treaty solumnly entered into? Sursly silunce cennot break the back of bigotry and recial antipathies. Zalightonment cen only follow in the nake of the trubh, the truth about the Arabs, for instance. The Allied Nations are well aver- that of all the senitic tribes in the East only the June contributed the full sucoure of loyalty to the Allied cause, bringing in proud bulief their blood and humble treasures. Not DO did the Arabs of Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Iron. For from boing deutral, they were actually hostile, wasy prey to the foul noises of Gurman propaganda, In it nocessary to point to the Iraq revolt to illuminate that point? The The Arab londed aristocrate, the eniro and military chieftens are as insatiable as Satan. It were just as impossible to actiofy or appease them as is to try to hold back the tidu with a groan, You cannot dual with them "cartus sur table". And be it remembered these potentation end princes are Arabia - Pan Arabic. Moduration and palliation are considered by them as signs of weakness, They take suitable advantage. Just CO Rommel and his Afrike Korps Were ready to leep from KL Alomein to Cairo and then sual the fate of the Allies in the llver Last by closing up the Suez Conal, the lately avoued friund of America and Britain, King Ibn Soud, had not / word to say, could not sper- E. single trooper, occul or donkey for Britcin's use. More British troops aure required to patrol the doubtful Arab areas and citius, especially in Egypt, than there actually focing Roumel's Afrike Korpa in the Lybian descrt, Piorro von Pesson reports. It WEB the June of Polustine that stepped forward 88 El man, voluntarily, not waiting for on army call. How may know or cir- to know that Palestine furnished the British armius in Lybia, Eritroa, Ethiopic and Sommliland thousands of doctors, nurses and duntists and placed the great Hedassah mudical center of Jurusalem at the disposal of the Empire? Who in there now to give public recognition to the courage, loyalty end stendfestness of the Jeas in their aid to the Allied nations in nohieving the trumendous victories? The Regraded Unclassified 182 The striking fact remains that the countries of the Nuar Gost with an regregate population of 45,000,000 (if Turkey is included) have contributed not a single soldier to the forces of the United Nations, the one exception ouing Polustine which has given her voluntuurs of whom more than 3/4 are Jown, Those Palestinian June clone in the British Imporial forous numbered 17,000 in September, 1942 in addition to the 10,000 in the military constabu- lary of the country. Yet, such has been the reward of the June that Areb appersement is placed above Junish honor. In Algiors, another cruel blow is struck by General Giroud's abrogation of the Crumieux docroe, depriving the Algurien Justa of their French citizenship, theirs since 1870 when Minister Crumisux in recognition of their loyalty and survice to France 30 ducroed, a citizen- ship that the Areb never wanted and never nulcomed. The MecDonald White Paper must be exemined in the light of events since 1939. If it nos a "breach of faith" then, how much gronter is the betrayal today? No other course but its abrogation in open now and the entire problem of the June and Polostine must Do et the forth- casing Intergovernmental Conference on Rufugeos. To foreclose considera- tion of additional Jewish innigration into Palestine by any joint pronounce- not now would doom the conforence to failure. It would suruly report the cruel mockery unceted it Burrauda and the tragedy of errors at Evian. It could cake us co-conspiratoro in the violation of international decency and honor. In the weke of the turrible scourge of wer, the bitter lesson is hermured hoge that the Junish problem is a problem of the civilized world, Jun and Guntile clike. The apathy of nations to the burning, sloughtering and mossering of June in Geranny did not prevent the horror from spreading to Cauchoslovakie, to time Polus, to the Dutch, to the Frunch. That which was violied as et Jondan question become a world conflegration. Inhuncrity in not exclusive; it cannot confine itcolf to one people without overflowing in all directions to drown E world in hatred and in flacks, No puace can be just or adequato until the Juvish problem in outtled. The one realistic approach in Poleutino. I yield to no non in my admiration for the British mort and woon and their mcgnificent efforts in this treasandous crises. The "comon men" in England has performed heroically the supurhumen tasks occasioned by this groctunt scourge in civilized history. The English people and the American people, however, should not be blinded by the dust-storms of official pro- tust BD to the fate of the Juice in Europe; they should not be duefened by the noise. Conversation is one thing; it cen be chariting, interesting and often vducational. But the situation her long since pessed the conversational obego. Action now is necessary. Thun the surgoon enters the operating room and his stoff of cosistents close in on his at the table upon which the patient rosts, immodiate action classt clways recults, The surguon dous not take scalpul in hand end meke a fun decisions and then cordially invite the boys to n. game of poker. From then on F.11 is deftness, co-ordination and cooperation. A human life is at stoke and time lo of the sssunce. If, in the interests of humenity, the surgeon doos not hositate, whet certhly russon can pe presented at this time to countenance dulty when the circumstances cro surrounded by E complete sura of fatality. have seved us r.nd the world. But how reconcil< that with her attitudo towards I Peport by nvowel of addiration for Ingland's unintly uncrifices that Privatine. A helo need slip but e full inchus to become A noose. She must opun Polustine to mass Junish indigration it anou; otherwise, Europe bucomes a mosive Jewish supulchre. an insupurable burden that must bu gotton rid of willy-nilly, I must remind Because some of the English Incore regard the Jonish question CB them of C. classic, favored story of their own King George VI. A boy is cerrying an oven child up the hill. then asked if bire ourden VICA too much for his, he replied, "It in not C burden, it is W brother." Regraded Unclassified 183 -5- Eithur Christianity in England and America give concrete merning to "Love they neighbor EJ theyself" or buar the stizar of hypocricy. Be it remembered that not everyone who LOVE, "Lord, Lord", shell enter the Kingdom of Hurven. Reading the official protestations of horror, listuning to the verbel expressions of compassion and voinly writing for the bands of inortie to drop from the hends of officialdom, I can almost hour the White Queen of "Alice in Nonderland" anying to Alice, "The rule is: Jen tomorrow end Jam yesterdry, but nuver jam today." What schoolroom cat and mouse geme la this to promise, thun plague? Are the insotiable Aroba to be fud while the cry of distrossed millions finds no answering call? The British Empire upon which "the sun nover gets" with its for flung possessions can now find it in her heart and aind to dony the tiny portion thursof that is Polectine to C. people who have watered and nourished it in reliance upon C nighty promise. Had she offered other havens to the storm³ toased of Europe, she night then have said ES did King James to the fly: "Have I three kingdoms and thou must needs fly into ay wye?" What are au offering but silence? The Jens everyahere - horo and abroad - look to President Roosevelt ID their only hope, their modern Roses to lead then out of the ,ilderness, to St.Ve them from E now and /Dro terroristic disspora. It apparently is too Into to change the apulo of opinion of Churchill, Eden, Helifex end other English leadors SEV4 by drratic name. Their iduns oro congerled except as Rossevelt will dumand change. in humbly potition his to benr upon the Britisa Foreign Office to code the light that only justice, Mercy and humanity con bring. He must bring Ingland back onto the both of the Belfour Declaration. I ctll upon the good people of America to help in this crises. There is so little time to not. Soon Roosevult will must Churchill. They any be in conclave now. Express your views to thos in cuthority in Enchington - to the President, to Secretary Hull, Secretary Morgunthou end other members of the President's Cabinet, your Send tors, your Congressmen. Your voice will shatter this conspiracy of silunce. Regraded Unclassified NOT TO BE RETRANS !ITTED COPY NO. 13 184 BRITISH HOST SECRET U.S. SECRET OPTEL 308 Information received up to 10 8.m. 18th September, 1943. 1. Naval Two of H.M. Dattleships bombarded the Salerno area on 16th. One was severely damaged by rocket bonbs and is proceeding to Malta in tow. A floot auxiliary was also bombed on 14th and is in tow. About 8 Italian cargo ships arrived at Malta on 14th including one of over 5,000 tons. An Italian Hospital Ship of 9,500 tons arrived on 15th. The port of Drindisi was opened on 14th and is in working order but labour is scarce. The Italian islands of Procida and Ponza were occupied by Allied forces on 15th. Ischia sur rondered on 16th. 2. Military Italy 16th. By four p.m. leading elements of the Eighth Army had reached Villapiana on coast opposito Scalea where they were in contact with our patrols from Taranto. Further inland patrols had reached Castrovillaco and Lagonegro where they were in touch with the enemy, and Vaclo where they have since been reported in touch with the Fifth Army. South East of Salerno the Fifth Army have reccempied Albanella and Eest and North of Salerno have driven off enemy counter attacks near Nontecorvino and Cappezzano. 3. Air Oporations Western Front. 16th/17th Modeno 651 tons Propped. Cloud and icing met on the way but clear visibility at Modane, Objective identified visually, many firos scon burning well. Antheor No cloud, good visibility torgot clearly seen all crows confident bombing vas occurate and one arch reported definitely hit. 17th/18th. Aircraft despatched:sea mining eight, Berlin six, railways Britanny soventeen. Italy 15th/16th. Wellingtons dropped 240 tons on the Torro Annenziata/Pompoii road. 16th. 357 heavy, medium and light hombers attacked communications in the Naples and Solorno aroas. Liborators dropped 74 tuns on a supply tump and road junctions at Potenza. Regraded Unclassified 185 NOT TO BE RETRANSMITTED COPY NO. 13 BRITISH MOST SECRET U.S. SECRET OPTEL NO, 311 Following is supplementary resume of Operational events covering the period 11th to 18th September, 1943. 1. NAVAL TIRPITZ and SCHARNHORST are back in Altenfjord. Mediterranean. Five Italian battleships, eight cruisers, eight destroyers, twenty submarines and at least forty smaller craft are now in Allied hands. One old battleship refitting, one Littorio Class under construction, two damaged Cruisers, 24 destroyers, 35 torpedo boats and about 40 to 45 submarines are under German control or unaccounted for. H.M. and U.S. Commsers and Destroyers, augmented on 15th and 16th by 2 of H.M. Battleships. Have maintained constant bonbardment of enemy positions in Salerno Area. Initial landings took place in good weather but ships' movements were hampered by mines. Naval Seafires gave Fighter cover from H.M. Aircraft Carriers for four days until they could use an airfield ashore. On 14th naval barrage was used to break up enemy tank attacks. H.M. Cruisers also brought reinforcements from Tripoli to Battle Area. French Destroyers and a submarine have landed troops at Ajaccio. Brindisi, Bari, Cotrone and Capri are in Allied hands. H.M. Submarines have sunk two small Merchantmen, hit 7,000 ton tanker with torpedo and bonbarded Samos. Allied Forces have landed on Kos, Leros and Sanos, Allied Naval casualties have been light. SUBMARINE WARFARE Summary of anti-submarine attacks in September reported to noon fifteenth. Number of attacks by shore- based aircraft nineteen, by carrier-borne aircraft one, by Warships fourteen. Sunk and probably sunk by aircraft 2, possibly sunk by Warships 2. Probably damaged by aircraft 1, Possibly damaged by aircraft 1, by Warships 3. Shipping Casualties. In September to date no Merchant ship is known to have been sunk in any theatre by U-boat, Week ending 12th six Ocean convoys arrived destinations without loss. From 11th to 17th inclusive four- SECRETARY OF OFFICE TREASURY 1943 SEP 23 AM 8 54 TREASURY DEPARTMENT Regraded Unclassified 186 -2- known casualties all by aircraft. British ship in tow West of Portugal bombed and sunk, British Hospital Ship bombed off Falerno sank two days later, one U.S. ship bembed and sunk a nd one damaged in Itelian Operations. Trade. Imports in convoy into United Kingdom week ending 11th. 1,396,000 tons including 699,000 oil, 2. MILITARY Italy, Salerno, Four German Divisions now identi- fied by Fifth Army, two of which believed not repeat not fully engaged, Air reconnaissance suggests elements of a Division from Rome Area moving South. In addition Division which has been acting as rearguard in Calabria now likely to be available although advance of Eighth Army will increasingly complicate enemy's position on his left Flank, Summary of Operations. On 11th Port of Salerno opened and A/A defences installed. Enemy by this time realised importance our attack and had concentrated his Forces. Object to cut bridgehead in half. 12th heavy enemy counter attacks launched which cen- tinued throughout following day. Situation became critical forcing British to withdraw from Battipaglia. 13th considerable penetration on 2-mile front made along line River Sele, U.S. troops withdrew from Altavilla and Albanella. 14th reinforcements including armour continued to arrive by sea and air. German attempt to break through held. 15th our positions consolidated and very dangerous moment passed, 16th Several counter attacks repulsed. and on 17th position continued to improve with enemy attacks again repulsed, Albanella and Altavilla recaptured by R.S. Troops in Taranto Area. There are seven airfields in good condition. Three hundred British Prisoners of War were rescued from a camp at Pisticci, Reinforcements have arrived and situation here 1s satisfectory. German divisions. No change in general disposition as between North and South Italy. Total remains eighteen, all offensive, Burma, Further reports of Japanese carrying out relief in Buthidaung Area, where enemy troops suffering from dysentery. 3. AIR OPERATIONS Western Front, Night. 929 Sorties. 18 aircraft missing. Very Successful attack on Dunlop factory, Montlucon 12 out of 26 major buildings destroyed and remainder damaged. Modane Railway centre attacked with objective interrupting cemmunications between Germany and Italy via France. Antheor, Railway viaduct attacked with same object. Day. Fortresses - Hispanne Suiza successful three of main workshops destroyed bombed factories in Paris Area with following results Caudron-Renault very successful every building hit, Renault at Billancourt heavy damage. Citroen damaged. Fortress attacks Nantes docks very successful, one destroyer sunk and much on damage caused. In R.A.F. attacks one 3,000 ton ship torpedoed off Norway, three 1,000 ton ships damaged Regraded Unclassified 187 (3) damaged off France and Helland and several small craft damaged off Dutch Islands. Mediterranean Area. Italy. Allied heavy, medium, light and Fighter bombers maintained heavy scale attacks in support of our troops. Bomber Sorties totalled 720 in one day alone, Enemy positions and communications round Area Salerno Bridgehead were repeatedly attacked. In one day 741 Fighter Sorties were flown over Salerno Beaches where they encountered total 120 enemy Fighters and Fighter bombers. A 2,000 ton enemy ship was torpedoed off Leghorn. In all these operat- ions Allies lost 23 aircraft, Russia. In the Den Basin the Russian Air Force heavily bombed the German lines of retreat by day and night and damaged many troop trains and motor vehicles, German Airfields were attacked by day and many aircraft reported destroyed on the ground, Elsewhere in the active sectors of the Front the Russian Air Force was chiefly engaged in direct support of their ground forcès, 4, Extracts from Photographic and Intelligence Reports of Allied A1r attacks. Mannheim. Attacked 5th/6th. Photographs 9th show considerable damage to business and residential property in the most closely built-up areas of both Mannheim and Ludwigshafen many streets between Mannheim Main Railway Station and river are devastated. New Industrial damage includes factories making Antillery Tractors and Tank dompenents, chemicals, Marine Diesel Engines (Sulzer) etc., Also Railway Repair Shops, Gas Works and Main Post Office. Hamburg. Final summing up indicates destruction on scale far beyond anything yet achieved in Air bomberdment. There are thousands of acres in which every building in every street is ruined. Special Items. Over 77 percent of the fully built-up Area destroyed or damaged., all four main shipyards damaged, five floating docks sunk or damaged also many ships including 12 Medium sized or Larger., in one diock every warehouse for about a mile is burnt out,, 2 important power stations appear to have been idle every since, two other power stations badly damaged, two very large gasholders burnt out, 5. HOME SECURITY Although over 20 bomb incidents reported. 15th/16th only one civilian in Kent Village killed during period. Regraded Unclassified 188 1 NOT TO BE RE-TRANSMITTED COPY NO. 13 BRITISH LOST SECRET U.S. SECRET OPTEL NO. 309 Information received up to 10 0.m., 19th September, 1943. 1. NAVAL Reconnaissance of SPEZIA 15th showed 1 Italian Cruiser, 1 Destroyer, 1 torpedo bost and El cargo ship had been scuttled. An 8 inch Oruiser appears to be damaged by fire, At SAVONA, 4 merchant vessels had been scuttled and at TRIESTE, 1 Tanker, 1 merchant ship and a coaster, 17th. A Hospital Ship was ineffectively bombed off SALERNO and on Italian Hospital Ship WCS attacked by aircraft south of COTHONE. One of H.L. Destroyers was damaged by near misses. Another of H.K. Dostroyers sonk 2 cargo ships in the Southern AEGEAN on 17th. 2. MILITARY ITALY. To 4 p.m., 17th. 5th Army. South of SELE, the front remains fluid. On 16th, U.S. troops ceptured ROCCADASPIDE end on 17th, ALTA- VILIA. Air Reconneissenco report Allied Troops ct CONTRONE, 6 miles north of ROCCADASPIDE. British troops have receptured BATTIPAGLIA. 8th Army, Londing clements are moving north from LAGENEGRO towards LONTESANO. TARANTO AREA. There was strong roaction from Gormans in small night ongagoments at GIOJA and LATENZA. SARDINIA. Germans reported to have almost completed ovocuction to CORSION after attacks by 2 Itelian Divisions. Some Italion borbers have been attacking Gorman craft in the STRAIT OF BONIFACIO. CORSICA. Itelions and patriots have nade SOLD gains in the south. GREEGE. Most Italien formations have been discraed by the Gormont Itolian Gorrison. Portison Guorillos have ceptured SUSAK end SPLIT. Italians ADRIATIC. Gormons have seimed 'LJUBLJANA' and discried the have overcome Gormon opposition in the CETINJE-KOTOR Gulf Area and word rc- sisting tho Germons and Croat Pro-Gornen troops ct DUBROVNIK on 14th. 3. AIR OPERATIONS WESTERN FRONT. 18th. A total of 52 escorted light and mcdium bonbers attacked cirfields at BEAUVAIS end ST. GER and 1. ef the reilway 1 missing. ROUEN, Typhoons damaged o 1,500 ton ship, 6 tugs, 9 cosstors - bargos contros at dropping 55 tons in all. Enemy cosunlties: 1.0.1. and 15 Ours: "ff the Dutch Coast. 18th/19th. Aircraft despritched: Scc-mining 45, COLOGNE - 5, 16th. Lustings drophed 30 tons on ronds and trensport 81 dostroying 16 ITALY. vehicles. Lightnings petrolled the benehes and relotsed tons over the battle pron. Airficld und other circraft attacked communio: tions dropping : ltogothor about 16th/17th. "ollingtons dropped 150 tons on CISTERN../LITTORIA 65 tons. 78 tons were rolenace by Liberators on reflusy objectives modium at bonbors. PESCARIA. of 242 tons was (5 corrupt groups) circraft :nd 18 gliders 120 Airficlds 17th, at outskirts of RO.E were bombed by he vy cod very reported A total dostroyed on the ground. Lightnings and Lustongs dropped tons over the bottle STOC. Regraded Unclassified NITED KINGDOM TREASURY DELEGATION BOX 660 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STATION WASHINGTON, D.C. September 19, 1943 TELEPHONE EXECUTIVE 2020 4 SECRET Dear Dr. White: The gold and dollar figures for August 1943 are as follows: Aug.6 Aug.13 Aug.20 Aug.27 Total Gold 977 982 968 972 Official Dollar Balance 444 449 479 505 Total Gold and Dollars 1421 1431 1447 1477 Scattered Gold 232 237 235 234 Gold Reserve against 1: ediate liabilities 10 10 10 10 AVAILABLE GOLD AND DOLLARS 1179 1184 1202 1233 Yours sincerely, A.T.K. A.T.K.R.V. A.T.K. Grant. Dr White, int to the Secretary, ed States Treasury, shington, D. C. Regraded Unclassified 130 September 20, 1943 9:40 a.m. HMJr: Is -- What's new, Herbert? Herbert Gaston: Well, I haven't heard anything new. The -- the group is here. It's Dan and Randolph Paul and John Sullivan and Harry White, Norman Thompson and George Haas and Ted Gamble. HMJr: Well, you might tell Fred Smith that he might get in touch with Colonel Sexton in General Marshall's office. G: To get in touch with Colonel Sexton in General Marshall's office? HMJr: When he gets in G: Yes. HMJr: and ask him if there's any new directives other than the last one that General Marshall gave me in regard to Colonel -- General Eisenhower's suggestion as to what we should say in regard to Italy G: Uh huh. HMJr: and that I'm thinking -- I don't know whether I'll do it -- of talking to the Italian population in New York on Thursday G: Yeah. HMJr: and have they got anything over there other than what General Marshall gave me. G: Uh huh. HMJr: They had a directive from Eisenhower what they'd like us to say. G: Uh huh. HMJr: It's a week old -- now, they may have something else. 0: Uh huh. Now, what day are you going to talk on that? Regraded Unclassified 191 - 2 - HMJr: Pardon me? G: What? HMJr: I may go down on the Lower East Side and talk to the Italians. G: On -- -- tomorrow, Tuesday? HMJr: Thursday. G: Oh, Thursday. HMJr: Thursday. G: Yeah. HMJr: Yeah. G: Uh huh. HMJr: And Smith should contact Colonel Sexton. G: Yes. Yes. HMJr: That's about all I've got. Uh -- G: Randolph Paul.... HMJr: Does Paul know anything on taxes? G: No. He'd like to ask you about the suggestion of Lee Pressman thathe attend that meeting of the Steel Workers' Executive Committee on Tuesday. HMJr: I think he should do it. G: Yes. Yes. All right. HMJr: And I'm anxious that you gentlemen contact -- continue to contact them. G: Yes. Yes. We're trying to get hold of some of the A.F.of L. people this morning. HMJr: Good. G: And.... HMJr: What 18 -- is Paul there? Regraded Unclassified 192 - 3 - G: Yes, Paul 18 here. HMJr: May I talk to him then? G: Yes. Randolph Paul: Hello. HMJr: Paul? P: Yeah. HMJr: Good morning. P: Good morning. HMJr: What is the temperature of Doughton and Stam? P: Well, Doughton -- Doughton is all right. of course, Stam 1s perennially sore at us, but.... HMJr: Perennially -- that's an annual isn't it? P: Well, I mean continuously and perennially. HMJr: Right. (Laughs) P: He - - uh - but he's being quiet now and Doughton is very -- of course, you know I -- We told Doughton that we would be glad to get the hear -- start the hearings in the month of September HMJr: Yeah. P: since he was so pressing about it.... HMJr: Yeah. P: and he seemed to feel very friendly about that. HMJr: Very what? P: Very pleased that we were. HMJr: Oh. P: And he's planning on sometime next week Regraded Unclassified 193 4 HMJr: Well, listen, fellow, about the only day I'm going to be in town next week, when I won't be out speaking, I think, will be Monday. P: Well, of course, it has to be fitted in with Stam. We'd be ready to go Monday, but Stam may get in a -- a postponement, but I don't care if you put it off on account of Stam. HMJr: I haven't seen the columniste and all the other s.c.b.'s. P: (Laughs) HMJr: But I haven't -- what I saw -- I haven't seen any unfavorable comment on postponing it. P: Well, there was an editorial in the Times that was a little critical, but HMJr: Oh, what the hell! P: but they'd be anyway. HMJr: On the other hand, I've seen plenty of editorials about Doughton's crack that he couldn't make out his income taxes. P: Yeah. He's very sore that that got out. HMJr: But he doesn't blame us, I hope. P: No, not at all. He's feeling very good toward us. HMJr: If we'd -- every day that we can gain, we can make some friends for my plan. P: Yeah. HMJr: And P: But on the other hand, we've got to maneuver so that Stam asks for the time and not us. HMJr: I agree with you. You're good at that. P: (Laughs) Well, did you - you want us to go to Pittsburgh -- you want me to go to Pittsburgh to see this convention? Regraded Unclassified 134 - 5 - HMJr: Oh, I think it's very important. P: All right. Well, we'll -- we couldn't get any of the labor people except Pressman Saturday. We're after the A.F.of L. people but they're awful hard to stir up. HMJr: Yeah. P: However, they have issued a -- they have issued a resolution in favor of Social Security. HMJr: I think it will be swell for you to go to Pittsburgh. P: Well, I'll go tonight then. HMJr: All right. P: And we're writing your statement now. HMJr: Good. Well, uh -- I P: I'd like to get ahold of your speaking schedule. I guess somebody here has that, hasn't he? HMJr: Well, the only set speech that I have 1s for Thursday, all day, in New York. P: This coming Thursday? HMJr: This week. And I'm supposed to be somewhere on the 27th, either in New Orleans or Houston or someplace. Gamble would know. P: Well, the 27th is Monday. HMJr: Is Gamble there? P: Yeah. Just a minute. He says that you are tentatively set for New Orleans on the 27th. HMJr: Well. P: So, that would mean that you'd rather have it the 28th or 29th. HMJr: I didn't know the 27th was on Monday. I'll be down this afternoon and Gamble and Smith and Gaston and I will set our speaking date, you see? Regraded Unclassified 195 - 6 - P: Yeah, well we have to fit this other thing into that, you know. HMJr: Well, I think I'm pretty well committed for the 27th. P: Well, that will be all right. We can get it to a day -- some other day right near there, but Doughton is very anxious to get it -- to start them in the month of September. It's like a Macy bargain -- a $1.99. HMJr: Yeah. At least it isn't one of those Ruml bargains P: (Laughs) Yeah, that was an unfortunate reference I'm afraid. It always stirs you up. (Laughs) HMJr: in the basement. P: Or anything will get you fighting mad.... HMJr: You can't get me fighting mad. I'm too low this morning. P: (Laughs) Any -- do you want to speak to anybody else here? HMJr: I'd like to talk to Gamble a minute. P: Gaston wants to speak to you again, too. HMJr: All right. P: Here's Gaston. (Aside: Gamble, he wants to talk to you.) Herbert Gaston: We might do something on the newspaper front. I noticed that Kiplinger's tax letter this morning says that there is discussion in some quarters of trying to combine increased Social Security taxes with the income tax schedules HMJr: Yeah. G: So it's out in that way. HMJr: Yeah. Regraded Unclassified 196 - 7 - G: And maybe we could feed it a little bit. HMJr: Well, I'll leave that to you and Smith. G: All right, I'll talk it over with Smith. HMJr: I'll leave it to the two of you. G: Okay, here's Ted. HMJr: All right. Ted Gamble: Good morning. HMJr: Hello, Ted. G: How are you, sir. HMJr: Pretty good. Three speeches in a week has kind of got me. G: Well, it's all the preparation and all the moving around more than the speeches, I think. HMJr: Well, what -- my pilot says I have to leave here at two. G: Yes. HMJr: So I thought when I got down there, you and Fred and I could settle that New York schedule. G: Fine. Well, we sent those people up this morning. HMJr: Yes. G: We have three of them up there HMJr: Good. G: getting all that information. HMJr: Good. G: So we'll be available when you get in. HMJr: If they say anything to you, "When is Morgenthau ?" : you can tell them by five o clock tonight you'll know. Regraded Unclassified 197 - 8 - G: Fine. Fine. Well, that's time enough. HMJr: And I think that that will be good. G: Fine. Well, I'll give you a report on New Orleans then, too, and you can settle the whole thing. HMJr: Right. G: All right, sir. HMJr: And that's about all I've got. G: Fine. HMJr: Except that I think that if the gang hasn't seen it -- that's Burgess' statement in this morning's paper on com -- against compulsory savings is a very powerful statement. G: Yes. Well, I'll see that they -- that it's circulated. HMJr: Yeah. G: All right, sir. HMJr: Okay. G: Fine. Bye. Regraded Unclassified 198 9/19/43 Statement by W. Randolph Burgess In 8. recent report, Mr. Burgess stated he was insuvertently quoted as saying that the average New Yorker was falling down on buying bonds, and that unless individual purchases increased, the alternative might be a change from voluntary to involuntary methods of reaching war swollen incomes. I should like to clarify these two points. In the first place, individual buyers are not falling down on the job. The figures for individual purchases are naturally smaller at this stage in the campaign then the figures for life insurance companies, savings banks, and corporations, which have large sums available to invest immediately. On the other hand, the campaign of individual buying has only just well started. There is always 8. lag in putting through and recording the huge volume of small bona purchases; so that the reported figures are several days behind the actual buying. Individuals are now making pledges both through payroll savings and house-to-house canvasses which will appear in the figures later. The campaign to reach individuals is getting 8. magnificent start. Regraded Unclassified 199 - 2 - It will need all the energy and vigor that we have; but the results so far are encouraging. The argumentation about compulsory savings is the old fallacy that there is some substitute in this country for voluntary effort and initiative. Compulsory savings in England and Canada and elsewhere has never produced substantial amounts of money, and it can not. Such a program, like any tax program, applies inflexibly to every- body, and there are a large group of citizens who are doing everything they can. The great virtue of voluntary subscriptions is our flexibility. Each subscribes accord- ing to his ability. We are raising virtually larger sums than any program of compulsory savings would bring in, anddoing it in the democratic way. Now it is up to all of us to prove this American method by reaching every possible individual buyer of bonds. Regraded Unclassified 200 September 20, 1943 4:35 p.m. THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE Present: Mr. Bell Mr. Gaston Mr. Smith Mr. Gamble Mrs. Klotz H.M.JR: This is what I would like to talk with you people about: I don't know which States, and so forth, but you have it in mind, I am sure. You fellows know. I really had a wonderful time in St. Louis. I thought of the farmers. I listened this morning to the WOR six to seven program, and they were very good. They announced that the Farm Credit Bank at Springfield had some kind of a competition for farmers which they would announce in more detail tomorrow. But I got to thinking about the farmer; we haven't talked of the farmer. That is what I thought about. On the other hand, I don't know how many gripes the farmers have and how bitter they feel. That will he maybe all the more reason to do something. I don't agree with Fred. I think I have got to go to New York. I will tell you why: After all, in the first place, New York represents forty percent of our money, doesn't it? MR. GAMBLE: About thirty-three and 8 third. H.M.JR: Burgess stood by me when no other finance man would. MR. SMITH: I didn't say you shouldn't go to New York. I said you could go as well to New York next week BE you could this week, that you weren't going to achieve Regraded Unclassified 201 - 2 - anything by the week's advance in time, particularly, and you can't - if you are going to do anything for farmers, you have to do it for farmers this week in order to get any good out of it. If you wait until next week, the drive will be over by the time the farmers are contacted, by the time they know anything has happened. That is all. H.M.JR: What do you think? MR. GAMBLE: I think that the best fellow to answer that is Burgess, if he is not too far along in his plans. I wouldn't want to disappoint him. I agree with you. If it is going to be embarrassing to them, of course, to postpone it a week, I wouldn't postpone it. Otherwise, I agree with Fred. H.M.JR: I can go on the noon hour on the radio here from Washington. MR. SMITH: Yes, you can, you can do that. You could do it from New York or any place else. MR. GAMBLE: On Saturday we had the Farm and Home Hour. H.M.JR: How are the farmers doing? MR. GAMBLE: The farmers seem to be doing very well. The State leading the E bond sales is Iowa. They are shead of any other State in E bonds. We contacted every program director of the United States, and they are making special appeals. H.M.JR: What do you mean? MR. GAMBLE: Farm program directors. They have these early morning hours on the radio. H.M.JR: I heard WOR, which is Mutual; then the end of WEAF, and they both did the farm stuff. They both have agricultural hours. Regraded Unclassified 202 - 3 - MR. GAMBLE: All we heard from agreed to ao it. They are making special appeals. H.M.JR: Let me ask Burgess. Admiral King is coming here at eight-thirty tomorrow morning - I am switching, but it is all on the same thing. I asked to go to him, and he very kindly offered to come here. I want to say to him, "Admiral, what is it that I can do through the bond drive on the home front which would help you?" and get him to think. I don't know what he is going to say, but I am going to listen. I certainly got good ideas from Marshall. I am human enough, but I can't help but be pleased that through that, the way the boys helped me write it-- MR. GAMBLE: It made an impression. H.M.JR: The President followed right along. There is no question about it. I think this thing about the Navy being 80 big and all that - it is just braggadocio. It is stupid to say how big we are. He might say, "I would like you to go - we are falling behind on destroyers, and I would like you to go to a destroyer yard,' or, "We are falling behind on battleships. I would like you to go to 8 battleship yard. That is why I want to hold up on the thing with Maritime. MR. GAMBLE: That is tentatively scheduled for Delta Shipyards at New Orleans. to do something on it, see, I want to do that which would H.M.JR: That is why I want to hold up. If I am going be most pleasing to Admiral King. MR. GAMBLE: He has 8 lot more information like General Marshall that hasn't been given out. morning. Nobody but Eleanor Roosevelt could do what H.M.JR: I just don't know. He will be here tomorrow Regraded Unclassified 203 - 4 - Burgess plans for me that day and live the next day. (Laughter) I mean, nobody but 8. Roosevelt could do that. MR. GAMBLE: Of course you really do those things. You always say you aren't going to do them. Then you get in & town and you go through that same schedule. You went to Cedar Rapids, and you made more calls than that. You went to Portland - I told you you didn't have to do any of those things, and you do them all. (Laughter) MR. BELL: He doesn't want to be scheduled. (Laughter) MR. GAMBLE: You end up doing them all. (Laughter) (The Secretary held a telephone conversation with Mr. Burgess, as follows:) Regraded Unclassified 204 September 20, 1943 4:45 p.m. Randolph Burgess: Hello, Henry. HMJr: How are you? B: I'm pretty well. How are you? HMJr: Well, I'm fine. You fellows are going great guns up there. B: Well, we're trying hard. HMJr: Well B: I think it's going pretty well. HMJr: Looks good to me -- a man in the street. B: Well, the -- the problem is the individual sales. Of course, that's still the problem and. HMJr: Yeah. B: the danger 18 that when we get over our quota which we're going to do in a few days -- 18 that there should be a let down and we're doing everything We can to have a program which will keep it going. HMJr: Right. B: And I thought your being here Thursday, if you will, would be an enormous help on just that. HMJr: Well, what I'm calling up on, before I get on that, I also loved your talk on "compulsory savings". B: Good. I thought you might like that. HMJr: Yeah. B: Well, the boys -- the boys misquoted me on Saturday and had me arguing that if this didn't succeed, we'd have to go to compulsory savings. HMJr: Oh. I didn' t B: I couldn't let that stand on the record. Regraded Unclassified 205 - 2 - HMJr: I didn't see that. Well, hit it again. B: All right. We will. HMJr: What I'm talking about 10-- -- how important would -- 18 it to you -- I'm coming but I want to know whether it's this week or next week. B: Oh, well, I think this is the week to do it, Henry HMJr: You do? B: if you possibly can. HMJr: I see. B: We're getting pretty well all set for it. HMJr: Uh huh. B: And this is about the right time to give it a kick. HMJr: Uh huh. B: Next week would be a little late. HMJr: It would be. B: We've got a parade on next Tuesday HMJr: Yeah. B: which I think will give us our next week's kick. HMJr: Yeah. I see. B: So, if you could do it this week, it would be a great help. HMJr: Well, we're just sitting here now -- there's Bell and Gamble and Fred Smith and Gaston and myself and we'll settle it in the next fifteen minutes. B: That's fine. I hope you're feeling good and strong because we want you to see the works. HMJr: Nobody but a Roosevelt -- Mr. or Mrs. Roosevelt could do what you plan for me Thursday and live. Regraded Unclassified 206 - 3 - B: No, it will be very nice and easy. We'll just put you in a comfortable car and whisk you around. HMJr: Yeah. B: I did it the other night. I went around and saw all of our HMJr: Well, you're a young fellow. B: zone outfit. HMJr: You're young B: The younger boys started this. HMJr: You're just a young fellow. B: (Laughs) HMJr: Well, when we get through, Ted will give you a call. B: Very good. HMJr: It will be within the next half hour. B: Thank you very much, Henry. HMJr: Well, thanks for wanting me. B: All right. Well, we're delighted that you can come. HMJr: All right. B: All right. Regraded Unclassified 207 - 5 - H.M. JR: Now, I owe that fellow - it is the first thing he has asked me, Fred; I mean, I owe that man a lot. MR. SMITH: That is true. I grant you that. Of course you could. - it would be pushing your schedule up a little bit, but you could go on the Farm and Home Hour from your farm on Saturday. H.M.JR: Well, let's settle Thursday now - what I am going to do - shall we? Then we will do the other. MR. GAMBLE: Fine. Here is what they would like you to do. They would like you in the morning to visit three offices, Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx. That is cutting it down. Then they would like to add to that, either in the morning or afternoon, a visit - preferably in the morning so you would have your afternoon free - to the Italian settlement - some Italian community where they have a War Bond office and are working - not one of Generalissimo Pope's. (Laughter) Then they would like you to have lunch at the Federal Reserve Bank, not a formal or publicized affair, but 8. small luncheon including Allan Sproul and his Board of Directors, W.C. Potter, and two or three of the leading bankers that have helped Burgess. They would like the Stock Exchange - I think we can waive that so that you have the whole afternoon free. Then you can meet with the War Finance Committee of New York at five or six, before your broadcast, and go on at six-thirty on the CBS network, and do this show with this group of people. H.M.JR: Just 8. minute - I am personally not crazy to do the New York Stock Exchange. MR. GAMBLE: Of all the things that they had planned - I talked to Burgess this morning about the possibility of scratching that off. I don't think he would be too much disappointed if we didn't. Regraded Unclassified 208 - 6 - MR. BELL: What does that mean? MR. GAMBLE: They want to have a bond rally at the Stock Exchange - shut down the Exchange and have this rally coincidental with the Secretary's visit there. Emil Schram is going to have all the Stock Exchange mem- bers and have a bond sale - close the Exchange. MR. BELL: Take very long? He has been very cooperative. MR. GAMBLE: I should say half an hour. H.M.JR: Some of them did a whale of a job. It has to be at three, that is the only trouble. MR. GAMBLE: Yes. H.M.JR: They won't shut it down-- MR. GAMBLE: Just ahead of the closing. MR. BELL: That would be right after your luncheon at the Federal. H.M.JR: Yes, but I have got to get a little rest. Well, the only thing - if I am to do the New York Stock Exchange - I would want lunch at twelve o'clock and I know that they have rooms there where I could go and rest afterwards. MR. BELL: That is right, they have good beds. They have beds in the Federal Reserve Bank. H.M.JR: Right in Sproul's room, too. You fellows are invited here not for your decorative qualities-- (Laughter) MR. GASTON: I think there is no objection to the Stock Exchange. I think it has some advantages, but it is a question of your endurance - whether you can fit it in or not. Regraded Unclassified 209 - 7 - (Mrs. Klotz entered the conference.) H.M.JR: I don't mind going to the New York Stock Exchange. I think it would be rather amusing. MR. GAMBLE: I think, as a matter of fact, .Secretary, it is & tribute to you and to the manner in which this whole program has been smoothed out, for these people to enthusiastically want you to come. They have had great interest. H.M.JR: Sproul has got to send me an invitation if I am going to go. I can't do it through Burgess. MR. GAMBLE: He will invite you. H.M.JR: I was saying, if I could go to the Federal Reserve at twelve for lunch - they have regular rooms there - I can have about an hour's rest. Are you opposed to the Stock Exchange? MR. SMITH: I am not opposed to it. I think that you got a good chance - you have got to recognize the possibility that this whole business of Morgenthau versus the bankers may crop out again, If you go to New York and wind up going both to the Federal Reserve luncheon - which they say is not 8. publicized event, but I don't believe it - I think that the columnists, Leslie Goulds, aregoing to know about it - and the Stock Exchange-- H.M.JR: If they invite me, why isn't it on the plus side? MR. SMITH: The only thing is that you have said it is going to be very difficult to raise the last five billion dollars and you are giving the columnists an opportunity to point out that the bankers raised at least thirty percent of all your money - the bankers in New York. And if they do do that - if the columnists do break that all up again and have you tipping your hat to the Federal Reserve Bank and the bankers, you are going Regraded Unclassified 210 - 8 - to have D'Olier and all the outlying bankers in the country who don't like Wall Street getting the impression you are paying tribute to Wall Street bankers for what they have done, aren't you? H.M.JR: That is one way to look at it. MR. SMITH: The wrong way, I grant you. I say that is the liability. H.M.JR: I tell you how we could offset that. What- ever the radio program is, let's make it a strictly people's program. I don't know what the program is. I tell you how I feel - very human. I never go to these financial writers' dinners. The only dinner I have gone to in ten years - one was 8. farewell dinner to George Harrison and I once had lunch at the Federal Reserve. That is twice in ten years that I have been there. Now, these fellows have gone to town and I think it is the generous thing to do. MR. GAMBLE: I think you can afford to be magnanimous about it. H.M. JR: I think it is the generous thing for me to say thank you. Sproul certainly knows I am coming and I can say, "As far as I am concerned, look, I don't care who I eat with." MR. GASTON: The point of view of the whole thing is that bankers and stockbrokers, they, too, are citizens. H.M.JR: You know, that was what Sproul wrote me after this meeting. He said, "Bankers, and so forth, also send their sons to war." That is in his letter to me. That was the thing he wrote to me. "We also send our sons to war" - that is exactly what he wrote to me - "We also send our sons to war." Now, I tell you, Fred, you see, you are a cynical Regraded Unclassified 211 - 9 - fellow that has been burnt up in New York - and so have I. But I rather kind of like to go in the lion's den. I like to be David. MR. SMITH: I won't oppose it. H.M.JR: You cancarry on the - what do you call it - the comparison of David - the analogy of David. As far as I am concerned, I would rather like to be David up there. MR. BELL: I think you will get good treatment and be glad you went. MR. GAMBLE: I certainly have seen no evidence but that these people have done 8. good job. H.M.JR: Do you suppose they are going to say, "Why tweive o'clock?" MR. GAMBLE: No. As a matter of fact, I suspect that is their lunch hour. MR. BELL: One o'clock is the lunch hour for the Fed. H.M.JR: Let's say twelve o'clock. MRS. KLOTZ: Why do you want to eat at twelve o'clock? H.M.JR: So I can be at the Stock Exchange at three. MR. GAMBLE: This way you will know you can leave your luncheon and have your rest. MR. GASTON: Being one of the Quiz Kids, I want to call your attention to the fact that it was Daniel and not David that went into the lion's den. (Laughter) H.M.JR: Again I felt on shaky ground, but I knew in front of these people, somebody would correct me. (Laughter) It was Daniel. It was David who threw the sling shot. Regraded Unclassified 212 - 10 - We will do that, then at three o'clock the Stock Exchange. Then when is my next appearance? Mr. GAMBLE: At five o'clock. H.M.JR: Where? MR. GAMBLE: At five o'clock with the New York War Finance Committee, in their office. H.M.JR: Just "Hello"? MR. GAMBLE: That is right. H.M.JR: And then what? MR. GAMBLE: Then Burgess has invited you to have a quiet dinner with him at his apartment. This is not an arranged thing, Mr. Secretary. He said he would like to have you do it so you could be away from the crowd. H.M.JR: I think, as far as I know, Mrs. Morgenthau is going to be up there and if she is, then I will have a quiet dinner with her. I have asked her to go on this thing. She will if she is well. We are terribly worried about her legs. She doesn't know whether she will or won't be-- MR. GAMBLE: That can be left open. I want you to know we discussed what you were going to do about dinner. At six-thirty, before dinner, you will be on the CBS net- work - six-thirty to six-forty-five. H.M.JR: What do I do at six-forty-five? Mit. GAMBLE: Six-thirty, that is your radio program. MR. GASTON: A fourteen-minute speech? MR. GAMBLE: Following the original suggestion that was made, we have discussed only the possibility of the Secretary visiting with these people on the air - a round- or four minutes to make & statement about what he saw in table affair, with the Secretary taking the last three New York. MR. GASTON: That is better than an actual town meeting. Regraded Unclassified 213 - 11 - MR. GAMBLE: I think, Fred, you will want to go up to New York and sit down with the CBS people. H.M.JR: No, these fellows have got to stay here with me tomorrow. We have to write a speech tomorrow. When I leave here Wednesday afternoon to go up to New York, I am going to the theater, taking Mrs. Morgenthau and my father to the theater. We are going to see "Oklahoma." Incidentally, if we go to lunch with the Fed, I would like my father invited. I leave here Wednesday, and that speech has got to be finished, and none of this nonsense business. (Laughter) MRS. KLOTZ: Mr. Morgenthau, I don't see how you can have the luncheon at twelve. H.M.JR: I think Mrs. Klotz is right. Let's tell them to get me - I want to be at the Fed one hour before lunch. She is right. I can get there one hour before- hand and rest an hour before lunch. Now, I an on the air from when? MR. GAMBLE: Six-thirty to six-forty-five, CBS. H.M.JR: Doing what? MR. GAMBLE: The only suggestion that has ever been made, which is the one we have worked on, is the idea of you doing the round-table with these New York War Finance leaders, Burgess and four or five of his people, & discussion of what you have seen in New York that day, the progress of the campaign, and the program will end up by you making a six or seven minute statement to the nation about your impressions. You could bring in this Italian visit to tie in with your talk. H.M.JR: I suggested this: We sent three reporters up to New York today to get local material. They will be back tomorrow. Right after Admiral King at nine o'clock, we go into a huddle - play conference. Regraded Unclassified 214 - 12 - MR. GAMBLE: That winds that up in nice shape. H.M.JR: Then that is all. I don't have to go to the tent? MR. GAMBLE: No, you do not. If you decide that day that you want to do something like that, that should be left completely open. H.M.JR: He is one of the smartest fellows. (Laughter) MRS. KLOTZ: I agree with you. H.M.JR: I think it would be nice if you accompany me that day. It is & big thing up there. I would like you to share the kudos with me. MR. GAMBLE: I really am needed here. I can go, but I really am needed here. H.M.JR: Let's think about it. I have 8 tight schedule. I am going out to the Navy Hospital. Let's stop now; you can work on this. All right, Herbert? MR. GASTON: Yes. MR. BELL: Yes. H.M.JR: I am not at all certain I want to do the thing that way - for local color this is just to throw out - I would love to do the thing with a lot of refugees. That is what I would like to do - the people who have come out of Germany recently - I would like to have them sit around the table. If we are going to do it, I would want Dave Levy to run it. MR. GAMBLE: If you decide you don't want to do the shipyard thing, you could do that the following week. H.M.JR: Let me throw that out. If Dave Levy and his gang would help us on that-- Regraded Unclassified 215 - 13 - MR. SMITH: Ted wants this as a strictly war bond thing. I think he is right. Why not leave this just as-- H.M.JR: I don't know if he is right or not. MR. GAMBLE: From our organization point of view we are right. Public-relations-wise we may not be. H.M.JR: Anyway, get the thing set. What we will do is, we will have 8. play conference tomorrow morning - you, George, and I, and I would like Herbert to sit in on it, and get a report from these men. MR. GAMBLE: Ten o'clock would be better for that. Fred won't have his material until ten. H.M.JR: All right, ten o'clock - a radio conference at ten o'clock. All right? MR. GAMBLE: Yes, sir. MR. BELL: A financing conference tomorrow morning? H.M.JR: All right, eleven o'clock, Mr. Bell. MR. GAMBLE: Ten billion two thirty-nine breaks down to thirty-three and a third of the individual quota. H.M.JR: You mean we have over three billion? MR. GAMBLE: No, individual quota is five, and we have over thirty-three and a third percent in that ten, two thirty-nine. MR. BELL: That means some place between 8. billion six and a billion seven. H.M.JR: That isn't very good. MR. GAMBLE: It is pretty good for this stage. MR. BELL: Better than two hundred million above the Friday night figure. Regraded Unclassified 216 - 14 - H.M.JR: You haven't the five o'clock figures? MR. BELL: No, they are late coming in. H.M.JR: Can you get them to me at the house tonight? I would like to have them. Let's stop now. MR. GAMBLE: Maryland went over today, 8. hundred and three percent of the quota. MR. BELL: We have had pretty good reports from these Federals. H.M.JR: I would like to - could you be in the office tomorrow morning from nine o'clock on, this office? I would like to go over the situation with you and Bell, and either Tickton or Lindow. Let's put Tickton down for nine o'clock. King won't be here more than a half an hour - Gamble and Bell and Tickton and Lindow. I would like to go in the Chart Room with you. MR. BELL: Tickton is in Chicago. Regraded Unclassified 385 217 COPY NA831 43 GOVT COLLECT NL TOWO BEACON NY 19 1943 SEP 20 - 8 46 TED GAMBLE OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY WASHDC PLEASE GIVE TO MRS KLOTZ ANY IMPORTANT TELEGRAMS WITH MY SIGNATURE THAT WENT OUT LAST WEEK WITHOUT MY APPROVAL. REASON FOR THIS TELEGRAM IS THAT I SAW A MESSAGE IN LOCAL PAPER SUPPOSEDLY COMING FROM ME THAT I HAVE NO KNOWLEDGE OF HENRY MORGENTHAU JR SEP 20 Regraded Unclassified 218 TREASURY DEPARTMENT INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION DATE September 20, 1943 TO: Mrs. Klotz FROM: Mr. Gamble At the request of the Secretary I am enclosing for you copies of the messages sent out for his signature in the past week. TRG Regraded Unclassified WESTERN 219 CLASS OF SERVICE 1201 MBOLS This is a full-rate Lasse Telegram or Cable- grame unless in de- UNION NL-Night Laner ned character is In- LC=Deferred Cable and by a suitable ymbol above or pre- NLT-Calle Hight Letter coding the address. A. N. WILLIAMS NEWCOMB CARLTON J. c. WILLEVER PRESIDENT CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD FIRST E-PRESIDENT Ship Radingram the sling time shown in the date line on telegrama and day letters is STANDARD TIME at point of origin. Time of receipt in STANDARD TIME at polat of destination NA831 43 GOVT COLLECT NL=TDWD BEACON NY 19 TED GAMBLE= IDEP 10 PM OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY WASHDC= LEASE GIVE TO MRS KLOTZ ANY IMPORTANT TELEGRAMS WITH MY IGNATURE THAT WENT OUT LAST WEEK WITHOUT MY APPROVAL. REASON FOR THIS TELEGRAM 18 THAT J SAW A MESSAGE IN LOCAL PAPER SUPPOSEDLY COMING FROM ME THAT I HAVE NO KNOWLEDGE OF= HENRY MORGE NTHAU JRs THE COMPANY WILL APPRECIATE SUGGESTIONS FROM rrs PATRONS CONCERNING ITS SERVICE Regraded Unclassified 220 ANDARD FORM No. 14A TREASURY DEPARTMENT APPROVED BY THE PRESIDENT G)** MARCH 10. 1926 WASHINGTON COPY TELEGRAM CHARGE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. APPROPRIATION FOR OFFICIAL BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RATES (The appropriation from which payable must be stated on above line) . a. - numes - 2-14117 SEPT 17 1943 MR JOHNNY THOMPSON RADIO STATION WTTM 35 WEST STATE ST TRENTON NJ ON BEHALF OF THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT I WANT TO CONGRATULATE THE B'NAI BRITH ORGANIZATION AND SPECIFICALLY THE B'NAI BRITH BODGE IN TRENTON FOR ITS SPLENDID COOPERATION WITH THE THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE. I KNOW THAT THIS SPECIAL RADIO PROGRAM WILL HELP TO SELL MANY EXTRA WAR BONDS TO BACK THE ATTACK OF OUR FIGHTING MEN OVER THERE HENRY MORGENTHAU JR SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY 11 Regraded Unclassified 221 ANDARD FORM No. 14A TREASURY DEPARTMENT PROVED BY THE PRESIDENT COPY WASHINGTON MARCH 10. 1925 TELEGRAM CHARGE TREASURY DEPARTMENT, APPROPRIATION FOR OFFICIAL BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RATES (The appropriation from which payable must be stated on above line) . & - - - 3-14117 EUGENE G GRACE PRESIDENT SEPT 17 1943 BETHLEHEM STEEL CORP 25 BROADWAY NEWYORK NY THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT ASKS YOUR FULL COOPERATION AND SUPPORT IN THE THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE. WILL YOU IMMEDIATELY INSTRUCT MANAGERS OF ALL PLANTS OF BETHLEHEM STEEL CORPORATION TO CONTACT LOCAL COUNTY CHAIRMEN OF WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE AND ARRANGE WAR BOND RALLIES IN ALL PLANTS AND ON COMPANY TIME TO COVER ALL SHIFTS. WE NEED THE SUPPORT OF EVERY AMERICAN IN THIS EMERGENCY. RALLIES AT THE PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT ARE THE MOST EFFECTIVE MEANS OF BRINGING THE MESSAGE TO THE WORKERS IN WAR INDUSTRIES, PLEASE ADVISE ME IMMEDIATELY so I CAN ADVISE COUNTY CHAIRMEN HENRY MORGENTHAU JR SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY nAt Regraded Unclassified 222 AMERICAN BY THE PRESIDENT ANDARD FORM NO. 14 FROM TED R. GAMBLE MARCH 10. 1926 BUREAU WAR FINANCE DIVISION TELEGRAM CHG. APPROPRIATION EXPENSES OF LOANS OFFICIAL BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RATES TRG:ecb SEPTEMBER 17, 1943. ALLEN T. ARCHER a. . - - - 10-1783 PRESIDENT, TOWN HALL 1321 BILTMORE HOTEL LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA I APPRECIATE YOUR THOUGHTFUL INVITATION TO APPEAR AT A LUNCHEON MEETING AT TOWN HALL. HOWEVER, I REGIST THAT I CANNOT AVAIL MYSELF OF IT, AS I NOW FIND THAT I WILL BE UNABLE TO COME TO LOS ANGELES DURING THE DRIVE. HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY MA Regraded Unclassified 223 EXPENSES OF LOANS WAR FINANCE DIVISION PLEASE SEND AS STRAIGHT WIRE TO NAMES ON ATTACHED LIST: SEPTEMBER 15, 1943 I HEREBY OFFER YOU APPOINTMENT AS A MEMBER OF THE STATE ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR THE WASHINGTON WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE. I BELIEVE YOUR ASSISTANCE WILL BE MOST HELPFUL IN MAKING OUR WAR FINANCING IN YOUR AREA EFFECTIVE. WILL YOU PLEASE SIGNIFY YOUR ACCEPTANCE TO ME. JOEL E. FERRIS, 901 FEDERAL OFFICE BUILDING, SEATTLE. HENRY MORTENTHAU, JR. SECRETARY OF THE TREAURY Regraded Unclassified 224 TREASURY DEPARTMENT WAR FINANCE DIVISION EXPENSES OF LOANS SEPTEMBER 14, 1943. JOHN A LOGAN NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FOOD CHAINS DRAKE HOTKL CHICAGO, ILLINOIS ON THE OCCASION OF THE TENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FOOD CHAINS I WISH TO CONGRATULATE THESE CHAIN FOOD STORE COMPANIES UPON THEIR RECORD OF COOPERATION AND ACHIEVEMENT IN THE SALE OF WAR BONDS AND STAMPS. I AM FAMILIAR WITH THE PLANS WHICH THE FOOD CHAIN COMPANIES HAVE MADE TO PARTICIPATE IN THE THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE AND I KNOW THAT THESE EFFORTS CAN BE PRODUCTIVE OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF EXTRA SALES OF WAR BONDS AND STAMPS TO THE TWENTY MILLION CUSTOMERS OF CHAIN FOOD STORES. I ALSO WANT TO THANK YOU AND THE MEMBERS OF YOUR STAFF FOR EXCELLENT COOPERATION AND EFFECTIVE COORDINATION IN PROVIDING YOUR ASSOCIATION MEMBERS WITH INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE REGARDING WAR BOND PHOGRAMS. SUCH INTELLIGENT AND UNSKLFISH COOPERATION BY PATRIOTIC CITIZENS AND THEIR ORGANIZATIONS IS NEEDED TO INSURE THE SUCCESS OF OUR WAR FINANCING EFFORTS. HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY "INITIALED - 'T.R.G.' and "HMJR" Regraded Unclassified 225 TREASURY DEPARTMENT WAR FINANCE DIVISION EXPENSES OF LOANS DAY LETTER SEPTEMBER 13, 1943. JULIUS EMSPAK GENERAL SECRETARY UNITED ELECTRICAL, RADIO AND MACHINE WORKERS UNION HOTEL NE. YORKER NEW YORK, NEW YORK. PLEASE ACCEPT AND EXTEND TO YOUR MEMBERS IN CONVENTION ASSEMBLED THE SINCERE THANKS OF THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT FOR YOUR AID IN THE WAR FINANCE PROGRAM. OUR PAY ROLL SAVINGS RECORDS IN THE ELECTRICAL AND RADIO INDUSTRY ARE CONVINCING EVIDENCE OF THE PATRIOTIC WAY IN WHICH YOUR MEMBERS ARE BUYING WAR BONDS UNDER THE SPONSORSHIP OF YOUR UNION AND INS LEADERS. WE ASK YOUR INTENSIFIED SUPPORT FOR THE CRUCIALLY IMPORTANT THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE NOW UNDER WAY. WE MUST BACK THE ATTACK WITH WAR BONDS IF OUR HOME FRONT IS- TO HELP OUR FIGHTING MEN DO THE BEST POSSIBLE JOB IN THE INVASION OF EUROPE AND JAPAN PLEASE ASK ALL YOUR MEMBERS TO BUY AT LEAST ONE EXTRA WAR BOND DURING SEPTEMBER. HENRY MORGENTHAU JR. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. Regraded Unclassified 226 TREASURY DEPARTMENT WAR FINANCE DIVISION EXPENSES OF LOANS DAY LETTER SEPTEMBER 13, 1943. RETD ROBINSON, ESQ., INT'L. PRESIDENT, UNION OF MINE, MILL & SHELTER WORKERS, C.I.O., BUTTE, MONTANA. PLEASE ACCEPT AND EXTEND TO YOUR MEMBERS THE SINCERE THANKS OF THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT FOR YOUR AID IN THE WAR FINANCE PROGRAM. WE NEED YOUR CONTINUED HELP BOTH BY ADDED AND INCREASED ALLOTMENTS FOR WAR BOND PURCHASE THROUGH THE PAYROLL SAVINGS PLAN AND ALSO BY THE PURCHASE OF ADDITIONAL BONDS DURING THE THIRD WAR LOAN DRIVE IN SEPTEMBER. IT IS CRUCIALLY IMPORTANT FOR THE FUTURE OF A FREE LABOR MOVEMENT THAT WE SHOULD WIN THIS WAR. THE HOME FRONT MUST SUPPORT OUR FIGHTING MEN BY GIVING THEM THE BEST POSSIBLE WEAPONS AND EQUIPMENT. THE MOST EFFECTIVE WAY IN WHICH MOST OF US CAN DO THAT IS BY BACKING THE ATTACK WITH WAR BONDS. PLEASE URGE EACH OF YOUR MEMBERS TO BUY AT LEAST ONE EXTRA BOND DURING SEPTEMBER, HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. Regraded Unclassified U.S. COAST GUARD 227 BOAN MIP A TREASURY DEPT. 9/202 G16 P T A QUAT 201855 Q2U GR 223 BT HEADING SECYTREAS OFFICE SECUTREAS TEXT KNOWING HOW BORED YOU GET ON AIRPLANES ESPECIALLY WHEN I AM NOT THERE WOULD LIKE TO MAKE A SUGGESTION WHICH WILL THROW EVERYTHING INTO A TAILSPIN X QUERY COLON WOULD IT BE WISER THIS WEEK TO GO TO A STRICTLY FARM COMMUNITY IN A FARM STATE AND APPEAL TO FARMERS (50) RATHER THAN GO TO NEWYORK WHICH CAN BE DONE AS WELL NEXT WEEK QUESTION UNDERSTAND WHEAT SEASON JUST FINISHED COTTON 1555 SEASON JUST BEGINNING so THERE MUST BE MONEY X IF YOU WAIT UNTIL NEXT WEEK IT WILL BE PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE TO CARRY THE WORD TO FARMERS EVERYWHERE BEFORE THE END (100) 2 PERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE OFFICIAL INITIALS $ Regraded Unclassified U.S. COAST GUARD 228 REASURY DEPT. HEADING CG16 PAGE TWO TEXT OF THE DRIVE X FARMERS ARE LAGGING BEHIND IN BOND SALES AND YOU HAVE NOT MADE DIRECT APPEAL TO THEM X LICKERT TELLS ME THEIR INCOMES ARE WAY UP X YOU COULD PROBABLY TAKE OVER NBCS FARMA AND HOME HOUR SATURDAY NOON AS WELL AS A RADIO NETWORK SATURDAY EVENING (150) IF TIME IS AVAILABLE X SCENE OF OPERATION COULD BE EITHER SOUTH OR WEST OF MISSISSIPPI OKLAHOMA CITY BEING HIGHLY RECOMMENDED BY SECRETARY WHO USED TO WORK FOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE X LICKERT SUGGESTS WESTERN END OF CORNBELT WHERE CROPS WILL BE BEST IN YEARS X I CAN GET (200) EXCITED ABOUT THIS BECAUSE IT GIVES US A WHOLE NEW APPROACH X BESIDES THERE IS PLENTY 2 OF OXYGEN DOWN HERE X FRED SMITH BT 201855 TOD 1857 SN 20 SEPT 43 END OFFICIAL INITIALS PERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE $ Regraded Unclassified NV 04/2 U.S. COAST guard 229 REASURY DEPT RW52/544Y PT A 02U 201909 QUAT W QUAH GR42 HEADING SECTREAS OFFICE SECTREAS COMDT CG TEXT FRED SMITH OFFICED OF SEC X I AM NEVER BORED WHEN I SLEEP X AS A MATTER OF FACT I ALSO THOUGHT OF FARMERS APPLES TO YOU HOLD EVERYTHING FOR AN HOUR AND WHEN OUR TWO GREAT MINDS WILL SPARK AS ONE BT 20189 201909 3 TOD 1917 20 SEPT 1943 VB OFFICIAL INITIALS PERATOR'S RECORD AND DATE $ Regraded Unclassified 230 September 20, 1943. Dear Mr. Golden: I was delighted to learn of the manner in which Miss Weston and her colleagues of the cast of "Three's a Family" bettered your request that they help out in the Third War Loan drive. I wish you would ex- press my personal appreciation to them and of course my warmest thanks go to you for asking their help and approving the turn it took, as well as for passing on the suggestion to the other producers. It is a little early for congratulations on the result of the drive but it is encouraging to receive them from you. We must make the campaign a success and we are grateful for all the fine cooperation we are getting. Sincerely, (Signed) H. Mergenthau, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury. Mr. John Golden Saint James Theatre 246 West 44th Street New York 18, N. Y. Regraded Unclassified In the Scretamp Signature 231 date sent 20 Dear Mr. Golden: the Manner in which miss I was delighted to learn 7 Wrston and her cilleague 7 the Cael f "Thre's a Family" bettered you request that they help out in The There has Loan drive. I with you would exhices my husmal appreciation to them and of cause my Wäimert Thanks 80 to you fn asking Their help and approving The turn it Took, as well as pin passing on The suggestion to the other producers, It is a little early for confeatulation in the result of the drive het it is encouraging to receive The cambaign them hm you We must make X a Ruccess and in are scateped m all the five Correcation we are getting which Regraded Unclassified Offices of 212 JOHN GOLDEN, Inc. SAINT JAMES THEATRE 246 WEST 44TH STREET BRYANT 9-6994 New York 18, N. Y. September 13, 1943 Zon. denty orgenthau secretary of the Treasury amenington, D. C. Desr ni, Morgenthau: First, of course, I'd like to congratulate you on the magnifi- cent you una the effective results of the bond drive, Also, I think you will De interested to know of a clever and sit 14ter-sting stunt that Ruth Weston, one of my actresses, wrote late 163 anow, "3 Is A Family." I had asked Miss Weston and the other Dars of the cast to step out between the acts, each on a succeeding birht. and make an appeal to buy bonds. They got together, however, and bent that idea by putting some bond drive speeches not between the asts, out actually into the play. In other words, during the performance of "3 Is A ramily," sure of the cheracters talks about needing money and thinking of selling $ 500 she hus. To which Miss Weston replies -- "No, this is not the time to soll, it's the time to Buy Bonde." Then she turns to the audienc and 40,0018 to them directly, just as Maude Adams used to step down to the footlights in "Peter Pan" and ask "Do you believo in fairies?" -- and says, "Don't you think we must help our boys and win this War sconor. all of you, everywhere?" And our audiences, by their applause, seem to like this idea of the actress stepping completely out of the play and talking directly to them. The idea is so good, I wish I had thought of it myself. At any rate, I am pleased, as I know you will be, that they are doing it in a of mine. Sincerely John Golden P.S. Incidentally, I have sent word about this to other play producers around the town, suggesting that they try something similar in their productions, Cable Active JOHN GOLDEN THEATRE : 252 WEST 45TH STREET : NEW YORK CITY josenare LIGHTYIN 1 WISE POOLS THE FIRST TEAR DEAR ME THANK U SPITE CORNER EVENTH HEAVEN WAGES POR WIVES THE WISDOM TOOTH TWO GIRLS WASTER PIGS THAT CRATITUE AJ HUMANDS 00 AFTER TOMORROW LET US SE GAT SALT WATER DIVINE DRUDGE THE BISHIP MMBINAMES A JOINH of NUMSTONE THE LADres MEET TAXICO A FAMILY No MILORK CLAUDIA "THEATRE Regraded Unclassified 233 TREASURY DEPARTMENT INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION DATE Secretary Morgenthau September 20, 1943 TO FROM Randolph Paul You may be interested in the remarks made by Congressman Disney relating to the Treasury's state- ment on renegotiation, which I quote below: "Mr. Disney. Did you hear Mr. Randolph Paul's testimony of the Treasury Depart- ment? He made & statement before the committee last week. Did you hear or read that testimony? "Mr. Schneider. No; I was not here. "Mr. Disney. That relates to the subject that has been discussed here some before the committee of renegotiation after taxes. I wish you would do me the favor of reading that statement, which seems to be 8. complete one and showed a lot of thought, and give the clerk of the committee the benefit of your views on that subject after having read Mr. Paul's statement. "Mr. Schneider. I shall be glad to do that. I read the statements made by the other government officials in the hearing before the House Naval Affairs Committee, and I am not impressed with any reasons they gave. "Mr. Disney. Mr. Paul made a clear study of it. "Mr. Schneider. If he made a better state- ment than was made by the others, I will be glad to read it." Art Regraded Unclassified 234 TREASURY DEPARTMENT INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION CONFIDENTIAL DATE Sept. 20, 1943 TO FROM Mr. Hass Secretary GOH Mongenthau subject: The Business Situation, Week ending September 18, 1943 Summary Prices: Commodity prices firmed last week, when optimism over an early peace was dampened by the hard fighting in Itely. Stock prices made further recovery on increased trading volume, with railroad stocks gaining 38 percent for the week. Industrial stocks on the London exchange, however, were alightly lower. Para products: The reconvening of Congress again brings to the foreground the problems of farm prices and food production. Average prices of farm products in August reached the highest level since September 1920, and in the four years since the war began they have increased 119 percent as compared with 91 percent in the compar- Able period of the first World Mar. Farm prices in August overaged 17 percent above parity. subsidies: Congress is apparently still opposed to subsidies for holding down livin costs, 28 indicated by unfavorable reaction of the Venate Banking and Currency Committee to Administrator Jones' proposals for subsidizing milk prices. PA rollback program: Details released by CPA on the proposed program for reducing living costs to the Bettember 1942 level do not appear to bear out OPA expecta- tions that this can be accomplishef with on expenditure of only 100 millions. V YRB index: A revision of the FRB industrial production intex, necessitated by the expension of menufacturing Activity under the var program, shows current total production one-fifth higher then indicated by the former index. (Confidential data). Regraded Unclassified 235 Stock orices moderately Righer In C week marked by the reconvening of Congress, and by tendorary setback to the Americah invasion forces in Italy, stook prices on the New York Exchange have extended their rine on somewhat heavier trading volume. (See Chart 1.) The advance in stock prices was most noticeable at the end of the week, when the war news had turned more favorable, end included all major groups, with no apparent distinction between "var" stocks and "peace" stocks. Railroad issues were particularly strong, gaining 3+ percent for the week according to Dow-Jones averages, while the gains in industrial and utility stocks were about half that amount. All three groups rerched the highest levels since the end of July. In the London market, on the other hand, industrial stocks declined slightly during the week. Congress brings back farm price problems With Congress again in session, the problems of food production and the handling of farm prices again becomes en active subject. While total food production in 1943 1s estimated at 5 percent above the record levels of 1942, civilian per capita food consumption will be reduced about 4 percent below that of last year due to the increased demands for the armed forces and lend-lease, although it will still be above tue 1935-39 average. The management of farm prices in such B. way 25 to maintain food production with the minimum infla- tionary influence remains a critical problem. In retrospect, farm prices have risen almost continuously during the bast three years, with the index of prices received by farmers reaching in August the highest point since September 1920. (See Chart 2, upper section.) Farm prices, in fact, have shown a greater rise during this war to date than during the comperable period of World War I. From August 1939 to August 1943, for example, the index of prices received by farmers rose 119 percent, 2.8 compared with a rise of 91 percent from July 1914 to July 1918 in the first World Mar. rapid rise than the index of prices received by farmers. Con- The index of prices paid by farmers has shown a less secuently, since July 1942, farm prices have averaged higher farm prices as a whole average 17 percent above parity last then parity. (See Chart 2, lower section.) Not only d1c month (August), but prices were above parity in that month for all groups of farm products except grains. Regraded Unclassified 236 - 3 - Grain prices show sharp rise during year Although form prices of grains ES E roup are still helor parity, they have risen more sharply during the past year than any other group of form products except fruit. (See Chart 3.) Prices received by fermers for barley end whent payanced 64 and 33 percent, respectively, in the year ended must. The 31 percent increase in corn prices shown for the period would undoubtedly have been much larger if it and not oeen for the imposition of D. price ceiling in January. Phe huze feed recuirements of our record livestock pooula- tion ne the heavy demende of industrial alcohol producers have been important factors in the rise in grein prices. In the finerl year 1943, the 000 sold 275 million bushels of wheat for feed nurposes, most of this during the last half of the year. The 000 18 continuing to sell whent for feed, having 1800sec of 88 million bushels in July end August, end its stocks are now Jown to approximately 127 million bushels. Secause most grain prices have been below parity, it has been impossible to impose effective price ceilings on any except corn. Fara prices of milk and butterfat have increased 24 end 22 percent, respectively, during the past year, but large increases in feed and la or costs have been an of feetting factor from 2 monuction standpoint. Other 0011 odities for which farm prices have increased substantially ove- the past year are: potatoes, 40 percent; flaxseet, 24 percent, and esse, 20 percent. The price of wool, of which the total output is purchased by the CCC, and the price of cottonseed, have shown more moderate increases. Large stocks have tended to retard an advance in cotton prices, which rose only 10 percent during the year. In contrast to the share advances in the prices received iv Termers for most products, prices received for hoge in Aunust were 3 percent below those of last year, end farm vices of beef cattle were only 11 percent higher. The decline in hop prices and the moderate rise in beef cattle prices have been ue largely to price ceilings and to rationing of meat. Heavy marketings of hors have also tended to lower prices. Commodity prices firm The stron occosition which our crmies are encountering 1n Italy, and the President's declaration that c. long, hard 11 ht 1 still shend, has E. somethat bul 18h effect on the 178.2 percent of the August 1939 average, the index 18 1 percent competities rose =11 htly to a new 1gh. (See Thirt 4.) ..t it:- markets last week, one the BLS index of 25 basic Regraded Unclassified 237 4 higher than in early April 1943, when the President's hold-the- line order was issued. While this 1s not a large increase in itself, the almost continuous gradual rise in the index since mid-July is not encouraging. Most of the rise in the index during the past two months has been due to advancing prices for grains and meat animals. Last week wheat orices rose 1- cents per bushel and barley prices 3¥ cents. Cotton prices rose fractionally, but prices of hoge were slightly lower. The BLS all-commodity index continues its sidevise move- ment of the past two months, holding unchanged in the week ended September 11 at 102.8 percent of the 1926 average. The index 1s now 3.6 percent above the corresponding week of last year and is 37.1 percent above the pre-war level of August 1939. Rising wheat prices squeeze millers With wheat prices having risen over 5 percent since mid- July, flour millers are being squeezed between the higher wheat prices and the fixed flour price ceilings set last December by the OPA, it 18 reported in the press, Because of the squeeze, business of mills in some sections is reported at E standstill, with many millers doing business at a price sacrifice. Although the use of a flour subsidy to relieve this squeeze has been studied by the OPA, it 18 possible that critical. However, when Government parity payments to wheat nothing will be done until the situation becomes more growers ceare at the end of the 1943 crop, some definite action vill be necessary, since the legal basis for the present flour price ceilings, fixed at 39 percent of parity (including benefit payments), will have been removed. Hog price ceiling imposed A price ceiling on live hoge at 14.75 per hundredweight, Chicago basis, was announced by the OPA recently to become effective October 4. Since present prices of hoge are above this the price ceiling should tend to reduce prices. However, corn and prices, which has made it more While level, it will do little to nerrow the wide margin profitable between to it feed corn to hoge great increase in the production fundamental of pork prices hog than to sell it in the market. and has resulted favorable in a corn-hog ratio has been a regions, factor lerd, the the tight feed situation in some dairy Likewise, causing decline in milk production. for which it has 16 been threatening chiefly responsible a for the shortage of corn industrial uses. Regraded Unclassified 238 - 5 - The MFA ennounced recently a reduction in the Government support price for hoge of $1.25 per hundredweight, effective cotober 1, 1944. Certain heavier weights are dropped from the support price schedule and lighter weights added, with the in- tention of discouraging feeding hors to heavy weights. While the lower support price may serve as 2 warning to farmers neainst further increasing hog production, it will have little immediate influence since it does not beçome effective for more than n year. Congress 0000888 milk subsidies Indications appeared last week that Congress 1s still обловед to the use of subsidies for holding down living costr. A suggestion by Food Administrator Jones that subsidies be used to bolster milk production met Congressional opposition visen presented before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee. Although no formal vote was taken, Senators Bankhead and Ball indicated that the majority opinion of the Committee vas favor- able to AD increase in retail milk prices in preference to the use of subsidies. Milk production, Mr. Jones said, will decline considerably unless steps are taken to vive dairy farmers 8. better price for fluid milk, particularly during the winter months. Although mill: production usually drops during the last half of the year, A reater than seasonal fiecline is now expected by the Bureau of Apricultural Economics. Moreover, under present conditions milk production in 1944 may be reduced to only 115 billion mounds, as compared with an expected 118 billion in 1943 and 119 in 1942. The threatened decrease 16 due not only to an unfavorable cost-price relationship but also to a failure of feed to move in sufficient quantities to feed-deficit dairy regions. The several alternative subsidy suggestions to bolster ailk production which Mr. Jones submitted to the Committee were: (1) a straight subsidy to producers, probably everag- in- 1 cent a quart, which would cost about #50 millions for the last three months of this year; (2) an area subsidy, in which the Government would allow a rise in retail ceilings in the low-orice areas, and would pay a subsidy to producers =0 hold prices stable in the high-price areas; (3) a feed- cort subsidy, which would compensate producers for increased feed costs since September 1942, and would cost bout 128 Millions for the final ouarter of this year. Regraded Unclassified 239 - 6 - Detoils of rogram to cut food prices released by OPA More details of the recently reported program to reduce living costs tero given last week by the OPA General Manager, Chester Bowles. The program, which is in the final stages of preparation. 1s intended to reduce the BLS cost-of-living index to corroximately the levels of September 15, 1942 or a 4.6 percent reduction from present levels. It will cost about 100 millions annually, according to the OPA, and the money to finance it 18 available in funds of the Commodity Credit Corporation and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The alan contemplates some transportation subsidies, some purchase- ond-resale operations, and some straight rollback subsidies. The program would effect the following reductions in IVENT retail prices: apples would be reduced from between 10 and 12 centa a. pound to 9 cents a pound, onione from 5 to 6 cents, oranges from 10.2 to 9.7 cents, potatoes from 4 to 3.5 cents, beanut butter from 33.3 to 26.5 cents, lard from 18.9 to 17.9 cents, end shortening other than lard would be reduced about 1 cent a pound. It vas indicated that this portion of the program would lower the cost-of-living index 2.3 percent. (Our calculations indicate that such reductions would lower the index only 0.8 percent.) Stricter compliance with orice regulations are expected by the OPA to produce another 1 percent reduction. The remaining 1.3 percent reduction necessary to bring the index down to last September's figure, according to the OPA, will result from regulations to be 18- sued on fresh fruits and vegetables. It seems doubtful that the program will achieve the results expected with en expenditure of only 8100 millions. Mr. Bowles intimated that more subsidies may be necessary in order to hold prices at the September 1942 level once the initial reduction has been achieved. However, "It will be the policy of the OPA to hold all its subsidy recommendations to En absolute minimum," and they are to be used only when there is no other vey to prevent E. rise in retail prices. New FRB production index The broad expansion in the war production program, with its fer-reaching effects on manufacturing activity, has index of industrial production. The revised index, now avail- Recessitated a general revision of the Federal Reserve Board able on & confidential basis, shows a current level of production about one-fifth higher than that indicated by the old index. (See Chart 5.) Regraded Unclassified 240 - 7 - The July preliminary FRB index of 243 (1935-39 = 100), on the new basis, compares with an index of 203 (revised) for that month on the old basis. More recent data, however, indicate that production in July was not as high as preliminary figures had indicated, according to confidential information from the Federal Reserve Board, and the index may be revised downward to 241 or 242, about equal to the previous peak of 241 in May. The August figure 1s currently expected to be around the 242 level. The Board has added 20 new series to the production index to make it more inclusive, and has substantially revised others. Greatest increases over the old basis are shown, respectively, by chemical products, transportation equipment, and machinery. The present revision makes the FRB index more consistent with economic data of other Government agencies covering such factors as employment, payrolls, and national income. Regraded Unclassified Chart 1 STOCK PRICES, DOW-JONES AVERAGES 241 Daily 1943 AME/ET SEPTEMBER 15 - 153 155 30 Industrial Stocks IN 150 (40 145 140 140 - 135 T.N. 130 (25 is 12 120 20 Relircade * - x No - 34 W a K. 2 a e 24 & is Utilities - 22 a x 21 18 18 - INDIA ! - Volume of Trading a / - - - o M 1 14 21 28 - DI 19 25 - 9 16 23 34 4. 13 20 17 4 If . , is 22 a 5 12 = A is APRIL - MLT 1 SEPTEMENTS - - 1943 - # the Secretary of - Treasury F 144 - é - - - Regraded Unclassified Chart 2 242 PRICES RECEIVED AND PAID BY FARMERS 1909-14-100 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 PERCENT PERCENT 180 180 160 160 Prices Paid 140 140 Prices Received 120 120 100 100 80 80 $ N J M M J $ N J M E J 5 N J M M J S N J M M J $ N 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 RATIO RATIO 120 120 100 100 Ratio of Prices Received 10 Prices Paid 80 80 60 60 M J S N J M M J $ N 5 N J M M J S N J M M J S N J M 1939 1941 1942 1943 1940 a Prices Paid, Including interest and Three Office of the Secretary of the Treasury P-252 Divides of Remark and - Regraded Unclassified Chart 3 243 PRICES OF SELECTED FARM PRODUCTS Percentage Change in Prices Received by Farmers, August 1942 to August 1943 PCR CENT BARLEY +60 +50 +40 POTATOES WHEAT CORN +30 FLAXSEED MILK BUTTERFAT +20 EGGS COTTONSEED TOBACCO BEEF CATTLE +10 COTTON WOOL 0 HOGS -10 AUGUST AUGUST 1943 1942 SOURCE: AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT Office of the Secretary of the Treasury F- Division of Research and Statistics Regraded Unclassified MOVEMENT OF BASIC COMMODITY PRICES 1942 1943 1944 PERCENT PERCENT AUGUST 1939-100 220 220 210 210 200 200 9 Uncontrolled Commodities* 190 190 180 28 Commodities 180 170 170 19 Controlled Commodities 160 160 OCT. DEC. FEB APR. JUNE AUG. OCT DEC. FEB 1942 1943 1944 PERCENTAGE CHANGE DEC. 6, 1941 TO SEPT. 10, AND SEPT. 17, 1943 PERCENT PERCENT Barby anzx 19 Controlled 9 Uncontrolled Flasseed 6462 Commodities Commodities +60 +60 +50 +50 Nops 4861 Carn 44.6% +40 +40 Aven 366X +30 Lard 280X +30 Wheat 287 2 244 Shellec 123% llood 111% Steers 2352 +20 Corronseed Oil 8.2% +20 Sugar 6.9% Butter max Wool Tope SBX Catton BOX Print Cloth 4.9 I Zine 3% 410 0% Change .10 Mides. Sills Tin, Rubber, Coffee, Copper, o St. Screptem, o St Screp exp Cocoo BX Tollow 4.12 Burlop 432 10 - 10 Dec. 6 Sept. NO Sept. 17 Dec. 6 Sept. ID t I 1941 1943 1943 1941 1943 1943 20 Controlled a Uncontrolled previous 10 June 26, 1942 Office of the Secretary of the Treasury - of - and States P-244-A Regraded.Unclassifie F.R.B. INDEX OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION, REVISED 1935-39=100, Seasonally Adjusted 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 PERCENT PERCENT Monthly 275 275 250 250 225 225 Revised Index 200 200 Old Index 175 175 150 150 125 125 100 100 75 J M M J S N J M M J S N JMMJSNJMMJSNJMMJSN 1939 J M M J S N J M M J S N J M M 75 1937 1938 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 Chart little of the Secretary of The Treasury 245 MU Dese and Statistics Regraded Unclassified DEPARTMENT OF STATE WASHINGTON rep. efer to Dear Henry: With reference to your letter of September 8, 1943, regarding possible proposals to levy exclse taxes on coffee, tea and COCOE and to increase the existing excise tax on sugar, I am enclosing 2 copy of an informal тешо- rendum describing briefly provisions in our trade agreements which would have a bearing on proposels to Impose excise taxes on these products. This memorandum was recently prepared at the request of Mr. Colin F. Stam, Chief of Staff, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. The situation which the enclosed memorandum endeavors to bring out may be briefly restated. Since sugar is pro- duced domestically a.s well as imported, an increase in the existing excise tax applying equally to both domestic and foreign sugar would not disturb the competitive rela- tionship between the two. A nondiscriminatory increase in the tax on sugar, therefore, would not conflict with either the letter or spirit of the trade agreements in which this Government has granted & duty concession on that product. With regard to ooffee, cocoa and tea, however, the aitua- tion is different. Since the supply of these products 1s almost wholly imported, the application to them of an excise tax would be no different in its economic effects from a customs duty. For this reason, the imposition of excise taxes on these products would ordinarily be regarded as inconsistent with the spirit, if not the letter, of the trade agreements in which this Government has guaranteed their duty-free entry. As pointed out in the memorandum, in excise tax on coffee would directly contravene the letter of the trade agreements with Brazil and Colombia. However, it has been the policy of the Department to take the posi- 1on that nothing in any trade agreement shall be construed to The Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury. Regraded Unclassified 7 - 2 - prevent the adoption of measures imposed for the pro- ction of the country's essential interests in time of ar or other national emergency. Other countries follow the same policy. It is understood from your letter that any excise tax proposals with regard to coffee, cocoa and tea would originate in Congress. If the appropriate committees of the Congress should give serious consideration to the imposition of excise taxes on coffee, cocoa and tea as temporary measures deemed essential to the war financing program, the Department would take up the matter with the foreign governments concerned in accordance with the policy stated above. Sincerely yours, Correstwee Enclosure: Memorandum Regraded Unclassified August 11, 1945 Proposed Excles Taxas an Coffee, Cames. Tea and Bugar In the event serious consideration should be given, in connection with current studies in regard to a new tax bill, to any proposal to impose excise taxes on coffee, 0000A, tea or sugar, the Committee on Ways and Means would undoubtedly give due consideration to the bearing of such & proposal on the foreign consercial relations and international obligations of the United States. The following information concerning these commodities may therefore be useful for reference pur- poses. The continued duty-free entry of coffee into the United States is provided for in trade agreements between the United States and eleven other American republics, namely, Brasil, Colombia, Venezuela, Eoundor, E1 Salvador, Costa Hios, Honduras, Gustomala, Halti, Peru and Mexico. The continued duty-free entry of cocoa beans 1s pro- vided for in trade agreements with seven American republies (the same countries mentioned in the previous paragraph, except Colombia, Guatomala, Peru and Mexico), and also in the trade agreement with the United Kingdom. The continued duty-free entry of tea 10 provided for in the trade agreement with the United Kingdom. In the trade agreements with Brazil and Colombia, resiprosal commitments have also been undertaken by the United States and the two countries mentioned not to impose any new OF increased federal internal taxes on the articles on which duty concessions were granted, including in the wase of the agreement with Colombia, ooffee, and in the case of Brazil, both ooffee and 0000R beans. The other trade agreements mentioned above do not contain a specific provision of this kind. However, since all or almost all if the ooffee, 00002 beans and tea consumed in the United States is imported, an "excise" tax on any of these com- odities would be, in effect, equivalent to a customs tuty. For this reason, the foreign governments concerned exclse" tax on any of these products as an impairment of ould almost certainly consider the imposition of an the Regraded Unclassified - 2 - lertaking by the United States to maintain the 00 status of the product, in return for which ing they granted valuable concessions on Ameri- export products. with regard to sugar, duty concessions on this prod- ust have been grented by the United States to Cuba and 7ard. Although there is nothing in either of these agreements which would prevent the application to imported sugar of an increased excise tax so long as such increase were also applied to domestic sugar, it is noted that the dovernment of the United States has purchased the entire exportable pertion of the Cuban sugar erop for this year, en a basis assuring a fixed return to the Cuban producer, and Is new negotiating for the purchase of next year's crop on a similar basis. It would appear, therefore, that under the terms of existing and proposed sugar pur- chase contracts, any increase in the excise tax would, in respect of the bulk of our sugar imports, have to be absorbed by the Government of the United States. The foregoing indicates in a general way our exist- ing commitments tmente with regard to coffee, 00002, tea and sugar. The Department of State would, of course, be glad to furnish any additional information in regard to these commi twents, or information in regard to other matters within the responsibility of this Department, which the Comuittee may 06 weasion desire in comnection with its consideration of new tax proposals. Regraded Unclassified V 250 September 20, 1943 Dear Waley: will you please transmit the enclosed letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer? It is from Secretary Morgenthau in reply to the Chancellor's letter of September 3, 1943, with regard to the visit of Lord Keynes and his colleagues to discuss tentative proposale for international monetary cooperation. Sincerely yours, (Signed) H.D. White H. D. White, Assistant to the Secretary. Sir David Waley, United Kingdom Treasury Representative, British Supply Council, Willard Hotel, Washington, D. C. Enclosure 9/21/43 - Forwarded to adresses by special messenger from Mr. White's office - 10:00 s.m. LS 9/21/43 Regraded Unclassified 251 SEP 20 1943 Dear Mr. Chancellor: I am glad that you have sent Lord Keynes and his colleagues to Washington to discuss with lb. White and the American techni- cal experts the tentative proposals for international monetary cooperation. Their discussions are now going on. I share with you the hope that these discussions will make it possible for our countries and the other United Nations to bring to the so- lution of the problems of peace the same spirit that has marked our common war effort. I appreciate your difficulty in choosing a successor to Sir Frederick Phillips. Frankly, we have come to regard the representative of your Treasury in Washington as an important link in the maintenance of close relations with you. I have every confidence that the representative you choose will con- tinue the tradition of cooperation between the Treasuries of the United States and the United Kingdom. You may be sure that your representative in Washington will always find a cordial welcome here. Sincerely yours, (Signed) W. Mergenthau, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury Sir Kingaley Wood, The Chancellor of the Exchequer, London, England. EMB/jm 9/20/43 Regraded Unclassified UNITED KINGDOM TREASURY DELEGATION BOX 680 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STATION WASHINGTON, D.C. REFERENCE: TELEPHONE EXECUTIVE 2020 21st September, 1943. Dear White, Thank you for your letter of September 20th enclosing a letter from Secretary Morgenthau to Sir Kingsley Wood's letter of September 3rd, 1943. I am sending the letter on to London, as I assume that this will be the Secretary's wish despite the tragic news of Sir Kingsley's death. Sincerely yours, S.D. walay Dr. Harry White, U.S. Treasury. Greasory Chambers, S.M. 3rd September, 1943. bean hn Morgen th an I am very glad that it has been possible to arrange for Lord Keynes to come to Washington to discuss with you and Dr. White and others the important proposals for an international monetary scheme after the war. Dr. White and Lord Keynes have both made this, as it were, their own subject, and have brought all their knowledge and experience to it, T am very hopeful that in the friendly discussions which they will have satisfactory progress will be made which will enable both our Governments to proceed to the next 'mportant stage. I need not introduce Lord Keynes to you. He brings my best wishes for the success of his task, and I know that he will have yours. Sir David Waley is Also returning to act for the time being as the representative of our Treasury in Washington. I am afraid, however, that I shall not be able to let him stay indefinitely as Sir Frederick Phillips' successor, for there pre other parts of his work at the Treasury on which he has specialised experience not easily Regraded Unclassified obtainable elsewhere. As you will understand, I am very anxious to make & right choice in succession to Frederick Phillips, who was your friend as well as mine, and enjoyed equally the confidence of both of us. I want to take time to choose someone who seems suitable and before I reach a decision I shall ask the Anbassador to see you personally and to tell you of my intentions. Yours Suncerely / none Henry Morgenthau, Esq. SEP1 254 25 SEP 20 1943 Dear Sir David: would you be se kind M to transmit the enclosed latter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer acknowledging receipt of his two letters of September 3, 19437 The first concerns the receipt by the United States of zuw materials from British Empire areas as recipresal aid and the second served to transuit the memorandum on the Overeses Assets and Liabilities of the United King- don. Thanking you in advance, I an, Sincerely yours, (Signed) H. Mergenthau, Jr. NP Secretary of the Treasury. Sir David Waley, United Kingdom Treasury Representative, British Supply Council, Willard Hotal, Washington, D. C. Enclosure. TMK:ff 9/20/43 Regraded Unclassified 255 25 SEP 20 1943 Dear Sir Kingsley: I as writing to acknowledge receipt of your two letters of September 3, 1943, - of which dealt with the receipt by the United States of THE materials from British Empire areas M resiprosel aid and the second of which served to transmit copies of the memorandum on the Overness Assets and Liabili- ties of the United Kingdom. I appreciate your giving these matters your close personal attention. You may be assured that the points raised in your letter and the assorandum will receive our most careful consideration. Sincerely yours, (Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury. The Hemorable Sir Kingsley Wood, Chanceller of the Imchequer, Landon, England. THE:ff 9/20/43 Regraded Unclassified Creasury Chambers, Whiteball S.M. 3rd September, 1943. bean his Morgentha In my message to you of the 23rd August I said that I would give close personal attention to the aide memoire on Reciprocal A1d which our Embassy received on the 18th August and would write to you about it. I am now taking advantage of Sir David Waley's return to Washington to send you this personal letter as it seemed to me best that I should ac uaint you myself with the position as I Bee it. In doing so, I know I can count on the ready understanding with which you have approached the problems of my country in the past. I should first tell you that my overnment have now given instructions for the reply to the State Department on the aide memoire which the Embassy received from them. I think it will be found convenient that our ply should be (iven orully in the first place; scussions as ,e both know often prevent misunderstandings. reover the representatives of our Departments in shington will then be competent to settle the administrative cedure for the new arrangements and thus to save time in /bringing Regraded Unclassified bringin bittem into effect. Afterwards, 1f it suits you, our agreement might be appropriately recorded in an exchange of notes which could be published for the information of our peoples, When I learned at the beginning of June that you had in mind proposing that raw materials should be given aB Reciprocal Aid, I viewed the idea with imedia to sympathy. It was a natural development bf the pooling of resources between our countries, which is illustrated by the Lend-Lease system, and on behalf or the United Kingdom and the Colonies, I obtain the concurrence of my colleagues to the general princ underlying your proposal. question of our gold and dollar balances, which now has been causing you some concern and which aed been hoping to discuss with Sir Frederick Ph11 seems to me a separate question and I can portu efer to it more conveniently later in this lett /As Regraded Unclassified Commany Creaters, As regards the proposals for raw materials, the Governments of Australia and New Zealand have their own Lend-Lease Agreements with the United States Government, and the Union of South Africa 18 negotiating such an Agreement. While the Government of India have no Agreement, they are giving Reciprocal Aid, they have direct relations on Lend-Lease with the United States Administration and they are, as you know, fiscally independent. The position is therefore that all these Governments will expect to be approached direct on the programme as it affects each one of them and to give their own answer. When the proposal was specifically made to us at the end of June, we naturally told the Dominions and India of our own policy in regard to it. We are, of course, also keeping them informed of the subsequent developments and, while you will appreciate that I cannot speak for them, I am not unhopeful of the attitude which they will take up. When we received the provisional list of raw /materials Regraded Unclassified unterials more tentative 311' Fr we did not PC the illustration scale of and I certainl: aid system should kept Plexible :0 must changed needs, de Are rendy to regard one offer as elastic and coverin all the procurements by the United States Government 01° uncontial reguire nts for var needs of food-stuffs and PAV datori lo, in so far as they can be supplied from the inited Ein do., ANd the Colonies. Somi precision in the 20 wasse is ocessar for smoth wo ng, but this CO., no donbt be achieved 1.1 the sa to vay as the case of Lend-Lease, through the sub.Hosion to us pro ranmes and requis tions which may very 1.48. to time and which, T can assure you, we will / e: de in the same way and with the same desire to help /as Regraded Unclassified Greaming Chambers, delhiteball S the Lend-Lease Administration have always shown in dealing with our requirements of United States resources. As regards the date of the 1st October. This as only suggested by us to give time for the arrange- ments which would be necessary for the switch-over from direct procurement by the United States Government to procurement by us. It was not our intention that you should complete all your contracts outstanding on that date. We are perfectly ready to make such arrangements as will permit supplies under Reciprocal Aid to commence st the earliest possible date. On these lines, which will be discussed with the Administration by Sir David Waley and his colleagues, I should expect that a satisfactory arrangement between our two Governments could speedily be made. It seems to me, however, that the proposal in the aldo memoire that financial reimbursement should be made to the United States Government, retrospectively 10 the 1st July, for all deliveries covered by the new arrangemente which were made between the 1st July and the Regraded Unclassified , to Which 1.00 ly nei lace in chelle the e materials m this raises and doll letter. Here I should be eness of our rel 1f : erstan that Inces and Ir riticis -] int scale. I boldue 10 lities the Noble 45 RES nc los Il no 8.8 Regraded Unclassified Treasury Chambers, Whiteball S.M. United States Government and of the Dominion of Canada. In many other parts of the world, however, We have to provide the finance for the war. We call only do this in the main by borrowing local currencies against a credit in sterling to the respective countries, and thus we re incurring unfunded indebtedness on a vast scale. We could not continue this policy indefinitely without having some proportion of liquid assets out of which the more pressing part of the liquid indebtedness could be met if called for from time to time. But our liabilities, which are liabilities of the United Kingdom alone, are several times as great as our reserves, and the disproportion between our reserves and liabilities is also reflected in their growth. Moreover, the gold and dollar balances, which are shown as United Kingdom balances, are not in fact our reserves alone; they are the pooled reserves of the sterling area. As you know, the members of the sterling area turn over to us their surplus dollar earnings in exchange for sterling credit. But this carries with it /an Regraded Unclassified toll a 1 ng erlin Poots suns = t ose W on the nce between the But that is hol BEGANE receivi resms scale beer 50 ol an :oramo na of lité of Il Regraded Unclassified Contain Crambers, SM. January Sir Frederick Phillips delivered to you a message from me on a proposal that Lend-Lease might be restricted if our reserves rose above a certain figure. It was, I think, on the 15th February that he gave a note to the Treasury briefly explaining the position. It is clear to me that possibly because the discussions on the subject 80 far have been incomplete, we have not been successful in demonstrating how we view this matter or the principles involved in it. I have therefore given instructions that the particulars in the note which Sir Frederick Phillips gave to the Treasury in February should be brought up to date, and I am arranging that a fuller confidential statement should be delivered to you for your consideration, and for discussions between the representatives of the United States Administration and our representatives in Washington. When you have studied this statement I am sure you will understand me when I say that my Government could not regard it as reasonable that a limit should be /placed Regraded Unclassified plac to our cold end doll e holdings which pays no region to our liabilities and the'r growth, or to the war irc mstances which leve brought about this position, particularly the fact that the have to finance practically the whole of th war expenditure in the iddle Mast and India. Indeed I real entitled to hope that when the whole position is d'scussed and is clear, we may count, while the war circumstances remain as they are at present, unon the continuance of Lend-Lease on its present lines. Our external financial usition naturally gives me grown for concePa AND in MY maiget Speech on the 12th April - outlined to Parliament the resent losition. This state ent 0.0 seit viúo interest and Parl ament is increasi. attention to the shole sub, ct; Part* e exhaple, that QUE Coli ind dollar Lel inst very uch lar increasing. *... red ise sheald talid ste of various inús disferent times to / Regraded Unclassified Creasurg Chankers, Whiteball S.M. discharge some of these liabilities, through the use of our gold and dollar balances. I shall welcome a full discussion on the problem and our representatives have instructions to disclose the whole situation to the United States Administration. I cannot say here and now what we shall find It best to do, but I shall keep you informed of the lines on which we are proceeding. As regards the publication of Reciprocal Aid figures, I think that it 18 necessary to publish a White Paper here as soon after the re-assembly of Parliament in the latter part of September as is found convenient. Parliament and our people are entitled to know of the magnitude of our effort and of the burden it entails. A copy of the White Paper in its present form has been given confidentially to the United States Treasury and to other representatives of the United States Administration and I shall be glad to consider any suggestions you or others may make on it. Then when we have it in the final form in which I think it should be presented to Perliament, I will arrange that you are /given Regraded Unclassified RE CRIVED Treasury Department SEP 17 1943 Division of Monstary Research given an on ort nity of seeing it before 1 t, is published. I have tried in this letter to :ive you a broad outline of our position, as I se it, Athont: tronbling "on with unnecessary detail. Even so the letter has perhaps become overlong. d'remistances, however, unfortunately make it impossible for us to sit lown together and tslk over this important subject. In au particularly anxious that you, ./ho have so clearly understood onr financial osition in the post 1.1:2 gave us your icl; at 2* 11:10 1t time, onlă have a full story and start Keve it street 1: a personal my from me. nich an good wishe Jun Sincerely Noral ent Nor enthan, use, Regraded Unclassified Creasurg Chambers, 5.00. 3rd September, 1943. bean her Margen than In the personal letter from me which Sir David Waley has delivered to you I refer to a fuller memorandum on the subject of our gold and dollar balances and our external liabilities which I was having prepared for the confidential information of yourself and other members of the United States Government. This letter covers the memorandum which, as you see, not only sets out the details of the position for your information but gives 9 full account of the circumstances which has led to this nosition and of our present policy in regard to it. Im Sincerely Mugley Nill Henry Morgenthau, Esq. Regraded Unclassified RANDUM BY THE BRITISH TREASURY THE OVERSEAS ASSETS AND LIABILITIES OF THE UNITED KINGDOM I. THE OVERSEAS FINANCIAL POLICY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. 1. The passage of the Lend-Lease Act early in 1941 and the assistance given by Canada from 1942 onwards have dealt most liberally with the more recent financial requirements of the United Kingdom in North America. These measures are well known and widely appreciated. In most other parts of the world, however, His Majesty's Government have to pay for the war by acquiring local currencies against B. liability to repay sterling and are thus incurring unfunded indebtedness on a vast scale. It would not be possible or reasonable to continue this policy indefinitely without having some proportion of liquid assets out of which the more pressing part of the liquid indebtedness could be discharged if called for from time to time. It has, therefore, been our deliberate policy to accumulate a reserve (though, relatively, a small one) against these liabilities - not out of our net external earnings because, of course, there are none - but partly by ad hoe capital transactions and partly by holding on to B. portion of such current dollars and gold 8.6 come our way (mainly from other parts of the Sterling Area) instead of using the whole of them to meet our liabilities. The dollars acquired from other part of the Sterling Area, however, have to be paid for in sterling, which increases our overseas indebtednoss, This system has, therefore, the effect of increasing our gross indebtedness but does, at least, mean that we hold something against it. For example, it has seemed to us more advisable to borrow in the course of the year (say) $3,200 million and retain $800 million to meet pressing claims, than to borrow $2,400 million and retain nothing against it. 2. The recent increase in British liquid assets is thus an essential component in a careful (though nevertheless vulnerable) financial policy by which, though with tho most dangerous risks to our post-war position, we have managed to finence a vast war exponditure in India, the Middle East and alsewhore - an expenditure which is, of course, vitally essential to the prosecution of the war. To set a limit to our assets while disrogarding the growth in our liabilities would tear this delicate system to pieces. Only If we are left free to pursue our existing policy can we hope successfully to finance our vast and essential commitments outside North America. Regraded Unclassified STATISTICS ILLUSTRATING THE OVERSEAS FINANCIAL POLICY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. (a) Growth of Liabilities in Relation to Assets. 3. The statistics which show how this policy has worked out in practice are given in dotail below. 4. The excess of the financial burden overseas beyond what could be met out of current income in the last 3/2 years has been met in four ways as follows:- $ million Jan.1,1940 Jan.1,1940 to In 1st half to Dec.31,1941 1942 1943 (approx.) Juno 30,1943 (1) By overseas loans* R.F.C. loan 345 15 - 10 350 Canadian secured loan - 635 - 15 620 Sundry loans & advancos 115 125 15 255 Total Loan 460 775 - 10 1,225 (11)By sale of overseas invostments (including sinking funds) 1,545 845 5359 2,925 (111)By not increase of quick liabilitios# (oxcl. those carry- ing a gold or dollar liability) 2,5857 1,240 1,235 5,060 (1v)By sale of gold and dollars (not, 1.0. allowing for gold and dollar liabili- tics) 1,950 - 305 - 330 1,315 Grand Total 6,540 2,555 1,430 10,525 * No crodit is hero taken for cortain loans advanced during the var to Alliod Government. √ The figures for the first half of 1943 are provisional and subject to correction. # 1,0, Banking liabilities and liabilities of Grown Agents and of Currency Boards. 7 The of this figure requires an catimato of the quick calculation at the commencement of the period on January 1st, and 1940. liabilities estimate of this assumed above is $2,000 million approx., to The is this figure which has to be added to the figures above it the correct total of the quick liabilities at any examination subsequent date, give This figure of $2,000 million is under further and may have to be roducod. Regraded Unclassified 5. The effect of these changes on the aggregate of the gold and ar reserves has been as follows: - $ million (Gold at 835 per fine OZ,) Dec.31 Dec.31 Dec.31 June 30 1939 1941 1942 1943 Cross gold and dollar reserves# 2,335 500 930 1,335 less gold end dollar liabilities - 115 240 315 Quick reserves 2,335 385 690 1,020 /Exclusive of dealers' balances. DIncluding an approx. allowance for 200 million held in private accounts at that date, but subsequently requisitioned and added to the official balances. 6. The relation between the growth in quick liabilities and in the quick assets held against them was, therefore, as follows:- $ million 1942 1st half 1943 Increase in quick liabilities 1,240 1,235 Increase in quick assets 305 330 The accompanying increase in total liabilities has been 2,015 and 1,225 respectively. 7. It will also be observed that, whilst gold and dollar reserves have increased in the last eighteen months, they have fallen by more than half over the period as a whole. Quick liabilities (namely $7,000 million approx.) are now about seven times the quick reserves held against them. (b) The Sources out of which the Quick Reserves have been Accumulated. 8. The following paragraphs analyse the sources out of which 1st an January 1942 to 30th June 1943. Particular attention may be drawn the increase in our quick reserves has been accumulated in the period to following points: - (1) Of the total net increase in the period of $635 million, by far the most important source has been the dollars acquired rom the rest of the sterling area ($594 million) which has involved a corresponding growth in our liabilities, (11) - Of represents pay of U.S. troops. A further $95 the dollars acquired from the rest of the sterling area million $462 million was received in respect of the pay of U.S. troops in the U.K. (111) between Apart the U.K. and U.S.A. was during the period adverse the from troop payments the balance on current account to U.K. by $349 million. (iv) A further Africa provided for the repatriation of South African in important source has been $182 million of gold from sterling South Government securities, which represents no increase our total assets. Regraded Unclassified with below, has been as follows: . United States. This account, apart from troop payments which are dealt favourable balance on current account between the United Kingdom and & the 9. The growth of our quick reserves has not arisen through million 1942 1943 1st half 1943 2nd half Receipts forecast) 825 324 Outgoings 312 1,112 386 394 Balance 287 - 62 - 82 The further reduction in net expenditure on pre-Lend-Lease commitmento during 1943 compared with 1942 has considerably reduced the deficit, but has not been suffidient to wipe it out. The prospective cost of the further reciprocal aid now proposed on raw materials will largely offset the saving on old commitments, but as its allocation between the U.K. (which boars the cost) and the Colonies (which produce the materials) is not casy to define in a balance of payments context, the matter is dealt with below in connection with the current balance with the U.S. of the Storling Area ao A. whole, 10. The troop paymonte which are not included in the above table ariso oving to the fact that, whatever else may be provided under Lond-Lease or Reciprocal Aid, it has been recognised from the beginning that Governments must rotain diroct responsibility for the pay of their own forces in all parts of the world. Receipts of the U.K. under this head have boon: - 8 million 1942 1943 lat half 1943 2nd half (forocast) U.S. troops in U.K. 50 45 150 It vill be seon that, ovon after allowing for these receipts, there still romains a deficit of $237 million in 1942 and $17 million in the first half of 1943 against the U.K. in favour of the United States, 11. Às mentioned above a special consideration applies to this item and to the similar receipts (acc below) by other parte of the Sterling Aroa. To offect these receipts by a reduction of Lend-Lease Aid to the U.K. would como to the same thing as asking for the pay of American troops throughout the Sterling Arca to be charged on the British Budget as a part of Reciprocal Aid. This proposal, if it were made, would be contrary to the principles of Mutual Aid, as understood hithorto, which have regarded the pay of the troops of each Ally, wherever situated, as the responsibility of that Government. 12, In addition to the outgoings included above, certain dollar payments have been made by the United Kingdom outside the Unitod States, insignificant in 1942, but amounting to 5165 million, chiefly to Canada, in the first half of 1943. 13. Capital transactions in the United States, after touching high levels in 1940 and 1941, nade only a small contribution to meeting the deficits in the poriod undor considoration:- $ million 1942 1943 1st half Salos of gold in U.S. B 4 Salos of securities in U.S. 22 21 Instalment of R.F.C. Loan 40 70 25 Regraded Unclassified 14. All the above items taken together show A deficit of over $900 million against the U.K. in the eighteen months ending Juno 1943. How, then, has the increase of the British quick reserves como about? There have boon three main sources. (1) By far the most important source has been the dollars acquired from the rost of the Storling Area. The current account between the rest of the Storling Area and the Unitod States has been as follows: - $ million 1942 1943 1st half 1943 2nd half (forecast*) Rocoipts 600 292 262 Outgoings 481 177 158 Balance 119 + 115 104 Boforo allowing for further reciprocal aid in raw materials. Taking those figuros in conjunction with those for the U.K., it vill be observed that in the eighteen months ended June 30th 1943 there has been a deficit of $115 million adverse to the Sterling Area as a whole in the above curront account with the United States outside Lend-Lenso and Reciprocal Aid. This may not have been appreciated in all quartors, and it may have been orroncously bolieved that the Unitod Kingdom quick reserves had increased because the greater scope of Lond-Lease compared with that of Reciprocal Aid had lod to a current balance with the Unitod Statos substantially favourable to the Sterling Arca. The new proposels for reciprocal aid in raw matorials will probably convort into a deficit the small surplus which might otherwise accrue from non on ns a result of the completion of payments on the pro-Lend-Loase contracts. The receipts arising from the presence of U.S. troops in the rost of the Storling Area (which are not included above) vero 3194 million in 1942 and $166 million in the first half of 1943. Receipts from this source in the second half of 1943 are conjecturally catimated at $200 million. All those dollars, both those arising from the favourable current account and also those in connection with U.S. troops, amounting altogother to $594 million in the eighteen months onding Juno, 1943, have been acquired by the United Kingdom under the pooling arrangements by which numbors of the Sterling Area soll to the United Kingdom for storling any dollars which thoy carn in excess of their own direct requirements. Thus the quick storling liabilities of the United Kingdom have been increased by the samo amount GD the dollar assets 60 acquired. (11) llo have received, mainly in the first quarter of 1943, $182 million of gold from South Africa for the repatriation of South African Government storling socurities. This has not represented an increase in our assets, but only n. change in thoir form. (111) Re also receive gold, chiefly from South Africa, against payment in storling, and since 1941 have retained a part of this gold to moet contingoncios, instoad of applying it at onco to moot current linbilities. 15. The above analysis of the sources of the quick assots of the Unitod Kingdom can be summed up na follows:- Regraded Unclassified million 1942 1943 1st half U.K. curront account with U.S. - 287 - 62 U.S. troops in U.K. + 50 + 45 U.K. dollar payments outside U.S.- 2 - 165 Salo of gold and securities and loans in U.S. + 70 + 25 Rest of Storling Area current account with U.S. + 119 + 115 U.S. troops in rest of Sterling Aroa + 194 + 166 Special gold from South Africa for repatriction of South African Government storling securities + 15 + 167 Other gold and dollar movements (not) + 146 + 39 Increase in U.K.:s quick assots + 305 + 330 Regraded Unclassified IN THE ADEQUACY OF THE UNITED KINODOE'S QUICK RESERVES. 16. Having regard to the size of the quick liabilities, it 1a obvious on by criterion that the quick reserves are seriously inadequate. But there at also certain other considerations which are, in greater or less degree, want to this question. (a) The liabilities are liabilities solely of the United Kingdom and x of any other part of the Sterling Area. But the quick assets cannot be garded as wholly available for the United Kingdom's requirements. A large purt of them has been acquired under the pooling arrangement referred to above by which all parts of the Sterling Area (other than some of the tesporary adherents) sell to the United Kingdom for sterling any dollars which they earn in excess of their own small direct requirements. These arrangements carry with them an implied obligation on the U.K., no far as is possible, to provide dollars for other parts of the Sterling Area, which have retained no significant dollar holdings of their own, when subsoquently they have a logitimate need for them. (b) The quick liabilities are the more burdensome because of the disposal of many of the more saleable capital assets, which otherwise would have served as a second line of defence. As the table above shows, the total loss of assets and increase of liabilities no far suffered by the United Kingdom during the war has amounted to 10+ billion dollars. In this respect our position is unique amongst the United Nations. In fact more than 90 per cont of this loss has accrued to the advantage of other members of the United Nations, many of whom have improved their overseas position during the war. The United Kinpdom alone has been expected to mortgage the future on a large scale by incurring overseas liabilities. During the earlier period of the war, expenditure in North America was the main cause of the deterioration of the United Kingdom's financial position. More recently her responsibility for mooting the groater part of the local cash expenditures in the whole area of hostilities from Tunis to Burna has been the main influence. At the present time the United Kingdom's local cash expenditure in Eypt, the Middlo East and India, over and above the supplies shipped across the seas, is amounting to somo $2/ billion annually, the greator part of which has to be borrowed from the countries concerned. Between the beginning of the war and the und of 1943, for example, it is estimated that we shall have incurred an indebtodness to India of some $3,750 million, of which some $1,200 million will have been used to discharge her Government storling debt and the balance will remain owing to her, (c) In judging whether, in spite of the above considerations, the United Kingdom is nevertholoss accumulating unnecessarily large quick reserves 1t is rolevant to consider the relationship botreen the United Kingdom's resources as shown above and those of other members of the United Nations. For example, the gold and dollar reserves of the U.S.S.R., which are not published, are estimated by the United States Treasury at $1,600 million and those of China at $750 million. The corresponding figures of France can be put at $2,875 million, of the Nethorlands at $690 million and Belgium at $870 million. None of these countrics have any significant amount of overscas quick liabilities against those reserves. The figures for the United Kingdom (which in respect of dollars include the whole of the Storling Ares) are at present, as shown above, about 11,000 million with storling liabilition seven times this amount against them. The not gold reserves of the United States (1.e. after doducting all foreign balances held in United States) are about eighteen times the gross reserves of the United Kingdom (1.e. before deducting the storling foreign balances held in United Kingdom which are soven times as great as the reserves). 17. If, therofore, in spite of a progressive deterioration in her net position, the United Kingdom 1s in a position, as we hope, to increase her quick reserves above the present figure by retaining certain liquid resources earnod outside our balance of trado with the United States instead of applying them forthwith to a reduction of hor liabilities, this cannot be Judgod, in the light of the above considerations, to be a matter for criticism or open to legitimate objection. 14th September, 1943. Regraded lassified UNITED KINGDOM TREASURY DELEGATION BOX 680 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STATION WASHINGTON, D. c. TELEPHONE EXECUTIVE sozo Se tember 22, 1943 The Honourable Henry J. Morgenthau Jr. Secretary of the Treasury Washington 25, D. C. Dear Mr. Secretary: Thank you for your letter of September 20th enclosing a letter to Sir Kingsley Food acknowledg- ing receipt of his two letters of Se, tember 3, 1943. I am forwarding these to London, as I assume this would be your wish despite the sad news we have had in the mean- time of Sir Kingsley hood's death. Sincerely yours S.D. Waley Sir David Waley SDW:bj Regraded Unclassified 277 TREASURY DEPARTMENT PROCUREMENT DIVISION OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR WASHINGTON September 20, 1943 MEMORANDUM TO THE SECRETARY: Supplementing report to you of September 13, 1943, the purchases against the African Program from September 13, 1943, to September 19, 1943, totaled $1,796,865.98, or a total of purchases for the program thus far of $61,755,847.44. Attached is report giving status of shipping against these purchases. is Clif for .. Mack Director of Procurement SECRET PORVICTORY BUY UNITED STATES persons BONDS AND STAMPS (37861) Regraded Unclassified 278 SHIPPING REPORT AS OF SEPTEMBER 18, 1943 Tonnage Tonnage Tonnage Tonnage Shipped to Date Under Load On Hand At Port En Route Commodity From U. S. A. At Port Waiting Vessels To Port Agric. Mach, & Implements 1776.38 172.82 381.94 136.32 Automotive Eqpt. & Parts 801.17 121.94 141.55 Batteries 120.77 .25 18.5 7.46 Dearings 2.21 .23 .63 .29 Brass & Bronze 288.4 2.5 87.6 Brushes & Brooms .8 .15 Bldg. Hdw. & Material 310.07 76.82 268.51 22.94 Chemicals 17943.14 1491.98 6781.11 4107.27 Clothing, Notions & Textiles 16602.5 16.73 3095.86 4467.51 Construction Machinery .44 Copper in Various Forms 336.3 98.18 10.57 Elec. Eqpt. & Supplies 74.44 22.76 7.45 36.97 Explosives 14.15 Ferro-Alloys 73.88 11.32 .53 Food & Food Products 6032. Furniture & Office Eqpt. .11 .49 .01 1.71 Glass 194.82 95.12 7.66 690.44 Graphite Products 92.66 .32 13.23 Hand & Cutting Tools 995.64 61.04 381.19 369.26 Industrial Machinery 49.85 73.2 106.14 243.52 Iron 145. 810. 222.65 1028.35 Jute Bags 857.47 535. Lead & Lead Alloys 73.18 102.5 Medical Supplies 56.12 .68 5.02 .3 Non-Ferrous Metals, Other 434.02 20.84 .81 Paper & Paper Products 4586.16 1605.09 1948.39 1939.12 Rope & Twine 247.7 34.75 14. 12. Rubber 778.48 20. 319.79 434.47 Regraded Unclassified 279 - 2 - Tonnage Tonnage Tonnage Tonnage Shipped to Date Under Load On Hand At Port Enroute Commodity From U. S. A. At Fort Waiting Vessels To Port Shoes & Boots 315.68 5.34 539.38 1465.2 Steel, Alloy & Carbon 7733.93 225.36 7392.58 5831.47 Steel, Pipe & Tubing 251.47 129.54 313.72 Tin Plate 845. 357.55 204.95 2431.05 Zinc 27.96 27.29 Totals 62,033.5 5112.46 22,831.88 23,712.27 Regraded Unclassified 280 25 September 20, 1943. Dear Mr. Payeers Per the Becretary, I - acknovledging your letter of September 19, which enclosed a copy of a report vysa the progress of the Seviet Protecol. Mr. Margenthan is glad to have this material and will read it with in- terest. Sincerely yours, (Signed) H. S. Klotz 1. S. Nots, Private Secretary. Momerable B. A. Payser, Mrester, Foreign Division, Var Prodmation Board, Vackington, D. c. Regraded Unclassified WAR PRODUCTION BOARD 281 WASHINGTON, D. C. IN REPLY REFER TO: September 17, 1943 Mr. Henry Morgenthau Room 280 Treasury Department Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. Morgenthau: I am enclosing a copy of the report upon the progress of the Soviet Protocol. This is the second report during the Third Protocol Period. Sincerely yours, E./A. Peyser Director, Foreign Division Attachment PYICTORY BUY ENITED STATES WAR BONDS AND STAMPS Regraded Unclassified 282 WAR PRODUCTION BOARD WASHINGTON, D. C. September 15, 1943 IN REPLY REFER TO: My dear Mr. President: The accompanying tabulation shows the progress made during August, and during the two months ending August 31, towards fulfil- ment of Third Protocol materials and equipment production programs for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Practically all raw materials programs are now on a satis- factory basis. Some adjustments in steel schedules remain to be made because of & 210,000 S.T. reduction in the Soviet request (1.e. from 710,000 S.T. to 500,000 S.T.), and allocations of & fev items, primar- ily chemicals and farro-alloys, are being held up pending elimination of excessive stockpiles; but details relative to other programs have been fully worked out and production in accordance with terms of Pro- tocol offers 1e under way, In contrast, much remains to be done before industrial equip- ment programs will be completely rounded out. Although orders for a large part (approximately two-thirds) of the industrial equipment called for by Third Protocol offers were accepted and put into production in advance of the opening of the Third Protocol period, there remained as of July 1, 1943 important blocks of orders still to be placed in the case of & number of categories. To date, many of these orders have not been forwarded to the War Production Board. In consequence, appreciable fractions of programs for tool tips and blanks, small cutting tools, measuring tools, electric furnaces, rolling mill equipment, wire draw- ing equipment, cranes, compressors, pumps, equipment for blast furnaces, valves and fittings, pnsumatic tools, and control instruments and test- ing machines have not yet been scheduled or even requisitioned. Be- cause of tight supply conditions, or the long-run nature of the equip- ment involved, several months are required after placement of contracts for shipment of items such as these to begin. The result is that & serious obstacle has been placed in the way of achievement of promised goals in the case of these categories. The principal reason for holding back these requisitions has been concern over the possibility that industrial equipment stockpiles will get out of hand. As of July 1, stocks of industrial equipment are estimated to have totaled approximately 180,000 short tons shipping weight. New production offered in the Third Protocol is estimated at about 510,000 tons. Thus, during the twelve month period there should VICTORY be available for shipment to the USSR about 690,000 short tone of BUY VRITED STATES WAR BONDE - STAMPS -an Regraded Unclassified 283 industrial equipment. Soviet representatives have stated that they ex- pect liftings to average around 50,000 short tone per month, a rate which would not only prevent a further growth of stocks but which would bring stocks down to 100,000 short tone or less, that is, to a reason- ably satisfactory level. However, past performance has given cause to doubt that exports will take place at this rate. During the Second Pro- toool period the monthly average was less than 20,000 short tons ship- ping weight. In June and July, the average increased to slightly more than 30,000 short tons, and in August the total came to approximately 75,000 short tons. This great acceleration was brought about, however, solely through petroleum refinery equipment being granted priority over practically all other export items. Of a total of some 135,000 short tone of industrial equipment lifted in the June-August period, approxi- mately 75,000 tons consisted of petroleum refinery items. During July and August, stocks of other equipment in warehouses and depots alone increased by more than 50,000 short tons. While it seems likely that with the completion of the petroleum refinery program, shipment of other equipment will greatly increase, it is questionable whether the increase will be sufficient to prevent stocks from growing appreciably during the Third Protocol period. It 1e noteworthy that in the case of most other items included in the War Production Board Soviet Program the stocks situation now seeme to be reasonably well in hand. Through diversions and increased liftings, steel stocks have been cut to less than 400,000 short tone. Non-ferrous metale have been reduced to the minimum required for pipe lines, and, through control of allocations, chemicals are being held to a reasonable level. Cable stocks have increased to some extent, but it is anticipated that recently insugurated reductions in schedules will shortly result in production falling behind exports with a consequent lowering of stock- piles. Respectfully yours, /s/ Donald M. Nelson The President The White House Washington, D. C. Attachment Regraded Unclassified SECRET DATE of - EDIPANT - THE increased all or - ", uni Indents - Sales - - DELIVERY Data - = and he Item Unit jed. Mate Available Kale Available Percent of Metto of Balance to be Comments tarel Protect et Kill in U.S.A. et Mill to C.C.A. 3rd Proto Actual Professor Item Production Ang. 1, 19k3 - July 1, 1943 - Program Seliveries to - of Sept. 1, 1963 To. Program - 31. 1943 Ang. 31. 1943 Completed Prot.Sched. To Complete - of (Prot.Sched.-100) 3rd Protocol Sept. 1, 1943 Prod. Program METALS The fairt Protocol and has tem formally Increased from 35,750 S.T. to 39,180 1.2. la eMities, - effort Le being male . (Inpt - Patricated) S.T. 39,120 6,328 17,600 R 1St 26,570 to - by 2,2%0 s.r. the earthly called for by this remit- mail. Deliveries to fale 7,290 S.T. primary 1agst, 2,74 1.7. segundary lagal, and 2,576 I.T. fabricated almism, % Final & PLE Fishel 8.7. 3,600 150 soo 17 100 3,000 inpart chipments - to companate for July A total of 600 I.f. of nichal la . Find la Food Serve 1.7. mossi scrap has has affored, trail - R 50 - I (50 the V.I.S.B. - not gst inficated that is Sestres se Sale 11. The - nate available la depail - ordered for experiental persons, Contated sichal inliveries la date e Vichal is Steel and Other I.T. 2,100 consist of as 1.1. la stati; as 1,7. 185 NOT 17 100 Protects 1,993 is sictrow size and wirig: 66 1.7. La musro-mickal string - 10 I.f. la sictross squares, , 1,9. 4,000 335 6ra 17 100 3,330 Biostrulytie - figure refer to copper castalant is nrima - terials requiring regular with are € Comer, Bestralytie 1,7. (171,400) (6,709) being applied the De- (13,854) (11) (65) (107,532) liveries is date taclude 4,372 4, I.f. restatant is exper bace allays; 1,17% s.f. contalad is - pois and tubent 95 S.T. contained is 11- motal and 4,379 N.T. outstand is alre will products, SECRET - - - - M 284 Regraded Unclassified SECRET Successive Fundale laty - M Tree Tax yi Tale available Rade Percent of of to be toral et 9433 in C.B.A. at min Lr, C.S.A. 374 From attual Produced Item Production Add 1, 1943 - - July 1, 1943 - Program Deliverier to -- of Test. 1, 1943 To. Program 31, 4353 - 34, 1943 Completed Ts Complete -- of 3rd Protocol lest. 1, 1943 Fros, Program expes (Contimed) States of copper tase alleys have been rebuted to & reasonable write 7 3am Alleys 1,1, 107.520 5,993 5,134 # 4 N,M the level through Increased un- lage: production is therefore currently beling memberated. . Experies 1.7. 4,03P 336 672 17 100 3,30 , line S.T. 13,40 1,120 2,2%0 17 100 11,700 States have been referst to - 11 Cooser Soote and Tabes 1.7. 15,000 able working levels and protection ns 1,17% . ky 13,6% is currently being accularated. the U.S.B.R. has ast - quality production et the full rate called for ky the Protocal. E Special Aller S.T. 26) Only very small qualities of special , 11 . K Vires 258 me-ferrous aller vires have been requisitional be date, IF Wire 1.7. 538 11 107 20 in 431 The production program above is for 9% Cotal S.T. 80.5 21 to the first half of the Protocol period is 157 40.5 only: the ratto of actual Seliveries to the Protocol schedule - there- fare, been adjusted to taxe this Le in account. Total Retain (Resinting Them 6, 1.1. 189,779.5 15,124 77.700 15 .. Commer, Electrolytic) 162,294.5 FERIO-ALLOTS The U.S. has offered 4 resir 18 1" Perrontlicio 1.1. - o c 1.1. of farrosilican ant - 1.1. - - - if ferrochrose per anth, but by agreement this offer la to because 11 E.T. - o o effective only shes statio tall an - - - U.S.A.R. account an retured " two nonths' requirements. AL present, *tocks Total more than fine Total Ferra-allige . o e regiremente ent as lifting are 1 - - currently taking place, is couse- surve, no allocation von rate is lagat and - la planned for the Impliate future. SECRET - - being M 28 8 Regraded-Unclassified SECRET - - M - Item Out 11 Rate Available Rade valiable Percess of Ratio of Primate le be total Pretual at will La U.S.A. Commits et -111 la P.S.A. 3rd. Prat. Actual Product Item Probaction Aug. 1, 1943 vary 1, 19-3 - Progres Selivarias to Tax -- of lest. 1, 199 the Area n. 19/3 - 11, 1543 Comleted to Comiste -- of 3rd Protocol Sect., 1. 1943 Pred. Program ACLOT TTEXL 16 Policied Drill Rate » ne food S.T. % # 17 14 106 19 o Other Aller 1.7. is 9 11 7 142 you 17 ne feel Stast 1,7. 1,180 N33 916 R 118 3,9% 1° Tgel Risel 3 Alley n? 1,7, 672 47 115 17 100 557 e Alley DN 1.7. ST2 37 or 15 16 58% D Other Allego I.T. 1.30 yes 1,02% 30 17€ . Die Viscis S.T. 2,358 1,166 o e o o 1,480 19 Cold Fistehel lare 1.7. 10,0% EM la adjusting Third Protosal profis- 1,765 16 gt 9,133 Use programs ** shipping mossibili- ties, the C.B.B.A. selected . total R 13. Aller here - Billets 1.7. 67,569 1,905 of only 300,000 s.r. of steel - 7,056 10 99 60,523 ben and alleg) la be product - the account lasted of the 710,000 S.T. : Statement Start offered by the U.S. A detailed no- & Therte S.T. 2,872 30 30 1 5 vorking of the stest program to - 7,64 , Strie S.T. 3% 265 421 fleet this relection to currently 125 735 e 3are S.T. (es Immed 756 in 41 in where, Pending completion of 5 26 715 this, - - evaluation of - gross made toward falfilment of the - Wire riesi commitment La pensible. m & Bell Vire 1.7. 6,563 275 E 1 a gross against the all program 3 Strie 1,f. 6,119 è 97 113 la stows, however, in order is 1a- - e Other Alleg 1.7. & (113 Basees) 75 dinate La . general way the trand 191 . - (191 incose) of production. F Steel Alley The à 185 RL. S.T. 99% 0 0 0 o , L/S Chinger 1.7. 1,625 99º 793 1,5% If 104 0-8 Certin - Floe Siven S.T. o 2 1,079 5 , 1 1.1. Nail Bearting Tabee s.r. 5.376 (9 Income) o e 0 e 5,376 H Signature Steel Wire s.r. o 69 764 - - (MA Income) X Nertal Allay Vira 1,7, o 702 261 - - (26) Invoice) Total Aller Steel 1.7. 114,603 7,469 14,322 12 71 100,251 SECRET - - - - M 286 Regraded Unclassified SECRET - - - - Pro Item Thalk In Kate Available Hinte Available Percent of Rette of Palance to be Commente toest Protocol et =111 in 7.5.A. at La 7.3.A. Va Proto actual Protoced Item Protaction - L. 1943 - any 1, 1343 - Program Deliveries to - of Sent, 1, 1543 1.. Program Ave. 9, 1543 402. 3., 1943 Completed Prgt. Sched. To Complete en of 3rd. Protocol Sept. 1, 13%3 Prot. Program CARROT STREL ins-f Nalla, Accossories missing Other S.T. 100,770 11,837 105,049 11 S 375,221 Ballway Faterial 10 Couser Class Strts (Pressal) N.T. 11,120 o o o e 11,170 16 Pints Carbon Tool Stand and 1.7. 5,81 522 1,089 16 5. 5,715 . 198 Drill Red Sex alley Steal for 199 Plate Carbos Ballet Care 1.7. 11,200 1,970 4,567 41 Z 6,633 / Timelate 1.7. 60,000 5,776 6,417 11 is 53,383 Other Cerbon Steal s... 36,000 3,7% 10,157 K 165 25,03 Total Carbon Steel 1,7. 50.397 11,000 67,509 17 71 477.000 CHEMICALS V6 Phenel U.T. 12,000 750 750 5 35 11,750 18 Ethylene Giyesl 8.7. 3,360 o o o c 3,360 by Nethers3 S.T. 6,720 o o o o 6,770 M Protrosize 3.7. 6,720 e e o o 6,770 Deceise et excessive stacks, alle- GIAL Giycerine 1.7. 5,720 1,657 1,857 M us 4,863 nations of shemicals are still - lag hald to . states La all - except glycerine, causile soda and 6141 Casatic Soda 1,7. 40,320 9,668 10,179 * 153 29,051 ethy) aleobal. 1% Sthyl Alcohol 3,1, 107,520 16,114 23,0% 27 179 13,664 6185 Acetane 1.2. 6,720 5 657 10 59 5,063 6ta Other Chestrais s.r. 17,096 452 75% 6 35 11,150 Total Chestrels 1.7. 302,176 23,477 96,20 19 112 163,889 SECRET - - - Colop M 287 Regraded Unclassified SECRET Insured Passacia - Imp le Pro- Date East 5 Fair evailable Lade Available Percent of total Ratto of et 1111 la U.S.A. Talance La be at R:11 Le U.S.A. Item trd. Prot. Commete actual Protuction 4vg. 1, 1943 July 1, 1941- Produced Prime / Juliveries to Fragra - S1, 1363 Mid. 31, 1943 Comisted - of Sept. 1, 1943 Prat.Schei, % Complete - of (Pres,Sched.=100) 3rd Protocol Seel, 1, 1313 Prot. Program MARI ? 47 REMARKS CARLE 1. Marine Cakle D. 1,200 43 133 1: 65 1,067 Deliveries of et cable shows are still apainst - tracts carried over fre the Second Protocol period. Angust skipmente of minurise cable marked virtual completion of . Trans-Compter # Calls d. 600 119 115 20 project which - give under vap 118 MI is Foresber, 1942. Completion of use wajest, which case le more the $1,500,000 is value sal with involved rach naterial end squis- mest Sesides cable, Le experied to Total Marine and DL 1,800 162 252 facilitate greatly see of the 1% Cable e 1,54 Samptan Tra in the movement if products late the 0.0.3.1. M/D an RELATED CARER 7% Torglated Cable end Vin S.T. 21,516 1,7% (Conner Contact) 4,303 & TM 17,713 Power and related cable probaction 7% Somer Cable and Wire 9.7. 70,000 a 6 has been est considerably below the Conser Content) - - 19,994 Protocol rate because of enstoard stocks (1.0. approximately 60,000 1,7, gress weight " if Total Fover end Related S.T. 41,516 1,756 1,309 10 August 1.1 Sable 5) 17,707 HISCOLLATION PATERIALS use 1 The entire that filser countract 3 thert Filer S.T. 1,000 I - 53 18 covered by contracts carried over 112 N71 from the Second Prisol period. Prosect schedules call for the - sistion of these by December, = Partment Pener 1,7. 1,6% o : 0 e 1,680 RIA Condater Person 5,7, 146 o 6 o e By *emisitions have been submitted 146 to date for paper probate, 19 Cigarette Pener 1.7. 3% a = 0 9 13E The offer of "other materials is . mine offer and la la he used , Other Materials and Their . 5,000,000 - Propects - saly to cover regula. - - Orders to date total only . Trae- tion of #5,000,000 and deliveries against there have been slight - cause of load factors, SECRET - - - Expirap M 2 Regraded Unclassified SECRET - - Imp - he tes Date 3rd Nate Available Rate Available Percent of Bahin of taes? Protocal Inlance to be at la P.S.A. at Mill - P.S.A. Commate 3rd Prot. Actual Item Protection Protuced 1, 1963 - itly 1, 1963 - Program Deliveries le To. Program has 2. 1943 - of Seut, 1, 1993 400 31, 1943 Presisted Prot,Schei, To Complete - of 3rd Protocol Sent. 1, 1943 Prot. Program INDUSTRIAL AND RELATED EXPIRYENT 1% Consted Carbita Time and $ 3,000,000 182,042 51,917 is a Marks 2,544,00) Regulations for à Large part of the 199 Smill Delting Tools a 15,000,000 1,106,655 offered quantities of these Items 1,756,250 12 71 13,763,509 have not pet been forwarded se the 1.1.3. 150 Fermaring Tosts a 3,000,000 23,466 201,617 7 the 2,799,383 Eyes Abrosive Profects . 4,000,000 491,526 674,896 17 130 3,325,104 August machine teal delivery date a Rechine Tosls a 120,000,000 5,713,200 are based - Interplete reports 11,209,250 is 106 98,590,750 the fobricators and will probably be witject to - appreciable supvent revision when All information is reselved. Et Rectrie Pursices I 12,000,000 05,904 Regulations for . large part of 99°,760 . 47 11,007.200 the electric fersaces offered have and yes been forwarial La the V.P.A. or the $16,000,000 affered, the V.P.S. expected $11,000,000 to be used to cover . rail mill, It has been facidad by the O.L.L.A., - mar, that mistellaneous rolling still seutneent should be mistituted for the rail sill, to date to - 64a Valling mills and a 16,000,000 9,729 $9,645 per of eshetituta equipment has 1 6 15,910,355 lass forwarded to the V.P.I. Detil such . program has loss Curvarded and restruel from the standpolat of production fassibility, and will requisitions are claimat and - tracte production cashet legis. Progress spinst this offer, therefore, has boan, and will incre- willy costime to be, slow, Esa Process, forms, Family - 30,000,000 1,565,100 2,886,500 10 1 1 5 I - Related Instruct " 27,113,500 prolisinary reports and will problem by be encloyed to - approciable vard revision. SECRET - - - bing M 28 Regraded?Unclassifi SECRET - Possible - Culemps - Pro- Item Dait 3rd Mate Available Trie desidable Priment of loss) Matto of Protent at MILL in U.S.A. balance to the at HILL In U.S.A. 3rd Prot. Esemente Item Actual Productive ing. 1, 1963 - July 1, 1943 - Protuces The Program Deliveries 1d Mass Ang. n, 1943 - 3, 1943 as of lest. 1, 1945 To Comlete -- of 3rd Protocal Sest, 1, 1943 Prot. Program AND RELATED ("estionet) Requisitions against the Third Pro- 44 Wire Prestage Internet . 2,000,000 , local affer lass and pt less for- o o P 2,000,000 varded to the 123. It les less therefore, se gl - dactime under w/. is Tarlour Intestrial $ 170,000,000 13,300,362 54,19,113 411 requisitiess for Items in this 20 us 95,565.007 estagory have been claired and - tracts placed for - lies, he farties is considered antisfactory. 7a - Thirt Protossi requisitions 56 Control Inst. est Testing I 1,700,000 31,969 304,653 have less forverted to Like V.P.3. 14 106 1,395,997 4a date, A large part of the pre- one las, therefore, miss per been pites under - 69-70 Anti-Priction levings I 15,000,000 969,691 1,826,867 12 n 13,173,133 The Block Signal System offered to in Floor Signal System $ 14,591,500 15,376 28,016 covered by one order. Substantial e o 13,563,48 delivaries against this are not - sected to begin will awiy 1544. The entire power program offered Le now under requisities. Nost - tracts here Seen placed and major to Power I 15,000,000 6,577,950 14,078,974 19 Items have been worked into - 112 60,923,076 faction schedules, Orders carried over from the Second Protocol perial an expected to be completed La the next two - deliveries spinist seu orders are schedniel to begin 1. December, Total Infustrial - Related $ 131,299,500 94,376,666 69,135,649 16 $ 362,155,851 SECRET - Public - being M 2 Regraded 3 Unclassity SECRET - - 1 las Pra- Itm Unit 3rd Sale Available Rade Available Percent of Letio of tocal Protucal Valance 11 To at mill in U.S.A. Commate at RUI is U.S.A. let Prot. Item Actual Productice Protoral Ave. 1, 1943 - July 1. 1)43 - - Program to Yo, Prigram Ang. 31. 1943 or of Sept. 1, 1943 Aug. a. 1543 Completed Prit,Schet, To Complete as of (Prot.Schet.=100) 3rd Protocol Sept. 1. 1943 Prot. Program MISCULLATION LOWER ITMS 67A Abrasive árais 1.1. 4,000 170 967 > 141 3,033 6KA Grankite Electroles 1.7. 5,757 680 1,014 is 106 4,743 6ml Other Draphite Goods S.T. 1,691 19? Zip 1% 52 1,450 6ac Granhite Powder S.T. 1,120 185 316 28 165 RA 74 Tires, Tabes, Other Butter s.r. 40,370 1,5% 7,852 20 115 Protucts (Rubber Content) your 4 Retailic Cloth and Bereez , 1,000,000 25,463 Tery few Thirt Protocol requisitions 12,85 13 76 467,075 for metallie cloth and screen have M yet been So the V.P.B. The C.S. has offered to empoly - " $25,000,000 of Beargeacy Aquip- sent provided the Surist Generament certifies Lise need for particular e Endoment . 75,000,000 Items totaling this - and - wided specifications are moneptable to the V.P.S. lo far only . fee - misitions have been placed under this category. Fecause of load tm- tara, as deliveries Look place against there is August. Var Production Poard Foreign Division Texter est Analysis Branch 14, 1943 SECRET I I I I 3 291 Regraded Unclassi 292 MFG Celcutta This telegram must bE paraphresed before being Dated September 20, 1943 comminicated to snyone other than a Governmentel Rec'd 3:20 p.m. agency (BR) Secretary of State, Washington. PRIORITY. 1210, September 20, 3 p.m. FOR SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY FROM ADLER OnE. Arrived Calcutta September .18. Used short time in Bombay to get cross section of Indian unofficial opinion on monetory situation and tc study bullion market. Two. Sending summary general observations and conclusions in separate cable. Material col- lected En-route by pouch. Shall finish full report by the End of WEEK and also forward by pouch. Expect to return Chungking on 27th. Three. US Army medical Examination in Calcutto gives me cleen bill of health. PATTON MRM Regraded Unclassified 293 NOT TO BC RETRANSMITTED COPY NO. 13 BRITISH MOST SECRET U.S. SECRET OPTEL NO. 310 Information received up to ton A.M. 20th Soptember, 1. NAVAL Last night our Constal forces off the Dutch Const torpodood a large ship and sot two trawlers on fire. A notor gun boat was damaged and had two casualties. One of H.M. Frigatos was torpedood carly this norning while oscorting nn outward Convoy South West of Iceland (C). 2. MILITARY ITALY To 1600Z 18th. Fifth Army. The Salient on the Rivor Sele has now been consolidated and our advance is continuing North Eastwards. A slight advance has boon nade North of Salerno, lfuch enemy novement Northwards from Battipaglin suggests that ho is thinning out in the Southorn sector of the front. EighthArmy. Satisfactory progress continues our loading troops advancing Northwards on Potenza are noaring Corleto and firm contact has been established with the Fifth Army. Taranto area. Our troops are now in possession of Gioja whenco the onony withdrow his rearguard on 17th. Tatrols have reached Trani and Potonza. RUSSIA. See D.D.M.I.'s tologram to Ililitory Attacho. Russians are stendily approaching the Dniopor along the greater part of its longth and it is becoming increasingly likely that the Gormans will withdraw to the West bank botwoon Orsha and Zaporozho. This is first good defonce lino to which they can now retire and they will doubtless try to stand here. Further South they will probably try to hold the lino Zaporozho - Melitopol to protoct Crinoa although country hore unsuitable for defence. 3. AIR OPERATIONS WESTERN FRONT 19th. Snall scalo attncks by oscorted Hodium and Fightor bonbers were nade on airfields in Northorn France and low countries. Enony casualties in the air 6, o, 6 ours 3 Spitfiros. ITALY 17th/18th. Wellingtons dropped 119 tons on an airfield in Rône area. 1 missing. 84 Modium nnd Light bombors attacked Torro Annunziata and conmunications in the battle area. 18th. Heavy Bonbers dropped 125 tons on Vitorbo airfield and 123 Medium Bonbers attacked two other nirfiolds noar Rono. Mirfiolds noar Foggia wore attacked by Lightnings of which three are missing. Dodocanose 18th. Eneny aircraft nade three attacks on Kos Island destroying three Transport aircraft on the ground. Fivo JU 88 and two III. 109 were destroyed by Spitfiro of vi.ich two are missing. CORRECTION TO OPTEL 309 For "(5 corrupt groups)" in third line from botton of page road "dropped and 57". Regraded Unclassified