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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 66
April 23 - April 30, 1937
Regraded Uclassified
- A -
Book
Page
Agriculture
Farm Tenancy Bill:
Conference after Cabinet between FDR, HMJr, Wallace,
and Bell - 4/23/37
LXVI
9
a) Wallace suggests cutting his road appropriation
($30 million)
Altschul, Frank
See Stabilization
Anderson, Benjamin M.
See Chase National Bank
Appointments and Resignations
Wolfe, Joe:
Gibbons reports investigation is completed: cancelled
checks showing money deposited to personal account;
HMJr will recommend to FDR dismissal of Landy and
turning over to Department of Justice all remaining
material - 4/28/37
217
Memorandum for FDR
377
- B -
Budget
Garner tells FDR people on Hill are right behind him in
perfecting the budget - 4/23/37
27
FDR explains to HMJr that Housing Bill should function
as follows:
- 4/26/37
71
1) $1 million project: city should provide out of
its own budget $200,000; Federal Government will
give grant of 45%, or $360,000; Federal Government
will give 10% of relief labor, or $80,000;
balance of $360,000 should be raised on first
mortgage
2) FDR also tells HMJr he will either send a message
to Congress or letter to Harrison and Doughton
going into detail concerning the shortage of
$600 million in revenue; wants to emphasise that
Treasury estimate and method of estimating are
correct but that taxpayers find too many loopholes
Garner tells HMJr time may come when he will have to
resign if he does not get the cooperation of FDR on
spending; Garner tells HMJr, "Frankly, I am talking to
the President through you" - 4/27/37
88
Business Conditions
Daggit memorandum: "The Business and Price Situation" -
4/29/37
292
- C -
Book Page
Chase National Bank
Aldrich and Anderson (Benjamin M. - - Economist) going to
Europe; Anderson is seeing Hull and wishes to see HMJr
also before sailing - 4/28/37
LXVI
231
a) HMJr discusses interview with Aldrich; tells
Aldrich, Anderson "rubbed him wrong way" and he
(HMJr) thinks interview was most unfortunate - -
4/30/37
340
Haas memorandum on conference
372
- E -
England
See Great Britain
Engraving and Printing, Bureau of
HMJr asks that Major Berry be informed that his request
for the 15% differential for night workers has been
approved - 4/27/37
103
- F -
Famous Brands Ohio, Incorporated
See Investigations, Treasury Personnel
Farm Tenancy Bill
See Agriculture
Federal Trade Commission
HMJr's letter to FDR, which was referred to Federal Trade
Commission; Federal Trade Commission's reply to FDR;
FDR's proposed letter transmitting this reply to the
Speaker and to Senator Robinson; and the letter from
Federal Trade Commission approving this use of its
letter; together with Oliphant resumd of case - 4/23/37
17
HMJr tells Oliphant matter was cleared at Cabinet - 4/26/37
63
Financing, Government
Taylor memorandum on gross amounts of bills which banking
system can properly handle, the proper maturities,
maximum amount which should mature on quarterly dates,
et cetera - 4/28/37
260
- G -
Germany
White reports on conversation with Dr. Otto Jeidels, one of
the owners of the largest wholly privately-owned bank in
Germany, the Berliner Handelsgesellschaft - 4/29/37
306
Regraded Uclassified
- G - - (Continued)
Book Page
Government Bond Market
Eccles explains Federal Reserve action to HMJr when
"the market went off pretty badly" - 4/26/37
LXVI
49
a) See Burgess memorandum
46
Harrison tells HMJr he is going to have a series of talks
with principal banks to find out, if possible, what is
worrying them 4/27/37
91
HMJr aska Butterworth to ask American brokers in London
why people are selling American stocks - 4/27/37
104
a) Butterworth reply
133
HMJr asks Cochran also to make inquiries - 4/27/37
117
Knoke tells HMJr, Bolton reports whispering campaign
mostly in academic circles, the so-called "semi-
intelligentsia" - 4/27/37
124,129,131
Great Britsin
See also Stabilization
HMJr reports discussions that Cabinet is having concerning
talks Bingham and Davis are having with Chamberlain;
Garner thoroughly displeased and wants to know subject
of discussions - 4/29/37
280
HMJr-Arthur Krock conversation - - 4/29/37
284
a) Ferdinand Coons' erticle "Stocks Fall in London"
discussed
1) HMr suggests article: due to FDR's constant
warnings, investigation shows United States
banks have not made commodity loans, brokerage
houses are in good shape, et cetera
Butterworth reports that Clay (Economic Adviser to Bank of
England) has emphasized that decline in London Stock
Exchange prices has reached panic proportions - - 4/29/37..
324
- H -
Harper, Williem G. (Secret Service Operative in Charge)
See Investigations, Treasury Personnel
Housing
See Budget
- I -
Investigations, Treasury Personnel
Yellowley-Igoe case: See also Books LIX, LX, end LXIV
Treasury Department's reply to Igoe's charges transmitted
to Department of Justice - 4/27/37
139
Yellowley and his chief assistent, Levi 2. Baker, ordered
cited for contempt of court because of conversations
with a Federal Grand Jury foreman - 4/29/37
283
a) HMJr discusses with Oliphant - 4/29/37
286
- I - (Continued)
Book Page
Investigations, Treasury Personnel (Continued)
McReynolds memorandum to HMJr reporting further on
alleged participation of Collector of Internal Revenue
Carl E. Moore, Assistant Collector of Customs C. W.
Pollock, and Secret Service Operative in Charge
William G. Harper, of Cleveland, Ohio, in 8 liquor
sales agency - 4/27/37
LXVI
188
a) For Oliphent memorandum on above, 4/27/37,
see page 192
b) Oliphant reports at 9:30 meeting that nothing
has ever been turned over to charity and they
have taken at least three more checks - 4/28/37
222
Harper-Moore-Pollock case discussed by HMJr, Oliphant,
McReynolds, Manning, and Helvering - 4/28/37
234 -
Second conference; present: HMJr, Oliphent, Helvering,
and McReynolds - 4/28/37
245
a) HMJr reports on conference with Senator Bulkley
1) Bulkley seems stunned that nothing has been
done
- J -
Japan
American Embassy, London, reports unsatisfactory
conversations with Arakaws; thinks Arakawa has no
instructions to do anything specific - 4/23/37
32
Resume of financial and economic policy &8 explained in
a speech delivered by Japanese Minister of Finance at
the Conference of Clearing Houses held in Tokio on
4/20/37
65
Telegram from American Embassy, Tokio, quotes Minister
of Foreign Affairs 88 saying that a check should be
placed on trend toward extreme trade protection and
that Japan should participate in movement with Europe
and America; in spite of this, Ministry of Finance has
decided to retain in force after July 1st measures
adopted on January 8th for import exchange control and
to expand the scope of the measures in order gradually
to restrict imports into Japan of luxury goods and non-
essential materials - 4/23/37
96
American Embassy, Tokio, reports on foreign policies of
Sato, recently appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs -
4/28/37
249
Jeidels, Otto (one of the owners of the largest wholly
privately-owned bank in Germany, the Berliner
Handelsgesellschaft)
See Germany
- K -
Book Page
Krock, Arthur
HMJr decides to talk to Krock - 4/26/37
LXVI
57
See also Great Britain
" " Stabilization
- M -
Mellon, Andrew W.
Tax case discussed at Cabinet - 4/26/37
64
Methodists
HMJr tells 9:30 group of plan for shrine at Oglethorpe,
Georgia, where Wesley landed, where, in time, they
will have a national home and national cemetery for
preachers - 4/23/37
1
Moore, Carl E. (Collector of Internal Revenue - Cleveland, Ohio)
See Investigations, Treasury Personnel
- N -
Narcotics
Strike at Parke-Davis plant in Detroit reported at 9:30
meeting; $1 million worth of narcotics there;
HMJr tells McReynolds to watch situation very closely -
4/29/37
274
Article in North China Daily News, Shanghai, on Taybank
case - 4/30/37
380
- P -
Pollock, C. W. (Assistant Collector of Customs - Cleveland, Ohio)
See Investigations, Treasury Personnel
Public Health
Dispensary:
HMJr asks Miss Roche, McReynolds, and representative of
Secretary Ickes to investigate - 4/28/37
221
McReynolds reports on space available in Loans and
Currency Building; will cost very much to put it in
shape - 4/30/37
360
- R - -
Russia
See U.S.S.R.
- 6 -
Book Page
Smith Company, E. M.
Conference in Cummings' office; present: Cummings,
Assistant Attorney General Morris, Oliphant, and
Magill - 4/23/37
LXVI
14
a) Following conference, HMJr writes Cummings:
"In view of unusual character of these cases,
***** any consideration of settlement of
civil liabilities at present is untimely
and these criminal cases should be pressed
to trial *****; thereafter the collection
or settlement of the tax liability can be
taken up" - 4/27/37
138
Stabilization
See also Government Bond Market
American Embassy, London (Butterworth), reports further
exchange of information: Phillips reports complete
understanding of United States point of view; thinks
it desirable to keep matter in the back of one's mind
for it is not pressing at this time
33
B) HMJr also asks Cochran to make inquiries
117
French situation also discussed in above conversation;
Phillips thinks & crisis point may be approaching
33
a) Cochran resume of situation in France -
4/23/37 and 4/24/37
35,43
1) Cochran reports Minister of Finance
bitterly complained before Chember of
Finance Committee yesterday against
circulation of stories of imminent
peril in finance situation and suggests
that campaign is the work of political
enemies - 4/29/37
331
Frank Altschul writes HMJr at length concerning "hot money" -
4/26/37
83
Knoke reports to HMJr on conversation with de Jong, of
De Nederlandsche Bank, concerning change in Instructions
with regard to sale of guilders - 4/27/37
110
Four principal causes of present uneasiness on exchange,
security, and commodity markets in Europe reported by
Cochran - 4/28/37
200
1) American gold scare
2) French situation
3) Remarks by FDR on commodity prices
4) Taxation by Great Britsin and borrowing for rearmament
HMJr-Arthur Krock conversation - 4/29/37
284
a) Ferdinand Coons' article: "Stocks Fall in London"
discussed
1) HMJr suggests article: due to FDR's constent warnings,
investigation shows United States banks have not made
commodity loans, brokerage houses are in good shape,
et cetere
Butterworth reports that Clay (Economic Adviser to Bank of
England) has emphasized that decline in London Stock Exchange
prices has reached panie proportions - 4/29/37
324
- T- -
Book Page
Taxation
For FDR's request that HMJr investigate loopholes in
tax system, see page 72
Conference in HMJr's office; present: Magill, Oliphant,
Helvering, and McReynolds - 4/29/37
LXVI
315
a) Reorganization of Bureau of Internal Revenue
discussed so that number of places for review
of additional tax cases before reaching Board
of Tax Appeals may be lessened
- U -
U.S.S.R.
For resume of conferences on gold, 4/11/37-7/17/37,
see Book LXIV, page 79
Federal Reserve Bank of New York reports cable from
U.S.S.R. State Bank indicating desire to open an
account 4/28/37
213
a) HMJr discusses with Eccles, who hopes Board
will approve request this morning; HMJr asks
Eccles to take personal interest because he
fears & little resistance in New York -
4/29/37
266
Taylor reports on luncheon conversation he and
Lochhead had with Oumansky - 4/29/37
263
Haas digest of two articles on Russien foreign trade
written by A. Rosenhols, People's Commisser for
Foreign Trade - 4/30/37
368
United States Savings Bonds
McReynolds reports on conference with Comptroller
General to discuss Treasury's proposal to designate
depository banks as fiscal agents of the Treasury
to sell "baby bonds" - - 4/27/37
191
HMJr tells Sloan and Bryan he wants to "pep up" sale
between now and July lst - 4/29/37
289
- V -
Veto Messages
Oliphant calls HMJr's attention to necessity of accurate
records at White House and at Senate of exact time at
which bills are returned to the Senate with the veto
message of FDR 4/26/37
47
- W -
Book Page
Wallace, Henry A. (Secretary of Agriculture)
Doughton-HMJr conversation concerning Wallace speech
"Boom Feared Behind New Deal Fiscal Policy"
delivered at University of North Carolina -
4/29/37
LXVI 328
a) Doughton feels only HMJr should represent
Administration on fiscal and tax policies
Wolfe, Joe (Democratic National Committeeman, Minnesota)
See Appointments and Resignations
1
April 23, 1937
9:30 group meeting.
Present:
H. S. Klotz
Mr. Magill
Mr. Oliphant
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Taylor
Miss Roche
Mr. Haas
Dr. Viner
Mr. Upham
Mr. Lochhead
Mr. McReynolds
Mr. Bell
HM,Jr: Mac, there 1s a Mr. Jones coming in at ten
o'clock and I would like to have you here. He wants
to know how they can go about making a national park of
a place down at Sea Island where this British gentleman
landed in 1770. He's got a very interesting idea. You
will be interested. The secretary of this general was
the man who founded the Methodist Church. Who founded
the Methodist church?
Dr. Haas: Wesloy.
HM,Jr: There were two Wesley brothers. What was the
name of the place?
Mr. Magill: Oglethorpe.
HM,Jr: I thank you. They are trying to do two things.
One, 18 to get a national park where Wesley landed, at
Oglethorpe, and next to at they want to have a shrine for
the Methodists, combined, in 1940, and have a national
home and national cemetery for Methodist preachers. On
account of their moving around, they don't have a home.
Very interesting idea.
Dr. Haas: The cemetery part is all right.
HM.Jr: What he wants to know 18 does the National Park
Service buy land or does Georgia have to buy the land. Who
2
-2-
can he 800 and how can he go about to buy Fort Oglethorpe.
The Methodists will take care of their part.
Mr. Bell: Act of Congress on the books which authorizes
the National Park Service to establish historical points
and make national monuments or shrines.
HM.Jr: Personally I am tremendously impressed with this.
I think he has a marvelous idea.
Mr. McReynolds: All the Methodists would have to do
would be to furnish the money.
HM,Jr: They will take care of themselves, but the two
things will be next to each other. What he 18 interested
in 18 having Fort Oglethorps made a national park. The
other thing 1s next to it. They are not asking for any
money, only to have Fort Oglethorpe as & national park.
Mr. Bell: The general policy is that somebody furnishes
the ground.
HM,Jr: I want to put him in touch with the right party.
The Congressman from that district comes from Sea Island.
Personally I think it is a good idea -- the combining of
the two -- and put the whole business where Wesley first
preached. The oak 18 still there. Evidently I am more
religious than some of the people in the room. Of course
he was not a Methodist when he arrived here. That's the
point. But out of that came the Methodist Church.
Mr. Upham: Jake Viner has read a very scurrilous his-
tory of Wesley's life.
Dr. Viner: I don't think the book stressed the Georgia
part of his lift. It W8.8 his life in England that it
stressed.
Mr. Bell: I am in favor of it if it does not cost money --
that and the Jefferson Memorial.
HM,Jr: I thought we might take this out of Soil Conser-
vation!
Mr. Bell: I am in favor of that too.
Mr. Magill: Can't you put a three-strand barbed wire
3
-3-
fence around 1t?
HM,Jr: It only needs to be a three-strand wire fence.
I want you to write a letter to Henry Wallace and ask if
I get more if the wire 1s barbed? For an hour and a half
Henry Wallace explained it and Bell said he understood it
perfectly!
Mr. Bell: I had a lesson in agriculture.
HM,Jr: The trouble was the President was sleeping 80
he did not stop anybody from talking.
Mac? Anything?
Mr. McReynolds: No. Graves 18 back this morning.
Mr. Bell: I haven't anything.
HM,Jr: You and I, what do we do? Just sit tight until
we get a call from the White House?
Mr. Bell: I think that's the best thing? You mean on
the agricultural thing?
HM,Jr: Yes.
Mr. Bell: They have had '8 rule and they were holding
it up in Committee -- the Agricultural Bill. Does it come
up for vote today?
Mr. Oliphant: That's what they said.
Mr. Bell: I thought it was being held until the Speaker
heard something from the White House.
Mr. Oliphant: Has word gone to the Speaker to hold it?
HM,Jr: Yes. But no word from this shop. Please get that
straight. We haven't done a thing. We Just sit tight.
Mr. Bell: I don't know what else to do. We suggested
a way to get the money and no one agrees with us, 80 they
ought to suggest something.
HM.Jr: 0. X. Would you make a note, Dan. In view of
4
-4-
the fact that Mr. Wallace throws down his own statement
as the thing is written, how much cash he would draw on
the Treasury. You see? He threw down his own statement.
This 18 the only copy I have. You might give no one to
take to Cabinet.
Mr. Bell: You mean based on Budget figures?
HM,Jr: Yes.
Mr. Bell: Get figures from our standpoint.
HM,Jr: Yes. Ezekiel fixed up figures on how much they
are going to spend and I use the figures and they show that
on a cash withdrawal basis that Wallace gets one dollar out
of every six. Then yesterday he throws down his own figures.
Mr. Oliphant: Ezekiel wasn't there?
HM,Jr: Oh, no.
Mr. Upham: I have nothing.
HM,Jr: The figures are right. Jump said they were right.
Dr. Viner: Is that the Department or all agricultural
programs.
HM,Jr: Everything that goes through Wallace.
Dr. Viner: I would throw in any agricultural expenses --
Farm Credit -- all agricultural expenses.
HM,Jr: Supposing you have someone do that, Dan.
Dr. Viner: You ought to make a functional analysis.
Mr. Lochhead: Nothing.
Dr. Viner: Nothing.
HM,Jr: Eleven o'clock, Jake, will you come in?
Dr. Viner: What's this investigation they are making of
the Alcohol Tax Unit in Chicago. The papers are full of a
Grand Jury investigation.
Mr. Oliphant: We heard of that.
5
-5-
HM,Jr: Did that just reach you? What do you read? The
Chicago Herald, one month late?
Dr. Viner: Chicago Tribune.
McReynolds: Yesterday evening they had it, only the other
side of it. "April Grand Jury bawls out the United States
Attorney's Office andthrows bouquets at Alochol Tax."
HM,Jr: God! Has it taken us that long to get it across?
Did you (Viner) notice somebody just returned from Chicago?
Are you interested in it?
Dr. Viner: Yes.
HM.Jr: Send for Harold Graves if you are interested. It's
& long story, but he can give it to you.
Dr. Haas: Nothing.
HM,Jr: Will you (Haas) get in touch with Professor Merriam?
He's the fellow with National Resources and he wants us to put
on a show for them. You see, the President has these meetings
supposedly once a week, but he will not have one next week be-
cause he will be away, and what Merriam wants is to look at
the picture from the Treasury's angle. Talk to him and 600
just what he wants. Find out what he wants. He whispered
to me and said that the next time they would like me to read
a paper on it from the Treasury angle. I don't want to do
it unless it's absolutely top-notch, unless we have something
to say. Anything else, George?
Dr. Heas: No.
HM,Jr: (To Miss Roone) Denver still there?
Miss Roche: Very much, sir.
HM,Jr: After you have read the report on that hospital
I would like to talk to you about it.
Miss Roche: I would like to talk to you, too, Sir, but
I would want first to talk to some other people about it.
Mr. Taylor: Nothing.
6
-6-
Mr. Gaston: Magill, do you have any objection to my doing
what MacKellar wants?
Mr. Magill: No. Fine. Unless Mac objects.
Mr. Gaston: Might get Mac to write it.
The President has no press conference this morning.
HM,Jr: Why?
Mr. Gaston: On account of Forbes Morgan's funeral. What
other reason, I don't know.
HM,Jr: You notice I wasn't asked to be a pallbearer. Also,
my picture wasn't among those in the advertising book. You
know. I felt hurt!
Was there anything more about my nice side remarks about
the New York Times and their gold story? Krock didn't call
me up.
Mr. Gaston: No. No. Both Rodney Bean and Bob Thornburgh
acted kind of guilty and shamefaced about it. Rodney was told
to ask and then Rodney wished it off on to Bob Thornburgh.
HM,Jr: Lucky for me, after Walter Lippmann had been in to
600 me he went up to see Bell and Bell told him word for word
what I had told him without any preliminaries. But he walked
in just the same to Bell and said, What I want to know is do
they mean what they say?
Mr. Oliphant: I sent you the files and record of what we
did in connection with the so-called joker in the liquor bill.
It's just for your records.
HM,Jr: Not for action?
Mr. Oliphant: No. You remember we communicated with the
Commission and I will have before you go to Cabinet meeting
a one-page summary of the Federal Trade Commission's bill.
HM,Jr: May I say to you people that on account of the
work Bell and I have been doing, I an just three weeks behind
and if anybody wants any action on anything, don't send it to
me; handit personally to Mrs. Klotz because everything else
is Just piling up for a rainy day. But if anybody wants
7
-7-
anything done, you had better actually hand it to her be-
cause I All three weeks behind on my reading. I have never
been so badly off.
Mr. Magill: Nothing.
HM,Jr: You fellows are going over at 11 o'clock?
Mr. Magill: Yes.
HM,Jr: Who do you take with you?
Mr. Magill: Secret Service!
Mr. Oliphant: A couple of machine gune!
HM,Jr: I want to say, if all of you could keep your ears
open, because I think the Treasury 18 going to come in for
sabotage from now on, the like of which we have never had
before. Bell and I are always in a tough spot, but I think
we will be in an even more difficult spot because as the
President turns to us and says, If Wallace wants a Farm
Tenancy B111, find the money for him, and then Wallace during
the day, I give this 8.6 an example, knowing we found the money
but it has to come out of some existing appropriation, has a
press conference and says, 'Too bad, Economy 18 the order
80 we will Just give yp all the programs,' and then today
comes a long statement from Ed O'Neal attacking the thing.
It clicks Just like that (gestures).
Mr. Bell: There is going to be 8. conference here in ten
days, I understand.
HM,Jr: I think it's terrible, but, 8.8 I say, I think
Boll and I will come in for this kind of thing within the
Administration. It has been bad enough up to now, but I
don't think anything we have had will equal what we are going
to get in the next two or three months, and anything you
people pick up or hear -- but it will come from within the
Administration. Wallace will attack and sit back and say,
"We want to do everything" and then put various pressure
groups to work on us. I think it's terrible. Money is
available for Farm Tenancy, for ever-normal granary, for
Housing -- it's all there, but they have to give up something.
So if you hear anything that 1a helpful to Bell and me, I
wish you would get it. Bell, I think you and I are going
to have the worst time because it's going to come from within.
Herbert, you might get O'Neal's release for no. Just how
8
-8-
much of it the President is going to stand, I don't know.
But I just thought I would let you know. But I think it's
worth taking -- quite worth while.
Mr. Bell: By the way, Walter Lippmann sensed that. He
noticed a story in the paper on Wallace and he said, 'I think
unless the President stands behind the Treasury that you
won't be able to go through with this program. I think
it's unfair to put the Treasury on the spot that way and
alone.' He said, 'I can see it coming.'
000-000
9
April 23, 1937
After Cabinet the President asked to see Wallace,
Bell and me. At the end of & half hour discussing the
Farm Tenant Bill Wallace suggested that we cut his road
appropriation from 150 million dollars to 120 million
dollars - the 30 million dollars to go towards starting
the Farm Tenancy Bill. This is, of course, what I hoped
and prayed for, namely, that they would cut appropriations
to find the necessary money to start anything new with.
On Crop Insurance they decided that they would limit
it to wheat and that they would only need about three million
dollars for administrative purposes until August, 1938, and
Wallace said that he would consult with his people to see
whether he could find the three million.
The meeting started very tense but ended on a very
amicable basis. I am tremendously encouraged.
Regraded Uclassified
10
CONFERENCE AT THE WHITE HOUSE, APRIL 23rd.
The President discussed with Secretary Morgenthau, Secretary Wallace,
and myself, the question of funds to finance, during the fiscal year 1937,
the provisions of the Farm Tenancy Bill and the Crop Insurance Bill. He
asked Secretary Wallace as to whether or not he had been able to find any
funds in the Agriculture Department to finance the Farm Tenancy program.
The Secretary replied that they had discussed the matter at some length
with the heads of the various bureaus of the Department of Agriculture
concerned and they had come to the conclusion that the most that would be
needed for the fiscal year 1938 to start this program on an experimental
basis and maintain only a micleus of an organization would be about
$25,000,000. He said he did not think they should spend more than
$15,000,000 on Farm Tenancy and he hoped that the Department might get
by with as much 88 $5,000,000 for the fiscal year. Under the land-buying
program he thought that $5,000,000 would be sufficient but officials
in charge of that program would prefer to have $10,000,000.
As to the source of the funds, he thought that the best place would
be good roads. He asked me to explain the situation with respect to good
roads. I stated that the Secretary of Agriculture, prior to January 1,
1937, apportioned for the fiscal year 1938 about $200,000,000 among the
several States for Federal aid highways and grade crossings, and that
there will be a similar amount available for apportionment on January 1, 1938.
The Budget for 1938 contains an item of appropriation of $150,000,000 to
pay the States for Federal share of this program for the fiscal year 1938.
11
- 2 -
I explained that when the Secretary of Agriculture apportioned these funds
to the various states it becomes under the law an obligation of the
Federal Government and does not require a contract to construct the roads
in order to incur that obligation. I said that I felt some money could be
saved out of good roads by two methods (1) for the Appropriations Commit-
tee to reduce the $150,000,000 to $130,000,000 after which the Secretary
should instruct Mr. MacDonald to advise the States that while the author-
ization for roads had been apportioned among the several States there
was only available for expenditure during that fiscal year the sum of
$130,000,000 and therefore projects would not be approved in excess of
that sum, or (2) for the Secretary to instruct Mr. MacDonald to delay
the approving of projects 80 that some part of the program, to the extent
of $20,000,000 or $30,000,000 will be thrown over into the fiscal year
1939. Of the two, I prefer number (1) because Congress would be a party
to the changed program. In either case, I think there will be some
repercussions from the road organizations.
The President instructed me to confer with Mr. Jump and Mr. MacDonald
of the Agriculture Department to work out the necessary steps and then
confer with the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee so that the
reduction might be made in the estimate pending in Congress.
Secretary Morgenthau then brought up the question of the participation in
this program of Governor Myers' organization. He said that he felt that Gover-
nor Myers already had the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation a set up which
Regraded Uclassified
12
- 3 -
is prepared to assist in this land-buying program, particularly in
the appraisal end. He thought it advisable that the Secretary of
Agriculture not set up a duplicate organization but be required to
use the organization already in existence with, of course, full
authority in the Secretary of Agriculture to determine the type of
projects and the places where they should be located. Secretary
Wallace agreed that this had a great deal of merit and he would be
glad to look into that phase of the matter.
Secretary Wallace then brought up the Crop Insurance Bill which
has passed the Senate. He said that he thought the President ought
to get behind it or it would not get through as a great deal of
objection has developed in the House. The President asked the
Secretary how much money was involved and he replied that there was
$10,000,000 for administrative expenses and $100,000,000 for capital
stock but that he did not feel the full amount indicated would be
needed for the fiscal year 1938. I asked the Secretary if he did not
feel that the incurring of obligations under the Crop Insurance program
could be confined for the fiscal year to wheat and the liquidation of
any obligation so incurred could be confined to the fiscal year 1939
and that the administrative expenses might very well be kept within
& limit of not more than $3,000,000. He said that it was his thought
that the bill now pending in the House should eliminate every grain
except wheat and that the experiment should be confined to that grain,
and that the matter of the liquidation of the obligations under this
program would not be presented until about August 1938, which would be
Regraded Uclassified
13
- 4 -
in the fiscal year 1939, and that certainly it was his thought that
$3,000,000 for administrative expenses would be ample and he hoped
that they might turn out to be a great deal less than this sum. He
also said that he saw no reason why the funds required in 1938 for
this purpose should not also be taken out of roads.
DWB
Regraded Uclassified
14
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE April 23,1937
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Magill
Subject: Conference regarding the case of E. M. Smith, in
Attorney General Cummings' office, attended by
the Attorney General, Assistant Attorney General Morris,
Mr. Oliphant, and myself.
The Attorney General asked for our views regarding the case,
Mr. Oliphant told him that in our opinion it was a particularly
flagrant case, since there had not only been gross fraud by the tax-
payer, but the taxpayer had induced twenty-five or thirty clerks,
cashiers and the like to participate in his attempts to defraud the
Government. Mr. Oliphant gave the Attorney General the names of
several of these individuals with salaries ranging from $1,800. to
$2,500. a year, who were dependent in some way upon Mr. Smith and
who, at his request, reported dividends of around $15,000. to $25,000.
each, which did not belong to them. Mr. Oliphant said that WO re-
garded the case as one of the worst which we had ever seen and that
it was extremely important to the morale of the taxpayers on the
Pacific Coast that the criminal prosecution be actively carried through.
The Attorney General then made B. long statement to the effect that
the difference between the Treasury Department and the Department of
Justice was that his men had had greater experience with Judges and
juries and that in many cases in which his attorneys would agree with
the Treasury that the fraud was flagrant, nevertheless a conviction
had not been secured. He mentioned particularly the Mitchell case
and the "Dutch" Schultz case. Mr. Morris stated that there were a
number of legal questions regarding some aspects of the tax liability
80 that WG might not be able to recover the full tax. Further,
Mr. Smith would explain the fraud on the grounds that his wife, from
whom he was separated, was causing him a great deal of difficulty, and
he did not want her to know the actual extent of his fortune.
Mr. Oliphant reminded the Attorney General that Justice's success
in fraud cases ran about 70 percent and that this case WRB of 8. sort
where success is likely, owing to the fact that there would be many
witnesses who would testify to Smith's fraudulent schemes. He said
that this 08.86 offered the same opportunity to the Attorney General as
the Mellon case to instill new standards of uprightness in taxpayers.
Regraded Uclassified
15
The Secretary - 4/23/37 - 2
The Attorney General said that so far as the civil liability
was concerned, the taxpayer is now offering $1 million in cash,
$500,000. payable at the end of the year, with the understanding
that he will waive the statute of limitations and permit the case
to be tried before the Board of Tax Appeals to determine his exact
liability. The understanding will be, further, that no part of the
$11 millions is to be returned even if the Board finds his liability
is loss than that amount. The Attorney General said that he thought
this offer VALS about all that could be expected, since the tax-
payer's total assets were around $4 millions. Be could hardly be
expected to offer the full amount of the tax, penalties and interest,
since to do so would undoubtedly ruin him and cause him to lose con-
trol of his business. The Attorney General felt that the taxpayer
would agree to enter a plea of "guilty" to one of the counts of
the indictment, and that it would then be up to the Judge to de-
termine the sentence. The Attorney General did not seen disposed to
undertake that his attorneys would make a vigorous attempt to seoure
a substantial jail sentence.
I pointed out to the Attorney General that although WG had lost
the Mitchell case, the not effect has been to put a stop to husband
and wife transactions for tax purposes, hence our loss W&S really a
great victory. Furthermore, whether we win or lose the Mellon case,
no one is apt again to create an educational trust out of pictures
hanging on the walls of his own house, Both Mr. Oliphant and I com-
plimented the Attorney General upon his persistence in prosecuting
the Mellon case, and told him that the case had been extremely help-
ful to the Treasury.
The Attorney General finally suggested at the end of a con-
ference of 11 hours, that we take a little more time to think over
the offer. Mr. Morris stated that the oriminal case was now set
for trial in the June term. The Attorney General thought that WB
ought to make up our minds regarding the offer in compromise at an
early date. He suggested in conclusion that the very fact that the
offer had been made would make it difficult for us to succeed in the
criminal case.
After this conference I saw Robert H. Jackson. He told me in
confidence that while he was head of the Tax Division he hAd strongly
recommended to the Attorney General that the criminal case be actively
prosecuted. He said he had told the Attorney General that the
$13 millions offer was ridiculous since it involved us in the neces-
sity of trying out the fraud case. So far as the entry of the plea
of guilty was concerned, he said he felt no doubt that & suspended
sentence would be given. He added that Mr. Bruce Kramer had been
very angry at him and at you for refusing to accept the offers in
Regraded Uclassified
16
The Secretary - 4/23/37 - 3
compromise and that he (Jackson) had been told that his transfer
to the Anti-trust Division might be connected with his
attitude in this matter.
Rm
Regraded Uclassified
17:
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE April 23, 1937
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Herman Oliphant
There are attached your letter to the President, which he
referred to the Federal Trade Commission, the Federal Trade
Commission's reply to him, his proposed letter transmitting
this reply to the Speaker and to Senator Robinson, and the
letter from the Federal Trade Commission approving this use of
its letter.
This, briefly, is the situation: It now violates Federal
law for a manufacturer to bind retailers to keep up the price
of his product. This Tydings-Miller Bill would make this law-
ful in interstate commerce involving States which have legal-
ized contracts for resale price maintenance.
This change in the Federal law would facilitate a rise in
the price of many commodities and thus raise the cost of living.
If they say this Bill is aimed to prevent a retailer from
selling something below cost to get customers into his store,
the answer is that that is a different unfair method of compe-
tition, namely, predatory price study. We should prohibit it,
but not legalize resale price maintenance.
The five cases in the Federal Trade Commission against the
liquor interests charged them with violating Federal law by
binding retailers with contracts to maintain their monopoly
prices. If the Tydings-Miller Bill passes, these cases fall,
and you can expect a rise in the price of liquor which will
accentuate the "bootlegging" problem.
Attachments
Uus Kerly:
4-27-27
Brought this subject at Cabinet
President agreed to sign
4 two attached letters HmL
Regraded Uclassified
18
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON
AYRES
April 23, 1937.
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
In response to your inquiry about
the letter of April 14 addressed to the President
by myself as Chairman of the Federal Trade
Commission, and discussing the probable effect of
the Tydings-Miller bill, you are advised that the
letter was for the use of the President in any
way he may wish.
Very truly yours,
W. 6 apes
W. A. Ayres,
Chairman.
Regraded Iclassified
19
Sirt
My attention was called to S. 100, which would render
legal certain contracts for the maintenance of resale prices
now illegal under Federal law. I requested the Chairmen of the
Federal Trade Commission to give ne a recommendation on this Bill,
and I attach his reply on behalf of the Commission.
The present haserd of undue advances in prices, with a
resultant rise in the cost of living, makes it most untimely to
legalise any competitive or marketing practice calculated to
facilitate increases in the cost of numerous and importent articles
which American householders, and consumers generally, buy. You will
note that the Federal Trade Commission has made no study of the
effect of resale price maintenance on consumers since 1929, but the
Commission does mention a reputable body of informed opinion to
the effect that such control of resale prices would be hermful
to the consuming public. Indeed, the Commission says: "There is
great probability that manufacturers and dealers may abuse the
power to arbitrarily fix resale prices by unduly increasing prices,
resulting in bitter resentment on the part of the consuming public,
especially in this period of rising prices."
Since we are in a period of rising prices, this 8111 should
not, in ay judgment, receive the consideration of the Congress until
the whole matter can be more fully explored. Conceivably, the Con-
gress might approve having the Commission bring down to date the
study which it made eight years ngo by examining the economic effects
of resale price maintenance under the novel and rapidly changing
conditions now attending business in this country.
Faithfully yours,
7AR
Honorable Joe T. Robinson
United States Senate
Enclosure
HOrboie Typed 4/22/37
Regraded Uclassified
20
Sira
My attention was called to H.R. 1611, which would render
legal certain contracts for the asintenance of resale prices now
illegal under Federal lav. I requested the Chairman of the Federal
Trade Commission to give no a recommendation on this Bill,
and I attach his reply ou behalf of the Commission.
The present hazard of undue advanced in prices, with a
resultant rise in the cost of living, makes it most untimely to
logalize any competitive or marketing practice calculated to
fecilitate increases in the cost of numerous end important articles
which American householders, and consumers generally, buy. You will
note that the Federal Trade Commission has made no study of the
effect of resale price maintenance on consumers since 1929, but the
Commission does mention a reputable body of informed opinion to the
effect that such control of resale prices would be hermful to the
consuring public. Indeed, the Commission sayss "There is great
probability that munufacturers and dealers may abuse the power to
arbitrarily fix resale prices by unduly increasing prices, result-
108 in bitter resentment on the part of the consuming public, espe-
cially in this period of rising prices."
Since we are in 6 period of rising prices, this Bill should
not, in my judgment, receive the consideration of the Congress until
the whole matter oan be more fully explored. Conceivably, the Con-
gress might approve having the Commission bring down to date the
study which it made eight years age by examining the economic effects
of resale price maintenance under the novel and rapidly changing
conditions now attending business in this country.
Faithfully yours,
7LR
The Speaker,
House of Representatives.
Enclosure.
Regraded Uclassified
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON
April 14, 1937
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. President:
Receipt 1s hereby acknowledred of your memorandum
of April 7, 1937, transmitting Secretary Morgenthau's
letter of April 6, 1937, and requesting a recommendation
on the Tydings-Miller Bill. The Commission has not
heretofore expressed an opinion as to the merits of
this bill for the reason that it deemed it to be a
matter of legislative policy for determination by
yourself and the Congress.
The Tydings-Miller B111 would amend the anti-
trust laws so as to legalize contracts and agreements
fixing minimum resale prices for goods sold in
interstate commerce and resold within the jurisdiction
of any state where such contracts or agreements as
to intrastate commerce have been legalized. / number
of states now have such statutes.
Many of these state laws and the Tydings-Miller
Bill are directly and irreconcilably in conflict with
the present Federal law on resale price maintenance.
Public policy since the passage of the Sherman Anti-
Trust Act in 1890 has been opposed to resale price
maintenance. Numerous court decrees have been entered
under the Sherman Act and numerous orders to cease and
desist have been issued by this Commission and affirmed
by the courts in conformity with the public policy
expressed in the Sherman Act end in the Federal Trade
Commission Act. Enactment of the Tydings-Miller Bill
would in its practical effect void such decrees and
orders and constitute a reversal of what has been
public policy for many years.
The President
- 2 -
April 14, 1937
Since state laws, legalizing resale price
maintenance, differ in the various states, and since,
under the proposed Federal legislation, Federal
exemption from the anti-trust laws would be
conditioned upon the legality of similar contracts
in intrastate transactions, the Tydings-Miller Bill
would modify the anti-trust laws in differing degrees
in different states. Thus, not only would it leave
the Federal anti-trust laws in full force and effect
as to those states which do not legalize resale price
maintenance, but there would be divergent policies as
to those states which legalize resale price maintenance,
because of the differing terms of the different
statutes in the respective states. Thus, the Federal
Government would be under the necessity of attempting
to enforce divergent regulatory policies toward
shipments made by the same manufacturer to dealers
located in different states, because of the differ-
ences in the respective state statutes.
A peculiar feature of many of the state laws
which would, under EL recent decision of the Supreme
Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Sutherland
(57 S. Ct. 147), thus be made binding upon interstate
commerce 1a that they require wholesalers and retailers
to conform to the provisions of private resale price
maintenance contracts to which they are not parties.
Thus, a private contract, the provisions of which are
determined without public hearing and apart from any
public supervision 8.3 to reasonableness, is made
binding upon all dealers and the consuming public.
With respect to the economic phase of this matter,
the Commission has not made a recent study of resale
price maintenance. However, in 1929, the Commission
did undertake such a study, reporting to the Congress
thereon in 1931 (H.R. 546, 70th Congress, 2nd Session).
In that report the Commission said:
"The position taken by both proponents and
opponents of resale price maintenance are
based on the belief that such maintenance
Uclassified
The President
April 14, 1937
of prices will limit retail competition
...
The real crux of the question, therefore, is
whether injury done to the consumers'
interests through the elimination of dealer
competition with respect to price-maintained
articles would be greater then the damage
now alleged to be done to the interests of
manufacturers and distributors of trade-
marked, nationally advertised brands when
they are used 88 leaders. Neither injury
is capable of exact measurement, but, in the
opinion of the Commission, the potential
damage to consumers through price fixing
would be much greater than any existing
damage to producers through this form of
price cutting."
The general opposition of economists and consumers
to this type of legislation is noteworthy. A question-
naire sent to members of the American Economic
Association some years ago, by Carroll W. Doten,
Professor at the wassachusetts Institute of Technology,
resulted in a vote of 401 to 87 that the manufacturer
should not have the legal right to control the retail
prices of his products.
There is great probability that manufacturers
and dealers may abuse the power to arbitrarily fix
resale prices by unduly increasing prices, resulting
in bitter resentment on the part of the consuming
public, especially in this period of rising prices.
Replying to your inquiry as to the five complaints
issued against certain distillers by this Commission,
referred to by Secretary Morgenthau, there are
enclosed herewith, for your information, copies of
those complaints. In substance, these dealers are
charged with mainteining uniform minimum resale prices
in interstate commerce and with enforcing agreements
with respect thereto by unlawful methods, such as
The President
- 4 -
April 14, 1937
the use of blacklists, boycott, threats of boycott,
and other coercive methods incidental to the enforce-
ment of their resale price policies.
With great respect, I am
Very truly yours,
W.a.ayer W. A. Ayres, agree
Chairman.
Regraded I Iclassified
THE WHITE HOUSE
277
WASHINGTON
April 7, 1937.
MEMORANDUM FOR
HON. W. A. AYRES
6106
Would you give me a
recommendation on this Tydings-
Miller Bill to which the Secretary
of the Treasury refers?
F.D.R.
761
Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury,
4/6/37 to the President. States the live
FARES Gending w/Pore the Federal Trade Com-
mission against DONE of the largeat distilling
compenter which he muntioned to President In-
1377
volve Lidr monopolistle practice of fixing
retail prinos in violation of Federal Inw
" winst rosels price maintenance. States If
Tydinga-Miller Bill, reported out in both
Houses, to to be unacted, the liquor Industry
should Do excepted.
26
SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
C
Washington
o
?
I
April e, 1957.
By dear Mr. Presidents
The five cases pending before the Federal Trade
Commission against some of the largest distilling companies
which I sentioned to you invoive their monopolistic
practice of fixing retail prices in violation of Federal
law against resale price maintenance.
The Tydings-Miller Bill has been reported out in
both Houses. It would legalise the monopolistic practices
on which these Federal Trade Commission cases rest.
This Bill applies to all commodities and would
tend to raise prices generally, particularly in the lines
of business where monopolistic conditions prevail. It
should not pass at all, but, if it is to be enacted,
the liquor industry should be excepted because a rise in
prices in that industry would have the additional social
disadvantage of accentuating the problem of "bottlegging."
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
The President
The White House.
Regraded Uclassified
27
April 23, 1937.
11:34 a.m.
H.M.Jr: Hello.
Operator: Vice-President.
H.M.Jr: Hello
Garner:
Hello Henry.
H.M.Jr:
This is your old friend, "Money-Bags".
G:
Yes, that's all right - I'm for you; I'm doing my
damnest to protect you.
H.M.Jr:
Well I just wanted before I went to Cabinet I wanted
to kind of - how things - how are they feeling up
there.
G:
Well by God there all for this reduction now I'll
tell you that.
H.M.Jr:
They are.
G:
Bet your damn life they're all for Secretary of the
Treasury'
H.M.Jr:
Well that's - ah
G:
That's - that's fine ain't it?
H.M.Jr:
Couldn't be better.
G:
Well now I'm just going to tell you. You've been up
there about three years haven't you?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
G:
And by God this is the first time that you've ever said
you wanted anything done.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
G:
Well now - ah - nobody's to blame but you fellows if
the thing's overloaded but we're ready to help now
and help like hell unless you
down and say
no - no - no - no - no
Regraded Uclassified
28
- 2 -
H.M.Jr: Well we'll go the limit. Of course, the way - the
trouble right this week is that the newspapers don't
believe we mean what we're saying.
G:
I know they don't and that's all right they may not -
we may not be able to do it. I don't know what the
boss is going to say; I believe he's going to balk
on this 10 percent.
H.M.Jr:
On the what?
G:
Is he going to balk?
H.M.Jr:
No.
G:
When he finds out what it is by God he's going to say,
"Well wait a minute".
H.M.Jr:
Well you know this reminds me of the way - when the
world war and they wouldn't believe that the American
soldiers were coming because they kept telling them
each month they were coming next month,
G:
Yes, I know - well we've been doing that you know the
last two years.
H.M.Jr:
And if there was some little bill that he could veto.
G:
Yes by God with a ringing message.
H.M.Jr:
I mean some little bill for a million dollars or
something
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
and say at least
G:
I just hope to God he can; I'll do everything I can
to persuade him to do it and fix it on the hill.
H.M.Jr:
If you could think of some little bill that didn't
mean much and we could get him to veto it and then
G:
Well you find out one of them and by God I'll do it.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Regraded Uclassified
29
- 3 -
G:
All right, I'll see you there at 2 o'clock.
H.M.Jr: Thank you.
G:
All right.
Regraded Uclassified
30
April 23, 1937.
11:35 a.m.
Bell:
Hello
H.M.Jr:
Dan
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
If we could only find some bill that comes down
for 500 thousand or a million dollars that - and
get the President to veto it soon, see?
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And then give a good stiff message and let it - it
would need something like that for these people to
believe that he's going to do it, see?
B:
Ah-ha.
H.M.Jr:
Now these bills that come down have to go across
your desk, don't they?
B:
Oh yes - oh yes.
H.M.Jr:
Well now see if you can't find some bill that we can
get them to veto that carries an appropriation
B:
Well I've been looking for some but there's been -
hasn't been any bills going through that amount to
anything. There's a lot of private claims and things
like that - about all.
H.M.Jr:
No but something that he could sound off on, you see?
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Make
a
B:
Ah -
H.M.Jr:
- a noble speech about, see?
B:
What I'd like to see him veto is some appropriation
bill.
H.M.Jr:
That's what I mean.
Regraded Uclassified
31
- 2 -
B:
That's never been done - I mean big one
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
B:
take the Interior Department bill which aT they
are now talking about increasing that Vocation Education
from three to fourteen which is eleven million dollars
increase and if they do it - just hop right on it and
veto the thing; he's opposed to it; he said he was at
the time and that - ah - and then call attention to the
fact that it's a shame that he has to veto a whole
appropriation bill with 500 items in it to get at one
and then ask for a Constitutional Amendment bfore he
can veto individual items. One at a time, see?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, well let's get something like that, see?
B:
Yes. Well I think that if he could take a whole
appropriation bill which is something - ah - well I
don't know - remember when one was ever vetoed.
H.M.Jr:
Well we've got to do something to make these people
believe.
B:
That's right. I know they don't believe it.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
And I talked about doing a little work here on some
letters
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
to go out to - about this next June and impress
upon these people that the President did mean to save
money in the next three months.
H.M.Jr:
Yes but we need - what we need is a very very strong
veto message.
B:
That's right - that's right. Well I've been looking
for something but there hasn't anything come along
that's worth much.
H.M.Jr:
Well - ah - when you get it give me - come running in.
B:
Allright, fine, I will.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
B:
Goodbye.
32
LMS
GRAY
London
Dated April 23, 1937
Rec'd 2:45 p. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington,
241, April 23, 6 P. m.
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.
for TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH.
At the weekly meeting at the British Treasury today,
I conveyed the information which was given me in the tele-
phone conversation of April 19th on Japanese financial
approaches in Washington, and Phillips stated in reply that
he had seen Arakawa since the latter's conversation with
Waley and that he had found him very vague. Arakawa had
made no mention of the tripartite monetary agreement and
asked a number of questions and had given no information
in return. Philipps said he could only conclude that
Arakawa had no instructions to do anything specific and
"728 merely "nosing around for information on the price of
gold".
I also mentioned that I had heard that the views which
he had been good to make known in last Friday's meeting
had been read with interest in Washington, particularly
his offer to exchange at any time views on the general
situation
33
LMS 2-No. 241, April 23, 6 P. m., from London.
situation created by the increase in the quantity and value
of gold. The American Treasury was, of course, also willing
to exchange views at any time; however, the important ques-
tion of ways and means immediately arose since the related
problems were so complicated that they did not lend them-
selves to cabled instructions. Philipps said that he under-
stood that point of view; that it was desirable to keep the
matter in the back of one's mind for it was not pressing -
there was no need of precipitate action.
He then changed the conversation by saying that the
French situation seemed to have become more complicated
since our last talk and was perhaps approaching a crisis
point. This time it was not due to a treasury deficiency
for the French Treasury had enough money with which to carry
on for the time being but it WD.S a currency matter, which
WC.8 to say a political matter. His feeling for which he
emphasized he had no factual basis was that "once again
we will be approached by the French for advice". Asked,
whether there was anything in the monetary realm which Blum
could do Phillips said that he did not believe there was
any definitive action he could take and therefore he had no
advice to offer them should they come for advice. At bottom
the trouble seemed to be one of political and social in
discipline;
34
LMS 3-No. 241, April 23, 6 P. m., from London
discipline; for example in some extraordinary way it has
become C. highly important political question involving
whether the Blum Government WS.S to reverse its policy and
provide a public works program merely to please the 30,000
workmen who were now reluctantly and intermittently putting
up the exhibition buildings.
BINGHAM
TTC
Page 3
35
PARTIAL PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris
DATE: April 23, 4 p.m.
NO. 523
FROM COOHRAN
Paris exchange market much quieter today. French
control had up to 3.30 p.m. intervened only slightly
selling sterling between 111.29 and 15. Lazard is sell-
ing dollars importantly against sterling or francs (then
converting francs into sterling). Dollars were fairly
well bid until New York opened seller. Rentes up; 4 1/2
1937 bonds unchanged; shares about even.
I made a call this forenoon at the Bank of France.
The French control had not intervened in the market up
until 11:30 but it was still too early to make any fore-
casts as to market trends. I was told most confidentially
by Cariguel that since I last called on April 16th (refer
to my telegram No. 491 of April 17, 9 a.m.) the control had
been steadily losing gold and had difficulty between
two credit days. Cariguel let me know that the net balance
of gold and foreign exchange in the control fund had
declined from approximately (end Section one)
36
PARAPHASE OF SECTION TWO. No. 523 from Paris April 23.
4,500,000,000 francs to 3,650,000,000 francs.
I questioned Cariguel as to whether during the past
few days any other means had been discussed of raising
money for the Government to supplement the Treasury's funds
which still remain from the new loan. The balance of
the Treasury, incidentally, (as I mentioned in my telegram
of yesterday) with the Bank of France has declined as
of the last statement. This confirms the prediction that
this account would not be increased through the receipt of
late payments on subscriptions to the loan, but the fund
was rather drawn upon. Reference was made by Cariguel to
the City of Paris loan - see my telegram No. 482 of April 14,
6 p.m. - the proceeds of which will undoubtedly be used
by the Treasury. Government or semiofficial loans which
are issued on the local market usually result in a flood
of applications being received by the Bank of France. How-
ever during the first few days that the City of Paris issue
was open, at the Bank of France not a single bond was sold.
I was informed by Cariguel that there 18 now some dis-
cussion of the possibility of issuing 2,000,000,000 france
of bonds of the Caissides Pensions, offering the same terms
as the last loan. Taking into consideration the present
(omission) market, he doubts whether such an issue would
be feasible.
Cariguel could not confirm the rumor that recently
an attempt to borrow in the Netherlands had been made by
the Treasury. END SECTION TWO.
BULLITT.
37
PARAPHRASE OF SECTION 3. No. 523 from Paris April 23
The recent weakness of the franc Cariguel attributes
to fears over the political and social structure in France.
This consisted of a flight from the franc, he said, and not
a filling of commercial demands for currencies of other
countries. During the last speculative attack on the frano,
he said, the situation was not favorable as long and short
term money rates are high on the French market, with prac-
tically no foreign funds here and bank deposits are low.
He said that nevertheless, if big holders of capital see
fit to leave the franc irrespective of money rates, this
currency can be put under such pressure that the foreign
exchange resources and gold of the French control might
not last long. Presumably the control had already started
drawing out gold from the Bank of France.
Cariguel said that, with reference to the situation
in the Netherlands, President Trip of the Netherlands Bank
had recently released from the Dutch stabilization fund
a considerable amount of gold.
END SECTION THREE.
BULLITT.
EA:LWW
38
PARAPHRASE OF SECTIONS FOUR AND FIVE, No. 523, April 23
from Paris.
He had given this gold to the Netherlands Bank of the Indies
against florine, to reconstitute the gold resources of that
Bank.
At noon today I had a visit from Maurice Frere, the
representative of Prime Minister Van Zeeland, charged with
preliminary international economic investigations. I have
known Frere several years, and he talked rather frankly
about his mission. The job keenly interests Frere, although
he realizes that nothing could be accomplished very quickly
and that there are many obstacles to be overcome and much
groundwork to do. Frere said he saw no early opportunity
to hold a world conference on these matters. He has no
preconceived plans about it, but is obtaining the views
of the appropriate officials in the various countries and
he then hopes to see if they can develop some common form-
ula.
Frere had seen Spinasse, the French Minister of National
Economy, before he called on me this morning. He found that
Spinasse, as well as Auriol and other officials of the Blum
Government, were interested in the undertaking of Van Zee-
land, and anxious to do what they could to assist it. How-
ever, he understands that the French Government 18 not in
a position to take the initiative but will await the results
of the explorations which Frere is making to see whether
then can fit into a general plan. If some broad interna-
tional program 1s achieved, Frere thought there would be
Regraded Uclassified
39
- 2 -
an especial opportunity for replacing quotas by customs
tariffs in France. The German situation, he knows, would
present difficulties in the achievement of such a plan.
Any big program, he believes, must envisage a devaluation
and stabilization of the Reichsmark, for which outside
financial assistance would have to be given to Germany.
France, he believed, would be unwilling to extend such
assistance to Germany without some political guarantee
from her. When Spinasse and other French officials urgently
requested Frere's views as to the French situation, he
said he expressed them frankly. The Blum Government, he
told them, should at once take definite and forceful action
to quiet the labor situation, and demand the Extreme Left's
full cooperation. Frere asked them why they were letting
such a situation develop for some other government to take
in hand. If a strong policy of public order and relaxation
of the forty-hour week, etc., would be followed by the
Blum Government, Frere said he thought it could win suffic-
ient confidence on the part of the capitalist classes to
bring about a repatriation of funds and a business paikup
If pickup which might
END SECTIONS FOUR AND FIVE.
BULLITT.
EA:LWW
40
SECTION SIX
save the situation. Nevertheless, he realizes that
the time for such action is near to passing and that 1f
a crisis is to be avoided, something must be done soon.
He would regret seeing a government which in most matters
meets the current policical thought in France fall on a
financial difficulty. He is convinced that his banking
friends in Paris, although skeptical of the present Gov-
ernment, would help the Government through a crisis rather
than see it fall in circumstances where the banks might
conceivably be blamed therefor.
Frere is returning to Brussels tonight and will proceed
to Berlin on Monday where he has been urged to stay a week
by Schacht. A favorable impression was made by Schacht
in Brussels where Frere attended the meetings between Van
Zeeland and Schacht. After leaving Berlin Frere will go
to Rome but will not stop off in Basel where he has
attended regularly the B.I.S. annual meetings heretofore
as a representative of the Austrian National Bank. He
considers that it is highly important that he obtain the
support of the Government of Italy to the present under-
taking and that the dictators find no reason to take
offense at Van Zeeland's procedure and no basis for
41
PARAPHRASE OF SECTION SEVEN. No. 523 of April 23 from Paris.
terming this plan a "democratic" maneuver. It is Frere's
plan to see the appropriate officials as soon as he can.
He does not want to expose himself to the general question-
ing which he might experience if he stopped over at Basel,
where at the annual meeting 80 many central banks will be
represented.
I questioned Frere as to whether on Van Zeeland's
trip to the United States he would be with him. His reply
was that van Zeeland's trip to Washington is still considered
as a purely personal call, and that 28 long as this is the
situation, he does not want to give evidence of actual
investigation or negotiation through taking his technical
assistant with him.
I gave to Frere a document on the American Government
1938 budget, and two publications of the Treasury Depart-
ment on capital movements. As yet Frere has not got together
any sort of a staff, but he said he might call upon me
later for further documentation with respect to our country.
Material on France had been given him by Rist.
END MESSAGE.
BULLITT.
EA:LWW
Regraded Uclassified
42
MM
GRAY
BOMBAY
Dated April 24, 1937
Rec'd. 6am.
Secretary of State
Washington, D.C.
April 24, llam.
FOR THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY.
Silver market continued quiet durint the WEEK;
ready opened at rupees 53-5 per hundred tolas and after
touching 53-10 closed at 52-12. Stocks on hand continued
heavy at about 34,000 bars and daily offtake improved to
about 85 bars. A shipment valued at 20,000 pounds
reported from London.
Gold declined; ready opened at rupees 34-14-3
per tola, touched 34-11-6, closed at 34-13-6. There was
some nervousness early in the WEEK concerning American
Treasury policy but confidence returned.
WATERMAN
WC
KLP
DECEIVED
TRUZANT
43
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris
DATE: April 24, noon
NO.:
527
FROM COCHRAN
There is no exchange news as Paris banks are closed
for the day.
This morning I talked by telephone with Jacobsson
at Basel. From Jacobsson's conversations with Van Zeeland,
Marcel and other officials of the B.I.S. and contacts, he
thinks Paul Van Zeeland is principally playing for time,
through Freres investigational trips to European capitals,
until he can come to Washington.
I talked yesterday with the senior partner in a
Paris-American banking concern. He told me that franc
deposits in his bank were not increasing and that the
deposits in foreign currencies, namely, sterling, dollars
and Swiss francs, amounted to twenty-four percent of his
total deposits. The firm of Sulzer Freres, one of his
clients which has manufacturing plants for engines, et
cetera, in France and Switzerland, informs hii that due
to inefficiency of French labor and to social legislation,
their cost of production in France is at present thirty
percent higher than that in the Swiss plant despite the
fact that higher per capita wages are paid Swiss laborers.
He
Regraded
44
-2-
He said that another American client of the bank requiring
large quantities of manufactured material finds that it
can get goods it had ordered cheaper in Switzerland than
in France and can get a guarantee as to fulfillment of
the contract and delivery for a specified date from the
Swiss while no guarantee will be given by the French
factories. These two examples were offered by my contact
to show the unfavorable financial situation which has
developed under the present political and social regime in
France and the unsound business.
03V13338
TS21 08 89A
EA:DJW
3
6330
- - - -
Regraded Uclassified
Fin
AH
45
The Government Security Market
Week ended April 24,1937
Treasury bonds recorded a net decrease of about 1/2 of a
point in the average during the past week, thereby cancelling
practically all of the advance in the preceding week. Prices
turned upward on Monday and Saturday but in the other four days
the movement was toward lower levels. Trading continued at a
moderate rate, principally in small lots, but as there was
little buying interest shown in the market a small amount of
selling at times resulted in sizeable losses. The long issues
were the most active and suffered the largest losses. The five
longest maturities lost about 3/4 of a point, the three
shortest issues were about unchanged, while declines by the
other issues ranged from about 1/4 to 1/2 of a point. Guar-
anteed issues declined about 5/8ths of a point in the average.
The trend to the Treasury note market for the week as a
whole was toward slightly lower levels but at no time was there
any real weakness in the market as individual changes on any
one day were confined to small fractions. Losses ranged from
1 to 6/32nds compared to gains that ranged up to 23/32nds in
the previous week,
MHHarro
46
MEMORANDUM
April 23, 1937
To:
Secretary Morgenthau
From: Dr. Burgess
Treasury bond market opened moderately lower today and
prices sagged steadily in quiet trading up to the close. The
long Treasury bonds finished 10/32 to 16/32 down from yester-
day, the intermediate maturities were down 4/32 to 12/32, and
the three shortest bonds were down 2/32 to 6/32. Losses in
the guaranteed bonds ranged from 1/4 up to about 1/2 point.
Volume was $1,572,000, most of which consisted of small lot
transactions. The note market was easier and closing quota-
tions were at the lows of the day, 1/32 to 4/32 off from
yesterday.
Domestic bonds were dull but there was a little activity
toward the latter part of the day when some selling appeared.
Second grade bonds showed losses of up to 1/2 point and high
grades were off, on the average, about 1/4 point.
Foreigns were generally quiet with prices unchanged.
German bonds showed gains of fractions to about a point and
a number of Latin-American issues were fractionally off.
No purchases for Treasury today.
Regraded
Uclassified
Please TREASURY GENERAL DEPARTMENT COUNSEL speak to me
WASHINGTON
APR 26 1937
My dear Mr. Secretary:
Reference is made to the letter, under date of March
5, 1937, to the Secretary of the Treasury from G. Mallet Prevost,
administrator of the estate of Teresa de Prevost, in which ap-
plication and demand is made for payment under the provisions of
Bill S. 1360, 74th Congress, 2d Session, entitled "AN ACT For the
relief of the estate of Teresa de Prevost". The letter states
that the Bill "became a law by reason of the failure of the Presi-
dent to return the same with his objections thereto to the House
of Congress in which it originated in the time and manner pre-
scribed and required by the Constitution and Law of the United
States". The amount involved is $25,000.
It appears from an investigation by members of my
staff that no record was kept either at the White House or at
the Senate of the exact time or even the day upon which the
Bill was returned to the Senate with the Veto Meesage of the
President.
Article 1, Section 7, Clause 2 of the Constitution pro-
vides, in part, as follows:
"Every Bill which shall have passed the
House of Representatives and the Senate, shall,
before it become a Law, be presented to the
President of the United States; If he approve
48
- 2 -
he shall sign it, but if not he shall return it,
with his Objections to that House in which it
shall have originated, who shall enter the Ob-
jections at large on their Journal, and proceed
to reconsider it. ... If any Bill shall not
be returned by the President within ten Days
(Sundays excepted) after it shall have been pre-
sented to him, the Same shall be a Law, in like
Manner as if he had signed it, unless the Con-
gress by their Adjournment prevent its Return,
in which Case it shall not be a Law." (Under-
scoring supplied.)
The nature of the return and record thereof contemplated
by the Constitution was indicated by the Supreme Court in The
Pocket Veto Case, (1929) 279 U.S. 655 (at pages 684-685)
"In short, it was plainly the object of the con-
stitutional provision that there should be a
timely return of the bill, which should not only
be B. matter of official record definitely shown
by the journal of the House itself, giving pub-
lic, certain and prompt knowledge as to the
status of the bill, but should enable Congress
to proceed immediately with its reconsideration:
and that the return of the bill should be an ac-
tual and public return to the House itself, and
not 8. fictitious return by & delivery of the
bill to some individual which could be given a
retroactive effect at a later date when the time
for the return of the bill to the House had ex-
pired."
It 1a obvious that the lack of records in the instant
case illustrates an undesirable situation which should be remedied.
You may wish to call the matter to the attention of those concerned
or to present it in Cabinet meeting.
Very truly yours,
General Counsel.
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Uclassified
49
"pril 26, 1937.
9:25 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello
Operator:
Chairman Eccles.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Eccles:
Hello.
H.M.Jr:
Marriner.
Eccles:
Yes sir.
H.M.Jr:
I think I better go away every Saturday.
E:
Why?
H.M.Jr:
Well look what happened to the bond market. What
did you fellows do to it?
E:
Well we put a few orders in.
H.M.Jr:
I see. Do you want to tell me? We've heard one
side of it; we haven't heard yours.
E:
Well this is what happened - ah - on Friday, of
course, the market went off pretty badly
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and - ah - so I had a meeting Friday a fternoon
in the office and we got ahold of George and decided
what to do on Saturday morning.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
Told them that they ought to change their tactics
and put some orders in
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and that's what they did.
Regraded Uclassified
50
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Well they must have changed their tactics about
putting in orders of five bonds under the market and then
when he hits it why withdraw the orders of five bonds.
E
Well they got a - they got quite a lot of them on
Saturday.
H.M.Jr:
But they must have followed the market up, didn't they?
E:
Well I wouldn't say that they put orders in - not under
the market - they put orders in with the dealers for
two million each.
H.M.Jr:
Two million each?
E:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Of what?
E:
Well two million - two million to each dealer.
H.M.Jr:
Oh I see.
E:
Two million dollars.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, to use at his discretion?
E:
What is it?
H.M.Jr:
To use at his discretion?
E:
No - no - to - to use them to buy any bonds that were
on the market - being offered at the market.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
E:
You know they weren't to follow it up but they weren't
necessarily to follow it down but if there were bonds
hanging over the market
H.M.Jr:
I see.
E:
You see? To pick them up
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and on the board they put orders in for - ah - well
I think they picked up close to five million.
Regraded Uclassified
51
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well -
E:
At least they - we got - we got Saturday morning
fifteen million
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and - ah - I - I argued that that market ought to
show some strength over the week-end.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
That they had bill financing to do to-day
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and that the job to-day - would be just that much
more if we didn't change that trend of the end of the
week.
H.M. Jr:
Yes. Of course, I'm simply delighted. Taylor and
Lochhead and I walked home Friday night and we talked
it all over and - because we felt terribly blue at
the way they were handling it but I kept saying it's
the Federal reserve's money - it's not mine and then
you fellows did Saturday what we were praying that
you'd do.
E:
(Laughs) Well -
H.M.Jf:
I mean you did what we'd have done if it was our money.
E:
Well I felt that - that the - ah - Open Market Committee
had authorized - we fought that thing through as you
know
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
and I said, "Well what the devil do they mean
now?" I said, "We've got this money to be spent and
it's true we can't take the market and there may be
more offerings than we can take but certainly we can
get in there and do a darned sight more than we did do."
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
I said, "We've proven by putting a statement - see George
is always arguing and some of the others on the Committee
Regraded Uclassified
52
- 4 -
were arguing very strongly that if we could show a
statement where we hadn't bought any bonds for a week
H.M.Jr:
That would be bullish.
E:
that that would be bullish because it wouldn't
be E supported market.
H.M.Jr:
Well they got
A:
And I said, "Well I - I'm not sure that's the case at
all. If I was sitting out in the country and saw that
condition I'd say that the Federal Reserve's got cold
feet and they're withdrawing."
H.M.Jr:
Well, of course, George Harrison has been saying all
the time the best news - they did nothing - well your
statement came out and showed that they'd done nothing
E:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
and the country's reacted - "Well if the
Federal Reserve System hasn't got confidence in the
bonds why should we?"
E:
Well it - an - I don't know what - I don't know what
reason George will give for that now, He'll have some
other reason I guess; something else will have happened.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, I - I haven't talked to him but Taylor has and from
the way he was sputtering I gathered that you fellows
must have done something and naturally we were curious.
E:
Well we bought - ah - we bought fifteen million on
Saturday.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, well All I can say is more power to you.
E:
And we're going to meet in about a half hour - George
is down - I had him come down and Sinclair is down
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
so that we can watch the market this morning and -
ah - SO as to make that bill offering successful, AS
I understand it though the bill market has acted pretty
good and the market is entirely cleaned of bills
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
53
- 5 -
E:
which is a good thing.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
And - ah - as you know, we took some of the bills last
week
H.M.Jr:
I know.
E:
but the dealers then during the rest of the week,
in spite of the bond market being weak, had a strong -
a pretty strong demand for the bills and they even got
rid of all the nine months bills.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
E:
So the bill market looks better.
H.M.Jr:
Well I think that having a strong market Saturday -
you're absolutely right - it makes it much easier to-day.
E:
Well I figured it would cost less to-day if we did that
than if we let that market continue to go down.
H.M.Jr:
Even the New York Times had a kind word to say for the
bond market
E:
Did they?
(Laughs)
H.M.Jr:
which is something.
E:
Well I hope - I hope it will get off all right.
H.M.Jr:
Well I'm simply tickled to death but we made up our
mind that it wasn't our money and we were going to
grit our teeth and go through this week and take it
on the chin.
E:
Well I - an - I told you I was going to do what I could
and I've been fighting like hell to keep the thing
going and
H.M.Jr:
Well -
E:
we've got another week to get through and
Regraded Uclassified
54
- 6 -
H.M.Jr:
Well I'm - I'm more pleased to-day than I've been
any time since the 15th of March.
E:
Well that's fine. I'm - I'm glad you are.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Well let me know later on, will you?
E:
I will. I'll call you.
H.M.Jr:
Now that it - I - you see with Burgess away I don't
get as good information as when Burgess is there.
E:
You know that's a terrible loss to us. Now if we -
an - an - those fellows don't run that market like
Burgess.
H.M.Jr:
Oh no.
E:
And - and - and
H.M.Jr:
And they've insisted that Harrison - ah - what the
hell does he know about the bond market?
E:
He doesn't know anything.
H.M.Jr:
And when you call up Harrison he insists on referring
to this man - what's his name?
E:
Ah - Allan Sproul.
H.M.Jr:
And not only that but he's the boy that sees the
newspapermen every a fternoon.
E:
Well it's just unfortunate. It's just one of those
damn breaks because I'm - I'm sure that if we'd had
Burgess - ah - the situation would have been handled
far much better than it has; the results would have
been better.
H.M.Jr:
Oh sure.
E:
Burgess was in favor of - of this action you know -
when this crowd was down here although he didn't
say much about it - I knew he was pretty much in
sympathy with what I wanted to do.
Regraded Uclassified
55
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Well even if he wasn't he'd do what you want him
to do.
E:
He'd not only do that but he knows what to do.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Oh I've felt his loss tremendously.
E:
Yes, well it's been a fright for us.
H.M.Jr:
Well let - talk to me a little later will you Marriner?
E:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
E:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
56
April 26, 1937
9:30 Group Meeting.
Present:
Mrs. Klotz
Mr. Oliphant
Mr. Magill
Mr. Upham
Mr. Gibbons
Mr. Taylor
Mr. McReynolds
Mr. Bell
HM,Jr: Steve, what about this J. L. Matthews, related
to the Vice President, who came in to see you?
Mr. Gibbons: He came in and said you had talked to the
Vice President, Just a young chap.
HM.Jr: I don't know who he 18.
Mr. Gibbons: He said the Vice President had spoken to
you about it.
HM,Jr: No. Well, I have to see the Vice President myself.
I will go up the first thing tomorrow morning. The Vice
President 1a more temperamental than at any time over the
spending thing. All this stuff that the Vice President is
working against Roosevelt 18 not true, because I have seen
him in action and he always said, 'Now, Chief, what do you
want? Is it all right for me to do 1t?' Don't for B.
moent, want anybody in this room to think he is working
against Roosevelt.
Mr. Gibbons: I think he would come right out in the open
and tell you what he 18 doing.
HM,Jr: Herbert?
Mr. Gaston: (Gave the Secretary Kiplinger's 'Washington
Letter'.)
HM,Jr: I got this over to Kiplinger anyway. I had
Regraded Uclassified
57
-2-
better luck than with Lippmann. (Reading) "How sincere
1E the President? We have reason to believe that he is
sincere NOW despite fact that in past he has TALKED economy
and then proceeded to spend more than ever. He may change
his mind, as he has in the past, but Just now he has reason
to be very earnest in working toward budget balance."
Herbert, I am inclined to sand for Arthur Krock. I haven't
done it for B. long time. And talk to him about the editorial
on gold in the Times. They ran that rumor the other day and
in order to justify themselves, instead of being good sports
and coming out and saying we are a bunch of old wash-women,
I kind of thought I might send for Arthur Krock and in view
also -- if you would get yesterday's Editorial Section of the
Times -- make a note -- a story by Turner Catledge. In the
body of his story 18 a straight factual story, but the head-
ings are 'Due to Treasury's Blunders we are Having Budget
Troubles'. Then you read the Turner Catledge story and
there is nothing in it, but the heading -- something about
'Treasury Blunders Makes Budget Balance Difficult -- but the
story does not say anything about it and there 18 no use
calling up -- I would much rather have it out with Krock.
What do you think?
Mr. Gaston: of course, Krock would not have anything to
do with the heading of that story.
HM,Jr: No. No. But I have nothing to 108 e and 8. little
to gain. Shall I call him up and see if I can get him?
Mr. Gaston: Yes.
HM,Jr: (To Operator) See if Mr. Krock could come in to
sea me between 11 and 11:30. Let me know which.
Mr. McReynolds: Nothing.
Mr. Bell: Nothing.
HM,Jr: Danny, on this thing
now did you keep your
word with me?
Mr. Bell: on, yes!
Mr. McReynolds; Yes, he did. I went around to his office
about eleven o'clock and the girl said, 'He isn't here. The
Secretary made him promise to stay nome.'
Regraded Uclassified
58
-3-
HM,Jr: Could you get hold of Clarence Opper and this
fellow Ihlder and sort of sit down and see if they can sketch
something along the line the President told us. What he
said 18, we take part of Ickes' revolving fund and then we
set up housing on a basis of, first, the community would
have to buy the land. Isn't that what he said?
Mr. Bell: He said he would insist on it.
HM,Jr: Then he said, two, we will give & 45% grant, and
three, all the unemployed labor that they could use.
Mr. Bell: Did he say 45% grant?
HM,Jr: Yes.
Mr. Bell: And in addition
.....
HM,Jr:
all the unemployed labor that they could use,
What they are doing now 18 they are giving them
Mr. Bell:
...
relief labor.
HM.Jr: Well, aren't they giving them -- we are buying
the land, We Just give them a 45% grant.
Mr. Bell: Ickes is constructing some himself.
Mr. McReynolds: All that he 1e doing is he's doing 16
all, but he 18 giving them 45%.
HM,Jr: Mac is in on this and we are not getting anywhere.
Mr. McReynolds: Ihlder has B. draft, but everytime it
comes back, something new is thrown into it.
HM,Jr: You have been thinking about it and if I get &
breathing spell in the next two or three days, I would like
to sit in on it, but I am afraid the President will send for
us.
For ty-five percent grant, he limited it to materials,
(I had better get him to give it to me at noon) and then give
them all the relief labor they could use. But I thought he
said 45% on materials.
Mr. Bell: I thought he said a 45% grant including all
the labor.
Regraded Uclassified
59
-4-
HM,Jr: Anything for me on the overhead of the various
agencies? Remember?
Mr. Bell: I have forgotten it if you did.
HM,Jr: I will tell you again. You were going to take
B. sheet and go back to July 1
.....
Mr. Bell: Oh, yes!
HM,Jr: ... and have the various number of people employed
in the several emergency agencies and as the money goos down,
18 personnel coming down.
Mr. Bell: We had to send to the field for some of that.
HM,Jr: What else?
Mr. Bell: That's all. There is a little concern on the
Hill about this economy program.
HM,Jr: Which way?
Mr. Bell: Cannon called me up last night and said --
Cannon is pinch-hitting for Taylor.
HM,Jr; What State does he come from?
Mr. Bell: Missouri. He says the Tabor stuff is going
out all over the country and all of these Democrate are
getting letters from their constituents criticising them
for not cooperating with the Republicans in this economy
drive.
HM,Jr: Swell!
Mr. Bell: To show the absurdity of the situation: one
of his men -- one of the letters he got was from & man who
said he was on WPA and he wanted more money from WPA --
wanted higher wages and at the same time insisted that he
cooperate with the Republicans on the economy drive.
HM,Jr: In other words, the heat 1s being turned on them.
Mr. Bell: Yes. But he says the thing that is worrying
him -- two points in the President's message, as to how he
Regraded Uclassified
60
-5-
18 going to meet the deficit in 1938 has not gotten across
at all and I told him you and I talked about it and said
if we could get some bill which he could veto we might bring
this home. He said, 'That's a good idea'. And he said,
'I hope you can get one', but he wants to attach to the
present deficiency bill the 10% cut. I am to ask the Pres-
ident this morning if he 16 agreeable to having that go
through.
HM,Jr: Dan and I have been watching for & nice juicy
bill for the President to veto and then with a big speech
give them a veto message 80 it will let them know he means
what ne says. How about Gibbons' request for an appropri-
ation for the New York Fair?
Mr. Bell: That Fair and Exposition thing is just &
plain racket. Every city in the country is trying toout-
do the other. We are paying all the administrative IX-
penses for these Fairs.
HM,Jr: Anything on your desk?
Mr. Bell: No.
HM,Jr: You know, they Just won't believe it. I use
the same example -- the Alliee kept saying, 'You keep telling
us the American troops are coming. We don't believe it.
Each month is going to be next month.' And tney wouldn't
believe it until they actually saw the list of killed. It's
the same way with this. They are not going to know until
the President publishes the first casualty list and then they
are going to believe it. It's true. They won't believe it.
Mr. Bell: I would like to see it happen to an appropria-
tion bill.
HM,JR: I bet I know which one. You are out for blood
in a big way!
Mr. Bell: I want to shoot a whole battalion all at once.
Mr. McReynolds: You want one of these large Department
bills.
HM,Jr: He has his eyes on & departmental bill and if he
kills that -- Mac, where is our Treasury bill?
Regraded Uclassified
61
-6-
Mr. McReynolds: That was ruined before it ever got to
the Committee?
HM,Jr: How far along 1e it?
Mr. McReynolds: Conference.
HM,Jr: You nad better watch it. This fellow Bell is on
the warpath.
Mr. McReynolds: I am watching 1t, but Danny ruined that
before it ever went up.
Mr. Lochhead: I haven't those other figures yet.
Mr. Taylor: Nothing.
Mr. Gibbons: I would like to tell you something I heard
Saturday night.
HM,Jr: Stay right behind.
Mr. Upham: You said you might want to see me before
HM,Jr: I think you had better start out just like I said.
I would not only see the banker fellows. I would see the
Farm Credit, the HOLC and the Federal Housing, Bo you get
all around the thing. I suggested to Cy that he start and
swing down through Richmond, Atlanta, Texas, New Orleans,
San Francisco and Seattle and take a plane back, and send
in a letter and let us know what's going on.
Mr. Upham: Mr. Gaston has already asked if he can go in
my place.
HM,Jr: Better get a little dope on the farm stuff. The
President got a letter from an orange grower in Florida send-
ing a check for $101.00 and he said he thought the President
could use it better than he because he's getting paid for
something he had done all his life. Said, Why should he take
money for that? I thought I would take my check -- I can't
say 'disabled' -- but Iwant to use a very carefully chosen
word -- the children at Warm Spring could 12 use it a great deal
better than I could and send it to the Warm Springs Founda-
tion for the children down there.
Mr. Gibbons: Physically underprivileged.
Regraded Uclassified
62
-7-
HM,Jr: Something -- not underprivileged.
Mr. Gaston: You spoke about the Wagner Housing Bill.
The only thing the President has said in his press confer-
ences 16 that this would be pretty much of a blue-print
plan and also he said that he is firmly convinced that
the whole cost should be the grant and then he also said
this other thing about using the Public Works revolving
fund.
Mr. Bell: The decision for the locality to buy the land
is the most important decision he has made.
Mr. McReynolds: All the housing people tell me when it
goes in that way you don't have to worry about financing,
because there won't be any program.
Mr. Gaston: I fixed up something for Mackellar, but the
man on the air tonight 1s Cummings.
HM,Jr: That's your worry.
Mr. Oliphant: I would like to tell you, before lunch,
about my talk with Wallace Saturday. It will take four
or five minutes.
Mr. Bell: (To Mr. Oliphant) Herman, may I ask what is
the condition of the refund to the Philippines?
Mr. Oliphant: There has been sent to Quezon & draft of
a letter which he 18 going to reply to us, asking us not to
pay it for the present. For the time being, not to pay to
the Philippines the $46,000,000.
HM,Jr: I think it's B. "gyp". I swear it 1s. I know
the Army does not want it, but I still think ....
Mr. Oliphant: The Army would like to have it for an
arsenal.
HM.Jr: But not for the Philippines.
Mr. Oliphant: An arsenal in the Philippines. They did
not want the political government to have it, but they would
like to have it for an arsenal.
HM,Jr: I listened to it last year and if ever a Government
Regraded Uclassified
63
-8-
was entitled to it, they are. I mean, a moral obligation
that they are entitled to it.
Mr. Oliphant: Absolutely.
Mr. Gaston: It's their gold reserve.
Mr. Oliphant: No. This is the other thing -- this is
the cocoanut 011.
Mr. McReynolds: Processing tax collected.
HM,Jr: On, I thought you were talking about the other
matter.
Mr. Magill: The Railroad Retirement 18 taking ite normal
course before the Ways and Means and I notice that this
Doughton bill for repealing that provision for reporting
corporate officers' salaries 18 going to be taken up under
B. rule, I suppose to be passed.
HM,Jr: I haven't read your letter yet on your talk with
the Attorney General, but when he sat down ne said, 'I had
8. fine conference'
Mr. Magill: When did he say this to you?
HM,Jr: At Cabinet. 'And I don't think there is any
real difference between us.
(Mr. Magill laughed aloud
at this remark.) I said, 'I am sorry, Homer, I haven't
talked to either of the men. So he said, 'Well, we are
practically together.' I had better see both of you this
morning.
Mr. Oliphant: Did the Federal Trade Commission thing
clear at Cabinet?
HM,Jr: It cleared. Wallace raised one objection. He
said something about rice in prices and he changed it to
put in the word the "seeming" rise of retail prices. Put
in the word "seeming" and the word "retail".
Mr. Oliphant: And the White House will send it?
HM,Jr: Will send it. The thing that surprises ne on
prices -- food prices are 10 points lower today than they
Regraded Uclassified
64
-9-
they were a year ago, which is surprising. It is All
cleared.
Mr. Oliphant: That's a good piece of work.
HM,Jr: The Attorney General handed it to me and wanted
me to present it. He did not want to present it. (Mr.
Oliphant laughed aloud at this remark.) But you certainly
would have gotten a big kick to hear him talking about 'his
brief' against the Aluminum Company. (General laughter
from the group.) 'You can't imagine the work it takes to
go into & thing like this.' I was feeling devilish and I
said, By the way, do the people's names who work on this
ever appear on the brief? 'Oh, yes, and he showed me Homer
Cummings and switched over to the other list and it mentioned
Robert Jackson last.
Mr, Oliphant: I Just happen to know how much time he put
on it!
HM,Jr: 'God! The time it takes!' And he did say one
thing and I gave him a pat on the back. He turned and said,
'Mr. President, another thing against Mr. Mellon -- Aluminum -
and you might get another art gallery out of it.' So I gave
him 8 pat on the back and I said, 'Homer, that's pretty good
coming from you.' I got the idea that a certain fellow by
the name of Robert Jackson, who spent about nine months work-
ing on the Mellon income tax case, somehow or other got the
idea that the Board of Tax Appeals thought the Administration
had lost interest and, purely by accident, before the Board
of Tax Appeals hand down the decision, he wants to show that
the Administration has not lost interest and, therefore, he
files another claim against Mr. Mellon and the Aluminum Com-
pany to show that the Administration 18 interested. The
fact that it came down before the Board of Tax Appeals de-
cision 1s pure accident or coincidence. Just an accident
on the part of Robert Jackson! Am I right? He's a smart
boy. He's got his whole reputation in that thing. So he
files this other thing and everything 18 fine and shows
Mr. Mellon 18 still Mr. Mellon and the Board of Tax Appeala
read it and now I say that Mr. Jackson's chances of winning
it are increased about 1,000 percent. Never occurred to
Bob!
Mr. Oliphant: No:
Mr. Magill: Hell, no!
000-000
Regraded Uclassified
Noted
Divident
65
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW York
April 26, 1937.
ATTENTION: Mr. Lochhead
Sir:
There is enclosed herewith copy of the summary
of a speech delivered by the Japanese Minister of Finance
at the Conference of Clearing Houses held in Tokyo on
April 20, 1937.
Respectfully
When
L. W. Knoke,
Vice President.
The Honorable,
The Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Enc.
ISWEOJA
BECEIAED
1881 RSA
TSG: TS RSA
VIDART
não
service - - --- -
Regraded Uclassified
The Summary of the Speech
66
of the Minister of Finance
Delivered at the Conference
of Clearing Houses Held in
Tokyo on April 20, 1937.
1. The purpose of our financial and economic policy is to promote
the welfare of the country. In view of our poor natural resources
and increasing population, the expansion of our foreign trade must
be the guiding principle. Accordingly it is necessary to promote
trade with other countries, to develop shipping and fishing indus-
tries and to encourage emigration. To attain these purposes it is
advisable to make reciprocal arrangements with foreign countries by
peaceful and gradual means.
Economic nationalism is still prevailing in the world and is
impairing foreign trade and jeopardizing the peace of the world.
Therefore if an international economic conference is held in the
future, we will gladly participate in the conference with B view
to clarifying the situation and to making foreign countries better
understand our country.
of
The urgent necessity for the present is to improve the producing
power of industry, to develop industries as a whole and to promote
foreign trade so as to enable the Government to meet the increased
expenditures. The increase of national expenditures ought to be
limited within the producing power of industry.
3. The Government is prepared to carry out taxation reform in the
near future. The increase of taxes, however, should not retard the
development of industries. In revising custom duties, the Government
intends to protect industries which require protection from the view
point of national policy and to give careful consideration to the
balance of payment.
Regraded Uclassified
67
C
?
68
2.
4. It is important not to make drastic changes in financial
matters and not to take radical measures which affect financial
institutions. However, in view of the great responsibility of
financial institutions with respect to the development of the pro-
ducing power of industry, the consumption of national loans, the
encouragement of savings and investment within Manchuria and China,
it is desirable that they collaborate and cooperate among them-
selves, and also discourage speculative employment of funds. As
to monetary policy, neither the expansion of currencies to the ex-
tent of exceeding the economic need of the country nor the strin-
gency of money inimical to the smooth operation of the financial
world is advisable. The amount of currencies should be appropriate
to the situation.
5. The balance of payment is reflecting all aspects of finance
and economics and should be taken into consideration by the entire
nation. The Government has decided to send gold abroad and increase
funds for the purpose of maintaining the present rate of yen ex-
change. However, we can not rehy simply on gold shipments. The
urgent necessity of today is fundamentally tò improve the balance
of paymentso as not to impair the foundation of the currency system.
When the producing power of the industry develops favorably, the
maintenance of the yen exchange rate at the present level will not
be a difficult task.
03V13038
Test TS ASA
TMJMTHA93G YRUZA39T
all to
- will - - -
Regraded Uclassified
69
LNS
GRAY
London
Dated April 26, 1937
Rec'd 2:50 p. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
247, April 26, 7 P. m.
FOR TREASURY FROM butterworth.
Replying to a question (*) House of Commons this after-
noon Charcellor of the Exchequer announced that he had
decided in the general interest of local authorities and
other borrowers to acquaint the market with his intention
to "advertise on Vednesday morning details of an issue to be
made on Thursday of two and a half per cent national defense
bonds to the amount of 100,000,000 pounds at 99 and one-
half. This will be a short to medium term security redeem-
before
able
/
the end of 1948 by annual drawings at par of not
less than 20% of the amount of the loan, the first drawing
being in the autuar of 1944; subscriptions will be payable
by installments over three months and the first dividend
will be 13 shillings per cent on the 15th September 1937.
In order that small investors may have an opportunity of
participating I have arranged for a separate issue of reg-
istered bonds in amounts of five pounds and multiples of
five
Regraded Uclassified
70
LMS 2-Jo. 247, April 26, 7 P. m., from London.
five pounds up to a maximum of one thousand pounds to be
made through the Post Office Savings Bank and Trustee Sav-
ings Bank".
Mr. Chamberlain also indicated that "the proceeds of
the issue until required for financing the defense program
will be available for reducing the floating debt and will
in any case cover the estimated expenditure of eighty million
pounds to be made this year from borrowed monies".
The London Stock Exchange was decidedly weak again today
but the amount of business transacted bore no relation to the
price declines; inasmuch as no brokerage firm can advise its
clients how any particular stock is to be taxed under the
new. national defense contribution there are no buyers, while
at the same time there are both nervous sellers and forced
sellers. Thus far there is no reflection in the House of
Commons, aside from a numerically small die-hard Tory group,
of the somewhat bitterly critical reaction now current in
the City.
The foreign exchange market was also active today as
well-informed dealers report that the Bank of France will
have lost as much as two million pounds today.
BINGHAM
HPD: WYC
(*) Apparent omission.
Regraded Uclassified
71
April 26, 1937
3:15 p.m.
Present:
Mrs. Klotz
Mr. Magill
Mr. Oliphant
Mr. Taylor
Mr. Seltzer
Mr. McReynolde
Mr. Bell
Mr. White
HM,Jr: Bell, I don't like to bring up these unpleasant
things, but I thought after having lunched with the President
you might B.B. well have the worst.
This is on the Housing bill. The President said on a
million dollar project that the city should buy, out of its
own budget, $200,000. That leaves $800,000. The Federal
Government will give a grant of 45%, which 18 $360,000.
Then, he said, we will give 10% of relief labor, which 18
$80,000 -- 10% of the $800,000 -- leaving a contribution of
$440,000. Now on re-cap, the city puts up $200,000; the
United States Government puts up $440,000; the balance of
$360,000 should be raised on first mortgage, and I said,
'What else do we contribute?" and he said, 'Nothing.' And
he said, 'Why?' and I said, 'They won't like it.' He said,
'If they don't like it, they're crazy!' I said, 'Is that
really all you are going to give them?' So he said, 'WHAT!
Henry, you and I could build on that basis and if they can't,
they're crazy.'
Mr. Bell: You didn't have a Senator present.
HM,Jr: No, but I have it in his own handwriting.
Mr. Bell: I don't Bee any initials!
HM,Jr: That's the President's last. And when I said,
'Mr. President, this won't do;they won't like 1t,' he said,
'Anybody that don't like that 18 crazy.' Well, they are
asking for 100%. And he said, "Well, if they don't like
that, they don't get anything. They can take it and like
it.'
Regraded Uclassified
72
-8-
Mr. Bell: This ie 56 - 44.
HM,Jr: It's 44% grant by the Government and 50% by
the local community.
Now, I want volunteers. Who 18 going to break it
to Senator Wagner? I'll tell you what we'll do. If
Vac does not come through with that memo that I am wait-
ing for in 24 hours, he's the candidate to see Senator
Wagner.
Well, anyway, there it 10. I'll move on. Isn't
that good news?
Mr. Bell: 0. K. That's fine.
HM,Jr: Now, the other thing 1s this, and you can
carry the ball on this, Magill. The President wants,
when he comes back, to send either a message to Congress
or a letter to Pat Harrison and Doughton in which he 18
going to go into detail as to what the $600,000,000 is
that we are short of revenue -- possibly use Professor
Crum's letter -- but anyway, he wants to say flatly that
our estimates and our method of estimating were correct,
but the citizens -- that's the word he used -- found 8.
trick way of finding loopholes. And then he wants us
to 80 into considerable detail as to what those loopholes
are, particularly elaborating on his friend Colonel Schick.
He's got that fellow on his mind. (Shick razor.)
And here's what 18 new. He wants to make B. recom-
mendation to Congress, now, the 12th of May, that these
loopholes be closed and that they be retroactive. And
he said he does not want to wait until next fall and he
wants to particularly, where it 18 true, to show the items
which are held up by Court action and go into B. description
of Just what the Court has done. And this thing -- some-
body he read -- Ray Tucker or somebody said that the Pres-
ident and the Secretary of the Treasury did not know how
to estimate taxes and it's gotten terribly under his skin.
So I told him about the one in the Times on Turner Catledge, who
wrote a perfectly straight story, but the headings were
'Treasury's Blunders Make Budget Balance Difficult. That's
in the Times editorial section. But he wants to hit this
and he said, "Don't wait until I come back. If you get
any good stories on how people evade taxes, send them down
to me by radio." He said, "I have been telling the Colonel
Regraded Uclassified
73
Schick story to everybody who comes to the house. People
get awfully angry about it and incensed to think that &
United States army officer would become a Canadian citizen
and move his fortune to the Bahama Islands.
Now I did not argue with him that his meesage wasn't
dry yet that he would make recommendations in November 8.8
to loopholes, but he 18 very much excited about it and he
wants to have those loopholes closed now and retroactive.
He thinks it's too late. I didn't argue with him because
ne was all steamed up. He had Just seen some congressman
about flood relief. He's turning him down on 8. flood re-
lief bill.
So I thought, Ros, if you would carry it and work with
Herman Oliphant and with Haas -- joint cooperation, but
somebody has to carry the ball. But I wanted to do the
two things and BO I thought it was a pretty good meeting.
Mr. Bell: Fine!
Mr. Magill: of course, it's mostly 8. matter of getting
information from these field investigations.
HM,Jr: Then he asked me something which I could not
answer and did not attempt to answer, and that was that he
saw some ruling about Internal Revenue on foreign corpora-
tions and ne said, "Are you sure that will stick?". I
said, "I don't know." Something he saw. But I don't
know whether everybody has seen Crum's report or not, but
I am giving you the stuff. This means no housing bill -
at least no money.
Mr. Bell: You don't have to go below the second line.
No housing.
HM,Jr: I said to him, "I didn't get all of this kidding
when I came into the room the other day." I said, "What
was it all about." I said, "I didn't get 1t." He said,
"Didn't you understand?" and I said, "No." So he said,
"I was getting back at Wallace at the statement he had made
that he wasn't going to get any money and I thought the way
to do it was to take it out on you and Bell, and Wallace
would get it." I said, "I wish you would give me a signal
next time." But did you get it, Bell?
Mr. Bell: No.
Regraded Uclassified
74
-4-
HM,Jr: I couldn't get it.
Mr. Bell: I thought he wanted to let us know we were
licked before we started.
HM,Jr: He turned to Wallace and said, "I don't want to
do anything to hurt Wallace." I just saw Wallace and he's
going along with us on everything. Even now he's talking
about taking some out of his $500,000,000, 80 I have nothing
to complain of and I thought you fellows would like to know.
Mr. Bell: I intended to call them over this afternoon,
and go over it, but I have not had a chance.
o0o-o0o
Regraded Uclassified
you 2x
#
1,000 , ano
Land 200 11120
BALANCE
810
We gand 45% 360, AND
and pay major
of inter
Form 10%
11
80, 11.0
Fur Cuntrib = H 440, was.
Imming : City pays
in tach fortand A 200, 100.
11.5 pays in tash 440, ano.
Balmer AG finand
360, was
1, was pas
Regraded Uclassified
76
April 26, 1937.
3:35 p.m.
H.d.Jr:
Hello
Operator:
Chairman Eccles. Go shead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello Marriner?
Eccles:
Yes sir.
H.M.Jr:
How are you to-day?
E:
Well I'm all right. (Laughs) How are you by now?
H.M.Jr:
Oh I'm all right. What did you spend?
E:
Well now - sh - I guess you got the report on the
bill market.
H.M.Jr:
No I haven't.
E:
The - an - well the - I got a preliminary report.
H.M.Jr:
Yes I've got it before me - I didn't realize it.
E:
Well it was - the preliminary in New York was 72
on the nine months and 63 on the short bills - it
was a little less than last week on the short and
slightly over on the long
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
.....SO that the average would be just about the
same or maybe slightly less than last week
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
.....SO that we're over that hump.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
Ah - the - ah - we - we told the dealers this morning -
indicated to them that if they found that they were
long on long bills and were having - have any difficulty
in disposing of them - marketing them during the week
that we would be prepared to help out.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
77
- 2 -
E:
"n - we don't know how many bills they bought but we
assume, of course, they did - they were in the market
and did subscribe to some extent.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
Now - ah - what we would do then tomorrow and Wednesday
and Thursday during the week would be to, if they found
that they were having difficulty distributing their
long bills, we would either take some off their hands
for cash or on an exchange for short bills. In other
words, if they found that they could readily sell
short bills
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and they - they - in that case they would, of
course, sooner have short bills than cash.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
We would then switch give them some short bills and -
in exchange for the long bills.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
And - and that - that apparently was helpful, of
course, in the situation.
H.M.Jr:
Well you fellows got your teeth into this thing
Saturday. How much weight has George Harrison lost
the last 48 hours.
E:
(Laughs) Oh he looked all right this morning.
H.M.Jr:
Is he sitting next to you now?
E:
No he's gone back.
H.M.Jr:
Could he hear me this morning?
E:
No.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
E:
No.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
E:
No he didn't hear you. Nobody heard you.
Regraded Uclassified
78
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
All right.
E:
The - ah - the - ah - the bonds to-day were - they
were just selling all over the lot.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
An - we bought 17 million.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
E:
Of bonds.
H.M.Jr:
Swell.
E:
And the - the - an - market was off - ah - in the
short bonds from two and - up to as high as, I think,
7 or 8/32d's in the longest ones.
H.M.Jr:
Boy you're watching this bond market these days,
aren't you?
E:
(Laughs)
H.M.Jr:
Remember when I used to call you up and you'd
E:
Well hell I know but
H.M.Jr:
give me a three day old quotation.
E:
we had no occasion to do anything about it.
We were so far removed from it that there was nothing
else to do.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, that was my money in those days.
E:
It wasn't anybody's money.
H.M.Jr:
Sure.
E:
Wasn't any money going in.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
E:
What?
H.M.Jr:
The days I used to put in 40-50 million in a day and
I'd call you up and you say "Huh."
Regraded Uclassified
79
- 4 -
E:
Well I know but you - ah - you didn't want us in at
that time. We went in on B partnership basis feeling
you got interested in it.
H.M.Jr:
I love to hear you talk quotations.
E:
Well anyway
H.4.Jr:
It warms the coccles of my heart.
E:
Now - an - you'll be interested in this - I - I think
that the bond market will possibly continue to go down.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
An - maybe I'm wrong but it's - it's just my hunch
that it will be put down and - because they've -
everybody's talked this 3%
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
The - there's a sit-down strike. (Laughs) That's what
it amounts to on the part of the insurance companies
and the big investors and they've put out - and I talked
to - Walter Cummings called me from Chicago this
morning
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and Walter said - ah - ah - the banks throughout
the middle west and customers were talk - talked to
him during the last week and again this morning and
it was their general feeling - because of the propaganda
that had been put out from New York, he said - that the
bond market is going to 3% and he said there wasn't any
of the banks that he knew of that were required to sell
at all to meet any reserves. He said they all had ample
reserves and practically all of them had excess reserves.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
So that the only reason they would sell the bonds would
not be because they had any other place in the world to
put their money but would be merely because they thought
they could buy them cheaper.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
:
Because they could sell them on a - on a 2-3/4 yield
and buy them later on & 35 yield - of course that -
80
- 5 -
in other words they were speculating to that extent.
E:
Now he said the insurance companies - ah - and, of
course, we know that - and the big institutional
investors who had wanted 3% right along are just
sitting back and are anxious to have the country
in general help them get that rate.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
Now - an - so I sald they may go to 3%.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
is
However, the minute they start their buying they
can't any more keep them at 3% than they can fly
because there just isn't enough places to put the
money they've got - an - and, of course, they'll
go back up again.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
Now - ah - I - we decided this morning here - the
Committee - that during the balance of the week
we would just continue to operate like we did to-day.
H.M.Jr:
Swell.
in
We wouldn't - we couldn't take the market and, of
course, we wouldn't try but that we would be in the
market and - ah - buy securities and undertake to
keep it orderly.
4.M.Jr:
Good.
E:
Ah - so I say if it should go down there
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
it's my hunch that we'll - we'll see a darned
good - a - a much better bond market a little later
on.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
That it's just one of those periods that - ah -
the propaganda has caused everybody to feel that
they're going to make profit by selling now and
buying later. Somebody is going to get fooled.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
81
- 6 -
E:
Now - ah - the - this was an interesting phase -
and I've heard it before and possibly you have -
that - ah - the Treasury was going to have to do
some long-term financing in June.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
And - ah - therefore that they - and they'd likely
have to pay 3%
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
because the investors that know wouldn't come
in for less than three now - that no one would take
less than 3%
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
and - ah - the tendency, therefore, would be
to wait with the expectation that they could get a
higher rate when the Treasury's financing had to be
done in June.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
Now - ah - of course, I think that to do any
long-term financing at all in June - at least unless
the situation was - was entirely different - ah -
would be a mistake and let the bill market - after
the first of June there will be a lot of excess
reserves.
H.M.Jr:
Marriner, listen, old man, let's wait till the first
of May and then we'll begin worrying.
E:
Oh yes.
H.M.Jr:
Then we'll begin worrying. Let's get through this
week. I think this is going to be your hardest week
and if you keep plugging the way you did to-day -
Saturday, see
E:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
ah - let's see where we are next Monday on the
first but don't let's worry about our 15th of June
because - don't let anybody tell you I've made up my
mind about anything.
Regraded Uclassified
82
- 7 -
E:
oh well I knew that. I was - I was merely telling
you the - of some of the propaganda that they're
putting out with an effort to knock down the bond
market.
H.M.Jr:
And don't forget that Walter Cummings was the first
banker to sell a big block of bonds that we knew of.
E:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
That he sold 25 million along - between the first
and seventh of March and it's the fact that he'd sold
it and I'd heard about it is the r eason that I stiffened
my price on the exchanges for the 15th of March.
Burgess told me that Walter Cummings had dumped 25
million and he was the first fellow to do it.
E:
Ah-ha. Ah-ha.
H.M.Jr:
And when he went down to Warm Springs to see the
President complaining about the bond market I said,
"You ask Walter Cummings why he sold before anybody
else did."
E:
Ah-ha.
H.M.Jr:
Don't forget it either.
E:
Well I knew that he'd done that.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
E:
And I'm not - Walter Cummings' report was merely -
and I don't know whether it was New York or not -
maybe
H.M.Jr:
You're coming over for lunch tomorrow.
E:
Well I'd like to.
H.M.Jr:
O.K.
E:
All right - one o'clock.
H.M.Jr:
Righto.
E:
All right. Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassif
83
LAZARD FRERES
120 BROADWAY
NEW YORK
LAZARD FRÈRES & Cre
PARIS
LAXARD BROTHERS & Co.I.ro.
LONDON
NEW YORK April 26, 1957.
TELEORAPHIC ADDRESS
LAZARD. NEW YORK
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Henry,
In view of the friendly and open-minded mamer
in which you received me on the occasion of my last visit
to Washington, I feel warranted in writing to you at some
length on the subject that we discussed. I do this the more
readily in that I was much impressed with your approach to
the problem, which seemed to me entirely without pre-conceptions
and purely based upon a desire to find a sound solution of
present difficulties.
My impression was that, among your other concerns,
you were extremely interested in the subject of "hot money".
I think that the great flow of gold to this country is in measure
due to a movement of capital in our direction which is the re-
sult of political and economic uncertainties in other parts of
the world. Because of the removal for the time being of the
imminent danger of a European war, I would expect this cause to
gradually assume diminishing importance.
Beyond this, however, there is another factor
difficult to appraise but which I consider of great moment.
that is the fact that the American price level has never anything
like fully adjusted itself to the revaluation of the dollar that
has already taken place. In my opinion, a gradual rise in the
commodity price level to accomplish such a readjustment should
not only be welcomed, but should be facilitated. Until this re-
adjustment takes place, there will be no stopping the flow of gold,
barring a new gold policy.
Regraded Uclassified
84
E
For the reasons stated when I was with you, I
consider & change in the price of gold as a brake on gold imports
an unsound conception and one which you will be extremely reluctant
to adopt. Now that we, for a long time, have had de facto stabiliza-
tion on the basis of $35. per fine ounce, I feel that any tampering
with the gold price would introduce an element of the greatest con-
fusion and uncertainty into the world and the domestic economy; and such
a step would be fraught with the greatest danger. I can see the
pressure under which the constant influx of gold must be placing you,
and yet I am satisfied in my own mind that to yield to this pressure,
either through refusing to buy gold, through attempting to place an
import tax on its importation, or through excessive handling charges,
would be in fact jumping from the frying pan in'to an extremely hot fire.
I would hesitate to predict how much of our recovery would be jeopardized
by such & fire once it was lit. I know how much considerations of this
sort weigh with you, and I em hopeful that your thinking will not take
you in this direction.
Since I last spoke to you, there has been a further
and material drop in commodity prices. This has now reached a point
where, as you know, it is creating a considerable nervoumess and
hesitancy in the business world. Furthermore, the Government bond
market has become as much & matter of concern to outside observers
like myself as it must be to the Treasury Department. I am told by
banking friends in New York that they have many orders to sell Govern-
ments and that there are few bona fide bids other than from the Federal.
This, taken in connection with your new program of selling Treasury
Notes weekly, creates 8 situation of some tension and one that I think
is getting near the point of requiring drastic action on your part, It
is so much easier to revive confidence when it has had merely a little
setback than after it has turned into pessimism and despondency, the
face of 8 declining business activity and a tendency towards growing
unemployment. I would consider neither of these latter possibilities as
extremely remote, barring action by Washington.
My feeling is that this situation could be readily
turned ebout if you would abandon the policy of gold sterilization and
deposit in gold certificates with the Federal the equivalent of the
gold now sterilized. This would have an immediate and an electric effect
on the bond market, both for Government and corporate issues, and would
go a long way towards throwing into reverse the feeling of apprehension
that has been growing all too rapidly in the last few weeks. It would
be reflected in the commodity market by substantial advances. Washington
bas been critical of advances in the commodity market until quite re-
cently; yet I cannot avoid the feeling that they should now be concerned
rather about further declines than about a new recovery. While I quite
sympathize with their desire to react from to time against speculative
excesses wherever they may appear, I feel that in the long run we will
only reach B. sound position if gradually the price level is allowed to re-
adjust itself to the present price of gold. Such a readjustment in itself
would correct many of the disequilibrie in our system.
Regraded Uclassified
85
- 3 -
There will always be a lag between a rising
cost of living and the rate of wages and salaries. Somethimes
one will out-run the other and at other times vice versa. But
having in mind the extent to which there is a tendency to re-
distribute through wages, salaries and dividends to en ever-
increasing number of individuals a constantly larger share of
the annual productivity, I would expect this to gradually take
care ot itself in the general upsurge of an economy which is
turned towards increasing activity based upon an enormous amount
of necessary work throughout the country waiting still to be
done. Such an upsurge will do more than anything else to solve
the problem of "bot money, and at the same time it will do more
than any other thing to bring about budgetary equilibrium. It is
obvious that anything which causes a material setback in this tendency
will have immediate and unpleasant implications for the budget.
This letter, as you see, is addressed to other
phases of the problem than those which I went into with you in some
detail when I was in Washington. I have not changed my view about
the question of the free coinage of gold, but I agree with you that
the phases of the problem touched upon in this letter are of more 1m-
mediate importance. In the end, they all have some pointsof inder-
dependence.
I am at your disposal at any time to discuss this
or any other questions with you, should you so desire.
With kindest regards, I am,
Yours sincerely,
Just Julan le
FA/B.
Regraded Uclassified
86
JS
Gray
PARIS
Dated April 26, 1937
Rec'd 4:09 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington, D.C.
530, April 26, 6 p.m.
FROM COCHRAN.
French control sold fair amount of sterling at 111.15.
Dollar has become a little more offered. The control sold
a few at 22.55. Rentes dealined about 1.70 francs and the
new 1937 four and one half national defense bonds sank
to 94.31. stock market bad.
is
Today's market nervousness/due in part to week-end
political developments and most particularly to insistent
and recurring demand of Jouhaux and his laborers that ten
billion france be borrowed by the Government to finance
public works and especially to take care of the twenty
odd thousand employed in finishing the Paris Exposition
structures. The idea of "work billà" after the German
example which could be discounted by contractors with
the bank and later rediscounted at the Bank of France is
being pushed while earlier ideas of capital levies and
nationalization of insurance and other business are
reviving.
"ith French Parliament assembling tomorrow, Govern-
ment may soon face a bitter debate on general policies.
The Minister
Regraded
87
- 2 -
From Paris #530
The Minister of Finance will undoubtedly be required to
advertise the Finance Committee's detailed information with
respect to the state of the Treasury, disposition made of
funds recently borrowed, etc.
BULLITT
SMS:RGC
Regraded Uclassified
88
April 27, 1937.
H. M. Jr. called to see the Vice-President this
morning. The Vice-President told H. M. Jr., that as
Secretary of the Treasury he has the responsibility
of the budget and the time may come when he may have
to resign if he does not get the co-operation of the
President on "spending". H. M. Jr. told him that he
does not threaten but if the President does not carry
out his promise to stop spending, he will resign.
The V.P. told H. M. Jr., that for two months he has
laid the ground work for the curtailing of spending but
that the President would not listen. He also said, "Henry,
frankly, I am talking to the President through you".
H. M. Jr. replied that he understood.
H. M. Jr. asked the V.P. whether he had confidence in
him and the Vice-President answered, "Henry, I am your
friend and I am proud of you. You can always count on me".
Regraded Uclassified
89
April 27, 1937.
9:58 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello
Operator:
Governor Harrison - go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello
Harrison:
Hello Henry?
H.M.Jr:
Good morning George.
H:
I was disappointed not to see you yesterday. On
account of this daylight saving thing I had to rush
off as soon as my meeting was over.
H.M.Jr:
I see. What were you - afraid to get caught in the
dark.
H:
Well I'll tell you. It gets me home so late. I
didn't get home as it was till pretty near 11.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
H:
And I - it cuts an hour off on the night train so
I have to skip that if I can.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
H:
Ah - I - everything is about the same as last night's
closing.
H.M.Jr:
well I haven't. I haven't - I don't watch the bond
market as closely as I used to.
H:
I see.
H.M.Jr:
I let Marriner and you do that.
H:
And -
H.M.Jrt
Seriously.
H:
What's that?
H.M.Jr:
I'm serious.
H:
Well I think that's right.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
90
& 1 1
H:
The - an - and I'm glad you don't bother about it.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
H:
Ah - the - an - ah - - - the difficulty is there's
a
there - that I wanted to mention to
you there - judging by the evidence of the last three
or four days
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
d:
there's a good deal of liquidation coming from
the middle west and far west
H.M.Jr:
I see.
H:
for the first time.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
H:
Ah - that's the reason that - usually quiet in the
mornings - it's been quiet in the mornings for three
days now and then there's - ah - the west wakes up -
ah - we get soaked and it's been quiet again to-day
but we're fearful that we will get soaked again this
afternoon the same as we did yesterday. Of course,
yesterday was a bad day in everything.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
H:
And a good deal of rumor or talk has been around town
about collapse of prices and securities in London.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
H:
Ah - which some people rumored I guess we've had
no evidence of any justification to the rumor.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
H:
That somebody's commission in - ah - houses - were in
trouble over there.
H.M.Jr:
A h-ha.
H:
Now whether that's had anything to do with added
pressure I don't know.
Regraded Uclassified
91
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well I wanted to ask you just what the various
worries were in New York - if you could - tell
me what are some of the financial people worrying
about in New York?
":
Well I don't know but I'll tell you what I've done -
I've just started to-day having a series of -
well I began as a matter of fact on Friday before
I went down there and they had only one then but
I'm having now a series of talks with the principal
banks just to find out - because I can get a collection
of that.
H.M.Jr:
I'd like to know
H:
And I'm having two or three of them come in to-day
again and after I get 8. better cross-section of it
I'll sum it up for you but I just wanted to know
myself.
H.M.Jr:
Because I - I - all I keep. hearing is they're worried
but I don't know what they re worrying about.
H:
Well I'll tell you - one man - and I think it's better
from your standpoint than mine not to ask me who it is -
some day I'll tell you came - came on Friday and I spent
an hour with him and, frankly, his only worry was the
general one - fundamental one - of what the world and -
and the U. S. too but the world was a whole was going
to do about gold because he thinks we're getting into
an awful Jam on it.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
d:
And he says that with America and England being forced
to buy gold at prices that are not justified in
relation to other world prices - gold that we don't
want - and the way he figured it out - that it will
either continue to come here and increase excess re-
serves or increase government debt and he just thinks
and expresses damnfoolishness for the world - for England
and this country to have to go on at that rate buying
gold that they don't want and all the rest of the world
is dumping on these two countries. Now he says funda-
mentally he thinks that's the most dangerous thing in
the situation and that thoughtful people are getting more
cautious about it and getting more
at the
President.
H.M.Jr:
Well that - would that mean there would be more or
less gold come this way?
Regraded Uclassified
92
- 4 -
H:
You mean his feeling that way?
H.M.Jr:
Well I mean if they're are enough people feel that way.
H:
Well I'll - I'll try to puzzle that out. I don't think
so because you see most of it is coming not because
people here are attracting it but rather because people
in the other parts of the world that don't want it are
selling it to us because they think they're getting a
very good price.
H.M.Jr:
Well I'd be very much interested after you talk to the
people - ah - ah - if you - if there's any general
ideas as to what's the matter I'd like to have them.
H:
Yes, well I'll - I'll - well I thought I'd just make
this survey just to see what's itching them all.
H.M.Jr:
Of course, from the standpoint of the United States
Treasury - ah - I'm not worried
H:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
because the things that are happening don't affect
us.
H:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
So there's nothing - ah - for me to worry about unless
the worries get sufficient that it slows up business.
H:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And, of course; that hasn't happened.
H:
No I don't think it's happened and to the extent we've
had any slowing up I think it's been
H.M.Jr:
So - ah - ah
H:
But I do think from - ah - evidence that you get
everywhere that there is a trend of firmer interest
rates all over the world.
H.M.Jr:
Well - ah - that - that may be so although I see the
British are selling B 1948 - 2-1/2% bond so that don't
look as though interest rates were so firm.
Regraded Uclassified
S3
- 5 -
H:
1948.
H.M.Jr:
That's what they - that's what they offered yesterday -
1948 - 2-1/2%.
H:
Yes, that's 11 years.
H.M.Jr:
At 99-1/2.
H:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Well let's see what happens beginning next Monday
when - when - after we've passed the famous May 1st date.
H:
Yes, well I think that we're seeing that now. I think
that we're closer to that.
H.M.Jr:
All right George if you get anything give me a ring,
will you?
H:
Yes, I will.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
H:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
MEMORANDUM
S4
April 27, 1937
To:
Secretary Morgenthau
From: Dr. Burgess
Treasury bonds were quiet today with little change in
prices. Volume of trading on the board was emall and there
was not a great deal of activity in the over-the-counter
market. Opening bids on the board were 1/32 under yesterday's
close and there was little variation from this level through-
out the session. The long bonds closed unchanged to 2/32 off
and the rest of the list was unchanged to 1/32 off. The
guaranteed group W&B also quiet but showed fairly large price
changes; the F.F.M.C. bonds were mixed and the H.O.L.C. bonds
were down 5/32 to 7/32 on sales. Government bond turnover on
the board was $691,000 compared with $3,643,000 yesterday.
The note market was quiet and steady with few changes in quota-
tions. Several middle maturities closed 1/32 down on the day,
the two longest issues 1/32 better and the rest of the list
was unchanged.
Domestic bonds were dull apart from a little activity in
the second grade rails, and price changes were generally small.
In the second grade group rails were emall fractions better on
the day, industrials were firm to last night's closing level,
and utilities were small fractions off. High grades were
rather mixed with a firmer tendency.
There was moderate and general activity in the foreigns with
few price changes of consequence. Argentine 4ge were off 1/2
point; Canadian bonds were unchanged to & shade lower, while
Australian and Japanese issues firmed slightly.
No purchases for Treasurv today.
Regraded Uclassified
95
ADDRESS OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON, o.e.
to
1804
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
In reply refer to
FE - 694.006/8.
April 27, 1937
CONFIDENTIAL.
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
for his confidential information a paraphrase of a tele-
gram (No. 119) of April 23, 1937, from the American Ambas-
sador at Tokyo in regard to trade policies of Japan.
Enclosure:
Paraphrase.
03V13038
1 is
VRITENINT
\ 1 \ \
Noted
A. Lochhead
(nox
Regraded
Uclassifie
I
96
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DIVISION { ( FE
BUREAU
(
ENCLOSURE
TO
LETTER DRAFTED
ADDRESSED TO
Secretary of the Treasury
S6
(CONFIDENTIAL)
PARAPHRASE
A telegram (No. 119) of April 23, 1937, from the
American Ambassador at Tokyo reads substantially as follows:
On April 21 the Minister for Foreign Affairs remarked
at a farewell dinner given in honor of the Kadono Economic
Mission that, although it may not be possible to restore com-
pletely international free trade as it existed in the past,
a check should be put on the trend toward extreme trade protec-
tion. The Foreign Minister said also that Japan should take
part in the movement in Europe and America for freer trade
between the nations.
According to reports in the press of April 22 the
Ministry of Finance has decided to retain in force after
July 1 the measures adopted on January 8 for import exchange
control and to expand the scope of the measures in order to
restrict gradually imports into Japan of luxury goods and
non-essential materials.
The attention of the Department is invited to the
inconsistency between the two policies above mentioned
in case the Department should have occasion to have con-
versations with the mission while it is in the United
States.
694.006/8
Noted =
A. Lochhead
Regraded Uclassified
97
April 27, 1937.
10:25 a.m.
H.M.Jr: Hello.
Operator: Mr. Knoke.
H.M.Jr: Hello.
L. W.
Knoke:
Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr: Hello Knoke. How are you?
K:
Quite well, thanks.
H.M.Jr: Ah - Knoke, have you talked recently to England or
to Holland.
K:
Well I'm expecting a call from Holland now.
H.M.Jr: Good.
K:
They put it in for ten minutes after eleven.
H.M.Jr:
Are they calling you?
K:
Yes, they're calling me.
H.M.Jr:
Good and are you going to talk to England today?
K:
Ah - well if you think I ought to.
H.M.Jr:
Well I - I'd like to know what they're all worrying
about. If you can find out, you know.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
If there's anything particular that's gone wrong or
is there - ah - what's all the shooting for, you
know?
K:
Yes, well I'll - surely I'll ask that question. I'm
afraid that (laughs) this situation will last for a
while, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr: Why?
K:
Well because - ah - ah - you see the - it will -
probably the rumors will come up and the rumors
will call for a denial and the more rumors and
the more denials probably gradually the more
hard-boiled the market will get.
S8
2 I I
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
And that, after all, is the experience that has -
that anybody always has had. The first denial
is the most effective; the second is - is not
quite as effective and so it will - and so it
continues.
H.M.Jr:
Well do you think these rumors that they're going
to drop the price of gold are coming from abroad?
K:
From where?
H.M.Jr:
From abroad.
K:
Oh I'm sure they are not coming from here.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
K:
Well that I'm sure of because - ah - at least I
have no reason to assume that anybody here is
spreading those.
H.M.Jr:
Well that's what I think.
K'
Well at least .....
H.M.Jr:
Some of the people here in the Treasury don't agree
with me. I think that they're being manufactured
abroad.
K:
They what?
H.M.Jr:
I think the rumors are coming mostly from abroad.
K:
Well that's what I think.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
K:
That's what I said. I don't think they come from here.
H.M.Jr:
No.
K:
They at least - ah - let me put it this way. I have
no reason whatever to assume that they come from here.
I have no indication of any kind.
H.M.Jr:
Well this is the way I feel and I told this to Governor
Harrison a little while ago. While these rumors are
bothersome and they upset the markets and so forth and
so on - but as far as the United States Treasury is
concerned they really don't affect us.
Regraded Uclassifie
99
- 3 -
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And while - what I'm trying to do as Secretary is
to be - to help keep the market stable see, and orderly.
In the final analysis all of this - what's going on
here for the last couple of weeks really doesn't touch
us. I mean there's nothing really to worry us.
K:
Well no - I guess.
H.M.Jr:
I mean the stock market falls four or five points;
it doesn't affect us and always - because it hasn't
slowed up business, you see?
K:
Yes, well, of course, the one thing - ah - one
respect in which it seems to me it does affect us
is the - the - ah - continued increasing amount of
gold coming over.
H.M.Jr:
Well why worry about it, Knoke?
K:
Well - ah
.....
H.M.Jr:
Supposing we get a billion dollars of gold - what of
it?
K:
Well - (Laughs)
H.M.Jr:
No I want to get that over to you. What of it?
Now look -
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
We're spending seven billion dollars next year - seven
billion three hundred million dollars.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Supposing I have to spend seven million dollars on
interest to sterilize a billion dollars worth of gold.
What of it? Why should I worry?
K:
Quite so, Mr. Secretary, but I'm not
H.M.Jr:
No but I want to get that over to you. I mean I want
to get it over to you
......
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
.....
so that you can get it over.
Regraded Uclassified
100
- 4 -
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
There's nothing in this situation which gives me any
cause for worry. If I get a billion dollars worth of
gold and sterilize and it costs me seven million dol-
lars in order to insure the financial structure that
this gold doesn't go into our blood-stream, see?
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Keep it out of our blood-stream.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
What is there to worry about?
K:
Well - ah - may I - ah - say how I think the market
is
H.M.Jr:
Please, always tell me and then tell me what you think.
K:
Ah - the way the market argues is that as the sterilized
gold mounts up someday there will be a kick from up in
the Capitol and the same old argument. They say, "Well
this is nothing but a bonus to the banker" and - ah -
in Patman's language and in Coughlin's language - a
bonus to the banker.
H.M.Jr:
Well all right - let me take care of that. I took care
of it in 133, 134, and 135.
K:
(Laughs)
H.M.Jr:
No, but I'm telling you.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I mean I want to get this over to you that neither
the President nor I are worried about the present
situation because there's nothing in the fundamental
economic structure of this country which it harms.
We're going ahead; we have our strikes, yes; we have
our labor troubles, yes; but the business moves forward.
Ah - the New York Times business index constantly goes
up. I mean what is there fundamentally for me to worry
about? That's what I'd like to have some New York
financier tell me, because I can't see anything.
K:
That isn't I think
H.M.Jr:
Pardon me?
Regraded Uclassified
101
- 5 -
K:
That isn't what you want to worry about - it's - ah *****
H.M.Jr:
Well I can't worry because they worry.
K:
Well that is just it - the - quite so you can't but
the effect of the - the accumulated effect of their
worrying is what worries me.
H.M.Jr:
True but what you want to know is - there's only two
people in the United States that can change the price
of gold, and I'm one of them.
K:
Mr. Secretary, I said to the Chase yesterday I was
willing to bet there would be no change this year and
I was willing to bet there would be no change next
year, and I said, "Politically I can't think any
further than that."
H.M.Jr:
Well what I'm getting at is - ah - I want you to
know that I'm not worried about five hundred million;
I'm not worried about a billion dollars worth d' gold
coming over here, see?
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And I - but I can't worry because some fellow down
there worries.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Now the only thing that Archie brought up is whether
we ought to step in and buy some gold in London
ourselves.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know whether that would help or not.
K:
Well I - I think it - ah - yes, I think it would
help because it seems to me the continued discount
of the London price indicates that supply - that
although demands has picked up considerably yet it
is not up to supply.
H.M.Jr:
Well, think that over.
K:
Well we - he and I discussed it yesterday afternoon
and I thought it would be - expressed the feeling
then
102
- 6 -
H.M.Jr: Well you talk to London; you talk to Holland, will you?
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And - and talk to Cariguel too.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And after you've talked to them give me a ring.
K:
Am I at liberty to indicate what you told me?
H.M.Jr:
Are you at liberty?
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Absolutely.
K:
All right, sir.
H.M.Jr:
I mean absolutely.
K:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
I mean I - I wouldn't give that to very many people
but I give it to you. You mean abroad and at home?
K:
Abroad.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, you can use it - you can use it anywhere where
you think it's necessary.
K:
All right, sir, and I'll call you later on.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, because that's the way I feel. I mean - the
point is I can't worry because some other fellows
are worrying and there's - there's nothing that
I can see that I should worry about.
K:
Well I shall do my darndest to get that across.
H.M.Jr:
0. K.
K:
All right, sir.
H.M.Jr:
All right, thank you.
Regraded Uclassified
103
April 27, 1937.
10:57 a.m.
Hello
H.M.Jr:
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Yes.
H.M.Jr: You tell Major Berry, when he comes back, that I have
approved his request for the 15% differential for the
men in the Bureau of Engraving.
Approved his request - I beg your pardon?
H.M.Jr: On the 15% differential - he knows what I mean.
Yes.
H.M.Jr: In the Bureau of Engraving - night workers. Question
of unions.
All right I surely will. Allright I surely will.
H.M."r:
I have approved it.
You've approved it.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
All right I'll tell him when he comes in.
Regraded Uclassified
104
April 27, 1937.
10:58 a.m.
Hello
Operator: Just a minute please.
H.M.Jr:
Put him on.
0:
He's on.
H.M.Jr: (Aside to Miss Roche: "Thanks Miss Roche")
Hello
H.M.Jr:
Hello Butterworth.
B:
Good afternoon Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Can you hear me.
B:
Absolutely.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Butterworth - what I want you to do if
you have the contacts - I wish you could talk to
either to some of the American
B:
I can't hear you sir.
H.M."r:
Can you hear me now?
B:
A little bit better, yes.
H.M.Jr:
If you know any of the American brokers in London -
brokerage offices - do you know any of them?
B:
Yes - yes I do.
H.M.Jr:
I wondered if you could sort of talk to them
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
....and find out why they think the people are selling
American stocks, see?
B:
Why they're selling American stocks?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, if they have any reason.
Regraded Uclassified
105
- 2 -
B:
Yes, well I - I know that there's been a spilling
over of the liquidation here.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
I'll tell you what I mean - brokers took the position which
occurred here in the last week.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
And then from
speculators and investors
found themselves in a position where they had to
undertake some forced liquidation.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
Now they - if they liquidated their English
stock
which had declined considerably in value -
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
Those were several reasons that I reported you know.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
They would have to do so at a great sacrifice
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
....and so they were inclined to liquidate some
of their American holdings
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
particularly the sort of well known market
leaders such as U. S. Steel and New York
Central and International Nickel.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
those
B:
The- particularly / national stocks which are
quoted in large amounts both here and in New York
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
which is an active market in both places.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
Regraded Uclassified
106
- 3 -
B:
And that I know has been going on.
H.M.Jr:
"h-ha.
B:
I don't think they've been liquidating their American
stocks from - in the last few days on the basis of
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
in
I think it was temporary rather than a permanent thing
I.M.Jr:
Well the thing that I wanted was: What was their
particular worry - not only American stocks but what
are they worrying about, see?
B:
Oh I see.
1.1,3r:
I mean - what are the people in the markets - what
are they worrying about abroad and in the United
States, see? I mean if - if you could find out - I
mean - ah - I know they are worrying about a lot of
things but I - I can't find out what their particular
worries are.
B:
I don't think they're particularly worred about the
American scene. I think their worry has been internal
matters here.
S.V.Jr:
Well could you find out more about it and send me a
cable on it?
B:
I could indeed. Would you like - like me to tell you
a little bit about the atmosphere at the present
moment?
H.V."r:
Yes.
B:
Ah - in brief the English market has improved to-day.
B.M.Jr:
Good.
E:
And people are feeling better in anticipation of the
statement which Mr. Chamberlain is making to the House
of Commons to-day
H.M.Jr:
I see.
Regraded Uclassified
107
- 4 -
B:
regarding the national contribution pact.
Of
arrangements of this pact
has - ah - hit the market so hard is because it's
connected in the peoples minds with the wartime
financing.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
This
pact.
E.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
B:
And it's going to hit people
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
For instance, if they come here on 1933, 134 and 135.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
A good many of the heavy incomes have been - and so
on were very depressed during those - so that if that
is true it would carry the
they will
have to pay a rather large tax.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
A very good
is that the - the whole
position is somewhat clearing up
on the basis
of the assessment
which was on the
three million pounds
that
twenty - twenty-five million pounds
but the particulars
as to how it is going to be
worked out has not been made clear.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
If those were cleared up I think that they will be
likewise clearing up the
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha. Well if you don't mind - I don't quite get it
very well over the telephone.
I wish you'd sit down
and write me a cable on it.
B:
I certainly will.
Regraded Uclassified
108
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
Now we here, as far as the Treasury goes, we have no
particular worries but there are an awful lot of other
people who are worrying and I'm trying, by calling up
you, calling up Cochran and New York, I'm trying to
find out what are people worrying about in the various
financial centers
3
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
and see if any of it makes any sense and - so
if you just talk and see - I mean if you can pin them
down, see?
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And if you can and never mind how foolish it sounds -
why just send it along.
B:
Yes I will.
H.M.Jr:
And we're trying to pick it up from the different
centers.
B:
Allright. Well I'll see if I can 't get you off a
cablegram tonight.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you very much.
B:
On this - Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
You got my report of the conversation on Friday?
H.M.Jr:
On what?
B:
On Friday.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
Was that satisfactory the way it was put?
H.M.Jr:
Yes quite.
B:
It was.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
Well thank you so much.
Regraded Uclassified
109
- 6 -
H.M.Jr: Yes, it was all right.
B:
Thank you very much.
H.M.Jr: Goodbye.
B:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
2)
110
FICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April B, 1937.
CONFIDENTIAL VILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
Facks 1. -3
DE WEDERLANOSCHE BANK.
Mr. de Jong called me at 11:51 and referred to his cable-
gram of today, by which he had canceled his previous instructions to
sall guilders at 5476 or better, and gave us a new order to sell for
their account further guilders 25,000,000 at 5484 less charges, that
is 54831 in cases where w sall through agents. If we made sales
without paying brokerage or commission to agents, he would be satis-
fied to receive 54851 also. de Jong was at great pains to point out
that changing the price did not nom & fundemental change in their
policy. All they intended to do was to follow the market rather than
stick to one rate irrespective of demand or supply. That being so,
they were quite likely to change their rate again in the near future
or, for that matter, to change it a number of times. In that case,
they would send us a telegram quoting us the new rate. I asked how
the dollar was behaving and de Jong said it was very much offered.
I asked how he explained the weakness of the dollar and he ascribed
it to the same old runers.
I took this opportunity to refer to our telephone converse-
tion of April 9, when I had repeated to his what the Secretary of
the Treasury had told no over the telephone, namely that neither the
President not he contemplated 8 change in the gold price. I nentioned
that I had had a similar call from the Secretary this merning, repeating
the same statement and I added that, personally, I was very consid-
erably impressed with what the Secretary had told no. de Jong thanked
me.
Be the sentiened that he unsted no to know that in all
Regraded Uclassified
111
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
FICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April 27, 1987.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT:
TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
L. V. Knoke
WITH DE HEDERLANDSCHE BANK.
- 2 -
probability we would receive substantial amounts of dollars for their
account, which they were not going to ask us to convert into gold.
This, however, did not apply to dollars with which we might credit
them against our sales of guilders in this market. The latter, we
were to continue to convert into gold as heretofore. I pointed out
that if he accumulated dollars without at once converting them into
gold, conversion under the present arrangement could not take place
at 8 future date. de Jong assured no that he fully understood the
situation.
LEK:KMC
BECEINED
Tax
/ I - 1 2 - / /
Regraded Uclassified
112
April 27, 1937.
10:58 a. n.
Hello.
Operator: Just 8. minute please.
H.M.Jr: Put him on.
Operator: He's on.
H.M.Jr: (Aside to Miss Roche: "Thanks Miss Roche.")
Hello.
H.M.Jr:
Hello Butterworth.
B:
Good afternoon, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Can you hear me?
B:
Absolutely.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Butterworth - what I want you to do if
you have the contacts - I wish you could talk to
either to some of the American
.....
B:
I can't hear you sir.
H.M.Jr:
Can you hear me now?
B:
A little bit better, yes.
H.M.Jr:
If you know any of the American brokers in London -
brokerage offices - do you know any of them?
B:
Yes - yes I do.
H.M.Jr:
I wondered if you could sort of talk to them
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
..... and find out why they think the people are sell-
ing American stocks, see?
B:
Why they're selling American stocks?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, if they have any reason.
113
22 I I
B:
Yes, well I - - I know that there's been a spilling
over of the liquidation here.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
I'll tell you what I mean - - brokers took the position
which occurred here in the last week.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
And then from
speculators and investors
found themselves in a position where they had to
undertake some forced liquidation.
H.M.Jr: I see.
B:
Now they - if they liquidated their English stock
which had declined considerably in value -
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
Those were several reasons that I reported you know.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
They would have to do so at a great sacrifice
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
.... and so they were inclined to liquidate some
of their American holdings
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
.....
particularly the sort of well known market
leaders such as U. S. Steel and New York Central
and International Nickel.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
The - particularly those national stocks which are
quoted in large amounts both here and in New York
H.M.Jr: I see.
B:
.....
which is an active market in both places.
H.M.Jr: I see.
114
- 3 -
B:
And that I know has been going on.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
B:
I don't think they've been liquidating their American
stocks from in the last few days on the basis of
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
B:
I think it was temporary rather than a permanent thing.
H.M.Jr:
Well the thing that I wanted was: What was their
particular worry - not only American stocks but what
are they worrying about, see?
B:
Oh, I see.
H.M.Jr:
I mean - - what are the people in the markets - what are
they worrying about abroad and in the United States,
see? I mean if - if you could find out - I mean - ah -
I know they are worrying about a lot of things but I -
I can't find out what their particular worries are.
B:
I don't think they're particularly worried about the Americar
scene. I think their worry has been internal matters here.
H.M.Jr:
Well could you find out more about it and send me a cable
on it?
B:
I could indeed. Would you like - like me to tell you a
little bit about the atmosphere at the present moment?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
Ah - in brief the English market has improved today.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
B:
And people are feeling better in anticipation of the
statement which Mr. Chamberlain is making to the House
of Commons today
.....
H.M.Jr:
I
see.
B:
.....
regarding the national contribution pact. Of
arrangements of this pact has - ah - hit the
market so hard is because it's connected in the
people's minds with the wartime financing.
H.M.Jr: Yes
B:
This
pact.
115
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha.
B:
And it's going to hit people
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
For instance, if they come here on 1933, 134 and 135.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
A good many of the heavy incomes have been - and so on
were very depressed during those - so that if that is
true it would carry the
they will have to pay a
rather large tax.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
A very good
is that the - the whole position is
somewhat clearing up
on the basis of the assessment
which was on the three million pounds
that
twenty - twenty-five million pounds
but the particulars
as to how it is going to be
worked out has not been made clear.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
B:
If those were cleared up I think that they will be
likewise clearing up the
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha. Well if you don't mind - I don't quite get it
very well over the telephone. I wish you'd sit down
and write me a cable on it.
B:
I certainly will.
H.M.Jr:
Now we here, as far as the Treasury goes, we have no
particular worries but there are an awful lot of other
people who are worrying and I'm trying, by calling up
you, calling up Cochran and New York, I'm trying to
find out what are people worrying about in the
various financial centers
.....
B:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
and see if any of it makes any sense and - so
if ..... you just talk and see - I mean if you can pin them
down, see?
B:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
116
- 5 -
H.M.Jr: And if you can and never mind how foolish it sounds -
why just send it along.
B:
Yes I will.
H.M.Jr: And we're trying to pick it up from the different
centers.
B:
All right. Well I'll see if I can't get you off a
cablegram tonight.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you very much.
B:
On this Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
You got my report of the conversation on Friday?
H.M.Jr: On what?
B:
On Friday.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
Was that satisfactory the way it was put?
H.M.Jr:
Yes quite.
B:
It was.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
B:
Well thank you so much.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, it was all right.
B:
Thank you very much.
H.M.Jr:
Goodbye.
B:
Goodbye.
117
April 27, 1937.
11:54 a. m.
H.M.Jr: Hello.
H.Merle
Cochran: Hello Mr. Morgenthau.
H.M.Jr: Hello Cochran. How are you?
C:
All right, thank you, how are you?
H.M.Jr:
Oh pretty well.
C:
Haven't heard your voice for some time.
H.M.Jr: No. Cochran why I'm calling up is I wonder if you
could make a few inquiries as to what people are
worrying about as far as the finances of the world
are concerned, see?
C:
Yes.
H.M.Jr: We're getting all kinds of rumors; some of them
credited; some of them London - I mean I wondered,
for instance - I mean what are the New York banking,
representatives of the New York Stock Exchange people
in Paris - what are they worrying about, see?
C:
Yes,
H.M.Jr:
What are the French people worrying about?
C:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
In other words, I'm trying to collect the various
worries and then see if they make a picture, see?
C:
Yes - yes.
H.M.Jr: Now, of course, I know about the gold and all that
and every day we deny it
....
C:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
.....
and we'll keep on denying it.
C:
Yes.
- 2 -
118
H.M.Jr:
But I wondered if you could visit around in the next
day or two and then send me a cable and give me what
the people are worrying about.
C:
Surely, I can do that.
H.M.Jr:
Even though they may sound foolish.
C:
Surely.
H.M.Jr: Have you got any ideas of your own what . - or have
-
you got any worries.
C:
Well I haven't any particularly, no. But when I was
in Basle, for instance, on the gold proposition -
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
At that time your
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
They were afraid that it left the door open to some-
thing and they thought that it might necessarily
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
And since then it's been the market collapse more than
anything to the effect of the President's statement
on commodities.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
C:
And, of course, London had such a bad day yesterday
and they've had this
proposition put on to
them and
budget.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
It's just given them the worst move they've had in
a long while.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
Then the loans coming out yesterday at a fairly low
rate - this - it's all upset them.
Regraded Uclassified
119
- 3 -
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
And then - then they fear that the American operators
might
in their own market.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
C:
They think that if they had a little more
- a little more confidence that it would
spread over here.
H.M.Jr:
You mean the stock market? Are you talking about
the stock market?
C:
That's it.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
That if the American operators had more faith in
their own market
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
......
that the confidence would be reflected on
this side.
H.M.Jr: I see.
C:
I'll - I'll get in touch with some of the Treasurers
here tonight or certainly in the morning.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
And, of course, after this week-end I could give
you quite a lot when I'm down at Basle.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha. Well -
C:
You remember I go there on Saturday night.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
C:
That ought to leave Monday and Thursday - then I have - -
no - Sunday and Monday. Then I had your wire yesterday -
Sunday rather
H.M.Jr: Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
120
- 4 -
C:
..... saying that you approve
for me.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
C:
I have no inkling of that at all but there's a good
man on that Committee.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
by him
so I'd only
be there two or three days.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
And I expect to get the Annual Report out by
before I go down.
H.M.Jr: Good.
C:
And they're going to have a very expansive chapter
on gold.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
On that I think there's probably some recommendations.
I can cable a summary of that before I go then I'll
get a cable off by airmail from Basle to Paris before
I leave there for
H.M.Jr:
All right, well send anything along - along those
lines.
C:
I'll send you one from Paris before I go
++++++
H.M.Jr:
Right.
C:
..... along this line.
H.M.Jr:
And you'll be interested to know that we've practically
made up our minds to go to Hawaii this summer.
C:
Oh is that so.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
I just sent you another bunch of booklets this time
on
Regraded Uclassified
121
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
Well
I
C:
H.M.Jr: Hawaii has no troubles just now and we think it looks
pretty good.
C:
Fine.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
Well I mean this summer is not going to be pleasant
over here.
H.M.Jr:
No we think that Hawaii looks very nice.
C:
I think personally you're headed in the right direction
but I'm sorry you're not going to be here in person.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
But for a holiday this is not going to be the place.
H.M.Jr:
No that's what we thought.
C:
When would you go then - - July or August?
H.M.Jr:
We'd be there the month of August.
C:
There the month of August.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. I thought you'd like to know it on account of
your own plans.
C:
Then what I should do - I should stay here for the
summer, I think, then later get the holiday
.....
H.M.Jr: Good.
C:
at
H.M.Jr:
Good.
C:
for some rest probably.
....
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Regraded Iclassified
122
- 6 -
C:
But I'll get off this cable in the next day or two.
H.M.Jr: Fine.
C:
And one thing - I can speak
with the French.
H.M.Jr:
I wouldn't take very much - I mean if - - if any govern-
ment could hear it all right.
C:
Oh well that doesn't matter. I meant personally.
H.M.Jr:
What's that?
C:
My friend here is giving a dinner on Thursday night.
H.M.Jr:
Giving a dinner Thursday night.
C:
And which I hope by this time
because
and he's invited him and Auriol and, I think, all the
members of this Control Committee.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
And he's been good enough to invite me along too.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
So I may hear some interesting things:
H.M.Jr:
Well you might drop me a letter.
C:
H.M.Jr:
What's that?
C:
it might be for some specula-
tion.
H.M.Jr:
Well you might drop me a letter.
C:
this Thursday night.
H.M.Jr: I say after it you might just write me a personal letter.
C:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
123
- 7 -
H.M.Jr: Did you hear what I say?
C:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
You might write me a letter.
C:
Surely.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
C:
All right I'll
H.M.Jr: O.K.
C:
There's nothing else here. Everything is going
all right.
H.M.Jr: Thank you.
C:
Goodbye.
H.M.Jr: Goodbye.
124
April 27, 1937.
12:57 p. m.
H.M.Jr:
Knoke?
L.W.
Knoke:
I had all three on the 'phone.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
And in each case I referred to our telephone con-
versation the 9th of April when I'd spoken to them
about what you had told me at that time and I - I
mentioned that I had again this morning discussed -
that you had discussed the situation with me
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
.... and that you - ah - that I heard very strongly
that there was nothing - ah - there's no change
contemplated anywhere.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
Ah - I then asked - ah - I suggested to Bolton that
he let me know just - along what lines people argue
in Europe
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
.....
and I asked the same question of Cariguel and
they both promised they'd let me know if they heard
any new arguments. Meanwhile, this is what Bolton
said. It was a kind of a whispering campaign
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
mostly among academic circles
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
(Laughs) What he called the "Semi-intelligentsia,"
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K3
.... economists .....
H.M.Jr: Yes.
Regraded l
125
- 2 -
M
....
ah - who - ah - based their argument primarily
on rising tendency of commodity prices.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
Ah - Cariguel said while there was very little in - in -
ah - Paris - the hotbed for all this talk was London
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
.....
and - ah - ah - as far as the Bank of France was
concerned, of course, they had never and were not taking
it serious now - that's the way he put it.
H.M.Jr:
I - you talked to Amsterdam?
K:
I talked to Amsterdam also and repeated the same thing.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. And they - what did they say?
K:
Ah - well they didn't - ah - I didn't go into full
length
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
because Amsterdam would probably give me what
London was giving.
H.M.Jr: Well everything that I've heard this morning; I talked
to Butterworth in London and to - ah - Cochran - and
it all heads up in London as near as I can make out.
K:
Yes, that's what Cariguel said too.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Well if they give you anything - let you know
....
K:
Well they both promised that they'd let me know and I
explained to them of how much value it was to us to
understand the psychology of the fellows abroad and
to know how they were arguing - would they please bear
me in mind and they both promised it.
H.M.Jr:
Of course, I feel that the shoe is pinching in England
and - ah - all these arguments about changing the price
of gold would help their situation and I've thought so
now for some time.
126
- 3 -
K:
Well I just wonder which, of course, would mean a
lower sterling rate, wouldn't it?
H?M.Jr:
Yes.
K:
I just wonder whether, with the present expenditure
for armaments,
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
K:
ah - sterling rate at this level isn't really
one that fits into the whole picture.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know. Well evidently it doesn't - otherwise
all this rumor wouldn't be coming out. I don't
K:
Well of course, there is - that rumor I think - there's
always the speculative element -
H.M.Jr:
Well there's more than
K:
He spoke of private banks - I'm sure he had in mind
Lazard Freres - ah - Cariguel denied that he thought
what happened of Lazard Freres business it was not
at the moment at least of a particularly speculative
nature.
H.M.Jr:
Ah-ha. Well - ah - what did they think - Lazard Freres
was doing something?
K:
Well that is a - ah - what's his name - Bolton didn't
mention him by name.
H.M.Jr: Yes.
K:
He spoke of private banks in Paris and in London.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
K:
And Cariguel furnished the name
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
K:
and said that he didn't think it was Lazard -
....
Lazard was doing that business just now.
H.M.Jr:
No - - ah
.....
127
- 4 -
K:
He rather protected Lazard on that.
H.M.Jr:
I see. - ah - well thank you very much.
X:
I'm dictating a brief report on the talk.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Well I don't think it's - I don't think it's
Lazard because as a matter of fact Mr. Altshcul was
down here the other day for the first time since
I've been here - asked to see me.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And - ah - he - ah I gather very strongly that he
thinks it would be a mistake to change the price of
gold.
K:
Yes, I see.
H.M.Jr:
And - ah - ah I - ah - I didn't get anywhere the
idea that - that - that he thought we ought to change
it. I mean I listened to him. I didn't talk - I
just listened.
X:
Yes, well I had the impression that of the two
Cariguel probably knew more about Cari - about Lazard
business than Bolton.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, well I got the very distinct impression from
Mr. Altschul that - that - ah - I was just reading -
I've got a letter here from him. I'll just read you
what he says.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
"Now that we for a long time have had defacto stabiliza-
tion on the basis of $35 per fine ounce I feel that
any tampering with the gold price will introduce
element of the greatest confusion and uncertainty to
the world and the domestic economy and any such step
will be fraught with the greatest danger."
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And that's in writing.
K:
Yes, I see.
128
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
So that's how they feel.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Couldn't put it any stronger than that.
K:
No.
H.M.Jr:
What?
K:
No - - no.
H.M.Jr:
I mean this is a summary of what he told me.
K:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I don't think
......
K:
I have: the highest respect for Mr. Altschul's opinion.
I think he's extremely intelligent and
.....
H.M.Jr:
Well - so he put it all in writing and - ah - so - ah -
he - ah - whatever the rumor is I don't think it's
coming from that source.
K:
Yes - yes.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
K:
Right, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
K:
Goodbye.
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
129
OF NEW YORK
FICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April 27, 1937.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
L. 1. Encke
DM
WITH BANK or ENGLAND.
I called Mr. Bolton at 12:24 to ask how things looked
over there nov. Be expressed the opinion that in London and on the
continent stock and commodity markets were beginning to look a
little bit steadier and that the principal liquidation seased to be
over. A lot, however, depended upon statements by the Chanceller
in the budget situation, which were expected some time during this
week. Business in dollars had been tremendous this morning, stock
brokers and Japanese banks being the principal sellers. The supply
of gold resulted from dishoarding and from the sale of newly-mined
gold. Sellers continued to believe that we would lower our gold
price. I asked Bolton whether he could explain to no along what
line these arguments ran. If we had a better understanding on this
point, maybe something could be done about it. Bolton then explained
that it looked to him like 1 kind of a whispering campaign carried
on by intellectual and seademic circles, with a good deal of talk about
commodity prices on the part of some economists who insisted that secure
or later commodity prices would have to be lowered and that this could
be best accomplished by means of a oubt in the gold price. I referred
to our telephone conversation of April 9, when I had spoken to his
about a telephone call I had just received from the Secretary of the
Treasury, in which the latter had repeated to no most emphatically
that neither the President nor he contemplated a change in the gold
price. I continued to say that I had this morning had a similar -
versation with the Secretary of the Treasury and that the Secretary
had repeated his previous statements, which had personally impressed
Regraded Uclassified
130
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April 27, 1937.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
L. I, Knoke
WITHBARK OF ERGLAND.
- 2 -
me very considerably, with the result that I felt very strongly that
the Secretary was not worrying about the gold inflow nor about the
present or future sise of the amount sterilized, nor about the inter-
est charge thus incurred, which was certainly of no consequence com-
pared with the fact that he had to find $7,000,000,000 next year.
The Secretary had added that the President was equally as determined
as he was, that there should be no change in the price. Bolton thought
that the difficulty was that a great many people (and notiody knew #-
actly who they were nor from where they got their information , were
sure that something was going to happen, feeling that where there was
so much moke there must be some fire. It was a very difficult kind
of argument to fight, he thought, but be would do his best to keep ne
posted and particularly to let me know if any new arguments made their
appearence.
LWK:KMC
DIVIDEN
Regraded Uclassified
131
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April 27, 1937.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
L. 1. Knoke
WITH BANK OF FRANCE.
I called Mr. Cariguel at 12:50. They had had a busy
morning, he said, with the frame sround 444 1/2 and further fluetus-
tions depended on what would happen here and what official statements
might be made. In Europe, and particularly in London, rumors were
circulating that we would interfere with the gold contents of the
dollar; so far Paris had not joined in this talk. I referred his
to our telephone conversation of April 9, when I had discussed with
him a telephone call received from the Secretary of the Treasury in
Washington, in which the latter had repeated to no most emphatically
that neither the President nor he contemplated a change in our gold
price. I continued that I had this morning had a similar conversation
with Mr. Morgenthau and that Mr. Morgenthau had repeated his previous
statements, which had personally impressed no considerably, with the
result that I felt very strongly that he vas not worrying about the
gold inflow nor about the present or future sise or amount of the
gold sterilised, nor about the interest charge thus incurred, which,
he said, was certainly of no consequence compared with the lat fact that
he had to find 7 billion dollars next year. The Secretary added that
the President was equally determined that there should be no change
in the price of gold. Cariguel said that he had originally thought
that these various runers had come from America but now he began to
wonder whether they did not originate in London. The public was very
credulous and prone to pay a good deal of attention to this talk about
lower prices.
I suggested to Cariguel that, if ⑉ had a better understanding
Regraded Uclassified
132
NISC 12 60M 8-36
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE April 27, 1937.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
TO
L. W. Knoke
WITH BANK OF FRANCE.
FROM
- 2 -
of just what these arguments in favor of price changes were, we might
be able to do something about it. Would he, therefore, help no and
give me a ring next time he came across a new argument or rumor -
wind
there was - new. He promised that he would do so but warned
se that it was a hard job to trace these rumors. At the Bank of
France they had never taken them seriously.
LWK:KMC
BECEIAED
Tear e YAM
THUNTRA930 YRU2A397
150 12 sty -
- as al Name house
Regraded Uclassified
133
KLP
PLAIN
London
Dated April 27, 1937.
Rec'd. 2:42 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
RUSH
248, April 27, 8 p.m.
FOR THE SECRETARY OF TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH
Your telephone call came during my daily market
inquiries here which I have since completed but there is
little to add to what I then said,
Briefly the present position must be regarded in the
light of its antecedents, viz, the initial nervousness
engendered by the "commodity price scare" which was further
augmented by the "gold price scare" brought to B. head by
Professor Sprague's speech in Paris. As reported in
my 224, April 17, 2 p.m., gold mining shares were seriously
affected and since then two small failures have occurred in
Johannesburg, the only market where there has been no
attempt to control speculation, and there have been rumors
of further difficulties. As also reported in that telegram
the downward movement in commodities aroused in its course
a number of other bear factors such as the effects of stock
loss
Regraded Uclassified
134
- 2 -
#248 from London - April 27, B p.m.
loss orders and hedge selling which caused much forced
liquidation. On top of this and just after the difficult
Stock Exchange settlement account terminating on April 15
had been arranged came the impact of Chamberlain's budget
speech with its national defense contribution tax, the exact
incidence of which the City was not then able and is not yet
able fully to asses. Its imprecision, its resemblance to the
hated war time excess profit tax, its apparent inequalities
(the severity with which it would fall on recently recovered
industries such as shipping, steel and engineering) and the
fact that it hits primarily common stocks caused an immediate
decline on the London Stock Exchange. In the given
circumstances each decline in turn brought about further
forced liquidation culminating yesterday in a "buyers
strike". Therefore those who had to raise cash were forced
to turn to the active New York market. As I mentioned on
the telephone London's repatriation of funds by the sale of
New York stocks has no connection with the American soene
as such but is entirely due to technical causes arising out
of the recent declines in commodities and stocks in London.
None of the American brokers consulted here reports sales
of American stocks by British insurance companies or invest-
ment trusts and on the contrary several have received buying
orders today at certain price limits. However it is to
be
Regraded Uclassified
135
- 3 -
#248 from London - April 27, 8 p.m.
be expected that in view of the recent past and the
growing nervousness about the French situation London
brokers may take occasion to improve their clients'
&
marginal positions which in some cases will doubtless
necessitate further sales in New York. Conditions in
the London Stock Exchange were better today and prices
advanced and there is a general feeling that the "worst
is passed."
The demand for dollars in the late afternoon was due
(1) to buying by Holland as a result of purchases of American
common stocks (2) recurrence of the rumors in the gold market
that something might be done in the United States to affect
the price of gold.
BINGHAM
HPD
Regraded Uclassified
136
RB
GRAY
Paris
Dated April 27, 1937
Rec'd 3 P. m.
Secretary of State
Washington.
540, April 27, 5 p. m.
FROM CO CHRAN.
French control yielded some sterling today. Dollars
were a little casier due to their being offered against
sterling. French rentes up 35 to 70 centimes without much
business being done. Rest of market quiet.
Today witnessed a lull permitting some recovery from
yesterday's unsatisfactory situation. Last evening
following a Cabinet meeting Minister of Finance stated that
the Government is maintaining its position of rejecting
the idea of a new long term loan. He also denied rumors
that there were to be resignations from his stabilization
fund committee (Rist, Rueff and Baudoin had each been
reported as resigning). The press says that Auriol also
said that the French financial situation was witnessing some
improvement rather than deteriorating as some alleged.
Auriol will be heard tomorrow by the Finance Committee
of the Chamber, on Thursday by the Finance Committee of the
Senate
Regraded Uclassified
:
137
RB
-2-#540, April 27, 5p. m. from
Paris
Senate and on Friday there will be general parliamentary
debate on Government's policies.
BULLITT
CSB
03VIT038
Now is SSA
1878762930 Y2UBA111
" 6% W issue
NO - -
Regraded Uclassified
138
April 27, 1937
tty dear Mr. Attorney General:
Mr. Magill and Mr. 011phant have reported to - fully
on the extended conference which you had with them last
Friday concerning the possibility of the settlement of the
tax cases against 8. M. Smith, E. M. Smith Company, and
Malter a. L. Smith of Los Angeles. They outlined to as
fully the suggestions as to a settlement, which are now being
mde to you on behalf of the taxpayers. In view of the -
usual character of these cases, it seems to IN that, as in
former tax cases of like seriousness, any consideration of
the settlement of civil liabilities at present is untimely
and that these oriminal cases should be pressed to trial OF
plea and sentence. Thereafter the collection or settlement
of the tax liability can be taken up.
I hope that you will consur in this view, in the light
of the additional information which Mr. Magill and Mr. Oliphant
gave you, but if you do not, I should like for us to discuss
these 06000 with the President, as indicated in my letter of
April 15, 1957.
Sincerely yours,
The Honorable
The Attorney General of the United States
RM/egh
% m
FILE COPY
Regraded Uclassified
139
April 27, 1937
The Honorable,
The Attorney General,
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. Attorney General:
I am returning herewith a number of letters ad-
dressed to Mr. Keenan by Mr. M.L. Igoe, United States
Attorney for the Northern Judicial District of Illinois,
containing criticisms directed at certain officers of
the Treasury Department. with these I enclose a memo-
randum given my by the responsible officers of this De-
partment commenting upon Mr. Igoe's charges. I believe
that you will agree with me, after examining this nemo-
randum, that there is no basis for Mr. Igoe's suggestions
of improper conduct on the part of officers of this De-
partment.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
HNG/mff
Initiated: Graves, McReynolds, Helvering and Oliphant
Regraded Uclassified
140
April 26, 1937.
MENORANDOM FOR THE
The Department has received from the Department of Justice a
number of letters addressed to Non. Joseph 2. Keenan, Assistant to
the Attorney General, by Michael L. Igoo. United States Attorney
for the Northern District of Illinois, containing complaints
against the Treasury Department, more especially against certain
of the Department's officials headquartered at Chicago.
These letters have been sent here informally pursuant to an
understanding reached noss time ago between Mr. Xeenan and Mooors.
Cliphant And Helvering. to the effect that Rr. 1800 would rebalt
in writing whatever grounds he might have for complaining of the
activities of Treasury agencies at Chicago.
In accordance with your request, & synopsis of the complaints
contained in Mr. Igos's letters, with the Department's comment
with respect to each specific criticiem, is submitted below.
Allered Unfriendly Attitude on the Part of
Treasury Officials at Washington.
Mr. Igoe begins his first letter. which is dated March 25, by
indicating that it is his distinct inpression that the officials of
the Treasury Department in Vashington feel that at all hazards they
must uphold their subordinates In the field regardless of the serite
of any controversy which may arise. Be bases this, he anys, upon
his experience is two specific instances: namely. the case of Halph
Charges
N. Oyler and the so-called Barney Franklin case. After discussing
these two cases at 6000 length, he has the following to any
Dept's. Reply to Igoe's
"From the statements above made, I believe you will
agree with - that all of the difficulties between the
Treasury Department and myself could have been ended
long ago If there had been A disposition on the part of
the officials of the Treasury Department to deal ex-
paciently and fairly with such difficulties when they
arose. It is because they did not do so that - find
ourselves in the situation which now confronts us.
Regraded Uclassified
141
- 2 -
Insuranch as Its. Igon evidently feels that the attitude of the
officials of the Treasury Department toward the two cases nantional
have had math to do with the strained relations between his office
and this Department, they will be doolt with here in SOME detail.
the Dylor Crea.
Ralph II. Oyler, now District Supervisor, of Marcetics.
at Detroit, Mich. was formarly on duty in the same expecity at
Chioago. Mr. Igne states that he comminicated to Mr. Whoms or
tain information pointing to improper contuct on Cylor's part. Re
says further that If the facts which he submitted to Mr. Gibbons
were proven, as he understands they ware, Cylor should have soon
membrily coparated from the Service. As calls attention to the
fact that Oylar still retains his position. to his (Igoo's) and
resement. 1tr. Iges obviously feels this the officials of the
Treasury Department in Washington ware not interented in retaining
Cylor in the face of his (Igne's) representations.
COMMIT
on Div St, 1933, the Purmer of Sarootics at Chicago submitted
forge reports to the United States Attorney for the Northern Juli-
etal District of Illinois, charging the following persons with
violations of the Federal Inrootic Drag Lawst (1) Denjamin Creach,
Ivan He Partos, and Villiam Paymel (2) India Howard and Charles
Porter Nitcholl; (3) Hal Price Rentley and Marvin Hardins and (4)
A. to Barroni and Junes The reports were Sevend upon in-
vestigations mile during June and July, 1933, at the Arlington
Park race truck, Chicago, w agents of the Pursons of Marcotics TUP
der the direction of Mr. Cylar. then District Supervisor at Chiengo,
and the violations charged aross onst of the alleged "doping" of
rade horses.
Mr. Cylor yes trunsferred from Chicago to Betroit on November
1. 1933, but before his transfer, on Augment 18. 1933, all the Date
nons namel above wore indicted in the Foderal District Court at
Chicago. The indictments were secured my Itr. Lealio R. Salter,
Special Assistant so the Attorney General, who had charge of these
cason for the Government from their Inception and no. as will be
coan, finally secured convictions against Howard and witchell.
Regraded Uclassified
142
the defendants in the Howard case ward Indic Howard, owner and
trainer. m/. Charles 2. Mitchell, his stable foreman. In the
smires of their Investigations, Federal Marantic agents observed on
reserve Instances that Jane before meing horses of the Homest
stable ware civen an injection from a notal agrings. They finally
notral the syrings on one socasion Just as its sentants ware should
to be atministered, and at the and time they nelsed erven bottles
from beness In the Howard stuble. The agrings and the bottles was
all found to contain heroin. On the prossedings in court, 4 me
ston to the was filed and overraled. On the trial,
both defendants wire found cullty on June 30, 1934, and on July 3.
1934, Howard - find $300 and conteneed so ton 40ys in Jall, and
Mitchell the fined $100 and nontened to five Ange In Jail. The jatl
contances ware responded and the defendants placed on prohation for
one your. Noth defendants appealed, and the direuit Court of Appeals
for the Soventh Circuit affirmed the judgment of conviction January
39, 1930. They petitioned the United States Suprese Court for on
tiorari, which was denied April 20, 1935. An has been eath, this
case was tried X Mr. Salter, Special Assistant to the Attorney Gan-
oral, the liberine argued the Government's and before the Circuit
Court of Appeals.
on Jane 20, 1934, the cosss against the other persons above
named were continued for trial until the September, 1934, term of
court, the United States Attorney's office advising that nation
would be deferred In those cases until the Howard date and been
finally adjudicated. As has been seen, shie was disposed of
an April 2, 1935. Mr. Igos successed so the office of District
Attorney in June, 1935, and these three anams TOTO panding at that
itm, with no obstaole now in the way of their prosention.
The defendants In the so-called treach case word Ronjarda
Creoch, whome wife visa the owner of 3 stable of horses. Ivan F.
Parker, Creech's non-in-law and trainer of the stable. and William
Pagme, a colored stable boy. During their Investigations, Federal
Sureette agents on fourteen occasions observed the administration
so horeos of the Creed: stable, gast prior to racing. of the com
tente of a motal ayringe. This me usually w Paster. with Page
assistance, but on at least one occasion Creech also - observed
to participate. A search of the stables use made on July 28, 1932,
and 120 crains of heroin and 16 grains of cocaine found thereon.
After the fimil disposition of the Howard ass, this case EM not
for trial on January o, 1936. However, on November 36. 1935,
Parts and Pagma withdrew their previous pleas of not cullty. and
entered pleas of cullty. Parks VV fined $500 and Payme $250. on
the sand car. on mation of the United States Attorney, the case VM
disnissed as to defendant Creech. this disposition was nide with-
out consultation with the Date or the District Super-
visor at Chicago, and the latter officer did not learn of the termin-
ation of the case until January 3, 1934, when she was informally ase
visal by Accistant United states Attorney Batley.
Regraded Uclassified
143
- 4
In the Barroni and Berhes case, it had been observed on too 00-
casions that a stableman entered & horee's stall with a syringe and
Inter Came out and rinsed the syrings with vater. The officers did
not actually see anyone use the syrings and there is no avidence to
show what was contained therein. The officers 414, hovever, seise
from the tack room of the Barroni stable, a number of bottles of 4
liquid which proved, upon analysis, to contain heroin.
In the Headley and Bardia case, the officers observed the con-
tests of a metal syrings administered to horses in some five in-
stances and a number of bottles were seized in the tack room of
Headley's stable of a liquid which proved, upon analysis, to contain
heroin.
The Barroni and Hezhas once and the Headley and Hardin case
wore set for trial on November 30, 1938, the Barroni-Hexhen care
to be tried first. Barroni and flexhen filed motions to suppress
as evidence certain property seized in the tack room, on the ground
that the search and seisure vore unlawful. Upon hearing arguments,
Judge Woodward rendered a memorandum opinion granting the motions of
Barroni and Hexhom and when the case vas actually called for trial,
it was dismissed in December 2, 1936, for want of prosecution. 30-
cause of the ruling on the admission of the evidence as to Barroni
and liexhes, the CASE of Headley and Hardin was also dismissed on
the was date for want of prosecution.
The Creech case was undoubtedly the strongest of the three
cases remaining after the disposition of the Howard case, and it vsa
the opinion of the Commissioner of Marcotics that a vigorous prose-
oution of this case by the Government would have resulted in the
conviction of all three of the defendante named therein. Early in
January, 1935, the Commissioner called the disposition of this case,
as above described, specially to the attention of Assistant Secretary
Gibbons, stating, assong other things, that there had been rumore that
a great deal of money had been reported ready to secure the closing
of the 05.00 without prosecution. Mr. Igon happened to be in
Tashington about this time, and the dissatisfaction of the Commis-
sioner of Narcotice with regard to this miter was communionted
personally to him by Mr. Gibbons in n conference at the Intter's
office in the Treasury Department. which was attended also by the
Assistant Commissioner of Narestics in the Commissioner's absence.
Regraded Uclassified
144
- 0 -
There is no record of what transpired at this conference.
" is apparent, however, although Mr. Gibbons now has no such
recollection, that Mr. Igee on this occasion must have conveyed
to Mr. Gibbons certain information pointing to misconduct on the
part of District Impervisor Cyler in connection with one of the
heree-doping asses here referred to. It 1s apparent also that
some agreement was reached by Mr. Iges and Mr. 01bbons to the of-
feet that Oyler's supposed nisconduct would be made the subject
of an investigation by the Intelligence Unit. On January 31,
1936, Mr. Gibbons made a formal recommendation to this effect,
to the Secretary. from which the following is quoted:
"District Attorney Igon advised m that he had
heard that the Narcotic District Supervisor at Detroit,
Mr. Oyler. had advised the Chief of Police of Lexington
or Louisville, Contudity, over the telephone that he 414
not think that one of the defendante In question could
be convicted, notwithstanding, be protested the final
sollon taken by the District Attorney."
Pursuant to Mr. Gibbons' recommendation, the Intelligence Unit
of the Bureau of Internal Revenue was directed to male an investige-
tion of Mr. Cyler's alleged miscondust, and a final report of the
investigation was delivered to the Department on May 14, 1936. This
report, which was signed by Special Agent J. 4. Jordan, contains the
following:
"In compliance with request of Assistant Secretary
Gibbons, the closing of the Benjamin Greech 'horee doping'
rase track case at Chicago, Ill., and alleged questionable
notivities of Mr. Cyler with reference to the Barroni and
Headley race track cases, were taken up with United States
Attorney Michael L. Igoo at Chicago, n.
........
"U. a. District Attorney Michael 7. Igoo informed -
that Attorney T. 3. McGrath. who represented Donjanin
Creech, Ivan H. Parke, and William Payme to the Cresch
7604 track case, had salled at his office on January 6,
1936, and inquired as to whether Mr. Oyler, the Marcotte
Agent in Charge of the FAGE track investigation, had been
to Mr. Igoe's office that day to advise his that Mr. Oyler
did not think there vas sufficient evidence to secure a
conviction in either the Barroni or Headley - that
Mr. McGrath did not represent either of the parties, but
was down in behalf of 6 mutual friend of theirs and his,
Regraded Uclassified
145
- s
namely, William 11. Schnidt, - Inisiness nan of Chicago,
undertalor, and also angaged in the maine who had
boon very friendly with both Mr. Headley and Mr. Burront
for 5 partod of yours, and who had been a aliont of At-
torney for twenty years. The U. n. Attorney
advised Attorney that in ass not know Mr. cylor
and that the Latter had never called on him.
"Attorney T. 3. McCrath informed me that on Junuary
17, 1935, 117. filliam X. Schnd &t and into his office,
undorpanied Y Hal Price Handley, defendant in one of the
mon track dasse, and introduced the latter. During the
corrersation, 117. Modrath inquired how they wase Informed
that Mr. Girr was contag to Chiengo and day he was coine
to success dismisial of the Handley use Barront daten to
the 11. 5. Attorney. Therepon, Mr. Ha2 Price Handley
told Mr. Mc0rath the following story:
"IOn daturiay, Junuary 4. 1036, Dylar called the
Chief of Police at Lexington and mini the Chief to are
mays a moeting between Cylar and Headley. The Chief sur
Hondley and Headley advised him that in was not intervated
in mosting Ovier at any I'm or any place. insisting that
Cyler had done his & creat injustice in involving him in
the marcotic picture because has had navor permitted the
11.90 of narcotics on any of his horees except as nicht have
boon prescribed in a medicine w a Licensed voterinarian.
the Chief of Police called Oyler at Detroit and so advised
hime Gylar then minted to know if the Chief would not and
to Detroit AS he wanted to tell him monthing. The Chief
then tell Oylar he could not (in book to Mondley because
Monthay would not talk about the case and that If the Chief
wanted to talk about the Drugo the would have to see Vallace
Huir, attorney for Handley. Mr. thir told the Chief he
sould no to Detroit and são what Oyler had to any. the
Chief arrived in Detroit Junuary 3th. not Oylor and it va
at that time that Oylan said 3ve 414 not think there 123
mufficient evidence to try the Barroni nnd Howlley cases
and that he VAS cotae to Chicago to so viving the United
States District Attorney in this District and he wanted
Mr. Handley to know that be W doing this ao that Handley
would appreciate his friendliness in the natter. Chief of
Police left for Laminaton on have January 3th and after
left for chicago on Funday. Junuary oth.
Regraded Uclassified
146
Regraded Uclassified
- 7 -
"Cylor, nome time during the work of January oth,
advised the Chief that just before he est on the truin
to & to Chicago, be received a tolegram so done to
Vashington which accounted for the reason of not doing
what he had advised them he was going to do."
"This statement of Attorney Modrath's Was correhorated
w Villiam 2. Schmidt. Attorney went on to any this
he know there WAS no fix in the Greech case: that Mr.
Behmidt is on Headlay's and Barroni's bond, and West noither
he nor Mr. Schmidt here over heard about any attenge on the
part of Mondley or Barroni to fix their case; that the
above statement of facts Le accurate and can be rolled upon
1005: and that he received $1,200 as his fee in the Creech
amo."
It is assund that the foregoing etatements mão to Special
Agent Jordan by Mr. Igon and Attorney substantially compriss
the information conveyed to Mr. 01bbons w Mr. Igoo at their earlier
interviews. At any rate, the investigation mile by Special Agent
Jordan along the line of developing whether Hondley's
statement, as reported w Attorney Medreth, appearing to Implionte
Gyler in AN attempt to effect a settlement of the original case at
the time pending against Headley, could be substantially corro-
borated.
Corroboration for this statement could not be hade Chief of
Police Thompson of Laxington, Kentucty, interviewed w Special
Agent Jordan on Harch 17, 1935, at Lexington, and in the course of
the Interview made the following statements
"I have known Halph Cylor for years and Harry
Analinger, the Commissions, is an eld-tine friend of
nine. I never tallord with Oyler over the phone About
the Hondley anso, and Cylor never called m on the
telephone from Detroit. I don't know where you not
this story, but shoever told it is a cools-eyed liar."
Upon being informed that his statement VM at variance with
statements attributed to his w Mr. Hoadley, and in the course of
the SAM any. Chief Therpeon the following signed statement to
Special Agant Jordans
147
Regraded Uclassified
- 8 -
"About theme years ago when Mr. Handley was indicted
for have anrootion in his stable, he asked - to halp
him to investigate to find out the facts in the also, M
to his knowledge he nover had my nurcotion around his
racing stables and all his employees accured him there
MM nono found around his barns.
"I have known Mr. Headley all my life and he and I
have boon personal friends all our lives, ml knowing
his standing in this community, I Visa what he was
maying was the truth.
"I mãe several trips to Chicago. balload to several
city desoctives and & les of other people I loss, to não
If I could find out what they found agrount Xr. Mendley's
stables, as Mr. Headley was contions to find out whother
his exployees were telling the truth or not.
"Ab different times when Shie case was not in Chicago,
I we there and realy to testify as a character witness for
Mr. Nandley. but every time It was not. it was always done
timed: and (F) also Intended to todas several of the best
citizens of this city to also testify as character vitnasses
for him
"Alone about the Christmas holldays of last year, I
más a trip to look over the traffic conditions in other
cities: I went to Cincinnati, Toledo, Detroit, Chicago,
Indianapolis, and Louisville. Just before I started
this trip, I called Mr. Headley and Mr. Mair and told
than I was going your Detroit and Chicago both. and I
would by and fint out hother the case WAS going to be
tried 07 continued, 90 that - world know whether to
take the character witnesses or not. So I put in & call
for Mr. Cylar and asked his is he me going so be in
Chicago or Detroit about that time, and I think he said
in Detroit: und when I arrived in Detroit, I - him and
asked his whother the 00.00 was going to be tried or con-
timed again, M I wanted to notify Mr. Mair no we could
ent our character witnesses up there. He told - that he
and not know and wouldn't know until he got to Chicago
nn/L consulted the District Attorney's office whether is
IRMS coine to so trint 07 continued.
"I don't know anything nore about It now than I and
three years age, as to what they found in Itr. Houllay's
stable, as Mr. Cylor and no om also has given no any
information on the subject."
148
- 9 -
It will X noted that Mr. Readley was mith to have teld Her
Modrath that Cylar Ind called Chief Thompson from Detroit on Jan-
MARY 4. Dut in his stoned statement, Chief Thorgison says that it
VILA her the called Oyler, and not after the called him Appearantly
luving this discrepancy in mind, Apecial Agent Jordan said to
Thorpson when the latter (The him his alemed statements "Tora
state here that you 414 talk with Mr. Cylor over the phone from
Detroit." To this Thropson replinds "Yon, I called hts W to
mix A date to now him there, but he nover called - from Detroit
my time."
On March 34, Special Agent Jordan also secured signed state-
nonta with regard to this matter from Healley and Mr. Neudley's
attorney, Mr. Vallace Mutr. Mr. Healthy's statement rends M 502-
lovel
"About the first of the year 1936, Emast Thompson,
Chief of Police of Laxington, RT.. called and told BD
he me going to several cities, including Detroit, on
nome police business, and wanted to know If I mented him
to nee Mr. Oyler while he was in Detroit, and I referred
him to my attorney, Mr. Matr. I am advised that he 4th
sall Mr. Mair and Mr. Hair told his that it would be all
right for him to see Mr. Oylar, and to fint out whether
my cruse was going to be disposed of on Jamery 9 or not.
wity recollection is that Chief Thorpens returned to
Lexington the following Monday and comminicated with Mr.
Mair, and that I called Mr. Huir and Mr. their tald no
that the case would not be tried on the 9th, and that
he understood Mr. Cyler was going to Chicago and that
everything was all right. I took from this statement
of Mr. Mair to mann that my case would be disposed. of
in the sure my as the Creach case.
as short time after that I want to Chicago on some
other business. and while there I called Hr. William S.
Schmidt, whom I have Imount for a lane Mm. and who is
RV personal friend and the voluntarily signed my bont at
the time I who intiated. I atd not call with
reference to the came, but Just to talk with him. Schmidt
not - down town about noon for lunch and augusted that
before bunch I 5 with his to are Attorney 7. B.
who TEMB his larger and friend, and who had represented
Creach.
Regraded Uclassified
149
- 20 -
"I want with Scholds to 190 Mr. Heleath and 416 not
talk to him AS v attorney and have novez employed Its
Motruth to represent M in NY my. In the course of
the conversation, Mr. McCrath tell no that In law 1150
Kiskland and Mr. Regves. 17 Chicago attorneys, ant also
love 112. That, who represented Marroni, and that the
othins of profession provented him from saying anything
concerning another Immyor's case, but he would be very
glad to advise with olthor of those contlemen, If they
called wor him.
"I told 1/5 McGrath that 1 VM not guilty in this
case, had nover at rarge time permitted the use of -
cotics on my horses, and had never permitted nurcotics
in any form to be in a stable. I sold his that Chief
Thompson was & 11fe-long friend, and had tried to find
out what the Government was claiming AS against 30, int
had arror been able to get any information. I also told
him about Thompson's trip to Detroit, and that Thompson
before Leaving had been in comminication with Mr. Muir,
and wanted to know about his seeing Cylar while in Detroit,
and when Thorpson date book be sald Oylar was going to be
in Chicago in a Any or two. I 414 tall Mr. Modrath that
Thompson not said that Cylor would 300 the District no
torney and reconnent the dismissal of RV case, but after
wards I talked with Hr. their and I found out that I had
evidently misunderstood the maning of It. This non-
vermation All the whan no told - over the phone that
'the case would not be trind, and overything would be
all right', taking from this that case von coing to
be having in nint the dismissal of the Greach
case, but I mimmidersted ltr. Nutr, and litre Shir mays
what he mont to tall me the that avalythine would to all
right, so that I work not vorry about RV Grea at that
time."
Mr. Miris statement is INS follows:
"M the time Chief Thompson TME going to Detrols,
he called me q and told na he - gotac to advoral
cities on nomo business, Including Datroit, and wanted
to know If I thought It would be well for his to -
Mr. Cylor while In Datroit. I told him It would be
entirely all right for his to seo Mr. Cylor and to Mr
certain, If 1so could, whether the case the coing to be
tried on Junuary 9 or not.
Regraded Uclassified
- 11 -
150
"In A day 07 two Thompson ruturned to Loxington,
called 99 and told me to had asso Oylar, best that he ase
not find out from him whether the Case would be tried on
the 9th, but that Cylar the going to Chicago and would
be at the Metrict Attorney's office.
"mooiving this information, I telephoned to our
attorneys in Chicago and told then that Mr. Oyler as
coing to be at the District Attorney's office and for
them so got in touch with the District Attorney and -
if our area could not so Alsposed of along the lines of
the Grooch case.
"I told Mr. Headley, over the telephone, that the
case would not be tried on the 9th, but that everything
would so all right. After talling hts this, be the in
chicago on nome business and he tells ISS that be had a
talk with Mr. Schmidt and Mr. McGrath, in which he told
Mr. MoOmth and Mr. Schmidt to the affect that Cylor was
reposed to come to Chicago, and that Two wis going to
request the District Attorney to diamise the CASO, Mr.
Healthy was to have motten this information from
m, best Mr. Readley was missnism about this and staintor-
proted R anying to his that the dase would not be triad,
but everything would be all right."
Attention is particularly invited to the fast that while Mr.
Sendley states he are initiate to Mr. MoOrath that Oylar planned
to have the case against his dismissed, has not says that this vis
a misstatament. Doth Mr. Meadley and Mr. Mair now state in write
Inc that the former signaterstood the latter, who had not Intented
to convey any main impression M that received w Mr. Headley and
passed on to Mr. There Le clearly TV) avidence to support
the statement that Mr. Cylor pronised to tain action locking to
the dismissal of this case, or that he had oxpressed himself M
feeling that the CASH VISA a wast on.
In considering the statements which have been mde with
respect to the Handley once, it 19 vall to rocall that this case
ma mile in July, 1933, and that during the acures of the investi-
cation n. Special Assistant to the Attorney Genoral - assigned to
handle it. The obtained the Inlictment and aftermats tried and
convicted Inste Howard, one of the defendants in another case made
at the time as the Headley case. The latter case remained
pending in the office of the United States Attorney at Chicago from August,
1033 to December 2, 1938, when It was called and dienlesed. During
this entire period the once was called for trial several times, end
on no coonsion was postponsent requested or suggested w Mr. cyler.
Regraded Uclassified
151
12 + 4
There 1m. moreover, considerable room for doubt whether the
statements originally attributed so Mr. Readley by Altorney McGrath
would have afforded grounds for the dismissal of Cyler even if they
could have been corroborated by substantial evidence, eince they
osen to imply only that Oyler had become convinced that there TM
not sufficient ovidence to try the case pending against Headley.
and that it vas his Intention so to advise the United States At-
torney who had the case in charge. Had these statements been nb
stantiated, there, of course, would have been a question whether
Mr. Oyler's alleged action was judicious and discrest, but over if
true, on their face they certainly de not imply corrupt misconduct.
Novever, the stories finally told w Thompson, Readley, and Muir,
as represented by their written statements now in the Department's
files, as the result of questioning by Special Agent Jordan, are in
as entirely different version from the account given by Attorney
Moornth, and they do not corroborate in any particular the state-
sente alleged by Attorney McGrath to have been made to him by
Headley in 60 far at those statements may be said to reflect on
Mr. Cyler. In these circumstances, and upon the recommendation of
Special Agent Jordan and the Chief of the Intelligence Unit of the
Bureau of Internal Revenue, the Department reached the conclusion
that It had no basis for taking notion of any kind against Mr.
Cyler.
The Barney Franklin Case.
Mr. Igoo repeats the complaint which he has previously made
with respect to this case, based on the fact alleged by him that
Mr. followley deliberately and knowingly transmitted to the
Chicago DAILY HE#3 a letter which he (I@00) had written to Tellowley
recommending the acceptance of an offer in compromise submitted w
the defendant in the case of United States vs. Barney Franklin.
Again Mr. Igoo oriticises the officials of the Treasury Department
at Washington for their failure to discipline Yellowley for making
this letter public.
COMMENT
Although the facts in this notorious case are well known, 11
is believed that they should be reviewed briefly here. On June 19.
1934, the defendant. Darney Franklin, the propristor of n rathskeller
in the Loop district in Chicago, was arrested in possession of an
illicit rectifying plant La the basement of his barroom premises.
At the time of his arrest, certain quantities of untaxpaid spirits,
counterfeit strip stamps, fraudulent labels, etc., ways found on
the promises. It was evident that Franklin was not only defrauting
the Government of 11s revenue, but was also cheating his patrons by
selling them spurious liquor.
Regraded Uclassified
152
- 13 -
Detween June 19 and September no, 1934, eight adjurnments UTTO
obtained from the United States Commissioner before the defentant
was held for the Grand Jury. On November 2, 1934, the defendant YAS
initeted. On December 10, 1934, A demirrer vas filed to the indiot-
ment. The decurrer was overruled on Jamuary 16. 1935, at which time
n plan of not milty was entered and a motion mile to suppress the
evidence. This notion use dented on April 26, 1935. Natween April
25, 1935, and September 30, 1935, the trial of this case was as-
journed five time. On October 15, 1935, the United States Attorney
recommended to the There and Penalties Unit 05 the Department of
Justice the acceptance of an offer in compromise in the STATE of
$2,600 rede w the defendant, Pronidin, in mathsfrotion of All civil
and original liability. This offer vas rejected by the Texter and
Fonalties Unit on the recommendation of the Alcohol Tax Unit of the
Treasury Department. The case me wijourned from time to time from
February 15, 1236, to November 30, 1936, at the request of Amaistant
United States Attorney Classer, who assigned MS the reason for his
request the fact that nn offer in compromise submitted by the as
fondant was under consideration.
the asses the finally onlled for trial before Sullivan in
the District Court on November 30, 1936. AS this time the defendant
withdrew his plan of not guilty and pleaded guilty to one count in
the indictment upon the understanding that N enepended sentence should
be given on all other counts and that there should be a fine of
$1,600 on this one count. This arrangment was recomented in open
court w Assistant United States Attorney Glasser. It 10 a conspion-
ous faot that the amount of the fine 50 recommended vas the same as
the nument offered in compromise of the miter, which had been -
Jested by the Department of Justice.
Than this recomendation was mis w Assistant United States At-
torney Flasser, the Court, of its own notion, took the matter under
advisement and adjourned the Mr of sentence until December 10, 1936.
On December 9, 1936, the Secretary of the Treasury protested
personally to the Attorney General against Olasser's recommentation
for the disposition of this date w 5 fine, and it is understood
that the Secretary's protest was promptly conveyed to United States
Attorney Igos. Notwithstmnding the fact, when the care can w for
sentence on December 10. Assistant United States Attorney Glasser TO-
noved his earlier recommendation, and the Court imposed a Cine of
$1,650 against the defendant in accordance therewith.
Regraded Uclassified
153
- 14 -
As will be seen from the foregoing. the Barney Franklin 0000
WAS pending in Chicago from June, 1934, until December, 1936. In
connection with the offer in compresise above reforred so, Mr.
Igoo, on Catcher 15, 1935, addressed the following letter to Mr.
Tollowleys
"Please fint enclosed cashier's check in the
amount of $1,650, which has been submitted to If by
the above-nased defendent (Frunklin) as m offer in
comprondes of the above entitled 000190.
"I have accepted this check from the defendant with
the distinct understanding that it is his liability only
and not no to his codefendant.
"I recommend the neceptance of this offer for the
reason that I think it 10 substantial and In view of the
past record of the defendant 16 is probably & better
settlement than 100 could receive through the courts.
"Hespectfully,
(Stgned) and Tre Igoe."
In response to this letter. Hr. Tellowley advised Mr. Igoo, on
November 13, 1935, that he could not concur in the acceptance of
this offer, and recommended that Franklin be prosecuted.
In an article which sppeared in the Chicago DAILY of May
15, 1935, the above letter was quoted. rent. 18 was Mr. Ipe's name
tion that & dogy of the letter had been furnished the HENS w Mr.
Yollowley. Acting on this assumption, Mr. Inco addressed the follow-
inc letter to Mr. Yellowley under date of May 16, 1936:
"I will thank you to advise - at your carliest
convenience, your authority for giving to the prees
my letter to you of October 15, 1935, which appeared
in the Chiongo Daily Hows of May 15th, 1936.
"Haspectfully,
(Signed) "Michasl L. Igoe
United States Attorney."
154
- 15
Regraded Uclassified
To this, Mr. Yellowley replied as follows, on Your 20:
"In reply to your inquiry w letter of May 16th, I
desire to advise that no part of the article referred
to, which appeared in the Chicago Daily Have of October
15, 1936, vas siven out w m or by any namber of 7
force.
"Very truly yours,
(Signed) us. 0. Tellowley
"Mstrict Supervisor."
On May 19, Mr. Ige responded to Mr. Tellowley's letter ad follows:
"A further examination of the article appearing
in the Chicago Daily News of May 15, 1936, together
with investigntions más by this office, cause no to
concluis that the statements in your comminication of
May 19, 1936, are not truthful. I shall govern myself
accordingly.
"Respectfully,
(Signed) #Wichuel L. Igoo
United States Attorney."
Mr. Igoo promptly reported this incident to the Attornay General,
and a conference Wills arranged for Mr. Igoa with officials of the
Treasury Department at Mashington, in the course of which Mr. Igon
instated won Yellowley's removal for his supposed nation in midne
lis. Igen's letter public.
Mr. Igoo's present complaint 1s, of course, a 23926 reiteration of
his former charge. but it is to be noted that although he indicated in
his second letter to Mr. Tellowley that he had mdo certain investign-
tions in the promises, he has furnished m information or evidence
whatsoever tending to show that the lotter published by the DAILY YOUR
was in fact mão public to 115. Tollowley or by anyone in Mr. Tellowley's
organisation. In his present letter AS in his previous complaint,
Mr. Igoo plainly states that his belief that Mr. Tollowley made his
lotter public reste solely upon the fact that the HTM article in which
the letter was quoted was uncomplinentary to hin (Ime), coupled with
the further fact that at the time of the incident a former reporter
of the MRSS. Mr. Charles Johners, was on duty in Chicago as the
155
- 16 -
Treasury Department's "publicity Agent." Mr. Yellowley entegorically
denied having given the letter to the XEVS, and such Investigation
as this Department was able to name at the time afforded no basis for
the conclusion that he had any part in the traisaction complained of.
A representative of the Department who called on the City Editor of
the Chicago DAILY yours for information M so the source of the letter
in question, was not with 5 declination to give out the acures from
which the letter cans but THE positively told that it 41d not smanste
from angone in the Treasury Department.
Under the foregoing circunstances, the Department are not foal
at the time of Mr. Igoe's original complaint and does not now feel
that it had any bests for action against Mr. Yellowley in connection
vith the matter.
Allowed Insfficiency of
the Alachol Tax Unit AL Chicago
Mr. Loss maises sertain complaints of inefficiency on the part
of the Alcohol Tax Unit at Chicago. These complaints are somewher
informatio. but they my fairly be classified M follows:
Operators of large stills are seldom If over appro-
handed: only ninor defendants are arrosted.
Investigations are see long delayed.
Cases are frequently spoiled w illegal entry won
the premises of the violators.
Cocupational-tax stamps are sold to vendors of we
taxpaid spirits.
Character of defendants in limor cases.
Mr. Igoo enyst The record indicates that operators of lazys
stills in this district are selden If ever approhonded. In practi-
only every CASO in which a large still is involved. only minor do-
fendants are arrested. This situation has been commented upon w
all of the Indges in this district." No says also that this situation
was commated upon w both the February and March, 1937, Grand Juries,
and refers to letters which he received from the foremen of those
Grand Juries containing such comment. In then goes on to support
this complaint w citing three particular cases called for trial in
March, 1937, in which he ene. or implies, that there visa adverse
comment by the Court won the chaos as presented w the Alcohol the
Unit.
156
- 17 -
COMMUNITY.
MT. Igoe's reference to the oriticisms of the February and
March Grand Juries need scarcely be taken seriously. It is known
to the Department that the letter signed by the foreman of the
February Orand Jury was written by Assistant United States Attorney
Glasser, and signed by the foreman at his (Glasser's) solicitation,
and 11 is reasonable to premise that the March letter originated
in this - way. is is of course obvious that the members of a
Orand Jury sitting for a one-month's term, and dealing only with
such few selected cases as the District Attorney chooses to bring
before it. would hardly be in & position to say of their own knowl-
edge that the Alcohol Tax Unit apprehends only the smaller violators
and overlooks the principal defendants.
As to Mr. Igoe's statement to the effect that all of the
judges in the Chicago district have commented on the failure of
the Alcohol Tax Unit to apprehend important violators, the Depart-
ment knows of three Cases only in connection with which the Court
made comment which might be construed as in may way reflecting
upon that Unit. These are the three cases referred to in Mr.
Igoe's letter, which vors called for trial, respectively. on
March 1, March 2, and March 3, 1937, as follows: U. 1. 71.
Frank Schaaffer, " al.; U. 3. vs. Frank Sidote, at al.; and
U. 3. vs. Klasr 1. Soltwodel. These cases will be discussed below,
with particular reference to such comments M wore made from the
bench at the time of trial.
V. 8. 74. Trank Schweffer. at al.--Tois 0889 originated with
the seisure, on January 1, 1936, of an illicit distillery on the
farm of George Subin, near Hinedale, Illinois. As the result of
s subsequent open investigation, the Alcohol Tax Unit was able to
connect eight defendants with the violation, all of whom, including
the defendant Schaeffer, were indicted on December 10, 1936. On
the trial of this case on March 1, 1937, two Government witnesses,
namely, Falter and stave Subin, some of the owner of the farm on
which the still was seised, failed to identify the defendant
Schaeffer when called to the stand for this purpose. Upon this
development, which CAMP as a surprise to the Government, Judge
Wilkerson unde the remark, as Mr. Igoe says. that there vas ovidently
something wrong with the Government's case. It is not seen how this
consent from the bench can be construed either as reflecting upon
the Aloohol Tax Unit, or as bearing particularly upon Mr. Igoa's
contention that the Alcohol fax Unit apprehends only minor do-
fendants. This was no more than the not uncomes occurrence of
Regraded Uclassified
157
- 16 -
Government witnesses changing their testimony. Following the
seisure of the atill in this case, the witnesses Valter and Steve
Subin had unde sworn statements to revenue officers connecting the
defendant Schaeffer with its operation, and they had identified
two different pictures of this defendant. It is not supposed that
Judge Filkerson's remark was intended to impute neglect to anybody
for the witnesses' repudiation of their testimony at the trial,
but it might well be observed that it was no less the duty of the
United States Attorney than of the Alcohol Tax Unit to anticipate
this event. Had Mr. Igon called these witnesses and made their
statements of record before the Grand Jury at the time of the in-
dictment. they would undoubtedly, under fear of prosecution for
perjury, have adhered to their original testicony when the case
went to trial.
U. 3. 11. Prank Sidote, of al.--This case had ite inception in
the seisure of B. large alcohol distillary on December 17, 1936, and
the arrest, at the time of the seisure, of four defendants, namely.
Frank Sidote, Joe Cieero, Wike Ponicki, and Jundo Rose. One addi-
tional defendant, John Tenuti, was connected by subsequent investi-
ention. All five defendants were indicted on December 10, 1936.
On March 2, 1937, the defendants Sidote, Cicero, and Ponicki on-
tered pleas of guilty before Federal Judge Sullivan. Mr. Igoe
states that the Court at this time expressed doubt, in view of the
youthfulness of the defendants, that they had any real responsibility
for the operation of the distillery, and that he postponed contence
until March 19, 1937, with instructions to the defendants that they
should assist the Government in identifying the actual owners of the
still. A subsequent investigation promoted by the Court's remarks
developed the fact that the actual owner of the still was one
Francesco Buggeri, now in Italy. and that the defendant Ponicki was
likewise financially interested. These facts were given to Judge
Sullivan when the case 0489 up for sentence on March 19, at which
time he again continued the case with a rearrk to the effect that
the people he was after were the ones who profited from the illioit
operations.
U. 8. 75. Elmer y. Solinedel.-This 10 one of several substan-
tive cases that grew out of the supervision by officers of the
Alcohol Tax Unit of the telephone of one Pete Modorowies, a well-
known alcohol distributor in the Chicago area. The Case jacketed
against Modorowies was not successfully concluded due to the fact
that the wire supervision was discovered by the telephone company
and had to be abandoned before sufficient evidence could be obtained
Regraded Uclassified
158
- 19
to incriminate his. The defendant Soltwadel, however, was arrested
on January 24, 1936, while transporting 75 callons of alsohol, as
the result of information secured from supervising Moderovier's
telephone. This case was called for trial on March 3, 1937. at
which time, after n motion to supprees the evidence had been denied,
the defendant entered & plea of guilty. After the plea of guilty
had been entered, it appears that counsel for the defendant advised
Assistant United States Attorney Glasser that his elient, the do-
fendant Soltwodel, was of the opinion that the Hodorovies ones had
been "fixed," supposedly by an Alcohol Tax investigator by the name
of Coleman. This information was conveyed by Mr. Classer to Federal
Judge Barnes, who after a conference in chambers called the Alcohol
Tax officers to the stand and asked them why Hodorowies had not been
brought in as a defendant. As these officers were not familiar with
the Hoderowies matter, and were therefore not able to answer the
Judge's Tuestions to his satisfaction, A conference was arranged in
chambers by Judge Barnes with the head of the enforcement branch of
the Alcohol Tax Unit in Chicago, who advised the Court that 11 had
60 far been found impossible to develop sufficient evidence to justi-
ty the submission of a conspiracy case involving Modorowies and his
associates. Be also advised the Court that the case against
Hodorowies had originally been handled by Investigator Coleman, who,
prior to the conclusion of the investigation, had been dropped from
the service as the result of a routine character examination unde by
the Civil Service Commission, and that the statement of the defendant
Soltwedel was the first intimation which officers of the Alcohol Tax
Unit had had of any alleged attempt to "fix" the case. After this
conference, Judge Barnes expressed himself Ad fully antiefied with
the explanation made.
It than appears that in the three instances cited by Mr. Igos
in support of his statement to the effect that the Federal Judges
have all commented adversely upon the alleged failure of the Alcohol
fax Unit to bring in important defendants, the supposed adverse
comment had to de only with the danes instantly before the Court
and had no reference to the general situation which, according so
Mr. Igos, exists in the Chicago district.
The personnel of the Alcohol fax Unit assigned to duty in the
Northern Judicial District of Illinois comprises 42 investigators or
enforcement agents. In addition to this personnel, special investi-
cators, to the average musber of about 12, are assigned to duty in
this judicial district, charged specially with the investigation of
important ayndicated operations in violation of the revenue laws
relating to distilled spirite, wine and beer. A fair indication of
the volume of the work done by this force of nen one be gleaned from
the following statistics showing results of their operations against
persons involved in the illioit manufacture, transportation, and
sale of distilled spirits during the calendar years 1935 and 19351
Regraded Uclassified
159
Still Beigures, etc., in the
Northern Articial District of Illinois
:
Calandar year
Item
:
1935
#
1936
I
I
#
I
Hurber of still soired
:
3301
174
Number of persons arrested
-
name
417
Average still commoity. callons
I
3001
354
Gallons of mach moised
I
1,020,6241
678,304
Gallons of distilled spirits soland
I
35,348:
30,840
Number of automobiles selsed
I
50Γ
36
Value of property soised
I
$354,8131
$335,017
I
:
These statistics are given hare not A8 having any direct banz-
Ing won Mr. Isea's charge that the Alcohol Pax Unit luss m/a no
handway against important operators, but stoply to give some fair
idea of the extent of the problem which has confronted the Alcohol
the Unit Ln the Chicago urua. In the Chicago district, as in all
other districts, the operations of the Alcohol Tax Unit met largely
be based upon complaints and information from public-spirited citi-
sone, and from police and other local peace officers. It is satnly
by Investigating such complaints and w following w much information
that the revenue officers Are snabled to loaste and mairo illicit
stills And to apprehend these attanting the plants, at well as those
encaged ta the complumentary operations of unlawful transportation
not salo. It is well lovern that, particularly in matropolitan areas
11:00 Chicago, the persons approhended while directly involved in
these operations as often paid employees of the real proprietors
and managers of the illicit enterprises) and n. proper ultimate or
jective of the Thurams of Internal Revenue is to determine by Invoice
tigation who these propriators and nanagers are and to obtain legal
evidence of their complicity. This is not easy to do, and the Do-
partment mins DO clain that In the Chienge ATEA or any other area
it is completely authorsful in reaching this ultimate objective.
There will always be Instances, As fairly illustrated by the three
cases which have been cited by Mr. 1gos, In which Use Department will
fail to reach the principal defendants. It night of course be said
that moh dames should be nore thoroughly investigated and never
procented for presecution until the real persons in interest have
boen implicated. 34:1 to follow such & course would be to tio w the
relatively small force which is available on a limited mmber of
cases, and this would be to allow other violators to run respont
while the investigation of this limited member of CASSE - nation-
loualy pursued. The Department's deliberate policy in this respect
Regraded Uclassified
160
H
19 to selse all illicit distilleries and to apprehend all violators
of which 18 has knowledge, regardless of their rank and status, with
the greatest possible dispatchi and to employ its limited force of
special investigators upon investigations calculated to develop ori-
dance against the malers of these rings and andicates whose
facturing and selling operations now the mont widespread and, there-
fore, the most damaging to the Inderni revomo.
This policy Le followed in all districts, and with the result
that in most metropolitan centers 11km Chicago, the illicit traffic
Is lapt at a minimum by the sheer physical process of destroying 12-
logal plants as they are found and promossing those who operate thes,
and by the constant pressure which is through compirany casse
note scatnst important muminotures and distributors of the syndl-
cated type.
In the nature of things, however, a large proportion of those
apprehanded by the Purona of Internal Deveme in purcuing this policy
will be in the chtegory referred to by 1tr. Igoa AS minor defendants-
not only parsons who are the employees of large violators trut persons
who operate on their own account in n small way. whother as INITI-
factures, transporters, or vandors. Considering the country an a
whole, It is probably correct to any that minor defendants of this
type involved in alcohol-tax chass probably outmumber the so-called
major defendants in the ratio of at lesst ton to one.
It is of course not intended Your the foregoing to leave the 1>-
pression that the Department has any choice in the matter of approve
handing minor defendants and reporting thees to district attorneys
with a view to their prosecution. The applicable statute requires
every fraudulent violation of the revenue laws, regardless of its
importance, to be 60 reported. the Innguage of the statute to as
follows:
Title 25, the 1645(b). U.S.C.-It shall be the duty
of every collector of internal reverate having knowledge
of any willful violation of any Law of the United States
relating to the revenue, within thirty days after coming
Into presession of mush knowledge. to file with the dis-
trict attorney of the district in which any panalty,
or forfeiture may be insurred, a statement of =11 the facts
and circumstances of the 0329 within his knowledge, together
with the news of the witnesses, forth the provi-
sions of law believed to be no violated on which reliance
my be had for condemation or conviction. (R.S. 100. 3164:
Pob. 34, 1919, c. 18, moo. 1317, 40 Stat. 1146; Fob. 36, 1936;
C. 27, 900. 1115, 44 Stat. 117.)
-Now district supervisor, Aloohol The Unit, Burosu of Internal
Revenue in once of violations of liquor-tazing laws. (10t of March
3, 1927, n Stat. 1382, and regulations issued therounder.)
Regraded Uclassified
161
$1
Before loaving this phase of the mitor, it should be said that
one of the most valuable instruments which the Government has at its
command In dealing with major violators of the Federal liquor laws,
in the vigorous prosecution. convistion, and inprisonment of minor
defendants who are connected with those major violators, whether as
employers or as customers. If the attitude of the prosecuting offi-
cars and the courts toward these ninor figures to one of under
Immienay, the Government has no pressure which It our bring to hear
upon those persons with a view to foreing a disclosure of their
principals or their sources of supply. This point is well illustrated
by the Schaeffer and Sidote Chees referred to above. where It is
evident that & thront of severe punishment against the ninor defendants
who had been approhended, olther w the District Attorney or by the
Court. would have brought to 11/300 the identity of the real principals.
It should be obvious that in any district where ainor defendante can
normally expect to be discharged without prosecution, or if prone-
outed or pleading cuilty lot off with a surpended sentence on the
ground that they are not principals, the Government to deliberately
abandoning the meet effective neass which it has at Its disposal to
identify novil locate the important violators. The best results ugainst
major violators AT6 naturally obtained in those julicial districts
where these facts AFC understood by the prosscuting officers, and DOB-
versely the pearect results are ashieved to districts where the pross-
outing officers are AVOIRE to hardling asses against so-called minor
defendants.
The remults of unjer investigations in the Chicago district have
not been added by any effort on the part of the District Attorney to
put preseure upon ninor defendants In the namer here suggested. The
moord shown that a much larger member of violators are released with
out trial in the Northern Indicial District of Illinois than In any
other metropolitan 1296 in the United States. The record shows also,
however, that dospite this handless there have been many instances
in the Chicago district where in commotion with large still soirures
these financing and directing the illicit operations, and those supply-
the the your anterial for purposes of illicit manufacture, have been
involved by the investigations of the Alcohol Tax Unit, and reported
to the United States Attorney for prosecution. A for of these CASSS
will be described below.
Casa Ho, 3611-K. William J. Joriman, at al.-2his case originated
with the seizure of a clandostine alcohol distillary on Pobruary 19,
1935, in A warehouse building operated by the Continental Warehouse
Company. Chiengo. The distillary had a daily producing capacity K
Regraded Uclassified
162
- 00 -
approximately 4,000 gallons not Will other of the largest illicit plants
over noined In the entire country. Subsequent investigation developed
that the must notorious liquor ring in the Chicago area VGS behind its
operations. The corn VPO which TM utilized as the basis of the useh was
murchased in ten's-ear lots through an slaborate coverturane arrangement.
21 finished alcohol not only fount its way Into the Chiengo mrint, but
vas shipped In druna to distributing are In other midmatern cities.
As the result of an extensive open investigation, & case report VIS
midital to the United States Attorney in Chinago on May 16, 1935.
naming 25 individuals and 7 corporations M defendants, and including
along with the persons who were responsible for the namifacturing and
distributing operations, those who MM furnished the hollors, Lanks,
and other equipment used in the construction of the distillery. and
these the supplied the row materials from which the illicit product VAS
anministured. The met important defendent was one William J. Torizon,
the nonacine director of the warehouse convery. and long A well-known
flows In the illicit alcohol meket in the City of Chicago.
Care No. 30-4-11 Pront Salam, at al.-This case had its incoption
or March 31, 1935, with the seisure of a Large illioit alcohol distillory
constating of one 1,500-gmllon still, and one 1,000-cmllon still. One
arrest WILE mde at the time of matsure. As the result of subsequent
Investigation, A 0020 report was submitted to the United States Attorney
on August 5, 1935. recommending the prosecution of nine defendants, in-
cluding four important principals, as follows: David Stern, Frank
Salam, Fred Hlusenthal, and San Rieff. Defendant Storm maintained an
office In n., from which he was in telephone communication
with the premises on which to distillary vas located and from which he
supervised the hamling of rew materials to the plant and the disposition
of the finished product. Defendant Salam rented the premises on which
the distillary vas located and supervised its construction. Defendants
Bluenthal and Moff furnished the zur mtorials from which the illicit
product - manufactured. The remaining five defendants ware employees.
Gase No. 3803-M. Anthour Hicali, at al.-This and involves &
Large combination headed X the four !ffcelt brothers, with headquartors
at Galmot City, Ill., n. minute of Chicago. An the result of an union-
cover investigation began in April. 1935, four large distillaries Do-
Longing to this combination ware unised in the northwrn part of Indians,
angaged in the annufacture of alcohol, shiefly for male in the City of
Chicago. Imploye worrdh merate eiro cocured from the United States
in Chiengo, based upon the telephone conversations Intor-
costed, and calling for domunitary instrumentalities of the crime.
Overt note in pursuance of the vara found to have been
nitted both in the Northern District of Indiana and in the Northern
District of Illinois. At the conclusion of the investigation, a
defandants were reported to the United States Attorney in the Northern
Regraded Uclassified
163
- 36
District of Indiana under date of December 6, 1935, for prosecution.
The more important defendants word the Viceli brothers, who from
their headquarters at Calumot City curried on a wholesale liquor
business on an axtensive scale, namifacturing and selling untaxpaid
spirtte in large quantities, purchasing and nains automobiles and
truce for health the alcohol, and consrally directing and mon-
violag the illicit operations.
Case No. 3849-K. Jong h Vani. of al-mis case involves the
Vani conbine, a notorious of alcohol distillors in the Chicago
area Two distilleries WOTE meised in connection with this GILSO,
one on November 22, 1934, and another on June 26. 1930, and those two
operations word connected by subsequent Gyen Investigation. Fourteen
defendants yoro reported to the United States Attorney at Chicago on
February 26, 1930, including Joneph Vani, James 7uni, Torg Corno, and
Palmer A. Melone, se principals. There persons ware the owners of
the distilleries, supervised their construction ml operation, paid
the employees working in the plants, brought THE materials to the
stills, and disposed of the finished alcohol. All four of thene to-
fendants had original records. Three other invortant defendants were
involved In this 0810 as l'ontenante of the principals, who assisted
in renting the distillery premiums, in purchasing oquipment and M-
>lion, and in otherwise facilitating the conspiracy. The remining
seven defendants ware still operators, trust drivers, not other ninor
employees.
Code No. 4517-N. Pater Dowine, at Al---This case involved the seizure
of two large alcohol distilleries operated on different premises,
one on December 37, 1935, and the other on May 5, 1935, the two
selmures being commented by subsequent investigation. A report me
submitted to the United States Attorney at Chicago in this onse on
November 3, 1936, recommending the prosecution of eight defendants,
including the following principals: Peter Domino, Frank Theodore,
Theodora Ingresta, Frank Increasia, and Anthony Donino. These
five individuals were all financially interested in the distillaries,
word responsible for renting the prenises on which they wire loanted,
annual the distilleries to be set w and operated, hired and paid the
distillery myloyes, and disposed of the alcohol mondactured. All
these individuals have criminal records, having been convicted and cent
to the penitentiary on a complracy charge In 1931. The remaining
three defendants in this case were persons employed as still operators
and truck drivors.
Regraded Uclassified
164
Case No. 320-M. Rainar. 11 al.-This case involves a
conspiracy to violate the Interval-revemue Thing on the part of a Ingree
alcohol manufacturing and distributing syndicate, commonly referred to
AS the Brurerman-Tainer combine, and known to be the second largest
- which has operated in Chicago and visinity since repeal. The
Introductory phases of the case vor. handled through the medium of
telephone supervision. More than 1,600 telephone calls relating to
the illicit business of the organisation were intercepted during the
undercover Investigation. A 4,000-gallon alcohol plant ville solued in
the nourse of the investigation, and other overt note were astabltshed.
Corn migar was utilized AS the basis of the mash for the distilling
operations in this plant. which was purchased through the usual nover-
house aystem Over 537,000 pounds of corn sugar were purchased from
the Corn Products Sales Company from about July 1, 1935, to August 15,
1935, by this syndicate. After the open investigation the instituted,
195 withouses wore interviewed, and 50 statements reduced to writing.
Five special investigators were engaged over a period of months in
developing this case, beginning in Amount of 1935. Evidance was nib-
nitted to the United States Attorney under date of May 18, 1936, against
B1 individuals and corporations including the following important do-
fentants: HARRY Allen %. Mainer, Mayage Suche, Ben yoid.
Sam Ininer, Arnold Invorman, and Charles Vins. These ware the princi-
pale and their chief lieutenants. Harry Brancrman and Allen M. Mainer
1702°F the financial backers. directors of all operations, and the -
ployers of the authordinates.
In addition to these persons, thirtoon individuals ware reported
to the District Attorney in this case for having furnished mterials
to the unitists or having connired with the syndicate to the and that
the materials might be received and properly covered. Thirteen other
persons were named in the case report as comprising the (Troup which
natually operated the distillary. owned or leased the premises houstng
the operation. purchased vehicles for the syndicate, and supplied needed
aquipment. A member of other defendants were included, se truck drivers.
convoys of the trucks used in transportation, and minor employees.
Case yes 41.50-M. Dooxee at Al--This case involved the
operation of a Inrge alcohol distillary on two different promiss, -
claiming in March, 1935, up to the date of its soirure on Catober 20,
1935, by a well-lawn Italian combination. Under date of March 26,
1937, & case report was mubmitted to the United States Attorney in the
Northern District of Illinois naming 17 defendants. including the
following principals: George Saladine, 3am Surage, Charles Fanno, and
Joa Messinn. These four defendants financed and owned the distillery
and directed the ontire illioit enterprise. The defendants Savage,
Panno, and Messina had long criminal records, including may violations
of the liquor 1ws. The other defendants ware largely still operators,
truck drivers, and compants of the prodess on which the distillary
was located. Thile those latter individuals are regarded as ninor co-
fendants, 11 should be said that motically all of then have long records
ME liquor violaters.
Regraded Uclassified
185
- 20
It should not be understood that the foregoing represents all
the cases which have been made in the Chicago district in recent
months which have involved important violators. As will appear in
& later connection, 38 conspiracy 04868 rere referred to the
District Attorney at Chicago for presecution during the 34-months
period from January 1. 1935, to December 31, 1936. Among these
GATER will be found a considerable mumber, in addition to those
above described, which contain evidence against the larger figures
in the illicit alcohol traffic in the Chiengo area. A total of
three hundred and fifty-three defendants were named in these casse,
and AB examination of the situation justifies the conclusion that
the Alcohol fax Unit at Chicago, while of course not uniformly wuo-
cessful in the investigations which it has ands with a view to
reaching the major illicit operators. has during the last two years
reported to the District Attorney evidence which involves the most
important of the individuals and groups engaged in the illicit
liquor racket In the Chioago district. Attention in invited parkie-
ularly in this connection to the Torkman, Braversan-Vainar, and
Miceli cases, implioating what undoubtedly are the three most
noterious alcohol syndicates which have operated in the Chicago
area since the repeal of Prohibition.
Alloced Delar in Completing Investigation.
Mr. Igon the complaint that "investigations are long do-
layed." He says that, In many cases, in submitting reports to him
the Alcohol Tax Unit requests that the cases be not presented to the
Grand Jury because an investigation 10 under may, and he implies that
in frequent instances cases Are lost by renson of the disappearance of
the necessary witnesses due to the long lapse of time. He supports
this charge by citing one case only. that of HATY Solla. with respect
to this case, he says that this woman operated a still from which
alcohol was supplied to one Harlan Crouch, who on May 14, 1936, 100
saulted and killed an investigator of the Alcohol Tax Unit in the
State of Indians. Re enys that the Solla worman was apprehended by
the Alcohol Tax Unit in the Chicago District almost a year before
this killing occurred, and he implies that despite pressure from his
office. the investigation of the Solla case has not yet been concluded
by the Alcohol Tax Unit.
COMMITTEE
with respect to this complaint. the Department has unde an examina-
tion of the cases reported to the United States Attorney at Chicago W
the Aloohol Tax Unit, and the record discloses the following: or a
total of 402 unjacketed (substantive) cases submitted to the United
States Attorney in the 14-months period from January 1935 to February
1937, inclusive, 365 were filed within 30 days from the discovery of
the violation, and of this number the great majority vere submitted
Regraded Uclassified
106
F
within a pariod of from two to ton Angress: 21 05305 TUTO eximited
within as days from the date of the violation: B ward submitted
within 20 tays from the discovery of the violations one in only
22 mass are & period longer then 90 Ange after the viola-
tion visa discovered before submission of the final dage report.
In the Momenths period from January 1, 1935, to December n,
1036, the Alcohol 2nz Unit at Chicago reported 38 Instated (oan-
extray) arees to the United States Attorney. It will be resembered
that this to the class of cases in which the Department by special
investigative affort undertakes to involve the "higher ups," or
syndicated operators. In violations of the revenue laws. As is well
known, conspiracy cares require a great donl of patience and time
for their miscossful completion. They necessitate the use of A vide
variety of Investigative methods, and time are frequently based upon
the supervision of telephones and the observation of suspects over
extended periods. It in maifest that investigations of this char-
actor can not be completed with anything 11:00 the same dispatch that
applies to the substantive chass nbove reforred to. Mary such casse
require months for their completion, and 11 not infrequently happens
that after prolonged investigation chass of this kint have to be
abandoned without securing 10aml oridonce of the complety of the
individuals valor emploion. The following record should de 002-
videred in the of the foragoing comunts or the 38 consyimey
00391 prosented to the United States Altorney in the M-months period
homtioned, 5 ware relatived within 30 lave from the date of the via-
Inston: 4 von submitted within 60 9 0029 submitted within 90
6 ward admitted within in days: 1 was submitted within 100
7 TOTO mismittind vithin 100 days; and 8 were submitted within
210 tays. Neven much cases 621 207 under investigation In the
Chicago District.
Considering all the CASOS referred to the United States Attorney
at Chicago by the Alcohol Tax Unit, 11 account that approximately 04
have boon completed not submitted with a view to prosecution within
30 days of the violation, 6% within 60 days. and 35 within 90 days)
and that in only 7 of the dises has the investigation boon prolonged
boyond 20 days. This record afforts little Justification for Mr.
Inca's charge that investigations are 20mg delayed.
The facts in the dolla case, which to the only case offed by
Mr. Icoo to substantiate his complaint, are M follows: This wonan
was reported to the than District Attorney at Chicago in October, 1934,
for I substantive violation which was discovered July 17, 1934; she
VIVE later reported to the District Attorney, now Mr. Iroo, for a out-
stantive violation which occurred on June 19, 1935; and also WAS The
ported for a third substantive violation in May, 1935. The violation
Regraded Uclassified
167
30
in ench case visa the operation of an illicit distillery. The plant
involved in the second case was vary large, having 5. expacity of
500 gallons. not when the report of this violation was submitted,
the District Attorney was requested to dolay proceedings with
respect to this violation pending further investigation by the
Alcohol That Unit, with A view to the implication of other defendants
If possible. This second case renained domant until Justs, 1936,
at which time the attempt to emlos & conspiracy case involving other
defendants was abamioned, and the District Attorney was requested to
proceed on the mibetantive charge against the Solla vone. An
indictment This obtained in this case on December 18, 1936, and the
work was tried and convicted on April 16, 1937, receiving & Jall
sentence of six nonths and a fine of $300. It does not appear,
therefore. that the dolay in this case occasioned w the unsurseasful
afforts of the Alcohol True Unit to involve other defendents, had any
advorse affect upon its ultimate proscoution.
Before leaving this point. attention should be called to the
fact that Mr. Ime's charge that the investigations undertakes by the
Alochol Tax Unit are unduly protracted 1m utterly inconsistent with
his other darge, above reforred to, that the Unit does not suffi-
siently concentrate upon the problem of bringing important violators
before him. It in of course obvious that If syndicated violators,
material mon, and those who have financial investments in illicit
operations, are to be prosecuted for the important part which they
play in the illicit liquor traffic, this can be done only through
the expedient of involving then na principal defendants in conspiracy
which In the very nature of things on missessfully be
made only w long and todious investigative offort on the part of the
revenue officers.
Alloced illawal narchas and soinures.
In the text of his various letters, Mr. 1000 entres no direct
reference to this subject, but in the letters referred so by him from
the forem of the February and March, 1937, Grand Juries, a statement
is m/s to the effect that may aloohol-tax cases have to be no-billed
by the Grand Jury for the renson that they are based upon the entry by
Aleckol Tax Unit agents into homes and premises of private individuals
without the aid of proper search mercate.
COMMISSIONER
Although Mr. Iges repented this charge verbally in his converse
tion with Housrs. Cliphant and Holvering, he has at to time submitted
any specific tratances in which onses presented to hin by the Alcohol
the Unit have falled of presecution w reason of illogal entry or
illegal search. the Department has before it, however, the record of
the Grand Jury sitting at Chicago during the month of February, comment
with respect to which will. it in believed, suffice to show the mb-
stantial facts recurding this particular complaint.
Regraded Uclassified
168
- 20 -
Seventeen alcohol-tax cases were taken by Assistant United States
Attorney Classer before the February Grand Jury. or this misser, 10
wore indicted and 7 were no-billed, and the ovidance is clear that 6
of these latter 7 cames wore no-billed w the Grand Jury on repre-
sentations for Mr. Classer the 1 they VOTO based upon illegal search
or illegal entry by agents of the Alcohol Tax Unit and that proseou-
tion could therefore not be sustained. The Department has made a
cereful examination of there aix cases, and mish facts in each case
no are believed partinent to the issue here under consideration will
so briefly stated.
Case No. IN-2019-on September 20. 1936, officers of the Chicago
Police Department neised a 350-gallon St. Louis-type still, together
with 7,000 gallons of mah and about 400 callons of alcohol. in a
one-story from residence on South Volumb Avenue. After this seirure,
the case was turnel over to the Alcohol Tax Unit for pressention under
the internal-revenue laws. The Government and not in any mg dooper-
ated In the seinire. It Is a well-established rule that the prohibitions
of the Pourth Americant relating to search and solmure apply only to
Federal officers, not that evidence obtained w State officers working
integeniently of Foderal officers own so admitted without question in
Federal Court. There ware no grounds for no-billing this chao by
rasson of a illagal march nal solmers.
Case No. IN-1922-This case was made during the investigation of
the miniar of as investigator of the Alcohol the Unit in the State of
Indiana in May. 1936, by one Harlan Grouch, which has been previously
referred to. The investigation in that GIVEN disclosed that shortly
after the mander, Grouch returned to Chiengo in company with one James
Jacobe and vas arrested by the Chicago police for the possession of
45 callons of bootles alsohol. The investigation disclosed that the
alcohol had been sold to Grouch and Jacobs w one Herman David. This
licensise will an adopted case. Regardless of the circumstances no
rounding this seisure. 18 was ande by State and not Federal officers
and the evidence would unquestionably have been admitted in Federal
Court had the case boan allowed to 8 to trial.
Case No. December 1. 1936, investigators of the Alcohol
Tax Unit who had been informed that the defendant was munufacturing
liquor, unde an investigation near his premises. Thile in the alley
they detacted an unmistakable oder of msh, which was traded to the
pronises where the selmure WAS mde. After detecting this odor, the
investigators proceeded to the house and knocked on the door. The
defendant's wife answered the door, and, being informed by the officers
of their identity and purpose. she was noncommistal, stating that her
husband was not at home, and inviting the investigniors inside the house
Regraded Uclassified
169
- 30 -
to avait his return. Then Inside the house, the investigators because
cortain that n still WILL in operation in the assessent. Than the
name's husband arrived, to wis placed under arrest and a soarch VMS
más of the breasent, where a 300-gallon still, together with a
quantity of mah, was selved. It to believed that the search in
this sase was illegal and could not have been used as A basts for
prosecution.
Case No. IN-3039-0n November 18, 1936, investigators who had
been informed that a still THE in operation in n. care on the north
aldo of Chicago, vent to the premises for the purpose of midne an
investigation. Than appronching the care they detected an -
mistalmble odor of alcohol. the investigators rapped on the carage
door, stated that they TOTO Federal officers, and nalsed that the
door be opened. The defendant in this case opened the door and was
invediately placed unter arrest. The curre was than overshed and B.
300-gallon still, together with lb quantity of mah and alcohol, was
seized. The facts In this case indicate a Instful search as M inst-
dont so an arrest for a crins conditted in the arresting officer's
presence. It 1s believed that Ath proper attention on the part of
the United States Attorney this case word have been mistained had
it been permited to 6° to trial.
Organ yes IN-3000-on December 3, 1936, investigators rate NR in-
vestigation of & reported violation on the defendant's premises. On
approaching the promises from the alley. the investigators anticed a
very promounded otor of formanting mark, which appeared to comate from
a two-stall carace located on the roar of the 10t. After determining
certainly that the odor we in fact contry from the care they
entered the NAME and found an unforground vat filled with mah, with
pipes leading to the hours. the of the officers went to the house and
rapped on the door. The defendent opened the door and will nated by
the officers the 933 in control of the carage. The defendant stated
that he was. He TOD thon astred where the still was located, and he
stated that It was in the Incoment. the defendent vas placed unter
arrost, and lad the officers to the otill, which WIVE found to be a
200-gallon plant of the St. Louis type. No seimure me mis witil
after the arrost. It will be noted that in this case the officers
are not enter the premises until after they had first adcertained that
& felony visa being committed there. It is believed that the search
in this case vos good, it having been nade as an incident to a lawful
arrest for A orine consitted in the arresting officer's presence.
Case no. III-1042-On April 10, 1936, investigniors of the Alcohol
Tax Unit want to a garace known M the "North There Garage." in
Chienge to investigate a complaint that untaxpaid liquor was being
manufactured there. they entered the and found a boy in
charge. After revealing thair identity. they asked the boy to show
Regraded Uclassified
170
- 31 -
them around the carage. As they proceeded toward the rear, they
detected an unmistakable odor of formenting mish and heard the
noine of a stens boiler. They proceeded to the second floor, where
they found a BAR sitting alongaide n steam boiler, receiving tenk,
and etill. The still, which vas a 300-gellen copper plant of the
St. Louis type, was seised, together with all the paraphernalia,
mash, and alcohol. This is A close case. It appears that this
search sight be called "exploratory" and perhaps could not have
been sustained. On the other hand, it is to be noted that the
netrure occurred in a public garage and there were therefore grounds
for a contention by the Government that the search did not fall in
the category of "exploratory" searches and was good. Rowever this
may ba, it is falt that the question whether the search was legal or
illegal in this particular case should unquestionably have been left
to be raised by defense counsel and passed upon by the Court.
The Department's judgment therefore is that of the six cases no-
billed by the February Grand Jury on representations by Assistant
United States Attorney Classer that they were based upon illegal
search and seizure, there was only one in which the circumstances
warranted a decision by the Government not to undertake prosecution.
In at least four of the remaining five cases the available evidence
10 considered to have been entirely legal and would have afforded un
adequate basis for prosecution had the cases been properly presented
by competent counsel. In this connection, it will be recognized by
anyone having a familiarity with police work that is is inevitable
that entries, searches, soisures, and arrosts made in good faith by
enforcement officers will in same instances be judicially determined
AS illegal on questions ruised by defense counsel, and no protense
is mde that there have not been instances of this kind in the Chicago
district as in all other districts. But the Department knows of no
other Instance in which Government counsel have themselves deliberately
undertaken to raise such questions before a Federal Grand Jury as an
obstacle to indictment.
There to considerable svidence which points to the fact that
Mr. Glasser's conduct of the Alcohol-Tax CASSE taken before the
February and March Grand Juries was not in good faith. It 10 a
matter of common knowledge that grand juries must and de rely wes
the prosecuting officers for instructions regarding the law in any
case presented to them. Moreover. it is known that the action of
the February and March Grand Juries at Chicago is no-billing certain
CASSE was taken upon the affirmative recomendation of Mr. Classer
and upon his positive statements, usually contrary to fact, that these
cases were based upon illegal search and seisure. It is known also that
the letter to Mr. Igoo signed by the foreman of the February Grand
Jury, condemning the Alcohel Tax Unit and extelling Mr. Classer, orig-
insted with Mr. Glasser himself, and there is no reason to suppose
that the letter signed by the foreman of the March Orand Jury had any
different origin. It will be pertinent to consider these circus-
stances in the light of the following statutory provision:
Regraded Uclassified
171
-
Title 20. use. 406, U.N.C.-I\ shall be the daty of
every district attorney to whom any collector of customs,
or of internal revenue.¹ shall report. according to law.
any case in which any fine, penalty, or forfeiture has
been insurred in the district of such attorney for the
violation of any law of the United States relating to the
revenue, to cause the proper proceedings to be commond
and prosecuted without delay. for the fines, penalties.
and forfeitures in such CLUB provided, unloss. wen 100
miler and ampiration. he shall decide that such process-
Inca cannot probably be matained. or that the unde of
public Justice do not require that mah proceedings should
be instituted; in which date he shall report the facts in
mistors cases to the Secretary of the Transury, and in
internal revenue 03,200 to the Commissioner of Internal
Reveres for their direction. (R.S. 300, B38; Feb. 37, 1077,
c. GO, 000, 1, 19 Stat. 241.)
The Ins defining the datins of district attorneys thus Imposes
was those officers the daty of proceeding In chees reforred to
then w the Buranu of Internal Revenue with & view to prosecution,
only in the event ther whall decide that Wra prograding an 270b-
ably be mistained on the extéange submitted to than, In view of
Dise provision of law, It would be fair to inquire dy 11 RUS that
Mr. Classer, If is value in good faith convinced that the six 00265
above refurred to were based upon illegal search 07 seisure, took
these CLOSS before the Drand Juny at all. He certainly was under
no date to do this. Cm the contrary. compliance with the statute
would have required his to comminate his adagivings with regard
to these cases, not to the Grant Jury, but to the Commissioner e
Internal Revenue, or, M is the practice in such mitors, to the
Commissioner's representative at Chicago, the District Supervisor
of the Alcohol Tax Unit.
It must be presuned that Mr. Igoo and his assistant, Mr. Glasser,
are familiar with the law which defines the duties of the offices
which they hold. In the face of this 1nt and contrary to its obvious
Intent if not its supress provisions, Mr. Olasser presented a musber
of casss to the trand Jury in which, as he represented to the grand
purers, the evidence will not sufficient to mistain prosecution.
Following the no-billing of these cases, Mr. Classer propared &
letter assailing the Alcohol The Unit for supposed delinquancies is
their proparation and praising himself, and he induced the signature
of this letter by the forumn of the Grand Jury. Mr. Igos promptly
gare this letter to the newspapers, where it was published along with
fantastic statements attributed to Mr. Glasser to the general effect
Now district supervisor, Alcohol Tax Unit, of Internal
Revenue in case of violations of liquor taxing laws. (sot of Hardh
3, 1937. 44 Stat. 1382. and regulations Lasued thereunder.)
Underscoring supplied.
Regraded Uclassified
172
- 33
that note bootleg liquor 10 being sold in Chiengo at the present time
than in the heyday of the Prohibition pariod. There AFC present here
all the alements of is deliberate plot to discredit the endowere of
the Purom of Internal Novement at Chicago to enforce the reverns Inwo:
there 10 nothing of a bona fide character that is worthy of serious
notice by the administrative offloors of this Department.
Collection of las from aliand illicit vantara.
Mr. Icee complains of the fact stat, as he enve, the Alcohol Tax
Unit collects the retail liquor dealer's compational tax from
ensies and similar unlicansed planes which traffic in untarpaid spirite.
If constutes his critician with this statements "This would soon to
be a violation in Itself by reason of the fast that it in effect 11-
canses the illicit operator."
CONSUMER
Mr. Iges's criticism of the practice of the Eurom of Internal
Revenue in collecting occupational taxes from parsons selling inter-
paid distilled spirite without a license in not ensy to comprehand,
since it in no wise impinges upon or conflicts with his jurisdiction
and duties M United States Attorney, but falls within the posuliar
administrative provines of the Consissioner of Internal Invenue. If
his comment is not to be regarded at being thelly gratuitions and
intrasive, it is necessary to conclude that, no is perhaps suggested
by the statement above quoted. Mr. Iges is of the opinion that this
practice not only in unwarranted In law, but constitutes each A via-
lation of law as to require his to give the matter his attention in
his official capatity as Government prosecutor.
To bagin with, it may be and that the practice to which Mr. Igoo
refore Is not peruliar to the Chicago district, Incl under long-stant-
100 departmental regulations is the withorm procedure in all the is
termal-roveme districts into which the country is divided. It is
obvious. therefore, that the Alcohol Tax Unit at Chicago mut be
ammented from any blans which my attach to the practice complained
of. With reference to Mr. Igoo's opinion that the practice is ille-
me. it my be said that the Federal statutes imposing agestal or
compational taxe upon sortain classes of persons have been in of-
feet for more than sixty years. Among other things they provide that
all persons who sell distilled spirits or offer such spirite for sale,
mibject to the occupational tax as retail or wholesale liquor
dealars no the case my >0, and in this respect they min no distine-
$1on between licensed and unlicensed persons, not between persons the
Regraded Uclassified
173
- 34 -
sell taxpaid spirite and thome who sell unterpaid spirite. The at-
ministrative construction base followed the law, M will be evident
from the fact that the uniform practice of the Bureau of Internal
Revenue has always been to undertake to collect the scoupational tax
from all liquor dealers operating in "dry" States: from unlicensed M
well as licensed persons selling liquor in "vol" States: and from per-
sons selling untaxpaid liquor as well AS those selling texpaid spirite
only. whether the State of sale is conta or "dry". In instances where
collection can not be nade otherwise, the rule has been to assert the
occupational-tax liability of any person apprehended in the sale of
spirite in violation of the Federal laws, by the assessment of the
tax, with ad valores penalties, for the period covered by his known
illegal operations, and this is regardless of whether the spirite
sold have or have not been texpaid under the Federal laws.
It would appear that Mr. Igos has fallen into the arror common
among uninformed people of characterising as a license the tax stamp
which is furnished to any person paying the occupational tax in COD-
nection with his current business. In this connection, the provisions
of Section 3243, R.S., are quoted below:
"The payment of any tax imposed by the internal-
revenue laws for carrying on any trade or business
shall not be hald to exempt any person from any penalty
or punishment provided by the laws of any State for
carrying on the 8430 within such State, or in any nan-
not to authorise the commensement or continuance of
such trade or business contrary to the laws of such
State or in places prohibited by municipal law; nor
shall the payment of any such tax be held to prohibit
any State from placing a duty or tax on the 1400 trade
or business, for State or other purposes."
The occupational-tax stamp Issued to dealers in liquor by the
Bureau of Internal Revenue carries the substance of these provisions
prominently on its face and, in addition, the following words: Tale
10.0 tax A license. It appears to be well settled that
Congress may tax even that which It forbids. It is believed that a
consideration of the applicable statutes and decisions should dis-
poss of Mr. Igoe's opinion that the issuance of occupational-iax
stamps has the effect of licensing illicit operations.
Mr. Tgpe 10 substantially correct in his understanding "that the
reason for the Alcohol Tax Unit's insisting upon the purchase of &
tax stamp from (by) individuals selling untaxpaid distilled spirite,
to so that the investigatore one sake a search of the premises after
Regraded Uclassified
174
8
the stamp has been termed in asseriance with loo." In Chiongo, as
in other large office, there Are may houses of prostitution, spasite
and/or, and dives where spirite are sold by the performed or disponsed
on the promises In violation of State and local 1/w. Not only do
them places every on the sale of spirits without State or municipal
License, but, as experted w Mr. Isoo, their liquor stocks not -
commonly consist wholly or partly of unterpaid or booting spirits.
The difficulty of reaching violators of this class - the usual me
forcement nethods in very creat. Y reason of No fast that their
Illiois operations are unually carried on in spartment houses and
other residential buildings not readily accessible to revenue offi-
0673. It :- often possible, however, to induca the propristor of
a -Ince of this kind to pay the Pederal occupational tax, which 1150
valved, ADDITE other things. nationalisment of tax Hability on the
propriator's parts and in any once dare this 18 done. the INFORMATION
nonth obviously clairs the which for a mussequent periodical inspection
of the promises by revenue officers under Section 3177 of the Mevised
Statutes. This practice, misch AS 1tr. Inco supports to commonly fol-
lowed in the Chicago district, has resulted in considerable progress
toward the alimination of the unlo of unterpada spirite at Chicago
through discrderly houses art other statter places which are illegal
under State and local law - an objective which 1s obvieusly dectrable
from the standpoint of protecting time Federal revenues. the mothod
Assoribed in legal in story respect, nov? 10 the noot effective nothod
which the Department can command to restrain the sale of bootleg spirite
through illicit and clunientine retail outlets. Re valid ranson
approved the It should be objected to by any United States Attorney.
Criticism of Mr. Arthur P. Modden
Inecial Account in Chance, Intelligence Unit. Chicago.
Mr. Igoo males two specific complaints against Mr. Maddon, the
first having to do with IS investigation which he requested Mr. Madden
to min of the expressed improper withdrawnl of a large amount of liquor
from a certain bonded warehouse in Chicago, and the second with an 1m
vastiontion which be likerism requested Mr. Madden to make of the my
pound miscon/mot of two inspectors of the Alcohol 2nt Unit in endonver-
Las to collect an amount of noney from 5 certain tax The two
cases are well movn to the Department.
Hornand Brothers. General Bonded Maryhouse no. 3. Chinago,
Mr. Igon says that from the beginning of his term of office, &
story had Soon in circulation which reached him sometimes over the
telephone and constines through non, to the effect that a
100% mount of liquer and been Exproparly vithtrum from N certain
Regraded Uclassified
175
- 30 -
bonded Be says that he requested Mr. Hadden to investigate
this mtter: that Ad a result of this request Mr. Mindden striced Ity.
schere. the Department's "publicity mn" at Chicago, that he (Iers)
sent Mr. rellowley under investigation; that hn (Igon) throught it
strange that Madden should in this my notify one of Tollowley's
agents of the fact that Yollowley WILL being investigated; that Itr.
Madden has failed to comply with his (Igne's) request for a report
of life investigation; and that he (Xgon) lears that If = artin has
Seen conditted in connection with the withdrawal of the liquor in
question, presemition might be barred by the reving of the statute
of limitations.
COMMIT
The bonded warehouse in question, although not named in Mr. Igen's
letter, YOUR General Bonded Warehouse No. 3, the proprietor of which
was Worand Bros., Inc. On December 4. 1935, Assistant United States
Attorney Classor brought to Mr. Maddon's attention certain claimed
irrogularities in connection with this warehouse. Mr. Madden no-
signed Special Agent D. I. Clean to Investigate this natter and on
December 7. Mr. Cluan called on Mr. Glasser, who advised him that he
(Cleaser) had come into the perseasion of certain information to the
offect that in the month of January, 1935, 5,000 cases and 150 barrols
of whisloy had been removed from this to the merchouse of
Valores and McLaughlin. Mr. Classer stated that his information wis to
the effect that this had been stored in the Normal Pron.mere-
house for a great many years, ml. that storage charges mounting to
$10,500 had accrued on 1t, which ware DatA to Morand Pros. at the time
of renoval. Mr. Glasser further stated that It was his impression that
the Government might have been defraulad of a large amount of money
through the unanthorized removal of this Mo stated that Us
source of his information was one Don Vacarelli, than an employee of
the Standard 011 Company in New York City. and formarly a storekesper
CRADE in the of Internal Nevanus. He stated further that
Vecarolli in turn had received his information from one Kooniz, At
employee of Morand Bron. Mr. Classer indicated that in his opinion
A thereach Investigation should be miss by the Intelligence Unit to
determine whether the Government had not been defrauded in conne-
tion with this transaction.
Following his interview with Mr. Olasser, Special Agent Olsen dis-
covered that the mtter referred to by Mr. Classer had already been
made the subject of an investigation w Mr. linidam's office. Vacarelli
had been interviswed at New York City by Special Agent c. L. Converse
of the Intelligence Unit on October 33, 1936. In the course of this
Interview, Vacarelli stated that he had boon employed as storekesper
in the Incroam of Internal Revenue unter Mr. Yollowley until
Regraded Uclassified
176
- 37 -
some time in 1934, and that in this capacity his last nasignment
was in the Morrant Bros. varatiouse; that William Reenic. whom he
described as owner of this a had told him that Mr.
Yellowley and informed his (Zoonic) by letter that his warehouse
would have to be closed and the whinkey stored therein disposed
of: that Mr. Koonie had advised Mr. Yellowley that there wild
storage Gree on the whichey amounting to $10,000; that after hearing
this story from Mr. Loanis he (Vacarelli) looked W the regulations
and found a section that provided that when whinkey had been in
bonded storage for ten years. the Government could seise 14 and well
it in order to collect its tax: that he (Vacurelli) had called this
regulation to the attention of certain officeru in Mr. Telloolay's
office and had been told to mind his own business: that in conno-
tion with the transfer of the whichey from the Morani Bros. VAN-
house to the Walcom and HeLaughlin warehouse Mr. Koenis stated to
his (Vacurelli) that Walom and McLaughlin were getting a half a
million dollars worth of whistory for $10,000, nad that in his
(Koanig's) opinion the Government should have selood the liquor and
sold It as it had all been In storage for more than ten years) Was
in his (Vacarelli's) opinion someone not & lot of noney to allow
this transfer to be nate) that in his (Vacarolli's) opinion, Mr.
Keenig should be interviewed in connection with this transaction;
that Assistant United States Attorney Warren Carridy had sont him
A tologran during the provious real: asking his when he would be
available to appear before the Federal Grand Jury at Chicago: that
reporters of the Chicago American had speken to his about this
miter the last time he was in Chicago: and that Alexander Jania
and former United States Attorney George 1. & Johnson know about
the matter and were considering having it-presented to the Grand
Jury,
Special Agent Converse stated in his report of this interview
that Vacarelli had proviously related this SVIII story to him in the
early part of 1935, and that he (Converse) had at that time inter-
viewed Keenig as suggested by Vacarelli. In the course of his in
terriew with Konnic. the latter stated that in his opinion every-
thing was regular in every way regarding the transfer of the liquor
from the Morand warehouse to the warehouse of Wakes and Walmighlin.
It is believed that the foregoing substantially comprises the
information which had reached Mr. Iges regarding the supposed -
authorized removal of spirits from the Morand Bros. varahouse at
the time when Mr. Madden's office me requested to investigate this
mitter. The natual facts regarding the transaction vill now be
stated.
Regraded Uclassified
177.
- 38 -
The Mornal Bros. warshouse, known as General Bonded Narchouse
No. 3, 10 located at 823-827 Norton Street, Chicago, Ill. This is
in a district frequented by cangators and hoodlums, and reported
attempts to rob the warshouse were made during the years when it
vas used for the storage of spirits, one of which, sono time bo-
twoon Fobruary 25 and March 5. 1037, was monoreful. Al though only
this one robbery untually occurred, the Morand warshouse, w reason
of its undestrable location, had to be closely guarded by revenue
officers at all times, and wish a constant 201200 of verry and annoy-
nnes to the officers of the of Internal who were No
sponsible for its reservision. On October 8, 1934, after informal
discussion of the matter with Departmental and Durou officers at
Washington, Mr. Yollowley, District Supervisor of the Alcohol Tax
Unit at Chicago, mubmitted the following recommendation to the
Comissioner of Internal Revonues:
"I an writing you recerding General Bonded Warehouse
No. 3, operated by Morand Bros., 073-827 Norton Street,
Chicago, Illinois.
"I have been recomending for the past siz years
that the spirite In this warehouse be noved to a don-
centration warehouse. The Incrome on several occasions
ordered the spirite concentrated but each the the pro-
pristor of the warehouse land the reseval postigned 100
definitely.
"Thero Are now only 33,345.3 tax gallons In this
warehouse. There is very little activity. Stornkeeper-
(migers are needed very badly at plants where there is A
great doal of activity. It is for this reason and the
fast that this warchouse is located in M undestrable
part of the city that I an again recommending that those
spirite be removed to a communiration warehouse. The
namigned there could then be Given
nore productive duties. I sincerely hope that you ONA
anin issue the concentration order and tint this work
can be accomplished as an early date.
"I shall amit your realy with interest.
"Yery truly yours,
(Stened) - c.
"Asting District Supervisor."
Regraded Uclassified
178
Regraded Uclassified
- 39 -
on October 31, 1934, an the result of Mr. Yollowley's recom-
mendation, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue directed the removal
of the spirits from the Morand marchouse. The following are peril-
nont extracts from the Commissioner's order:
my virtue of the authority vested by Law in the
Secretary of the Treasury and by his conferred and 100
posed upon the Commissioner of Internal Reverns. you
are instructed to direct the Morand Brose, Incorporated,
to effect 22. removal of all distilled spirite stored in
Its General Bonded Unrehouse No. 3, 023-837 Norton Street,
Chicago, Illinois, to nome concentration warshouse or wire-
houses, designated as mah, pursuant to the Act of Pobra-
ATT 17. 1923, as reanacted in the Treasury Appropriation
Act for each fisanl year up to the present
time. Preferably such warahouse or merchouses should
be located in Chicago no as to effect the most reasonable
transportation costs. Purther instruct the proprietor of
General Bonded Warehouse No. 3 that this removal must be
accomplished within thirty Engre from the date of this
order unless an extension of time is granted X the Depart-
ment.
........
"Upen removal of the spirite purmant to this order.
payment of accrunt charges against such spirite and trans-
portation costs to the concentration wurshouse my be
rade (1) by the owner of the spirite (2) w the proprietor
of the warehouse from which the spirite are resoved or (3)
Y the proprietor of the murchouse to which the spirits
are reserved. In the avent the said charges and transporto-
tion costs are not remund by the propristors of ofther of
the warchouses, the Department will look to the owner of
the spirite for mottlement of much conto.
"In the event of failure or refusal of Morand Bros.,
Incorporated, to renove the spirite within the time -
scribed in this order, or within my extension of time
which my be granted, you AFG directed to report mall
failure or refusal to the Department with much rocom-
mendation as you my doom approprinte."
179
- 00 -
The statutory authority for the transfer of spirite in this
is found in Section 3272. h. 3., mailing At follows:
"Misser in the opinion of the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue any distillery or other warehouse 10
unsafe 02 will for use, or the narchandise therein
19 for my reason liable to loss or great waster. he
my discontimes main medical and require the mr
chandies therein to be transferred to mah other -
house M be my destgnate and within euch time na he
may prescribe. such transfer shall be nute under
the exporvision of $200 collector, or of such other
officer M my be designated by the Consissioner,
novil the acquence thereof shall be paid by the cumar
of the morthantise. Whenever the owner of mail nor-
chandise fails to much transfer within the time
prescribed. or to M the gust and proper asspense of
much transfer, as amoortained and determined by the
Commissioner, stich marchandise by be seized and sold
by the collector in the num numar as goods 1279 nold
won distruint for tipos, and the proceeds of such mis
shall be andior to the payment of the taxe the thereon
and the cost and expenses of much male and removal. and
the balance paid over to the owner of mach nerchantise."
Horand Bros., Ino., cortain difficultion In complying
with the order of the Commissioner for the renoval of the spirite, and
on December 30, 1934, Mr. Tollowing wired the Commissioner as follows:
"Morand Bros. failed tales stops renoval spirits
to another warehmise accordance your order October
thirty-first. Suggest you dasignate Waloun MoLanghlin
or Lawrance warshouse, or both, ISS receiving concer-
tration worehouse for these spirite. Shall than
magotiate with proprietor designated receiving mre-
house with view having him assume storage charges
and cost renoval and file necessary papers for yes
noval."
And he wired the Commissioner again on January 2,1935, A8 follows:
"Please designate by wire warshouse to remove
spirite Morand warehouse. 300 my telegram December twenty-ninth."
Regraded Uclassified
180
- 41 -
On January 3, 1935, the Commissioner nent the following tolagram
so Mr. Yellowley:
"Rotols December twenty-nine and January two inno
order October shirty-one for removal spirts from Morand
Brothers warehouse to another mirshouse, Durom 1a
acreadble to designation of either and Halmyhlin
or Lawrance warehouse, or both, as reseiving concentro-
tion varahouse and you are authorised to nogotiate with
propristor of mar warehouses with view to having them
ADDITION storage charges and cost of removal. If such
armagements made specific order for concentration will
so issued."
Acting under the authority to be found In the correspondence
here referred to, Mr. Yellowley canned the transfer of the spirite
in question from the Morand warehouse to General Bonded Warehouse
No. 3, operated by Walam nn/ Malaughlin, at 200 East Illinois Street,
Chicago, the transfer being completed February 4. 1935. The transfer
was under the direct supervision of inspectors R. ?. HeGrath, 0. L.
Studenberg, and n. J. Rusine.
Aft will appear from the foregoing. the supposed unauthorized
transfer of spirite in this instance will in fact a transfer which
had been expressly authorized and directed by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue. It was in accordance with the law and the rega-
Intions of the Department, resulted In no loss to the Government
but on the contrary diminished the risk of such loss, was supervised
by officers of Internal Revenue, and was regular in every respect.
In view of the insimuations by It. Igos's informant, perhaps it
should be apecially added that in connection with the transfer of
tamble norehnalism from one bonded warshouse to another, the Gov-
armont preserves all its security and 11ons for the ultimate -
nent of taxes.
In view of these facts it is consent difficult to uniorstand
the basis of Mr. Iges's criticism, bet his complaint apparently
Cross out of the fast that in the course of his investigmtion, Mr.
Madden, or agents working under his supervision, male certain con-
tasts with Mr. rellowley's office, the intended inference svidently
boing that these contacts word designed so defent the objects of the
investigation. The record clearly shows that the investigation me
in fact conducted in a manner wall calculated to bring to light all
the facts with referrace to the miter under trquiry.
Regraded Uclassified
181
- 42 -
Allowed attented artertion by Algohol 25 Unit arents.
ltr. Iges writes that on one cooasion two Agents of the Alochol
Tax Unit attompted to collect notary from 8 defendant In & case which
has been referred to his office for prosecution. No questioned the
subject of the attempted collection and accordingly brought the este
for to Mr. Madden's attention with a view to having AR appropriate
Investigation nate. No any's further that, much to his assoniahment,
he later loarned that Mr. Madden had talom the mitor 8 with the
local office of the Alcohol Tax: Unit, which last advised him (Maddon)
that the action of the two agents was regular. No concludes w
maying that Wis the "a rather strange must in which to contract An
investigation."
COMPUTER
The defendent whom lbs. Igon has in wind, although he doos not
Monthly him in his letter, to 0730 Thoodors Men. the with one
Margaret Born TR&E the proprietor of & Atsorderly house at see
Morth Lolant Avame, Chiango, when theme premises ware visited by
revenue officers last September. Ries novt linran ware ventors of
unterpall alcohol at various locations in Chicago, Including 282
North Loland Avenue, 4451 Bazel Avenue, and 855 Insurance Avenue.
A criminal case was name ant against these persons growing out of
sales of unterpad pirits at the Leland Avenue address In September,
1936, and out of similar sales mêe at the Lewrence Avenue address
in Devember, 1936. and this was referred to Mr. Igno's office for
disposition. On March 5, 1930, Mr. Igee addressed the following
letter to Mr. Madden #
"In ros Theodore Rios and Margaret Horan
"I have boon informed by the above named people.
that when they voro arrested on November 340 1936,
certain suggestions were made so then w nen of the
Alcohol Tax Unit, annely Paul Tamillo and 0. Davis,
with reference to & mettlement which they sight notes
in lieu of tasse.
"They further informed 255 that they received tale-
phone calle from one of the men of the Alcohol Tax Unit
every day for three consecutive days. requesting than to
brine $200 down to his, and that If they 414 not he would
como w and got them.
"It Is w suggestion, in viaw of the above, that on
investigation be mão to determine the foots in this case.
"Respectfully,
(signed) M. 1. IGOH
V. 3. Attorney."
Regraded Uclassified
182
- 43 -
On March 9, at Mr. Maddon's direction, Special Acont Somera,
of Mr. Mndden's staff, called on Assistant United States Attorney
Glasser with reference to this matter and WM furnished by Mr.
Classer with a copy of the following affidaviti
07 RISS
"I reside at 937 LaPayette St. I an the anno
Theodore Miss who was arrested on Hovember M. 1936,
with Margaret Horan for A violation at 985 Lawrence
Avenue, where the agents seised one gallon of alcohol.
Then we arrived at the New Post Office Duilding as
the office of the Alcohol Tax Unit, Presl Famillo not
0. Davis wire sitting alons with us, and Tamillo told
us that our taxes would be in the neighborhood of 2000.
and that (9) would be acquested to pay that. When I told
him I had no much amount of money, he naimal m how moth
I had. Than I informed his that I had $000 worth of
bornis bonds left, he registed that I anah the Somus
bonds M soon M possible, and doliver the $200 to Mr.
No also told no that if I burried and cant in the bonds
intediately I should receive the money within 5 four
days. Mter this conversation 18 was talen orsr to
the United States Court Nome and arraigned bafore Don-
niscioner Walker. Our dhao was continued before Comie-
sioner Walloar and hearing WELL not for December 0. 1036.
On the Monday, Tuesday, and telnesday following our
appoarance before Commissioner Valler on November 34th,
Mr. Tamillo called at Y home every day for three days.
and told me that If I d14 not bring the $200.00 down to
him be would como w and cot m. After Mr. Twilllo's
call of the Vednesday following our before
Judge Valker, IF) 414 not 000 him again until he testi-
flod in the Commissioner's Court room on December 8,
1938.
(signed) "Theodore Rice
"I, Margaret Horan, having read the above statement,
consur in 11 and my that it is the truth.
(31 ma4) Margaret Horea
"Subscribed and evorn to before - this 12th drg of
January. 1937.
(Signed) Deniel D. Glasser
"Hotary Public."
Regraded Uclassified
183
- 44
It - apparantly the beltef of Mr. 1,000 and his novistant,
Nr. Olasser, that the demands nate of the defendante Riom and
Norma for Alcohol Tax Agents Tamille and Davis. AS described in
the above affidavit, were actortiomic and froutulent in dharao-
tor. Under these circumstances, Special Agent Sommers in And
001279 visited the offices of the Alcohol Tax Unit for the pur
2038 of inspecting the files relating to the case, Invusation
of the files disclosed that the Investi entions nañe by the Al-
cohol the Unit had brought to 11ght the fact that these defendants
had insurred a liability for compational and ad valoren
penaltive amounting to $442.92, as the result of their liquor sales
at the addresses above Given during the period from December 1,
1933, to June 30, 1937: that the propor forms had been filled up
by these persons in November, 1936, notmowledging their tax 11s-
bility In this ment that the defendant Rios advised Agents Tamillo
and Davis at the time, however, that he ase not have this amount
of money, but thought he could realise at lenet $200 by cashing
his borns policy, and would pay as lasst that amount: that Agente
Tanille and Davis thereafter sought on c. minder of occasions to
sequre the tender of this maller mant and that the file of the
contains an official report of Agents Fundlle and Davis
which includes the following statements
"Inspector Twilllo phoned Mr. Rios, the wholessler,
on November n, and he promised to be in December 1, to
pay $200 on his liability of $447.93 AS wholesaler.
"On December 1. Inspectors Taxillo and Davis waited,
but Xins did not show w.'
Special Agent Somere interviewed Us. I. J. Baker, Senior
Inspector, Alcohol 2nx Unit. and the superior officer of agents Tamillo
and Davis, the advised that he (Baker) had born in close touch with the
handling of the Mes-Horan case and was familiar with the afforts rade
w the agents to collect the the Since It me this developed that the
donands name upon Ries NS described In the above affiderit dated
January 12, 1937. had been vale R. matter of official record in the files
of the case and ware known to and approved by the expervisory officials
of the Alcohol The Unit at the time when the transaction occurred in
November, 1936, third ware clearly no prom/s for the muposition that
they were axtortionate and fraudulent in character, and Mr. Madden's
investigation was closed when there facts were brought to light.
Regraded Uclassified
184
- 40
Thile it this - that there is not the allghtest ground for
the Icee's criticism of the methods purmied by Mr. Madden in haviling
this investigation, there is one further neport of the nutter which
armed be commented mon. Mr. Igoo says In reference to the Rice-
Homa Incidents "It is V understanding that once a chae 1s referred
to the Department of Justice. the disposition of that case romins
sectusively with this department." No mans to any that
1000 the Rice-Horan matter had been referred to his office for
prosecution, his office, as a antter of law, than because exalusively
responsible for It, and any attampt mês thereafter by revome offi-
core to collect money from the defendants vas AR improper Intrusion
2
won his jurisliction. The Department disagrees with M-, Ispa's
understanding of the law on this point. The reference to a United
States Attorney, with % view to criminal prosecution, of n. willing
and frandulent violation of the internal-reveme Lum relating to
diatilled mirits, has not harotofore been construed as relieving
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of his rusponsibility for the
collection of the intornal-revemue taxes found to be tue from the
>oraon or persons involved in the violation, oven though the liability
for much taxes arises out of the identical circumstances which cive
rigo to the original liability: and it has long been the sulform
practice in all districts for the Comissioner, by his officer^ and
agents, to ADDRESS the occupational taxes and ad valoren penalties
prescribed w Inc. together with comodity taxes than applicable,
all persons found engured in the illegal unmissiture or sale
of distilled apirite, and to purmises the renedies prescribed in the
statutes for the recevery of much taxes, independantly of my orininal
recording which my be Instituted w the United States attorney.
The Department is not but that Mr. Igoo's
of the 1.00 La at the bottom of his complaint in this onso, since, if
the law 100ml been M he supposed, he nicht have had crounds for the
bollef that the notion of revenue officers Tandllo not Davis anounted
to not unmarranted interforence with his functions. Under the natual
circumstances of the case, however, it is clear, first, that the
Aloohol The Unit at Chicago who regularly performing n routine duty
in its afforts to effect the collection of tame due from Rice and
Moran; and, record, that the nots of agents Tanillo and David were
their proper official note in their capacity M inspectors and
deputy collectors of Internal reverne.
Regraded Uclassified
185
8
Oriticious of Mr. A. Mar Gymball
Office of the General Counsel
In a separate letter, dated March 20, 1937. Mr. Igoo miss date
plaints against Mr. H. Riley Compbell, M attorney of the General
Counsel's office, Duram of Internal Revenue, the vas formarly Mr
signed to Nr. Igosts office ne Special Assistant United States AB-
torney. for the of masteting in front cases. Mr.
Igno says that Campbell "1s instating that be must supervies and con-
trol all civil matters which ATO new pending In this (Iges's) office.
and which are now handled in conjumetion with this office by Carl The
Peridas of the office of the Revorue Counsel." Mo says further that
for nore than a year past he (Igco) has been forced to spend more
than half his time in an effort to protect hinself from unharrasing
situations which he to satiafied WIN brought Into extetance through
the joint activities of Yellowley, Maddon, and Compbell. No mys
further that because of Campbell's willful and permistent refusal to
cooperate with him, he advised Garybell (this was some months no,
probably December, 1936, M the result of the events in the so-colled
Malone case) that he (Igee) could no Longer work with him.
It is someshat difficult to comment upon sweeping observations
of this character. At Mr. Igoo's instance. the Conoral Counsel of
the Duran of Internal Bevenue relieved Campbell from duty in Itr.
Igoo's effice in January, 1937. and so far as can be assertained
Campbell has since had no contact with that office. The alloged
joint activities of Tollowly, Madden, and Gamphell are considered
to be entirely Imaginary. Campbell has had as occasion to controt
Tellowlay officially. and be anys that even now he has only the
alightest acquaintance with him. Since he vas toin out of Iges's
office in January, Campbell has been writing with the revenue and
special agents on certain important income-bax froud onses which ATO
now in the investigative stage. It is believed that Mr. Icco's state-
nent that Compbell willfully and persiatently refused to cooporate
with him during the time Oneybell VM mealgned to his office, ann be
diamissed with the connont that It MM not until after certain user
culties arona between Mr. Igne and Carpbell in December, 1936, in
connection with the Valone choo, that If Igea raleed any question
requeding the character of Gampbell's services.
Regraded Uclassified
186
- 47 -
Action of Nr. 5, C. Yellowley in Connection With
Service Laboratories. st AL.
By letter dated April 3, 1037, Mr. Igon formarded to the Terma
A. dog of of comminication dated January 9. 1930, directed w Alexander
Junio, them Special Agant in Charge in the Buronu of Prohibition, to
Goorge 1. & Johnson, then United States Attorney In Chicago, relative
to an investigation in 1929 and 1930 of the activities of certain
availably donstured alcohol permittees and cover-house in Chinago and
other netropolitan cities buring the period from 1922 to 1030. Mr.
Irom migrate that this retter should now be inquired Into by the
Truesury Department. The informace apparantly intended to that Mr.
followley, ad Pruhibition Mainistentor in the 05 Prohibition,
and later na District Supervisor in the Incrones of In/tistrial Alcohol.
was cullty of - milfessance or nonfessance in connection with the
Immence of parmite and the supervision of comittees.
COMPUT
According to the Dopartment's records, the enso referred to 190
vulted in the indictment of 5029 than one hundred corporations and 130
dividuals, mostly permittees novil cover-houses in Chicago, Nov York,
Clovoland, Detroit, and Baltinors, on & charge of conspiracy to violate
the National Prohibition Act. Done idea of the thoroughness and the
extent of the investigation m/le at the time will be gained from the
feet that the case report now in the Department's files consists of
more than 2,000 typewritten payment, exclusive of exhibits.
It is believed that no purpose would be served X reopening this
case. The matter our be disposed of by stating that at the time the
case was investigated in 1939 and 1930, the facts in connection there-
with were fully known to the Director of Prohibition and later to the
Commissioner of Industrial Alcohol: and that these officials found
nothing in connection with the investigation that night be regarded
as reflecting in the alightent degree on the cluinistration of his
office by Mr. Yollowley. In fast, the record shows that may of the
penditions who ware finally indicted had previously had their permite
revolced as the result of investigations made by inspectors writing
wier Mr. Tellowier's direction.
Regraded Uclassified
187
- 46 -
Genelusion
It is our conclusion that the charges and complaints mão
by District Attorney Igee reflecting upon certain Treasury offi-
cials headquartered at Chicago, as contained in his letters of
March 25, March 29, and April 8, 1935, addressed to Honorable
Joseph 3. Keenan, Assistant to the Attorney General, are without
any foundation, and require no administrative action by this
Department.
(Signed)
GUY T. HELVERING
Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
(Signed)
WM. H. McREYNOLDS
Administrative Assistant
HNG-
(mff
to the Secretary.
(fh
Regraded Uclassified
108
April 27, 1937.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
In re: Collector of Internal Revenue C. E. Moore,
Assistant Collector of Customs C. W. Pollock,
Secret Service Operative in Charge 1, G. Harper.
An investigation of the alleged participation of Treasury officials
at Cleveland, Ohio, in a liquor sales agency, developed that the above
named persons became associated in the Ohio Sales Syndicate during April
1934, each acquiring & twenty percent interest in the profits without
any investment therefor. This syndicate was created as the result of
negotiations commenced by Secret Service Operative in Charge Bert C.
Brown, Detroit, Michigan, since removed from the service, who was in-
strumental in organizing Famous Brands Ohio, Inc., of Detroit, Michigan,
during August 1933, the sales agency for the American Distilling Company
in Michigan. The Ohio Sales Syndicate was created to act as a sales
agency for this company in Ohio. From April to December, 1934, inclu-
sive, Mesors. Moore, Pollock and Harper each received an income of
$8,293.14, Collector Moore being paid $1,503.98 in addition for sales
promotion services.
On January 1, 1935, the syndicate was incorporated as the Famous
Brands Ohio, Inc., and stock issued according to the interest of each
syndicate member. Mesers. Pollock and Harver received 18 shares each,
13 shares were issued to Collector Moore's wife and a nominal price of
$5.00 per share was paid. After the agency was incorporated additional
dividends totaling $1,620.00 were paid to each up to the time the investiga-
tion was commenced, July 2, 1935.
A hearing was held at the office of the Secretary of the Treasury,
July 24, 1935, to afford Messrs. Moore, Pollock and Harper an oppor-
tunity to explain their connection with this agency. As a result the
Secretary directed that Messrs. Moore, Pollock and Harger should either
diapose of their interests in the agency and forfeit to the United States
Treasury all profits realized by them from that business, or sever their
connection with the Treasury Department.
Collector Moore was noncommittal in his replies but finally, Decem-
ber 16, 1935, he wrote to the Secretary stating that he proposed "to
return to the company such profits as I realized from this transaction
when and as I am able to do so". Prior to the date of Collector Moore's
Regraded Uclassified
189
- 2 -
letter, Senator Bulkley had, on December 6, 1935, written to Secretary
"orgentheu indicating that the return of such profits would be made to
the Famous Brands Ohio, Inc., and that the company would then pay them
over to public charity. Mr. Pollock wrote a letter to the Commissioner of
Customs, December 26, 1935, stating "I agree to contribute to charity, as
I am able, the profits I have received, under the same arrangement made by
Collector Moore". Mr. Harper wrote 8. letter to the Chief, Secret Service,
under date of January 2, 1936, stating: "I will undertake to return the
profits I have made ⑉",
There were no further developments until September 24, 1936 when a
letter was written to the Famous Brands Chio, Inc., to obtain information
as to whether profits had been relinquished by Messrs. Moore, Pollock and
Harper but no reply was received. It subsequently developed that this
company liquidated shortly thereafter, certificate of dissolution having
been filed December 21, 1936.
A further investigation was then made during January 1937 to deter-
mine whether Messre. Moore, Pollock and Harper had complied with the
Secretary's instructions. This inquiry developed that subsequent to the
hearing on charges at the Secretary's office, July 24, 1935, Messrs.
Pollock and Harper, and Collector Moore's wife, each received $3,060
additional in dividends on the Famous Brands Ohio, Inc., stock.
The stock of Collector Moore's wife was held by her until January
10, 1936 when her father, who resides with Collector and Mrs. Moore,
acquired the stock and thereafter endorsed over to her checks for divi-
dends issued to him in the total amount of 2,070 which were deposited
in her bank account.
Mr. Pollock's stock was transferred to his wife December 20, 1935,
and on April 21, 1936 this stock was acquired by a next door neighbor,
Mr. Charles Michel, Jr., who states he paid Mrs. Pollock $720 for it.
A dividend check in the amount of 1720 was issued to Mr. Michel but his
check for $720 to Mrs. Pollock, purporting to be the cost of the stock,
WSE not charged to his bank account until the dividend check was
received and deposited, thus in effect resulting in no cost to Mr.
Vichel.
Mr. Harper's stock was acquired by his wife January 10, 1936 and
on April 17, 1936 it was transferred to Mare J. Wolpaw, B former
Asistent United States Attorney, Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Harper states
he sold his stock for 15.00 per share, or $90.
It will be observed that not only did Messrs. Moore, Pollock and
Harper fail to relinquish to Famous Brands Ohio, Inc., profits realized
by them from this venture, but on the contrary received substantial eddi-
tional income from the liquor agency after official notice that their
association was considered reprehensible and instructions given to them
that they should forfeit the profits already received.
Regraded Uclassified
190
- 3 -
Mr. Gardner Abbott, President of Famous Brands Ohio, Inc., now in
liquidation, stated on January 29, 1937, that no repayments of profits
were made by Messrs. Moore, Pollock and Harper. On the same date
Messrs. Pollock and Harper admitted that they had not returned any
profits to the liquor agency to date and both indicated that they did
not contemplate making any immediate payments. It was also indicated
that Messrs. Pollock and Harper have been guided by Collector Moore's
action in this matter. Collector Moore was not interviewed as he was ill
at the time of the recent investigation.
When the evidence of the association of Messrs. Moore, Pollock and
Harper was first brought to the Secretary's attention, it was and still
is considered to be a grievous offense and removal from the service was
deemed to be the proper disposition. It was only after a further con-
sideration of the case that it was decided to be lenient and permit them
to remain in the service by relinquishing all interest in the liquor
business and divesting themselves of all profits received. This they
agreed to do, but the evidence established as a result of the recent
investigation definitely shows that neither of them made any honest
effort to comply with the Secretary's instructions, but on the other
hand continued to flaunt the Secretary.
mcPepulds
Regraded Uclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to