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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 678
November 17-21, 1943
- A -
Book Page
American Red Cross
Goosebay Base, Labrador: Two workers stationed there at
HKJr's request - 11/17/43
678
172
Argentina
See Foreign Funds Control
- C -
China
United States military and civilian governmental
expenditures: Adler asked to discuss with Kung exchange
rate for - 11/20/43
340
a) Reply - 11/24/43: See also Book 679, page 274
b) Treasury's second cable to Adler - 12/9/43:
Book 683, page 38; 12/14/43 - Book 684, pages 78.79
Correspondence
Mrs. Forbush's mail report - 11/19/43
265
- E -
Embassies
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- F -
Financing, Government
War Savings Bonds
Payroll Deduction Plan: Reynolds (Senator, North Carolina)-
Treasury correspondence concerning - 11/18/43
227
Likert preliminary analysis of data obtained in study
of 3rd War Loan Drive - 11/18/43
230
a) Additional data - 12/13/43: See also Book 683,
page 21
Embassies' response to 3rd War Loan Drive - 11/19/43
258
4th War Loan Drive: German tanks (captured disabled)
sent from Italy by Clark - 11/17/43
128,262
Foreign Funds Control
Argentina:
See also Book 672
War Department reports on reaction to freezing of funds -
11/17/43
157
(See also Book 681, page 217 - 11/30/43)
a) HMJr and Treasury group discuss: Book 681,
page 209
Resumé by Paul of entire action - 11/20/43
296
Wallace recommendation: Control needed after war -
11/23/43: Book 679, page 130
Conference; present: Hull and State Department group:
HMJr and Treasury group - 11/24/43
199
*Conference: present: HMJr, General Somervell, General Clay,
and White - 12/23/43: See Book 686, page 171
Regraded Unclassified
- I - (Continued)
Book Page
France
Political conditions reported by Treasury representative
in Lisbon - 11/20/43
678
342
Cox (Oscar) sends cable giving additional information -
11/24/43: See Book 679, page 269
- G -
Germany
For captured military equipment see Financing. Government:
War Savings Bonds (4th War Loan Drive)
Goosebay Base. Labrador
See American Red Cross
H 1 I
Haiti
See Latin America
- L -
Labrador, Goosebay Base
See American Red Cross
Latin America
Argentina: See Foreign Funds Control
Haiti: Shere (Louis) to represent Treasury on commission
to make industrial survey in Haiti - 11/17/43
133
Lend-Lease
United Kingdom: Federal Reserve Bank of New York
statement showing dollar disbursements, week ending
November 10, 1943 - 11/20/43
291
Likert, Rensis
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- 0 -
Office of War Information
Davis transmits copy of budget with memorandum on work in
North African territory - 11/17/43
147
- P -
Post-War Planning
Currency Stabilization: Speaker Rayburn's committee-
289
Treasury conference - 11/19/43
Regraded Unclassified
- R - -
Book Page
Revenue Revision
1943 Revenue Bill
House Ways and Means report - 11/18/43
678
248
Paul memorandum: "Reply to contention that reduction
in Government expenditures reduces revenue needs
below amount recommended by the Treasury" - 11/20/43.
285
Reynolds, Robert R. (Senator, North Carolina)
See Financing. Government: War Savings Bonds
(Payroll Deduction Plan)
- S -
Shere, Louis
See Latin America: Haiti
- T -
Tanks (German)
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
(4th War Loan Drive)
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
- W -
War Savings Bonds
See Financing, Government
Regraded Unclassified
1
Fred Smith and starry thite
read 11/17/43
Regraded Unclassified
2
November 17, 1943
10:20 a.m.
Robert
Patterson:
Henry?
HMJr:
In person. In the flesh.
P:
Right. This is Bob Patterson.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
I spoke to Fred Osborne about that matter we
discussed the other day.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
The Arab edition we have nothing whatever to
do with.
HMJr:
I see.
P:
The English edition.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
in Cairo
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
your information is correct that we do
transport the paper.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
The War Production Board allows the paper and
we transport it.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
We don't foster the thing in any way
HMJr:
No.
P:
except by the transportation of the
necessary paper.
HMJr:
Yeah.
b.
How they get the plate there he doesn't know.
Regraded Unclassified
2
November 17, 1943
10:20 a.m.
Robert
Patterson:
Henry?
HMJr:
In person. In the flesh.
P:
Right. This 1s Bob Patterson.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
I spoke to Fred Osborne about that matter we
discussed the other day.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
The Arab edition we have nothing whatever to
do with.
HMJr:
I see.
P:
The English edition
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
in Cairo
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
your information ie correct that We do
transport the paper.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
The War Production Board allows the caper and
we transport it.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
We don't foster the thing in any way
HMJr:
No.
P:
except by the transportation of the
necessary paper.
1
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
How they get the plate there he doesn't know.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
3
HMJr:
No.
P:
The -- I discussed with him the disposition
of the matter.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
His feeling is this. He said he thinks the
soldiers ought to be given facilities to read
whatever 18 most popular in this nation.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
That this publication has the biggest circula-
tion of any magazine and it is distributed over
there, I think, free or for 10% maybe or some --
some reduced price at any rate, by the company.
HMJr:
Just a minute -- well, they pay for it. I don't
know how much but they pay for it.
P:
Pay 10$ or something.
HMJr:
Well, I think it's -- but I don't remember but
I do know they pay for it.
P:
That's more or less irrelevant if you
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
He feels
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
two things
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
first, that it's been done and the termination
of it would -- oh, raise a big hullabaloo
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
and, second, that he has the policy of
facilitating the reading by soldiers of what
is in widest circulation in the United States.
HMJr:
Yeah.
Regraded Unclassified
4
- 3 -
P:
We do the same thing on the distribution of
cigarettes and so on. We try to get overseas
the quantity of them that the ordinary public
here consumes
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
in the same ratios. And he said that he
does that on magazines and newspapers and weeklies
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
the same way. I'm not disposed to differ with
him.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
I am impressed by the fact that if a change were
made now, there would be the charge that we were
censoring or we were partial and trying to punish
someone.
HMJr:
Well, you don't mind my
P:
I don't particularly like it but
HMJr:
No.
P:
it's an awkward business.
HMJr:
Well, I'm going to drop it but in dropping it --
I mean, I found the situation.
I've reported
it to proper authorities BO the responsibility
is yours.
P:
I know it.
HMJr:
I'm not going to do anything more about it.
P:
All right.
HMJr:
I think you're wrong.
P:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I think entirely from the side -- other matter,
that where cargo space is 80 scarce, that you
can find space for this commodity -- uh -- I
think that you might be subject to criticism.
Regraded Unclassified
5
- 4 -
P:
This is rather -- this 18 not a high priority.
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
The -- the transportation of the thing.
HMJr:
But, I
P:
It's graded down
HMJr:
But, Bob
P:
but still it gets there all right.
HMJr:
I've found it: I've told you about it.
P:
Yep.
HMJr:
It's your responsibility. It's not mine and
I'm going to let it rest there. See?
:
Yep. I've tried to get in touch with Bob
Sherwood
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
but he's up in New York
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
and sort of a hard fellow to get a hold of.
HMJr:
Well, I'm not going -- it's -- it's a dead horse
8,8 far 8.5 I'm concerned.
P:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
Now, may I bring up something new though?
P:
Yep.
HMJr:
While I was over there General Hughes, Deputy
Commander to General Eisenhower, invited us to
send a man to stimulate the sale of War Bonds
with soldiers. You see?
P:
Yep.
HMJr:
From this country -- and since then he has written
to me again reminding me. I don't went to send
somebody from over here, but there seems to be,
over there -- there's -- going back to Weshington --
Regraded Unclassified
6
- 5 -
HMJr:
Cont'd:
there's a mix-up as to whether the stimulation
of war bond purchases by soldiers should, be
under the Finance Officer or the Special Services,
and nobody in General Eisenhower's Theatre seems
to know who's responsibility it 1s.
P:
Yeo, we can clear that up.
HMJr:
Now, if that could be cleared up and then 1f
you approve, whichever way you decide it should
go, and then get out a directive saying that
either Special Services or the Finance Officer
should appoint somebody in each Theatre to
stimulate the sales of war bonde, then we'll be
glad to cooperate with that person.
P:
What's the name of the General? General Hughes?
HMJr:
Hughes.
P:
What's his job?
HMJr:
He is Deputy Commander to General Eieenhower.
P:
All right. Yeah.
HMJr:
It's Everett Hughes.
P:
Yep.
HMJr:
He's a S.O.S.
P:
Yeah.
HMJr:
But he's a Deputy Commander.
P:
Right.
HMJr:
And he has asked us when I WES there, and since
written me. But there is this mix-up which they
say comes back to Washington; that there have
been two directives, each contradicting the other.
P:
Okay, I'll dig right into that.
HMJr:
And you'll let me know?
P:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
Thank you.
Regraded Unclassified
7
November 17, 1943
10:30 a.m.
FINANCING
Present: Mr. Daniel Bell
Mr. George C. Haas
Mr. Henry C. Murphy
Mr. Jacob Viner
Mr. Robert Rouse
Mr. C.J. Devine
Col. Allen Pope
Mr. Herbert Repp
Mr. Benjamin Levy
II.M.JR: Gentlemen, in the first place, let me say this,
that I feel that since we have established a pattern of rates
on March 19, 1942, the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee
has done a swell job keeping practically that same pattern,
and I think that you people have played a very important part
in assisting the Fed in making that possible.
Now, every so often we kind ol check up on ourselves,
and we have these different loans. We are doing it now, as
we enter the Fourth war Loan, and the question has come up
concerning a mechanism as to how to handle the bill market.
we have nad a number of discussions and the Federal meserve
nas made some recommendations, and we have made some recom-
mendations, and the way the matter stands at this moment --
I am just having a little discussion here to give you the
benefit of this thing -- is this, and I am going to be very
frank. After all, I don't expect to read about it in Drew
Pearson's column or the Wall Street Journal. (Laughter) who
is the man who writes for the Journal American -- the finan-
cial writer?
MR. ROUSE: Lenlie Gould.
H.M.JR: My pal!
MR. REPP: We will settle for Teddy Goldsmith.
H.M.JR: Anyway, this recommendation which was made by
these people about midnight last night -- they finally found
you (to Mr. Lepp) -- is that we put tne bill on the same
status as all the other Treasury securities ano give it rights,
as I understand it; and then if a man has & hundred million
dollars' worth of tills, or if a man with the Federal Reserve
Regraded Unclassified
8
- 2 -
has, and they want to put these bills in, they would have the
privilege of exchanging those for equal amount, as would any
bank or any dealer or holder.
Now, the alternative to that, of course, is to let the
Federal Reserve buy direct, and I made it perfectly clear
yesterday that if we were going to do that I would insist
that the Treasury and the Federal Reserve go up on the Hill
and explain it in advance, because the testimony, as I
remember it, v.as in passing this legislation, giving the
Federal Reserve the right to buy up as nigh as a million
dollars in case of an emergency. I haven't checked my testi-
mony, but zir. nouse is sure of that, because certainly if
you do it six times, it no longer becomes an emergency.
matever success I have had here in explaining to Congress
in advance - often 1 explain in advance and they don't like
it. out they sa, "You are Secretary of the Treasury; it is
your responsibility. Go ahead." And they are satisfied to
the extent of letting me run the job as long as I teil them
in advance. But what they don't like is to read about it
in the papers - if they read the papers! Rouse says you give
out a release and they read about it. The answer is, they
con't read - at least not our stoff. They read about a trial
oown in the bahamas, but they don't read Treasury releases
and Federal Reserve releases. And just sticking the notice
in the papers doesn't mean anything. If somebody writes about
it and they think we have tried to pull 8 fast one - some
people think, and I think correctly so, if we start to ex-
plain it on the Hill it is going to be & tempest in a teapot.
and it may be. You might have Eccles up there for weeks.
Now, I appreciate what Mr. Rouse says, that this method
of giving them rights may be a little clumsy, I am just go-
ing to run through my impression. Now, in talking of bout this
thing, though, ne asks a very pertinent question, and that is,
wouldn't the market gradually die out as, say, a new customer
with new money can't get his bid filled. So I said that I
would have no objection if a man who put in & bid for a hun-
dred thousand dollars didn't take care of the situation, I'd
be glad to consider increasing the amount to two or three nun-
cred - as much as is necessary. That way you would keep a fairly
live market to get subscriptions. And if the thing ran over
seventy-five or a hundred million dollars, for a week - you
Regraded Unclassified
9
- 3 -
see? And we would in this picture expect you people to con-
tinue to take an interest in the bill market.
Now, what is wrong with what I have said so far? Will
it work, won't it work? Do you have a better scheme? I'd
like suggestions.
MR. REPP: My objection, Mr. Secretary--
H.M.JR: Objection?
MR. REPP: Yes. The things I heard last night included
also the present plans on your desk. I think probably of
those which were offered, it is the best compromise so far,
but we have a bill market--true enough-that hasn't been a
very active market and the bids have only been slightly over
the amount offered; but you have had the thing working rather
smoothly up until this point, anyway. It is something the
market understands and knows.
Now, if you inject a new element you are going to take
some very simple mechanism and a simple money market instru-
ment and make it difficult. The Federal Reserve market would
have to announce how much they had maturing every week and
how many bills which you put to them on option they are going
to retain, so that they could probably come in and exchange
those, also. You would have a variable amount for cash each
week, sometimes three hundred million, sometimes five, some-
times only one hundred million. And you give an element of
uncertainty to the whole Treasury bill mechanism, which I
don't think is necessary.
Now, this question of buying direct, I think probably
some educational work could be carried on and it might be done
by saying there is no new credit created and no new money to
the Treasury, but you do raise this question of buying direct.
There is a simpler way, I think, or handling it, and that is
that we continue to take an interest in this Treasury bill
market and our interest is accentuated.
H.M.JR: Let me make this plain. I have been more than
happy in the way the Open Market Committee has operated.
This question has not been raised by me, but very strenuously
by the System. That is no secret, is it?
Regraded Unclassified
10
- 4 -
MR. ROUSE: It is all right to say here, certainly.
H.M. JR: After all, it is all right to say it here. So
if Rouse would answer you, it is really up to Rouse.
MR. ROUSE: I think the thing has gone well up to here.
Our problem is in the future, and in the light of our present
maturities over the next thirteen weeks we feel that the
natural interest which the market is taking may not prove
sufficient to take up at three-eighths or better the full
amount of what our maturities will probably be, and we want
to find some way of maintaining the credit we have already
out into the market and be sure that the volume tendered at
the three-eighths rate or better is maintained, and avoid
direct purchasing in the sense, not of replacing maturities,
which we have been doing right along, anyway, in other types
of Treasury securities, but to avoid direct purchases in
bills over and above our maturities.
In other words, if we have to induce additional tenders,
the question comes up--it is a matter of conscience, really,
as far as we are concerned--or the point at which we are
soliciting, actually soliciting, tenders for which the induce-
ment is that we will take them immediately off their hands,
whether at the premium or not. And that is the point we have
been wanting to avoid. If you come to that, that is a
direct purchase, and I don't think it would be proper to do
it without telling the public, including Congress, about it.
H.M.JR: I just want to inject this, and I think you men
know this. Now, understand I didn't know before this that you
people represent the Executive Committee of the 17 bond dealers.
MR. ROUSE: They happen to be identical, but they are
not here representing that.
MR. REPP: We are here as individuals and not as re-
presentatives.
H.M.JR: But let me throw this in for a moment. My
position has always been that I have been more than willing
for you fellows to make some money out of the Government bond
market, and I haven't changed. I am just throwing that in.
I haven't changed. You have never heard any complaints from
Regraded Unclassified
11
- 5 -
me about making an honest penny out of the thing.
MR. BELL: Bob, is this a fair statement of your position,
that you like the present method of handling the Treasury
bills but you are now getting to the point where something
has to be done to induce bidding, and you don't want to have
to ask the dealers in banks to put in bids for your account
if they can go on and you can get bids over and above the
bidding and make the market feel easy and acquire those
bills in the normal course, replenishing your maturities?
You would be satisfied with that method as long as you
weren't put in the position of having to go out to these
individual dealers and induce them to put in bids?
MR. ROUSE: That is correct. When the initiative is on
my part, I think at some point the question would be properly
raised as to whether it was direct bidding.
MR. LEVY: The initiative can come from you. I'll be
willing to increase my bid.
MR. REPP; I am sure we would.
MR. LEVY: As long as we have a "put."
H.M.JR: Without having to write it out, if after you
men had left you went away with the impression that we people
here would like you to intensify your interest a little bit--
do I have to say anything more than that?
MR. LEVY: No, sir. You didn't even have to say that
much.
COL. POPE: I don't think there would be any question
about having to go on bended knee. All we want to know is an
indication if we could solve it that way.
MR. LEVY: As long as the Federal doesn't change its put.
H.M.JR: It is a nice, safe business, say.
MR. LEVY: I'll say it's very safe.
MR. REPP: Speaking only for myself, we'd be glad to
intensify. The profit is not involved at all. It is just
Regraded Unclassified
12
- 6 -
that we can help in maintaining the money market and aid
Treasury financing.
COL. POPE: I wrote to Eccles and sent 8. copy to Rouse.
MR. REPP: I'd rather do it without profit.
MR. DEVINE: I'd rather do it without profit.
MR. REPP: We can intensify our effort.
H. JR: You'd rather not even make the two dollars?
MR. DEVINE: We'd rather not make anything.
MR. ROUSE: You can't avoid making the two dollars and
eight cents.
MR. LEVY: You have 8 three-eighths put.
MR. REPP: We give half of it back to you, anyway.
(Laughter)
COL. POPE: I think one thing, Mr. Secretary, we should
take into consideration, that if we are going to change any-
thing that involves any great expression by you toward the
Hill, somewhere, and the papers take it up, it is so much
involved that the average person doesn't understand much about
it, and I am a little afraid at this time that when we are
talking about bill rates or what is going to be done about
bills that a great many country bankers and some others may
say, "Oh, well, this is a change." It will just intensify
things. But it is quite serious today in my opinion--the
talk about money rate changes.
H.M.JR: You are talking just the way I feel, and I'd
like to say how I feel, and if any of you people disagree
with me I wish you would say SO. I feel this way, that since
the 19th of March, 1942, it is to the good management of this
Open Market Committee that we have been able to keep money
absolutely stable. That is the only thing of any importance
in our economic life which is stable.
Now, just as soon as you begin to monkey with it, the
people are going to sit back and wait to see what the next
Regraded Unclassified
13
- 7 -
thing is going to be.
COL. POPE: That is right. And they are just on the
edge ready to accept something like that and it is an
argument in their favor, money rate changing.
A.M.JR: And there are a number of people, directors of
tanks and others, who happen to believe that what we nave
cone is right, or believe that we could continue, through
management, to finance the war. And the slightest change
they will say, "You see, Bill, I told you this wouldn't
last.' Then they begin to to back - "On neil, I'm not
going to buy - hell, it's got to change."
Am I vight?
MR. DEVINE: You are absolutely correct.
M.M.JR: Does anybody differ'.
The REPP: 1 think, for this stage of the game, Mr.
Secretary, that is right, because they :0 back to your
speech and quote the words "Tramework of principal,
which puts three-cighths here and two and a half there.
There is your interest curve.
It may be necessary sometime to possibly allow some
02 these shorter rates to firm, but I doubt if this is the
moment.
H.M.JR: Does anybody think this is the moment to
change - between the Third and Fourth war Loan?
MR. REPP: No.
H.M.JR: Would any of you fellows recommend I change
it?
DEVIME: 1 certainly wouldn't.
Don't Closs it over.
Regraded Unclassified
14
- 8 -
M. BELL: There certainly were a lot of people in
March, 1942, who contended you couldn't do the thing we
started out to do. AS we have gone along, more people
have gotten confidence in the ability to maintain that curve.
They are disappearing fast. Within the last month they
have been talking about changing these rates, as the
Colonel said, more and more, and if you change it once, you
are sunk.
H.M.JR: have you changed your mind, Colonel?
COL. POPE: No, 1 haven't at all. 1 think it is
dangerous enough now; but I think it is not so dangerous
but what, for instance, if the last twos were par fifteen
or sixteen bid, I think the whole attitude of the people
would change it right over. It is as close as that to
being one way or the other.
H. JR: But they are not.
COL. POPE: No, but as long as they are not, 1 think
these rates - theres quite a difference in that. There
would have to be a good deal of explanation on that. I
personally think that would be bad to do right now.
H.M.JR: I don't want to have the Federal meserve
buying direct from me unless we go up on the Hill and
explain it.
Mr. LEVY: I don't think there is any necessity for it.
H.M.JR: I can assure you that won't be good.
COL. POPE: I don't think it will.
Mr. LEVY: No necessity for it. As long as the
Federal meserve System is ready to give anybody a put of
three-eighths, 1 don't see what anybody nas to worry about.
COL. POPE: As far as I an concerned, and from what
everybody eise has said here, if it would relieve the
situation by intimating, maxing it through the sign
Regraded Unclassified
15
- 9 -
language, or anything of the kind, what is wanted as far
as putting in for bills is concerned, that is all that is
necessary; it is irrespective of profit or not profit.
That is not a matter of concern at all.
H. . JR: Do you fellows want to go in a room and talk
it over?
MR. REPP: I don't mant to. I will tell you what we
will do: We will intensify our interest in the bill
market.
M. LEVY: So will we.
COL. POPE: We will.
the DEVIME: we will.
H.W.JR: (To house) What more do you want?
MR. NOUSE: I don't want anything more.
H.M.JR: Leave it as it is now for a while. Will you
recommend that to your bosses?
MR. MUSE: Yes, sir.
MR.BELL: That we 00 nothing else so far as the
exchanges are concerned.
MR. NOUSE: That is right.
M... DEVINE: It certainly is the most simplified way
to handle the whole thing.
H.M.JR: We have known each other - this is my anni-
versary, incidentally - I didn't know it until 1 read it
in the paper. (Laughter) And, incidentally, 1 am getting
to be an old man, so I like to go back, but approximately
the day that Hr. Rooseveit put me in here, the Government
bond market hit an all-time low. If you look it up, you
will see that. Do you remember that refunding failure,
and everything else: hight around Nove ber 17 or 18
Regraded Unclassified
16
- 10 -
the Federal neserve discontinued open-marke operations,
that week, the week I came in here. You look it up.
The Government bond market struck an all-time low, and then
I made my first loan, which was for nine months, and then
after that I paid, I think, either two or two and a half
percent
MR. BELL: More than that, I think. Well, 1 may be
wrong. I was thinking we borrowed for thirteen months.
H.M.JR: You arespoiling my story.
then the boys
said, "You can make a long-term loan; we will 60 thirteen
months. The first was for nine months and then go out
and maxe a long-term loan. (Laughter)
II.. REPP: Just on that, /r. Morgenthau, this is
your anniversary, can me say something complimentary?
It has taken all these years to get things going the right
direction, and certainly the credit of the Government has
been maintained, and the market has been kept on an orderly
basis. You have got this har Loan campaign going. There
are probably some refinements to be made, but people are
beginning to understand and know it. That certainly is
one part of the war effort that is going smoother all the
time. And anything you do now to inject new elements to
educate or re-educate the people, why you really hamper
your objective. Now, maybe post-war problems will change
this thing.
H.M.JR: I will be up on my farm seiling apples.
(Laughter)
MR. DEVINE: We have even eliminated the black market.
H.M.JR: How is your pump down on your farm?
M.S. DEVINE: Still working fine.
H.M.JR: The pump?
MAY DEVINE: Yes.
Regraded Unclassified
17
- 11 -
H.X.JR: You heard that story? You tell about your
pump.
Mic. DEVINE: Well, the Secretary asked me one day
If I had any problems. I said I nad a very important
problem; my pump up there was struck by lightning and
1 applied for a priority and it would probably take me two
months to get another. by that time all my animals would be
dead and my farmer would have left me.
ne said he would see what he could do about it.
(Laughter)
It has been working very well ever since.
H.M.JR: That is the way we water the market.
(Laughter)
MIG VINER: Prime the pump. (Laughter)
H.M.JK: Can we go on to the next thing? Are you
(Rouse) all right?
MR. ROUSE: Yes, sir.
H.W.JR: Now, as to the basket, the only change which
hes been recommended is that we have a two and a quarter
instead of a two. That is the only change.
MR. LEVY: Two and a quarter and--
R.M.JR: Two and & quarter and two and a half.
Mic LEVY: You have to eliminate the twos. It is a
little bit congested.
COL. POPE: Then the discussion on the note business.
MA. BELL: Discussion as between a seven-eighths
certificate and a note. I mean, that has Leen discussed
011 around.
Regraded Unclassified
18
- 12 -
Miss REPP: Is that 8 proper nart of this discussion?
H.M.JR: Yes, SO whatever you would like to throw in
on that, I would be more than pleased to hear.
MIC DEVINE: Well, now, the two and a quarter bond
that you might sell, I think it would be most important to
price that right; that is, fit it in the right slot, be-
cause you have now about a billion, seven hundred million
of potential sellers that fit into that '52-'58 class.
I say that I think the important part 01 this two and
a quarter, if such an issue is sold, is to fit in in the
right place, because you can break down the rest of your
market. I think you should make it as long as you can,
somewhere around '54 or '57 if you can, although it
wouldn't make any difference - '55-'57.
Now, that may seem long, nut I feel that re arcless of
mat issue you sell, the price of the new bond will be
worth no more than par four or par six unless your whole
market changes.
Now, if you sell at two and a quarter, we will say
'53-'56, you are going to affect the two and a quarters
or '52-'55, which are alone with all the twos where the
ressure is. You are going to break that marke down.
Mr. MURPHY: What are you assuming about the restric-
tion?
MR. DEVINE: 1 an assuming until the obligation becomes
a ten-year one the banks can't buy them. In other words,
in two years' time, on a '55 option date, the banks could
then buy them.
MR. REPP: Fifty-five option?
K... LEVY: I taink you can bring it out a little further -
'57-'60.
COL. POPE: That is the way I feel.
Regraded Unclassified
19
- 13 -
II.M.JR: well, the boys nad it down '56-'59 - the
Haas boys.
MR. DEVINE: The reason I mentioned this, Mr. Secretary,
was--
Mile LEVY: Fifty-seven is an open date; 1 don't think
you have any call then.
Mit. DEVINE: The reason I mentioned this was due to
the fact that the last time you priced the tvo and a
half you had '67 twos outstanding and you brought out 8
'62-'67 - you dropped five years.
R.M.JR: We had all kinds of arguments about that,
didn't we? I can't remember which side 1 was on. I will
have to look it up.
MR. REPP: 1 agree very much with Chris that this bond
has to be properly placed. Une question: What was the
optional date, '53 - '54?
Mk. DEVINE: No earlier than '54. Stretch it out
as far as you want to; make it '60-'63; just no shorter.
N. LEVY: Ten years is too short.
MR. BELL: You want to put it right on the line as
close as you can.
VR. REPP: I think you have to give a certain amount
of rate for the restriction of marketability for a period
of years, and if you say '55-'57 as an optional date,
sure, that will 60; it is a thirteen-year bond. Maybe it
might be well to shorten it to '56-'59. I think you have
to make it look somewhat attractive. I tain it will have
an effect on the market, but following our discussion of
last year, the two and a half percent market sold off,
but no adverse effect on the over-all picture of the thing.
The DEVINE: I probably went to extremes when I said
'BU; I don't believe you can 20 about pricing this bond
Regraded Unclassified
20
- 14 -
any old way. I am just fearful the bond will be too
short.
MR. BELL: Too rich.
H.H.JK: There is no indication of that here.
1. REPP: I definitely agree with you there; but
priced right would be something in the latter part of
'56 or '57.
COL. POPE: There are a lot of tools available in
this market, and if you have it too attractive, the
savings banks can ruy it and a lot more twos come in.
NOUSE: Are there a lot of twos available?
COL. POPE: I think a good many.
MIA DEVINE: The point there, Colonei, is that you
have a '52-'55 in the hands of savings banks now. You
probably have cone over these figures. You have three
nundred million '52-'55's in savings banks, and two
hundred and forty-eight million in the insurance companies.
In the came of the first '52-'54's, you have five hundred
million. In the case of '58-'58's, you have seven hundred
million. So you have potential selling there, or switching,
of a billion, seven hundred and fifty million.
Mi. LEVY: That is why '57-'60 sounds better. You
don't care how much two and a quarters.
H.I.JR: me don't have to settle that today. All we
have to settle today and tomorrow is whether it is to be
a two and a quarter.
REPP: I think that is it.
IM BELL: live will have to settle the date whenever
The start with the publicity on the Fourth war Loan, which
ought to be not later than next week. lie don't have to
settle it today. (To bell) Do they love to say the yearage?
Regraded Unclassified
21
- 15 -
MR. BELL: Yes, because that goes in your llterature.
MR. ROUSE: Would you figure your ten-year figure
to the calendar date or maturity?
MR. BELL: To the calendar date, I think.
M. I&EPP: You have done that on your two and a halfs.
COL. POPE: Then they would be available to your
commercial banks at ten years.
30. BELL: We will have to treat this a little
differently. It seems to me we have to say that when it
got down to ten years as a calender date, they could buy
them.
Do you have any objection, George? It seems to me
it ought to be the calendar date.
MR. MURPHY: It doesn't seem reasonable to me because
the ter-year limitation is presumptively to prevent commer-
cial banks from having long bonds in 8 falling market; and
if the market were a falling maret, it would be the
maturity rather than the calendar date that was significant.
As long as it is a good market, it doesn't matter.
MR. BELL: I wouldn't worry much about it.
MR. REPP: Open market is based on the optional date.
MR. BELL: We always think when we get down to these
small coupons everybody ought to look at the maturity date
and then the market puts it on the other, continually.
COL. POPE: Could I ask you - in regard to the basket
I have been advised - there have been so many people talk-
ing about baskets, and so forth - that it has been generally
thought to leave out the certificates; then when you
come to corporations, industrial corporations, you probably
have to supply something to them besides two and 8 quarters
or two and a half's, if you are going to get volume there,
and the not e was suggested.
Regraded Unclassified
22
- 16 -
One or two indicated to me that there seems to be a
feeling you should restrict the note for purchase by
banks for six months or a year. I would like to say that
I think that any restriction there is really not of great
help, because you are only restricting for six months or
a year.
It might be the time, a year from now, When it might
be just as weil not to have a sudden change in the buying
availability by the banks, and I should think it is just
as well, for that reason, to have no restrictions at all,
and if you do put restrictions, it is going to make a
difference in the amount of corporate buying.
S.M. BELL: That suggestion vas made, that we restrict
the note. We have had many suggestions. In some instances
the certificate should be left in, and others, it ought
to be eliminated entirely and substituted for a note; others
suggest that the certificate nught to be put in only for the
corporations.
I think it would be nice to have an expression of the
views of the group.
MR. LEVY: well, I con't see any reason, if you are
going to offer a certificate - which I think you should,
ratner than a note - I can't see where you are going to sell
any notes to individuals in any great quantity. The biggest
buyers have been the corporations or insurance companies -
even some business firms.
MR. BEIL: You wouldn't sell the certificates to
individuals, either?
MR. LEVY: 1 would sell them to anybody who wants them.
MR. BELL: But I say you wouldn't sell any more, or
probably shouldn't
Mr. LEVY: I don't taink they will buy very many of
them, but I wouldn't restrict it in any way. 1 would
leave it the way it vas.
Regraded Unclassified
22
- 16 -
One or two indicated to me that there seems to be a
feeling you should restrict the note for purchase by
banks for six months or a year. I would like to say that
I think that any restriction there is really not of great
help, because you are only restricting for six months or
a year.
It might be the time, a year from now, viten it might
be just as well not to have a sudden change in the buying
availability by the banks, and I should think it is just
as well, for that reason, to have no restrictions at all,
and if you do put restrictions, it is going to make a
difference in the amount of corporate buying.
MR. BELL: That suggestion was made, that we restrict
the note. We have had many suggestions. In some instances
the certificate should be left in, and others, it ought
to be eliminated entirely and substituted for a note; others
suggest that the certificate ought to be put in only for the
corporations.
I think it would be nice to have an expression of the
views of the group.
MR. LEVY: Well, I don't see any reason, if you are
going to offer a certificate - which I think you should,
ratner than a note - I can't see where you are going to sell
any notes to individuals in any great quantity. The biggest
buyers have been the corporations or insurance companies -
even some business firms.
MR. BEIL: You wouldn't sell the certificates to
individuals, either?
Mr. LEVY: 1 would sell them to anybody who wants them.
Mk. BELL: But I say you wouldn't sell any more, or
probably shouldn't.
MR. LEVY: I don't think they will buy very many of
them, but I wouldn't restrict it in any way. I would
leave it the way it was.
Regraded Unclassified
23
- 17 -
MR BELL: You think we ought to have a certificate
and not a note?
Mill LEVY: That is right. I think you could keep your
notes and do your refunding in '44 for some of the other
things there.
MR. REPP: I think the problem is one which should
be explored from the basis of your over-all plans on
handling the Fourth War Loan. I think it ties in very
definitely, also, with the question of quotas and that
effect on the money market.
If you are going to go and have your whole drive com-
bined at one time in January and you include a 0.0f I.
in there, and the Treasury takes a stand against it, you
still have this tremendous transfer of funds to meet quotas
out of liew York, Chicago, and other districts for the
purely statistical reason that the C.of I. is a vehicle
through which they can do it. Now, C.of I. questions what
type of money.
There is a certain demand for notes; I don't suppose
you sell too many of them.
I would think there is a possibility that you could
go along, and I would suggest that you definitely divide
your drive. Put all of the emphasis on tue individuals,
and then come with your second part. I would do a two and
a quarter percent bond, and I would open the last part of
December. And I would seriously consider including a
note if they want it, and along a little later, I would
consider an offering of Treasury notes to corporations -
I mean, C.of I.'s outside of the drive. It statistically
looks good, but you raise different type of money than
the eleven and a half.
MR. BELL: would you feel the same way about it if
me licked that allocation 30 as to avoid the transfer of
Funds?
Regraded Unclassified
24
- 18 -
MR. REPP: It would lessen my objection. But you
just can't continually have funos pulled away just for the
question of giving quotas - statistical operations.
Jk: What they are proposing to do is a book-
keeping operation - not move the funds. If Western Union,
for instance, wants to spread a thousand dollars in every
western Union office, they will do it on the books, but
they won't move the money.
M.. REPP: I think the Treasury should oefinitely take
a firm stand on that.
H.K.JR: That is what we are proposing. Sears and
Roebuck, and Woolworth - every store gets credit. All
right, Cive it to the community on the books, but you
don't actually move the money around.
MR. REPP: That would goalong way in answering my
objections. You know, a study of these figures - of the
issues of C. of I. - show that a large percentage of them
CO, for a time, anyway, stay outside the banking structure.
cut there probably is a certain demand for a note in this
market. You will reach a different type of money, and if
you Cive them the opportunity to buy a C. of I later, you
may have two cracks at two different types of money. I
would seriously consider divorcing C. of I.
M. BELL: You would?
MR. DEVINE: what vas that last?
MR. REPP: I mould seriously consider divorcing the
v. of 1. from the drive, for everytody; and then 6° and
JUNE a C. of I. offering whenever you need the money -
February, March, April, lay--
YR.
HAAS: Confine the operation to corporations?
2... REPP: A non-banking offering, unless you see
reason to change your opinion at the time. But I would
like to emphasize again that I would reopen the outstanding
Regraded Unclassified
25
- 19 -
two and a half, and not create a new two and a half.
H.M.JR: You would eliminate the C.of I. entirely?
M... REPP: From the drive. If It is quotas and large
figures, then it should be included; if it is a type of
money, and spreading your financing over a period of time
and really put the emphasis in getting the type of money
that is better in the long run, I would divorce it from
the drive.
MR. DEVINE: I think I agree with nerb. I think you
should eliminate the C.of I.'s from the drive, because to have
a drive where you are borrowing money for one year, seeing
these huge subscriptions built up when they don't mean any-
thing - they end right back up in the open mar/e again -
1 think it is a waste of time. More pressure should be
put on the three series of bonds you have, plus a two and
a quarter and a two ano a half to the public.
AS far as the corporations are concerned, 1 tnink
they should have a chance of buying C. of ['s, and al SO
the banks. How it is handled, I think, is immaterial.
Mic. REPP: You don't need a drive.
MR. ROUSE: that do you think of a note for the drive?
MR. DEVINE: To individuals, 1 don't see any purpose
of even going after five-year money. You are giving them
three series of bonds, and you are giving them a two ano a
quarter and a two and a half, and that is the kind of money
you really want.
MR. REPP: as it a note that you would consider for
incividuals, too?
AM DEVINE: I wouldn't olier the incividuals a note,
out I wouldn't care whether you offered the corporations
a note, or not.
IN, HEPP: jist dion't know.
Regraded Unclassified
26
- 20 -
SR DEVINE: The market could use something in there.
Mr. BELL: Supposing you combined the corporate and
individual drive. 1 don't mean in the sense that you don't
emphasize the individual in the first part of the drive
ano then go into the corporate end, but supposing you com-
bine it for the purpose of over-all national total. Would
you still have the note in sometime during the drive,
either when you emphasize the corporate end oi it, or would
you rather have a certificate for that purpose at that
time?
MR. DEVINE: I wouldn't combine the drives.
MR. BELL: 1 am saying, supposing we did want to com-
bine, say, an over-all total for the nation?
MR. DEVINE: 1 would rather put a note in there than
a certificate.
MR. REPP: I agree with Chris on that, with the under-
standing the certificate will come along later.
MR. BELL: ne can issue the certificate any time. In
the drive you ought to l.ave a note if you combine the
corporate and incividual as one.
COL. POPE: I feel very strongly that the drive should
be two or three weeks, of whatever length of time, for
individuals only from the standpoint of sales to individuals.
H.
JR: What would you offer?
COL. POPE: I would like to suggest for the inclviduals
giving them E, F, G, C's, and two and a quarters, and not
the two and a half's, for the reason that 1 am a little
afraid of this two and a half market. I feel that the
two and a quarters are something new, and I think to indi-
viduals it would be just the two and a half's. But when
it comes to the insurance companies, 1 know what they want;
they want two and a half's. I think that if te drive of
individuals ended, and then you took it up with insurance
Regraded Unclassified
27
- 21 -
companies and banks, 1 think that drive could be then
taken with a much less organization, such as you would
have with individuals, and it could come right after it.
And I would eliminate tne certificates and you could
put the note in, but I don't think that group would be
necessarily as anxious to have the note.
I suggest, then, a little later date the corporations
coming in then, because I have felt that you know a little
bit more about what kind of a drive you want, and you have
the corporations separated. 1 would give them, then, a
certificate at that time rather than a note, and the two
and a quarters and, if necessary, two ano a half's, al-
though I taink they would be less apt to buy two and a
half's.
H.M.JR: Just to refresh my memory, George, I have
heard 30 many people that 1 am confused - when you fellows
started in this book, what did you people recommend as to
the number of weeks, and 30 forth.
MR. HAAS: We have sot several proposals.
H.M.JR: Give me the one you recommended.
Mr. HAAS: I think the one that we nad the most pro
arguments for was what we called a three-prong drive,
very similar to the proposal Mr. Repp made, except his
issue of certificates; we were going to include that open
issue in the over-all figure.
H.M.JR: Let me put it differently where I am confused.
I have about ten memoranda mere. We were going to open the
drive first for two or three weeks for individuals, and
those individuals were going to be offered E, F, and G
Treasury savings notes.
MR. HAAS: Two and a quarter and A half.
SALUS: And no certificate in this thing.
Regraded Unclassified
28
- 22 -
MY HAAS: Not for individuals, but certificate included
for the corporate sector of the drive.
h....JR: That would be the first two or three weeks.
306 MAAS: Individuals.
MM.R: Then =, F, and G Treasury savings notes,
two and a quarter and two and a half; and then whatever
the latter part of the drive - the last week - comes in-
surance companies and mutual savings banks. Is that right?
Main HAAS: And other corporations.
H.D.M: But in this you have got the seven-eighths,
the two and a quarter, and the two and a half.
MM HAMS: That is right. And then there was another
proposal.
Mic. RELL: Plus the Treasury notes, of course, which
are continuous. Savings notes are on continuous sale.
H.M.Jk: Aren't those the C's.
MR BELL: Yes, sir.
H.M.JR: Now, to clarify my own thinking, the only
difference is, I gather, that these gentlemen nere are
inclined - if not, they can say SO - to have the first two
or three weeks of the crive for the incividuals, minus
the seven-eighths; but when you open up to insurance
companies ano everybody else, they still would leave the
seven-eighths out.
MR. REPP: That is my feeling.
Mk DEVINE: I don't think it mais an awful lot of
difference. I would as soon put the seven-eighths in.
Mr. BELL: out you voulo have a short security, either
S seven-eighths or a note.
Regraded Unclassified
29
- 23 -
MR. DEVINE: That is right. I think for corporations
you would have to have either a note or a seven-eighths.
H.M.JR: we tested that last July with a couple of
hundred telegrams. I don't know - two-thirds of them
wanted the seven-eighths.
Mine LEVY: The corporations and business people would
want them.
H.M.JR: They don't want the note.
COL. POPE: I don't think they would take it.
MR. LEVY: I think there are a lot of people in business,
individuals, partnerships, and so forth, who have some
money lying around. They don't want to buy any long-term
stuff. Just because they don't happen to be incorporated,
they shouldn't be left out. They would have money for a
short investment, too.
H.M.JR: I thought you were going to eliminate the
seven-eighths entirely.
MR. REPP: That was my impression. It was based
primarily on this transfer of funos for statistical pur-
poses. You say that will be overcome, but 1 still think
it is not a bad idea to include a note in that corporate
portion of the drive, eliminate the seven-eighths and 20
back to the market later with your seven-eighths security
for a cash offering. You don't need a drive.
MR. BELL: He is just eliminating the certificate
from the drive.
Mr. REPP: Not from the money coming in the Treasury,
but for the drive.
M.M.JR: Supposing we keep the seven-eighths in, say,
for the last week of the drive, or the third or fourth
week. Are you going to say to indiviouals, "You can't
buy it the last week"?
Regraded Unclassified
30
- 24 -
MR. LEVY: Not as far as I am concerned.
H.M.JR: How are you going to keep them?
MR. DEVINE: You can't keep them from buying it but
you are driving after some figure before you have it in
there.
MR. MURPHY: Included in the quota - but we would be
glad to sell it to them and include it in the over-all
quota.
H.M.JR: You mean you won't get credit?
MR. MURPHY: No credit for the incivioual.
M. LEVY: That is all right.
H.M.JR: That is what I have been trying to find out.
Mr. LEVY: Shouldn't be in a cuota as far as indivi-
duais are concerned.
MR. HAAS: You have had SO much to read.
H.M.JR: About ten memoranda. But the idea is, it
would not be in the quota, but if a fellow wants to buy
it, all right, but the State or county gets no credit.
MH. LEVY: Shouldn't be in the quota for the har
Finance Committees.
H.M.JR: Mr. Gamble is perfectly willing to leave the
certificate out entirely.
MR. LEVY: That is all right as far as working is
concerned.
H.M.Jk: out not to have it in the árive at all.
out then he said he would like to have a note.
M.
LEVY: I can't see the note angle.
Regraded Unclassified
31
- 25 -
dere is Gamble's (Gamble's memoranoum
handed to Feil).
K. HAAS: I summarized at the bottom, Dan.
CR. VINE: I wouldn't make a lot of fuss about selling
the seven-eighths and boosting figures, because it is an
easy thing to sell. Whether you have it on sale at that
time - if I had any amateurs engaged in the drive, 1 would
tell trem nothing at all. That is a money-market operation
und not a drive operation.
JR: If they want to buy it--
MR. LEVY: That is O.K., but it shouldn't be part
of the quota of the "ar Finance Committee.
h.M.JR: There should be no pressure.
MR. MURPHY: Part of the corporation quota, but not
the individual.
MR. LEVY: If they are going to give the corporation
a quota.
H...JR: Has anybody told you what we arethinking of
going. after this time? Would you like to know?
Mk. LEPP: I certainly would.
H. JR: It wouldn't bore you? he are talking of
fourteen billion.
Miss ROUSE: Would you split that up for the public
in any way, or just fourteen billion dollars? Have you
announced a figure for individuals?
H.M.JR: Whatever we did last time.
M. ROUSE: That was five billion last time.
m.M.R: This time we are talking five and a half.
Regraded Unclassified
32
- 26 -
MR.
ROUSE: That sounds good - five and half.
H.
JM: I think we ought to announce the individuals.
%...
LEVY: The idea would be to keep the individual
open for two or three weeks, or two or three weeks plus the
rest of the drive.
H.M.JR: It would be open the whole time. Let's say
the drive was four weeks; in the first three weeks would
be individuals.
Mil.
LEVY: Then they could still buy them.
H.M.JR: On, yes. But you get a good head-start and,
say, the last week we would have it for the banks.
MR. REPP: I would still leave the seven-eighths out.
That seven-eighths money is available to you at any time.
Why pay interest on it for three or four months?
H. JR: The four or five-year money market is starving.
MR. REPP: In the banks, certainly; but also among
certain corporations.
MR. LEVY: They are given something on the refund of
the guarantees, and things like that; I would save it
for them, for that. of course, the banks have most of that
stuff.
M.M.JR: As far as I am concerned, this has been very
helpful. Do you (Bell) want to talk to these men some
more? I would like to talk to my own people a few minutes.
MR. ROUSE: Mr. Secretary, could I raise one more ques-
tion, because I think it is pertinent, and we have these
men here? You have a maturity of three billion eight of
certificates on December first, and four hundred and twenty-
one million notes on December 15, which will have to be
taken care of; and I see no reason, myself, why they
shouldn't be completed, refunded. And I presume the opera-
tion, if you are going to do it, would be done next week.
Regraded Unclassified
33
- 27 -
The question has come up, and I wondered whether these
men would think it might be desirable to offer 8 double-
barreled exchange of a certificate and a note for these
two and get some experience with the corporate interest
in the notes versus certificates, which might not be per-
manent in sett ng up the Fourth War Loan Drive, but cer-
tainly for the one following would give us some experience
statistically over the intervening months.
Jk: Give the people that choice?
MIL ROUSE: Yes.
E.
JR: Of taking either viat they have now, or a
note?
MR. ROUSE: Yes. I don't see any reason for paying
those off in cash. You have got to borrow the money to
pay them off, anyway.
MR. DEVI E: 1 would turn them all in with the certifi-
cate again. I wouldn't sell a note in there, when you
have a drive coming on ten days later, or three weeks
later.
MR. HAAS: You would mop up some of the funds.
H.M.JR: Frankly, I don't like to experiment in that
way. You get another black eye if it isn't good. I
would much rather, sometime when we have to, sell a note.
MR. REPP: I trink I definitely would; rather than pay
off the December, I would sweep them in mechanically.
MR. MUTPHY: They have 8. very peculiar distribution,
Mr. Secretary, these exempt securities; and although the
type of security, apart from its tax exemption, you would
think would be mostly held by banks, they are not. Two-
thirds are held outside of the Treasury survey and presump-
tively by people holding them because they are tax exempt
and not interested in changing for a taxable security. We
are recommending they be paid in cash.
Regraded Unclassified
34
- 28 -
M. LEVY: I think most of them would pay cash.
MIC I.OUSE: Don't you think a considerable portion
is held by corporations, now?
MR. BI: About two-thirds outside of the banking
system.
We have been rolling over the certificates. The
question I raised with Bob the other day is whether we
ought to start mixing certificates and notes. You could
do better than any other on this one because the rates
are low. I wondered whether we shouldn't keep them on a
separate operation.
H.M.JR: I would, personally, just roll them over.
COL. POPE: At this time I would.
H.M.JR: how we nave got SO many things to do. I
can't have any more balls up in the air at this time.
I will drop a couple.
Mile BELL: Well, we have gotten to the point where
four nundred million collars to pay off maturity isn't
very much in our pocketbook any more.
H.M.JR: 1 don't want to start monkeying with this
thing. I would make as little fuss as possible.
MR. MURPHY: The pressing thing is to pay off the note
and roll over the security.
MR. LEVY: You have got the money in the bank, anyway.
MR. VINER: If only 8 small proportion would be offered
in exchange, 1 wouldn't offer in exchange. It doesn't look
well.
MR. BELL: well, what the individual would (10, no
doubt, would be sell a December '50 note for the rights.
Regraded Unclassified
35
- 29 -
MR. LEVY: But some of these rich fellows won't even
do that.
MI. REPP: If this sixty-odd percent over a period of
the last year, a fair amount of them come from the indivi-
duals and go back to corporations. I look at it as a
practical thing. here you have four hundred million
dollars that you have to pay off. Why can't we sweep it
all in one operation and make it all C. of I.'s and clean
it up?
MK. BELL: You could. Watever you could get out of
four hundred million would save our cash balance to that
extent. I don't see any great harm in it. In the first
place, I didn't think we onght to mix certificates and
notes; we ought to keep them on a separate basis.
MR. VINER: I don't think you ought to exchange
different things. I think a tax exempt, now, is a wholly
different security from a non-tax exempt. You are chang-
ing two things that are not the same area of merchandise -
don't have the same buyers and don't serve the same purpose.
MR. BELL: The tax exempts are going out on December
15.
MR. VINER: This turn-over you speak of means that in
the market there is a lot of swapping and exchanging.
MR. REPP: I don't care much, me way or the other.
H.M.JR: What do we propose?
M.. BELL: Just to roll it over the three billion
eight maturing certificates and pay off the four hundred
million dollars maturing December 15 in cash.
H.R.JR: That is what you spoke to me about.
VR. HELL: You said that sounded all right at the time
I spoke to you about it. You could bring in the four nun-
ared million dollars as a part of the refunding on December 1.
Regraded Unclassified
36
- 30 -
It isn't a big sum. You could get certainly half of them,
and you might get two-thirds that are refunded. we could
CO that.
JR: I wouldn't fuss with it.
Sin. LEVY: You will make it very hard if you are
going to roll them over on December first, because they are
due December 15.
JR: I would pay off the four hundred million.
M.. FELL: 1 think Herb is right. It is really un-
important either way you jump.
H.R.JR: Isn't that what you want us to GO?
DR.
MULPHY: Yes, sir; and that is the first step.
That is what we have been doing.
R.M.JR: I agreed with this once.
MR. BELL: That is right. Well, we haven't announced
it yet, so it could be changed.
COL. POPE: It is a very minor matter, _..r. Secretary,
but I am not sure that it might not grow a little bit, and
I don't know the solution of it, quite. Insurance companies
outside of the State of New York, and I think it is confined
there largely, can borrow to ruy. They have been permitted
to 8 ahead and do the equivalent - get someone else to
buy, and then they buy at a later time. The result of it
is, it is a pretty attractive thing for insurance companies
to ao, doing it that way, because it really results in the
use of their credit in getting, at a later date, a security
at a point - whatever it might be - below the offered price.
I was not sure whether that might not be growing, and if
it is growing, then it does upset your calculations from
the stancpoint of what the insurance companies are going to
buy next time, ano it also ones take a certain amount of,
Regraded Unclassified
37
- 31 -
buying power of two and a half out of the market during
the interim period.
H.M.JR: That was brought to my attentionand the
A.B.A. is filing a memorandum on it.
Regraded Unclassified
38
November 17, 1943
11:30 a.m.
FINANCING
Present: Mr. Bell
Mr. Rouse
Mr. Murphy
Mr. haas
Mr. Viner
H.M.JR: What I would like you to co, if you would,
is go over now and try to sell this to your boss, see?
I take it you (Rouse) are entirely satisfied?
MR. ROUSE: Yes, I am satisfied.
H.M.JR: All right, I am satisfied. All I want to
do is raise my eyebrows.
MR. ROUSE: Well, I think the thing worked out, in
the way it was done, perfectly satisfactorily.
H.M.JR: Well, they have got nothing to lose on the
thing. They have got the feeling they are going away
helping their Government finance the war.
MR. BELL: That is the important thing. They feel
they are rendering a real service to the Treasury.
MR. VINER: I think they are perfectly right and wise
in saying they don't want any profit out of it. The amount
of profit in it is small potatoes for them, and this way
they can get prestige, and they will get all of the commen-
dation, I hope.
H.M.JR: After I am on the farm.
Mk. VINER: And it may prevent rather a nasty discussion.
Regraded Unclassified
39
- 2 -
H.N.JR: I think it is a nice solution.
Mr. RELL: I like it much better.
H.S.JR: Now, one second: Please come in here
at & quarter of three with a memorandum of what the pro-
gram is, you see. I can say, "This is what we are pro-
posing.
such BELL: You want that on the basket, and everything?
H.M.JR: Yes, at a quarter of three. And, please, I
kept Gamble from going to new York so he could be consulted
today. So if you people would come in at a quarter of
three with a memorandum for me - I went the whole works -
the whole business. And don't spring anything new on me
like this refunding, again.
MR. ROUSE: I did that. I didn't know of your conver-
sation, and because it related to this problem in notes in
drives, I thought there was some experience that could be
gained by it, and it might be worth considering and talking
about.
H.M.JR: You can give him an office, can't you?
MR. BELL: Sure can. I think this is all to the good.
We have nad some nice conferences this week, I think.
MR. HAAS: Nice and long. (Laughter)
Mr. ROUSE: 1 would like to say this, Mr. Secretary,
with respect to this group down here this morning, that I
think an intimate conference of this kind, when you give
the effect of leisure and interest, is one of the most help-
ful things that can happen to the market, because these
fellows will just spread the atmosphere all over the country.
M.M.JR: I have got nothing to do these days. I an
at leisure. (Lawghter)
Regraded Unclassified
40
- 3 -
Mr. ROUSE: I know, but you remember, you have had
difficulties - when Mrs. Morgenthau was so ill, you were
strained and time was short, and so forth. But the atmos-
paere that this creates is a most important part, psycho-
logically, of the market.
JR: And they are aware that I am at ease; they say,
"Morgentnau is not worried about anything."
I will let house do my worrying. (Laughter)
Regraded Unclassified
40
- 3 -
MR. ROUSE: I know, but you remember, you have nad
difficulties - when Mrs. Morgenthau was SO ill, you were
strained and time was short, and SO forth. But the atmos-
phere that this creates is a most important part, psycho-
logically, of tne market.
H.
JR: And they are aware that I am at ease; they say,
"Morgenthau is not worried about anything."
I will let house do my worrying. (Laughter)
Regraded Unclassified
41
November 17, 1943
12:18 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Young.
HMJr:
Hello.
Philip
Young:
Hello.
HMJr:
Phil?
Y:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
How are you?
Y:
I'm very well, thanks. How are you?
HMJr:
Very well.
Y:
I'm delighted to hear it.
HMJr:
Phil
Y:
I hear you had a good trip.
HMJr:
Very good. I wondered if you could help me
out a little bit?
Y:
I'll do anything I can, sir.
HMJr:
I'm making a talk tomorrow night in New York
and I'm talking about these 500,000 Enfield
rifles which we sold to the British right after
Dunkirk
Y:
Yes.
HMJr:
and which you remember.
Y:
Right.
HMJr:
Now, could you -- do you remember, or could
you get for me within a reasonable time, what
proportion of the total rifles was this that
England had after they arrived over there?
I remember they once told us but -- that this
represented, I know, a very high percentage.
Y:
All right. I'm sure I can get a line on that.
Regraded Unclassified
42
- 2 -
HMJr:
Could you?
Y:
I'm sure of it.
HMJr:
Do you think you could do it within -- by
today?
Y:
Oh, my, yes. If I can get it at all, I can
get it very, very quickly.
HMJr:
All right. Well, now, when you get it would
you mind calling back Fred Smith in my office?
Y:
Fred Smith?
HMJr:
Yes. And then there was another little thing.
All of the rifles that we sent, as I remember
it, had a little -- they painted them with a
little red circle around them or something.
They told me that Was to distinguish them.
Y:
I don't recall that.
HMJr:
Yeah. You might ask them that. They all had
a little tag or red circle painted on them to
show that they came from the United States.
Y:
Right. All right.
HMJr:
But 8.8 I remember it, this represented at
least a half or two-thirds of all the rifles
they had.
Y:
Yes, or even higher.
HMJr:
Or even higher?
Y:
Yes.
HMJr:
You see, if I could get that it would helo me
in my talk.
Y:
I certainly will. Delighted to.
HMJr:
Hope to see you soon.
Y:
I'd like to call on you one of these days.
HMJr:
Any time -- just give me a ring.
Y:
Thank you.
HMJr:
Good bye.
Regraded Unclassified
43
Lunch at the Secretary's invitation
November 17, 1943
Present: Secretary Morgenthau
Lord Mulifax and .r. Maley
of the Dritish Treasury
Mr. White
The group was called by Secretary Morgenthau for the purpose of
discussing what could be done about the British dollar position.
Halifax began the serious part of the conversation by stating that he
had informed Sir John Anderson at London of his conversation with
Secretary Morgenthau. He said he had written to the effect that
Secretary orgenthau had stated that if the British could help
Secretary Morgentheu in trying to work out the problem of British
dollar balances during the war that he (Secretary Lorgenthau) would
do whatever he could to help England out with respect to the postwar
financial difficulties that England was facing. He asked the
Secretary whether his statement represented correctly the conversa-
tion and the Secretary replied yes. Halifax said that he had not yet
received an answer from London nor did he expect one, He said that
his Government would be in a better position to judge what they might
do if they knew more specifically what Secretary Lorgenthau had in
mind to do for them during the postwar period. lie appreciated the
difficulties that any cabinet member of the present government would
have in committing his Government to any postwar program but that
his (Malifax) Government would have to have more information on which
to base a judgment of the suggestion that Secretary Morgenthau had so
kindly made.
The Secretary replied that quite obviously he could not make any
specific promises inasmuch as he could not bind the Government,
especially the government that might exist in the postwar period. ne
could say that BO long as he was Secretary of the Treasury that he
could try to help the British Treasury meet its difficult postwar
problems.
Secretary Horgenthau reminded Halifax of the circumstances under
which the first Lend-Lease Bill was passed and the statements that he
had made before Congress in his efforts to obtain favorable reaction
to the proposed Lend-Lease Bill. lie had a copy of some of the excerpts
before Irim which he said he would like to have Lord Halifax read. We
said that in & sense he was on the spot in the light of these statements.
lie said that for a long time we had been trying to find ways of getting
the British to reduce their balances in harmony with his commitments
to Congress and in compliance with a directive of the President with
respect to those balances. he said that the British had been of no
help in that matter and were making it very difficult for us to reduce
the balances. ne said that what he would like to do now was to let
the British suggest ways in which those balances could be reduced. lie
hoped that the British would appreciate the long-run advantage in
Regraded Unclassified
44
Division of Honetary
Research
- 2 -
cooperating with him in trying to keep his commitments before Congress.
He thought that unless the balances were reduced there was danger that
the Lend-Lease program might be jeopardized as he had explained to
Halifax at their forer meeting. He asked pointedly what suggestions
the British had for reducing the balances. He said there must be many
appropriate ways of which they were cognizant whereby they could bring
the balances down.
Halifax asked Waley to answer that question. Waley said he
thought he appreciated the situation in which the Secretary found
himself. He reviewed the British international position and said that
his Government could not very well leave themselves in a vulnerable
financial situation on the promise that the American Government would
make available to them through one means or another substantial sums
after the war. He said in the first place he doubted that any such
promise could be made and in the second place he doubted seriously
whether his Government would wish to accept assistance designed to put
Britain on its feet during the postwar period. lie thought that Britain
would wish to deal with its own problems and would not want the solu-
tion as a (ift from the American Government. Ne added that the British
Treasury could not be expected to take action and make recommendations
to reduce their vitally necessary balances with no definite knowledge
or prospect of being able to rebuild them in the near future.
Both Malifax and Waley raised the question whether the problem
could not be laid before Congress with a knowledge that Congress would
approve the policy now being pursued with respect to those balances.
Waley said that when the Lend-Lease Bill was first introduced the
United States was not at war. Now they were Allies in a common fight
with Great Britain and that seemed to him to definitely alter the
situation. He wondered whether Congress would not 80 recognize it.
The Secretary and White both expressed the view that it was not
unlikely that Congress might take the position but emphasized the
point that it would have to be Congress who should detensine that
change in policy from the earlier commitment. he pointed out that
the Lend-Lease Act had been renewed several times without any indica-
tion of a shift in policy from the original conditions being indicated
or mentioned to Congress. He also referred to the Truman Report us
containing paragraphs which indicated that Congress was not aware of
any change in policies with respect to dollar balances. ne said that
if the matter were brought before Congress that it seemed that there
would be as better chance of getting Congress to approve the policy of
permitting the Dritish to build up gold and dollar reserves against
their sterling liabilities if at the time the matter was brought to
Congress the 2020 and dollar balances were at a level which indicated
that the British Government was keeping faith with its commitment that
Secretary orgenthau had made in 1941 with the full approval of the
British Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
45
Division of Monetary
Research
- 3 -
Secretary orgenthau asked Malifax whether the British Treasury
hud ever raised the question with the Lend-Lease authorities or of the
United States Anay of getting us to take over some of the responsibility
of meeting the expenditures in India. Maley replied that they hadn't
but that they would be very happy to raise that point and that they
would be lad that the Secretary was thinking along those lines. White
remarked that in the opinion of Congress there might be some question
about treating India, where the bulk of the sterling expenditures was
being made, as a third country. If it were to be treated as a third
country then there were a number of questions that might be raised with
respect to our relations with India.
Malifax asked the Secretary whether he had anything definite in
mind with respect to making payments in India and the Secretary replied
no he was just trinking aloug, that he hadn't (iven the matter any
serious thought as yet. nalifax pressed him on the point and the
Secretary said that he wanted to ruminate on the various possibilities
ano alternative courses any he wanted the British likewise to think
about the problem and come forward with suggestions. lie felt that
something had to be Lone with respect to British dollar balances and
that he hoped the British would have some practical suggestions as to
now they might be reduced.
The Secretary referred to the unfortunate action of somebody in
the British Government Loing behind the Treasury back and registering
objections to the policy as laid down by the President. Halifax and
maley denied such intention and maley said they would be very careful
in the future to discuss Treasury matters directly with the Treasury.
After Maliax ano Waley left the Secretary cuatted a moment with
White and they explored the possibilities of what we could ask from
Great Britain in the Way of obtaining bases or access to raw material
resources in countries like India and alaya etc., in return for a
program of helping the British build up their balances. White said
that he would think about it and have a memoranous making some
definite suggestions.
- D. White
HDW
Regraded Unclassified
46
November 17, 1943
2:45 p.m.
FINANCING
Present: Mr. Daniel Bell
Mr. Ted R. Gamble
Mr. George C. Haas
Mr. Marriner Eccles
Mr. Allan Sproul
Mr. W. W. Paddock
Dr. Jacob Viner
Mr. Henry C. Murphy
Mr. E. B. Hall
Mr. Robert Rouse
Mr. Woodlief Thomas
Mr. Ernest G. Draper
Mr. John McKee
Mr. LeRoy Piser
H.M.JR: Can somebody tell me what is in the memorandum?
You have sat in on this? (Memorandum entitled "Recommendations.)
MR. GAMBLE: Yes.
MR. HAAS: I can start reading it.
Recommendation one is, "That there be no change in the
pattern of rates ranging from 3/8% to 2-1/2%.
"2. That we continue the present basis of market bidding
for bills with the expectation that cooperation from the market
will provide bids at 3/8% or better in ample volume." That is
their way of stating that thing.
"3. That we continue to expect the Federal Reserve System
to provide sufficient reserves to meet the needs of the market
and to maintain a good tone in the Government Securities market
at the established pattern of rates.
"4. That the over-all national goal for the Fourth War
Loan be fixed at $14 billion, of which $6 billion should be
set as the individual goal ($3-1/2 billion of this latter
amount should be raised through the sale of Series E Savings
Bonds); and that $8 billion should be set as the goal for
Regraded Unclassified
47
- 2 -
other non-bank investors. Sales to dealers and brokers are
included in this last figure with the understanding that
their subscriptions will be policed."
I think you have changed this from here on, Dan. I am
down to five.
(Mr. Bell handed revised draft of "Recommendations to Mr.
Haas, copy attached.)
H.M.JR: Am I rushing you?
MR. BELL: A little bit.
H.M.JR: I have been sitting around with nothing to do.
MR. HAAS: "5. That the date for the start of the drive
be Tuesday, January 18, 1944.
"6. That the timing of the drive be arranged as
follows:
"(a) Emphasis in the period from January 18 to February 1
be placed on the individual quota of $6 billion.
"(b) Drive to continue until February 15, taking in
other non-bank investor subscriptions beginning February 1st.
"(c) All subscriptions from individuals received at the
Federal Reserve Banks or at the Treasury of the United States
up to February 29, 1944, will be credited to the drive; and
that corporations will be permitted to subscribe during the
entire period of the drive but no public announcement of such
subscriptions will be made by the Treasury until after
February lst.
"7. That the basket should consist of the following
securities:
"(a) Individuals: E - F - G Savings Bonds, Treasury
Savings Notes, 2-1/4% Treasury bond (Call and maturity date
to be decided just before announcement), 2-1/2% Treasury bond
(Call and maturity date to be decided just before announcement).
Regraded Unclassified
48
- 3 -
H.M.JR: I can read faster than you can. That ninth,
do we want to kind of have it there in case we want to do
that?
MR. BELL: Yes. We feel you should take care of the
insurance companies and also the savings banks and any other
person who wants to come along. I think it was recommended
to you that we might do it at the beginning of each month.
H.M.JR: Now, this two-and-s-quarter maturity date, is
that all right with Camble?
MR. BELL: We left that for discussion. They have been
'56-'59, Ted, some place in that area.
H.M.JR: Is that all right?
MR. GAMBLE: Yes.
KR. BELL: We will have to settle it before the 24th.
H.M.JR: That is all right. You fellows can settle it.
You can read it among yourselves.
MR. BELL: There is one more page coming.
H.M.JR: Who is in agreement?
MR. BELL: Ted isn't in agreement with number four.
H.M.JR: Why not?
MR. BELL: He doesn't like the six-billion-dollar goal
and half a billion dollars of Series E.
H.M.JR: I can't agree with that either.
MR. BELL: These are our recommendations.
H.M.JR: I thought we had five and a half.
MR. BELL: Ted had that in his memorandum, but we feel,
Mr. Secretary, that you have two months here, January and
Regraded Unclassified
49
4
February, which are the best months of the year for seasonal
increase in savings bonds, and that we ought to go up at
least a half billion dollars more than you did in the last
drive. You got four, nine, or five billion dollars of good
money from individuals in the last drive, and you ought to
increase that at least to six, of which certainly half would
come through just seasonal increase in savings bonds.
MR. GAMBLE: I think we are allowing for that increase,
Mr. Bell, when we take out the billion, two hundred and twenty
million that we sold in the two percent and replacing it
with two and a quarter which you can estimate at about half
a billion dollars in sales. Then you will find when you
take out that, that you didn't have a five billion, three
sale, comparing this basket to the other one, but you had
closer to a four billion sale.
When you go up to a five and a half billion, I don't
think it will affect your sales quotas; if I did, I would
be in favor of it. I don't see any harm in going six, seven,
or eight billion dollars over our individual goal. I think
the States are going to have to organize to do the job. They
know that they have to make an improvement of six hundred
million dollars in sales to individuals in E bonds, and they
have to make an improvement of four hundred, thirty-five
million dollars in sales of F and G bonds, aione, on the
basis of five and a half billion, and I think they are going
to have to organize to do a thorough-going job. I think they
will seil the same amount of securities, regardless of what we
fix the quota at. Therefore, I would rather have that margin
of safety, because there is some question, Mr. Bell, as to
whether we can sell the issue if we don't appreciably change
the dollar purchases of E bonds, whether we can sell and
deliver three and a half billion dollars of E bonds.
MR. BELL: We have a longer period and more experience.
You are going from January 1, and we are going to have a
lot of securities issued by January 18.
MR. GAMBLE: I have no quarrel on the money; I just
don't think it is wise for us.
Regraded Unclassified
50
- 5 -
MR. BELL: It seems to me if you only go to five and 8
half billion most of your salesmen will say that ought to be
simple; it is only two hundred million dollars above the
last results.
MR. GAMBLE: This time we have agreed to emphasize the
individuals and announce the quotas nationally and go out and
put every community on record as having the E bond quota of
X dollars.
H.M.JR: I am not going to argue.
MR. BELL: You asked us for our recommendations. (Laughter)
H.M.JR: All right; I have to watch myself every minute.
I am putting down five and a half. What did we have originally
on this E, three?
MR. BELL: Three. I will tell you why in a minute. Well,
they can go to a picnic about six days out of the drive.
MR. GAMBLE: I don't believe it, Mr. Bell.
H.M.JR: That is eight and a half.
MR. BELL: On the other end, which is the one I would
like to see emphasized.
H.M.JR: Now look, gentlemen, I have enough confidence
in my sales organization that they will do the best they can.
We didn't make it last time. I don't believe - and with all
the damned peace talk around here it is awfully hard to get
the people down. Now, if the war is going tough along the
middle of January or February when the Fourth War Loan is
on, Ted will go out and get it if it is there. We didn't
make it the last time.
Senator Bankhead gets up and says, "In some States we
didn't make our individual quotas, and in some States we didn't
make our E quotas." I don't know where he got those figures.
MR. GAMBLE: They were all published.
Regraded Unclassified
51
- 6 -
H.M.JR: He smeared them all over the Congressional
Record. I don't like it.
MR. BELL: As long as you mentioned him, I think his
report ought to be answered. His report was terrible.
That ought to be answered before that bill gets into the
House.
H.M.JR: I have given Ted the job; I gave it to him
this morning.
MR. GAMBLE: Our man is away until Monday.
MR. BELL: I mean the Committee report, not Benkhead's
statement, which indicates all the way through that there
has been & failure in this war financing.
H.M.JR: Who is your man?
MR. GAMBLE: We will take that on, too, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: Better let the Legislative Section.
MR. BELL: Better let Speck--
MR. GAMBLE: And Lynch and Fred and Magen can do it, the
four of them.
H.M.JR: I don't know how much time you have, out you
had better hit it. I an glad you brought it up.
Well, look, I have lived with this thing now long enough,
and, hell, you had me all set at five and a half.
MR. BELL: Who did?
H.M.JR: You all did.
MR. BELL: Oh, no, we never heard of five and 8 half
until yesterday's conference.
Regraded Unclassified
52
- 7 -
H.M.JR: I got all these fellows last night, all kinds
of memoranda.
MR. HAAS: Yes, they said five and a half, the bankers.
H.M.JR: And how about this group from New York, George?
MR. HAAS: Oh, they are high-figure boys.
H.M.JR: Well, O.K. It is one thing to put it down.
We didn't get it last time. That is all right. It is that
Tickton influence around here. (Laughter)
But I have enough confidence in Gamble and his crowd.
If the money is there they are going to get it. Public
sentiment is running against it, and we are going to have a
tough job getting five and a half.
MR. BELL: I don't think so, but if we get six and 8 half
it will be just as well.
H.M.JR: Never since I nave been here, I am sorry to say,
have we ever gotten the E bond quota we went after, not once!
MR. BELL: I don't think any harm was done last time
because you didn't get it. You had a three billion dollar
quota, and you got two and 8 half. I don't think you got
bad publicity.
MR. GAMBLE: We did get some, some in the Bureau of the
Budget and we got it in OWI, and many people have been given
some ammunition that they shouldn't have had.
11.M.JR: OWI and the Budget used it, didn't they?
MR. GAMBLE: They both used it against us.
MR. BELL: In what way?
MR. GAMPLE: The two and a half million E bond figure.
MR. BELL: Did they use it publicly?
Regraded Unclassified
53
- 8 -
H.M.JR: They cut down our appropriation by two million
dollars, didn't they?
MR. GAMBLE: Well, they were very critical of our
failure to reach our E bond quota.
DR. VINER: Do you think they won't examine your goals?
MR. GAMBLE: Well, I think we can defend them, Doctor
Viner. It will take better than fifty million pieces of E.
bonds in order to get the two and a half billion.
H.M.JR: Mr. Hall, you are very quiet. Are you satisfied
with this?
MR. HALL: Yes, sir, I think it is all right. Five and
a half billion is all right, and, of course, I wish we had
courage enough to say six, but I think it would be much
better to have the more moderate quota and cover it sub-
stantially. I think it puts enough pressure on the local
communities with respect to the E bond quota.
MR. GAMBLE: I don't want anyone to get the impression
I don't think we are being moderate. I think if we have four
billion dollars of savings bond money we have taken on 8 real
chore, that is ninety-five percent of this tax we are talking
about, and it is a real undertaking, because we have to go
out and get it, Mr. Bell, not only on the premises that we
are getting the benefit of the quota, but they have got to
get it up to February 15.
MR. BELL: You have a much better organization this time;
at least you should have. There should be more individual
canvassing, and everything should be better.
MR. GAMBLE: You sit down and examine what We have done
to this basket. We have taken out at least seven nundred
fifty millions of dollars in sales of two percents versus
the difference in our contemplated sales of two and a quarter.
We have added nearly six hundred million that we want them to
get in E bond sales and four hundred and thirty-five million
that vie want them to get in F and G bond sales. In F and G
Regraded Unclassified
54
- 9 -
bonds it is more than we have sold in any month since this
program started, with the exception of two months. That is
increase alone, Mr. Bell.
MR. BELL: I thought Syd Tickton figured you only had
between four and five hundred million dollars in bad money
in the individual results.
MR. GAMBLE: You have taken out & billion two hundred
and two million twos.
MR. BELL: That makes your four billion eight result in
the last drive, so what you are doing is increasing it seven
hundred million.
MR. GAMBLE: You are taking out the two percent bond.
You are not going to compare the two and one quarter sales to
a billion two hundred twenty million sales of two percent indi-
viduals in this drive.
MR. BELL: I am taking out the free-riding.
MR. GAMBLE: I am in favor of that. I am all for it..
MR. BELL: I have got to assume that you are going to sell
as many individuals at two and a quarter from a permanent
investment standpoint as the twos.
MR. HALL: I don't think you can quite assume that.
MR. GAMBLE: I am in favor of eliminating two percents. I
am in favor of doing away with this billion two hundred and twenty
million dollars that we had to our credit in our individual sales
in the Third War Loan Drive, but from all of the people that I
checked, on all of the information that I could get from George's
boys, from our fellows in New York, from our chairmen, they think
that a five hundred million dollar estimate on two and a quarters
is the outside figure. Now, there is seven hundred twenty
million dollars' difference in the sales. In fact, let me put
it another way, Mr. Bell. I honestly believe that this drive
we are talking about is all wrapped up in the E, F, and G
sales. I think the other is stationary.
Regraded Unclassified
55
- 10 -
MR. BELL: I think that is right, the two and a half to
three and a half.
MR. GAMBLE: I think the fellows will have to go like the
devil to find 8 billion and 8 half dollars in tax notes for
individuals and two and & quarter and a half percent bonds.
They will have to double anything in that field that has been
done before. They are going to have to get it.
(Representatives of the Federal Reserve System are called
into the meeting.)
H.M.JR: We all have put in an awfully lot of work on
this thing. I don't know whether we have come out at the
right end, but we have talked to a lot of people, and we have
listened. I haven't tried to sell anybody anything.
I have jotted down some notes. It will take me a couple
of minutes if 1 might read it to you, how we feel today.
(Reading from memorandum of recommendations) "That
there be no change in the pattern of rates ranging from
3/8% to 2-1/2%" May I interpolate here to say in all sincerity
that since March 1942 when we undertook this pattern of rates
I think the Open Market Committee has done a perfectly grand
job of management, and I would like to congratulate them at
this time, after having taken a very careful look at just what
you gentlemen did. You have done 8 beautiful job.
(Reading) "That we continue the present basis of market
bidding for bills with the expectation that cooperation from
the market will provide bids at 3/8% or better in ample volume.
"That we continue to expect the Federal Reserve System
to provide sufficient reserves to meet the needs of the market
and to maintain a good tone in the Government Securities
market at the established pattern of rates.
"That the over-all national goal for the Fourtn Mar Loan
be fixed at $14 billion, of which $5-1/2 billion should be set
ES the individual goal ($3 billion of this latter amount should
be raised through the sale of Series E Savings Bonds); and
that $8-1/2 billion should be set BS the goal for other non-bank
Regraded Unclassified
56
- 11 -
investors. Sales to cealers and brokers are included in this
last figure with the understanding that their subscriptions
will be policed.
"That the date for the start of the drive be Tuesday,
January 18, 1944.
"That the timing of the drive be arranged as follows:
Emphasis in the period from January 18 to February 1 be placed
on the individual quota of $5-1/2 billion."
Do you have an extra copy of this?
MR. BELL: I have just one, I am sorry.
H.M.JR: Give one to each of them.
(Mr. Bell hands copy of "Recommendations" to Mr. Eccles)
H.M.JR: Did you change the figures in there?
MR. BELL: No, I didn't. The figuresin number four should
be five and a half instead of six, and eight and a half instead
of eight, and three for the E bonds.
H.M.JR: The thought now is that they can subscribe, but
we won't give them credit in the quota. If they want to buy
them, all right, but they won't get credit in the quota.
MR. BELL: The question we have is whether they should
have credit in the other classification, other non-bank
investors.
(The Secretary completes reading of "Recommendations,"
copy attached)
H.M.JR: I would be very glad to have any comments,
criticisms, or suggestions. It is still wide open. If it
isn't clear - I just received this two minutes before you
came in; that is why we didn't have enough copies. I am
sorry.
We will start anywhere you gentlemen would like to.
Regraded Unclassified
57
- 12 -
MR. ECCLES: Of course, this puts us, as a committee,
at a little disadvantage. I can express my individual views
with reference to various aspects of it; I suppose every other
member could do likewise. It doesn't make it possible, I
think, to take each of these suggestions, one at a time, and
express the views of the Committee.
H.M.JR: The memorandum was just handed to me before
three. We only got through this morning. Mr. Rouse was
here and neard us discussing the thing up until the very
last minute, and I asked him to let you know. I tried to
let Mr. Ransom know as we went along. I will proceed any
way that you want. I don't want you people to feel that
you are on the spot or anything like that.
MR. BELL: This is something the Secretary asked us this
morning after we closed our conferences, how we felt about
the recommendations, and they were submitted to him just at
a quarter to three.
MR. ECCLES: I think I or Mr. Sproul could report the
views of the Committee, not necessarily with reference to
this program, but the views with reference to the problem of the
pattern of rates, the present method of buying bills, and the
question of the basket. After all, this is merely, 88 I get
it, an expression.
MR. BELL: That is about all that is.
MR. ECCLES: We have discussed all of those questions.
I will take the bill matter first, because that is what we
discussed the other morning, you will recall. We presented
as best we could our arguments for the need of replacements
and there is no need of repeating the arguments, because I
think you are all familiar with them.
H.M.JR: May I say, I read all of the memoranda very
carefully that I was given and that those then were copied
and circulated among the people here.
MR. ECCLES: Now, the staff people - Dan called me yester-
day, and they met last evening.
Regraded Unclassified
58
- 13 -
R.M.JR: Until midnight.
MR. ECCLES: For the purpose of discussing it, and they
arrived at 8. method which we didn't feel was as good as the
one we suggested, that - definite open facing the thing,
frankly - but as I understand it now, all we are expected to
do is to just continue to buy whatever is offered at three-
eighths, that the Treasury has arranged, or will arrange
with the market and the dealers to see that bids are put in.
All that we would be expected to do, of course, is to con-
tinue to take anything that was offered at three-eighths,
which, of course, we would do. Our bills will run off each
week, and the Treasury, and not us, will arrange for adequate
bids to he put in to assure that the billion dollars--
H.M.JR: After all, Rouse was here. If he had been
willing - I don't want to put any undue burden on him. But
after all, he has to carry it out, as I take it. Is that
right, Sproul?
MR. SPROUL: No, as I understand it, there is a change
here. We have been carrying it out, but we say now the
situation is such that we no longer think it is the way to
carry it; and if it is going to oe carried out in that same
way in the future, then you should make the arrangements,
not us. That was my understanding.
H.M.JR: No, say whatever is in your mind, will you?
MR. ROUSE: Yes. I would make an addition to what the
chairman said, that I think you would probably expect us,
and it would be proper for the System, to continue, broadly
speaking, the encouraging of bids for bills and interest in
bills and broadening of the market for bills to the extent
that we are able to by circulars and general conversations,
that as far as our having any responsibility for putting in
or seeing that specific inducing the placing of specific
bids on any tendering day, that we are freed of that respon-
sibility, because, as I understand it, and we all know, we
want to get away from any burden at all or liability in any
sense of direct financing of the Treasury. And we employ
indirectly agents to do that. We open ourselves to the
accusation of direct purchases, and the Treasury should be
Regraded Unclassified
59
- 14 -
willing to talk with the market and encourage the market
to appreciate the problem of the Federal Reserve maturities
and the need for increasing the volume of tendersat the
weekly offerings to an extent to where there would be an
ample coverage.
I think there is no doubt that the market would be
willing to do that. In fact, the market has assured you it
would do it.
H.M. JR: I am sorry you people weren't here. No one
had to do that. All I had to say to them was, would they be
willing to increase their interest in the market?
MR. ROUSE: That is right.
H.M.JR: And their answer was, "We would be very glad
to increase our interest in the market, and we want to do it
et no profit LO ourselves."
MR. ROUSE: The only qualification was no profit to
themselves.
H.M.JR: But that doesn't mean that I am going to move
down to the Federal Reserve Building in New York, nor is
anybody from the Treasury going to move down to the Federal
Reserve Building in New York. We are still going to look to
you people to do the operating. Let's have it perfectly
clear.
MR. ECCLES: Yes. But there is quite a distinct difference,
it seems to me, in the mechanics of the operation which we
would expect to carry out and take all the bills that are
offered, just as they are offered, either under the option
account or openly. Now, that is very different from making
a previous arrangement, which is the thing we are unwilling
to continue to do for dealers; in other words, to get in
touch with dealers and say, "We want you to put in for our
account, in effect." That is what it amounts to, that you
put in bids and we will take the securities off of your hands
BS we have been doing at three-eightus, plus thirty-seven
dollars and fifty cents a million. Now, we feel that that is
a direct violation of the law. We have felt that way for some
Regraded Unclassified
60
- 15 -
time. I have felt pretty strongly on it. Congress says
that you cannot buy directly from the Treasury. I see very
little difference in our buying directly from the Treasury,
which is different from the exchange. The law permits an
exchange of 8. maturity for a maturity. What the law forbids
is direct buying.
Now, we consider that --
H.M. JR: The arguing has all been done. All these
fellows want to know is if they go out and buy for bids,
is the put still there?
MR. ECCLES: The put is to everybody. We have a posted
rate of three-eighths.
H.M.JR: That is all they want to know, all arrangements
have been made. It is finished. You don't have to do B. thing.
MR. SPROUL: That was the only point.
MR. ECCLES: That is our point.
MR. SPROUL: If any question arises concerning it they
will get in touch with Mr. Bell, and not us.
MR. PELL: No, I don't think so. I think you are making
a distinction here between the Federal Reserve Bank in New
York operating and managing the System account and operating
as fiscal agent of the United States.
Now, I think we have to look to Mr. Sproul and Mr. house
in the New York market to see that there are enough bids
every Monday night to cover these bills as fiscal agent. I
don't think you can expect Mr. Bell or anybody else in the
Treasury to stand guard over the market, but I think it is
only fair to say that the Secretary in discussing this market
with the four principal dealers this morning told them of the
various plans. And they didn't like any of them. They said
we are going to be severely criticized. They said, "Why don't
you leave well enough alone? We have enough effort in this
market to see enough bids are put in."
Regraded Unclassified
61
- 16 -
NR. SPROUL: If the Secretary of the Treasury requests
us as fiscal agent for him, we do that as fiscal agent. That
is still the Secretary of the Treasury doing it.
MR. BELL: If you are looking at it that way, O.K.
H.M.JR: Now look, gentlemen, don't let's made something
extra difficult. We nave two things that we can do. he can
say, all right, the Federal Reserve has come to us and said
that they are worried about these bids. They don't like what
they have been doing. They don't think it is on the up-and-up
and we are worried. "we con't think we can carry out your
wishes," because you put me in that position on March 19 and
I had to ask you up. I will refresh my memory on this. You
asked me to do that point blank. You have done a damned good
job since then, see?
Now, 1 say if you want to change and do the thing directly -
in our testimony and I believe in your testimony you people
said that the only use to do business direct is in case of
emer encies. Well, the emergency is once a week, fifty-two
weeks. I am not willing to do it at all unless we go to the
Congress and explain the thing in detail. Eccles might be
up there for weeks. Now, some people don't like that. It
would attract a lot of attention. These people worked hard,
your people, and our people, house.
Last night they made a recommendation; and then after
thinking it over decided you are putting the bills on the
same basis as other securities.
Rouse said when he got shaving this morning he got the
idea that if we would indicate the market - 1 said, 'Is there
anything you can put in writing or a report?" All 1 had to
do was raise my eyebrow and compliment these people a little
bit.
They said, "Do you want us to take a little more interest
in the market as individuals? he will be ¿lad to do it." We
have nothing to worry about. All these other suggestions we
don't like. If your conscience is bothering you at all, I am
willing to say we took the initiative.
Regraded Unclassified
62
- 17 -
On the other hand, I am going to insist that the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York as our fiscal agent supply
the machinery. It isn't any different. Mr. Sproul asked
me point blank to order him to do this in March, 1942, which
I did.
I am not ordering now, except if we do it this way; these
dealers having told us they are glad to do it, don't want to
make any money on it, they will do it just as long as they
or anybody else can put this thing to you people. They assured
us not to worry. They don't like any of the other suggestions,
and they like this. They said not to monkey with it, see?
MR. BELL: I might add that they think if you change
this everybody will be expecting another step. The next step
will be a change in rates, and then another step--
H.M.JR: If you get up against it, I would rather
not see it in 8. formal report of the Open Market Committee,
but if any time you get up against it, you can say that I
encouraged the dealers to take more active interest in the
market, I am perfectly willing to have you say that.
MR. McKEE: There isn't anything for us to be embarrassed
about. We have a fixed rate to take bills at, three-eighths
of one percent. Period. Now, when the bills come, we take
them.
The thing that you are interested in is to see that your
weekly offering is underwritten. You have relieved us of all
of this responsibility by this action, and I for one member of
the Open Market Committee am very grateful, because we were
worried about the proportion that we had to find each week to
make out the full amount. I don't see any hardship in this
for us, but from now on it is your direction and responsibility.
H.M.JR: It has been that, old man, from March, 1942
to this date.
MR. McKEE: I think we have divided the responsibility
8 bit by our action.
Regraded Unclassified
63
- 18 -
H.H.JR: I don't know where the thing is, but I went
through the conversation. You (Sproul) will remember it.
You asked me to please instruct you to do that. Do you
remember?
MR. SPROUL: Yes. Now, I think the difference that Mr.
McKee is referring to here - you were working through the Open
Market Committee then, and in this arrangement you will be
working through the New York Bank as your fiscal agent.
MR. McKEE: And not as manager of the Open Market
Committee.
MR. BELL: You are relieved of this embarrassment you
have been talking about.
MR. ECCLES: We are prohibited as an Open Market Committee
to make direct purchases, and we figure that, in effect, when-
ever we make previous arrangements that we are doing indirectly
what we are prohibited from doing directly. Our counsel so
advises us, and we have known for some time that we were getting
on to dangerous ground on that score. We just don't like to
feel that we have five hundred million of bills running off
and we have to go right out to a dealer and say, "You put a
bid in to the Treasury for this five hundred million and turn
them right over to us immediately and we will give you thirty-
seven dollars and a half a million for your action. Now, we
just feel that that in effect is really what we are doing.
MR. ROUSE: May I say at that point, Mr. Chairman, that
we have not made any commitments for specific tenders, that
we have really acted in behalf of the Treasury to try to
encourage - with specific instructions - to encourage bidding
for Treasury bills, pointing out the Treasury bills.
MR. ECCLES: We have been paying thirty-seven and 8 half
& million to get our own maturing bills back.
MR. ROUSE: For a small proportion of them, and & good
sized proportion of those allotted to the dealers, roughly
two-thirds.
MR. ECCLES: We went along because of that proportion.
Regraded Unclassified
64
- 19 -
MR. ROUSE: I just had in mind the record.
MR. ECCLES: The situation that we are confronted with
now is & maturity of from four to five hundred million a
week out of 8 billion. We are confronted with the replace-
ment of about half of them we have gotten, not only those
bills every week, but of taking several hundred million of
either bills or other securities to provide the necessary
reserves that we would expect to buy in the market. And,
of course, we figured under the proposal that we made, and
our counsel so advised us, that we were not doing direct
purchasing, but we were accomplishing an exchange which the
law permits and which we have done in the case of certificates
and other papers.
(To the Secretary) I was just saying that what our
counsel advised us was that it was strictly in accordance
with the law, that it was an exchange which we have already
been doing in the case of certificates and notes and bonds
and which the law permits. They permit an exchange. What
we proposed was an exchange of our maturing bills just as we
exchange every other maturity which was within the law,
whereas what we were doing was doing indirectly what we are
not permitted to do.
MR. BELL: I think that might be termed legal, but I
think we could still be criticized for that very thing. I
think the proposition that came out this morning where we put
bills on an entirely different basis and on a straight exchange -
we might get by with that.
MR. McKEE: That is all right. That is calling the
dog by another name. But as long as we are not furnishing
the Treasury any new dollars, I don't feel that anything
we have taken out of the market at any one time in contin-
uous maturity by rolling it over isn't furnishing the
Treasury new dollars. But I would be just against it as
much as you people would be against the furnishing of one
dime except through an overdraft of a new dollar. It is
just a medium of meeting the situation which we have had
marketwise weekly to meet, and now you have assumed a
responsibility. I am just tickled to death with it.
H.M.JR: Have you any objection?
Regraded Unclassified
64
- 19 -
MR. ROUSE: I just had in mind the record.
MR. ECCLES: The situation that we are confronted with
now is B. maturity of from four to five hundred million a
week out of a billion. We are confronted with the replace-
ment of about half of them we have gotten, not only those
bills every week, but of taking several hundred million of
either bills or other securities to provide the necessary
reserves that we would expect to buy in the market. And,
of course, we figured under the proposal that we made, and
our counsel so advised us, that we were not doing direct
purchasing, but we were accomplishing an exchange which the
law permits and which we have done in the case of certificates
and other papers.
(To the Secretary) I was just saying that what our
counsel advised us was that it was strictly in accordance
with the law, that it was an exchange which we have already
been doing in the case of certificates and notes and bonds
and which the law permits. They permit an exchange. What
we proposed was an exchange of our maturing bills just as we
exchange every other maturity which was within the law,
whereas what we were doing was doing indirectly what we are
not permitted to do.
MR. BELL: I think that might be termed legal, but I
think we could still be criticized for that very thing. I
think the proposition that came out this morning where we put
bills on an entirely different basis and on a straight exchange -
we might get by with that.
MR. McKEE: That is all right. That is calling the
dog by another name. But as long as we are not furnishing
the Treasury any new dollars, I don't feel that anything
we have taken out of the market at any one time in contin-
uous maturity by rolling it over isn't furnishing the
Treasury new dollars. But I would be just against it as
much as you people would be against the furnishing of one
dime except through an overdraft of a new dollar. It is
just a medium of meeting the situation which we have had
marketwise weekly to meet, and now you have assumed a
responsibility. I am just tickled to death with it.
H.M.JR: Have you any objection?
Regraded Unclassified
65
- 20 -
MR. McKEE: No, not if you want to take that load
on. All the future is yours, with our blessing.
H.M.JR: Well, we are at war. I have got to raise
the money.
MR. McKEE: It could be done in different fashion,
where the outside public wouldn't be called upon to do
a concerted job.
H.M.JR: I know, but as between Eccles and whoever
the Federal Reserve Board wants to send up on the Hill
and somebody from the Treasury going up there and going
all through this thing for a couple of weeks, which I
don't think would help matters any, I'd rather do it
this way.
MR. ECCLES: Of course, I feel it would be inadvis-
able to go up on the Hill. What we proposed, of course,
we felt that it shouldn't necessitate our going up on
the Hill, because it was in accordance with the author-
ity given us in the Statute of exchanging what we had
maturing, whether bills, certificates, notes, bonds, or
what.
I was on the Hill, as you know, in connection with
getting that legislation through. I was up there for
both the House and Senate for two or three different
days.
H.M.JR: For days, weren't you?
MR. eccles: No, I was only a few hours in the
House; I think a day in the Senate.
H.M.JR: Somebody asked me the question up there,
was this an emergency or for a usual matter. I said it
was an emergency.
MR. ECCLES: It is. What we are proposing wouldn't
be part of the five billion. That is the distinction.
The five billion is where you give the Treasury new
money. In other words, if you want five billion - -
Whereas, what we are doing is not proposing to give the
Treasury one dollar of new money. Now, if you wanted
Regraded Unclassified
66
- 21 -
five billion of new money and issued five billion of
bonds, you could do that once and we then couldn't make
any further direct loan to you. That would be new money
until that was paid. That is 8. revolving fund of direct
purchase to meet an emergency; and the real distinction
between that and what we proposed is merely turning
over what we have, which doesn't give the Treasury one
dollar of new money. The Treasury, in the first instance,
got this money for bills in the market. In the first
instance, they got the money for certificates in the
market. All they do now is roll over our certificates.
They roll over our notes for us when they come due. All
we are carrying out is roll over the bills, which is all
in accordance with the law, no part of the authority
for the five billion.
H.M.JR: We went into all of that.
MR. McKEE: Can't we tell the Secretary that we
are in accordance with the arrangements he has made
with the market?
MR. SPROUL: What I would tell him--I think you
would be better advised to do it the way we suggest.
Other advisers tell you differently. You have decided
to do it this way. I think that is up to you.
H.M.JR: I have been sitting here waiting for people
to come to me, so it isn't as though I was rushing any-
body as far as these people are concerned, and I am not
rushing you, as President of the Federal Reserve of New
York and our fiscal agent. Would you be willing to
undertake this--I having satisfied myself that there
will be plenty of bids?
MR. SPROUL: I say that I, as fiscal agent, am
going to undertake it when you, the Secretary, request
it.
H.M.JR: I am asking you now.
MR. SPROUL: I say we are willing to undertake it.
H.M.JR: All I ask for is as good management in the
future as we have had since March 19. I am assured of
Regraded Unclassified
67
- 22 -
that, am I not?
MR. SPROUL: I think SO.
H.M.JR: All right. Well, I'm satisfied, so can
we consider that matter settled?
MR. SPROUL: Yes.
MR. ECCLES: The only interest I have, as Chairman
of the Open Market Committee, is the responsibility for
what I feel the Open Market has been doing. If we have
no further responsibility--and, as I understand it, we
don't--then of course we have nothing further to say.
I feel like John: We just have nothing further to say
about it. It isn't our responsibility.
MR. McKEE: We have our own problem as far as
accounting is concerned, but it can be handled.
MR. ECCLES: Well, we don't buy more or less this
way; we wouldn't buy any more or less bills. We will
end up with the same bills or the same rate. It is
merely 8. question of method.
MR. SPROUL: Optional account rather than System
account.
H.M.JR: I look to the Open Market Committee very
definitely to carry the responsibility of supplying
sufficient excess reserves.
MR. SPROUL: That is a separate matter.
H.M.JR: Yes, but I want to be sure. I look to
the Open Market Committee to see that they supply suffic-
ient reserves SO that we can float the Fourth War Loan.
MR. ECCLES: Well, the market supplies its own
reserves. We establish a rate of three-eighths. Now,
the only further thing we can do is drop the rate to a
half, maybe. We could drop the rates lower.
H.M.JR: Supposing you want to increase your bill
portfolio?
Regraded Unclassified
68
- 23 -
MR. ECCLES: I mean, drop the rate to a quarter.
H.M.JR: It is a question of increasing your bill
portfolio, if it is necessary. That is the point.
MR. ECCLES: We have no way of doing it, unless we
bid the rates down. We bid the bills up to a premium
and bid the rates down, maybe to a quarter, because we
stand today to take all bills that are offered and the
banks are not supposed to be in on the drive, as I
understand it.
H.M.JR: This matter is a mechanical matter which
I settled.
Now, somewhere, some point mentioned reserves.
Point 3: "That we continue to expect the Federal Reserve
System to provide sufficient reserves to meet the needs
of the market and to maintain B. good tone in the
Government Securities market at the established pattern
of rates."
MR. BELL: That is what they have done in the past.
MR. ECCLES: That is right. We will continue to
do what we have done. All we do is buy what is offered
to us.
MR. ROUSE: It is an inter-relation of what is going
on currently; no change.
MR. ECCLES: Yes, but what I meant to say to the
Secretary is that we can't go out and buy securities
without bidding up the market of securities. We can
stand there and take the securities that are offered,
which we have been doing and which we expect to continue
to do at this pattern; to try to force an expansion
of reserves would mean that we would go out and bid
for securities so as to get them, induce people, to
sell them to us--induce the banks and individuals to
sell them to us.
H.M.JR: All I am asking is that you people continue
to do the same kind of job in the future as you have in
the past.
Regraded Unclassified
69
- 24 -
MR. ECCLES: We intended to do that.
MR. BELL: I think that is all that says. We are
not asking you to put more reserves in or fix the
reserves at any place. They are asking you to continue
what you have done in the past.
MR. McKEE: It is a continuing problem.
H.M.JR: I am just asking you to continue.
MR. McKEE: Sure. There is nothing else for us to
do, whether you ask it or not:
MR. ECCLES: All we are saying there is We continue
to maintain a pattern of rates. Period.
MR. BELL: Keep 8. good tone in the market. That
is what you have done, and you have done a swell job and
we want a continuation of it.
MR. SPROUL: Well, 1 think we all understand each
other. There is no question of how you interpret this
word or that--what keeping a good tone in the market
means or doesn't mean. We have the problem of providing
the reserve funds the banks need to meet an increased
currency in circulation and in their deposits. That
we must do and will do. And you don't want us, and we
don't want, to force funds into the banks which will
make the banks bid against other investors for Government
securities. Your policy is to keep the banks out of
financing as much as possible, and we certainly agree
with that policy.
So that our problem remains, as I see it, to provide
the funds necessary to meet the increased currency
circulation, to meet the increased requirement against
deposits, and the pattern of rates will then largely
take care of itself. But we'll be there to see that it
doesn't move too far in one direction or the other.
MR. ECCLES: It is the bank's option. If the bank
needs reserves, it has to sell us something, and we want
Regraded Unclassified
70
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to be sure that we are there to take what they want to
sell us in line with the pattern. And they want to be
sure we will do it. If they are sure we will do that--
and certainly that in itself gives the confidence to
the market and it is all based entirely upon our, in
effect, pegging, because it is practically a peg of
the market at certain different maturities.
MR. McKEE: We have got those two settled. Let's
PO on to the next one.
H.M.JR: Do you want to read this memorandum?
MR. McKEE: I don't know the next point.
MR. BELL: There are about four points.
MR. ECCLES: Yes, I'd like to say this further,
though. You say no change in the pattern. I'd like
to make this point, thinking of the future. As I
understand that, however, the pattern is three-eighths
to two and a haif. Now, we can't maintain a two and a
half or a two percent rate if the long-term rate begins
to go down. I mean, if there is a shift from the short
intermediate bonds into the longer bonds, then as we
have said, the holding of the short rate where it is
may well tend to pull down the long-term rate.
Now, if that happens, there is nothing we can do
about it, because we have practically nothing to sell
to the market to keep it up, so we can keep the short
rate. That is no probiem. The problem comes in
maintaining the long-term rate.
H.M.JR: Going up or down?
Regraded Unclassified
71
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ECOLES: Going down; there will be no probièm to
keep it from going up, because we buy. me can always buy,
see? If your tro percent or two and a half percent bond
showed weakness and began to get down to par, we can sup-
port the market. There is no problem there of maintaining
tuat rate from going up.
JR: There is no indication right now that the long-
term Government bond is going to :0 up.
VT. ECCLES: at tne moment, that is correct, but all
1 wanted to say here is, if we bring up this question
again - which we would feel it was possibly our outy to
00 - if that is mat happens - if, in other words, to
muintain this spread which we have said is a difficult thing
to no, looking to the future, 1 take it that you are just
as anx ous as we are not to have this long-term rate - down.
M.M.JR: I will put it differently to you. Le have
ot a curve which was established on March 10, 1942. I
would like to keep it just as near that as possible.
R ECCLES: So would we.
MR. SPMUL: We have been keeping it as near that as
possible. We have now said to you that that is getting
more and more difficult. It may be that sometime in the
future, or the more distant future, it may become impossible
to do it. We will have to _et together, then, and decide
what we are going to do about it. We foresee that possi-
bility arising unless we create so much fund that we run
counter to your other policy of keeping the banks out of
the financing.
H.M.JR: The door is wide open, twenty-four nours
a day. In this war nobody can tell what is going to
nappen. At any time the thing gets to where you peo le
talnk it is impossible, we will meet immediately.
EN. SPROUL: well, we thought we were just about there.
we have a temporary situation, as we see it, where the
pressure lsn't on, out vill recur soon, I think. we will
then De Lack.
Regraded Unclassified
72
- 27 -
H.M.JR: If it does, come back.
Mr. ECCLES: As I recall, the other day--
JR: I will get a reservation on the plane - not
at the hotel--
MA. ECCLES: As I recall, when we met the other say
I got this impression: 1 know, from Dan, that the Treasury
is just as anxious to see these long-term twos and twos and
a half stay stable - stay where they are - as they are in
the short rate; in fact, more so, if anything, because of
the problem of refunding.
In other words, if the long-term rate goes down,
and it did a little last June because we out out, instead
of a seven nine two, we extended it to eight ten, which
was an evidence of a slight dropping in the rate. Now,
that establishes a new floor for refunding operations,
and we feel that it may become increasingly difficult to
do refunding on any lower long-term rate.
No. BELL: wouldn't you hate to be asked to maintain
an eight and a half, ten and a half, percent bondy
LSK. ECCLES: I would sooner that than a ten-twelve
two-year bond.
MIL. McKEE: Are we maintaining a pattern of rates
when we make it possible to get your maturities out farther
and farther?
ARE BELL: I think we are making it more difficult when
we extend it each time, particularly in the immediate area.
MR. ECCLES: That is the basis of this thing, is the
thought of the refunding job that is ahead, and not getting
a rate structure here that makes refunding increasingly
difficult.
H.M.JR: Allan Sproul says we have a momentary lull.
I don't know now long that is. For the moment, it looks
all right. any time it doesn't 100% all right, please
Regraded Unclassified
73
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run up a red flag as danger signal.
MR. McKEE: I think what Allan meant, Mr. Secretary,
is the fact that the momentary lull is between now and when
you spend all this money you have to deposit in these
banks, which will create a problem between now and the
end of the year for us.
H. .JR: We have talked to a lot of people, and most
ol them don't agree with you, but that is what makes norse
trades.
MR. McKBE: I am used to that.
11.M.JR: Time will tell. 1 nope neither of us is too
wrong.
MR. McKEE: Just in that regard - when the proposals
are made to you, and you say you have read all the memoranda -
I don't know where you got all the time, but nevertheless,
there are plenty.
H.M.JR: I have read all of them carefully.
MR. McKEE: The reason that I was persuaded to favor
the three-quarters of one percent, nine-months bill, with
the refinancing of your certificate, was to get an adequate
supply of paper in the hands, flowing in and out, of
bank ownership to act as the medium of the expansion of
deposits thout bills payable.
Now, I have seen the bankers run away from your bill
because it was yield and speculate with your certificate
for the same purpose because of the pattern of rates. Now,
sometime on the line we ma; get into trouble with that,
and it is going to react against all of us, out there isn't
enough interest in the bill to serve the purpose, to tlow
up these deposits as might be necessary to finance this
war, without showing bills payable. All the puts that we
have had in our system, which was four billion seven hun-
ored million dollars today - something like that - repre-
sents bills payable in this country; bills payable by
banks.
Regraded Unclassified
74
- 29 -
Now, 1 don't know whether we are going to have enough
of that, if they don't keep on buying bills.
Mile BALL: Put out more bills.
Mr. McKEE: They won't buy them, Dan. It is a ques-
tion of rate. They are playing the pattern of rates with
their certificates, which can't be used for that same pur-
oose.
H.M.JR: It is perfectly possible that we may be
wrong. If this thing nakes any breaks anywhere along the
lines, why let's get together again. We will be getting
together, anyway, now.
Is there anything else?
MR. ECCLES: Well, there is only one other thing.
MR. lickEE: I just wonder - talkingabout your basket
and speculation - I wonder if you mean everything you
say there about writing a letter. I have followed not
only yours, but our approach to these various issues;
after a drive we get all excited acout the free-riders
and the speculation in these various issues, and then when
we come up against a new issue we get terribly worried
whether it is going to be a success or not, and then we
weaken as to our approach. Now, we mean what we say and
will stick with it.
H.M.JR: No question about it. I understand the A.B.A.
is going to get out & letter, too.
Mit. BELL: No, not on this.
H.M.JR: I can assure you we will get out a stiff letter.
Mr. BELL: And they ought to take a look at it, too.
H. Jh: we will be glad to show it to you.
Main McKEE: You fellows can only 3° SO far in suggest-
ing, because you have no authority.
Regraded Unclassified
75
- 30 -
H.M.JR: AS a matter of fact, these Sources of Fund
people say we should go after sixteen and we are only going
alter fourteen; so the pressure all along the line will be
easier except on incividuals.
there ECCLES: On the basket - the whole approach - 1
am in complete disagreement with this memorandum. It won't
be the first time, but I think that Allan and I have some
slight difference on the thing, but we didn't have a chance
after we met a little while this morning to give this as a
statement of unanimous presentation of committee. But I
mignt point out where the differences nere are, if you are
interested in having them.
H.W.JR: Yes, sir.
Mr. ECCLES: We said there should be a separate drive
for incividuals on the one hand, and for corporations,
insurance companies and mutual savings on the other.
The drive for individuals, logically, should be first.
The corporation drive should be only after the maximum
oossible amount has been raised from individuals. That
is the most anti-infiationary action.
H.N.JR: We are having three weeks of incividual drive.
MR. ECCLES: Yes, well now, I have this point of
difference - a little bit. The Treasury will have a
balance of about eight billion dollars in the middle of
January, and the drive, at that time, does not appear to
be necessary. The drive could be postponed at least until
the middle of February. It does not seem necessary for ti.e
Treasury to maintain such large balances for meeting unfore-
seen contingencies - for large redemptions in savings bonds.
That was, as I understood it, the need.
H.K.JR: We are carrying a little over one-month
supply of money.
"ay [ interrupt you? I have had a lot 01 talk with
Reison, Stacy 19% and all those people, una this thou ht
that if Germany should collabse the sudden expenditure 1.6
Regraded Unclassified
in
76
- 31 -
going to stop; well, there is nothing over there yet which
shows anything like that. AS a matter of fact, they think
that they are being increased, because we may have to pay
off a lot of these companies on the seventy-five percent
settlement. So they taink the out-of-pocket may increase
to the extent of four billion dollars.
ECCLES: You mean, if the bill goes through.
JR: Yes, but I have been with Nelson - 1 ..ave
nad Stacy May over here. I have been all over this thing.
This idea that some people have, that if Germany should
collapse, the expenditure would certainly drop off, there
is nothing in the Army or Navy, or Welson's organization
which hears that out.
face ECCLES: We haven't thought of at. I agree with
you that there is not any likelinood of the expenditure
dropping off.
- McKEE: I hope you are bot., wrong.
M.M.JR: We think that the country mi nt be in the
frame of mind that at the first shock it might be difficult
to raise some money. So I feel very strongly that we
should carry a month's supply of money on hand right now
as the minimum.
ECCLES: I feel, of course, if the Treasury had
to rely on what the market did for it, that ma, be true;
but with the setup that you have got today, for now and
for a long time in the luture, the Fed has simply got to -
the central bank in this country, and every other country,
for that matter - has got to meet any situation; and our
feeling is that any amount that the Treasury may need
in bills they could raise in bills, in certificates, or,
of course, with the over-drafts, as quickly as it vas neces-
sary. If it was five billion, ten billion, fifteen or
twenty billion - whatever it is - I think you are in that
position. I can't ima ine your being confronted with any
situation where you Meven't got, in effect, large cash
bolances available throu Fed, any time. It must, of
necessity, be that way.
Regraded Unclassified
77
- 32 -
I just wanted to say that 50 that you wouldn't feel
that you were going to have to rely, to meet a situation,
on your cash balances. because even eight billion, in
that circumstance, may not be enough to meet it.
but after all, you have got to figure on the sort of
mechanism that we have got created to meet any kind of a
condition up to tens of billions; because that is where you
have 60t to be, isn't it?
- BELL: Yes, we have got 8 lot of obligations
hanging over us. we may have to meet and meet pretty
quickly.
MILL ECCLES: In a short time. And, after all, it
is the responsibility of the central bank to do it.
fast is all. The are just interested in seeing this market
doesn't collapse. when you think of what it means to the
banks, our own portfolio, the insurance compunies, the
whole picture - well, we just don't feel that those large
malances are necessary; that you have the equivalent any
time you want it.
MM. BELL: we have that much more, then.
MR. ECCLES: It has been mentioned above that the
individuals could be postponed until at least the middle
of February. In that event, the corporate drive, we feel,
should be postponed - Allan had 8 little disagreement on
this - until March or April.
An alternative drive program rould put the corporate
drive first, the individual drive farther over, inasmuch
as the last individual drive wasn't SO long ago; that
in the spring it would be easier masing a drive, and it
would be farther removed from the time the last drive was
made. In that case, you could get the corporate drive first.
Our reasons for the separation of the drives would be
to concentrate emphasis upon individuals. Most of the
effort of & selling organization could be concentrated
in the individual crive. A corporation drive would require
little sales effort.
Regraded Unclassified
78
- 33 -
Now, something has been said about the need of the
impetus of having the two all come together SO the adver-
tising and the selling organization, and everything, is
done at the same time. It seemed to me that what happens
under those conditions - at least happened the last time -
is that you get corporations coming in and selling securi-
ties they bought at the last drive in order to subscribe
for this time; that you get a lot of borrowing in order to
carry quotas; that the impetus of the drive is fine for
Individuals.
You want to do everything you can, but so far MS giving
the Impetus to corporations, it only induces them to sell
securities they bought before, or to go in and borrow
money to take securities, and that ends up in the bank's
getting the securities indirectly.
For instance, in the Deptember drive the banks got
four billion dollars of securities, indirectly.
H.M.JR: we are familiar with all that.
MR. ECCIES: So if you separate them, that is not as
likely to happen. That was the argument.
MR. BELL: You woulen't prevent all of it, Marriner,
if you separated it, particularly if you put any emphasis
on the corporate drive. But Ted Gamble can tell you; ne
had fifty-one chairmen in here last week. Outside of one,
New York, they couldn't agree in separating it.
MR. ECCLES: 1 know of a few instances where the
corporations had one committee, and the individuals an
entirely different group. The corporations had a group of
bankers ano business people who made a list. That v.as no
job at all.
MR. BELL: True in some places, I suppose, yes.
in. GAMBLE: AS an example, the State of Texas has
two hundred and fifty-four counties, and they didn't want
to do the job twice, but once. It was difficult for them
Regraded Unclassified
79
- 34 -
even to hold one meeting in all of those places before they
ot away from the drive. I think you will be interested
to know that not one of these people shied away from taking
on la more serious responsibility SO far as individuals were
concerned and in changing the basket in some way so there
wasn't this danger of free-riding at all. The have modified
it, as you notice there, and spread out the incividual
period from the 18th day of the month until the first of
the month. They will have no report of any sales until the
first of February. I think that is a definite step forward.
I think we all agree with you it would be ideal if
it were three or four weeks.
BELL: What we would propose nere is a sort oi
in-between; we have had many suggestions that we not
change it from the last - leave it alone. You have
these people all trained and they know what it 13; let
it 20 that way. And somebody else will come along and
say, "Let's separate it and put one section way out here
weeks away.
NOW, this is the thing: To bring it together in the
first case, but at the same time, to have enough separa-
tion so the different States can WORK it separately.
Mr. ECCLES: I taink that is a big advantag over the
September. If you want to keep the very large balances of
Mar Loan Deposit Account, of course, it does make this
reserve taing like that (gesticulates); if you run along
with the balances of three billion to twelve billion, it
makes it much less. cut it can be handled. The reserve
thing can be handled by the shift of bills back and forth
in the portfolio, that will meet the reserve requirements
throu h the change.
H.M.M.: Lave you _ot a memoranoum you are reading
there?
date ECOLES: Yes, I have got one which we used as a
basis of our discussion over there. I underlined part of
it because it wasn't M. committee demorandum.
Regraded Unclassified
31
80
- 35 -
JR: Do you want to leave something with me?
A. ECCLES: I can leave it. It is a memorandum we used
as a busis of discussion just tefore we came over nere.
we didn't have time--
N. JR: I would like to have that, then I would know
mat your position is.
En. loKEE: Before we get away from the subject, I
youid like to register a desire for a change in your pro-
run, and that is to present the same old story for the
little bank with the savings deposits. You are just
oriving the saving deposits of the country into the Federal
Savings and Loan, end the building and Loan associations
in competition, because they can't get a two and a half
percent bond.
You have sot to do something about that or just recog-
nize that they are going to N° out of the savings business.
It is serious.
H. .JR: \.e are interested. Now, have you something?
IcKEE: I think your next issue, two and a half,
ought to be included whenever you include mutuals and
others on some percentage basis.
H.M.JR: I an sympathetic with that.
EUCIES: me have a paragraph on that here, and I
found in talking to the bankers the other day, Dan, that
Lee Aggins, and B.M. Adwards, ano tue savings section of
the A.B.A. are very much concerned about the smaller
banks losing to the building and Loan and other concerns.
and I know that to be true.
BELL: They are going to :ive us a memorandum of
that.
JR: Are you taking the four-thirty train?
Regraded Unclassified
81
- 36 -
M. SPROUL: No.
JR: Can you stay a minute?
Mare SPROUL: Yes; I an taking the five o' clock.
H.M.JR: All I need is a minute.
(To ...r. socies) If 1 could have this thing here
(indicating Memorandum for Discussion at Meeting of Members
of Executive Committee on November 17, dated November 16,
1943, copy attached,, I would like to stuoy it.
"n. ECCLES: There is one other twing on your basket that
disappoints me more than anything else and that is the offer-
ing of tne certificate to the non-banking investor again.
BELL: Again, we had a lot of discussion of it,
varriner, from oozens of people, including the state chair-
де and the bankers, and everybody else, and they felt
that if you put in a note there would be more free-riding
than on tue two percent bond. That is what outside acvisers
teil us. And yet they tell us we have to keep something
in that busket for the corporations. They won't 6° into the
live-year note or the bonds, and many of them con't want
the Treasury savings note.
30 we taink we are knocking a lot of people out by
leaving out the certificate; and we hate to do it, making
our task that much harder, and we don't feel we can take
that chance, much as we would like to leave it out.
MR. ECCLES: There is the place where tuey are claying
this pattern of rates to a fare-ye-well, right now.
Mr. BELL: You are getting a few of them, and that
coesn't worry me one bit. If that is the only thing ve
had in, the certificate, I would vote for it a nundred
percent.
Ma. ECOLES: well, of course, what ne are getting is
a lot of certificates, ano we are going to get an increasing
amount.
Regraded Unclassified
82
- 37 -
MR. BELL: Fine.
MR. ECCLES: That is right, but if they couldn't play
that pattern as they do, me would get more bills.
MR. BELL: You are going to run out of bills pretty
soon, anyhow. You are getting down to half of them.
MR. ECCLES: We have got close to six billion. There
are seven billion of them we haven't got.
MR. BELL: You have to stop some place if the
market keeps any for cushion.
MR. McKEE: Have you disregarded the idea of more
bills at this time?
MR. BELL: We are leaving it to you to preserve the
market and keep a good tone. we have passed it up for the
time being.
H.M.JR: They seem to be a drug on the market; why
put more on?
MR. ECCLES: That is right; the market won't take them.
It is just another way of putting more into use through
the market.
H.M.JR: Is there anything else?
Regraded Unclassified
Rursed by Mr. Bell 83
RECOMMENDATIONS
1. That there be no change in the pattern of rates ranging from 3/8% to 2-1/2%.
2, That we continue the present basis of market bidding for bills with the
expectation that cooperation from the market will provide bids at 3/8%
02" better in ample volume,
3. That we continue to expect the Federal Reserve System to provide sufficient
reserves to meet the needs of the market and to maintain a good tone in
the Government Securities market at the established pattern of rates.
4. That the over-all national goal for the Fourth War Loan be fixed at
014 billion, of which $6 5'm billion should be set as the individual goal
3.
($3-1/2 billion of this latter amount should be raised through the
snle of Series E Savings Bonds); and that S82billion should be set as
the goal for other non-bank investors. Sales to dealers and brokers are
included in this last figure with the understanding that their subscriptions
will be policed.
5. That the date for the start of the drive be Tuesday, January 18, 1944.
6. That the timing of the drive be arranged ns follows:
(a) Emphasis in the period from January 18 to February 1 be placed on
SW
the individual quota of 86 billion.
(b) Drive to continue until February 15, taking in other non-bank investor
subscriptions beginning February 1st.
(c) All subscriptions from individuals received at the Federal Reserve
Banks or at the Treasury of the United States up to February 29, 1944,
will be credited to the drive; and that corporations will be permitted
Regraded Unclassified
84
- 2 -
to subscribe during the entire period of the drive but no public
envouncement of such subscriptions will be made by the Treasury
until after February lst.
7. That the basket should consist of the following securities:
(a) Individuals:
E- E - F - - G Savings Bonds
Treasury Savings Notes
2-1/4% Treasury bond (Call and maturity date to be
decided just before announcement)
2-1/2% Treasury bond (Call and maturity date to be
decided just before announcement)
(b) Other Non-bank investors:
F & G Savings Bonds
Treasury Savings Notes
7/8% Certificate of Indebtedness (Will be available
for subscription by individuals but decision with
respect to credit against individual quota will
be made Inter.
2-1/4% Treasury bond (Srume as above)
2-1/2% Treasury bond (Same as above)
8. That the date of the marketable securities be February 1, 1944.
% That the 2-1/2% long bond be reopened at least once between the Fourth
and Fifth War Loan Drives.
20. That any decisions with respect to the drive be announced on November 24th.
11. That the Secretary of the Treasury send a letter to all banking
institutions of the country pointing out the Treasury's objective to
borrow DA much of our required funds ns possible fro non-bank sources,
Regraded Unclassified
85
- 3 -
and ask them for their cooperation in elimin ting speculative
subscriptions and free-riding. Advise them that there is no
objection to loans by banking institutions to facilitate permanent
investment in Government securities if such loans are paid off within
the period specified by bank examination authorities (6 months).
12. That Certificate of Indebtedness maturing December 1, 1943, in amount
of $3,800,000,000 be refunded and Treasury note maturing December 15,
1943 in amount of $421,000,000 be paid off in cash.
Regraded Unclassified
Original Draft
86
Regraded Unclassified
1. That there be no change in the pattern of rates ranging from 3/8% to 2-1/25.
2. That we continue the present basis of market bidding for bills with the
expectation that cooperation from the mrket will provide bids at 3/8%
or better in emple volume.
3. That no continue to expect the Federal Reserve System to provide sufficient
reserves to meet the needs of the market and to maintain a good tone in
the Government Securities market at the established pattern of rates.
4. That the over-all national goal for the Fourth War Loan be fixed at
$14 billion, of which $6 billion should be set as the individual goal
(03-1/2 billion of this latter amount should be raised through the
sale of Series E Savings Bonds); and that $8 billion should be set as
the goal for other non-bank investors. Sales to dealers and brokers are
included in this last figure with the understanding that their subscriptions
will be policed.
5. That the date for the start of the drive be Tuesday, January 18, 1%4.
6. That the tining of the drive be arranged as follows:
(a) Emphasis in the pariod from Jamary 18 to February 1 be placed on
the individual quota of # billion.
(b) Drive to conside until February 15, taking in other non-bank investor
subscriptions begiming February 1st.
(e) All subscriptions from individuals received at the Federal Reserve
Banks or at the Treasury of the United States up to February 29, 1944,
will be credited to the drive; and that corporations will be permitted
87
- 2 -
to subscribe during the entire period of the drive but no public
agrouncement of such subscriptions will be made by the Treasury
until after February 1st.
7. That the basket should consist of the following securities:
(a) Individuals:
R - F - 0 Savings Bonds
Treasury Savings Notes
2-1/4% Treasury band (Call and naturity date to be
decided just before announcement)
2-1/2% Treasury bond (Call and maturity date to be
decided just before announcement)
(b) Other Non-bank investors:
F& G Savings Bonds
Treasury Savings Notes
7/8% Certificate of Indebtedness (will be available
for subscription by individuals but decision with
respect to credit against individual quota will
be made Inter.
2-1/4% Treasury bend (Seme as above)
2-1/2% Treasury bond (Seme as above)
8. That the date of the marketable securities be February 1, 1%4.
9. That the 2-1/2% long bond be recepend at least once between the Fourth
and Fifth My Lean Drives.
10. That any decisions with respect to the drive be exclunced on November 24th.
11. That to Secretary of the Treasury send a letter to all banking
institutions of the country pointing out the Treasury's objective to
borrow as such of our required funds 88 possible fro non-bank sources,
Regraded Unclassified
88
November 16, 1943
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
FUL DISCUSSION AT EETING OF .E.BARS OF
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ON NOVEMBER 17
1. There should be a separate drive for individuals,
on the one hand, and for corporations, insurance companies,
and mutual savings banks on the other. The drive for individuals
logically should be first. The corporation drive should be
only after the maximum possible amount has been raised from
individuals.
2. Since the Treasury will have a balance of about 8
billion dollars in the middle of January, a drive at that time
does not appear to be necessary. The drive could be postponed at
leust until the middle of February. It does not seem necessary
for the Treasury to maintain a large balance for meeting unfore-
seen contingencies such as large redemptions of savings bonds.
Since the Federal neserve System is maintaining stability in
the Government security market, the Treasury could meet any
conceivable emergency need for funds through offerings of bills
or certificates. In addition, the Treasury could borrow 5
billion dollars directly from the System, none of which authority
is now being used. In effect, therefore, the Treasury would have
a large cash balance, even though its actual deposits were reduced
to a low level.
3. It has been mentioned above that the individual
drive could be postponed at least until the miodle of February.
In that event, the corporate drive could be postponed until
March or April. An alternative program would be to have the
corporate drive in February, in which event the individual drive
could be postponed until April.
4. The principal reason for the separation of the drives
is to concentrate emphasis on sales of securities to individuals.
Jost of the efforts of the selling organization could be concen-
trated on the individual drive; the corporation drive would re-
quire a relatively small amount of sales effort. With the separa-
tion of the drives, reliance could no longer be placed on corpora-
tion subscriptions in order to reach the goals. The Treasury
would receive a more even flow of funds and consequently would
Regraded Unclassified
89
CONSIDENTIAL
- 2 -
November 16, 1943
avoid the payment of interest on the excessive cash balances
that result from the present drives. The number of kinds of
issues included in the individual drives could be reduced.
smaller transfers of deposits to war loan accounts than during
the past drives would result in smaller declines in required
reserves and consequently in less encouragement to the expansion
of bank credit.
5. It seems desirable to have a period of a month or
two between the incividual and the corporation drives. The
advantages of the separation would have real force only with
some Interval of time between the drives. Moreover, since the
total of the individual drives would not be known for a week or
two after the close of the crive, better planning of the corpora-
tion drive could be made if it were postponed until some time
ulter the conclusion of the individual drive. Quotas would be
estatlished on a State basis for the individual drive.
6. In the corporation drive, provision should be made
for the investment of savings deposits of commercial banks on
the basis of scine formula. The formula for each commercial bank
- at be 25 per cent of the amount of the bank's savings deposits
but not more than $1,000,000. Commercial banks have a large
amount of savings deposits. Since they are unable to invest them
in new issues at rates 01 more than 2 per cent, however, they
mave reduced their rates on savings deposits to 1 1/2 percent and
less. Buildin, and loan associations and other savings institu-
tions are taking this business, since they are able to invest in
:- 1/2 per cent bonds and consequently can pay higher rates than
can commercial banks. By this process, the Treasury in effect
is encoura Ing the growth of a publicate banking system. If
commercial banks were permitted to purchase 2 1/2 per cent bonds,
however, they could pay 2 per cent on their savings deposits,
which would place them in & better position to meet the competi-
tion of other savings institutions.
7. The basket in the individual drive snould consist of
Series E, F, and G savings bonds and 2 1/2 per cent marketable
bonds not available for purchase by commercial banks for 10 years.
The basket, thereby, would be considerably simplified. There is
no need of including certificates, notes, or 2 per cent bonds in
the basket. The first two kinds of issues are not generally
attractive to individuals; although the 2 per cent bonds were
purchased in large amount by indiviouals in the last drive, a
corable nart of these purchases were speculative in
Regraded Unclassified
30
COMIDE TIAL
- 3 -
November 16, 1943
character. The corporation drives should include savings notes
and 1 1/2 per cent marketable notes of March or June 1948,
which would be purchased largely by corporations, and 2, 1/2
per cent bonds, which would be purchased largely by mutual sav-
ings banks, insurance companies, and commercial banks under the
above formula. It does not appear to be desirable to include
E 1/4 per cent bonds In either basket. There would be few if
any subscriptions for 2 1/4 per cent bonds that would not be
placed in 2 1/2 per cent bonds, and the addition of another
kind of security would add to the complications of Treasury
linancing.
8. In order to reduce speculation and commercial bank
purchases in the next drive, dealers and brokers should be pro-
mibited from subscribing for the new issues other than the 2 1/2
per cent bonds. In addition, the Treasury should issue a state-
went discoura, Ing the extension of bank credit for purchasing
of carrying new issues of Government securities except where the
loans are to be repaid out of anticipated income. The rate of
interest should be not less than the coupon rate on the securi-
ties pledged as collateral for the loans, and it might also be
desirable to have a 10 per cent margin. Finally, trading in the
nev. issue of notes should be prohibited for between 15 and 30
days after the close of the drive.
9. Holders of the December 1 certificates and of the
December 15 notes should be permitted to exchange their holdings
for an issue of 1 1/2 per cent notes of march or June 1948.
Hotes are suggested instead 01 certificates in order to ellminate
tue large refunding problem that would arise after only a year
EF the refunding were into certificates.
Regraded Unclassified
7
91
11-17-43
1.
Brokers + Deakes out of 4th War Loan
X7
why not bid and ask on bills,
Banks public relations
would should he to help
Inao. Rep cost of money
66 asling as their earnings
time to rise
Patter to all Banks 15 explaining
fective of 4th Loana.
mee change 3/8 futtle will
say line is brother and
will expect other rate will
hange.
Regraded Unclassified
92
November 18, 1943
Fred Smith
The Secretary
Lord Halifax called and said that they don't have the
figures as to the number of rifles they had in England at
the time of Dunkirk but that I could say that they did not
have enough rifles for the soldiers who were in England.
In other words, they did not have a rifle for every soldier
who was in England at the time of Dunkirk. I don't know
whether it's worth saying, but anyway that's what he told
me. Thank you very much. Frished
Regraded Unclassified
93
November 17, 1943
Fred Smith
The Secretary
At this meeting which took place in my office
with Marshall, why not state how many rifles we got
for the English. I think that that would be much
more impressive than anything else. The way it reads
it ien't at all impressive. Finished
Regraded Unclassified
94
November 17, 1943
Fred Sm1 th
The Secretary
Where we talk about the meeting taking place in
my office, to get rifles to England, I'd like to say
something like this, "When I look back over the last
three or four years, one of the things that I did
which I am most proud of or happy over was that I was
able to have a part in arranging for the rifles, etc.,
to go to England in her darkest moment." Something
along that line, please. Funished.
Regraded Unclassified
95
Draft from which reading copy
was typed.
96
Gentlemen:
I am glad to have this opportunity tonight to talk to the
Nation's leading advertising people, because I have confidence
in the ability of advertising men to bring the facts of the
war to the American public. And today, perhaps more than at any time
since the war began, there is a vital job to be done on that
front.
The dangerous dream of & quick end to this war grows more
serious every day. It is particularly pressing right now. On
every hand we see a surge of activity to prepare for post-war,
sometimes at the expense of the vital job at hand. The stock
market has been in & steady plunge ever since word first got
around that the Nazis are about to crack. The newspapers
regularly report new signs of the coming collapse of Cermany.
In Tashington the exodus to after-the-war jobs has started in
cornest.
% one in Washington can give mo any concrete evidence that
Jermany is tottering on the brink of capitulation -- and I have
sought out practically everyone who would have any reason to
know. And I can tell you that on the Italian front the Nazi
troops are not near cracking.
It is always possible, of course, that the people on the
.azi Tome Front will be unable to take the bad news from Russia
or the terrible destruction our bombs are raining upon them;
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
97
But if the Mazi Home Front should crack, that would be
a wind-Pall. In the meantime, we are only playing Mitler's
came when we see peace just around the corner.
1 as convinced, by the way, that the Nazis have a pro-
priotary interest in this wave of optimism. The early signs
of "orman collapse came fro stories printed in Nazi controlled
nowspapers; then from travelers out of Germany, who reported
their observations to neutral newspapers, chiefly those with pro-
tri tendencies. Finally, Witler himself managed to convey the
impression in his most recent speech that life in Germany is
hell. I cannot think that he and Vr. Goebbels would be so
tender about keeping us posted of a coming crisis unless there
le G. rabbit in the hat somewhere.
Those who hail an early crack-up of the German nation
Two not talked to Cerman prisoners, I can assure you of that.
= had some first hand reports on the state of mind of prisoners
when I was in Italy. They are mighty arrogant. They believe
in Adolf Witler, and say the Russian campaign is the fault of
the Cerman generals. They don't understand when you talk to
them about Democracy. They say: "What? A nation without &
suchrer? That is chaos!" Then if you pursue the subject of
their present leader, they may admit he is not perfection -- but
do until they find another. And -- get
very well
he will
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
98
this, gentlemen -- they say their next Fuehrer will win the
next great war. So here they are -- these defeated prisoners --
already planning another assault on civilization.
This is one reason why we must concentrate on fighting the
wer right up to the last bitter day. There is 8. good chance
that letting down now can needlessly prolong the war for weeks
04- months.
I was in Italy three weeks ago. I went with General Mark
clark up to the front lines. I drove in a jeep through the
muntains to a spot within & mile of the Nazi troops. I went
through a small village -- or what had, a few days before, been
B village -- called Dragoni. It was still smouldering. American
bulloozers were busy clearing debris out of the streets SQ that
our supply trucks could get through; and at one spot our jeep
had to climb high over a pile of masonry and stones that the
day before had been a public building. That was about all
there was left of Dragoni -- that huge pile of wreckage. It
was the same in a half dozen other small towns that we passed
through. That happens because the Mazis don't like fighting in
the open. They run from building to building, and Mark Clark's
"ifth Army or Jimmy Doolittle's planes simply have to take the
buildings down around them. It is, I can tell you, & mighty
Regraded Unclassified
- 4 -
99
slow and difficult process. When I broadcast from Algiers, I
pointed out some of the difficulties of fighting over there.
"I had no idea," I said, "of the terrible terrain in this area
over which we must fight the Nazis. The area between Naples
and Ilome is mountainous and thick with trees and foliage. It
is ideal for defensive action, because the Nazi forces can hide
high in the mountains, and fire on our forces without being
seen. And when they are driven from one mountain, they need
only to retreat a few hundred yards to another and it is the
name taing all over again."
Since I left Dragoni, the Allied Armies have managed to
Let fifteen miles closer to Rome. Five bloody, hard-earned
illes & week, that's all. But it isn't the fault of our fight-
the men. They are tough and in the pink of condition. The
fact is that no army in the world could move any faster. It
will be almost a miracle if we are in Rome before Christmas.
And that's the picture on the Italian front while we, back
here, are congratulating ourselves on polishing off the war in
n hurry.
But even that's not the whole story.
The weather is closing in over there. Our troops may be
without air protection more of the time than they will have it,
200 they tell me that air protection is just about the most
important single factor in modern invasion.
Regraded Unclassified
- 5 -
100
I talked to General Doolittle about that in Tunis. In his
war room, lined with huge maps of the entire Allied battle front,
he showed me how aircraft are dispatched almost on 8. moment's
notice to any fighting sector to take care of difficult enemy
implacements or stubborn resistance. Just two days before I
arrived in Tunis, Doolittle said, some of the forces in Italy
were caught in what might have been a serious trap had it not
been for the medium bombers called to the scene.
In an hour or two the bombers had done 8. job that would
have been next to impossible without them -- and certainly would
have meant heavy, bloody losses! This was only one case that
Bolittle pointed out where a temporary setback had been turned,
through immediate air support, into a victory.
Dut now the winter is here, and the weather is closing in.
Jimnie Doolittle and Air-Marshal Tedder cannot send airplanes
anywhere, at any time, on a moment's notice, as they did this
summer. Is there any promise of early peace about that?
Or, can you find hope of quick victory in the fact that
the Allies have still not crossed that narrow ditch called the
English Channel, for the simple reason that the other side is
lined solidly with sudden death? Can anyone really think it
is going to be easy to bring Cermany to her knees in uncon-
Regraded Unclassified
101
- 6 -
litiona. surrender while her troops are planted within gurishot
of Creat Britain?
but because the Nazis promise, through their propaganda
bureau, to fold up; and because we'd like to get on with the
neace, too many of us are getting eager to sidetrack the main job.
Personally, I think it is serious enough to call for some-
body to no something; and I came here tonight because I think
you advertisers and advertising people who are already using
your talents and facilities and genius to make the American
people understand many of the facts of war, can ão still more.
I asked your help once before. Representatives of your
your came to las ington a year B. 0 and I told them, if I
recell correctly, that we were faced with the biggest selling
job in Mistory with practically no precedent to go on.
WAR
Through your dvertising Council, you secured the volunteer
help of the ablest advertising people in the United States
and the cooperation of advertisers and media, and went to work.
: think everyone knows what & splendid job has been done.
During the Third War Loan, advertisers sponsored 89,000
mévertisements in the daily newspapers - a total of 61,573,588
li 88, at a cost to themselves of more than six and one-half
illion dollars. Two-thirds of the advertisements were prepared
by the advertisers themselves, and one-third were prepared for
Regraded Unclassified
102
- 7 -
us by the War Advertising Council.
Throughout the Drive, I am told, practically all of the 10,000
wecklies carried advertisements which were paid for by one or
more local businesses.
In daily and weekly newspapers, business supported the
campaign with more than eight and one-half million dollars worth
of space.
On the radio you did a magnificent job. The National
Association of Broadcasters tells me 3,382 hours of radio time
and 200,000 announcements (valued at $12,000,000) carried
Third War Loan messages to the public, throughout the days
and nights of the Drive. Through the Allocation Plan and
additionally contributed time, advertisers played a most
important part. You gave us the use of your best radio audiences.
At least $3,000,000 in magazine space was provided by
advertisers and the magazines themselves. 250 general magazines,
56 farm journals and 450 business and trade magazines each
contributed a full page.
Advertisers and the Outdoor Industry provided by all odds
the most expansive outdoor showing of all time. I am told
this had a value of $1,700,000.
This 3 week campaign, provided by advertisers, would have
cost a commercial advertiser $30,000,000 -- 10 million dollars
n week:
Regraded Unclassified
103
- 8 -
A National survey made afterward revealed that 30" of
the people in the country knew about the Bond Drive, and
understood that extra Bond purchases were the measurement of
participation. This was an important contribution, for in
previous Drives, too much of the public took the position that
Whey don't mean me."
You see, therefore, something of the job advertising
has done.
You may be interested to know that my experience with
advertising in connection with this war started even before
the "Var Loans.
It started back in the days when those of 118 Wio felt
that an attack on the United States was inevitable, were trying
to zet the country ready to defend our shores against any
pressor. Our biggest job was trying to make the people see
that, as the President said, we couldn't simply climb into bed
and pull the covers over our heads.
In those days -- about four years ago -- Callup polls
pointed out that 92% of all Democrats and 94% of all Republicans
were sayin that we simply should not fight.
Yet steps had to be taken to protect ourselves -- steps
that worried some Americans because they thought we were
Regraded Unclassified
104
- 9 -
Inviting war; inviting war simply because we admitted its
peroach. But even then we had & good- idea of Mitler's
program. We felt sure he intended to take Britain in the
opelay of 1841, and then join forces with Japan and go to work
on 115 in the fall. And we could not be sure that this program
Pould not succeed.
Today everyone everywhere agrees that we were scheduled
on the aggressors' program as much as Poland, Ozechoslovakia,
or Britain. Dut things were different then.
_ven Dunkirk, and the Fall of France, did not arouse the
American people to 8. sense of the reality of the danger ahead.
Here was the very moment when the light of civilization in
Europe came nearest to dying, perhaps forever. The British were
desperate. Their entire future, their whole defense depended
upon getting materiel, and getting it quickly.
/inston Churchill had made it clear that equipment losses
et Dunkirk had been staggering. Britain needed everything --
artillery, ammunition, aircraft, and most of all rifles. Every
able-bodied man in England had to be prepared to fight off
invasion, but in all Britain there were no rifles for them,
and not much of anything else, and you can't stop Mazis with
stocks end stones.
Regraded Unclassified
105
- 10 -
The British needed help. Somehow, by some means, we had
to get them some rifles, and enough other equipment to pre-
para them for the invasion which seemed imminent -- and which,
if it had been imminent, almost certainly would have been
successful.
General Marshall, and a group from the War and Navy
Departments, came several times to my office to discuss what
might be done. After twenty years of peace, we had very little
equipment of any sort to use in fighting a war. But we felt
that if we dug deeply enough we could find some obsolete
materiel, and perhaps some equipment in private hands, that
would help out. Before long we found quite a collection of
usable materiel. For example, we found five hundred old 75
millimeter guns, and four hundred Thompson sub-machine guns
left over from the last war. The Navy turned up five thousand
obsolete 30 pound bombs and the Army found 560 hundred pounders.
Some place, we found 80 out-of-date torpedoes, and someone came
up with five hundred 38 caliber revolvers which antedated even
the first World War.
To arm the foot soldiers and the Home Guard, we managed
to dig up nearly a half million rifles. We might have added
to this several thousand more old Springfield 30-30's, but
there was no ammunition to be found anywhere in the world, and
the guns were no good without bullets.
NUTS (Mettugh - Leave space fn 6 mine lines day playe.
Regraded Unclassified
106
- 11 -
that was more important, we found that this equipment could
be sold legally to the British without involving the American
Government in an act of war.
when I look back over the last three or four years, I
think this meeting stands out above all else in my mind,
because the stakes were SO great. I am proud and happy to have
has & hand in arranging for this materiel to 8° to England in
her darkest me ent. I shudder a little to think of our cast-
off equipment being thrown into battle against the Nazi's
modern machinery of war, but it was certainly better than nothing.
Tritain was again armed, inefficient and meager though the
armament may have been, and civilization passed a crisis. But
it was 8. mighty narrow squeak.
It was back in these days when we were struggling to make
the public see what stark dangers lay ahead that American
advertising men first came to the aid of their Government. It
seemed obvious, at least to me, that the American people were
not getting the true significance of the news reports. They
die not see the approaching danger. Something more positive
had to be done. That something, it seemed to me, was some good,
factual, hard hitting advertising to help the people see and
feel what we were up against.
Regraded Unclassified
107
- 12 -
Not long after that, advertising began to appear. It was
vought 011- paid for by patriotic Americans who took upon them-
sleves the responsibility of making their friends and neighbors
ewere of the situation. They were written by some of you
Govertising men, I think, who are here tonight. You were
doneers then. You were pioneering the biggest job of public
information in history. And you were pioneering too in giving
advertising the dignity of social responsibility.
Obviously we could not continue indefinitely to find anti-
juated Luns and odd bits of equipment in private hands for
the British to buy and use. The time had come to take drastic
steps. We knew for example that 8. few months later there
would be a crisis in the British Navy; that with the rising
poher of the German Havy, Britain would have too few ships to
Befeno herself, let alone keep the invading Maxis in any kind
of check.
The public had to be made aware of this situation. The
majority of newspapers went to work on the problem editorially
and you prepared an advertising campaign that helped achieve
amazing results. That was only three months after Dunkirk, but
the Gellup box Score began to look much different than it had
before. Sixty percent of the American people stood solidly
back of the President in transferring over-aged destroyers to
Che British to help Volster their /av/. The neonle were be-
to SEC.
Regraded Unclassified
108
- 13 -
it few months later there was another educational job to
be done. azi IT boats were preventing our shipping from reaching
its vestination. It became necessary either to convoy our
reighters or simply to consign a good part of our materiel
to Havy Jones. An advertising campaign was planned
nof
to teil the public about the problem, and again you were
dolged by many influential editorial columns. I remember one
of the advertisements. It was headed "Okay, Mr. President, go
aliead and clear the Atlantic."
hat the President was able to do in a fireside chat, plus
west you were ablo to do, gained the support of e majority of
American voters behind the idea of arming and convoying our
ships. Fifty-five percent of the people backed the decision,
and only thirty-eight percent definitely opposed it. A few
weeks before, fifty percent of the people had been definitely
A ainst it and only forty-one percent were willing to see it
done. Here again was a victory for the policy of letting the
people know the facts.
Public sentiment is much improved now. Today the Nation
is not only solidly behind the war, but has gone on record
as wishing to take on a big share of the responsibility in
helping keep the world peace through world organization.
Regraded Unclassified
- 14 -
109
luch of this change was due to the Jap attack at Fearl
Merbor. But even while the Japs were pulling their sneak
attack, three out of every ten Americans still felt that it
was most important to stay out of the European war.
The striking reversal of public sentiment from narrow
irolationism to a complete acceptance of International responsi-
kility is 2 monument to mblic education. And some of you who
upe here in t is room, by writing and financing advertising
campaigns, he as much to do with that education over & period
If time 8.8 any other group of people.
Since the early days, .hen most of the work was done in
spare time by patriotic volunteers you have taken the war as
your professional assignment. It is no longer a spare time
operation. You are putting applying your best brains, - and converting
sizeable portions of your appropriations to this war information
job
This job which I want to repeat must be stepped up, not
tapered off, as we march toward Victory.
Some of this increased war information effort can and should
be channeled through bond advertising. Promoting bonds, I feel,
is a double-headed job. Half the job is raising money, but the
other half is maintenance of interest in this war, and what
it means to every American.
:e hit a high spot in this job, I believe, the day the
Toird War Loan opened, which also was the da: Italy surrendered.
Regraded Unclassified
- 15 -
110
3. wondered what the effect would be on the drive. I was not
long finding out. One of our State Chairmen called up and said:
"well, I wess the Third War Loan is off -- the war's over and
Mere's 10 need to raise money."
So we called in Ted Repplier of the Advertising Council.
"write us an advertisement that will stop this in its tracks,"
! told Repplier, and he went to work on a great advertisement.
You may remember it. It said: "Will the Surrender of Italy
mean a Tome Frunt Defeat?" Then, because of the smooth working
arrangement between your people and ours; the ad started running,
the next day, in 970 newspapers throughout the Ration. We
followed this up by telling the people the bitter truth about
our equipment losses in Sicily. We must have had a sobering
effect on a lot of people, because we didn't get any more phone
calls, and that particular surge of optimism soon faded away.
I want to make one more observation.
A year ago, I went to England. What I saw there gave me a
lot of inspiration, and a lot of confidence about the outcome
of this war. I came back knowing in my heart that we were going
to win. The British had survived the Blitz; the Russians had
stopped the German advance; we had halted the Jap drive in the
far East. Slowly and painfully the Allies were overtaking the
enemy's lead. Obviously, it would take a long time, but in
the end we would win.
Regraded Unclassified
- 16 -
111
./hen I returned from the front early this month, I still
felt sure we would win, but I felt far more grim about the war
than I did & year ago. I had an opportunity to discuss the
actual fighting and the nature of our enemy with many American
and British officers and men. I was civen a pretty clear
idea of the heroism required of our men when they face the tough,
fanatic Mazis, and as a. result I ac ieved & healthy respect for
the blood and sweat that goes into every foot of enemy ground
we take. And I found no evidence anywhere along the line that
we are near the end, unless the end should come through some
freak of circumstance.
I do not want to underestimato however, the effects that
the terrible defeats in Russia, or the destruction of Germany,
must have on the Mazi Home Front. That destruction must be
fantastic. In Italy I saw what bombs can do. I saw the Port
of Naples, lying in E. mass of ruins. I saw the Port of Palermo
in Sicily battered SO badly that one sizeable ship lay bigh and
dry on a. wharf, blown completely out of the water. But General
Patton assured me that Palermo was only three or four percent
destroyed. Hemburg has been seventy percent destroyed, the
Germans themselves admit, and several other Nazi cities have
received even more destruction.
Yes, it is conceivable that the Cermans can't take it. It
is possible that the same thing will happen that happened the
last time. .10 may be awakened 2018 morning by whistles and
Regraded Unclassified
112
- 17 -
Dells and newspaper boys selling extras.
But it is also possible that we can waste a great deal of
recious time thinking about that morning, and we can divert a
_reat deal of our energy into making ready for it, and then
find that it shows no signs of coming. And in the meantime,
good American young men are losing their lives trying to end
the war the hard way, because they have no choice except to do
it that way, or not at all.
I am glad that you and I have been partners so often in
the use of advertising in connection with this war. I have gone
over the whole story because I thought you would be interested
in it. I have liked working with you. I think you have estab-
lished a remarkable record. I think you have by concentrating
on the job to be done, and casting aside all thought of political
differences, immeasurably improved the stature of advertising.
out this is na funeral oration. Your job is barely begun.
And the job is going to get more difficult every week, and every
month, that the war wears on. Because we are going to get
tired. Everybody is going to get tired. We are going to want
peace and relief from the restrictions that war outs on what we
no, and what we eat, and what we have.
Regraded Unclassified
113
- 18 -
Unconditional surrender is a large order, and there may be
8. temptation to settle for less as the possibility of peace
approaches. I hope you will remember that. I hope you will
put your minds to doing something about it, and thus continue
the patriotic record that some of you started back in those
early days of Defense.
Regraded Unclassified
114
11/17/43
Last minute changes in final reading
copy.
115
GENTLEMEN:
I am glad to have this opportunity tonight to talk
to the Nation's leading advertising people, because I
have confidence in the ability of advertising men to
bring the facts of the war to the American public. And
today, perhaps more than at any time since the war began,
there is a vital job to be done on that front.
The dangerous dream of a quick end to this war
grows more serious every day. It 1s particularly
pressing right now. On every hand we see a surge of
activity to prepare for post-war, sometimes at the
expense of the vital job at hand. The stock market
decline
has been in a steady plunge ever since word first got
around that the Nazis are about to crack.
Regraded Unclassified
116
- 7 -
It is ideal for defensive action, because the Nazi
forces can hide high in the mountains, and fire on
our forces without being seen. And when they are
driven from one mountain, they need only to retreat
a few hundred yards to another and it is the same
thing all over again."
Since I left Dragoni, the Allied Armies have
managed to get fifteen miles closer to Rome. Five
bloody, hard-earned miles a week, that's all. But it
isn't the fault of our fighting men. They are tough
They've got what t takes tolick the nazio, man 6m man.
and in the pink of condition/ The fact is that no
Army in the world could move any faster. It will be
almost a miracle 1f we are in Rome before Christmas.
Regraded Unclassified
117
- 18 -
Here was the very moment when the light of
civilization in Europe came nearest to dying, perhaps
forever. The British were desperate. Their entire
future, their whole defense depended upon getting
materiel, and getting it quickly.
Winston Churchill had made it clear that equipment
losses at Dunkirk had been staggering. Britain needed
everything -- artillery, ammunition, aircraft, and
most of all rifles. Every able-bodied man in England
had to be prepared to fight off invasion, but in all
was oney a handful of
Britain there were NO rifles for them, and not much of
anything else, and you can't stop Nazis with sticks
and stones.
Regraded Unclassified
118
- 20 -
For example, we found 500 old 75 millimeter guns,
and 400 Thompson sub-machine guns left over from the
last war. The Navy turned up 5000 obsolete 30-pound
bombs and the Army found 560 hundred pounders. Some
place, we found 80 out-of-date torpedoes, and someone
came up with 500 38 caliber revolvers which antedated
even the First World War.
Patial
To arm the foot soldiers and the Home Guard, we
managed to dig up nearly a half million rifles. We
might have added to this several thousand more old
Springfield 30-30's, but there was no ammunition to
be found anywhere in the world, and the guns were no
good without bullets.
Regraded Unclassified
119
- 25 -
Sixty per cent of the American people stood solidly
back of the President in transferring over-aged destroyers
to the British to help bolster their Navy. The people
were beginning to see.
A few months later there was another educational
Job to be done. Nazi U boats were preventing our
shipping from reaching its destination. It became
necessary either to convoy our freighters or simply to
consign a good part of our materiel to Davy Jones.
To tees the public about the T you / developed
An advertising campaign was planned to tell the public
about the problem, And and Again you were helped by many
influential editorial columns. I remember one of the
advertisements. It was headed, "Okay, Mr. President,
go ahead and clear the Atlantic.'
Regraded Unclassified
120
- 30 -
So we called in Ted Repplier of the Advertising
& asked them to
Council. 1 "Write us an advertisement that will stop this
They
in its tracks," + tole Repplier, and he went to work
and ina fewhoms produced what I thank who
on a great advertisement. You may remember it. It said:
"Will the Surrender of Italy mean a Home Front Defeat?"
Then, because of the smooth working arrangement between
your people and ours, the ad started running, the next day,
in 970 newspapers throughout the Nation. We followed
this up by telling the people the bitter truth about
our equipment losses in Sicily. We must have had a
sobering effect on a lot of people, because we didn't
get any more phone calls, and that particular surge of
optimism soon faded away.
I want to make one more observation.
Regraded Unclassified
121
- 32 -
I had an opportunity to discuss the actual fighting
and the nature of our enemy with many American and
British officers and men. I was given a pretty clear
idea of the heroism required of our men when they face
the tough, fanatic Nazis, and as a result I achieved a
healthy respect for the blood and sweat that goes into
every foot of enemy ground we take. And I found no
evidence anywhere along the line that we are near the
end, unless the end should come through some freak
of circumstance.
I do not want to underestimate, however, the
effects that the terrible defeats in Russia, or the
destruction of Germany, must have on the Nazi Home Front.
Regraded Unclassified
122
- 34 -
But it is also possible that we can waste a great
deal of precious time thinking about that morning, and
we can divert a great deal of our energy into making
ready for it, and then find that it shows no signs
of coming. And in the meantime, good American young men
are losing their lives trying to end the war the hard
way, because they have no choice except to do it that
way, or not at all.
I am glad that you and I have been partners so
often in the use of advertising in connection with this
told you
war. I have gono over the whole story because I thought
you would be interested in it. I have enjoyed 1 liked working with you.
Regraded Unclassified
122
- 34 -
But it is also possible that we can waste a great
deal of precious time thinking about that morning, and
we can divert a great deal of our energy into making
ready for it, and then find that it shows no signs
of coming. And in the meantime, good American young men
are losing their lives trying to end the war the hard
way, because they have no choice except to do 1t that
way, or not at all.
I am glad that you and I have been partners so
often in the use of advertising in connection with this
told you
war. I have gono over the whole story because I thought
you would be interested in it. I have enjoyed liked working with you.
Regraded Unclassified
123
November 17, 1943
Dear Grace:
I thought you would be inter-
ested in seeing a copy of my letter
to Anna, which I sent her yesterday.
Yours sincerely,
H. m.J.
Miss Grace Tully,
The White House.
Enclosure: copy of letter to
Mrs. anna Roasevelt Boettiger dated 11/16/43
Regraded Unclassified
124
November 16, 1943.
Dear Anna:
I received your very interesting letter and
was delighted to know that you are still taking
such a "keen" interest in our war bond program.
During one of John's visits here he told
me about the Victory Square replica of Mount
Vernon end the Washington Monument and all of
the good work that had gone into this very
patriotic endeavor.
As you might well imagine, I have very
carefully avoided performing such tasks as you
suggest, but 80 long as they seem to have you
"on the spot" I will be more than pleased to
sign these citations for you. I do think, how-
ever, it is a bad precedent for your Father to
sign them as it would in all probability bring
B regular deluge of such requests and he cannot,
of course, hope to do this sort of thing under
his very trying schedule.
With all good wishes to you and the children,
I am
Sincerely,
(Signed) Henry
Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Boettiger,
Associate Editor,
Seattle Post Intelligencer,
Seattle, Washington.
airmal
Regraded Unclassified
125
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
November 16, 1943.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY:
I am enclosing herewith copy
of a reply which I have sent to Anna,
together with her letter to me.
Perhaps the Treasury could do something
to help her out. Will you be good
enough to let her know?
Grace Grace G. G. Tully Jully
Private Secretary
Enclosures.
126
November 16, 1943.
Dear Anna:
I have asked Steve about your letter
to me of November twelfth. He tells me that
we are getting many similar requests from many
cities and communities throughout each of the
forty-eight states and that it would be physi-
cally an impossible Job for the President to
comply with these requests. Some of them would
require a hundred or more signatures and in the
end the total upon the President would make it
impossible for him to do.
At Steve's suggestion, we are passing
your idea on to the Treasury people, hoping they
will be able to do something satisfactory and
which will not include or involve the President.
This takes to you and the children
my love.
Affectionately,
Grace G. Tully
Private Secretary
Mrs. John Boettiger,
Seattle Post Intelligencer,
Seattle, Washington.
Regraded Unclassified
127
Seattle Post Intelligencer
ESTABLISHED 1853
ANNA ROOSEVELT BOETTIGER
November 12, 1943
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Dear Grace:
For two years now the city of Seattle has held daily open air meetings in a
blook in the main section of town which has become designated as Victory Square.
John started this going right after Pearl Harbor and the primary goal of the meetings
is to sell war bonds and stamps to the public who attend. But, of course, in order
to sustain interest we have held programs entering into practically every phase of
the war effort.
In 1942 we had 180 programs and $6,500,000. in stamps and bonds was raised.
In 1943 we had 130 programs and $51,500,000. was raised. Quite a difference!
Novr the committee, which donates its time and keeps the Square running during
the good weather months, has decided that in order to sustain the interest of the
voluntary personnel they wish to present each one of them with a "recognition cita-
tion" which would read somewhat as follows:
Recognition Citation for Loyal Service at Victory Square-Seattle
To
Because of the devotion of time, thought and energy to a sincere purpose is the
most precious of gifts;
Because you have given this "stuff of self" so generously, so ably, so inspir-
ingly; Because Victory Square has made brilliant contributions to the welfare and defense
of our City, County, State and Nation under war through your efforts.
Believe, that you forever possess our esteem and the happiest wishes that can be
born of loyal service.
Under this they want the signatures of Henry Morgenthau, Jr. and our State, County,
City and Victory Square chairmen. But above all they want to know if father would
also take the time to sign them. There will be approximately forty to sign.
I have told them that I doubted very much and was practically sure that father
could not do this but as my say-so did not seem to satisfy them, I promised to write
you for an "official" answer.
See you soon!
Affectionately,
Anna
Miss Grace Tully,
Secretary to the President
P.S. - If you definitely know then ur the won answer 't have is
These House,
Testington, D. C.
to wait!
"no" just say ad now
Regraded Unclassified
128
November 17, 1943.
My dear General:
I was delighted to receive your letter today
informing me of the shipment of the captured
disabled German tanks.
I know of no single activity that will generate
more enthusissa amongst our good people here at home
than the exhibition of these accomplishments of your
glorious Fifth Army. You can be sure that the use
we put it to will be well worth your splendid efforts
in arranging this for us.
Thanking you again for the excellent treatment
I received at your hands, I an
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark,
Headquarters Fifth Army,
A. P. 0. #464, U. 8. Army.
Thereft
nRR
Regraded Unclassified
129
U.S. SECR
EQUALS BRITISH secret
HEADQUARTERS FIFTH ARMY
Office of the Commanding General
November 4, 1943.
Hon. Henry E. Morgenthau,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
During the time when you visited us recently you
said that captured disabled German tanks would be useful in
the War Bond Campaign, as they could be sold to the highest
bidder.
We have succeeded in collecting six German tanks
which were knocked out of action by the Fifth Army units
during the present campaign in Italy. Arrangements have been
made for them to be shipped this week on the "Poinsette".
They will arrive at some North Atlantic port in the United
States about December first, and will be marked for Secretary
of the Treasury, U. S. War Bond Drive. You can undoubtedly
follow up their arrival through the Transportation Service,
Army Service Forces, in the Nar Department.
It was a great privilege to have you here at my
headquarters, and I hope your entire trip was satisfactory.
With kindest regards and best wishes, I am
Yours MarkW.Clark, sincerely,
MARK W. CLARK,
Lieutenant General, USA,
Commanding
U.S. SECRET
EQUALS BRITISM SECRIT
Regraded Unclassified
2
Hgs
130
MEMORANDUM
November 17, 1943.
The incretary
ns
` Γ. Sullivan
I an attachine a memorandum Conmissioner Hannegan sent
me on the incrican Distilling Company situation. In have asked the
to propare a recomendation to close this loophole and to
submit that recommendation to Dr. Paul.
Chairman Canson Purcell of the STC tells me that 1.3.s
preliminary investigation indicates that the people who have been
Buying this stock were people in the liquor business who were interested
in obtaining the whiskey rather than the stock. I believe that the
entire liquor black market could be smashed with one change in the
Internal "evenue Code. Under present law distillers are allowed to
leave the Liquor in a bonded warehouse right years before they are
stated to pay the tax. No liquor incroves after more than four
MARS in wood. If the law were changed to require the distiller to
my the tax when the liquor had been in the honded warehouse four
years this would force out of the bonded werehouses about one hundred
illion callons. The release of such R large amount of liquor would
ice out the black market. situation over night.
Incidentally, if one hundred million mallons was withdrawn
at the new tax rate this would nean an additional alcohol tax collection
of one billion dollars. Further, it would materially increase the
income taxes of those engaged in the licuor business and insomuch as
they are now enjoying their greatest prosperity and are in the high
henckets, the additional yield through income taxes would be substantial.
I an convinced that the nove would be exceedingly popular throughout
the country.
Regraded Unclassified
131
AVICTORY
BUY
UNITED
treasury department
WAR
SONDS
TIAMPS
WASHINGTON 25
OFFICE OF
November 16, 1943.
MISSIONER or INTERNAL REVENUE
DEPLY TO
OF INTERNAL REVENUE
AND ALPER TO
TO:
MR. SULLIVAN
PROM:
LR. HANNEGAN
REA.
In re:
Sale of whisky to stock-
holders at one-half mar-
ket price.
According to an article in The Wall Street Journal, November 15,
1943, the Directors of American Distilling Co. have authorized the
sale of substantially all the company's bulk whisky to common stock-
holders on B. pro rata basis. The whisky, comprising about 245,000
barrels, will be offered to stockholders at the book value and cost
to the corporation. It is stated that the book value is equivalent
to approximately half of the O.P.A. ceiling price. The whisky is of
verious types.
With regard to the alcohol tax features, the spirits which the
American Distilling Co. proposes to distribute to its stockholders
are all in bond, that is, they are in internal revenue bonded ware-
houses and in the custody of internal revenue officers. The spirits
are not taxpaid. Distributees will not be permitted to obtuin physi-
081 possession of these spirits until they advance to the bonded
warehouseman the money required to pay the tax. Evasion of the dis-
tilled spirits tax cannot result from this distribution, and there
are no internal revenue lews or regulations relating to liquor which
prevent such distribution.
With regard to the income tax features, if property is trens-
ferred by B. corporation to a shareholder, or by an employer to an
employee, for an amount substantially less then its fair market value,
regardless of whether the transfer is in the guise of a sale or ex-
change, such shareholder or employee shall include in gross income
the difference between the amount paid for the property and the amount
of its fair market value to the extent that such 'difference is in the
nature of (1) compensation for services rendered or to be rendered or
(8) 8 distribution of earnings or profits taxable as a dividend, as
the 05.36 may be. In computing the gain or loss from the subsequent
sale of such property its basis shall be the amount paid for the
property, increased by the amount of such difference included in
gross income. (Section 29.21-1, Regulations 111.)
Regraded Unclassified
132
- 2 -
In re: Sale of whisky to stock-
holders at one-half mar-
ket price.
The quantity of the whisky involved (245,000 barrels) indicates
the possibility of 8. prearranged sale thereof to a third party. It
is the Bureau's position that where a corporation has sold or agreed
to sell property to outsiders the distribution thereof to stock-
holders who complete the sale is no more than a distribution to them
of the proceeds of the sale contract; the corporation realizes gain
or sustains a loss on e. sale, and the stockholders are in effect the
recipients of E. cash dividend. (Merten's, Volume I, paragraph 9.67.)
If the corporation, in the absence of B. prearranged sale to
others, were to distribute the whisky as B. dividend in kind to its
stockholders, rather than in the manner proposed by the American
Distilling Co., there would be no tax to the corporation but the
stockholders would pay a tax based upon the market value of the
whisky, or warehouse receipts received.
If the stockholders later have the corporation bottle the whisky
for them, the cost of the bottling if borne by the corporation would
not constitute an ordinary and necessary business expense. However,
reimbursement of the cost of bottling by the stockholders would not
constitute income to the corporation.
Regraded Unclassified
133
NOV 17 1943
Dear Mr. Shere:
In accerdance with the request of Assistant
Secretary Adolf 4. Berle, dres of the State
Department, dated November 5, 1945, you are hereby
appointed to represent the Treasury Department M
an expert on taxation on an official mission to
Haiti.
You will be a number of & @Gamission of
three representing the United States Government
which will conduct a survey for the purpose of
ascertaining possible ways in which both private
capital and governmental agencies might cooperate
for the purpose of developing cortain small
industries in Eaiti, particularly after the was.
It is expected that the commission will
depart for Haiti on or about the first of
December, 1945.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan. Jr.
Mr. Louis Share
Division of TAX Research
Treasury Department
Washington, D. Co
IN 11/12/43
Regraded Unclassified
134
NOV 17 1943
My dear Mr. Berle:
with further reference to your letter of
November 5, 1943, 1 am pleased to inform you
that the Treasury Department has assigned
hir. Louis shore, Assistant Director of the
Division of Tex Research, to be its representa-
tive on the commission which is to make an
industrial survey in Haiti.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan. J1
Denerable Adolf do Berle, Jr.
Assistant Secretary
State Department
Washington, D. C.
= 11/12/43
Regraded Unclassified
135
as
52650
NOV 17 1943
Dear
In necertance with your request, I have replicd
to Mr. Carlton 6. Dress, who - you a plan for the
premotion of post-mr receployment of service - and
- and I - enclosing a copy of w letter.
Affectionately,
(Signed) Henry
I I É
the Thise House
Inviewere
APLT:mab 11/15/43
Regraded Unclassified
136
52650
a
NOV 17 1943
year m. Breas:
Mrs. Receivelt has asked - to consider the plan presented
is your letters to her dated July x. 1943, and November 2, 1943,
and write to you about 12.
Year interest in the resupleyment of cervice - after the
war is intert protermartly. this Department is currently studying
ways is which, is its field of operations, as can father time
objective, and we are grad to get suggestions true interested
citisms.
Your plan, although outlined in terms of the Issuance of a
MV type of courtity, is in counte a tax plan, It calls to
treating M expense, for casess profite tax paryone, the -
not calle w corporations, for the resuployment of returning
envise - and - thesh a plan would in reality be & subsidy
to corporations for remploying service - and - thile
subsidies for this purpose night not be objectionable in principle,
11 should be noted that they would, in practice water current corpo-
ration Issue and - profits tax 1awa, affect corporations
sections 1 3 $ s I I
the greatest benefits in tax regission while these vidah nie -
prefits during the or years would reseive no adulty at all
homes they would have nothing against which to effect the
expense of setting - reseployment received. This differential
impact of the addition which the plan would provide presento the
added difficulty that as would tend to - as orderly return to
pensetine production al exployment. 10 would be to result
in receployment of returning - and - in injustries
which vere checkmally for wer purposes and which must
- or later ourtail their operations. This the solution of
1 10 I I 2 1 $ I
I 1 1 i I 1 I I I a
- properts, would - 180320 insentive or opportunity to
enjoyed 220030 - no warting profit. w which my here good yest- -
me-joet any adde I
Regraded Unclassified
137
- 2 -
Your interest in the problems which will confront service
non and - after the war is very mah approxiated.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr
Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. Carlton c. Prese
Vice President
1. Schumcher & Go.
60 Vest 40th Street
New Yesk, New Yesk
APLT:amb 11/15/43
Regraded Unclassified
138
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
November 11, 1943.
MEMORANDUM FOR SECRETARY MORGENTHAU:
Mrs. Roosevelt will appreciate
it if you will be good enough to
answer the attached letter from Mr.
Brose.
Malvina C. Thompson
Secretary to
Mrs. Roosevelt.
Regraded Unclassified
#139
Wanerly Fabrirs
52650
Division of F. Schumacher & Co.
CONVERTERS IMPORTERS MANUFACTURERS
OF DECORATIVE FABRICS
60 West 40th Street New York City
November
Second
1943
Ind In'
YES
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt
The White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear :rs. Roosevelt:
Many months ago I wrote you a letter and I received es reply
from one o: your secretaries to the effect that you would
answer it when you returned.
In my letter I submitted a plan which has had wide approved
with all the people with whom I have discussed it.
It is briefly this.
1. The Government to issue non interest bewring
bonds.
2. These bonds to e sought by corporations and
consilere! 8. an expense.
3. Corporations would be permitted to Juy these
bonds on a basis of 8 thousand dollar bo:.d
per employee in the service er year.
4. These bonts could be called and t.e .oney
used to hire and 08 returning service sen
and women.
I know you have piles an: piles of mail, out : world 11ke it
very nuc.. ir you would real my letter and let :.e know
you think of it.
very sruly Wurs
rose
Carlton rose
Vice resident
5. & CO.
CCB/MB
"We aim to produce the best possible merchandise at the lowest possible price"
Regraded Unclassified
140
Waverly Fabrics
Division of F. Schumacher & Co.
CONVERTERS - IMPORTERS MANUFACTURERS
OF DECORATIVE FABRICS
60 West 40th Street New York City
July
Twenty-sighth
1943
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt
The White House
Washington, D. C.
prepared:
Dear Mrs. Roosevelt:
Have given consiterable thought to the problem that will be
created by returning men and women now in the Service of of Our
Country and believe I have an idea which will solve 75,6
ti.15 very serious problem.
: an presenting this 11ea to you because I admire and respect
- or Juigment and : know you will use it to advantage in your
newspaper articles If you consider it worth wille.
been reuting in the papers daily of lurge of money to
below e set aside by corporations for reconversion of plunts
rence time operation - yet no have Jeen realing nothing of these
9878 corporations setting aside large sums of money for
recenversion of nen ----- and it is about time we started
of people da being more important than trings.
:- is this. It is proposed that the Government by issue non
Internet plan bearing bonds. These bonds could be bought
corporations in the Service of Our Country -- say $1,000.
to the extent of an arbitrary amount per year per
100 se boxis 1. over in exact relation to the amounts paid out
:.. envioyee could be cashed by the corporations owning this to after
ervice WIT evioyees who have returned and are again working.
with which the corporations purchase these bonds deducted would
be " . noney lineed 83 expense and for this reason would be
from net profit before calculating taxes.
Regraded Unclassified
141
2
While it is true that this would cut down - to some extent - the
taxes that the Government received, it would actually increase
the amount of cash passed on to the Government and taken out of
circulation because most corporations would buy more bonds for
this purpose than the percentage of tax that would apply on the
monies involved.
A careful check of corporation statements will disclose the
rising tide of cash in the bank, cash that would flow in great
volume to the Federal Treasury for these bonds - the purchase
of which would be deflationary.
The provision now made in the tax laws granting a post war credit
for this purpose is obviously ridioulously inadequate.
Am sure the morale of our men in the Service would be immeasurably
improved if they knew they would be assured of good jobs that will
pay them at least the amounts they were earning before the war
started for a period of several years after their return.
Would like very much to know of any objections to the plan or if
you think it worth while.
Very-truly yours
Carlton C. Brose
Vice President
F. SCHUMACHER & CO.
CCB/MB
Regraded Unclassified
AMERICAN RED CROSS
NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
WASHINGTON 13,D.C.
November 17, 1943
Monorable
Bell
liver
Secretary of the Treasury
ington, D. C.
Dekt Mr. Bell:
Permit me to refer to the letter of October 22, 1943, written by
Chairman to you regarding a suggestion of the Secretary of the Treasury
have Red Cross workers stationed at Goosebay Base in Labrador.
I hope both the Secretary and you will be interested to know that
190 Red Cross workers,
Miss Josephene Lambert, Recreation Worker
and
Miss Mary Harper Tewksbury, Staff Assistant
have been assigned to that station. They arrived there on November 15, 1943,
and are at the moment occupied in setting up a suitable program.
With renewed appreciation and thanks to the Secretary for calling
Ohio need to our attention, I am
Sincerely yours,
Richard F. Allen
Vice Chairman
Insular and Foreign Operations
ENROLLMENT FOR SERVICE
JUNIOR RED CROSS ENROLLMENT CAMPAIGN. NOVEMBER 1-15, 1943
Regraded Unclassified
143
Treasury Department
Office of the Under Secretary
Date: 11/3
To:
Mrs. Klotz
From:
The Secy. might like to see this as he
raised question of Red Cross girls at Goosebay
Base.
(initialled) DWB
144
AMERICAN RED CROSS
National Headquarters
Washington, D. C. 13
October 22, 1943
The Monorable
DE ... Bell
Under Secretary of the Treasury
washington, D. C.
Dear Dan:
Thank you for your letter of October 20 in which you pass on to
us the suggestion which the Secretary made that it would be well for the
American Red Cross to have a couple of Red Cross girls stationed at the
Copsebay Base in Labrador.
You will be interested to know that Mr. Arthur Sulzberger, who
returned e short time 8.0 from a trip abroad, made the same suggestion and
following his suggestion, we sent a special representative to Goosebay to
talk the matter over with the commanding officer. As a result, the com-
-anding officer expressed his desire that the Red Cross send two Red Cross
sirls to Goonebay to operate a club facility.
Because of agreements which we reached some eighteen months ago
with the Army which provide that special permission must be gotten from
the har Department for the establishment of facilities in the Western
Hemisphere, this matter is now going through official channels and will be
Landled promptly by the American Red Cross if a favorable decision is
given.
Thank you for calling this to my attention. Perhaps by the time
the Secretary returns from his present trip, the decision will be reached
und action will have been taken by the Red Cross.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Norman E. Davis
Chairman
Regraded Unclassified
145
October 20, 1943
Dear Mr. Davis:
As you know, the Secretary is now in North
Africa and on his way passed through Goosebay,
Labrador. Fe wanted no to say to you that it
would be an excellent thing if you would place a
couple of Red Cross girls at this station. He
seems to think there is 8. great need because of
the many planes going over this route.
It is something you might want to discuss
with the Army people.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) D. N. Bell
Honorable Norman E. Davis,
Chairman,
American Red Cross,
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Unclassified
146
SECRET
SECRET
WAR DEPARTMENT
PARAPHRASE CF INCOMING MESSAGE
From:
Coosebay Labrador
To:
War
No.:
768, 13 Cotober 1943
From Morgenthau for Dan Dell, Treasury Department.
In about B. week from now, please inform Norman Davis
that in my opinion they could use to & ood advantage a couple
of Red Cross girls at Goosebay Labrador.
Action:
Gen. Strong (for Treas. Dept.)
Information: OPD, SGS
Cm-In-7549, 13 Oct. 1943
Copy 9
SECRET
Regraded Unclassified
146
SECRET
SECRET
WAR DEPARTMENT
PARAPHRASE OF INCOMING MESSAGE
From:
Goosebay Labrador
To:
War
No.:
788, 13 October 1943
From Morgenthau for Dan Bell, Treasury Department.
In about 8. week from now, please inform Norman Davis
that in my opinion they could use to & good advantage EL couple
of Red Cross girls at Goosebay Labrador.
Action:
Gen. Strong (for Treas. Dept.)
Information: OPD, SGS
Cm-In-7549, 13 Oct. 1943
Copy 9
SECRET
Regraded Unclassified
147
November 17, 1943
Dear Elmer:
I wish to acknowledge receipt
of your letter of November 15, which
I have read with interest.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) Henry
Mr. Elmer Davis, Director
Office of War Information,
Washington, D. C.
P.S. d have not yet received any
information from the Budget.
for
Regraded Unclassified
148
OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
November 15, 1943
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Tressury
The Treasury Department
Dear Mr. Secretary:
I have asked the Director of the Budget to send
you B. copy of our budget for your information, as you re-
quested, since we have only working copies here.
In connection with our North African operation
may I repeat for the record what I told you Saturday morn-
ing -- that we have in the entire Mediterranean theater and
on the way to it about 160 men, though these are part of a
combined American and British, military and civilian organi-
zation of some 800, whose executive officer is the local
director of OWI. Às to the quality of their work I can cite
the following cablegram received from General Eisenhower
through the Chiefs of Staff on October 7: "The capture of
Naples seems a suitable occasion for sending you a message
of appreciation for the work of the Psychological Warfare
Branch, which consists of OWI, oss, PWE and MOI- In the
campaign in Tunis, then in Pantelleria and Sicily, and now
in the invasion of Italy PWB has made its contribution as
an integral part of the fighting forces, and I look forward
to & continuance of valuable work by this organization. No
less important has been the propaganda in the North African
base area and the occupation propaganda in Sicily and certain
regions of Italy, where PWB, working in the closest coopera-
tion with the Civil Administration (in Africa) and the
Military Government Section (in Sicily and Italy) has made
a great contribution to the friendly and cooperative at-
titude of the local populations."
To this testimony by the Commander-in-Chief may
be added that of General McClure, which is to be found on
pp- 1251 ff. of the hearings on the supplemental appropria-
tion bill, enclosed herewith. Inventure to suggest that
the opinions of the general officer most immediately
associated with our work, and of the communder who has the
FORVICTORY
most vital interest in its success, are worthy of some
BUY
consideration.
UNITED
STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
Edwardans Very truly,
STAMPS
Attachments
Elmer Davis
Director
Regraded Unclassified
149
November 13, 1943
Mr. Harold Smith
Director
Bureau of the Budget
Dear Herolds
Secretary Morgenthau
has asked me for a copy of the OWI
budget 80 that he can see how the
money raised by his bond programs
is being spent. Will you be good
enough to send him a copy of the 1944
budget as approved by Congress last
summer and a copy of the supplemental
request for an additional $5,000,000
contingency fund which is now pending?
We have only working copies in this
office. Many thanks.
Cordially,
Elmer Davis
Director
GBarnesictw
ce: margenthan
Regraded Unclassified
SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1044 1251
150
propriations, therefore, for both of these services should be con-
8. red not only with reference to the immediate needs of these serv-
ices but also the essentiality of these services to the successful working
of a volunteer system under which the resources of the country are
mobilized for replacing our veterans successfully in civil life.
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1943.
PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE, CENSORSHIP, AND PUBLIC
RELATIONS, ALLIED FORCE, NORTH AFRICA
STATEMENT OF BRIG. GEN. ROBERT A. McCLURE, UNITED STATES
ARMY, ALLIED FORCES HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AFRICA
The CHAIRMAN. The subcommittee has before it a budget estimate
of $5,000,000 for the Office of War Information for its contingency
fund to be used for carrying on activities in conjunction with actual
or projected military operations in the various theaters of the war.
We are very fortunate in having with 118 this morning Brig. Gen.
Robert A. McClure, from Allied Force Headquarters, who has just
returned from north Africa and who returns to north Africa to-
morrow.
It has been suggested that General McClure might be in a position,
by way of preliminary consideration of this item, to give us some in-
formation as to the relation of military operations to the Office of War
Information operations and procedure over there,
General McClure, we are very glad to have you with us. You may
proceed, on or off the record.
Discussion off the record.)
(
The CHAIRMAN. How long were you in north Afrien?
General MOCLURE I joined General Eisenhower's staff in north
Africa in the middle of December and was given the assignment to
organize a staff section to handle psychological warfare. public rela-
tions, and censorship. 1 have all three of those nctivities under me
now,
The CHAIRMAN. I believe you are, like our colleague, Mr. Landlow,
a citizen of the Hoosier State of Indiana?
General McCLURE. Yes, sir.
(Discussion off the record.)
Mr. SNYDER. General, you might give no your service record by
way of introduction.
General MCCLURE. I am # professional soldier, Prior to getting
into this war I Was assistant military attnché and Inter military
attaché in London. When General Eisenhower organized his head-
quarters I became G-2, chief of intelligence. and left there in the mid-
dle of December and joined his stall in north Africa, where I organ-
ized the section known as the information and censorship section, of
which psychological warfare is one of the branches. In the north
African theater psychological warfare operates directly under the
commander in chief; that is, under military control and supervision.
It is an integrated unit, and our personnel, funds, and equipment
Regraded Unclassified
1252 SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1044
SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1944 1253
come from both British and American sources, Within the payet
readered, and used ILF their passes through the lines the leaflets we
logical wartsm branch we have the British Political Warfare
16 dropped, calling for their surrender, Using that instance
the Ministry of Information, and their military and naval personnel.
only as an answer to your question, I should any the propaganda
On the American side WG have the O, W. L, 5 number of military
we have und there has kept a number of soldiers from shooting at
personal, and a few Office of Strangic Service personnel that are a
us, and thereby saved the lives of our DWII troops.
part of this organization. It lume its identity largely as O, W. L,
Mr. SNYDER As we go through Italy, do you think this type of
P. E. W., or wither as British or Americant and that is a point
work will become more usefull
I have insisted on that it be Allived, and that neither British nor
General Yes, I do, sir,
American interests be produminant. Our efforts there under General
Mr. SNYDER Is General Elsenhower in complete accord and sym-
Einsthower are essentially nn Allied effort.
pathy with the activities you are carrying on through O. W. I.i
The activities of the P. W. B. (peychological warfare branch)
General McCture Yes, I think 1 can speak for him in that, be-
have the W. 1. as the dominant part at far as personnel, equipment,
cause 1 am a member of his staff, and le lane told me he was satis-
and par nil are concerned. P. W. 11. activities consist of three spheres.
fied.
(Disension off the record.)
The CHAIRMAN, The activities and operations of O, W. I. are
The CHAIRMAN. What have you to any about the effectiveness of
entirely under the direction and control of the commanders in charge
O. W. I. activities at the front, General McClure?
of the military nives and of the chiefs of staff at the front, are they
General I Am convinced that they are particularly effec-
not?
time and have ende an important contribution to our military effort.
General McClune. They are directly under the control of General
The CHAIRMAN Winst criticism have you to make, or what sig-
Eisenhower's headquarters. We docontralized the Army commanders
gestions have you la make, regarding the operations of O. W. I. at
by attaching these people to them, but they are not permanently
the fromt at the present time?
assigned to these organizations.
General I have no criticism of them. I am partien-
The CHAIRMAN. Insular as they relate to military operations at the
larly national with their cooperation und the help they are furnish-
front nt this time, they are quite an effective part of the military force,
lingt TML
under the direction and control of the military authoritiest
The CHARDMAN, You have no suggestions which might be uffered
General McCrunt. That is surrect.
for any improvement of 0. W. operations at the front?
Mr. Luisow. At the expense, probably, of being repetitions, I
General McCrung 1 have not, sir.
should like to ask you this question, because I think it is important
Mr. Symma Me. Chairman, it was my privilege and opportunity
and is information we would like to have 1 would like to ask General
In have General McClure escort me in London when I was there in
McClure what he thinks of what O. W. I. in doing in reference to
November, and be also presented BE to Prime Minister Churchill. I
its foreign activities, as to its value to the contialities of the service:
know the high esteem in which they hold him over there, and I am
General I can only speak for the north African theater.
glad to know lse was placed in this position in north Africa, nf
Their foreign activities there have been very helpful to 154 and al the
Card Blanca,
lent time he are quite entiefied with them, and we certainly wieh
1 would like took General McClure two or three questions,
them to continue,
Wish did you go to North Mrien, General!
Mr. LunDow. Would you suffer a great los if you were deprived of
General Mi Cui In the middle of December,
those services!
Mr. SNVIAL December 19127
General McCLUBE I think we would, sir.
General McCuse Yes, in
Mr. Lundow. This is probably 8. protty brand question, and that
there? What was the general
Mr. SNYTOR What Was the wt-up of O, W, I, when you went
is with reference to the propaganda service generally. It seems to
me you have a very power instrumentality to use against the enemy
General Initially The activities were sproad in three
in a theater of operations through propagands, but it seems to me
persons where We nurle OUT landlings, It was hilf has well coordinated
we are not using that ne much as We should in order to get the bot
at that time and is haik a little time to 201 those widely wattered
results. I wonder what you think about that.
notivities, each enviewhat independent, together into a smooth work-
The Atlantic Charter, of course, is a very idealistic instrument,
ling team. It Wills a RUW experience for all of le and we simply had
couched in very general terms
In learn the hand Way,
What would you think if it were possible for the United Nations
Mr. SXYDEN. Do you think that 0, W. 1., as it has leen operated
to get together on A more definite statement of peace aims, as to just
in North Africa, Sicily and Italy since its inception, has saved the
what we might expect in the way of benefit to people of occupied
lives of American large to any extent? If you did lud have O, W. L,
countries, nº a bosis for further propaganda efforts!
would there lurve been Divre lives last, without the deja we have
General McCLURE. 1 do not know that I am qualified to answer
taken thas fart
General 1 can only date my opinion, and I would
that, sir,
Mr. Luniow. Is there not a great deal of splitting off of Usese Axis
definitely, "Yes," Illustrative of that is the fact that A number say
peoples from their tyrannical governments If they could get IL more
of Axis soldiers, Italiane and Germans, have comm in and sur-
complete and better understanding of the better world that we are
1254 SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION 1945
SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1944 1255
trying in being about after this conflict in ener, the turire we
gri first improved upon them, in unit that an important contribut
deneral McCrose 1 have personally come in contact, certainly at
If intervals, with about 75 percent of them. I am in intimate con-
to the war effort?
General MBC 1 should think it WILL definitely; you, sir. In 4
lact with probably 15 percent of them, and in daily contact with
several.
small way we are trying to do that in the occupied territory,
Mr. It section to me, an in my own spinion, that you could
Mr. TABIR. And what were the types that you vame in contact
with-that is what was their activity
very well utilize a more definite statement of peace aims than the very
General McCLURE Of the large timiler I stated there, some 75
idvalistic mud time principles of the Atlantic Charter.
percent, they migrd through all of the activities of O. W. L., because
(Discusion off the record.)
Mr. TARKH. General McClure, we have been weing reports in the
I attempted to knep at loast stughtly familiar with the details of their
operation, but necessarily devote most of my time to matters of policy.
papers every day of broadnasts un the German radio indicating Ger-
Now, of those on the policy level and creative level, with whom I
man withdrawals and lowers in Russin. 1 was ruther surprised, in
deal, there is Mr. Jackson, who is a senior O, W. 1, man there, the
view of that fast, to hear you my that you did not believe the German
radio program directors, leaflet writers and producers, the script
people were getting information (La to the events nn the Russian front.
writers, news burenü chief, propaganda intelligence personnel, and,
For a considerable time we have been getting reports in the daily
of course, the team chiefs who are actively with troops in the field and
prese and liver the radio of the by the German radio
in all occupied areas.
with reference to the Remian campaign that have preveded the Rue-
Mr. TARKE What ain you call A team?
sian antioncements, and many lines they have told a story that was
General McCure. The group we will and up with the Army we
were, from the German priof of vium, then the Russian announce-
call a team. They furnish these five services that I mentioned to you.
ment later. Have you noticed Chart
Mr. TADER How many are there in your own set-up?
Gowrd I have noticed that necesional tendency lately;
General McCLURE In P. W. B, Psychological Warfare-
yes, ein.
Mr. TABER. I given the set-up you have representing General Eisen.
Mr. TABEL Is il possible that the do not got to the
hower.
Cirroon people!
General McCLURE Well, that includes Public Relations, Censurship,
General McCLUDE Some of the German beondenste that are sent
civilian and military, and Psychological Warfare. Each of those
RAJE in Morse sudo are for external consumption and are not neces-
three is an integrated Deitish-Anserican allied team.
mily resived. broadcas to the German prople for sets on which they can be
(After discussion off the record:)
Mr. TABER. Now, suppose you give us this picture: As to Censor-
Mr. TARK Do you know whether these Insulcasts are in German
ship, is that or in that not envired by O.W. 1. in their Foreign Branch!
IIF in English, up how they are pail out?
General McCLURE, No.
General They broadeast in several different languages
Mr. TABER That is up to the Army!
and you would have to take any particular item you might read
Veneral McCure. O. W. I. has nothing to do with censorship, va-
find its course. That miglis give you NIIDO delinite information a
A self-censorship, which We espect of all agencies. 1 uness they
the amilive the Germans expected be reach,
tensor their own programs and then submit them to our reason.
Mr. Woomme, In any event, pared of Une Inmidents spenking of
Mr. TABER Now, the Foreign Language Group that you time are
German of them us planned strategie withirawals.
made up about how Are they made up out of your force, or out of
They de me speak of them in the light of military defense In must
the O. W. I. force, or both?
of Hume German brondonts that [ have noted they culue them in their
General McCLURE. Both, sir. When you spesk of "my" forea,
unn advantage, In not that must
O. W. I. in one part of it, and the British counterparts are in it, also,
Goneral Cream, Yes: I don't think that that in true,
Mr. TABER. As to these foreign-language people, that is, the une
Mr. Twom. The German people are intelliged enough to know
who brondeast in " foreign language or get together script in foreign
that - withdrawal penerally represents a defent, are they not? Our
language, are they mostly your own people?
drainstion prople are intelligent enough to know that if We WPIV making with-
General McCLURE. Yes, largely our own people, either furnished
they fini of Italy right INW that no world regard it ne a défent, a are
by the British or by the United States, or hired by us from local
sources. We hire French, or Italians, or whatever may be necessary
General Yes: our people would,
Mr. TIME think NO,
or desirable for part of that work.
Mr. TABER Of course you ennnot hire Germans with a great desl
number picture of the resurd, BA you are able. with reforence to of the a
Mr. Tame for Now I north like to have you give No . little hit
of safety; I appreciate that. That is correct, is it not?
General McCure. Yes, sir.
(The question was of the mard.)
O, W. -Employees in Truly of the nameme
Mr. TABER. How do you handle three German-language broadensts?
General McCLURE. We requisition our personnel from O. W. 1.
Mr. Trues, Of the number altogetive emigned to General
be the British P. W. E. and they furnish Chem. From what militor
cour lower's in entitact with? what peremitage of them lineo you personally
they get them. how carefully they are checked, and all that, we do
not know I
Regraded Unclassifie
SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1944 1257
1256 SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1944
ask the question: Does your propaganda deal with important
Mr. TABER. You do not handle that yourselft
General McCLURE. We estinot do it in the field.
Stary operations!
General McCLURE. That is our major concern: yes, sir, in the field.
General McCLURE No, sir. We let them de that and fornish las
Mr. TABER You have not the facilities!
Mr. LAMBERTSON. I got the impression from earlier hearings there
was a broader field of propaganda that préceded the Army quite in
with qualified personnel.
Mr.TAnam. Now. did your como back from the front for the purpose
advance.
(The question was answered off the record.)
of this conference heret
Mr. LAMBERTSON. I have no question it has been effective in France--
General Oh, by BIT means, sir.
Mr. TABER. Now, BY WB on through Italy to the north, how do
German propaganda and our propagands-and maybe in Italy; but
I get it that the activities of O, W. 1. might be of more value than
propaganda bax never affected the English from the Germans, and
they have been in the paid? You told that to somebody. 1 wondered
propaganda has never affected the Germans from the English, BO far
58 we can toll, has it? Is there any evidence that propaganda has
how that could be,
affected the English from Germany, or that English propaganda into
(The question was answered off the record.)
Mr. TABRA. Now, them operations that you are handing up over
Germany has affected the Germans, that we know of, to date!
General McCLURE I am afraid I cannot answer that.
there are presently Branced not of Regular Army appropriations,
Mr. LAMBERTSON. Well, my own answer to Mr. Ludlow's question,
are they not!
about the illumination of the "four freedoms" is that there in not any
General McCure. A pari of them are.
illumination of them. The Allied Nations won't agree on it, so that
Mr. TABER How else?
General MeCcuse Through O. W. I. appropriations and by the
we might know what they have in mind.
Mr. Drerer. General, does the authority of your command permit
British. Mr. Tabra, Well, O. W. I. is simply financing the personnel that
of & determination of the type and the method to be resurted to in
propaganda ne it operates on the foreign front) Are you a policy-
it contributest
General McClune That is right, air, plus equipment.
making officer, in other words?
General MCCLURE Yes, sir.
Mr. TAMER And the British finance the personnel that they con-
Mr. DITTER. Or are you a vehicle through which policy formulated
tributet
at some other source is carried out!
General Correct, plus equipment.
General McCLUME. We are the policy-making group. Although, of
Mr. THERE The Invilities are largely being financed, or restoration
course, policies communicated to iss through the Combined Chiefs of
of facilities in being financed by the Armyl
Staff are carried out as a part of our program. These policies are the
General Sure of Harry. We requisition supplies from
broad over-all ones.
0, W.I. and Ilin Reitish P. W. just the AATHO no WE requisition them
Mr. DIFFER. As to propagandal
from the Army. It has been novemary, due to flue eninifications of
General McCLUIn. As to propaganda.
this job and the uneretainties, to get supplies from any source wb
Mr. Dreten. In other words, you determine the type of propaganda
WII nus find the exist.
that is to be used and then, in turn, convey that command to others
Mr. TAMER Ithink that is all I have,
to be formulated and put into being; is that it?
Mr. General, I WIII interested in your comment on
General McClure. That is correct, sir, insofar as it affects our local
how much your fels had levn contributed to the in Italy, and so
on, in the light of a statement maile by William L. Shirer, n. month
theater. Mr. DITTER. Does that command permit you to determine yourself
OF ⑉ herk. with which you may n° may not be fumiliar, where Mr.
who will be identified with the agency that is projecting the propa-
Shirer siys in part that-
mediate command are subject to your decision and determination
ganda! In other words, in the military field, the men under your im-
- during the on vruria) lass between Inly 25 and
September 1. need the the winig no communication with the
General McClure- That is right.
min Insign win mag to support. to Instruct them on a
Mr. DIFFER. And in the dignified position you presently hold, you
any unful nile they might have player And 144, - Mr. Churchillt disclosed
last week. Ure DEPARTMENT afford in mes aver the our side as early as
determine the staff officers you are to have and then what will be
August 15, That the tax nations of The Dialism perside wanted in enime over
can their responsibility for carrying out the command you may make. Is
them 19.11 les nn dnuht. They - to time loves humany the lestructions neid
that some privilege accorded to you for personnel identified with the
enversignment. Time el smill II was too Into, until the Germans bad
Unite hold un the emintry,
propaganda agency!
General McCLURE. That is correct: yes, Any personnel-
Would you disagree violonity with that statement
Mr. DIFFER. Civilian and military!
(The spinstion was answered off the resiol.)
General McCLURE. Right. Any 0. W. I. civilian over there now
Mr. I de THE think I have any forther questions.
that 1 no longer wanted, all I would need to do is to communicate that
Mr. T Was interested in the questions Mr. Ladlow
to Mr. Davis, and I am quite sure the individual would come home
naked, General, and the fact they were not very well answered, about
the Mamination of the Adantic Charter and O. W. I., which makes
very quickly.
Regraded Unclassified
SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1944 1259
1258 SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFESSE APPROPRIATION, 1044
Mr. Dremat. Now, te your command restricted to north Afriem
(oreign prem of the countries in which we are operatingt There
we distinct flokls, are there noti
does in extend into the Sicilian and Italian compaign?
General CLUBE They are overlapping fields, sir.
General McClure It extende into Italy.
Mr. DIFFER. Well, to what extent would our men be reading the
Mr. DITTER Do you have a similar of enther, does your
foreign press?
authority extend to the whole of the European theater?
General McCoune. They not only read it, but also information that
General McCrane Not the European theater, limit the north African
comes in from the United States, from any source, information that
Theater. Mr. Derren. Is there any other military man responsible for the
comes in daily from O, W. 1. news bulletins, and so forth, is furnished
the Stars and Stripes as well as the foreign press, and they use it,
situation there and having the seme degree of anthority which you
Mr. DITTER. I have just the simple subject before use, and I am
exercise in the African thenter?
wondering what its military value would be. It was called A New
General I eannot answer for the London set-up, sin.
World Arises in the United States. Did you happen to have 5. chance
Mr. DITTEL Would your artivities put you in contact with
in see that?
the foreign press in the BEPAR under your consiment?
General MCCLURE. I have not seen the article.
General Yes, Fir; very definitely.
Mr. DITTER. Then you cannot pass an opinion on the military value
Mr. DITTER. In other words, would you be privileged in examine
of that particular piece, can you!
from time to time the press of the sections through which your com-
General McCure. No, sir.
mand extend-the foreign press?
Mr. TABER. Would you know who made the announcement of the
General McCLURE You mean the Italian or French press?
Italian surrender on the 8th of September, I think?
Mr. DITTER Well, whatever press might be there.
General McCLURE Who made the annomement, wirl The an-
General McCLURE. Yes, we do HI, We furnish them information
insidepment was started by General Eisenhower's statement.
and we censure the press,
Mr. TARER. That was an authoritative statement from General
Mr. DITTER And does time permit of your personal examination of
Eisenhower!
the type of propagands that is carried in that foreign pres? I as-
General McCLURE. Yes: a transcription.
sume you have . rather leavy demand apons your time and your
Mr. TABEL That passed through your hands?
ability.
General McClure Right. Our personnel made the transcription,
General I do not personally examine the foreign press,
carried it and put it on the air.
except the French,
Mr. TABER. Now, who was it in O. W.I., if I an correct, that made
Mr. DIFFER. For instance, do your have the opportunity and time
the statement about Itely's "moronic little king"!
to sean the foreign press (Le it may circulate in the areas through
General McCLUBE 1 have no idea. It did not come from our
which your communal extende?
theater.
General McCusse Not I der not, air, although I have an analysis
Ir. TARER. It did not name from your theater!
of it presented to nic.
Jeneral McCrame. Definitely not.
Mr. DITTER Are your familier with the type of information distrip-
Mr. Off the record.
vited from the New York office of O. W. 1. to the foreign press corre-
(Disenssion off the record.)
quedents of the country for insertion in the prvse abroad?
Mr. RABAUT. Off the record.
General McCiume I [see see that which coows in to us five distribution
(Discussion off the record.)
in the French or the Italian press: yes, sie.
The CHAIRMAN. Did I understand you to may that you did not have
Mr. DITTER. Are you prepared to make an appraisal of its military
sufficient service of this character in your area and that your could
value, as it has come to your attention? or theme that you have wen,
use additional personnel and additional O. W. 1. survice?
do you think they have military value?
General MCCLURE That is correct, sir: and we have made requisi-
General McCi CHE I cannot noswer whether they have military
tion on Mr. Davis for that.
valor, Inst news in the field, particularly in an activé theater, is very
Mr. DITTER. May I ask just another question! General, a distin-
exential, There has been a erying noed for it on the part of nur
guished group of United States Senators visited sme of the fronts
soldiers and certainly by the foreign press, the French press.
last summer. Did they have an opportunity of visiting with your
Mr. Dirma. Now, les us differentiate between the two, General, I
command?
am nid thinking of the projection of perpaganda for our own men;
General McCLUBE. They did, sir,
1 am thinking of the projection of propaganda in the foreign press,
Mr. DIRTER. To what extent did they have an opportmity of mak-
in the areas coming tituler your eximmand, They are two distinct
ing an appraisal of conditions that existed in and about your com-
firbls, are they tudi
General McCline Yrs, sie
mand! General McCLURE They had conferences with, not only myself, but
Mr. Derre In other words, there in certain informational work
my staff, and they did look into O. W. L activities there during their
being done, and very properly an, for the mintenance of morale and
stay, sir.
informational purposes, of sur own men. Now, that is a distinct field,
is it not-entively distinct from that which la belong projected Into
Regraded Unclassified
1260 SUPPLEMENTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE APPROPRIATION, 1044
Mr. DITTER. So that the privilege was accorded to them of mal
o
an appraisal?
General MCCLURE. Yes.
Mr. RABAUT. Do you not think that we ought to have what sort of
comment they made with regard to that?
Mr. DITTER. It would be out of order for me to quote a Senator.
Mr. RABAUT. What was said on the occasion of (heir visit?
General McClure. None of the Senators indicated to me their at-
titude toward 0. W. L as a result of what they learned in north
Africa.
Mr. TABER. How many have you requisitioned from O. W. I. in
addition to those you already have, and what types?
General McCLURE. This had better be off the record.
(Discussion off the record.)
Mr. TADER. The set-up that is under the control of General Eisen-
hower?
General McCLURE That is correct. That is anticipating our fu-
ture needs.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1943.
OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION
STATEMENTS OF ELMER DAVIS, DIRECTOR; ROBERT E. SHERWOOD,
DIRECTOR OF OVERSEAS OPERATIONS BRANCH; JOSEPH BARNES,
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, ATLANTIC OPERATIONS; FERDINAND KUHN,
DEPUTY DIRECTOR FOR INFORMATION POLICY; THURMAN
BARNARD, CHIEF OF OUTPOST BUREAU; PHILIP C. HAMBLET,
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, OVERSEAS BRANCH; FRANK MARCH,
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR MANAGEMENT; AND GEORS
BACKER, CONSULTANT TO THE DIRECTOR, OVERSEAS BRAN
AMOUNT OF FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR FISCAL YEAR 1044 AND REQUEST FOR
ADDITIONAL CONTINGENCY FUND
The CHAIRMAN. We have under consideration this morning an esti-
mate from the President submitted in House Document No. 328, for
a deficiency appropriation of $5,000,000, as follows:
For an additional amount for salaties and expenses, Office of War Informa-
tion, fiscal your 1044, Including the objects specified under this head and under
General Provisions pertaining to the Office for Emergency Management in the
National War Agencies Appropriation Act, 1044, $5,000,000: Provided, That this
supplemental appropriation shall not be available for expenditure unless the
Diroctor of the Office of War/Infermation, with the approval of the President,
shall determine that such funds are necessary for carrying on activities in con-
Junction with netunl or projected military operations: Provided further, That
receipts, in an amount not exceeding in the aggregate $50,000, from the sale or
rental, outside the continental limits of the United States, of publications,
phenograph records, radio transcriptions, motion-ploture filins, photographs and
pictures, educational materials, and such other Items as the Director may deem
pree sury to carry out the program of the Office of War Information, may be
used to supplement this appropriation: Provided further, That the last paragraph
under the hend "Office of War Information" In the National War Agencies Ap-
propriation Act, 1044, is hereby repealed: Provided further, That the limitations
in said appropriation are hereby increased 88 follows: To meet emergencies of A
151
TREASURY DEPARTMENT M
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
Secretary Morgenthau
November 17, 1943
TO
FROM Mr. McConnell
Mr. Sullivan, Mr. O'Connell and I attended a meeting
this afternoon called by Judge Byrnes for the purpose of
discussing recent criticisms the Attorney General has made
of certain interpretations the procurement agencies had
made of the renegotiation statute. The Attorney General
has felt that the departments have construed the so-called
"raw materials" exemption contained in the statute too
broadly, and as a result have exempted from renegotiation
business which should not have been 80 exempted.
The issue was essentially the same one as was made by
the Attorney General in a memorandum sent to the President
last July. At that time, as you may recall, you joined
with the Under Secretaries of the War and Navy Departments
and the Chairman of the Maritime Commission in a report to
the President defending the interpretation given the
statute by the agencies concerned.
The situation was recanvassed today, and it was
decided to hold further discussion in abeyance until the
Congress has completed its consideration of proposed
amendments to the renegotiation statute, since the Congress,
by reenacting the disputed provision without change will
have resolved the question in favor of the position here-
tofore taken by the departments.
The Attorney General was entirely agreeable to this
method of proceeding, and it would seem that as a practical
matter this issue will not be raised again.
Mr. Justice Byrnes presided over the meeting. Also
in attendance were Mr. Jesse Jones, Mr. Goodloe and Mr.
Patterson from the RFC; Judge Patterson and Mr. MacIntosh
from the War Department, Mr. Kenny from the Navy, Mr. Leo
Crowley of FEA and Mr. Benjamin Cohen.
R.E.m.
Bygler
Regraded Unclassified
C
152
/
November 17, 1943
FEA
ELORANDIES FOR THE PHISTLENT
Folicy on Lend-Lease and British Lollar Falances
(i) January 1, 1943, jessrs. Wallace, Hull, Stimson, Stettinius and
[oll (acting for Mr. Lorgenthsu), who formed the senior inter-agency
Squarittee on the Lollar Position of lend-lease countries, submitted
the followi B recommendation to you which you approved:
"It is recommended, in the light of present circumstances,
that the United Kingdom's gold and dollar balances should
not be permitted to be less than about 4600 million nor
above about 31 billion."
*
*
o
De reasons supporting this decision were:
1. Land-lease countries should be allowed to maintain their Bold
- dollar balances at a level consistent with their needs for
the vigorous prosecution of the war.
2. In the early discussions with the British they suggested that they
should have a "minimum working balance of 60 million required to
meet contingencies everywhere." This figure was made the "floor."
3. The .1 billion "ceiling" was a freezing of the status quo since
on January 1 British balances were actually at about that level.
4. In your Earch 11, 1942 Report to Congress on Lend-Lesse Operations
you said:
"No items (i.e., for lend-lease aid) are a proved unless the
following conditions are met.
(e) the lend-lease aid re-
quested must not be obtainable, as a practical matter, by
payment therefor in American dollars or other currency available
to the requisitioning country."
5. In testifying on the Lend-Lease Bill in January 1941 the Secretary
of the Treasury assured Congress that the British had only suf-
ficient dollar exchange resources to pay for the goods already
ordered in this country. In this connection (with the full
approval of the British authorities) he told the Senite Committee:
Regraded Unclassified
153
- 2 -
"every dollar of property, real property or securities
that any English citizen owns in the United States, they
have agreed to sell during the next 12 months, in order
to raise the money to pay for the orders they have already
placed, they are going to sell -- every dollar of it."
6. The liquid dollar assets of the British had risen from some
350 thousand at the start of lend-lease to $1 billion on
January 1, 1943 - exclusive of very large holdings by South
Africa. Early in 1941 the Treasury Department, in cooperation
with the other agencies, had initiated and pressed for an in-
crease in the scope of land-lease in order to relieve the
pressure on Britain's gold and dollar holdings, and later to
restore those balances to a level considered by the British
as necessary for working purposes. In accordance with that
policy a number of transactions were placed under lend-lease,
which otherwise would have had to be handled by the British
on a cash basis. Since the scope of lend-lease had been
increased in order to maintain and boost British balances,
it became necessary, when those balances continued to rise,
to consider whether a limit should be placed upon them.
*
Since January 1943 British balances have continued to rise, until
they are now at approximately $1.6 billion, or $600 million more
than the top figure set at the beginning of the year. In May the
Treasury initiated discussions with the British for raw materials
as reciprocal aid. It was originally expected that between
$200-$300 million would be received in this way. However, the
negotiations have taken a long time, major parts of the Empire
have still not agreed, and even twelve months from now it is not
believed that the Foreign Economic Administration will have received
raw materials from the British Empire much in excess of $100 million.
British Investments in the United States
Of the estimated $1.5 billion of American investments owned by res-
idents of the United Kingdom approximately 3400 million have been
sold outright. $500 million were pledged against an RFC loan of
$390 million, which was later reduced by payment to 3350 million.
Accordingly, the British still retain about $650 million of these
investments, with no strings on them, and another 8450 500 million are
on deposit as collateral.
Regraded Unclassified
154
- 3 -
Sunnary of Dollar Position
In summary the British foreign exchange position vis-a-vis the
United States -- excluding the holdings of other parts of the Empire
vis-a-vis the United States, which have improved over the period --
has changed as follows:
Dec. 30,
Oct. 31,
1940
1943
(In millions)
Gold
$ 202
$ 975
Official dollar balances
54
615
Private dollar balances
305
320
Total liquid balances
561
1,910
U. S. securities
616
360
Direct and miscellaneous
investments in U.S.
900
785
Deduct collateral pledged to RFC
-
- 500
Total U.S. investments (net) $1,516
$ 645
Regraded Unclassified
155
- 4 -
The British Argument
The British oppose any effort by the United States to narrow the
scope of lend-lease aid, in order to prevent the increase in British
gold and dollar holdings. They point out that foreign countries
hold approximately $7 billion of short-term claims on sterling, that
these sterling balances owned outside England are increasing three
or four times faster than the British balance of gold and dollars,
that accordingly their international financial position is worsening,
and that they need all the gold and dollars they are accumulating.
Furthermore, they assert that of the $1.6 billion holdings, $365
million must be deducted because of specific gold and dollar payment
obligations to foreign countries.
There is no doubt that these mounting sterling obligations of the
British constitute a serious financial problem especially for the
post-war. The policy problem is whether the scope of lend-lease to
the British should be kept as wide as it now is for the purpose of
enabling the British to keep a growing reserve against obligations
to foreign countries, which the British do not intend to meet until
the post-war. A further consideration is that most of the short-
term obligations owed by the British fall under two heads:
1. Many were accumulated before the U. S. extended lend-
lease aid; and
2. Most of those contracted since lend-lease are owed to
British Empire countries.
It is recognized that in all probability Britain can make no better
deals with the Dominions and with India than to pay in sterling or
sell their securities back to them. But it must also be recognized
that the essence of the British position is that the scope of U. S.
lend-lease should be kept wide in order to compensate for monetary
payments made to the Empire.
Recommendations
The considerations which prompted the President's directive of
January 1, 1943, are still sound, and require action to curtail
the scope of lend-lease aid to the British, unless Congress is in-
formed of the situation and agrees to a more generous policy.
1. It is therefore proposed to have the British pay for a larger
proportion of civilian goods obtained in this country.
2. In particular, it is proposed to discontinue certain transactions
which would never have been undertaken except for Britain's acute
shortage of dollars, and which experience has shown are opposed
Regraded Unclassified
156
- 5 -
by considerable sections of opinion in this country. Among the
transactions which it is proposed to cut are: (a) long-term
capital installations; (b) off-shore purchases such as Iceland
fish, Caribbean sugar, and oil from outside the U. S.; (c) civi-
lian goods to the Middle East; (d) all goods to South Africa
(which is well off financially); (e) small requisitions (which
are a nuisance); (f) certain other controversial civilian items.
If you approve will you please indicate below:
Regraded Unclassified
157
WAR DEPARTMENT
WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF
MILITARY INTELLIGENCE DIVISION 0-2
WASHINGTON
November 17, 1943.
The Honorable,
The Decretary of the Treasury.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
In accordance with your request for a weekly report on the
Argentine reaction to the freezing of funds, the following is
submitted:
The Argentine public remains in ignorance of the
background of the freezing of the two banks, no accu-
rate information having yet been given out to counter-
not the plethora of anti-American propaganda. In con-
sequence, stories have reached at least one American
business men to the effect that one reason for the lack
of publicity on the blocking is that by taking such
action Argentina is being robbed by this country; in
contrast to Great Britain which early froze all Argen-
tine assets as a necessary war measure (presumably for
the conservation of the British foreign exchange posi-
tion) we are said to have frozen the two banks as a
punitive measure.
As an indication of the concern felt by the Argen-
tine Government over the freezing of the two banks, the
Minister of Foreign Affairs has assured the American
Ambassador that, once the accounts of the two banks are
unfrozen, the Government will immediately take effective
measures to prevent the recurrence of activities com-
plained of, and gave general assurances in behalf of the
Finance Minister and himself that we can count on the
guarantees mentioned, and full implementation thereof,
85 well e.8 the furnishing of what is veguely referred to
as "things we need."
Very sincerely yours,
FORVICTORY
BUY
ENITED
STATES
GEO. V. STRONG,
WAR
HONDS
Major General,
4/18
STAMPS
A. C. of S., G-2.
Regraded Unclassified
158
reasons must the
worled. manage
IJJ
This telogrem must be
percphrosed before being
Dated Dovember 17, 1943
communicated to anyone
other than E Governmental
Rec'd 5:25 p. in
agency. (SC-00)
Secretary of Stato,
Wishington.
2184, Hovember 17, 4 p. 11.
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL FOR secretary "REASURY
FROM ADDER.
Onc. Roturned Chungking November 15.
IVO. Saw Do. Kung same dey and reported on
Treasury's sttitude on future of Board in accord-
ance Mith Cairo instructions. Ho indicated it WCS
perfectly agreeable to him that Foord should be
wound up in noor futuro. I suggested it might be
desir. blo for Treasury and Ministry to issue a joint
statement at suitable moment couched in appropriato
lenguage in order to avoid Axis propogends oxploit-
ing termination of agrooment to which he rocuily
agrood.
Three. Reference your 1038, November 15.
Docre should be able to meet its obligations and
settle outstrnding business by December 31. In this
connection It is licuidation of storling obligations
which require nost time LS our atobilization loan is
still in toot While sterling obligations under Sinc-
British
Regraded Unclassified
159
-2- 2184, November 17, 4 P. m.
British agroements of 1939 and 41 will have to be
handlod. In informal discussion Thomas told no it
WES his impression Board could bo wound up by your's
and though it might requiro a month longor.
Four. Reforence your 1617, Novomber 11 end
1298, September 17. I delivered mossage to appro-
priato quartor for transmission immediately on
returning from my provious trip to India and shall
forward roply ES soon CS reccived. Am informed
mossage WES sont out it is not yot cortain whether
it roached dostinction. At my request it is boing
sent again.
NK
GAUSS
Regraded Unclassified
160
NOT TO EL RE-TRANSMITTED
U... CHI
COPY NO
IV
M.S. SECRET
ao 377
Information received up to 10 A.M. 17th November, 1943
1.
The of H.a. Destroyees end 11ght craft operated off Listos on
15th/10th and last night. One Dectroyer VAS slightly damage! by enemy iun
Leros The enemy again ruccedried in landing re-iaforcementr
during 15th/16th on an maintained on intense air efirm.
It. 71, reported at 11:30 r.d. 16th that : irolos communication dith LEROS Lewn,
T. 7:47 that emening the enemy havin, captures including Fortenes
hynogurters. The position of our guardian is critical.
Burma CMI a have evacuated FORT HITE after inflicting
soveryeasunities on the enem/ are have ithdrann to
Plan
3.
nh estern Frunt 16th. J47 Fortresses And 102 Liberators
rece sent the formay: 303 sircraft attacke/
T... 1- objectives droppin, 203 tons on MADE (50 miles North 1002
or 362 tono on RJULAN ELECTROLYTIC HYDROGES! PLANT and 32 tong on
when SITRATES FACTORY ith tair to E,000 results. 4 once/ direraft shot 00/10,
fortressos missing. Typhorn bombers attacks an infiald at BREST and shipping
of H.VRC a 1,000 ton hip AS sunk end mothir denaged.
15th:/17th. 21 Hosquitoer objectives 1s North est Germany no 8 Volling "
deayord 4d in FRANCE.
Dodecanese 15th. 3 (itchells and 15 Benufi htors carrios
out pesops in the LEROS ACO- and danaged on
Coutroyer. Emergy dircraft maint.ing: continuous attacks on Leave and
supplier to the dorth Empt part 1 the Islan .
1). Dokota memo, et <lrorof> and 7 successfully
on 16 herry, massum 000 light conters attached MARITZA and
sirficils.
Regraded Unclassified
161
November 18, 1943
10:05 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Robert
Rouse:
Good morning.
HMJr:
Bob, I wanted to call you un to tell you two
things. Number One, I thought you'd been swell
and I appreciated what you told me on how you
felt about my attitude, but I hope you didn't
feel that I was trying to put you on the spot.
R:
Oh, Lord, no.
HMJr:
Well, Bell or somebody, I don't know who, stayed
behind and thought SO. I had simply called on
you because I felt that you could give them the
flavor better than anybody else could.
R:
Yeah. Well, I thought I had when I was over at the
Board
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
between two and three.
HMJr:
But you diân't feel that I had tried to put you
on the spot?
R:
No, I didn't. I -- remember? -- I told you before --
just before the meeting
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
when you asked how I had gotten along
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
that they were prepared to accept it but they
wanted to out the responsibility on you because
they feel this consciousness of direct purchasing.
HMJr:
Well
R:
And the way the thing worked out, I think, while
it made a little strain for two or three minutes.
HMJr:
Yeah.
Regraded Unclassified
162
- 2 -
R:
was much better than -- to have had it and
had the air cleared.
HMJr:
Well, as long as you didn't feel it, because,
after all, you rendered the Treasury a swell
service and I didn't want you to feel that in
any way that -- embarrassed about it.
R:
Oh, no, I didn't. I don't know how the Board
people felt about it -- whether they thought
that I was having difficulty exchanging my
Treasury hat for my
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
System hat, but I wasn't concerned about it.
HMJr:
Well
R:
I hope they weren't.
H.Jr:
Well, they -- it wasn't they. I think it was
Bell said something to me.
R:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Because I didn't see any of them afterwards.
R:
Well, you may have to protect me against the
Chairman someday, but outside of that
MAJr:
Well, you may -- I'll be glad to do that and
that's easy.
A:
Uh
H.Jr:
But
R:
No, I had no feeling about it
H.Jr:
Yeah.
R:
and it was awfully nice of you to have it
in mind and call me.
H.Jr:
Good. All right. Well, we're all set, aren't
we?
R:
We're all set, except the price of securities
and I don't know when you want to do that.
Regraded Unclassified
163
- 3 -
HMJr:
Well, I'm seeing Bell at lunch and I'm going
to tell him to be ready.
R:
Yeah.
HXJr:
Okay.
R:
Okay, thank you.
HMJr:
Bye.
Regraded Unclassified
164
November 18, 1943
10:55 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Ocerator:
Senator George.
HMJr:
Hello.
Walter F.
George:
Hello.
HMJr:
Henry talking.
G:
Yes, Henry, this is Walter George.
HMJr:
How are you?
G:
Pretty good.
HMJr:
Walter, I thought that idea of yours which
you gave out yesterday, of saying that they
couldn't hold the liquor in private warehouses
more than four years was a swell idea, and I
had a press conference this morning and they
asked me about it, and I said I thought Senator
George had an excellent idea and I concurred.
5
Well, thank you very much. I think it is, Henry.
Of course, I haven't fully explored it, you know.
There might be -- I don't see any bugs in it
though. Those fellows just want to escape this
high tax.
HMJr:
Well, I thought that I'd send you up what I
said in my prese conference, plus what the
Alcohol Tax Bureau will send us as to some
of the details, you see?
G:
Yeah. Well, I thank you very, very much.
HMJr:
Because they asked me some questions which --
like, "How could we get a billion dollars worth
of tax out of a hundred million gallons if it
was only $9 a gallon?" You see?
G:
Yes.
HMJr:
But I'm asking Alcohol, now, to out it all
together in a package and send it us to you.
Regraded Unclassified
165
- 2 -
G:
Fine.
HMJr:
But I think it's -- with your help, they could
get that through fairly promptly. It would just
blow this whole black market up in the air.
G:
I believe it will.
HMJr:
I think it's a swell idea.
G:
I think it will blow it up. That's what I think.
HMJr:
Yeah. Well, I hope to see you soon.
G:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
Thank you.
G:
All right.
Regraded Unclassified
166
November 18, 1943
2:00 p.m.
GROUP
Present: Mr. bell
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Gamble
Mr. white
Mr. riaas
Mr. O'Connell
Mr. Smith
Mr. Thompson
Mrs. Klotz
H.M.JR: Look, (to Mr. Sullivan) there are two
things which you can pass on to the Bureau. I think that
Senator George should be congratulated for being on nis
toes, and I wish I could say as much for my own organiza-
tion on the hundred million gallons. I think we were
asleep at the switch. I wish you would pass it down the
line. with all the people that we have, I think somebody
could have thought of that.
MR. SULLIVAN: I agree.
H.M.JR: (Gestures)
15% SULLIVAN: Oh, you are right oftener than that!
(Laughter)
M.R.JR: I have been travelling with two men, and
I have gotten & little timid after travelling with Smith
and white.
Another thing - John, I don't want to be picking on
you aiter you were so gracious, but I did make this state-
ment today, that I would be looking into this American
Distilling proposition; and if I had been on my toes I
should have told them, "won't the whisky crowd ever learn
anything?" In the middle of the war, to pull at fast one
like this! Fure conservation, even though legal, doesn't
do the whisky people any good.
Regraded Unclassified
167
2 -
SR: SULDIVAN: It depends on what they are pulling.
It asn't _one far enough for us to know that.
Ja: Can I just tell you I would like you to watch
it? It should be watched.
Let's take anybooy who is a big enough stockholder.
..e gets a thousand gallons or whisky as his dividend. what
is he going to do with it? How would he dispose of it?
NR. SULLIVAN: The people who are buying them - on
the preliminary report I have from the SEC - are people in
the retail liquor business.
H.M.JR: but take Mr. Brown and his wife, who both own
twenty thousand shares. what are they going to do?
Mr. SULLIVAN: I think they are going to do the thing
I Am complaining about. I think that they will sell.
They never get the whisky; they get the warehouse receipts.
= think they will sell that whisky.
H.A.JR: well, Dan Hell's friend, Sylvia Porter, has
quite an article on it. 1 refer you to Sylvia.
MRS. KLOTZ: "Who is Sylvia?"
(Clipping from the Washington Post, dated November 11,
1943, handed to Mr. Suilivan by the Secretary.)
MR. BELL: She is my friend since a certain time.
MR. SULLIVAN: This is the taing that should be watch
very carefully, because this can be done in a lot of other
things besides whisky. That is why I think when you 20
before the Senate Finance you ought to have a recommenda-
tion that will stop it in this business and ail lines of
business. For instance, General Foods, instead of declar-
ing dividends could give warehouse receipts on cases of
canned peas and butter, and all that sort of stuff.
H.M.JR: That would be wonderful.
Regraded Unclassified
168
- 3 -
_________________________ SULLIVAN: It certainly would, but it would take
it right out of the revenue.
GASTON: How?
SOLLIVAN: because the profit made by the indivi-
duel is not subject to corporate income tax.
H...JR: well, I an looking at this thing from the
standpoint of just plain morals. I think at this time it
is danned bad morals for any company to be doing something
like that.
SULLIVAN: When they closed the market, Emil Schram
told me there was one bid in for a hundred shares at one
hundred and seventy-five dollars, another bid for a hundred
shares at one hundred and fifty, and six hundred shares
at one hundred and twenty.
L. .Ja: Nost cisgusting! Makes wonderful reading
for the fellows on Volturno!
You (Sullivan) waten it, will you?
M.C. SULLIVAN: Yes, sir.
R.M.JR: You were here when I saw this Texas lawyer?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes, sir, I was.
H.M.JR: I read that report that 1 got. If my
memory is right, 1 told Wirtz if Brown and koop would
notify me that ne was theiraccredited attorney, we would
tell them where ne could help, but we had no notice that
Le is their accredited attorney.
MR. SULLIVAN: He tolo you he was.
E.M.JR: Yes, but 1 would have to be notified, formally.
VR. SELLIVAN: I don't recall that.
Regraded Unclassified
169
- 4 -
H.M.JR: You could look at the minutes if you want to.
I don't want him to say, "I told you I would help you and you
never asked me."
I said, "It is up to the company, I take it, to notify
me that you are their accredited representative, and when
I am so notified, I will be glad to take it up with you."
I read the thing; 1 con't think they have a leg to
stand on. But I don't want him to be able to say, "I
offered to help Morgenthau and he never requested my help."
I think the next move is from the company to notify
me this man is their representative. I don't think he
is; I think ne is representing somebody else who is not
in the company.
JR. SULLIVAN: Well, I haven't any reason to know.
H.A.JR: will you clear that up for me?
MR. SULLIVAN: Certainly.
H.M.JR: Gaston?
Mr. GASTON: I haven't anything.
MR. SMITH: I haven't anything.
H.M.JR: Is your stuff ready (smith) SO we can get out
of here at two twenty-nine?
MR. SMITH: At two twenty-seven!
H.M. JR: Just so you people won't think some of us are
playing tiddly-winks this week, ve have settled, in the last
three days, the Fourth war Loan - the terms, and so forth, and
SO forth. And I think the high spot of the whole thing -
for those who are interested - is again the Federal Reserve
Board, who were about as dumb as they could be.
They again put up this whole fight to raise the interest
rates on the three-months notes in order to save the
situation on the long-term bonds. And then when we refused
Regraded Unclassified
170
- 5 -
to 0.0 that, the whole question of how the bill market
should be handled, and they said they couldn't handle it
that way any more, that it was too near buying direct
without buying direct. So we ended up - to make a long
story short - by their insisting that I instruct the Federal
Reserve bank of New York as my fiscal agent. From now on
they can handle the bill market for the Treasury - com-
pletely eliminated themselves from the picture.
I reminded them that in March, 1942, they made lue
orcer them to hold the present rate structure where it
was. I said, "1 congratulate you on the swell jot you
have done.
They said, "Well, yes, yes; but you will admit that
we have taken initiative since.
I said, "You have cone a beautiful, wonderful job of
management, but you did make me order you to do it. And
you insisted, and I ordered Allan Sproul to 00 it."
I said, "All right, now you are saying you can't
handle the bill market unless 1 direct this thing. I said,
"I have done SO this morning."
Now, the interesting thing was, I dion't have to do a
thing. We had these bona dealers around. I said, "Could
you boys take a little more interest in this tring?"
"lie get you."
I said, "Well, take care of it."
"You forget about it."
And that is about all that 1.85 said. Theysaid, "he don't
want to make & collar on it; We want to render this service,
and won't make a dollar on it."
GASTON: that is the bills?
MAR: Yes. but 1 mean, again here was a chance
that LCCIES WHS riding his hobbies - might have put us
Regraded Unclassified
171
- 6 -
on the spot - wanted to change the rate structure. The
bankers are smurt enough; they realize they are making
bis interest on their invested capital. They are happy.
They want them left along, and they are willing to let the
Treasury continue, and support the Treasury publicly,
actively, in their present rate structure. And the
Teceral Reserve Advisory Committee, and the A.B.A. are
with us, too.
Den and I were talking about it at lunch. The board
has practically nothing left. Anything they do now, they
do because the Secretary of the Treasury has ordered
them to no it. And to be 30 dumb!
So it kind of took the juice out of me, yes, sir;
=ut it vas a 2000 meeting. George llaas' noys gave me some
wonderful statistics and facts to base ay arguments on.
They were very helpful.
30 all around - 1 hate to use this word, But that
18, que to the selfish attitude of tue Federal Reserve
Board, we are again going to be able to keep the rate
structure where it is. It is the only tring in the whole
Government that is stable - money - and I am not exas-
gerating, am I?
M.
BELL: No, I trink not.
JR: Even Dell got ruffled with accles!
But it was a nice buttle: it vas quick and fast.
The other thing that Bell told me on Lecies, which
I dion't know - we are kind of gossiping a little - 1 mean,
I and my crop full of Accies yesterday - was that Lccies
and the Board went off half-cocked on Tri-Continental.
TR. BELL: That is subconscious.
WHITE: Seiling and buying. (Laughter)
-...J.: That is my exclusive privilege. Thanks to
-821 Bailie, God rest his soul.
Regraded Unclassified
172
7 -
They went off half-cocked. They have gone out in
sort of a 'show cause" order against Trans-America to
taxe their license away from them. Jow, it is pretty
not stuff, and Rocles finds Limself out on the end of the
1100. So now he is trying to rush through a law between
now and the first of January which will fr eze all holding
companies, and then he can drop this thing with Giannini,
because Giannini is going to fight. Now, get this again;
ne needs a putlic relations man, or something - whether
it could do nim any good - ne is willing to recommend to
the Congress of the United States, not only to freeze Ar.
Giannini, out to freeze the Iccles bank, too, and give
them a permanent charter to do business.
BELL: Permanent monopoly over an area to do business.
O'CORNELL: lie was willing to do that some years
a_o when we suggested a bank holding-company bill that had
'ant sentence in it.
BEFL: Not as strong as this.
Sale V'CONNELL: ne has gone further?
BELL: de is willing to carry the full responsi-
fility before ress, defend the measure, and everything.
So it is just little tidbits - all 01 these
things - accles being Chairman of the Utan Construction
Compary, and the Utah Construction Company having a part
in four, five, six Federal contracts. I think all of
those things - the Republicans are going to be swart and
awake about the first 01 September next year, and then
dump them, one after another - or maybe about the first
of October. They know it. I think they will wait until
about thirty days before election and then dump the wnole
thing. To be chairman of the construction company soing
direct tusiness with the Government on Government contracts,
and also Chairman of the Federal neserve Board is beyond
me: It makes my apple deal look pretty small, doesn't it, Joe?
State O'CONNELL: They ever Looked anything alike.
N.W.JR: Thank you, Joe.
Xr. THOMPSON: Congressmen Ludlow is ready to start
the Appropriation hearing nea, December 6, if that will
tie onvenient for you. If not, he till set one that will be.
Regraded Unclassified
173
- 8 -
H.M.JR: The 6th, that doesn't sound right.
MR. THOMPSON: Monday, the 6th.
MR. GASTON: 11/e will have to go back and look up the
usual questions that Ludlow asks.
H.M.JR: Am I in favor of subsidies? No.
Am I in favor of holding companies? Yes.
MR. GASTON: How high can the debt go, safely?
MR. WHITE: Judging from the answer to the first
two questions you are in favor of more silver.
MR. BELL: Did you tell your press conference this
morning anything about the refunding?
H.M.JR: No. You didn't tell me to.
MR. BELL: I didn't assume you would, but I got word
from some place around - I believe Shaeffer called me and
wanted to know if there was anything today or tomorrow
on the refunding. I think you might have Schwarz say
something about it tomorrow.
R.M.JR: Will you take care of it?
MR. BELL: Yes, and then we will give it to the boys,
say, Saturday morning or Monday in a release.
H.K.JR: Now, the big thing, Ted, Bell and I had a
knock-down drag-out fight. See my black eye? He wants
to give out your Fourth Var Loan on Wednesday morning,
and I am for doing it Thursday morning. I think most of
the people stay home Thanksgiving. Where do you stand?
MR. GAMBLE: I would be in favor of Wednesday morning,
I haven't talked to Mr. Bell, but--
H.M.JR: Smith?
MR. SWITH: I don't think it makes a bit of difference.
Regraded Unclassified
174
- 9 -
MR. HAAS: It is a point worth fighting for. (Laughter)
MR. SMITH: It isn't worth getting out on the end
of a limb.
MR. BELL: You are between two groups?
H.M.JR: All right, I will appoint a committee of
Bell and Gamble.
KR. SMITH: To come to a conclusion?
MR. BELL: It doesn't make a bit of difference; I
don't know whether a whole day would be better from the
point of view of reading habits, or not.
MR. THOMPSON: It is not 8 holiday.
MR. BELL: Why didn't we issue an executive order,
then?
MRS. KLOTZ: Is that the truth, that we will work
on Thanksgiving?
H.M.JR: Sure.
MR. WHITE: Just to give thanks!
MR. BELL: That is all.
H.M.JR: Not too serious, now, Harry. And, incidentally,
I have signed your forty letters this morning.
MR. WHITE: Fine. Here is all I have. I don't know
whether you saw this before, but Lauch Currie gave me 8
copy. It might interest you.
(Mr. White handed copy of letter from the President
to Secretary Stimson to the Secretary.)
MR. WHITE: They are quite upset at being left out of
the picture.
Regraded Unclassified
175
- 10 -
E.M.JR: Just one minute. That is the amazing thing,
boiling it down: The President directed the Secretary of
"rr to plan all feeding, etc, leaving everybody out,
"except," he said, "you will consult the State Department
end political advisers in the Treasury for such economic
and fiscal advice as you may need."
MR. BELL: I got the same thing the other day.
The fellow said they had gotten this letter and wanted to
know if I had written it. I told him I had never heard
of it.
R.M.JR: Can I keep this?
MR. WHITE: Yes, which brings to the fore this
question I spoke to you about 8,5 to who should pay for
this grain to he exchanged in Argentina.
The British have objected strenuously. They wanted
it on a fifty-fifty basis.
Before I saw the letter - I don't know - I would have
chan ed my mind, but before I cailed Dean Acheson's office
to find out what their opinion was - Hiss is going to talk
to Dean Acheson tonight. It may be that we will have to
compromise temporarily on the basis of fifty-fifty. Five
million dollars are involved.
H.M.JR: No, it is not all right, but I will go along
with it.
MR. WHITE: We will insist that it merely be on that
basis, and leave the question of continuing payments to
be discussed, leave it open. Or the alternative is that
we will have the Army pay for it all and say we are not
oing to settle the question at all. It isn't settled to
our satisfaction.
H.M.JR: You had better get fifty-percent out of the
English while you can. The point was, we have paid for all
the food going into these countries up to now, and Le said
"Now, England, you pay up to how much we have and from then
on we go fifty-fifty.
Regraded Unclassified
176
- 11 -
To which they said, "We will go fifty-fifty now."
MR. WHITE: They will go fifty-fifty on payments
to third countries. They are sending a little coal, but
less than 8. half million dollars a month.
H.M.JR: I didn't expect much; neither did you.
MR. WHITE: Now, here is something: This is the
Combined Chiefs-of-Staff letter.
(Mr. White handed copy of letter of November 18, 1943
from the Secretary to Admiral Leshy to the Secretary.)
MR. WHITE: Here is a draft of the proposed memorandum
to the President that you were going to take up with Hull
along with--
H.M.JR: (Interposing) On what subject?
MR. WHITE: Crowley on the British dollar position.
I thought you might like to read that over before I finally
agree with him. (Memorandum handed to the Secretary, copy
attached)
H.M.JR: Yes. If you saw what was in my suitcase
you would get-- (Laughter) How much more do you have?
MR. WHITE: Just two points, quick. One is that
Lauch Crowley called me.
H.M.JR: Wait 8 minute - Oscar Lauch Crowley!
MR. WHITE: This one is particularly Lauch Crowley,
because he called me up a little bit perturbed at Joe's
memorandum to the President on the French. He said, "Am
I correct in assuming that when they appeared here at
Regraded Unclassified
177
- 12 -
that meeting that you were going to take that matter up
with Crowley?"
I said that your letter to Hull specifically indicated
that you had discussed it with Crowley with the definite
intention that when Hull spoke that you wanted Crowley in
on the discussion.
He said, "Can't he tell Crowley that?"
I said, "Yes, certainly," because I do remember you
did say you were going to take it up with Currie.
H.M.JR: Did I? I thought the other matter - but I
didn't know that.
MR. WHITE: They both were discussed at the same
time.
John has made an appointment with the House Committee
tomorrow. I want to tell you what we propose to tell them.
We want to tell them about the bank statements that you
are sending out and give them copies. We also propose to
tell them approximately the status of the discussion we
had with the British, and about some discussion of the
principles that we agreed upon, and indicate what we had
not agreed upon.
H.M.JR: That would take care of the press. Smith
won't be here, but Shaeffer will be. Get Shaeffer to tell
you what the press asked me about your problems today, will
you please?
LR. WHITE: Well, we thought of giving the bank statements
to the press next week.
H.M.JR: Be sure and talk to Shaeffer, will you?
MR. WHITE: Yes.
H.M.JR: All right?
Regraded Unclassified
178
- 13 -
MR. WHITE: That is all.
H.M.JR: Joe?
MR. O'CONNELL: I haven't 8 thing, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: You might tell Paul that Smith will be back
here surely by Monday.
ER. SMITH: I will be back Friday.
H.M.JR: When he is back I want him to see Paul on
the other view about my statement on the Hill. I want
Paul to put some thought to it himself, please,
MR. O'CONNELL: I will tell him.
H.M.JR: My statement.
MR. O'CONNELL: Yes.
H.M.JR: George?
MR. HAAS: I have nothing.
MR. GAMBLE: I have only one thing. The best slogan
we have received up to date is, Let's get it over," for
the Fourth War Loan. I thought I might try it out on this
august body.
MR. HAAS: The next time you will say "We are still
at it.
MR. GAMBLE: It could apply to the drive from the
survey we made. It seems that the thing in most peoples'
minds is to move a little faster.
H.M.JR: It sounds 8 little scapy.
MR. WHITE: The next one could be "One More Push."
H.M.JR: No, I personally would stick by "Back the
Attack." I don't see why you have to change it.
179
- 14 -
MR. BELL: "Continue to Back the Attack."
MR. GAMBLE: We have been using "Keep Backing the
Attack.'
H.M.JR: I just think "Back the Attack."
MR. WHITE: Keep "Back the Attack. " That's what
we've been doing - keeping it back.
MR. GAMBLN: You must remember that the place where
we make the widest use of it is in the newspapers.
B.M.JR: Now listen, does Pillsbury Flour change
their slogan every spring and fall?
MR. GAMBLE: Yes.
H.F.JR: "Eventually! Why not now?"
MR. GAMBLE: They change the appeal.
H.E.JR: Oh, they have 8 trademark. Packard: "Ask
the Man Who Owns One, and all the rest.
MR. GASTON: On the other hand, Buick changes every
year. They always have a slogan. "Better Buy Buick."
They change it every year.
MR. WHITE: How about Smith Brothers?
H.M.JR: You will admit that that trademark has
whiskers. (Laughter)
MR. SULLIVAN: We had better break this up right now.
H.M.JR: This is not an august body, at least we are
not sitting in an august body. Come again. O.K. Do you
have anything else (Gamble)?
MRS. KLOTZ: He has enough now.
NR. GAMPLE: I think I had better keep the rest of
it to myself.
Regraded Unclassified
180
- 15 -
H.M.JR: At least admit we did a job for you.
MR. GASTON: You will do as you please, anyway.
MRS. KLOTZ: He says you have to admit you have an
open-minded reception.
H.M.JR: John?
MR. SULLIVAN: Nothing, sir.
H.M.JR: Smith? You had better get your overcoat
and your tin hat and meet me.
MR. SULLIVAN: I had that Fish letter you sent in for
a reply. I want LO get out the correspondence. I am not
at all sure it calls for a reply.
H.M.JR: Did you notice the "best" or "kind regards"
he threw in?
VR. SULLIVAN: He is quitting on this charge, you
see, immediately.
H.M.JR: I think when a man makes a charge of perjury-
that some Treasury official got some of his friends to
commit perjury, I think we ought to press him.
MR. SULLIVAN: If we answer it, it will be on that
ground; but as an American citizen, if he knows anything
is wrong it is his duty to do it, especially 8. Congressman,
not to condone that, just to get & settlement of his
private affairs.
H.M.JR: That perjury charge, I don't think we can
just overlook it.
MR. SULLIVAN: I don't, either.
MR. GASTON: Did he say they tried to make his friends
commit perjury?
H.M.JR: He said that a Treasury official tried to get
one of his friends to commit perjury against him. And,
Regraded Unclassified
181
- 16 -
of course, I wrote, "We hate to do it, but if you insist-
Be will tell us, maybe. I would study it.
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes.
H.M.JR: Herbert?
MR. GASTON: I haven't anything.
11.M.JR: Did you speak to--
MR. GASTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: Nothing else.
MR. GASTON: No. I have two or three appointments I
pould like to talk to you about.
H.K.JR: When you see Mason - I have a request that
when that helicopter passes its test I want to ride in
it. Who was the pilot before this one?
MR. GASTON: Sinton.
H.M.JR: I don't know whether he ever got one or not.
Once they have accepted it, I would like to go over and
ride.
MR. WHITE: What is the hurry? Those things are
still in the experimental stage.
MR. SULLIVAN: In the air.
H.M.JR: I want to see if I can run one. They say
you can learn to run one in fifteen minutes.
MR. GASTON: They say you do better when you haven't
learned:
H.V.JR: The Administrative Assistant to Preston Delano -
you can put in his application for deferment. It will
most likely be granted.
MR. THOMPSON: Robertson.
Regraded Unclassified
182
- 17 -
LR. BELL: He hasn't been called yet.
MR. O'CONNELL: Is that the Robertson in the Legal
Section?
MR. BELL: No, he isn't, he is Administrative Assistant
to Delano.
MR. WHITE: By the way, the Army notified us they
wouldn't be able to use the Treasury people in Italy.
Regraded Unclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to