Images (2)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
28276361
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 262
May 12 - 15, 1940
Regraded Uclassified
- A -
Book Page
American Red Cross
National banks contributions discussed by HMJr and
Norman Davis - 5/15/40
262
405
Amtorg Trading Corporation
Rubber (raw) purchases from Brazil commented on by
Federal Bureau of Investigation - (5/10/40)
167
Annenberg, Moe
See Tax Evasion
Army Appropriations
See War Conditions
- B -
Bank for International Settlements
Transferred from Basel to Chateau d'Oex, near Gstaad,
in the Bernese Oberland - - 5/15/40
360
Bank of America
Investigation by Federal Bureau of Investigation of
contribution by Giannini - 5/14/40
250
a) Report on Rozan (Max) and Unschuld (Henry) -
5/14/40
289
Belgium
See War Conditions
- C -
China
See War Conditions
Countervailing Duties
Italy: Duties rescinded on certain silk products - -
Italian comment - - (5/10/40)
288
- D - -
Denmark
See War Conditions: Germeny
- F -
Financing, Government
Debt Limit, Raising of: HMJr asks Smith (Budget Bureau)
to make suggestion - 5/15/40
334,339
Foreign Funds Control
See War Conditions
Regraded Uclassified
- G -
Book Page
Gausebeck, August T. (Head of Robert C. Mayer and Company)
$500,000 contribution to Republican Party and reason
therefor commented on by Federal Bureau of Investigation
(5/10/40)
262
166
Germany
See War Conditions
Giannini, Amadeo P.
Contribution investigation by Federal Bureau of
Investigation - 5/14/40
250
a) Report on Rozan (Max) and Unschuld (Henry) -
5/14/40
289
Government Bond Market
Eccles discusses support of Federal Reserve System
with Gaston and Cochran - 5/13/40
133
a) Harrison tells HMJr of Eccles' remark that
he (Harrison) should not call if merket
went down; Eccles will call personally;
HMJr tells Harrison to keep him informed -
5/14/40
200,381
b) Eccles confers with Cochran - - 5/14/40
248
Great Britain
See Mar Conditions: United Kingdom
- H -
Hinckley, Robert
HMJr commends - 5/15/40
313
- I -
Indiana
See Tax Evasion
Interdepartmental Committee on Mechanics Training for the
Aircraft Industry
See har Conditions: Airplanes
Italy
See War Conditions
- M -
Mayer and Company, Robert C.
See Gausebeck, August T.
McReynolds, William H.
To take over in Thompson's place for two weeks -
5/14/40
198,252
Monnet, Jean (Monnet and Murnane)
See Ralph Reed's report on connections in Germany -
5/13/40
107
Regraded Uclassified
- N - -
Book Page
Netherlands
See War Conditions
Norway
See War Conditions: Germany
- P -
Phillips, Sir Frederick
See War Conditions: United Kingdom
Procurement Division
Reduction (further) discussed by HMJr, Graves,
and Collins - 5/14/40
262
205
208 of the 396 employees dropped find employment - -
5/15/40
420
- R - -
Reconstruction Finance Corporation
Bill before Congress:
Wagner explains to HMJr he knew nothing of bill
until after it had been introduced; reads paragraph
from Jones' report: "I have discussed bill with FDR
and it has his approval" - - 5/13/40
152
HMJr, Foley, Gaston, and Upham confer on HMJr's
appearance before Committee - 5/13/40
160
Glass' disapproval discussed at Treasury conference -
5/14/40
199
Actual testimony
215
HMJr and Wagner discuss testimony - 5/14/40
224
HMJr and Glass
If
If
- 5/14/40
237
HMJr and Duffield n
"
- 5/15/40
385
a) "Once a Hoovercrat, always a Hoovercrat"
Red Cross, American
See American Red Cross
Rozan, Max
See Bank of America
- S -
Self, Sir Henry
To be recalled - - 5/15/40
313
- T -
Tax Evasion
Annenberg case: Helvering and HMJr discuss new offer of
$6 million - 5/13/40
114
Indiana: Elder (Bowman) pays full tax on $235,000 on
account of 2% Club - 5/14/40
198
a) Copy of report sent to FDR - - 5/15/40
423
Regraded Uclassified
- U -
Book Page
United States
See War Conditions: Strategic Materials; United States
Unschuld, Henry
See Bank of America
Upham, C. B.
Asked to assist group in charge of Foreign Funds
Control - 5/13/40
262
73,139
- W -
War Conditions
Airplanes:
United States Production: 24,000 engines of
1000 horse-power per year 8.8 of January 1941;
engines of larger horse-power also commented on -
5/13/40
48,49
Development Costs and Allocation Thereof:
Progress report as of 5/13/40
50
Interdepertmental Committee on Mechanics Training
for the Aircraft Industry: Report - 5/15/40
297
Transport Planes: Churchill's plan to buy a number
from United States - HWr's notes on steps taken -
5/15/40
312
a) Memorandum for FDR 28 dictated by Hinckley
319
Army Appropriations:
HhiJr suggests to FDR that only General Marshall
testify - 5/15/40
329
Belgium:
Banque Belge pour l'Etranger: Problem of New York
assets discussed by Bolton (Bank of England)
with Knoke (Federal Reserve Bank of New York) -
5/13/40
82
China:
Assistance by United States in maintenance of
currency: Cable from American Ambassador,
Chungking - 5/13/40
99,103
Chiang Kai-shek and American Ambassador confer on
economic situation - 5/15/40
377
Kung and American Ambassador confer - 5/15/40
413
Exchange market resume - 5/13/40, et cetera
131,245,340
Foreign Funds Control: Upham asked to assist group in
charge - 5/13/40
73,139
Germany:
Use of marks by soldiers of occupation in Norway and
Denmark (elthough against orders) one of main
causes working against Reich's wise monetary
management: American Embassy, Berlin - 5/12/40
1
Funds in United States: Investigation of by Federal
Bureau of Investigation - 5/14/40
194
Regraded Uclassified
- W - (Continued)
Book
Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Italy:
Stock prices charts - 5/12/40, et cetera
262
42,296,379
Countervailing duties rescinded: Italian comment -
(5/10/40)
288
Ship insurance being transferred from London to
United States БО that war losses may be settled
in American dollars: Bullitt informs FDR, HMJr,
and Hull - 5/15/40
370
a) Cochren-State Department conversation:
See Book 263, page 96
b) Harris discussion: Book 263, page 274
I) Harris report contradicting rumor:
Book 263, page 317
Wetherlands:
American Securities, Disposition of: Conference at
H&Jr's home; present: representatives of Treasury,
State, Allied Purchasing Mission, Winister Loudon
and Mr. Saher - 5/12/40
4
De Nederlandsche Bank informs Federal Reserve Bank
of New York gold account "F" and dollar account np"
have been transferred to Netherlands Government -
5/13/40
78,79
a) "Condition on Amsterdam felling" discussed
at 9:30 meeting - 5/15/40
355
Netherlands Trading Society: Problem of British
Empire branches discussed by Bolton (Bank of England)
and Knoke (Federal Reserve Bank of New York) -
5/13/40
82,97
welles, at FDR's request, asks HMJr to speed rolease
of governmental balances in this country -
5/13/40
117
Purchasing Mission:
Vesting Order: Progress report - 5/14/20
244
Securities Markets (High-Crade):
Current Developments: Haas memorandum - 5/15/40
343
Shipping:
Situation reviewed in Herris memorandum - 5/13/40
105
Insurance (Italian ships) being transferred from London
to United States so that war losses may be settled
in American dollars: Bullitt informs FDR, HAJr, and
Hull - 5/15/40
370
a) Cochran-State Department conversation;
See Book 263, page 96
b) Harris discussion: Book 263, page 274
1) Harris report contradicting rumor:
Book 263, page 317
Steel: Cable to Bullitt (not sent) - 5/15/40
322
(For cable sent, see Book 263, page 38)
Regraded Uclassified
- % - (Continued)
Book
Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Strategic Materials:
Molybdenum: Shipments of - 5/13/40
262
159
United States: Appropriations as submitted by
departments, approved by FDR, approved and
appropriated by Congress - June 24, 1939;
November 27, 1939; end Alsy 8, 1940
43
United Kingdom:
Phillips, Sir Frederick: Request that be visit
United States to be discussed by H.Jr and
Ambassador Lothian - 5/13/40
60,110,122
State Department informed - 5/13/40
139
United States:
Willitary Expension Program: Conference at White House;
present: HWr, Woodring, Johnson, and Marshall -
5/13/40
45,172
e) Memoranda considered: (1) principal ses-coast
defense items; (2) enlistment nocessary to
bring regular Army to peace-time strength;
(3) Budget provisions; et cetera
b) 100 million appropriation and Committee of
which Secretary of Treasury would be chairman
recommended by HAJr to FDR - 5/13/40
172
1) Discussed with McReynolds - 5/14/40
253
Wilmerding, Lucius, Jr.
HiJr discusses availability with Thompson - 5/13/40
135
Regraded Uclassified
1
PARTIAL PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Berlin.
DATE: May 12, 1940, 9.a.m.
NO.: 1308.
My number 953, April 18, 5 p.m.
The Reichsgesetzblatt of May 9 contains a decree
dated May 3 establishing a Reichskreditkasse for the
issuance of a special mark currency for the use of German
troops in Denmark and Norway. An administrative announce-
ment dated May 9 is given in the DEUTSCHE REICHSANZEIGER
of May 10 describing the new ourrency which will be
issued in demominations of fifty pfennings one, two,
five, twenty and fifty marks. As related in my telegram
under reference Reichskreditkassenscheine had already
been issued to German troops of occupation in Norway and
Denmark prior to the formal setting up of the Reichs-
kreditkasse for these troops.
The regulations for the new Reichskreditkasse are
almost identical with those establishing a Reichskreditkasse
in Poland (see my number 1579, October 4, 4 p.m.) which
with the reestablishment of the Polish Central Bank has
now been discontinued and its currency withdrawn from
circulation.
The following 1s confidential. The German soldiers
of occupation are not allowed to take normal mark currency
with them but are supplied with Reichskreditkassenscheime
to
Regraded Uclassified
2
-2-
to be used in territories of occupation. I learned at
the Reichsbank that in spite of this prohibition many
German troop units had carried great amounts of mark
currency into Norway and Denmark. I was recently told
by an official that this was one of the main causes of
the recent expansion in circulation of Reichsbank notes.
The official said that one of the great consumers of
currency 1s the army and that this factor added to the
Reich's difficulties of wise monetary management.
KIRK
FA:MSG
Regraded Uclassified
3
JI
PLAIN
London
Dated May 12, 1940
Rec'd 2:54 p.m.
SECRETARY of State
Washington
RUSH
1180, 12th.
Ministry of Economic Warfare asks whether
there would be any objection on the part of the
United States Government to a braodcast being
given by the B B C in Flemish, French and Dutch
to the Effect that any holders of American bearer
bonds who, fearing lest they fall into the hands of
the Enemy, may take than to the nearest United
States consular officer and, after making a sworn
declaration and burning them in the presence of
the consular officer, will bE issued with a certi-
ficate allowing them to obtain a renewal of the
bearer bonds in due course.
Ministry of Economic Warfare feels that it is
urgent that the B B C make such an announcement
tomorrow. Accordingly, immediate reply is requested,
KENNEDY
KLP
Regraded Uclassified
(Conference at Secretary's Home)
Sunday,
May 12, 1940
RE DISPOSITION OF AMERICAN
8:30 p.m.
SECURITIES IN HOLLAND
Present:
Mr. Berle
Mr. Bernstein
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Foley
Mr. Ballantyne
Mr. Gaston
Minister Loudon
Mr. Saher
Mr. Pleven
Pleven:
The British and French Governments were informed
early this morning and they immediately got in
touch with the Dutch Government and also a repre-
sentative of the Bank of England. Now, those
securities are held by about fifty different in-
stitutions and those institutions are what might
be called scattered. Their idea was to take very
drastic steps. This is something which perhaps
they have to do under difficult conditions and
it might take B. little time to be able to get
hold of the securities which exist and which are
very numerous, because the Dutch estimates of the
securities are even higher than our own estimates
of those securities and will exceed about 600
million dollars.
H.M.Jr:
American securities?
Pleven:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
In the Netherlends?
Pleven:
Yes. Those securities are in many banks. Their
business was to keep those things in safe custody
and they were working on the idea that if anything
untoward happened in the Netherlands, the United
States would always take steps to avoid the Ger-
mans using the securities. This money must be
obtained 1f they are to continue buying here, so
it 1s very important to be able to get the stock
out and if the stock cannot be gotten out, to
have some system by which they may be destroyed
and upon proof of such destruction the American
corporations and Government will issue new certi-
ficates.
Regraded Uclassified
5
- 2 -
Now, I understand that a country in this posi-
tion may give what they call, I believe, a
cremation of such and on some basis this ore-
mation certificate, such as U. S. Steel and 80
forth, can get new stock.
H.M.Jr:
Well, when you came in we were talking - I was
just listening to Mr. Cochran, who has been
in the Consular service. I don't know whether
it is practical. I mean, 1f these were taken
into the Central Bank of Netherlands and burned
and an American diplomatic consular officer being
present, he might certify to what the Central
Bank of Netherlands was doing.
Cochran:
Ordinarily they don't certify the Central Bank
officer's signature. It is usually a notary or
someone of the foreign office and if it were a
Central Bank governor, there should be someone
from the foreign office or some judicial authority
certify it and then the consular or diplomatic
officer - it would be the consular officer in
this case - would certify to the signature of
this officer.
H.M.Jr:
of the foreign officer?
Cochran:
Yes.
Berle:
They want a foreign officer, a notary, B. clerk of
court or any other judicial officer of the bar?
Cochran:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
Do you want to ask Mr. Pleven anything? Then I
am going to ask him to wait in the other room.
Berle:
One question, if I may. Have you the approximate
distribution as between the United States Govern-
ment bonds and the other securities?
Pleven:
Not at all.
Berle:
The figure you give is combined of all kinds?
Pleven:
Yes, I think it is all kinds and there are only
about fifty of these.
Regraded Uclassified
8
- 3 -
Gaston:
Mr. Pleven, of those bearer securities you speak
of, would there be certificate numbers of record?
Pleven:
There is an American certificate and Dutch certi-
ficates, you see, --
Gaston:
Oh, they are not all American securities?
(Mr. Frank entered the conference)
Berle:
May I ask one other question? The suggestion was
made in respect to the American securities, what
happens to the bearer certificates out against
them?
Plevent
Well, you see the bearer certificates are scattered
amongst thousands of people. Now, those people
will find a way to hide them. We don't know what
they will do with them. The only grief of those
people 18 the ownership of certain American securi-
ties which are under their custody.
Berle:
I understand. My question was because I wonder
what would happen If, after the process you suggested
had been gone through with, the bearer certificates
the Dutch Trust has issued then turned up, perhaps
after B. military occupation of the country, in
Switzerland or Italy or some other place and were
then presented here saying, "Here is your legi-
timate owner."
Pleven:
The way I would do it 1f I was the Dutch Government,
you see, would be to decide that all those assets
have to become the property of the Dutch Government
by being commandeered with proper conditions to
give back to all people who have the certificate
of such and such stock later on. The Dutch Govern-
ment would take them by decree from the registered
owners of those American securities.
H.M.Jr:
Jerome, word came could we do something. They
said there is 600 million dollars worth of
American securities in Holland and they want to
know whether we can help them by having them
destroyed before B. representative of the United
States Government. They want an answer tonight.
Regraded Uclassified
The Netherlands Minister will be here at 9:00
o'clock.
Frank:
And many of these are held against these certi-
ficates?
Plevent
Against the certificates. You see, the first
attempt is going to be to *take those securities
physically out of Netherlands and it 1s only
if it appeared impossible or after having tc
take half of them or something that they would
like as a last resort to do something. This is
why we have got to get in touch with you.
Bernstein: Those certificates are simply credit claims
against the Dutch Trust, they are not claims
against the American corporation.
Pleven:
oh, not at all.
Frank:
There is B custodian there?
Bernstein: So that even though those bearer certificates
are floating around, the American company only
recognizes the Dutch trustee that happens to
hold the American securities.
Pleven:
I would think from the point of view of the
American corporation, the only factor is the
stock certificate, which is in the name of the
holder.
Frank:
Wouldn't most corporations there register - the
usual by-laws, I would think, would recognize
a lost or destroyed certificate on appropriate
evidence and I shouldn't think they could get
any better evidence than the United States Govern-
ment. I shouldn't think there would be much ques=
tion.
Berle:
The only question comes in on bearer bonds and
things of that kind and U. S. Government bonds
or on stocks. On other bonds, they would go by
the usual provisions of the corporate charter
or trust indenture.
Regraded Uclassified
- 5 -
Foley:
I assume some of the securities are our own
securities, Jerry, Treasury stuff.
Frank:
American things?
Foley:
They may very well be.
Frank:
But to the extent they are corporate stocks,
I wouldn't think there would be much problem.
(Mr. Pleven and Mr. Ballantyne retired from the
conference)
Cochran:
There would be no use trying to make photostatic
copies of all of those,
Berle:
Try again.
Cochran:
I don't think the Consulate would hold those.
Bernstein:
Supposing the possession of those things were
turned over to the American diplomatic officers.
Frank:
Do you think the Germans would respect it?
Bernstein:
What problems would be presented?
Berle:
We don't take custodial accounts for foreigners.
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me, you are wrong. My father, when he
was American Ambassador in Constantinople, took
the physical property of 13 different countries
that he was asked to represent when they left.
I suppose that is different.
Berle:
That is & different case.
H.M.Jr:
I suppose that is different and he had the money
in the cellar.
Berle:
That 1s a different case when you take over diplo-
matic property.
Gaston:
Why do we have --
Berle:
I would refer it to Mr. Cochran --
Regraded Uclassified
S
- 6 -
Cochran:
I did the same thing. I was in Germany when
the war broke out.
Berler
We have never take foreign property for custody
except diplomatic property.
Cochran:
We have used our good offices in looking after
it, but I don't think we have actually taken
it in.
H.M.Jr:
We would take English and French securities in
Hollend?
Cochran:
I don't know that we would do that. We would
put our seal on the office that we would take
over, but I don't think you would take the
physical --
H.M.Jr:
My father took these - I think it was 13 countries
that left Turkey and left their properties in the
cellar of the Embassy.
Berle:
How much was public property? We have now under
seal property of dozens of legations, and so forth,
that have left their affairs in our hands.
Cochran:
But they were left in their own buildings.
Berle:
By the way, I might say that the Germans have
been pretty systematically violating that. There
1s not much you can do about it against machine
guns, but we haven't extended diplomatic immunity,
that I know of, to property --
Bernstein:
Now, one thing, they may be a bit deluded. This
fellow said they realized the Treasury's freezing
would prevent the Germans from being able to use
the funds and this proposal of theirs was simply
to make available the funds to them, to the Allied
side. If these are bearer securities, the Treasury's
freezing order won't prevent the Germans from using
them.
Berle:
Well, we haven't got that far yet, have we?
Bernstein: Well, any Treasury things, or most Treasury things.
Regraded Uclassified
10
- 7 .
Even if they can't be assured of getting & re-
issue, they may want to burn them.
Berle:
I had it on my docket to call you tomorrow to
start & little check on bearer securities com-
ing through Switzerland and more particularly
Rome, but that was tomorrow morning's job.
Bernstein:
It would be a terrific job to attempt to block
bearer securities.
H.M.Jr:
Well, what are we going to tell these people?
Berle:
Well, if I may suggest --
H.N.Jr:
Is everything safe in Los Angeles?
Gaston:
Yes, There was only one of the Japanese tankers
there and they searched that and there is another
coming in.
H.N.Jrt
Somebody got worried that there were some troops
on them.
We were told yesterday that there were going to
be ten or twelve tankers.
Gaston:
The report the Navel Intelligence got was that
there were four Japanese tankers in the harbor
yesterday and five or six more were expected.
Frank:
With troops?
Gaston:
Well, no, there seemed to be something funny
about them. At 6:45 this evening we discovered -
a fishing boat discovered & submarine off the
Coast of Maine which wasn't there.
H.M.Jr:
The island?
Gaston:
No, the submarine wasn't there. They saw it and
then our men reported back in about 15 minutes
that the submarine was the 125-foot Coast Guard
patrol boat Travis.
H.M.Jr:
Another submarine.
Regraded Uclassified
11
- 8 -
Berle:
Well, to get back to the practical solution of
this, subject to Mr. Cochran's better judgment,
the physical problem of cremating these in an
American Consulate before a Consular officer
who was besieged by all kinds of people with
bombs being dropped on them strikes me as being
out of the question. I do not see any reason
why the foreign office should not detail somebody
of sufficient standing who would go down to the
Netherlands Bank and there witness the cremation,
make 8 certificate and have our own Consuls in-
structed to witness his signature along with
the statement of the bank, which ought to be
pretty good evidence and why that wouldn't cover
the situation. In some of these Consulates,
there is no possible way you could cremate them.
Cremating a bunch of bonds and securities 18
not the easiest thing in the world, unless you
have a good working furnace.
Cochran:
No. In Amsterdam they have those little tile
stoves. It would take a long time to burn them.
Gaston:
These bearer certificates issued by the Dutch
trusts are purely B. domestic proposition.
Frank:
Surely, that is no problem.
Bernstein:
It will be a problem that the Dutch trust will
sometime have to meet.
Frank:
But that won't get them in the - that won't
get America into difficulties.
Gaston:
If it is as Pleven suggests, the Dutch Govern=
ment commandeers them, then their problem 1a
with the Dutch Government, not with us.
Berle:
The American corporation recognizes the Dutch
decree transferring title of those from the
trust to whoever the Dutch representative be-
comes. That can be worked out and that is e.
legal question.
Foley:
I don't see how we can give them any kind of
assurance at all that what they do in a hurly-
burly over there in the next 24 hours or 48
Regraded Uclassified
- 9 -
hours would either be recognized by ourselves
or the private corporations in this country.
"renitt
But I think 1t. world be pretty good evidence.
Foley:
It would be pretty good evidence, but what --
Vrank:
Jone transfer agency is going to have a head-
ache.
Foley:
They can't rely on any assurances we can give
them. So far BS their own securities are con=
cerned, I don't know how much there might be
there. \.e have B. pretty complicated procedure
for the issuance of new certificates when e
bond has been lost or destroyed.
Frank:
A U. S. Government bond?
Poloy:
Yes, and I think the statute requires security
before another one can be issued. I don't think
it 18 just & matter of regulation. We could go
down on the H111 and we probably could take care
of the situation without much difficulty. I
think there would be a great deal of sympathy
on the Hill, as we found out when we amended the
foreign exchange powers here very recently. I
don't see how We can go much beyond saying that
we will do everything we can to help, but how
effectual that will be, none can say. Ce won't
know what the securities are and we don't know
under what circumstances they would be trans-
ferred.
Mrle:
I didn't understand we were being asked for that
assurance, did you?
rank:
Ch, the best you can do is give them good advice,
Caston:
That is about all they are asking..
B.M.Jr:
That is all, but the more I have thought of it
since I have talked to you, I think it ought
to be handled by the Netherlands Minister and
not through the British Broadcasting System.
Berle:
You may recall that when I talked to you, that
was a preoccupation of mine.
Regraded Uclassified
13
- 10 -
H.M.Jr:
Yes. You agree, too?
Berle:
Certainly.
H.M.Jr:
I think it would be much more popular in this
country if we need any legislation that we
are doing it for the Netherlands Government and
the British suggested that they wanted this
broadcast from their official broadcasting
station.
Berle:
I will go a little bit further. I think it
would be highly improper for us to create the
impression that we have named the British Govern-
ment or the British Broadcasting Company or
anyone else our agents to effectuate an arrange-
ment like this. It is all right from the British
point of view, but I think we probably would run
into a good deal of trouble here. The suggestion
Mr. Cochran made 1a that we merely act as authen-
ticating agents in creating a piece of evidence
which, 80 far as private securities are concerned,
would normally carry the situation with a bit
of nuisance. The Treasury may see things dif-
ferent. I am not familiar with that and don't
know how it fits with United States Government
bonds.
Frank:
Where are these things? Are they all in one place?
Berle:
Most of them are in the Amsterdam banks. The
Rotterdam Central Bank is on fire.
Frank:
Have the Germans taken possession of Rotterdam?
Berle:
No, but parts of it.
H.M.Jr:
Is this thing clear in your mind as a Consular
officer? What would you do if you were in
Amsterdam and you couldn't get word to the
State Department and they asked you to do this?
Cochran:
I would go along with him and be a witness to it.
I wouldn't do it in my office.
H.M.Jr:
What kind of an official would you ask for? You
14
- 11 -
are over there, you can't get any instructions
and they are asking you to do this.
Cochran:
I don't know the Dutch law, but ordinarily &
foreign service official or an officer of a
court or 8. notary public, one of those three.
It depends on the practice of the Consulate
General in Amsterdam. They must have the
signature on file of the person whose signa-
ture 1s now being authenticated. They must
know he is still the duly authorized person.
Berle:
There wouldn't be any difficulty about that.
Cochran:
No. I wouldn't specify too frankly what offi-
cer he should have, but get him to have some
Dutch official whose signature he is in a posi-
tion to authenticate.
H.M.Jr:
Well now, that you will have to do and what 18
more, by word of mouth tell the Dutch Minister
to do this and say you will confirm it through
a cable to the Consular service and there 1a no
publicity and that is the end of it.
Berle:
No, they will have to do the publicity.
Cochran:
Because ordinarily a Consul wouldn't take the
responsibility of saying this document is good
for 200 shares in General Motors.
Berle:
I would say, as he states it, I would see no
point in broadcasting it. What they are really
looking for are not the scattered private securi-
ties, but some 50 or 60 big pooled holdings.
A broadcast 18 the worst way to do it, I would
think.
Cochran:
There are just a few of those big concerns in
Amsterdam.
Berle:
There are probably a lot more of small amounts
which will drop out of the country.
Gaston:
If they want to use B.B.C., it 18 a Dutch offi-
cial who should use B.B.C., of course.
Regraded Uclassified
15
- 12 -
H.M.Jr:
Do you have any question, Jerome?
Frank:
Not the slightest. It is the obvious thing
to do. You will have your own problem. I
would think Ed might be right. You know that
better, about government bonds. You may need
some legislation.
H.M.Jr:
He is doing his homework on the telephone.
Gaston:
They have to give security.
H.M.Jr:
I didn't have a chance to tell anybody except
you what it was.
Berle:
Well, Secretary Hull was out there this after-
noon when Kennedy's wire came in and I chatted
with him.
H.M.Jr:
So he knows about it?
Berle:
He knows about it. They want to work out the
matter as well as possible.
H.M.Jr:
While we are doing it, don't you think we might
make the same offer to Belgium?
Berle:
The Kennedy offer contemplated both Belgium and
Holland. They wanted to broadcast the French
and Belgian - Flemish, also Belgian, and would
include the Dutch.
Frank:
Probably there is no where near the securities
in Belgium that there are in Holland. Holland
has held a lot for B. long time.
Berle:
There are a lot of them. They have had them
quite a while.
Frank:
You will find them in Switzerland. There must
be a terrible lot in Switzerland.
Cochran:
Of course, since those two branches have been
set up in New York, the Swiss bank corporation
will hold a large part.
Frank:
That is right.
Regraded Uclassified
16
- 13 -
Berle:
My impression 18 that a good many of the
Dutch securities are on the way over here.
Cochran:
here have been a good many shipped in the
past. I know they had to increase their
space 8.8 custodian service down there and put
in more vaults.
H.M.Jr:
As soon as Ed comes in, we will ask him about
the U. S. Government and then we will invite
those gentlemen back.
Berle:
It seems to me we might. In that case, the
only other thing we would have would be the
cable instructions to our Consuls, which,
if you think we will have the idea, I think
it would be a simple narrative statement of
the proposal, 8. statement that they are au-
thorized to witness the destruction and/or
authenticate the signature. I don't know how
many of our men - I don't know what the demands
on our men will be in the next few days. They
ought to be pretty great and B. couple of them
have been bombed out of their Consulates and
have had to set up temporary Consulates.
H.M.Jr:
How are you going to handle the U. S. Government
bonds?
Foley:
Well, it requires & bond in connection with the
issuance of & new certificate when the original
has been lost or destroyed.
Gaston:
Both bearer and --
Foley:
I think so.
Berle:
I see where your surety companies take --
Foley:
Well, either that or we might be able to have
that changed.
Berle:
The private securities all have that provision.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Ed, to do B. little fast thinking, what I
get from what Berle said while you were out,
he 1s going to go back and draft a cable now
17
- 14 -
as to securities in private companies in the
United States. Is there anything special that
he has got to put in there on U. S. Government
bonds?
Foley:
Well, I would like & little while.
H.M.Jr:
How much time do you want? I should have told
you what it was, but I didn't. How long do you
want?
Foley:
I will know more at midnight than I know now.
Can you give me until midnight?
H.M.Jr:
No. Take at chance.
Berle:
My thought is this: I think Jerome was called
on this. All you are doing is creating a docu-
ment which is excellent evidence of the loss of
these securities, bringing in play our law for
the replacement of them. The intervening ques-
tion, the Dutch decree for requisition, is an
entirely different matter, but we don't have
to settle that tonight.
Assume we do recognize the right to requisition,
that is a separate question. Our cable would
be adapted toward giving the Consul enough back-
ground so he knows what he is doing and then
telling him that he may authenticate these certi-
ficates of destruction which are executed by some-
body, presumably B. bank in Holland, in the presence
of B. Dutch official who states that fact and whose
signature and office the Consul witnesses and
that is the document which --
Foley:
You want to get it off tonight?
Berle:
Yes. That document will then presumably be pre-
sented to you in the Treasury in the case of
the Treasury certificates and these other fellows,
the private corporations, in requesting the
issue of the replacement certificate under their
by-laws or under the appropriate statute, in the
case of Treasury certificates.
Bernstein: It may be that as far as holdings of private
securities are concerned, you will have to go
18
- 15 -
further and have these things - the destruction
witnessed by an American officer. Would that
present an impossible burden? Supposing these
banks can do all the work, the Netherlands Cen-
tral bank can do all the work? They will have
lists, a sheet which will refer to a hundred
securities and all that the American Consular
officer has to do is to see what they are throw-
ing in the fireplace and check the list every
time they throw something in the fireplace and
then sign his name once.
Serle:
Bernstein, about the last thing in the world that
an American Consul, where there 1s real stress,
will be doing is sticking around and checking
things of that kind.
Frank:
How can he help it?
Berle:
We will do the best we can on that, but you have
in mind that there are many, many hundreds of
Americans in Belgium. With everything in the
world going on, many of these men under fire and
so on, they will be dealing with the situation
as rapidly as they can but they won't go taking
a happy walk to the bank unless life happens to
be running fairly easy. There will be ships
and sealing wax and everything in the world
coming in on those boys.
Frank:
I would like to raise a question about our long
list. Maybe it is the best you can do, but
you are going to have these things presented to
dozens of different corporations. If you have
one list, that list will get worn out by the
time it makes the rounds, won't it? I would
think you would have to do it by the corporation.
H.M.Jr:
Have it photostated.
Bernstein:
There are 50 trusts. Each trust would have the
job of making out a sheet of all its securities
with as full a description of it as you can get.
H.M.Jr:
Bernie, they say the big bank is burning there.
That wasn't a pun, either. You have got to
Regraded Uclassified
19
- 16 -
think of some way that has never been done
before that a transfer agent here in New York
will recognize.
Bernstein:
It seems to me if there are only 50 trusts,
you will need 50 certificates and I don't know
why 1t need be more than a page or two long,
listing the securities in some appropriate
way and every time you just throw it into the
fire and the guy signs h1s name and I don't
know why it would take them more than an hour
to do the whole batch. Those trusts must know
what they are - they must have sheets giving
inventories.
Berle:
They know what they do. The question is whether
the Consul or whoever it is can verify all those
lists. They won't be B. page or a page and & half
long. They will be endless pieces. They have
flocks of bonds and they wouldn't be one bond,
they would be 200 bonds, perhaps, of the same
corporation and they will have stacks of lists.
Frank:
I suppose in Amsterdam - the Consul must have
several deputies there.
Cochran:
A Consul General, two Consuls and two Vice Consuls.
Berle:
That is right, five of them. There are three in
Rotterdam and a couple in the Hague.
Cochran:
Those are the diplomatic officers there.
Berle:
They are both now.
Cochran:
That is right.
Berle:
And we could, of course, if the Embassy staff isn't
working too hard - which is B. fat chance - some of
the boys in the Embassy could also help the Con-
sular officer.
Cochran:
I think it would be 8. good idea 1f the man could
be present, but ordinarily we wouldn't ask a
Consular officer to say that this certificate
is a valid certificate of the ownership of
shares.
- 17 -
Foley:
I should think 1f this isn't EL Consular officer -
if there isn't a Consular officer there, someone
in the foreign service would actually see these
certificates destroyed. The chance of having
the thing recognized by a transfer agency in
New York isn't very good.
Frank:
I don't think so.
Foley:
Think you have got to have somebody there? I do.
lie 18 the fellow that has to take 8. chance. He
is the guy that has to go out on the line. He
has got confidence in these people and he trusts
them. That 1s about all there is to it.
Frank:
If he doesn't trust them, the transfer agency
doesn't.
Berle:
How many people are going to go out and take the
chance --
Foley:
That is what I think.
Frank:
He ought to take the chance. He can't defend
himself any. He might as well go busted.
Berle:
If I saw a Treasury official doing that, I would
feel a little bit happier about it.
Foley:
I think we take as many chances as the State
Department.
Cochran:
Yes, we are getting 8. little bit conservative
these days.
H.M.Jr:
I em very pleased to see that Mr. Berle and I
are just a couple of laymen here being snowed
under by the lawyers.
Berle:
I used to practice law myself and I am not quite
sure I agree with Jerome on the question of
what we really - what they really want is proof
of the loss, don't they? Just why do they get
B. better proof out of an American Consul who
happens to be there than out of anybody?
Bernatein: We are just checking on whatever --
Regraded Uclassified
21
- 18 -
Berle:
The law of a private corporation is that lots
of things get lost without having a policeman
or B. constable or somebody around to witness
the loss and that happens all the time. I admit
that it is quite a nuisance and the Allied pur-
chaser must be in possession of these things
because they have to have & good lawyer in New
York to attend to that nuisance.
Bernstein:
This is what was done during the World War.
Berle:
But they weren't just shoving this on the
Consul as the thing came on. There they had
had the list made and in one case, at least,
they had had it checked off long before and
then when things got too hot they threw it over
the dam. A lot of those were destroyed will thout
benefit of American clergy and still fixed up
later, though it was quite a chore to put through
the transfers.
Frank:
Wouldn't it be possible that one of the Consular
officers would have some American who would go
there? I just have a feeling it would make it
easier for these folks if you had some American
whom the Consul would ask for to be a second
witness.
Berle:
Haven't the New York banks --
Bernstein:
I wonder if there aren't transfer agents there.
Cochran:
Not for those Dutch concerns.
Frank:
Don't any of those American concerns have repre-
sentatives there?
Cochran:
Not in the Netherlands.
H.M.Jr:
Does the National Bank have an agency?
Cochran:
Not in the Netherlands.
Frank:
Are there any English banks that do?
Cochran:
I couldn't say as to that.
Regraded Uclassified
22
- 19 -
Frank:
Aren't there any large American corporations
over there?
Cochran:
There are plenty in Belgium, but none in
Amsterdam. What the Consul could do, he could
be present and say he witnessed the burning,
but I don't think you ought to ask him to
identify each security.
Bernatein:
Could you create a Consular officer, provided
you could get any American who was free who
would be willing to devote a few hours to
witness the burning?
Cochrant
He has to be accredited to the local officials
there.
Frank:
More than that, the bank would find out about
that and they would say you were putting some-
thing over on them.
Berle:
They would see a bomb coming down and somebody
would say, "Run out into the square and get an
American.
Frank:
I think you are going to put a pretty big burden
on the Consular officer to identify each certi-
ficate.
Cochran:
But let him be present at the burning and then
give him the certificate and he authenticates
that.
Frank:
And they ought to get an important officer of
some Dutch bank to be there. Get the President
of the bank, or something.
Berle:
I will try to drag in a. few wives and children
whose houses have been wrecked and send them
down to the bank.
Cochran:
If they could get it centralized --
H.M.Jr:
Can't we send out instructions so that if cir-
cumstances are such that they can do the thing
and not neglect their work, it would be pleasing
if they would offer their good offices to be
of such and such assistance.
Regraded Uclassified
23
- 20 -
Berle:
But I was trying to offer a case where actually
you wouldn't be able to do that and that is in
the case where actually - you probably will be
able to get a good deal of that done in Amster-
dam, assuming that it isn't bombed.
Frank:
Well, Amsterdam, I think, 1s where you might
be able to. Couldn't they try to get some
high official of the Dutch bank to be there?
Berle:
Failing that, I would - what he ought to get
is a high official of the Dutch bank and a
Dutch officer.
H.M.Jr:
Maybe they have a Supreme Court of Netherlands
that isn't busy.
Berle:
I doubt 1f they are hearing many cases just now.
Cochran:
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has the
signatures of those top men in the Denederlansche
Bank, I think.
Bernstein:
In any event, Mr. Secretary, I wonder if you don't
want to tell them that they ought to destroy
every sheet of value because they may be quite
mistaken in relying upon the effectiveness of
your order to keep the Germans from getting the
value.
H.M.Jr:
My order?
Berle:
How do you mean?
Bernstein:
The freezing order, because if those are bearer
securities, even regardless of your order, they
are going to be able to realize on values, be-
cause they sell it to anyone. You are not
blocking - you couldn't, thout blocking all
outstanding bearer securities, prevent that
and consequently I think that ought to be
impressed on them, that come what may, they
burn everything.
Berle:
That is a good thing to impress on the Dutch-
men.
Regraded Uclassified
- 21 -
B.W.Jr:
Have you got It straight in your mind?
Herle:
Yes,
T.M.Jr:
Are you ready for them?
Borlet
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Do you want to rehearse it, do you mind?
Barler
Certainly. I think as far as the cable is sent,
it would be first to recite the substance of
their proposal and then in view of the possible
imminent capture of these securities, it is
contemplated that the holdings of American securi-
ties shall be destroyed in the presence of trust=
worthy witnesses and it is desired to get trust-
worthy and adequate evidence of such destruction
so that these securities may be replaced later
at the request of their rightful owners and in
compliance with our laws and practices. Accord-
ingly, he 1s instructed In so far as possible
to witness the destruction of the securities
and to certify to the fact that such destruction
without, however, undertaking to identify the
securities but to certify the signature and
qualifications of the Dutch witnesses to such
destruction, which should include a competent
bank official and B, competent judicial, notarial
or other officer of the Dutch Government and
whose signature the Consulate would normally
authenticate. Now, there is the question.
Foley:
who would Identify the securities?
Berle:
lie don't care,
Frank:
If worst came to worst --
Foley:
He has got to, hasn't he?
Berle:
If you want to say that, say it cen't be done.
Nobody can identify 600 million dollars worth
of securities.
Frank:
If worst came to worst, Congress could pass
some legislation indemnifying the American
Regraded Uclassified
25
- 22 -
corporations against loss on that kind of a
certificate.
Cochran:
And then taking these in steps, the Consul
can certify to the signatures of that local
official. That local official may be satis-
fied with the signature of a Denederlansche
Bank official, who in turn accepts the lists
these several concerns turn in.
H.M.Jr:
If they could pick a bank official who - it
is known that his signature is on file with
the Federal Reserve of New York, it would be
very helpful, preferably a bank official whose
signature is on file with the Federal in New
York.
Frank:
Maybe some of those bank officials are up at
the front line right now.
Berle:
No, I think you will find them in the banks.
I can see the Germans troops bearing down on
the town while somebody is sitting in a bank
counting securities.
H.M.Jr:
They will do B. lot to save 600 million dollars.
Cochran:
If the Minister can get word in the Central
Bank to pass word on to these concerns, I think
that would be the most effective way of getting
them in.
H.M.Jr:
Right. Jerome?
Frank:
Yes.
Cochran:
Because on the Bank's central board are repre-
sentatives of every one of these corporations.
Berle:
The other thing you ought to say to him, it
is up to the Dutch with such help as they can
get to get that advice to the corporations
and other people.
H.M.Jr:
And that we will not give out any publicity
on this side. Everything will have to come
from his Legation. I am satisfied where it
came from the other day. You, too?
Regraded Uclassified
- 23 -
Berle:
I am, because I ran into something else that I
know came from there.
H.M.Jr:
I see. You know, we got this rather snooty
telegram from the Central Bank of Netherlands
that said, "How come all the publicity?"
All right, boys?
Foley:
Yes.
Berle:
I still don't know who got it first, whether it
was across the street or not. I haven't figured
it out yet.
H.M.Jr:
Well, we have worked with them a good many years.
Berle:
It doesn't matter.
(Mr. Loudon, Mr. Pleven and Mr. Ballantyne entered
the conference)
Loudons
I have requested my lawyer to come, too.
H.M.Jr:
Do you think he will be here in five minutes?
Loudon:
He ought to.
Berle:
We ought to probably indicate, I think, what the
Minister probably knows as to our law in connection
with the destruction of these certificates.
Loudon:
Yes.
Ferle:
In practically all American corporations and even
in connection with the Treasury where & bond or
B. share of stock is destroyed and destruction can
be proved, the owner can obtain a new certificate
later by going through certain procedures, which
is that you have to prove the loss and advertise,
usually, for B. certain number of days in an
American newspaper and then file a bond that you
will hold the corporation harmless if the old
certificate turns up and then & new certificate
is issued to you. That would be the procedure
which I assume would have to be followed. The
Treasury has a slightly different procedure
Regraded Uclassified
27
- 24 -
which is a little more complicated, but it
still follows the same general lines. A
security lost in transit or shipment or some-
thing of that kind, again I believe there is
an advertisement filed and 8. bond and so on.
About all that can be done here would seem to
be 8. method of proving that the certificates
had been destroyed and using that document
of proof as the foundation for the reissue
of those certificates later. That seems to
be the theory we are running on. Have I
stated it exactly, Mr. Secretary?
H.M.Jr:
Quite.
Berle:
Our people might, I suppose, be of use in
authenticating documents by witnesses to the
physical destruction of those securities and
that, I take it, is as far as we could pro-
bably go. Now, that would then mean that some-
one with a certificate of the ownership of
the certificate before, plus the proof that
it had been destroyed, would then turn up on
this side of the water with this proof and
request an issue to him of the equivalent
certificate.
H.M.Jr:
Can I interrupt you a minute? If you are going
to do this for Belgium, too, would you want
the Belgian Ambassador here now?
Berle:
I think there 18 time on that, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
We can handle that tomorrow morning.
Berle:
Based on the military situation, I should guess
there 1s & good deal more immediate possible
stress in Holland than there is in Belgium, as
far as we know now.
Loudon:
I don't know, but - I am not so sure about it,
but --
Berle:
I am not, either. I merely indicate that the
spearhead --
Regraded Uclassified
28
- 25 -
Loudon:
Our needs are just as urgent - they are near
Brussels and when they get to Amsterdam, we
have just started our first line of defense.
They are through the line of defense if they
have crossed the canal.
Berle:
That is true.
Loudon:
Then there is --
Pleven:
I have not heard that in Belgium they have this
system.
Frank:
I don't think that would make any difference,
though, would it?
Loudon:
May I ask another question? If you give those -
may I say, this certificate of destruction, by
the American Consul General of the American
Legation, they must reach here. In that case,
18 it feasible that it will be handed to the
American authorities who in turn will see fit
to export them in the pouch?
Berle:
I think that could be arranged, yes.
Loudon:
Because I think that is absolutely necessary.
H.M.Jr:
Absolutely.
Loudon:
That is B vital procedure. Now, the second thing,
if you do that and this pouch gets lost, therefore
they can't be delivered here. In some way or
other, can you then arrange that telegraphically
the numbers of the certificates - if they are to
go down, I would have nothing left.
Frank:
Unless you could photostat that list.
H.M.Jr:
Telegraph, I would say, is out. Mr. Berle doesn't
even know 1f his telegraphic instructions will
get through tonight.
Loudon:
They will go over. I have rung up four times
to The Hague. There is no nervousness in The
Hague. There is nothing going on there.
Regraded Uclassified
- 26 -
Berle:
That is true now. My thought is that that might
not be true at any time.
Loudon:
I would be very much surprised.
Berle:
Well, in Rotterdam our Consulate has already been
bombed and I imagine somewhere else.
Prank:
I see no reason why photostats should not be
made and retained in the Consulate.
Cochran:
You would have one copy made which the Consulate
would keep and one to the Dutch Bank and one
put in our Legation files for transmission in
the pouch?
Serlo:
That, I should think, would be the way to do it.
We could make them in triplicate or something
like that. We haven't lost any pouches that I
know of so far.
Loudons
Of course. Rotterdam is a separate island and
first of all we have had successes today in
pushing back with troops and we had successes -
Dordrecht has been recaptured and the reason
that Rotterdam itself has not been cleaned up
is that they have dropped again 5,000 parachutes.
They keep on dropping as many as they can because
from Rotterdam they hope to have the river and
then be able even for the submarines to get
through the inland waters and make off the Holland
Coast to the English Coast.
H.M.Jr:
5,000 today?
Ieudon:
5,000 today. The battle is shifting the whole
time. As soon as they can get through that
something is going on, we get more news. They
gave out that the airfield is completely destroyed
and in the city with the help of the Fifth Column
who are all Germans who have lived there ten or
fifteen years who snipe out the windows, it is
not an outpost of the German Army. As long as
we are still busy in Rotterdam, I have been
specially instructed to take notice of this, that
the main power of the Army in Holland - there
is 99 percent of the Dutch Army still operating
Regraded Uclassified
- 27 -
and they think they can hold out for con-
siderable time. They are not the least
afraid for Rotterdam.
Mr. Saher entered the conference)
H.K.Jr:
I think, Pr. Berle, if you would go ahead and
state the case --
Berle:
I think maybe you are familiar with the general
outline we are discussing.
Saher:
Oh, yes, yes.
Berle:
Under our law, when a certificate of stock or
a bond is destroyed, there is 8, prescribed pro-
cedure for issuing a new certificate or B. bond,
as the case may be, that usually consists first
of proof of destruction of the original. Second,
usually advertising in a paper for any holder of
the original to present it 1f he has it and third,
the filing of bonds securing the corporation or
what-not in case the original does turn up, after
which a new certificate has been issued to the
original owner or his transferee. All that can
be done here, obviously, is to arrange 8. docu-
ment which is the best proof of the destruction
of the certificate and in the case of a certi-
ficate payable to bearer, bonds payable to
bearer, the owner at the time of destruction.
Now, it is obviously impractical for any American
officer to undertake to verify a list of many
hundreds of millions - well, there is a military
operation in progress, so that about all we can
do would be to witness 8. destruction of the
securities and to authenticate the signature
of 8 responsible Dutch officer, a notary or a
judicial officer or someone from the foreign
office who might also have witnessed and verified
the destruction and have some responsible Dutch
banker, preferably a banker whose signature is
on file with the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, which would mean an officer of the Nether-
lands Bank. Our thought was, therefore, that
we might instruct our Consuls, if they were
Regraded Uclassified
31
- 28 -
requested, to witness wherever possible the
destruction of the securities and to authenti-
cate the signatures of the responsible banker
and of the responsible Dutch officer, together
with the offices they hold and & statement
of the - 8. concise statement of the facts and
the list of securities 8.8 they were then fur-
nished to him, which these people had verified.
If he can verify them too and has time, so much
the better, but he may be having other things
to do about then in view of the military opera-
tions.
On that, the holder of those securities, aided
by that evidence, could probably then get in
most cases with perhaps some nuisance here, but
could eventually get the reissue of securities
to them. It may be highly desirable, I think,
to have all bonds very thoroughly destroyed,
because if those do get out and then get into
the markets through Germany to Switzerland or
to Rome or to any - Spain or to any other neutral
country, that they would then turn up and they
would, of course, invalidate any reissued cer-
tificate or 1f not invalidate them, at least
give claim against whoever has them. That 18
about what we thought of doing, but the initiative
as to requiring the destruction or suggesting the
destruction and suggesting what ought to be done
distinctly ought to come from the Dutch Govern-
ment, because it is a Dutch matter, it would seem
to me, or 1f we did it in the case of Belgium,
then for the Belgian Government.
The suggestion as to how it ought to be done
necessarily has to come from the country in
which these securities are. We are not suggest-
ing that anyone go and destroy our securities
in this manner. This is a method by which we
could furnish B document constituting proof
of loss and at least prima facie proof of owner-
ship at the time the destruction took place,
which would make possible the reissuance of
securities later on.
H.M.Jr:
I would like to add one thing. Your broadcasting
station is still working, isn't it?
Regraded Uclassified
32
- 29 -
Loudon:
Yes.
H.M.Jrr
Because the suggestion was made that we do
this from the British Broadcasting Corporation.
I think it would be much better if it were done
by your own people rather than having it done
by England.
Loudon:
That I get in touch with The Hague?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Loudon:
Yes. But it 13 not 8. matter which I would like
to telephone about.
H.M.Jr:
No, but the suggestion was made - there is no
reason why I shouldn't say it - you see, this
came to us two ways. Mr. Berle received it
from the American Ambassador in London and in
the suggestion which came to him, they wanted
this information so it could be broadcast over
the English Government broadcasting station.
T.e here feel whatever should be done, we would
like to do it through you and you handle it with
your government. Now, if your government wants
to broadcast it, that is their business, but we
think it would be 8. mistake from the reaction
at home here to have it so to speak, being
broadcast by the English Government to the world
to go out and destroy American securities. That
is just the way we look at it. Not being a dip-
lomatic officer, I can say that.
Berle:
A diplomatic officer could say that.
H.N.Jr:
It came through the State Department and through
the Allied Purchasing Commission.
Saher:
The problem 1s, Mr. Secretary, that we should
like to destroy the Dutch bearer certificates,
because the Dutch bearer certificates might
turn up once. Is that your meaning?
Berle:
For us, we have no problem at all. The suggestion
has been made, however, that because of the
exigencies of the situation, 8. great many Dutch
Regraded Uclassified
- 30 -
men and more particularly some 40 or 50 Dutch
administration trusts, not being able to do
anything else, will wish to destroy their
securities rather than let them fall into
enemy hands and then will wish to apply for
reissuance of those securities later on. That,
of course, is their own problem and their
difficulty. They have asked what can be done
to assist them in obtaining a reissuance of
those securities should they do that.
The procedure is strictly, therefore, at their
suggestion and my only word as to the destruction
of the bearer certificates would be that any
bearer certificate which was not destroyed will
eventually, of course, find its way into the
world markets by other sources and if it does,
there is no method yet worked out by which you
can prevent the holder of that security from
eventually realizing on it.
Frank:
And the Secretary's impounding would be --
H.M.Jr:
You realize that Mr. Frank 1s Chairman ol our
Securities and Exchange.
Frank:
I was just saying it WRB pointed out by the
Treasury that the Secretary's impounding would
be inefficacious as to the bearer certificates
if they got into some other hands.
Foley:
We can't control it.
Saher:
But we would not mind very much about these
bearer certificates, because the bearer certi-
ficates --
Frank:
I am not talking about the trust certificates,
I am talking about bearer bonds or B share of
stock endorsed in blank. Those must be
destroyed, because the Secretary of the Treasury's
impounding order will not be effected.
Borla:
The bearer certificates of the Dutch trusts we don't
consider are any concern of ours at all. That
is probably B. matter that will be entirely a
Dutch problem.
Regraded Uclassified
34
- 31 -
H.M.Jri
I wonder If they have another word for bearer
certificates.
9aher:
No, we have the same name but I nixed up those
things. I see that. Well, the most important
part of the thing is the American stock certi=
ficates. They are in large quantities. They
have always been there, There is no great risk
with these certificates, because they are known
here in the States as being in the hands of
that special country, 30 there is no difficulty
with that nor - there are very few and unimportant
quantities of American stock certificates which
are endorsed in blank. With these things, I
would not even do anything at all because if -
that may amount to half B. million dollars, which
would be very high. The most important items
are the shares held directly in Holland. We
have no time and I would not suggest to lose any -
to make any discussion concerning these stock
certificates endorsed in blank, because there
1a not - there may not even be a million of
guilders. It is not important.
Foley:
That simplifies it very much.
Berle:
The remaining question is the question of bonds.
H.M.Jr:
U. S. Government bonds.
Foley:
Do you have any of our Treasury obligations?
Saher:
Not much.
Frank:
Any quantity of American bonds of American cor-
porations?
Saher:
Not in great quantities.
Frank:
Many of them are registered.
Saher:
I don't think SO.
Foley:
How much would be ours and how much world be
private, the direct obli ations?
Regraded Uclassified
35
- 32 -
Frank:
How many are --
Loudon:
I was informed that there are in Netherlands,
I think, 610 millions.
Frank:
Are those all in Amsterdam?
Loudon:
There are some in Rotterdam, too.
Foley:
All under one control?
Saher:
No, I guess that it might be under 40 or 50 dif-
ferent controls.
H.M.Jr:
Now, may I ask, does Mr. Tripp's bank have any
of those in his vaults? Whose vaults are these
in, mostly?
Saher:
Very often there is a brokerage which has its
own safe installed and they are in the safe of
that firm. They may be in some cases in the
safes of larger banks and then we have what
we call clearing banks, who don't do any normal
business except act as clearing institutions.
Frank:
Are those registered?
Saher:
Oh, yes, in the name of the trust.
Frank:
So there is no bearer problem hers.
H.M.Jr:
We feel here - we, in fact, are quite sure that
the Denederlansche Bank, which Mr. Tripp - the
signatures of his officials are all on file
with the Federal Reserve in New York, so if they
could be used, those gentlemen's signatures could
be used, it would be very helpful.
Saher:
Oh, surely, that 1a possible.
H.M.Jr:
And you could ask - it would be very easy to find
out - which of their signatures are on file here
with the Federal Reserve in New York.
Saher:
That 1s easy, very easy.
Regraded Uclassified
36
- 33 -
H.M.Jr:
And I should think that they have the machinery
anyway. That building hasn't been attacked,
has it?
Saher:
That would be very easy.
H.M.Jr:
Where is the Denederlansche Bank?
Cochran:
In Amsterdam.
H.M.Jr:
It hasn't been attacked, has it?
Loudon:
Oh, no.
H.M.Jr:
You know the top officials are on file here.
Cochran:
oh, yes.
Loudon:
Those are all officials of Amsterdam, those are
not officials of Rotterdam, of the agency of the
national bank in Rotterdam.
Cochran:
Our Federal Reserve Bank would only have the
signatures of the main bank in Amsterdam.
Frank:
It 1s a comparatively simple problem, then.
Saher:
It is a simple problem and I would not lose
time with the other problem because it is of
no importance if you consider this problem.
Pleven:
I would like to make clear, we were asked to
obtain from you if you could advise your
concerns that 1f they are advised by the Dutch
Government to do something of this sort, this
is all right from your viewpoint.
H.M.Jr:
Mr. Berle, you are going to the State Department,
aren't you, to get out such a message at once,
isn't that right?
Berle:
That is right.
Pleven:
If it was found necessary to adopt this system
of destruction, we wanted to be sure that your
Consuls would know what to do.
Regraded Uclassified
37
- 34 -
Foley:
Advice will be sent from here that this is
contemplated.
Saher:
In other words, B Consul would say, "Wall,
what have I to do? I can't assume that
responsibility."
Berle:
I wonder 1f the discussion hasn't gone a
little bit farther than that, Mr. Pleven.
The Minister of Economic Warfare requested
us to authorize a broadcast by the British
Broadcasting Company commencing tomorrow,
that 18 to say, sometime at 2:00 or 3:00
o'clock this morning, 80 that either they
have already discussed it at the Hague or
they were going to go ahead anyway. Now, do
you happen to know how that stands?
Pleven:
You see, my telephone call came through about
1:30 this afternoon.
Saher:
It is possible that they did not realize in
London at their meeting that the most important
problem concerning the destruction, the situation
is very easy from many points of view. The Ameri-
can corporations know in general where these
stock certificates are, They are there already
for many years. There is no great danger of
falsification of presentations of documents. That
is all excluded. They might have thought in
London that there are e. great many other stocks
that aren't, but that would make the thing very
complicated.
Berle:
That is obviously what they were talking about,
because they were thinking of a broadcast for a
great number of little people.
H.M.Jr:
Aren't we all right now?
Loudon:
I don't know whether this --
Saher:
This is an important problem. It 1s understood
that what we are willing to do is one hundred
percent in conformity with American law. If you
would need that, you would need your transfer
agent and & representative in Holland and for
Regraded Uclassified
38
- 35 -
us the important problem is to replace the
normal proof with the American law as you
are handling these things here by some other
kind of document.
Berle:
That I don't think we can possibly do. We
can't change over night the American law. All
we can do is to create the best possible proof.
Saher:
And the only thing we might even suggest is
that you wouldn't advise the American corpors-
tions not to be too difficult with us.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I think you realize that everybody here
is very sympathetic and the best illustration
18, we get & telephone call and we drop every-
thing to give you gentlemen our attention. I
think you will find the greatest sympathy here
and it has even been suggested that if necessary,
1f this takes place, we go to Congress and try
to get them to somehow or other validate this,
1f possible, our Congress, you see. I think
you will find that everybody is very sympathetic.
Saher:
Oh, yes, we have that feeling and we are very
happy about it.
R.M.Jr:
We can't give you anything in writing. We can't
guarantee if you burn these things and every-
thing else - but you will find that there 18
sympathy here.
Loudon:
Is there anything I can do - is there anything
you want me to do? I am absolutely willing to
put any wire on any line in any code anywhere
you want it as long as I know exactly what you
want me to do.
Saher:
No, your Excellency, I would suggest what there
is to be done. I think, your Excellency --
Loudon:
It 18 not --
Saher:
At once wire to Holland and explain that it is
necessary to do what gives the greatest possi-
bility of getting new stock certificates issued
over here. It is understood that it will be
Regraded Uclassified
8
- 36 -
of some influence when officials of the Nether-
lands Bank sign the documents and if possible
one official of the Netherlands Government and
then the American Consul or Consul General. If
we get these three signatures, then we get &
document which is not in the real sense of the
word 8. legal document which we need, but it is
B. document which we might consider 8.8 giving us
B. fair chance to obtain the result we wish.
I should therefore suggest that you (Pleven) as
well as our Minister give this word to The Hague
and tell them you can't get B. guarantee that B.
new stock certificate in America will be issued
but you have a nice fair chance to get it.
Berle:
If you get a piece of evidence that will be
accepted.
Saher:
That is right.
E.M.Jr:
I think you would be doing me B. kindness and the
Belgian Ambassador if you told him what happened
here later tonight. He might like to know.
Loudon:
I will ring him up and I will ask him to come and
see you, because I would like to --
H.M.Jr:
I think you might tell him what happened here 80
he will know. I think you will be doing him a
kindness.
Loudon:
I will do that.
H.M.Jr:
Are you (Pleven) going to answer Nonet tonight?
Pleven:
Yes, and I will tell him what happened and that
you are kind enough to give your consideration
to this problem and I will make it --
H.M.Jr:
With them, I mean you will work with them.
Pleven:
Yes.
Loudon:
I would like to add in the telegram I would also
suggest 1f they deem it necessary in The Bague
Regraded Uclassified
- 37 -
to use that, to call in these other bearer
certificates.
H.M.Jr:
That is up to them. That is up to your govern-
ment.
Again, Mr. Berle - when I get through saying
that he can change it - but I wouldn't say that
you are doing this at the suggestion or by
authority of the United States Government.
Loudon:
No, but I em suggesting it. I can always say
it has been suggested to ne, without saying
it is the United States Government.
Berla:
In that case, Mr. Ballantyne, since the sugges-
tion has come to us that the British Broadcasting
Company would like to broadcast something tomorrow
and requesting immediate reply, I intend wiring
our Embassy in London that 8.8 we see it there 1a
no point in such a broadcast. At all events, if
any such broadcast should take place, it should
be at the instigation of the Dutch authorities
and indicating what we have done. I don't know
that we need to go se far as that. The immediate
question was whether the British Broadcasting
Company should broadcast something. There appears
to be no need of that on your statement.
Saher:
Yes, but the Minister just told me that neverthe-
less there are, 8.9 he has been informed, about
50 millions in the other amount and as we are
now in the situation, we might consider 50
million. In B. country which is in the horrible
situation of our country, you know, every penny
counts.
Berle:
I agree entirely about that. If there is to be
any broadcast, it would presumably be a broad-
cast by or on behalf of the Dutch Government.
Saher:
I quite agree. I understand fully your stand=
point, In B bit friendlier way, if you say
there 1e no need for a broadcast, that is not
up to the point, E.8 I might think, but the
good thing would be to say, well, it 1s better
Regraded Uclassified
41
- 38 -
to do it in the Netherlands than in England
and the Netherlands Minister will take care
of that.
Berle:
I have but one difficulty. I had understood
from the cable we got from our Embassy in
London that this had already been arranged,
but Monsieur Pleven tells me it is still a
matter to be discussed with the Dutch Govern-
ment. Plainly, therefore, it would be 8. little
unusual if we cleared a British broadcasting
release in advance of an arrangement between
the British and the Dutch Government.
H.M.Jr:
Isn't your foreign minister in London?
Loudon:
In London or in Paris. He may be on his way
to Paris.
Saher:
Mr. Berle, you said it is not necessary to make
a broadcast. That 1a the only thing I wouldn't
like to be said.
Berle:
I can say that, but I think perhaps B. better way
of putting it would be that it doesn't concern
us but primarily 1t is B. matter for the Dutch
Government.
H.M.Jr:
All right, Mr. Minister?
Loudon:
All right. Shall I go home and drop the cable?
H.M.Jr:
If you want anything more tomorrow, we are
available.
Loudon:
No, I think we know enough to drop the cable
tonight.
Regraded Uclassified
ITALIAN STOCK PRICES
(Milan)
Dec. 31, 1927 - 100
Daily
Weekly
I 940
1939
1940
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JULY
AUG,
SEPT.
OCT
NOV,
DEC
JAN.
FED.
MAR,
APR.
MAY
JUNE
JULY
2
9
16
23
30
6
13
20
27
4
11
16
25
FEX
PCR
PEN
PER
CENT
CENT
CENT
CENT
210
210
185
185
200
200
180
190
190
190
175
175
180
180
170
170
170
170
160
160
165
165
150
150
160
160
SHARES
140
140
SHARES
545
Volume
THOUSANDS
THOUSANDS
200
200
130
130
100
120
100
120
110
0
110
o
JULY
30
13
20
27
4
11
18
25
AUG,
SEPT.
OCT.
NOV,
DEC.
JAN.
FCB.
MAR.
APR.
MAY
JUNE
JULY
2
9
16
29
6
1939
1940
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
1940
.
DAILY FOR LATEST WEEK ONLY
The 14. IM Secretary of the Treasury
FO - 141
Invoice al Towards and Details
Regraded
5-13-40
43
APPROPRIATIONS FOR STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS
Approved and
Submitted by
Approved by
Appropriated
Departments
President
by Congress
June 24, 1939
$25,000,000
$25,000,000
$10,000,000
November 27, 1939
90,000,000
15,000,000
12,500,000
May 8, 1940
12,500,000
12,500,000
-0-
Totals
$127,500,000
$52,500,000
$22,500,000
May 13, 1940.
Am
Regraded Uclassified
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
The following appropriations nave been made by the Congress
for strategic and critical materials:
By letter of June 24, 1939, the Budget
Officer, War Department, transmitted
to the Bureau of the Budget an esti-
mate of $25,000,000. The President
approved the estimate and transmitted
it to Congress on July 10, 1939, in
the same amount (House Document No. 396,
76th Congress). Congress approved
$10,000,000 which amount was carried
in the Third Deficiency Appropriation
Act of 1939, approved August 9, 1939
$10,000,000
Under date of November 27, 1939, the
Assistant Secretary of War and the
Assistant Secretary of the Navy re-
quested that the Treasury Department
submit an estimate for the fiscal year
1941 in the amount of $90,000,000.
The Treasury transmitted this esti-
mate to the Bureau of the Budget on
December 1, 1939, for inclusion in
its annual estimates for 1941. The
President approved $15,000,000 for in-
clusion in the annual Budget for 1941.
Congress appropriated in the Treasury
Department Appropriation Act for 1941
12,500,000
Total Appropriations
$22,500,000
In addition, a supplemental estimate of
appropriation was submitted to the
Bureau of the Budget on May 8, 1940,
approved by the President and Trans-
mitted to Congress in the amount of
12,500,000
Grand Total
$35,000,000
Regraded Uclassified
Totes on Army Program Conference
At the White House, May 13, 1940, 5:15 P.M.
There VAS some preliminary discussion between Mr. Morgenthau
and Kr. Johnson with respect to increasing airplane engine pro-
duction. Mr. Johnson's memorandum encompassed the possibility of
building two or three Federally owned engine plants or duplicating
existing facilities of the three established engine manufacturers,
Mr. Morgenthau took lasue with such & program stating that
he thought it was much more to the point to establish new privately
owned companies in the airplane engine field. Mr. Johnson men-
tioned the possibility of Continental AB it had developed an air-
plane motor which showed some promise.
Mr. Morgenthau went on to say that possibly a large private
Interest might be persuaded to buy out Continentel, and that he
would like to see at least two more private manufacturers in the
engine field, Mr. Johnson countered with a statement that he
would like to see at least three more private manufacturers making
plane engines.
Kr. Johnson added that he thought probably Chrysler would be
the best one to do such n. job. Whereupon, Mr. Woodring recalled
the experience that Packard had had in that field. Colonel Burne
interjected with B. remark that after all it was the time element
that mattered, and that it was imossible to build a plant and
train the personnel in P short time as evidenced by the experience
of Allison which had been working on the whole project for four
years and on its plant for the last eighteen months.
By that time General Marshall was ready to proceed with the
meeting, stating that the figure of $112,736,000 which represented
the pay. entions, clothing, transportation, etc., for 38,000 men
for twelve months had been reduced to $15,229,000. The resulting
difference vas to be handled as a deficiency appropriation.
General Marshall said that three other general items had been
changed, namely, all amounts for anti-aircraft had been collected
into a single Item whereas it had been distributed through several
Items heretofore: the amount for the modernisation of planes and
Measons for planes had been divided into two categories rather than
lumped together: twenty heavy bombers had been entirely omitted from
the list.
Regraded Uclassified
46
- 2 -
Mr. Woodring made the statement that the President said
no items should be included on which production could not be
started right away, and Mr. Johnson said there were no such items
included. Mr. Johnson inquired of General Marshall about the
$98,000,000 for food and rations which had been cut from this
list. General Marshall replied that he understood that it would
be financed by EL deficit appropriation.
Because of the confusing nature of the items, Mr. Morgenthau
inquired as to just what the differences were between the list
under discussion and what it had been at the morning conference
with the President. Mr. Johnson replied that this $98,000,000
item for food and rations, etc., for 38,000 men had been elimi-
nated, and Mr. Woodring added that about a total of $111,000,000
had been cut out.
Mr. Morgenthau inquired as to what delay there would be
in getting production of commercial (essential) items, and
Mr. Johnson replied that the delay could not be more than twelve
months or those items would become non-commercial (critical)
items.
Mr. Morgenthau suggested that the group meet at 10:30 to-
morrow morning to talk on the aircraft factory situation. This
was agreed to by Messre. Woodring and Johnson.
Mr. Morgenthau reiterated his position that new companies
in the engine field were more preferable than expansion of exist-
ing plants. Mr. Johnson said that such B. program would be fatal,
but Mr. Woodring replied that he was all for it. Mr. Johnson's
position was taken primarily on the basis of the time element
involved and he pointed out the fact that the Allison plant had
depended on the Cadillac workmen of General Motors who had been
specially trained.
Mr. Johnson said that Lycoming and Continental were two
small companies, but perhaps they could be worked in on such 8
program. It vas Mr. Morgenthau's suggestion that they be bought
out inasmuch as increased pressure through large buying orders
on the three manufacturers now in the field would give them indi-
gestion. Mr. Johnson said that he did not think 80 and that any
new companies in the field would have dropsy, gout, and consumption.
To which Mr. Morgenthau replied that crowding would be just as bad.
Regraded Uclassified
47
- 3 -
Mr. Woodring pointed out the possibility that the production
load, even though it were doubled at the present time, might double
again in six months; 8 situation which the three established con-
panies would find it impossible to meet. In support of this,
Mr. Morgenthau stated that the Anglo-French Purchasing Board had
already invested $60,000,000 in the three established companies;
that more business would swamp these companies, and that the loca-
tion of the plants were in the wrong places.
He added, however, that he would be agreeable, and Mr. Johnson
concurred, to & plan whereby 10 to 25 million dollars would go into
new companies to get them started and the balance possibly into e
dimlication of existing facilities.
Mr. Morgenthau closed the session by reiterating his position
that everyone should seriously consider the estoblishment of two or
three new companies in the field before any other plan was adopted.
Py.
PY:bj
5/15/40
Regraded Uclassified
48
CONFIDENTIAL
May 13, 1940
To:
The Secretary
From: Mr. Young
General Brett informs me that the
airplane engine capacity as of January,
1941, will amount to 24,000 engines of
the 1000 horsepower class per year.
704.
49
CONFIDENTIAL
May 13, 1940
To:
The Secretary
From:
Mr. Young
In accordance with your instructions, I called
General Brett to find out how many engines of 1000 horse-
power and over the three airplane engine companies could
produce as of January, 1941.
General Brett called me back at 12:45 and explained
that the only accurate measure of productive capacity
was in terms of horsepower rather than of engines. The
latest estimate 1s that productive capacity of 2 million
horsepower per month would be available by December, 1940,
allocated as follows:
Allison
400,000 horsepower
Wright
800,000
#
Pratt and Whitney 800,000
#
This 2 million horsepower would be equivalent to 2000
motors of 1000 horsepower each per month. This estimate
includes allied orders but does not include estimated capa-
city on probable orders.
General Brett vas very anxious that you understand
how nebulous such an estimate is because the manufacture of
engines of more than 1000 horsepower each would reduce the
total number produced. The General was very cooperative
and seid that he had plenty of other figures if you did not
like these.
Py.
Regraded Uclassified
50
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
FICE OF THE DIRECTOR
WASHINGTON
May 13, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY
There is attached hereto as a matter of information copy of a priority
message which I received this morning, addressed to General Brett by
Colonel Echols of Wright Field.
Breen
att.
Regraded Uclassified
51
PRIORITY
DHQ-T-627 5-8-40
GENERAL BRETT
WITH REFERENCE TO CONVERSATIONS THAT YOU AND MR. MORGENTHAU HAD AT THE ALLISON
PLANT IN REGARD TO THE CHARGING OF DEVELOPMENT WORK WHICH WE WOULD BE GIVEN BY
VARIOUS MANUFACTURERS IN RETURN FOR AUTHORITY FOR RELEASE FOR FOREIGN SALE, I
AM SENDING YOU THE FOLLOWING SUMMARY TO DATE:
IN REGARD TO JUST EXACTLY WHAT FUNDS THE VARIOUS MANUFACTURERS WERE TO CHARGE TO
THE ALLIES AND HOW THESE CHARGES WERE TO BE MADE WERE NEVER MADE IN THE FORM OF
ANY FORMAL AGREEMENT. WITH EACH ONE DURING PROCESS OF NEGOTIATION, AFTER WE HAD
DECIDED ON THE AMOUNT OF DEVELOPMENT FUNDS THAT THE AIR CORPS WAS ENTITLED TO
RECEIVE REIMBURSEMENT ON, I THEN ASKED THEM THE QUESTION: "AS TO HOW MUCH OF
THIS AMOUNT THEY INTENDED TO CHARGE DIRECTLY TO THE FOREIGN SALES." THE FOLLOWING
IS A SUMMARY OF THE AMOUNT OF REIMBURSEMENT IN THE FORM OF DEVELOPMENT WORK THAT
WE ARE SUPPOSED TO RECEIVE AND BASED ON THE INFORMATION THEY GAVE ME, THE AMOUNT
THAT THEY INTENDED TO CHARGE TO THE FOREIGN SALES:
NAME
BASIS OF NEGOTIATION
CHARGED TO ALLIES
CURTISS AIRPLANE
$745,000.00
ALL
BELL
510,000.00
ALL
LOCKHEED
1,100,000.00
ALL
MARTIN
850,000.00
ALL
CONSCLIDATED
600,000.00
ALL
ALLISON
1,000,000.00
ALL
CURTISS PROPELLER
400,000.00
$200,000.00
HAMILTON STANDARD
150,000.00
ALL
1 -
Regraded Uclassified
52
DHQ-T-627 (CONT'D) - 5-8-40
NAME
BASIS OF NEGOTIATION
CHARGED TO ALLIES
PRATT & WHITNEY
$ 750,000.00
ALL
WRIGHT AERONAUTICAL
750,000.00
NONE EXCEPT IN CASE OF
CANCELLATION OF CONTRACT,
IN WHICH CASE ALL
DOUGLAS
NONE
NORTH AMERICAN
TWO PRODUCTION AIRPLANES PRICE NOT STATED
TOTAL -
$6,855,000.00
$ 200,000.00
NEGOTIATIONS WITH BOEING AND GENERAL ELECTRIC ON TURBO STILL PENDING
ECHOLS
EMK
COPY
Regraded Uclassified
53
May 13, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY
There is attached hereto as a matter of information copy of & priority
message which I received this morning, addressed to General Brett by
Colonel Behols of Wright Field.
att.
Regraded Uclassified
PRIORITY
54
DHQ-T-627 5-8-40
GENERAL BRETT
WITH REFERENCE TO CONVERSATIONS THAT YOU AND MR. MORGENTHAU HAD AT THE ALLISON
PLANT IN REGARD TO THE CHARGING OF DEVELOPMENT WORK WHICH WE WOULD BE GIVEN BY
VARIOUS MANUFACTURERS IN RETURN FOR AUTHORITY FOR RELEASE FOR FOREIGN SALE, I
AM SENDING YOU THE FOLLOWING SUMMARY TO DATE:
IN REGARDTTO JUST EXACTLY WHAT FUNDS THE VARIOUS MANUFACTURERS WERE TO CHARGE TO
THE ALLIES AND HOW THESE CHARGES WERE TO BE MADE WERE NEVER MADE IN THE FORM OF
ANY FORMAL AGREEMENT. WITH EACH ONE DURING PROCESS OF NEGOTIATION, AFTER we HAD
DECIDED ON THE AMOUNT OF DEVELOPMENT FUNDS THAT THE AIR CORPS WAS ENTITLED TO
RECEIVE REIMBURSEMENT ON, I THEN ASKED THEM THE QUESTION: "AS TO HOW MUCH OF
THIS AMOUNT THEY INTENDED TO CHARGE DIRECTLY TO THE FOREIGN SALES." THE FOLLOWING
IS A SUMMARY OF THE AMOUNT OF REIMBURSEMENT IN THE FORM OF DEVELOPMENT WORK THAT
WE ARE SUPPOSED TO RECEIVE AND BASED ON THE INFORMATION THEY SAVE ME, THE AMOUNT
THAT THEY INTENDED TO CHARGE TO THE FOREIGN SALES:
NAME
BASIS OF NEGOTIATION
CHARGED TO ALLIES
CURTIES AIRPLANE
$745,000.00
ALL
HELL
510,000.00
ALL
LOSTHEED
1,100,000.00
ALL
MARTIN
850,000.00
ALL
CONSOLIDATED
600,000.00
ALL
ALLISON
1,000,000.00
ALL
CURTISS PROPELLER
400,000.00
$200,000.00
HAMILTON STANDARD
150,000.00
ALL
- 1 -
Regraded Uclassified
55
DHQ-T-627 (CONT'D) - 5-8-40
NAME
BASIS OF NEGOTIATION
CHARGED TO ALLIES
PRATT & WHITNEY
$ 750,000.00
ALL
WRIGHT AERONAUTICAL
750,000.00
NONE EXCEPT IN CASE OF
CANCELLATION OF CONTRACT,
IN WHICH CASE ALL
DOUGLAS
NONE
NORTH AMERICAN
TWO PRODUCTION AIRPLANES PRICE NOT STATED
TOTAL -
$6,855,000.00
$ 200,000.00
NEGOTIATIONS WITH BOEING AND GENERAL ELECTRIC ON TURBO STILL PENDING
ECHOLS
KMK
COPY
Regraded Uclassified
56
May 13, 1940
8:55 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
General
Marshall:
Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Good morning, General. I understand you telephoned
me after I left you -- a message that you had from
General Watson.
M:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Well, would you want more time possibly this morn-
ing to review the thing and
M:
Well, I think -- I can -- as it stands now I've got
a full half hour, haven't I?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
M:
Well, suppose -- can you add ten minutes to that?
H.M.Jr:
Surely. I have nothing which 18 ae important as
that.
M:
Well then suppose we make it 8. full forty-five
minutes for me to talk to you before we go over
there.
H.M.Jp:
All right. Ten-fifteen?
M:
Ten-fifteen.
H.M.Jr:
Now, what
in
The sense of what he said was he was going -- you
remember when I first made the presentation --
started to make the presentation to you Saturday,
it was -- began on the basis of what the President
had called on me for.
H.M.Jp:
Right.
M:
And what I had added to that little thing that
has come over about anti-aircraft.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
Regraded Uclassified
57
- 2 -
M:
And then you put that aside to take in the broader
program BO it wouldn't be piecemeal.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
M:
Well now, I gather from what General Watson said,
two things. In the first place, that -- that the
night before the Navy had a direct conversation
with the President.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
M:
And he had thrown them out on -- or at least seem-
ingly thrown them out, on the basis of getting 20
thousand additional men.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
the
General Watson was adhering to this little thing,
which he seems to have been somewhat responsible
for, that anti-aircraft request
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
":
for which I tacked on additional iteme for
certain gune and ammunition.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
M:
And he stressed very much that we mustn't bring up
the question of men. Well, I mean -- I just wanted
to tell you that
H.M.Jr:
Well, I
M:
that 18 his view.
H.V.Jr:
I've differed before with the President and
I suppose that's why he has me around, and I've
had plenty of time to think the thing over, and
I'm convinced what we want 18 an all-sround program.
si
Well that's -- there's no question in the world
about that.
H.M.Jr:
And I'm going to fight for that.
Regraded Uclassified
58
- 3 -
M:
Well, that's what I've got to do.
H.M.Jr:
And I also feel that the time has arrived where
you've got to have the tools to work with and then
you've got to be personally held responsible.
M:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
And you can't be held responsible unless you've got
what you need.
M:
Well, I've -- I just wanted you to know that slant
on it because I suppose there's
H.M.Jr:
Well, we'll
M:
And I'll be over there -- I'll be over there at a
quarter past ten.
H.M.Jr:
I -- I think it's agreeable to you if I have those
two budget men here.
M:
Yes, sir.
H.V.Jr:
We won't take them to the White House
M:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
but I think it's better to carry them with us.
Don't you think 80?
M:
Suppose you do this, Mr. Secretary, get them over
there about a quarter of an hour after I get there.
H.M.Jr:
A quarter of an hour after.
M:
Give me about fifteen minutes of your time.
H.M.Jr:
You want -- you want it alone, I take it.
M:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
That's all right.
M:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
Regraded Uclassified
May 13, 1940
2:15 D.M.
Harry
Woodring:
Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
I've Just come back.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
When do you gentlemen think you'll be ready?
W:
Well, I just went in to talk to Marshall and then --
probably be four or five o'clook before we have our
phase of it. Now, Johnson of course will have to
prepare, from his angle, the question of plant
capacity and building of plants. That will have to
come from down there and I don't know when that
will be ready. But General Marshall said he would
have his information sometime before five o'clock.
H:M.Jp:
Well, why don't I do this.
W:
All right, what?
H.M.Jr:
Why don't I call up Harold Smith and suggest every-
body -- we meet in the Cabinet room at five o'clock.
W:
That's all right.
T.M.Jr:
How's that?
V:
That's all right.
H.V.Jr;
Because I -- I don't want it over at the Treasury.
I mean, I'm embarrassed enough. So......
W:
Well, that's all right. If that's all right with
you you're welcome to come here, but I really think
maybe the other 18 a little better.
H.M.Jr:
Well, the reason I said the Cabinet room 18 because
I understood you wanted it at my office.
V:
Well, I think that -- I thought it would be 8. little
better away from the War Department.
H.M.Jr:
Well, let's have it at the Cabinet room.
Regraded Uclassified
GO
- 2 -
W:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
How's that?
W:
That's all right.
H.M.Jr:
I'd like to do it the way you want; I don't care,
because personally I'd much rather not come.
W:
Um-hm.
H.M.Jr:
But as long as it's set this way, if you want it
in the Cabinet room we'll have it in the Cabinet
room.
W:
Um-hm. You don't think there'll be any undue
alarm if we were -- meeting in the Cabinet room.
I don't want to
H.M.Jr:
Oh. Well, I mean you -- they don't know you're
going to the Cabinet room.
W:
No.
H.M.Jr:
Could you
W:
What do you think of meeting in General Marehall's
office? Would you come here?
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'll be seen going over there and that'll
create more excitement.
W:
Yeah, I guess BO. Well, all right..
H.M.Jr:
I mean, Edison 1e over there at the White House and
-- I mean, supposing they don't know whether youre
going to see the President or not.
W:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
Huh?
W:
All right, five o'clock at the Cabinet room.
H.M.Jr:
And shall I let -- will you let them know or shall
I let the others know?
Regraded Uclassified
61
- 3 -
W:
Well, I'll tell General Marshall and I'll tell
H.M.Jr:
Johnson
W:
Johnson.
H.M.Jr:
I'll get word to Harold Smith.
W:
Now look, if we can get our
end of it ready
with General Marshall, I'll get you over a copy
of that as early as I can.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you so much.
W:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
W:
O.K.
Uclassified
82
May 13, 1940
3:40 p.m.
Present:
Mr. Pleven
Mr. Young
Mrs. Klotz
HM,Jr: While I have it in mind -- oh, I will
get Phil Young and then I don't have to do it all
twice. (Phoned for Mr. Young to come to the meeting.)
General Marshall was here yesterday, our Chief
of Staff, and I spoke to him about the Colt and he
said that Colonel Burns is having a meeting called of
the Colt manufacturers, here in Washington, to arrange
with them to take care of both the Allies and the
United States Army.
Mr. Pleven: That's very good. That's very
good.
HM,Jr: I can say this to you, because I was
with the President all morning, there is no disposition
on the part of the Government not to see that you people
get what you want. Quite the contrary. Quite the
contrary. And every effort will be made to see that
you continue to get what you have on order and that
wherever we can be helpful we will accelerate. See?
Mr. Pleven: Mr. Secretary, that merely dis-
poses of the matter which Mr. Purvis wanted me to take
up with you because I happened to be in Washington to-
day.
HM,Jr: I have had ample time to talk this
morning and what I would like -- I haven't got -- so
hard to get these figures, and I am carrying a figure
in my mind that since the first of April that you have
put up around $40,000,000 to the airplane companies
for plant expansion.
Mr. Pleven: Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
83
-2-
HM,Jr: I am also carrying a figure that
before the first of April you put uo around
$60,000,000. From the beginning.
Mr. Pleven: I have handed to you -- we have
handed to you a complete statement.
HM,Jr: Since the first of April?
Mr. Pleven: Which was giving a complete break-
down.
HM,Jr: Am I right on the $100,000,000?
Mr. Pleven: I think you are a little bit on
the high side. I think the total is $60,000,000.
HM,Jr: Your memorandum said $60,000,000 origin-
ally, and then since the first of April I think it 1s
$40,000,000.
Mr. Pleven: No, I think 1t covers the whole.
HI,Jr: That's what I don't know. That's Just
it. Does It cover the same period? Then it must
be more.
Mr. Pleven: It wes $60,000,000. That covers
the whole. It was a summary of what was shent and
what was to be spent.
HM,Jr: Is the $60,000,000 -- since then you
have gone forward with Wright?
Kr. Pleven: It included the forecast.
HR,Jr: In using a figure, should I use $60,000,000?
Mr. Pleven: Yes. $60,000,000.
HM,Jr; Is that for plant alone?
Mr. Pleven: For plant alone.
Regraded Uclassified
64
-3-
HM,Jr: Including training?
Mr. Pleven: Certain amount of training, but only
$3,000,000 or $4,000,000.
HM,Jr: Now, on Pratt Whitney, how are you getting
along?
Mr. Pleven: What we have not spent on Pratt
Whitney we have spent on Wright. Where we planned to
spend $8,000,000, we are in fact spending $10,000,000.
HM,Jr: Knowing what you want gave me a chance
to talk to the President and with everybody there. You
see? Assistant Secretary of War, Chief of Staff. And
there 18 every disposition to leave it as it 18 or even
be more helpful.
Mr. Pleven: That was really the thing I came for.
HM,Jr: And the Colt thing, I explained they are
having a meeting on Wednesday with Colt -- the Army is --
to work it out that both the Army and the Allies be taken
care of.
Mr. Pleven: Several firms have definitely given
us the impression they only want to sell us if we clear
the new plane and that was the thing that we were wonder-
ing, if word could be said to those people that it was
not a question of saving dollars but question of saving
time.
HM,Jr: When you get a specific case like Colt,
tell me.
Mr. Pleven: You might like to know that the
people who were giving us the impression, outside of
Colt, were Du Pont, Hercules
HM,Jr: But you have not go up to the point of
signing & contract.
Mr. Pleven: No.
Regraded Uclassified
65
-4-
HM,Jr: Colt, you have a contract.
Mr. Pleven: Yes.
HM,Jr: Now, the other thing, 1s this gun for
the ....
Mr. Pleven: For all the planes.
HM,Jr: 37 m.m.?
Mr. Pleven: There are three sorts.
HM,Jr: It's for all of them?
Mr. Pleven: Covers all requirements.
HM,Jr: You will see what happens Wednesday. I
would not worry too much. I would say that's the least
of your worry.
Mr. Pleven: Thank you, Mr. Secretary.
o0o-o0o
Regraded Uclassified
TELEGRAM SENT
CK
GRAY
May 13, 1940
1 c.m.
AMERICAN EMBASSY
LONDON
RUSH
848.
Your 1180 twelfth. It is believed the any
brondcast of the type proposed would occasion less
misunderstanding If it were =1 de by Netherlands and
BElgion governments respectively since this government
obviously dozu not dug_est destruction 32 securitito
and the result of such destruction 14 the concern 52 the
owners rather than of the United States.
The suggestion has been mide by Allied Governmento
that BElgion ind Netherlende notionale destroy .merican
securities in CASE of threatened 1065 and at the SIME
time provide themselves with evidence of destruction
which may soich them in decuring later replacement of
these securities, For your inform tisn Tressury has
been syprosched In this sense by British ind French
representatives. It has Advised these representatives
and also the Dutch |'inister that of course no guaranty
could
Regraded Uclassified
67
-2-#848, May 13, 1 a.m. to London.
could bE given of replacement of destroyed securities
but that Consuls would bE authorized to authentioate
the signatures of Dutch and BElgian officials who might
witness such destruction and who might certify to the
numbers and ownership of the securities destroyed. Such
certificates, especially if, in addition to the officials
there were included the statement of a Dutch or Belgian
bank officer whose signature was on file with the Federal
RESERVE Bank of NEW York might well prove to bE EVIDENCE
of loss or destruction which would materially assist in
obtaining renewal of the securities in due course.
You may wish to point out that there are only a
few Consulo in Holland and BElgium, all very much
occupied, and that it would bE physically impossible
for them to witness personally the destruction of
securities SAVE in important instances.
Foregoing sent after full discussion with Treasury.
HULL
(AAB)
AB:AMB:WDM
Regraded Uclassified
E8
TELEGRAH SENT
CK
GRAY
Hay 13, 1940
1 a.m.
AMERICAN LEGATION
THE HAGUE.
RUSH
86,
"Treasury informo us that the Netherlands md
BElgion Governments are considering advising their
nationals to destroy American succurities in their
possession where there is danger that such occurities
might bE lost or captured. In such cases the govern-
ments mentioned will probably advise the owners to
accomplish the destruction in the presence of on
appropriate notary or judicial officer and also a
responsible official of = bank, preferably one whose
signature in on file with the Federal RESERVE Bank of
NEW York. It is further intended to have the owner
and these witnesses certify to the securities so
destroyed, identifying than appropriately, and to
request authentication of the signature of the Govern-
ment officer by & consul of the United States, after
which such certificates of destruction would bE left
with the consul to bE forwarded to the United States
by pouch.
You
Regraded Uclassified
T9
ham -2- No. 86, May 13, 1 a, m+, to The Hague
You are authorized to receive such certificates
and to authenticate the signatures of appropriate
Government officials who have witnessed such destruc-
tion. In CASES of importance and if circumstances per-
mit you may, if requested, witness such destruction and
state that fact in the document. You may also transmit
such certificates by pouch. If requested EXECUTE in
triplicate retaining one copy, giving one copy to
interested party and forwarding original to Department.
You should point out that authentication and transmission
of such a document does not constitute an assurance that
the destroyed securities will bE replaced, but only creates
documentary Evidence which might bE of as stance in CASE
replacement is Inter sought. You should lso make 1t
clear that while every care will be taken to ensure the
safe transmission and custody of such certificates the
United States Government and its officers accept no
responsibility in that connection.
Repeatato Consul General at Amsterdam, and to Consul
at Rotterdam if practicable.
HULL
(AAB)
A-B:AAB
Eu:HSC
Same to Embassy, Brussels, as Department's 64, May 13, 1 sem,
less last paragraph, adding following paragraph:
"Repeat to Consul General at Antwerp and to Consul
at Brusstle."
Regraded Uclassified
70
TELEGRAM SENT
GRAY
May 13, 1940
2 a.m.
AMERICAN EMBASSY
LONDON
RUSH
849.
Department's 848, May 13, 1 a.m.
For your information following is text of
telegrams sent to Embassy, Brussels, and Legation,
The Hague, for repetition to consular officers in
Belgium and The Netherlands, respectively:
QUOTE (Text of Department's No. 86, May 13, 1 a.m.
to Legation, The Hague) UNQUOTE
HULL
(ACB)
EU:HSC
Regraded Uclassified
71
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
May 13, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
Mr. Peyser of the Federal Reserve Board phoned at 9:25 A. M.
with respect to the situation in the Government bond market
which was down then about 6/32's from the opening. Offerings
were relatively small but there is no buying in the market.
He said the Federal Reserve Board had not received any offers
or made any purchases in support of the market but that if it
continued to drop very fast today that it would undoubtedly
have to go in.
art
I have a call in to talk to
Mr. Rouse in hew york to get wit his veror
Regraded Uclassified
72
May 13, 1940
General Watson called me and asked me who
I thought ought to be at the conference this
morning.
"Did I think the Director of the Budget?"
and I said yes.
"Did I think Woodring?" and I said yes; by
all means.
Regraded Uclassified
12
RE FOREIGN EXCHANGE
May 13, 1940
10:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Foley
Mr. Upham
Mrs Klots
H.M.Jr:
Cy, do you want to get in and help? Pull up
a chair.
Upham:
If I can help you, I certainly want to.
H.N.Jr:
Don't be Jewish and answer 8 question by asking
one. What I want to ask you is this: We are
taking care of the money of five different
countries. Bell has got this thing and he 18
away and Herbert Gaston 1s doing a swell job of
pinch-hitting and he has also got Coast Guard
and a half a dozen other things. I want you
to sit with these two men for a couple of days
and familiarize yourself with this whole ques-
tion of being custodian for five countries and
when you have got the thing and got it soaked
up, I want you to take it on. In the meantime,
just sit with these two fellows until you have
got the stuff.
My understanding with Delano is that he can
spare you and he is lending you to me and the
main thing is that all of this stuff which is
day and night - are you all right, is your
heart sound?
Upham:
Yes.
B.M.Jr:
So sit with these two people and gradually absorb
it and then you can begin to take the thing over,
80 that they can do their own stuff and get to
know the personnel and everything else, but I
want to push this thing on you. Then when Bell
comes back - it is his responsibility and you
report to him, see.
Upham:
Sure.
H.M.Jr:
But I want new blood and I want an extra spoke
to my wheel and an extra tire and I want you to
take this thing on. Weren't you in National
City foreign exchange?
Regraded Uclassified
74
- 2 -
Upham:
Yes, a long time ago.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right, but get into this thing and
just - it will take you a couple of days to
soak it up. You look very healthy.
Upham:
I am all right.
H.M.Jr:
All right. I have got confidence in you and I
wanted an old friend with & certain amount of
intelligence and full loyalty and that is you.
Go with these fellows now. They have got all
of this, with Rotterdam burning. Go on.
From:-
75
mr.Hefflefinger
D&n
Regraded Uclassified
76
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
May 13. 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
I talked to Mr. Rouse of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York at 10:30 A. M. He said there had been a fair volume
of small offerings without many bids and that the System had
gone into the market without any publicity or flare and had
taken about $300,000 out of the market in an effort to offset
part of the excess offerings. He emphasized that the System
had not shown its hand in the market. The market was a shade
better around 10 o'clock (New York time) but did not show signs
of continuing. It was the view of their trading desk that
prices would not hold.
wit
as of 11:15 A.M. - workington - Federal had
increased its purchase to 500.000
Regraded Uclassified
77
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 13, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM W. H. Hadley
11:15 Daylight Seving
GOVERNMENT BOND MARKET
Federal Reserve Bank has purchased $300,000 long bonds in
the market. Prices are steady at the moment at 10 to 15/32nds
below Saturday.
CABLE
From: Amsterdam
To: Federal Reserve Bank of N. Y.
Date:
Sent and received
May 13, 1940
#168
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.
Will you kindly note that the right to dispose of our
gold account "y" and our dollar account "F" with your
institution no longer belongs to our bank but have been
transferred to the Netherlands Government effective today.
If and when the Netherlands Government draws on the said
account they will probably do so through the intermediary
of the Bank of England.
egd. De Nederlandsche Bank
Rec'd by phone from Mr. Knoke's Secretary - May 14/40 - 11:30 am
ka
Regraded Uclassified
79
CABLE
From: Amsterdam
To: Federal Reserve Bank of N. Y.
Date: Sent and received
May 13, 1940
#167
Our #153. Our credit in favor of Netherlands Minister
in Washington. Credit increased with $600,000 to $6,960,000.
Monthly drawings now allowed up to $145,000. Please disregard
further instructions our #153. New instructions reads as
follows: in case balance of dollar account F not sufficient
to cover said drawings you are authorized to take over as
much gold of gold account ? as necessary for the purpose.
egd. De Nederlandsche Bank
Rec'd by phone from Mr. Knoke's Secretary - May 14/40 - 11:30 all
ka
F'vs the Dutab Girts
account which anter
Bmk operates
HMI
Regraded Uclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 13, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
FROM
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Pinsent telephoned this forenoon. He said that the Secretary of the
Treasury had asked the British Ambassador to have Sir Frederick Phillips come
to the United States. Pinsent stated that both the Ambassador and he would
be delighted to see Phillips come over, and that the Ambassador is entirely
ready to send the cablegram. Realizing, however, how difficult it may be to
pry one of the busiest government officials away from London, the Ambassador
would like to have some sort of a summary of the subjects which the Secretary
of the Treasury would like to discuss with Phillips, so that he may use this
RS an argument in the request that this key man be sent to the United States.
Pinsent wondered, also, whether we had considered the amount of conjecture
which & visit by the Under Secretary of the British Treasury might cause in
present circumstances,
I told the Secretary of this call at 11:30 this morning, He instructed
se to tell Pinsent that he would be glad to receive Lord Lothian at his home
this evening at 8:45. I telephoned Pinsent at once.
Pinsent called me back shortly afterwards to let us know that the
Ambassador is dining at the Rumanian Legation tonight at 8:15. He would be
glad to call at the Secretary's house at 3 o'clock, after dressing, or around
7:15, before dressing. The British Ambassador wants me to let them know
whether either of these hours would meet the Secretary's convenience.
A.M. A.
Regraded Uclassified
81
RDS
GRAY
London
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd 1:11 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
1186, May 13, 6 p.m.
FOR THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY.
I took the liberty of sending a copy of your address
to Montague Norman. I received an acknowledgement today
with the following remarks: "In this connection I may
remark, first, that the address goes to the root of the
matter in showing that movements of gold are a by pro-
duct and a symptom of more fundamental commercial and
financial relations and will bE corrected automatically
if ever the world becomes normal again. And secondly
that the following statement is true viz, 'EVERY foreign
country wishes it had more (gold): No foreign country
likes to lose any of it: all countries accumulate it as
soon as they can afford to do so!"
KENNEDY
HPD
Regraded Uclassified
Dear thereacy
64(e)
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
32
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE May 13, 1940.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
=
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION DATE
L. W. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND,
Mr. Bolton called at 11 o'cloak this morning. Be had two
matters he wanted to talk to me about, he said. First, the problem
of the Benque Belge pour l'Etranger, which he understood had their
New York assets completely blocked. He thought it might be of value
to us to know that this bank was e British institution registered
in England and that full control W&B in London. I replied that we
were thoroughly alert to the problem involved, that we had discussed
the matter on Friday and Saturday with the Treasury in Washington
and pointed out to the letter how handicapped the Banque Belge
pour l'Etranger was 8.8 a result of the new regulations. I added
that we had an appointment with them and their lawyers this after-
noon and that we were anxious to do for the bank whatever it was
possible for us to do.
Mr. Bolton then said that he had waiting outside of his
office at that moment a. London representative of an organization
which had been established over the weekend in London to run the
British Empire branches of the Metherlands Trading Society. As we
knew, those branches were throughout the Far East and owing to the
situation in Amsterdam and the blocking of Dutch funds in New York,
that bank would probably have to default in its payments in the Far
East. This organization had been established in London to meet the
emergency situation. It could no longer get in touch with Ansterden
since communication between London and Ansterdam had been out off
early this morning and
consequently it did not sem to be able
Regraded Uclassified
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE May 13, 1940,
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
L. W. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
to get anywhere at all. It had requests from all over the Far East
or funds to meet local requirements. The British authorities
would help to the best of their ability but the Trading Society
had large assets in New York. He wanted to put that matter before
me so that we knew what the situation was and realized the need of
urgent consideration in case the organization shoul make an applica-
tion here for licenses. I replied that needless to say we would do
what we could if " received an application and had the problem
explained to us,
Mr. Bolton repeated that Ansterdam was, at least at the
coment, cut off from London; communication with Belgium on the other
hand was pretty good.
If he had other matters in the future to which he wanted
to draw our attention, he would make free from time to time to send
US cables.
LUK.EW
Regraded Uclassified
84
HSM
PLAIN
London
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd 1:16 P. n.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
1193, Thirteenth.
FOR TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH.
1. Sir Kingsley Wood, the new Chancellor of the
Exchequer, is a solicitor by profession and has been a
liember of Parliament since 1918. HE is best known for
the administrative ability hE displayed as Postmaster
General from 1931-35, when hE improved technically the
postal, telegraph and telephone systems dd gave then
commercial popularity. EE is a middle-of-the-road,
machine hardened Conservative. Although hE has no
special knowledge of national finance hE is intelligent,
approachable and will- no doubt do what hE is told.
2. The new Cabinet and Winston Churchill's pre-
prinent position within it has given confidence to the
City. British security markets closed higher on the day.
KENNEDY
NcL
Regraded Uclassified
35
JI
GRAY
Milan
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd 2 p.m.
Secretary of Stnte
Washington
27, liny 13, 5 p.m.
FOR TREASURY DEPARTMENT. Today's prices ns
follows: 198.25; 337; 507; not listed; 370; 203;
1650; 62; 223.50. Volume 125,300.
Further selling offers forced quotations to
nEw low levels for the year, apparent reason for
it due to increasing political tension.
SCHOLES
HID
Regraded Uclassified
36
JT
CRAY
ANKARA
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd 3:50 Della
Secretary of State,
Washington.
54, May 13, 6 pan.
Belgion Minister to Turkey, Alexandre Paternotte de
la Vaillee requests that the Guarantee Trust Company of NEW
York be authorized to make payments on his order out of his
checking account and on his and his wife's (born Anne
Cruger, bearer of an American passi ort issued b; the Varsaw (#)
dated in 1938) order out of the safeketping accounts held
in their respective names.
HACHURRAY
CSB
(#) Apparent omission
Regraded Uclassified
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Consulate General, Batavia,
Java, Netherlands Indies.
DATE: May 13, 1940, 4 p.m.
Resident individuals and legal entities are pro-
hibited from disposing of foreign currencies, oredits
or negotiable papers by the Netherlands Indies foreign
exchange controls decree of May 11, which was published
today. Also they are forbidden to dispose, either
directly or indirectly, of domestic currencies, nego-
tiable paper or credits to persons abroad. Legal
entities and individuals who are nonresident may not
acquire or dispose of foreign or domestic ourrencies,
negotiable paper or credits per day exceeding one
hundred guilders in value. Exemptions from these
restrictions may be granted by the directors of the
Java Bank.
The full text will be sent via air mail.
DICKOVER
EA:MSG
Regraded Uclassified
CABLE
From: Catterns, Bank of Ingland, London.
To:
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Date: May 13. 1940
#436/40 Personal and Confidential for Allan B. Sproul
1. We have been considering possible steps which might need to
be taken to protect British Government exchanges/gold/ security hold-
ings in the United States at present held in names of various British
banks, including ourselves, against the risk of attachment at the
instance of enemy interests.
2. H.M.G.'s legal advisore in Washington have expressed the view
that complete protection against attachment can only be obtained by
a. transferring such assets into the name
of a clearly identifiable nominee of H.M.G.
b. notifying the holding bank that such
assete are held on behalf of H.M.G.
c. the British Ambausador to acquaint the
United States State Department of the designa-
tion of the accounts held and that the funds in
question are owned by H.M.G.
3. So far as the holdings in our name with you are concerned va
fully appreciate that it 1s contrary to your policy to opening accounts
in the name of a foreign Government.
4. But both H.M.G. and ourselves feel it is essential to take
every precaution and I understand to this end H.M.G.'s diplomatic repre-
sentative in Washington will inform Mr. Morgenthmu of the necessity to
protect our position as in #2 above. We felt that you would 11ke to know
before any such move is made in order that you may be sware of the back-
ground.
5. If we could have yourreactions by cable we could then telephone
you if that would be helpful.
(SIGNED) CATTERNS
Bank of England.
Received by telephone
From Mr. Knoke's Secretary
5115 p.m. May 13, 1940
amp
Regraded Uclassified
89
RDS
GRAY
Paris
Dated liny 13, 1940
Rec'd 5:23 peme
Secretary of State,
Washington.
347, May 13, 6 peme
SECTION ONE.
FOR THE treaSury.
Jenny devoted his article in yesterday's LE TEMPS to
a discussion of the KEYNES plan and its implications.
He considers the measure as a tax rather than as C. loan
and stated that "ito adoption would involve practically
no advantages. On the contrary it would have the dis-
advantage of discrediting loans in general. In other
words, it might socily lead to a reduction in the amount
of capital fresly offered for investment and thus favor
the development of inflation." Thile admitting that con-
cumption of non-sustntials should bE curtailed Jenny
is opposed to any taxation scheme designed to force all
funds not required for/ absolute necessities into the coffers of
the state.
BULLITT
INS
Regraded Uclassified
90
VRH
GRAY
Paris
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd. 5:30 pame
SECRETARY of State,
Washington.
647, May 13, 6 p.m.
(SECTION TWO).
Under such circustances all manufacturing activities
other than those required "to prevent people from dying
of hunger and cold" would bE directed toward the production
of war materials and export commodities. Such 1 situation
is not desirable because : (1) many Enterprises which
have been accustomed to supply the country with nonessen-
tials could not be changed over into war industries;
(2) industries producing for export also require a home
market in order to prevent unit production costs from
rising; and (3) "the entire industrial and compercial
system EXCEPT for that part connected with armoments
would find itself progressively blocked which would maan
such a destruction of capital invested at long term that
the national Economy would bE dangerously weakened.
BULLITT
DD:
Regraded Uclassified
31
VRH
GRAY
Paris
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd. 5:30 Pame
Secretary of State,
Vashington,
647, May 13, 6 p.m.
(SECTION TEREE).
"The fact that Germany is proceeding along this path in
no way proves that in order to conquer her the democratic
nations must also follow it". Jenny concludes that the
was must bE financed according to "classical financial
concepts". "The means of financing public expenditures
are the same in time of war as in time of DEROE. These
are taxation and loans, recourse to inflation being
avoided at all costs". The state should SEED to "sponge
up" part of the increased purchasing DOWER distributed by
it through use of taxation and such taxation should DE
limited only by diminishing returns.
BULLITT
LMS
Regraded Uclassified
92
VRH
GRAY
Paris
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd. 5:15 pame
Secretary of State,
Washington.
647, May 13, 6 p.m.
(SECTION FOUR)
The Ministry of Finance in a communique to the press
issued today announced: (a) to facilitate the entry into
France of merchandise from Belgium, Luxembourg and The
Netherlands, the French Customs authorities have arranged
that such merchandise bE shipped direct to Customs ware-
houses located in the interior instead of being hEld at
the frontier for Customs Examination and the completion
of Exchange control formalities; (b) the personal Effects
of all refugees from the above mentioned countries will
bE admitted free of duty and their automobiles and other
means of transport will also bE admitted free on the
presentation of an official "laissez passer"; (c) the
Exchange control regulations regarding the importation of
gold, banknotes, coins and securities are temporarily
suspended
Regraded Uclassified
S3
-2- # 647, May 13, 6 pame, from Paris
suspended in the case of refugees (please SEE Embassy's
telegram No. 467, April 12, 7 p.m.).
BULLITT
DDI:
Regraded Uclassified
34
D3
G.MY
Paris
Dated May 13, 1940
Rec'd 5:55 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
647, liay 13, 6 Pails
(SECTION FIVE)
However, declarations must be made regarding the
means of payment imported by refugees; (c) during their
residence In France such refugeto will DE clarrified as
"persons considered as French" in so far as *10: exchange
control re_ulations are concerned.
The Bank OF France announced this aftermoon that at
the request of the Minister of Pinance all Luxemburg
accounts would DE temporarily "blocked."
Mormal and permanent budgetary revenue for the month
of May 1940 totaled 5,500,000,000 france an increase of
1,807,000,000 OVER the figure for the corrisponding month
of 1930, Revenue from indirtot taxes exceeded budgetary
catimates 'ay 437,000,000. The Tile in revenue WES prin-
cipally Que to increases in the Tive per cent levy on
DEVENUE from professions (113,000,000) customs dutics
(502,000,000) Jusiness them over tax (252,000,000) and
sugar
Regraded Uclassified
95
-2- #647, May 13, 6 p.m., from Paris.
sugar and saccharine levied (39,000,000).
BULLITT
DDM
36
RDS
GRAY
Paris
Dated liay 13, 1940
Rec'd 7:02
Secretary of State,
Washington.
547, May 13, 5 pain.
(SECTION SIX)
One war levy the special 15% on professional revenues
yisldrd 150,000,000 while the comment tax furnished
541,000,000. Normal and per ensat revenue for the first
quarter of 1940 totaled 15,740,000,000 france an increase
of 3,605,000,000 OVER the figure for the corresponding
period in 1939 and 156,000,000 more than budgetary Esti-
mates.
3y the termo of on arrate published in the JOURNAL
OFFICIEL wholecelers and retailers cre given until June 15
to draw up lists of prices charged by them (please SEE
Subcasy's telegram Fo. 319, Lay 10, 3 p.m.). Furthermore
only the price of merchandise considered in commercial
usage as "current scles" need bE reported.
Another decree provides that the custome duties on
potatoco will bE suspended until June 30, 1940.
(END OF HESSACE)
BULLITT
NPL
Regraded Uclassified
97
PARTIAL PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Consulate General, Shanghai.
DATE: May 13, 1940, 6 p.m.
NO.: 414
The following is quoted from & letter in regard to
Netherlands frozen accounts in the United States which
I received today from the Netherlands Consul General
here, and agreed to transmit for the appropriate atten-
tion of our Government:
"The Netherlands Trading Society and the Netherlands
India Commercial Bank and this Consulate General should
highly appreciate it if the following summary of the
situation might be laid before the interested authorities.
The purpose of the blocking of these accounts in
general 18 obviously to prevent that the invaders of
Holland should divert these monies for their benefit.
However, no German pressure can be brought to bear
aforesaid
on the agencies of the/kix banks in Shanghai, the managers
of whom are amenable to Netherlands Consular jurisdiction.
In view of the neutral status of Shanghai, endeavors
are made to keep the city out of the war as much as pos-
sible. The American measure, however benevolent its
intention, would speedily result in the closing of the
local banks with the resultant loss of prestige.
It is maggested that an unblooking of the total
of these
banks would in no way go against the
spirit
Regraded Uclassified
38
-2-
spirit of the measure taken by your Government. If this
should prove unfeasible, might I urge a prompt decision
on the application for licenses with regard to individual
payments.
True it 1s that many exceptions have been made by
growing out of
belligerents to the application of restrictive measures/blx
the European war, in Shanghai. The British Trading With
The Enemy Act, for example, hasn't been made fully oper-
ative in Shanghai; so long as they do not take part in
political activities, Germans are allowed to reside in
the French concession. In this attitude 1s reflected
the general concern to maintain Shanghai's neutrality
and to avoid giving a pretense for intervention to the
Japanese.
This telegram was repeated to Peiping and Chungking.
BUTRICK
EA:MSG
Regraded Uclassified
(Confidential)
PARAPHRASE
A confidential telegram (no. 213) of May 13, 1940,
from the American Ambassador at Chungking reads substan-
tially as follows:
After some general conversation during the course
of a call which the American Ambassador made on May 12
on the Minister of Finance (Dr. Kung) at the latter's
request, the Minister asked what the effect had been in
Washington of the American Information Committee's mes-
sage. The Minister remarked that now the Generalissimo,
who had talked with him (the Minister) on May 11, would
be likely to want to send a similar message. The import
of the Minister's remarks gave the Ambassador the impres-
sion that the message would take the form of an appeal
to the Government of the United States to back the at-
tempts of the Chinese to maintain the currency as he (the
Minister) mentioned assistance in this field to France
by the United States and he spoke of information (?)
quoted from statements of American examiners, he said,
indicating that approximately a hundred millions (?)
currency -- the property of individuals in China and
Chinese banks representing capital which had fled China --
was held on deposit in banks in the United States. Dr.
Kung spoke of press reports to the effect that the Ameri-
can Government had taken measures to freeze overdrawn
resources
Regraded Uclassified
100
-2-
resources in the United States belonging to neutral
nations taken over by Germany. He made a somewhat
vague inquiry whether the Government of the United States
could not make available to the Chinese Government the
names of such depositors so that China might take some
measures itself to utilize for itself such funds or
whether the funds belonging to Chinese might not be used
by the Government of the United States in steps to help
stabilize
XXXXXX China's currency. The only request which the
Minister of Finance made in connection with these matters
was as indicated in the beginning of this telegram --
what the effect had been in Washington of the American
Information Committee's message. He (Kung) said that
China was crippled in (?) to make her support of Chinese
currency successful by the fact that she had no control
over foreign merchants and brokers and foreign banks in
Shanghai; that China's efforts to keep open the market at
Shanghai was causing China to suffer; and that not only
would collapse of the currency destroy China's ability
to resist in economic fields but it would also be disas-
trous to American investments and business in China.
He expressed the hope that the Government of the United
States would feel able to do something to contribute to
the stabilization fund and to protect the American com-
mercial position. Dr. Kung remarked that he had brought
to
Regraded Uclassified
10.1
-3-
to the attention of the British Ambassador the fact that
half, at least, of the money raised and used in the Sino-
British revenue fund had gotten back into British commer-
cial hands and had in this way been of benefit to foreign
business, including British.
The Ambassador reiterates that the Minister of
Finance made no definite requests and he (the Ambassador)
remarks again that the drift of the conversation was as
indicated above. The conversation left the Ambassador
feeling certain that Dr. Kung was preparing the ground
for a message from General Chiang Kai-shek somewhat along
the lines indicated above and perhaps addressed directly
to President Roosevelt.
The Ambassador states that on May 12 the Financial
Adviser to the Chinese Government (Dr. Young) asked entire-
ly independently whether Kung had made known that General
Chiang had called him in and had made inquiry concerning
the situation with respect to prices and the effect of the
present condition of the Chinese currency on prices.
Regraded Uclassified
102
May 13. 1940
The Netherlands Minister telephoned no (Mr. Moffatt) sometime
between 1 and 2 o'clock this morning to say that he had just been
on the telephone to the Hague in connection with Mr. Morgenthau's
suggestion regarding the recorded destruction of American bearer
bonds. He was told at the Hague that the news was very black; that
the Germans had reached the Zuider Zee on the north; that the Dutch
troops were exhausted having had no sleep for 3 days and nights;
that allied help could not reach them in time. In the circumstances
they regarded it as too late to take any measures on financial
matters.
(Furneshed to Hmg by mr. Cochran)
Regraded Uclassified
(CORFIDENTIAL)
103
PARAPHRASE
A confidential telegram (no. 214) of May 13, 1940,
from the American Amoassador at Chungking reads sub-
stantially as follows:
With regard to the matters dealt with in his telegram
no 213, the Ambassador feels that his knowledge of these
matters 1s not sufficient to enable him to give advice on
the subject. He 1s of the opinion, however, that the
present moment 16 a critical one and that, if a way could
De found to assist the Chinese Government to stabilize
its currency end in this way help the Government to help
itself, this would obviously afford protection at the
present time to American interests and investments in
Chine. The Ambassador remarks that it would seem advisable
that the United States Government make some effort in view
of the conditions which would ensue if the Chinese cur-
should
rency/collapse and he adus that in a large measure the
United States has benefitted from others' efforts up to
the present time.
Regraded Uclassified
104
CONFIDENTIAL
May 13, 1940
To:
The Secretary
From:
Mr. Young
In accordance with your instructions, I called George Hase
at the Purchasing Board office in New York this morning and
asked him to ascertain the amount of money put into engine
plants classified as to British, as to French, and as to com-
pany, together with a three-way breakdown showing the amounts
for plant expansion, personnel instruction, and taxes as of
April 1st, and since April 1st,
George Haas told me at that time that just prior to my
call Bones had called from Colline' office requesting the
Purchasing Board statistician to furnish him information on
gasoline. Haas told Bones not to make any more calls until
he returned to Washington.
George Haas called me back on the telephone at 2:15 to
say that he had found out that the Purchasing Board was also
making independent reports direct to Collins and to the State
Department. The Board wished to know what to do about those
reports inasmuch as there was some duplication of material
between reports and as the Board was subject to some varied
instructions from different sources as to the reporting pro-
cedures.
It was Haas' suggestion that nothing be done on those
reports until his return at which time we could take them up
one by one, ascertain the necessity for them, and remove as
much duplication as possible. I agreed with Haas and asked
him to bring back complete information with respect to these
other reports as well as copies of them if possible.
The Purchasing Board la evidently anxious to cooperate
as it volunteered to send two men to Washington to work with
Ballantyne on the reporting procedure if it could secure copies
of our analyses.
Py.
Regraded Uclassified
165
13
MAY M, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
Shipping Situation.
The export cargo situation at New York, according to
statistics of the Association of American Railroads is practically
the same as last week.
The number of cars of export freight unloaded during
the first week in May averaged over 700 cars per day as compared
with an average for last month of 676 cars per working day.
Export freight awaiting lighterage aggregated 3357 cars on hand
on May 1st as compared with 3472 on May 6th.
Business began
to pick up toward the latter part of April and seems to be
continuing. On May 8, export freight in storage in railroad
terminals and warehouses was 4308 cars, with storage room available
for 10,302 cars.
Loading of revenue freight for the week ended May 4th
totaled 665,510 cars, the highest since January 13th, according to
reports filed by the railroads with the Association of American
Railroads and made public today. This was an increase of 20,990
cars from the preceding week this year, 93,485 more than the
corresponding week in 1939 and 129,361 over the same period two
years ago. This total was 102.94 per cent of average loadings
for the corresponding week of the ten preceding years. Average
car loadings for the ten-year period, 1930-39 were 646,502, based
on the similar week each year.
Grain in cars, elevators and barges at New York amounts
to approximately 1,217,000 bushels. Unloadings have shown a slight
decrease this week. There were 147 cars of Grain on hand et
New York on May 8th.
Regraded Uclassified
103
-2-
There is very little activity in the export grain
market; the rate to Antwerp continuing at 75 # per 100 lbs.
A rate of $25.50 per ton May, was reported this week, from the
River Plate to Antwerp.
The volume of business in the ocean freight charter
market is not very active. Charterers continue to go slow
due to unsettled Scandimavian tonnage situation. Inquiry for
coal carriers continues moderately active. It was reported
that two vessels were closed from North Atlantic ports to Italy
recently, one at $13.00 per ton, the other $13.50.
It is reported that another large order for shells is
being negotiated that will require 40,000 tons of steel.
Steel production last week showed an advance of 31 points over
the previous week, a proportion of which is attributable to the
volume of steel going into export.
Basil Karris
Regraded Uclassified
may 13, 1940.
Ur. Sollivan:
This morning, while awaiting the arrival of several persons
who were to participate in a conference with members of the law
Am of Sullivan and Cromwell, 48 Wall Street, New York, New York,
I engaged in Morris Darrell, a member of that firm, in the usual
conversation, and, among other subjects, he referred to the war
the recent "bad news" concerning the sume.
He stated that one thing which troubled him WILS the apparent
superiority of the German air force and the fuot that the Allies
and not (in his opinion) sufficiently increased their orders for
Amrican planes. He added that he was in a. position to know
he spoke because a member of his organization was attorney
for a purchasing agent and was constantly in touch with the entire
sattor. He then explained that he was referring to Jean Monnet.
1 interrupted to ask if all Allied purchases were not made
through one individual and he explained that it amounted to about
that, England and France each having their own purchasing agent
our the Prench representative (I understood him to say) also acted
as coordinator and that they were constantly in communication so
that each knew of the other's activity.
Mr. Darrell also supplied the information that he was per-
sanully acquainted with the French representative, Mr. Jean Monnet,
und that he was, in fact, counsel for the firm of Monnet and Murnane,
in which Mr. Monnet had an interest. I ignored the name of Monnet
but displayed some interest in the name of Murnane, romarking that
it sounded familiar to me, and after EL moment's hesitation, I asked
IF, by any change, he was the individual I seemed to identify as
une formerly connected with the International Match Corporation.
Mr. Darrell said he was undoubtedly the man I had in mind and that
my confusion could readily be understood because his name WB.5 often
contioned in connection with the Krueger matter, and explained that
instead of being directly interested in the International !latch
Corporation, he was a member of the banking firm of Loe Higginson
and Company, which handled most of the financial transactions of
the Utch Company in America.
I continued the conversation by asking is this firm, in which
in Hurnane wws now interested, was a successor to the old Loo
Rigginson firm. His reply was that the firm had no successor, and
Regraded Uclassified
- 2 -
Mr. Sullivan.
time Mr. Murnane was still oncused in the liquidation of the old
partnership and was "doing an excellent job of it". He explained
further that Mr. Murnane, in addition to his activities a.8
liquidator of Lee Higginson and Company, WES engaged in an Inter-
national business with Mr. Monnet and had been very successful in
that enterprise.
In answer to my query as to whether this was a brokerage firm,
M replied in the negative and volunteered the further information
that their activities were International in acope, practically all
of which were boing conducted in foreign countries. He stated
that the firm had been quite successful in handling financial mat-
tare for persons interested in transactions in those countries
WILDOM laws prohibited the withdrawal of currency, such as Germany,
Italy, etc. He said that one of the most recent large transactions
West proved profitable was the sale of some coal-mining properties
owned by certain Jewish interests in Czechoslovakia and their abil-
ity to get the proceeds from the sale out of Germany, that, of
course, the sale was made in marks and In order to get the proceeds
out of the country, it was necessary to barter with persons in
ather countries or with Germans who had interests outside of
Germany. When I displayed an interest in such accomplishments, he
ment into considerable detail as to how those barters or trades
sometimes occur, such às having ships and other articles built or
commodities purchased in Germany for outside delivery, payment
therefor being made in Germany with marks.
I expressed some surprise that E firm with a French name would
not with such success in dealing with Germans because of the appar-
at feeling of hatred in Germany against French subjects. Mr.
Carrell replied that the firm never operated under its own name
but usually in the names of its employees stationed at the places
of operations, who were of an unusually high type. He said that
the recent transaction concerning the salo of Czechoslovakian coal
properties was handled through a prominent British lawyer, whose
name I understood to be "Flick", and that he, in turn, employed the
tighort type of counsel in Germary, and that this method was
unually Followed in all important transactions.
Regraded Uclassified
103
- 3 -
Mr. Sullivan.
Note: The revenue agent in his report of January 30,
1939, on the case of the partnership of Monnet, Murnane
and Co. for the year 1937 stated that individuals of high
standing were in charge of the offices in London, Paris
and Shanghai. The names of some of these individuals are
Mazot and Strathallan in Hongkong and Shanghai, Drummond
in London, and Pierre Denic (Dennis) in Puris.
At this point the conversation was interrupted by the arrival
of the others.
Rainh Recd
Regraded Uclassified
110
May 13, 1940
9:01 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Lord Lothian.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
0:
G₀ ahead, please.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Lord
Lothian:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
L:
Good morning, Mr. Morgenthau.
H.M.Jr:
How are you, sir? Lord Lothian, the reason I'm
calling you is this. There 18 BO much going on
that affects me that I wonder if your Government
could send over here right away -- just -- if he
only stayed here a week -- Sir Frederick Phillips.
L:
Whether he could send -- whether they could send
Phillips over?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, if he Just stayed here a week.
L:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
There are 80 many things that I think need smooth-
ing out between your Treasury and myself.
L:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And it would be very helpful and -- to me -- if he
could come for a week.
L:
I'll -- I'll see to that at once. And if -- sup-
posing he can't come, is there anybody else you
would like?
H.M.Jr:
Well, the only trouble 1s he and I have gotten
acquainted, you see?
L:
Can do what?
Regraded Uclassified
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
We've gotten acquainted, you know. And he is of
sufficient importance over there that I do hope
that they can send him. I just don't happen to
know anybody else that
L:
Yes.
V.".Jr:
And I do know Sir Frederick Phillips
L:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
and there is BO much going on that if they
could let him come over for a week
L:
I'll send that request straightaway, Mr. Morgenthau.
H.M.Jr:
Would you do that?
L:
I'll do that this morning.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
L:
All right.
H.U.Jr:
Thank you.
Regraded Uclassified
112
May 13, 1940
9:26 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Senator Glass.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
0:
Go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Carter
Glass:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
How are you?
G:
Fairly good, thank you.
H.M.Jr:
Senator, I had a little matter - I'd be glad to
do it on the phone or I'd be glad to come and see
you this afternoon at your convenience. Which is
easier for you?
G:
Well, whichever you care.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it's in regard to this bill that -- for the
R.F.C. Are you going to be in later this after-
noon?
G:
Well, I have an engagement at five o'clock.
H.M.Jr:
At your hotel?
G:
I can manage to be here earlier, though, if you
want?
H.M.Jr:
At your hotel?
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
At five o'clock?
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Could I be there -- come and see you, say at a
quarter to five
Regraded Uclassified
113
- 2 -
G:
Well
H.M.Jr:
......OF four-thirty.
G:
Better come earlier than that.
H.M.Jr:
Four-thirty?
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
At four-thirty.
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I Just don't think we ought to have any banking
legislation at this time.
G:
Well, I'm not quite sure that we should have.
H.M.Jr:
I mean, it just -- it opens up the whole thing,
that's all.
G:
I introduced the bill by request.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. And all -- I just think that -- well, I'm
just head-over-heels trying to be helpful on
this European situation.
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And I don't went to get into any fight now on
banking legislation.
G:
All right. You come up and we'll talk it over.
H.M.Jr:
At four-thirty?
G:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you BO much.
Regraded Uclassified
114
May 13, 1940
9:51 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Helvering. Go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Guy
Helvering: Hello.
H.M.Jr:
Guy, you're going to have to do this on the phone
because I'm getting ready for a White House meet-
ing at eleven.
H:
That's terrible over there.
H.M.Jr:
What?
H:
That's terrible over there, isn't it?
H.M.Jr:
Yeah. No, but -- can't you clear this on the phone?
H:
Yes. Well, here's what I've run into, Mr. Secretary.
I'm not getting so very much support from our own
forces on this Annenberg thing.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
H:
They have come up from their two and a half million
to six million.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah, that's your own staff.
H:
No, no, the texpayer.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
6:
And which he wants to pay a million dollars' cash
and then get time on the payments.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
H:
Well, I'm convinced in my own mind he owes B. great
deal more tax than that and I'm convinced also of
this fact, that he can't -- he can't really pay
with what he's got what he actually owes.
Regraded Uclassified
115
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Can't he borrow it from the R.F.C.?
H:
(Laughs) Well, I don't know.
E.M.Jr:
They've made stranger loans than that over there.
5:
Yeah, that's right. Now, -- but there are some
very questionable items in there that will reduce
that tax about a million dollars.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
à:
But I'm just -- I'm just of the opinion to go below
eight three would Just be uncautionable.
H.M.Jp:
Well
H:
But I'd be willing to recommend that with the 1dea
of sustaining that with a reasonable degree of
accuracy.
H.M.Jr:
Eight three.
H:
Yeah.
K.M.Jr:
Now, wait a minute. Wait a minute. Bargain day,
Just a minute. Wait a minute, Foley and Sullivan
are here, let me ask them.
H:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
(Talks aside to Foley and Sullivan) Hello.
E:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Foley and Sullivan say they'll go along on eight
three.
5:
Yeah.
H.M.Jp:
O.K.?
is
Yes, I don't know whether they'll offer that.
They're coming in again this afternoon. That's
what I think we ought to stand on and if not go
to trial.
H.M.Jr:
I'm with you.
Regraded Uclassified
116
- 3 -
H:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
It would be a swell trial.
H:
All right.
H.M.Jr: 0. K.
Regraded Uclassified
May 13, 1340
10:05 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Go ahead.
Sunner
Yelles:
Good morning, Henry.
F.M.Jr:
Hello, Sumner.
Wt
Henry, our Minister in the Harve, George Cordon,
called me 110 about five o'clock this morning.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
11:
The situation 18 breaking very repidly.
".".Jr:
Yeah.
W:
And he had three messares that he wanted me to
give the President at the urgent request of the
Prime Minister. One of them related to the urgent
request that before it was too late the governmental
balances in this country be released to the Dutch
Government. That, of course, did not include any
request with regard to private balances; solely
governmental balances.
".",Jr;
Yeah.
W:
And the President asked me to cell you end tell
you that he thought that ought to be done immediately.
I knew that you have been talking it over but I didn't
know whether any decision had been reached 88 yet.
H.M.Jr:
No, because -- there's no rush about it except in
the mind of the Minister.
Well, this didn't -- this didn't come from the
Minister here. It's from the Prime Minister in
the Hague.
Well, it's all 80 -- I mean, it's -- we can do it
just as well if we have the legal authority -- we
can do it just as well tomorrow or the next day,
see? I mean, I don't know why they're in such a
sweat about 1t, but I've been getting
Gaston 18 sitting here with me -- it's just - the
Regraded Uclassified
118
- 2 -
Dutch Minister has just been talking to him and Berle
called me up fifteen minutes ago about the same thing.
W:
Um-hm.
H.M.Jr:
Give me a little time to talk it over with our own
people. If we feel that by being slow that it means
we can't do it, then I'll do it at once, Sumner, see?
W:
Yes, yes.
H.M.Jr:
If I find that I could do it Just as well a week from
today, then give me a little time.
W:
Why sure, Henry, I'm simply talking to you at the
request of the President. I don't know the practical
details involved.
H.M.Jr:
I don't either but they've been working on it all
night.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
But if -- I'll assure you that if by hesitating
it means that tomorrow or a week from tomorrow
I couldn't give them, I'll do it at once and take
the chances.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
If, on the other hand by taking my time and be sure
that I'm doing what is legal, I want a little time.
W:
Yes,
H.M.Jr:
That's fair enough, isn't it?
W:
I understand, Henry. All right.
H.M.Jr:
Is that the main thing?
W:
That's -- that's all, yes.
H.M.Jr:
Do you feel as blue about it as the Netherland's
Minister does?
W:
Well, the details that our own Minister gave me at
five this morning couldn't have been worse.
Regraded Uclassified
115
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
I see.
W:
They are landing transport planes, the Germans are,
in Rotterdam every minute, pouring in there.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
And from the north they are coming in and they have
broken into the inner circle of fortifications, the
Utrecht, Rotterdam, Amsterdam circle.
H.".Jr:
I see.
1/:
So it's a question of 8 short time, I should imagine.
H.V.Jr:
O.K., Sumner.
W:
All right, Henry. Thank you.
H.V.Jr:
Thank you.
Regraded Uclassified
120
May 13, 1940
2:38 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Secretary Wallace.
H.V.Jr:
Right. Hello.
Henry A.
Wallace:
Hello.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Henry.
V:
Yes.
H.".Jr:
Morgenthau.
W:
Henry, Zeke was in this morning and we were talk-
ing over this world picture and our situation in
this country, and -- you see I've been out of town
all the time since this last thing broke
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
and frankly I feel, of course, as everybody
does, greatly disturbed. Zeke had some ideas it
seemed to me might have some merit. I wondered if
you would care to talk to him and me.
H.M.Jr:
Well, yes, as soon as I get & breathing spell, but
I'm just sunk today, Henry.
W:
of course you are.
H.M.Jr:
Give me a little time and I'll call you and when
it's convenient for you I'd like to get together.
W:
Well, that'll be just fine.
H.M.Jr:
Delighted to.
W:
Or would you do me the honor of coming over to lunch
one of these noons?
H.M.Jr:
Sure, love to.
W:
How are you fixed for tomorrow noon?
Regraded Uclassified
121
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, I've got this -- this Army thing I'm working
for the President on, Army budget for some reason
or other.
W:
Yeah. How would Wednesday noon do?
H.M.Jp:
Wednesday would be all right.
W:
Well, that'll be fine. Let's plan on Wednesday
at one o'clock then.
H.M.Jr:
Just a second. Let me look at my calendar.
(Brief pause) Wednesday 1e All right.
W:
All right. Fine.
H.M.Jr:
Be delighted to.
W:
That'll be fine.
H.M.Jr:
One o'clock?
W;
One o'clock Wednesday.
Regraded Uclassified
122
May 13, 1940
3:32 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Lord Lothian.
R.M.Jr:
Hello.
0:
Go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Mr. Ambassador.
Lord
Lothian:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I don't want you to give up your dinner tonight.
L:
Oh, no, that's quite -- I've settled that all
right, Mr. Morgenthau.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'm sorry.
L:
Well, I mean, I know how busy you are these days,
these other things don't count at all.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I -- I feel badly.
L:
Don't do that, really, because I've simply arranged
to go around afterwards, that's the Rumanian
Minister and have -- I want to have 8. talk to him.
I was going right after dinner.
H.".Jr:
My trouble -- I've been -- I'm just desperate on
time and I've got to go back to the White House
at five and I don't know when I'll get back.
L:
Quite. Don't -- don't give it a thought, Mr.
Morgen -- Secretary. I'll go -- I'll be there
at eight forty-five. I'll have a bite beforehand
and I'll go around and see the Minister afterwards.
That's all fixed up already. So that's -- that's
perfectly all right.
H.V.Jr:
Well, would you come and have R bite with us?
L:
Well, a very small bite. What time?
H.M.Jr:
Seven-thirty and then you could leave right after-
wards.
Regraded Uclassified
123
- 2 -
L:
Well, that's very nice of you, Mr. Secretary. Are
you sure that
H.M.Jr:
Just my wife and myself.
L:
Are you sure that's convenient?
H.M.Jr:
We'd love to have you.
L:
Well then I'd love that very much. I'll come then
at seven-thirty.
H.M.Jp:
At seven-thirty and then you can leave right after-
wards.
L:
That's right, yes,
H.M.Jr:
Because
L:
Thank you a lot.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
L:
Goodbye.
H.M.Jr:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
184
May 13, 1940
5:05 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Henry Stea-
gall:
All right. How are you?
H.M.Jr:
My heartiest congratulations.
S:
Thank you, sir. Thank you.
H.M.Jr:
You made a magnificent run.
S:
I escaped with my life.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it
S:
Diân't do enough to brag about.
H.M.Jp:
sort of teach them B lesson.
S:
I've got a little more than I've been getting. I've
got about 6,000 majority, which 18 pretty good in
my district.
H.".Jr:
Well, it shows what the people think of you.
S:
Good considering that I didn't make a campaign and
I had a hard campaign made against me. Outcanvassed
end everything.
H.V.Jr:
I know
S:
Feel pretty good about it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you have every reason. I'm proud of you.
S:
Thank you, sir. Mighty sweet of you to say that.
You want to be heard -- any of your people heard
on this little bill down here?
M.M.Jr:
Well, I tell you how I feel. If somebody can -- If
you want somebody to go up there would it be all
right if Preeton Delano and Foley came?
S:
That would be all right.
Regraded Uclassified
125
2
H.V.Jr:
What?
S:
Anybody you want.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I think I'd let Preston Delano and Ed Foley
go up. I tell you, one of the reasons, I don't
want it to Beem B.B. though it WAB a feud, Bee?
S:
I think you're entirely right about that and I
think your -- your plan 16 very good. It may be
that we can work it out some kind of way to kind
of -- there's not enough involved in that -- dif-
ference there to have it advertised around here
that we've got a cuarrel on.
B.C.Jr:
You know, Jesse 18 & fine fellow and for him to
stoop to this little stuff isn't like Jesse, you
know.
2:
Well, I cen understand how he'd rather not be
bothered with having to -- 88 a matter of detail --
how it could be simplified to some extent.
H.M.Jr;
Well
S:
But I don't understand how he'd care enough about
it to have any question about it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's the way I feel and we've been doing it
this way since '33 and if I suddenly came up there
and said, "Now look, Congressmen, I want to intro-
duce a bank-holding bill tomorrow." Here it 18 the
middle of May, you know -- or something like that.
And there are a lot of things in bank legislation
that has nothing to do with this bill.
S;
Yes, Now I tell you, I don't know but what your
decision 18 B nice way to handle that. I don't
like to throw it around here that we're quarreling
amongat ourselves over some petty stuff.
Well
S:
I'm glad you feel that way about it.
All we do 18 to give the Republicans ammunition.
S:
I know it. Well, I'm going to tell the Committee
what you said to me about that.
Regraded Uclassified
- 3 -
Good. And.
T think -- I think they'll preciate your viewpoint.
You see, Jesse shot too fast on this thing. It
didn't clear through the Budget, you know.
Yes.
Jr:
And he should have given the Director of the Budget
a chance and given me a chance.
S:
Yes,
Now, he came over here and showed us the bill and
we had our report ready Wednesday, and he dropped
this thing in the hopper Tuesday night.
5%
Th-huh.
Now that's a little bit too fast, you know. And if
he'd have given us time we could have ironed it
out in the office of the director of the Budget.
5:
Well, you let those gentlemen be down here in the
morning and -- where I can get them if I need them,
and if you want them to appear -- I -- I guess
"r. Jones will be back tomorrow probably, or out
up Claude Hamilton. He didn't quite finish the
explanation of the
Well
S:
technical provisions of the bill, but you have
whoever you want down here tomorrow.
I'm on call -- if you give me a ring I'll come
hustling up there, but I don't want it to seem
like an administration fight inside
S:
No, I don't blame you. I think the other way 1s
a good way to do it, and
But if you change your mind, I'm here.
in
All right. All right.
Regraded Uclassified
12/
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
Now, while I've got you on the phone. Sometime,
if I could talk to you about this housing bill.
I'm very much interested in that.
S:
Well now listen, let me tell you. I'm interested
too now and I've got my sleeves rolled up to work
at that and we're in confusion about it. I'd love
to talk with you at length about it, but here's
what happened. We made a mistake, which I knew
darn well when we were making it, but the boss
said do it and of course I did it. I first told
him what I thought about 1t. We all knew we were
going to lose the fight on that rule.
H.M.Jp:
Yes,
S:
And it was a mistake to take it up, because put the
boys on record. They voted ua down. Now, we've
got to do something to save their darn faces.
H.V.Jr:
Yeah.
S;
And some of them want to save their other ends,
and are going to be wanting more than that before
they're through with it.
H.M.Jp:
Yeah.
S:
But I've had them over and over here together. We've
got this young fellow from Tennessee, who 18 in
Cordell Hull's district, by golly
H.M.Jr:
I know.
8:
who made a mean fight against us and then we've
got another boy from Oklahoma, who 18 just B. kind --
a peach of a boy all right, but a little conservative
about everything. We've gotten the thing smoothed
out except those two men.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
S:
Now, we're in this situation. Cox, who was against
us the other time and thought it was crazy that
I had mentioned rule housing in the bill, I did
that and knew we were having trouble with the bill,
and I put it in there partly because I thought it
Regraded Uclassified
- 5 -
would get votes on both ends of the thing, you know,
urban and rural.
Yesh.
S:
So Gene asked me when I was before the Rules
Committee.
N.Y.J.:
Yesh.
8:
of course he said, "I don't mean to be unkind in
by attitude about this bill but I'm sure the gentle-
man doesn't think there'll ever be such thing as
rural housing in his section of the country or
mine under this bill." I said, "Listen Gene, you'll
have a rural housing project in your district before
you go out of Congress."
H.V.Jrr
Yeah.
S:
Well, by golly, he's got one started already.
Wonderfull
3:
And now he 18 enthusiastic.
Well, what do you know about that.
S:
But he wants us to save the face of these fellows
in the House by a bunch of amendments, which we
can do and not ruin the bill.
Yeah.
8:
But he says now before we get a rule he wants these
boys on our side of the committee all to Agree to
go along 80 that there will be no danger of defeat-
ing the bill.
I see.
Well, if these boys wanted me to zo along, we're
going to have to take a ruling and RO in there and
fight it out anyhow.
Yeah,
That's what we're going to have to do.
Regraded Uclassified
129
- 6 -
H.M.Jr:
Well now
S:
And these -- I had the President talk to these
boys and I understand one of them is all right.
I'm going to see them both in the morning and I'm
going to know in the next 24 hours where we are and
I'll talk to you again about it.
H.M.Jr:
Now, may I
S:
I may give you some work to do.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'm ready. Now let me tell -- did you know
that I've talked to Sam Rayburn?
S:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And did Sam tell you that if you get the bill out
he'll pass it?
S:
Well, Sam -- Sam's fully convinced. I talked with
Sam.
H.V.Jr;
I mean, that's just
S:
any doubts you know about the politics
of this thing. We can't back off that program on
the eve of election, you know.
H.M.Jr;
Well, Sam did me the kindness to comê down here
and talk to me.
S:
Yeah, he's all right.
H.M.Jr:
And Sam says if you'll get the bill out he'll pass
it 80 fast you won't be able to see it.
S:
Yeah. Well listen, Mr. Secretary, I think we can
pass the bill over the opposition of these boys, and
I think that's what we're going to have to do. But
here's the story. The Bill doesn't have to be gotten
out. It's already on the calendar of the House.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
S:
They merely voted down the rule. We've got to have
another rule, see? There's where we are.
Regraded Uclassified
130
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, just remember I'm at your service.
S:
Thank you, sir, and I may give you some work to do.
H.M.Jr:
It will be a pleasure.
s:
Thank you. Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
131
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE Mag 13, 1940.
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Cochran
CONFIDENTIAL
After opening at a lower level, sterling noved erratically in a thin
market today. The first quotation vas 3.19, more than nine cents lower than
the closing rate on Saturday. Immediately after the opening it fell to 3.15,
and then moved quickly up to 3.23. A weaker tendency was in evidence during
the afternoon and the closing quotation for sterling vas 3.16.
Sales of spot sterling by the six reporting banks totaled L529,000, from
the following sources:
By commercial concerns
L153,000
By foreign banks (Europe and Near East)
L376,000
Total
1529,000
Purchases of spot sterling amounted to L163,000, as indicated below:
By commercial concerns
L124,000
By foreign banks (Far East, Europe and South America)
L 39,000
Total
L163,000
The Irving Trust Company reported that it had sold cotton bills totaling
12,000 to the British Control on the basis of the official rate of 4.02-1/2.
The Bank of Manhattan reported that it had purchased L2,000 for spot
delivery from the British Control at 4.03-1/2. The funds will be used to
pay for a shipment of whisky.
Developments in the other important currencies were as follows:
The New York banks continued to quote French france on the basis of
a sterling-franc cross rate of 176.40 france per pound. The closing quo-
tation for that currency today Vas .0179.
There were no quotations given for the Dutch guilder and the belga.
The Sviss franc continued to decline today. touching a low of .2220
at the close.
The closing discount for the Canadian dollar was 18%.
The reichamark moved off to a low of 4000 at the close.
Regraded Uclassified
132
- 2 -
We purchased $10,000,000 in gold from the earmarked account of the
Bank of France.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that the Bank of England
made the following shipments of gold from England, which were consigned to
the Federal:
$6,243,000 to be earmarked for the account of the Bank of England.
2,255,000 to be earmarked for the account of the Swise National Bank.
$8,498,000 Total
The Bombay spot silver quotation worked out to the equivalent of 43.26d.
up 1/44.
Spot silver in London rose 3/16a to 21-3/16a. The forward price, fixed
at 21-1/16d, showed a gain of 1/8d. The United States equivalents were
31.32 end 30.76#.
Handy and Harman's settlement price for foreign silver vas unchanged at
34-3/44. The Treasury's purchase price for foreign silver was also unchanged
at 35#.
We made eight purchases of silver totaling 403,423 ounces under the
Silver Purchase Act. Of this amount. 150,000 ounces represented sales from
inventory, 60,907 ounces consisted of new production offered to us on a
spot basis, and the remaining 192,516 ounces were new production from
foreign countries, for forward delivery.
R.M.S.
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Uclassified
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 13, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM Mr. Coohran
Thrirean Ecoles of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
telephone1 Mr. Gaston's office at 11 o'clock this forenoon. I was present
and Fr. Reston asked Mr. Eccles to talk with me. Mr. Eccles stated that up
WALLI today the Federal System had not been purchasing any Government securi-
T163. The market had declined somewhat on Friday and Saturday, but there had
bean outslie buying, and none of the dealers made any offers to the Federal.
the servet WELB sufficiently orderly not to Justify any intervention by the
Tederal.
This morning the Federal has been observing the market on the basts of
the longest issue, the 60-65 bonds, which opened at 105.30/32. The market
worked 10wn one-half point after a short interval. There were practically no
bayors. Offers were not heavy. It was possible that these were being made
in the my of feelers. But after the market had gone off about one-half
point in the first hour. the Federal thought intervention was in these circum-
stances desirable. Such intervention has been made through operating through
itly one dealer, and no bids have been placed in the market. The System did
abt vant any public statement made at this time. They thought this might be
12 invitation to the market. So for at least this morning, the Federal System
1. trying out this plan of purchasing through one dealer, with as much canou-
finge as possible. and endeavoring to prevent any publicity.
12. Socles said that the Executive Committee of the Open Market Committee
falt that, as a matter of policy, they should let the market work down, but
=st become panicky. The idea is to keep purchases small, but to increase buy-
Inc 16 prices decline. This, Eccles felt, should teni to stabilize.
Chore is not A panic such as there vas last September, Eccles felt that
- tatase had been made in September of buying too much at first and then with-
triwing toosoon. The policy now should be to give outside buyers 8. chance to
500 in. but for the Federal to buy enough to keep the market from breaking
-
At the time Xr. Eccles spoke to me the purchases by the Federal had reached
307,000. The System wsa leaving discretionary power In the hands of the New
York Bank. There had been no call from the Bank for further instructions, which
led Scéles to believe that the market was not particularly active. In this con-
section. Zocles stated that they would prefer to have the Treasury communicate
with the Seard in Washington if any instructions or advice is to be given on the
atter of open market operations.
Regraded Uclassified
2
Mr. Focles reminded me that last Autumn the Treasury had some of its
own funds to Invest. He suggested that if we have any at this time that
the Federal go along as heretofore and be responsible for looking after
the market, but give the Treasury an option at the close of business on any
securities which the System had bought and that the Treasury might care to
take over for its own portfolio. Shortly after Eccles had spoken with me,
the Secretary telephoned me that he also bad had a conversation with Ecoles.
Le had asked Eccles to keep in touch with me in regard to the market. The
Secretary also asked me to provide & memorandum of our conversations with
Socles, and to submit to the Secretary after lunch a statement P.S. to invest-
ment funds available in the Treasury.
Kr. Hadley, after consultation with Mr. Heffelfinger, has provided no
with the following statement at 12 noon today:
"INVESTMENT FUNDS AVAILABLE
Available funds for investments include $4,000,000 cash for
Postal Savings which could be used immediately.
In addition to this cash available, Postal Savings holds
$96,500,000 2% special notes which could be redeemed and the
funds used in the market. Also, F. D. I. C. has $71,000,000 of
the special 2B, part of which might be redeemed and the funds
used.
This gives a total of $4,000,000 cash readily available and
$167,000,000 in special 2a which could be used if necessary.
RESERVE BANK OPERATIONS TODAY
50 far today, Federal Reserve has purchased outright
8500.000 long bonds and has made a switch of $450,000 from short
into longer bonds."
AMP.
Regraded Uclassified
GROUP MEETING
May 13, 1940
9:30 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Young
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Thompson
Mr. White
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Foley
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Cochran
Mrs Klotz
H.M.Jr:
This young Wilmerding, I would like you to
find out who he is working for and what he
is doing and is he available for anything
else.
Thompson:
I think he is. He 18 working for Eddie Bar-
telt, but I think we could make him available.
H.M.Jr:
Well, find out what he 1s doing and how much
he gets paid and out of what fund, will you,
please? How are you feeling?
Thompson:
Pretty good.
H.M.Jr:
Any better?
Thompson:
Not as well as I would like to be.
H.M.Jr:
Any better?
Thompson:
Not yet. I get new glasses today. Maybe that
will help me.
H.M.Jr:
Are you going to have them pink?
What else?
Thompson: Nothing else.
H.M.Jr:
Harry? I asked Lord Lothian to have Sir Frederick
Phillips over here this morning. He informed
the State Department. Berle just telephoned that
the Netherlands Minister phoned him at 2:00 o'clock
that the Dutch troops were exhausted and the Ger-
mans were taking the Zuider Zee and that it just
wasn't even worth burning up the stuff. Berle
says he doesn't think it is nearly as bad as that.
Regraded Uclassified
136
- 2 -
He says they have just taken that part of
Holland which they couldn't defend anyway,
but he sent the stuff out and he said he
would send it to me and did I have any idea
of what we could do and I said no, the rest
was up to them.
You (Schwarz) have got to be awfully careful
now what you tell. I am letting you sit in,
but don't go talking to the press, see. I
don't want you to say that you don't know what
I am doing, see. I mean, 1f there are any
doubts, you had better ask either Gaston or
me what you can or cannot tell.
Schwarz:
It is the usual routine.
E.M.Jr:
Is press at 3:00 today?
Schwarz:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I would just as lief have it at 3:00.
Schwarz:
Fine. They are expecting to come at 3:00.
White:
DO you expect to confine yourself to one or two
topics, or would you like sort of an agenda to
discuss with them?
H.M.Jr:
The main thing I want is this question of weekly
inventory. This whole question of American
securities and all the rest of the stuff. Why
wait until midnight with the main bank of Am-
sterdam burning to come to my house like they
did last night and try to get this thing straight-
ened out? We had a two and a half hour meeting
last night at the house. I said something about
Belgium and Berle says, "I don't know," but if
the English have got the securities why don't
they send them over here now and not wait until
the night before the Bank of England is burning.
The principal question is this question of
inventory. I want a net position each week,
Harry, free sterling - until they make up their
mind you will have ample time to talk to me
about it.
Regraded Uclassified
- 3
White:
All right.
E.M.Jr:
Phil?
Young:
You asked me to remind you this morning in
respect to the new routine of Collins making
B. request through Haas to New York.
P.V.Jri
I told George myself when he went up there,
no more Collins stuff. Do you think I ought
to tell him that? I don't think it is neces-
sary.
Young:
We can let it go and see what happens.
F.F.Ir:
If you think I had better tell him, I will tell
him. I am in no mood for any fooling.
Young:
Let's try it out for a week and see how it works.
B.M.Jr:
liake B note, will you, Phil, what I would like
prior to the first of April is the amount of
money that the English have put into engine
plants by companies for construction, for training
men, and for any tax purposes, whatever the break-
downs are, you see, by companies. And then since
the first of April, how much, you see.
Young:
The French, too?
B.M.Jr:
Yes, English and French.
Voung:
That is a cumulative figure as of the first of
April and B. separate figure since April?
E.V.Jr:
Yes.
White:
We are still, as far as I am concerned, not getting
any figures as to expenditures by other than these
British and French accounts. I don't know whether
you intended to get --
1.K.Jr;
It 1s unimportant for the time being, Harry. Then
what I want 18, you (Young) might call up General
Brett direct for me, can General Brett tell me
how many engines of B thousand horsepower and over
Regraded Uclassified
does he think, the way the orders stand today,
the English and our own, that these three engine
factories will be able to produce by January.
In January, how many engines of B. thousand
horsepower or over does he think by January, '41,
these companies will be able to produce, you see.
I would like him to do that for me, see.
Young:
Right.
B.H.Jr:
And tell him that if - as the picture changes,
could he let me have it as it exists today end
then 1f there are any changes, would he bring
it up to date. If he needs any help on that
from our end, we would be glad to give it to
him. January 1, how many engines of B. thousand
horsepower and over can these companies produce,
both for our own needs and - total production.
Pratt and Whitney, Curtiss-Wright, and the other
one.
Herbert, what about that six million dollars they
transferred?
Daston:
I didn't know about it.
U.M.Jr:
There was six million dollars transferred last
week to the Federal Reserve and he was to have
roughly $130,000 a month.
Foley:
That was only when Amsterdam fell, Mr. Secretary,
He couldn't touch that until Amsterdam had fallen
and he had gotten word either from the foreign
minister there or the minister in London that
Amsterdam had fallen.
E.M.Jr:
I didn't know that clause was in there. George
Harrison didn't tell me.
Cochran:
Berle just mentioned on the phone to ne this
thing of a general license for --
B.M.Jr:
But George Harrison read the cable to me over
the telephone and --
Foley:
That is what the Minister said to us, Mr. Secretary.
Regraded Uclassified
139
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
I am going to put Cy Upham in charge of this
foreign exchange thing, just borrow him and
put him in charge of the whole thing so we
have one extra spoke to our wheel. He has had
four years of experience in foreign exchange
and I have got to have somebody. Gaston has
to pinch-hit on it when Bell 1s sick, and 80
forth and so on, so I am bringing Cy up and I
am going to put him in charge of the whole
works so that we have an extra man, you see.
It will take him a couple of days to get used
to it, but Cy worked in the foreign exchange
of the National City for four years, did you
know that?
Foley:
No, I didn't.
H.M.Jr:
Besides that, he is an attorney and I have per-
sonal confidence in him, but we need somebody
else. I mean, we need more people around here.
Have you (Schwarz) got that?
Schwarz:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Anything else?
Young:
No, sir.
H.M.Jr:
General Marshall is coming in alone at 10:15.
Elotz:
Mr. Helvering is down here.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Schwarz:
Do you want to say anything about the nature of
it?
H.K.Jr:
No. Don't tell anybody he is here unless they
see him and if they see him, it is up to him
to say what he 18 here for.
Schwarz:
Same thing on Sir Frederick Phillips?
H.M.Jr:
He has got to come over here first. We don't
even know he is coming. That would also be
Regraded Uclassified
140
- 6 -
the British Embassy. First, they have to say
he is coming and 1f anybody sees General Marshall
here, it is up to him to say why he 1s here. He
was here Saturday for two hours and nobody 38W
him. Did you know that?
schwarz:
No.
SMIN
He was here for two hours Saturday. Let Marshall
do his own explaining.
White:
I wonder 1f there might be a good story ready
when Phillips comes over that might be interpreted
as laying the groundwork for a possible credit.
It will get a lot of guesswork and publicity,
so there should be a good excuse ready.
E.K.Jri
Work one out. The best excuse in the world is
I am not satisfied with the information I am
getting on the money spent here and I have sent
for him and I want him to put it all together.
White:
I think that is 8 good story.
Edwin:
That 1s the fact, that I can't get it. They have
got some of it in Canada, some of it here and
some in London, and I want the top man in the
Treasury to come over here and put the pieces
together.
Brehran:
I have the text of Moffatt's memorendum on that
conversation. I didn't know whether you wanted
to keep that or not.
Where did you get this from?
Cochean:
I phoned Berle's office. You wanted me to phone
and get a copy of the messages which they sent.
They gave me this because Moffatt had just brought
it down and they are sending over the others.
Mr. Berle brought up the points, as I say, of
these general licenses for the Dutch and also
for Norway.
Well, I an awfully busy today.
Regraded Uclassified
141
- 7 -
Cochran:
I asked about Matthews and he asked me to phone
the State Department. Did you get e report on
Government bonds?
H.M.Jr:
Incidentally, you can tell my very good friend,
Mr. Danny Bell, unless he proves to me otherwise
that I think it is absolutely on his shop that
that message never went over to the President
of the United States about that last payment
of two hundred and some odd thousand dollars
on the Finnish loan which they told us to hold
in suspense and which we were supposed to get
legislation and as far as I can find out we have
never got any legislation and we never did any-
thing about the Finnish debt and that is ab-
solutely on Dan, unless he can prove it is on
some lawyer or somebody.
Thompson:
I went over the file.
H.M.Jr:
It is absolutely on Dan. I can't do everything
that I am - he was told to fix that thing up.
It was up to him to prepare the legislation and
to go over there with the whole thing and there
must be a lot of stuff.
Thompson:
There 18, yes, there is B. great file on it. The
file indicates that in view of the legislation
authorizing loans from the Export-Import Bank
that this other thing W&S dropped. That is the
way it stands. I have it all drafted.
H.M.Jr:
Well, dig it out and sit down on it with Foley,
will you, and with Cochran, because I feel very
much embarrassed on this whole thing, because
just fortunately they have no follow-up system
at the White House, but if they did I can't say
Dan forgot about it. I am going on the theory
he did. It is absolutely on him, as I say, un-
less he can say he gave it to Foley or Sullivan
or somebody and they fell down, but let's pick
it up and at least go through the motions of
sending it over there. I think it is terrible.
Thompson:
I talked to Dan about it last night.
Regraded Uclassified
142
- B -
H.M.Jr:
Just because these fellows put up a good fight -
you speak to Den about it,
"horpson:
Yes. Be said he understood that in view of the
legislation passed the matter was dropped and
the State Department people refused to go along
with it.
E.K.Jr:
I would like to get the letter off and signed.
It is just today everybody is excited about
rubber and tin. I wrote & letter recommending
that they spend 95 million dollars, either 90 or
95 million dollars in cash. Did you know about
that? Get that letter out of the Budget office,
will you, showing that I was on record for 90
million dollars in this year's appropriation?
The President has discovered rubber and tin and
I am on record, I think, for 90 million dollars.
I would like to show it to him. Now they are
all excited about it to think they have just
discovered strategic war materials. I want the
whole heart of the whole 90, whatever was left
in the balance of the appropriation.
White:
Did Herbert tell you of passing interest about
that ship that 1s going to Finland? It is not
important, but of some interest in connection
with that.
E.F.Jrs
I am - the Army was ready to let Finland have the
arms and the President told them in Cabinet not
to let them have any arms.
White:
Ee passed on the information to you about the
shipload of American amminitions going to -
E.V.Jr:
No, I didn't know a thing about it. Finnish
arms from either Army or Navy. I just can't
understand it. What is it?
White:
A ship either was leaving or was about to leave -
loaded with ammunition, the biggest armament
order, they said, that they had ever had leave.
Some of it was consigned to Sweden and some to
Finland. There was no food on the ship. It
was going to Petsamo.
Regraded Uclassified
143
- 9 -
R.N.Jr:
No food?
White:
That was merely in line with what he had told
you.
S.V.Jr:
Yes, but the President now suddenly switches
and says we shouldn't help them on their arms.
I think it is a mistake.
White:
You mean you think they should get arms now?
If the Army and Navy has some obsolete stuff
that they want to sell at ten cents on the dollar,
why shouldn't we sell it to Finland?
White:
He said the Finns were starving.
8.9.40:
But I am coming back to the President of the
United States suddenly - he is taking the attitude,
"To hell with Finland, they are lost."
/oley:
You can't get arms in there, can you, now?
E.V.Jr:
Yes. They have their own ships. They can go
up to Petsamo, which is up there in the Arctic
See, and they can go in there perfectly all
right. That 18 just the point. They would go
up here (Indicating on map).
Poley:
I see.
White:
Is it the President's view that they never will
be able to use those arms?
S.M.Jr:
-he view is that the Germans will get them. They
come right in here. They have got this 250-mile
road here connecting up with the railroad. Nobody
disturbs them and they have got & perfect way and
that is & nice free port up there at Petsamo. I
can't read this language on the map, but that is
the name of the port, isn't it, Petsamo?
aston:
That sounds right, yes.
L.K.Jr:
They come in here and they have got their own
lines and they go up there and they built a
Regraded Uclassified
144
- 10 -
thousand mile long highway two years ago and
they can also come right down perfectly okay.
Gaston:
The Russians compelled the Finns to cede them
a port on that Petsamo harbor which covers the
entrance. The Russians have complete command
of that any time they want to block it.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, but they haven't yet.
All right, John?
Sullivan:
I have a memorandum of my conference with Jim
Vinson Saturday morning. You also asked me to
remind you this morning about the Federally-
owned airplane plant that he is going to suggest.
H.M.Jr:
I can't do it today.
Sullivan:
No, I didn't think so. Do you want me to suggest
it to you later?
H.M.Jr:
Let's just let it ride.
Sullivan:
All right, sir. Now, on the abandonment of
duplicate tax returns, I think before we do
anything about it I should go over it with you
and I should also talk with Doughton and Cooper
and Senators Harrison and LaFollette.
H.M.Jr:
Use your own judgment and whatever you do is
okay.
Sullivan:
Then I will go ahead and see them today, sir.
H.M.Jr:
I will read this, it is short. You use your
own judgment.
Sullivan:
That is just what you and I discussed and it 18
all under control.
H.M.Jr:
Let me take 8. minute. If I don't do it now, I
won't do it at all. What has got me sunk, on
top of everything else, the President has wished
the Army budget on me and that is what Marshall
was here for two hours on Saturday and that is
why he is coming here today. I am in complete
Regraded Uclassified
145
- 11 -
disagreement with the President and complete
agreement with General Marchall. I think the
time 1s coming that you have got to say to
the Chief of Staff, "What do you want? It
is up to you to have it and we hold you re-
sponsible," instead of letting a lot of people
say, "What you need is this or you need that
and you don't need this and you don't need
that." The time has come to say to the Chief
of Staff, "What do you want? All right, you
can have it if it is within reason, and give
him an all-round figure and quit trying to
tell the Chief of Staff what he does or doesn't
need and that is why your Army is in such B.
lousy shape and 1f they would let me tell the
story to the country, I could get the money
for them. I can tell it or he can tell it,
but 1f they knew what I know and what he knows,
you would get the money over night. It is
Greek to me. Is it okay?
Bullivan:
It 18, air.
t.V.Jri
All right. I can't study it, but 11 is sll
right.
Bullivant
That 18 all, sir.
Ed?
Voloy:
I have & memorandum here on the issuance of
duplicate U. S. securities and the issuance of
duplicate bonds and stocks by private corpora-
tions. My own suggestion is that I think we
have to consider the publicity angle. We might,
in so far as the Issuance of duplicate stock
certificates by private corporations is con-
cerned, speak to George Harrison and have him
speak to Loree, because the Guaranty is the
transfer agent for most of the large stuff and
they could tell us very quickly what they would
have to have.
1.4.2m
Do it, between the two of you.
Polay:
All right.
Regraded Uclassified
148
- 12 -
H.M.Jr:
Do It, between the two of you.
Foley:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
What else?
Foley:
That is all.
H.M.Jr:
Herbert?
Gaston:
The Netherlands Minister repeated what Berle
had already told you, that he had started to
talk to The Hague last night and in the midst
of his conversation they told him it was too
late, they couldn't do that now. We will just
have to forget that. Then this morning he
got this message from them:
"We deem that underlying shares of American
securities deposited with the central adminis-
tration trusts in Amsterdam fall under Banking
Emergency Act. Therefore, the revenue of these
securities 18 blocked and also after transferring
books. A point, however, is not clear. That is
whether license is required for such a transfer.
Through such a license transfer can be made 1m-
possible. Immediate addition to Banking Emer-
gency Act for that purpose is desirable."
In other words, what they want is that if our
Executive Order and law do not block the trans-
fer of those shares - this is a question of
law that we should talk about over here, I
suppose, and report back to him. The main point
they are interested in is whether the transfer
of those underlying shares in America --
H.M.Jr:
I don't care about it. Good God, do it. You
fellows do it. Take the responsibility and
argue about it. We argued about it for two
and a half hours last night. Either you can
or can't do it. What about this money in the
Netherlands Government?
Foley:
Wall, Herbert, I told the Secretary that that
six million dollars that the Dutch Minister
gets which he can disburse up to $132,000 a
Regraded Uclassified
147
- 13 -
month doesn't become available to him and he
didn't become the general paymaster for the
Americas until Amsterdam falls and he gets
word either from the Minister in London or
from his foreign office.
H.M.Jr:
And I think you are wrong.
Foley:
That Amsterdam has fallen. Isn't that what
he told us?
Caston:
I don't know, Ed.
R.M.Jr:
When I come back from the White House, tell
me so I can keep my face with the President
and Welles. If it 1s a matter of doing some-
thing to save their money - if Amsterdam falls
or 1f they lose out - well, you heard my con-
versation. I want to do it that way. But
if by postponing it I can do it the legal way,
then I want to postpone it. That is clean-cut,
isn't it?
Easton:
Yes.
H.N.Jr:
You two (Foley and Gaston) stay. I want to see
you on something here. That is all.
Regraded Uclassified
148
May 13, 1940
9:33 A.mm
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Go shead, please.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Adolf
Berle:
Hello.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, Berle.
B:
Henry, I sent those telegrams last night.
H.V.Jr:
Good.
B:
However, the Dutch Minister tried to get ahold of
me between one and two o'clock this morning and
he didn't raise me, and got Pierrepont Moffat
instead, and he had telephoned the substance of
the conversation we had last night to the Hague.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
B:
They told him that the news WRB black and that the
Germans had reached the Zuider Zee on the north;
the Dutch troops were exhausted, and the Allied
help probably couldn't reach them in time. And
accordingly they regarded it as too late to take
measures on financial matters. Now, meanwhile we
had authorized our Consuls to authenticate docu-
ments along the line we described in the event
that they were asked and to assist in witnessing
it where they could if they had -- if the circum-
stances permitted and it was an important job and
80 forth. So that the machinery 18 all set there
if these people in London or the Hague change
their mind about it.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
B:
Now, should anything more be done. I suppose we
leave it now for the Allied Command to get to
work on it.
H.M.Jr:
I don't see what else we can do.
Regraded Uclassified
149
- 2 -
B:
I don't see. I may add that our military -- the
"ilitary Intelligence Liaison Officer has been
in this morning. He doesn't regard the news 8.8
black as -- apparently Loudon got it over the
telephone. H1e view 16 that what actually hap-
nened 18 that the Germans took the northern
of Holland, which couldn't be defended anyway,
and that was indicated in any event and that for
the rest the lines seemed to be holding fairly
well except for one plunge across the Masse
River and across the Albertosmal and that seems
to be 2 kind of a spurt.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
B:
Something that unless they, 8.8 they put it, unless
the men are supermen they probably couldn't main-
tain themselves. of course the main -- main bodies
of troops haven't come into action yet.
H.M.Jr:
All right, Adolf. Two things, one, if you could
just let me have a copy of those cables
B:
They are ready and on the way. I should have sent
them over -- I didn't send them over last night.
There was nobody to send them to. It WaB about
midnight.
H.M.Jr:
The other thing, if you'd make a note, you might
tell Mr. Hull. I called up Lord Lothian this
morning
B:
Right.
H.M.Jr:
and asked him please to send Sir Frederick
Fisher over here to see me -- Sir Frederick Phillips.
B!
Frederick
H.M.Jr:
Phillips.
B:
Phillips.
H.M.Jr:
He's the top civil service man in the British
Treasury.
B:
Yes, I know.
Regraded Uclassified
150
- 3 -
And very able. He was here two years ago.
6i
oh, he's very good.
And I asked them please to send him over here at
once, because there are so many things that are
left until the last minute and I want to talk with
that man. So he said, "Would anybody else do?"
And I said, "No." But I'd like the State Depart-
ment to know that I did ask for him.
I shall be very glad.
And if you could back me UD on the thing by saving
something to Lord Lothian or If Mr. Hull would, I
really need somebody like that BO they don't always
leave everything to the last minute.
Yes, and the number of irregulars that show up here
really get into each other's wey pretty soon.
Pretty bad.
We've had Gwatkin and Dean Bates and BO forth,
and the Allied Purchasing people and one thing or
another all working a little at cross-purposes.
Well, the Allied Purchasing Mission, AB far AB
I'm concerned, we're getting along beautifully.
Yeah.
Gwatkin and Rist I refuse to see as you know.
Yes.
I did see them once before they left, but I didn't
went anything to do with them, but I do want Sir
Frederick Phillips over here because he -- at
least he knows what it's all about. You know him,
don't you?
Yes, I do. Not well but
I......
He's very able, you know.
Oh, very able and very quiet and he knows his Job.
Regraded Uclassified
151
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
B:
Right. All right, sir. I'll.do that.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
B:
Goodbye.
152
May 13, 1940
4:58 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Senator Wagner.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Robert
Wagner:
Henry
H.M.Jr:
How are you, big boy?
W:
All right. I -- I -- you're as hard to get as Hitler.
H.M.Jr:
Go to hell.
V:
Say, Henry, I just -- I didn't know whether you under-
stood the other day when I talked to you. You know,
I knew nothing about this bill, its introduction,
until after it was introduced.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I
W:
I didn't know but what you thought maybe that I had
Bome knowledge it was coming up.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I didn't know.
V:
No, I had no -- nothing. Here's the only thing that
I knew about. Two months ago Jesse talked to me and
immediately when he talked about this one provision
I said, "Well, that's a conflict between you and
Henry." He said, "Well, It may be." "Well," I
said, "So far a.B I'm concerned you'll have -- you
and Henry will have to straighten that out."
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
Otherwise -- now that's the -- the next thing I knew
is when the old man told me that Jesse would like
to have hearings last Friday. Well, I said, "It
can't be done. I don't know but what I want to
study the bill first and we'll have to have a
regular meeting." Now -- 80 I want you to know
that very clearly, because I certainly wouldn't
have introduced B. bill that -- which affected any
of your powers without asking you about it.
Regraded Uclassified
153
- 2 -
H.".Jr:
Well
V:
That you should take for granted.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
W:
I didn't -- I wasn't
H.M.Jr:
I was a little surprised, Bob.
W:
Yeah. Well, I -- I thought of -- only after I got
off the phone and I said, "I wonder if Henry had
any idea that I knew about it." I didn't know B.
damn thing about it until the next day when Miss
Adams of -- of the office told me that the Benate
had introduced that bill and that night -- no, the
following morning Jesse tried to get ahold of me.
H.M.Jr:
Well, how
W:
I told him I hadn't had & chance to study the bill
but now here's -- here's a strange situation. I'll
read you his -- the last paragraph of his report,
which I only Just got incidentally. Just about
ten minutes ago.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
(Aside: Where 18 that provision?) Just one moment
I want to read -- oh, in the very end he says,
"I have discussed this bill with the President
and it has his approval."
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
V:
Now, I know that that's not BO, but I don't know how
to bring it out because the General called me up 8.
little while ago.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
And he told me that the President was -- was opposed
to those provisions, you know, that apply to your
power.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
Regraded Uclassified
154
- 3 -
W:
Now, I better call back to find out whether I can
say that publicly or not, in view of what he has
said here in his report that the President told him
that he was for the bill. How am I going to work
that out?
H.M.Jr:
Well, you've been at this 60 much longer than I have
W:
Well I mean, I'd better find out
H.M.Jr:
The fact remains it never cleared through the Budget
Office. That's the simplest thing.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
I -- I don't like to drag the President in. The fact
it never -- it's never gone through the -- the only
thing the Director of the Budget ever did was to
send up my memorandum and he never had a chance to
Dass on 1t, 60 why don't you put it on him instead
of the President?
W:
Well, I'd better -- in view of the fact that Wat --
the General just called me up and I didn't have --
(clearing his throat) I've got a. nasty cold -- and
I didn't have Jesse's report, see?
H.M.Jr:
Well, I don't know
W:
Now, in view of the fact that I've zot his report,
I think I'd better call back and say at least what
Jesse says in his report to the committee. Here
are twenty members -- nineteen members of the
committee and Jesse says the President approves
this bill. Now
H.M.Jr:
Well, you
V:
that shouldn't be left unanswered.
H.V.Jr:
Well, haven't -- well, you've got Jones' report
which is his and you've got the report from the
Director of the Budget, which is official.
W:
No, I -- we haven't got a report from the Director
of the Budget. (Aside: Have we?)
Regraded Uclassified
155
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, ours went through the -- ours went to the
Budget and was forwarded by the Budget.
W:
Yes, yours was forwarded by the Budget.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
W:
But there 1sn't anything -- any direct statement
there that this 18 not in conformity
H.M.Jr:
Well, why not ask Jesse to get a statement out of
the office of the Budget?
W:
Ask what?
H.M.Jr:
Ask Jesse Jones to get the Director of the Budget
to tell you where the thing stands.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Well listen, you know this game BO much better than
I do.
V:
Yes, well I -- I wondered how much talk you have
had, you see, because I just got this -- the two
came almost together. I just -- the General
H.M.Jr:
I haven't had much but I wasn't sure, on account
of my conversation, just how you felt, 80 where
I've been, I don't mind telling you, 18 I've been
over with Carter Glass. See?
M:
Have you?
H.M.Jr:
I've just come back.
V:
Oh, I see.
H.M.Jr:
And -- I didn't know just how you felt and Carter
told me that he's against those two provisions.
W:
He 187
H.M.Jr:
Definitely.
W:
Oh well then I don't have to bother about any further.
Regraded Uclassified
156
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
No, I just left him and he says that he thinks ten
years 18 too much and why increase it to fifteen,
and he says as to the other thing he thinks that
I've done a swell job and he isn't going to change
it.
W:
Yeah. Well, I didn't know you did that. If you
did that, of course, that's all O.K. with me.
H.M.Jr:
No, I've Just come back and Carter Glass says --
he says he's going to send for Jesse and tell
Jesse that he isn't going to support him on those
two things and he never read the bill.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
He said he never read the bill before he dropped
it in.
W:
I see.
H.M.Jr:
And he said
W:
He never talked to me about it neither.
H.M.Jr:
He said he's sending for Jesse and tell him that
on both of those provisions he 16 not going to
support him and he's going to vote against him.
W:
Well then all right. Then I won't bother any
further about it.
H.M.J:r
S₀ if you've got Carter Glass, you've got General
Watson and little me.
V:
Yeah. All right. All right, fine, Henry. Thank
you very much.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
W:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
157
May 13, 1940
2:40 p.m.
Present:
Mr. Foley
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Bernstein
Mr. Upham
Mr. Cochran
Mrs. Klotz
HM,Jr: Now, Mr. Gaston, what do you want to
clear with me now?
Mr. Gaston: Some general licenses and a general
license for the withdrawal of funds from the accounts
of the Government of the Netherlands and accounts of
the Government of Belgium and the Belgian National
Bank.
HM,Jr: All right.
Everybody happy?
Mr. Foley: We have no alternative. We also
have agents and instrumentality for the two Governments
but I think that's going further than they ask us to
50 and I think we should limit to merely what they re-
quested at this time.
HM,Jr: O. K.
Mr. Gaston: Another general license on the
four principal banking institutions of the East Indies.
The two Java banks and the others. We think that we
will ask them whether they really want that.
I think that's all we want to get signed now,
isn't it Bernie? We had two conversations with the
Minister and his friend, Dr. Saka came down, and we
discussed what he should do in regard to the securities
held in Holland and we advised, at Mr. Bernstein's
Regraded Uclassified
158
-2-
suggestion a decree transferring all these securities
to the Netherlands Government and this man Saur 18
going to take that up with them. That will be very
valuable to them in trying to establish title in the
right people to those securities later if they want to
negotiate to sell them.
HM,Jr: All right. What else? I tried to
get His Majesty's Ambassador to come and BAE me at
a quarter of nine, but he has to go have dinner at
the Rumanian Legation. Mr. Berle can give up a
dinner and Jerome Frank can walk out in the middle
of dinner to help them, but Lord Lothian can't give
up his.
Mr. Cochran: I got a message back to him
that that is the only hour you could see him.
HM,Jr: Now, what else? You like this work,
Cy?
Mr. Upham: I am beginning to understand their
language.
HM,Jr: Well, when you don't know, ask Father
Bernstein.
Mr. Upham: I will have to find out about this
"Father" Bernstein business.
HM,Jr: Did you get my talk into those two
places?
Mr. Foley: It was introduced that same night
you mentioned it to me, in the House by Somers of
Brooklyn. We gave it to Wagner the same day and
Wagner did not put it in and the last I heard of it
he had not put it in yet. It's in the House but not
in the Senate.
o0o-o0o
Regraded Uclassified
159
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
May 13, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
The following is reported for your information:
Vessel
Destination
Commodity
SS LJURICA MATKOVIC Marseilles, France 616 bbls. Molybdenum concentrates
-
-
-
-
74 drums
-
.
-
E
:
W
357
-
=
-
.
-
-
-
-
112
-
R
"
.
-
-
from Naco,Mexico
to Marseilles, Fr. 107 bbls.
-
"
#
-
Ditto
108
1
-
W
.
-
-
Ditto
110
-
1
"
The above vessel sailed from New York et 3 p.m. on May 10.
Banil havis
Regraded Uclassified
100
May 13, 1940
3 p.m.
Present:
Mr. Foley
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Upham
HM,Jr: If I go up on the Hill, I have never
rotten angry before a committee, but I don't want
to go before the committee and say, "Well, if I had
not had this power we never could have done the thing
on the Bank of America and we had two letters from
Jones asking to subscribe and neither of which we com-
plied with because we did not think it was good."
Kr. Upham: I only know of one request that
was not acted on, last March. He sent that over
really at our request.
HM,Jr: No, he did not. What I think, in
the humor that I am in, that it is much better I
don't go up on the H111 because I might -- I think
he was kind of dirty, Jones was.
Mr. Gaston: I sort of agree with that and
it dramatizes with the newspaper men a conflict be-
tween you two.
HM,Jr: I think two things will happen this
afternoon. One, I will find out from Pa Watson
whether he phoned and he will. And if he choned to
these people, Wagner and Stegall, that the President
does not want it then we go and gee -- you and I,
Foley -- go and see Glass at 4:30. I have an ap-
pointment with him at 4:30. If the Senator says
O.K., we will skip it. If Glass says O.K., and
Wagner and Stegall are told by the President he does
not want it, then I think let Delano go up in a very
dignified way and I will simply Bay I am too busy,
this is too unimportant.
Regraded Uclassified
261
-2-
Mr. Foley: I told Ford you were at the White
House twice and were probably over there now and you
night not be able to 20 down tomorrow and you might
want to send Preston Delano.
HM,Jr: I just remembered I have a press con-
ference and 1f they ask me, "I have said how I felt.
It is very unimportant. I have nothing to add to
what is in my letter. So many more important things,
this seems to be very important to Mr. Jones, but it's
very unimportant as far as I an concerned." I won't
even mention Jones' name.
Mr. Foley: I would not any it is too unimport-
ant.
Mr. Gaston: I would say "in view of other
metters that are pending, it is relatively unimportent,"
HM,Jr: Why not out it this way: everything I
have had to say, I have out in my letter."
Xr. Foley: "I have given my views to the com-
mittee. It's un to the committee."
Mr. Gaston: The newspapers have practically
made Jones out a liar already, because "While Mr. Jones
said he had the support of the President, it was noticed
that Administration supporters in the committee were
against him.'
HM,Jr: I will simply say I. wrote my letter to
the Director of the Budget and it has gone up to the
committee and I think the committee understands my
position. I have nothing more to add.
Mr. Foley: It's up to the committee.
HM,Jr: But we got everybody except Stegall and
I think by sunset we will have Stegall.
Mr. Foley: If our fellows stick to this, the
Republicans will vote against it en masse and that's
11 votes. If Stegall loses, he has not got enough
votes to get the bill on.
Regraded Uclassified
162
-3-
HM,Jr: Well, he won't do it if the President
tells him he's not interested.
o0o-o0o
163
May 13, 1940
My dear Mr. Hoover:
This will acknowledge receipt
of your two letters of May 10th, one
reporting further on the activities
of the Antorg Trading Corporation and
the other giving information concern-
ing Mr. August T. Gausebock.
I have read both these communi-
eations with interest and thank you
for sending the information to no.
Yours sincerely,
(Sagned) H. Morgenthan, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. c.
Regraded Uclassified
164
May 13, 1940
Ny dear Mr. Hoovert
This will acknowledge receipt
of your two letters of May 10th, one
reporting further on the activities
of the Antorg Trading Corporation and
the other giving information concern-
ing Mr. August T. Gausebook.
I have read both these communi-
entions with interest and thank you
for sending the information to no.
Yours sincerely,
(Sagned) H. Morgunshau, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Uclassified
C5
May 13, 1940
Hy dear Mr. Hoover:
This will asknowledge receipt
of your two letters of May 10th, one
reporting further on the activities
of the Antorg Trading Corporation and
the other giving information concern-
ing Mr. August T. Gausebook.
I have read both these communi-
entions with interest and thank you
for sending the information to no.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) EL Morguathau, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director
Federal Bureen of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. c.
Regraded Uclassified
166
JOHN EDGAR MOOVER
DIRECTOR
Federal Burran of Investigation
United States Department of Justice
Mashington, B. C.
Irleave
May 10, 1940
Personal and Confidential
AA
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
I have ascertained from a confidential source that
one August T. Gausebeck, who is the head of the Robert C. Mayer
& Company of 50 Broadway, New York City, investment bankers who
handle much of the German business in this country, sometime
470 nade a contact with my informant and told him that he
wanted to donate $500, 000 to the Republican Presidential cam-
paign. The informant inquired of Gausebeck why he wanted to
do this, whereupon Gausebeck gave as his reason that if a
Republican were elected, then there would be favorable trade
:caties between the United States and Germany, whereas if
resident Roosevelt were re-elected, that would be impossible.
Gausebeck was informed that such a donation would be
impossible since the laws prohibited donations in such sums,
and Gausebeck then stated that they would have the donations
nade in small lots from different people; that they had con-
tributed to Father Coughlin in amounts of $100 to 3500 at a
time, and that they had the office employees send it in $5 and
10 bills.
I, of course, have been unable to corroborate any
0,0 the above information, but am endeavoring to procure further
details.
Respectfully,
d edgan abover
Regraded Uclassified
Teans
CMM EDGAR HOOVER
DIRECTOR
M 187
Federal Surrent of Investigation
United States Department of Justice
Mashington, D. C.
May 10, 1940
Personal and Confidential
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. O.
Dear Br. Secretary:
with further reference to the activities of the
Antory Trading Corporation, I have just received the sol-
lowing information:
It has been ascertained that the Antorg Trading
Corporation is purchasing later, a raw rubber, jrom Brazil
because OU" the British embargo on rubber from the Dutch East
Indies and the Malay States, these being the principal
nources of rubber. The British Consulate in New York City
recently wrote a letter in substance as follows:
"Two consignments of fine rubber recently arrived
from Brazil, allegedly consigned to the Amtorg
Trading Corporation, through the Chase National
Bank, the Brazilian shipper allegedly being one
Farsh, The shipment consisted of 358 cases in
one consignment and 294 cases in the other, a
total of 141 tons. I have not learned how this
rubber is to be shipped outward if it is true
that it la ultimately to be destined for Russia."
I have also learned that there has been some cor-
respondence between the Frank D. Roff Company, Inc., of
Hoboken, New Jersey, who are rubber dealers, and their agents
0,5 Mannos, Brazil, the name being I. A. Saver. Saver wrote
to 20ss on March 12th telling him that he had been informed
through third parties that there was a new buyer in the
market who, to the best of his belief, was the Amtorg Trad-
ing Corporation. He asked what Roff knew about them and
stated that they were buying "Up River Fine, " which is a
Regraded Uclassified
108
lionorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Page Two
grace of rubber costing sixteen cents, which is considerably
Loove the market. Roff replied that the Amtorg Trading
Corporation was a New York purchasing agent for Russia; that
skep had been picking up all the rubber they could get, but
Lince the United States was frowning on this they were find-
ing it difficult to get people in New York to sell to them,
that the Government was trying to build up a reserve of another
grade 0,° rubber, and they asked all citizens not to ship
nore then normal amounts abroad, as a result of which the
nest reputable dealers would not sell to Amtorg at the present
sine. Saver again wrote on April 1st from Brazil, stating
stat ke noted what was written and that he thought it best
not to have anything to do with Amtorg, that for Roff's in-
formation he was given to believe that Amtorg was buying
rubber in a round-about way; that they were buying rubber
from /irms in Rio and other places, mostly German firms,
sho in turn buy their rubber in Brazil and ship on neutral
vessels and then reship from Rio and other places to Japan
or New York in transit, presumably to Vladivostok or some
other Russian port.
I have also ascertained that on about April 2nd
1 steanship arrived in New York from Brazil with one lot of
310 ouser and another of 183 cases; that later, on April
19th, there arrived 850 cases from Brazil of Pyra rubber,
chick 1020 consigned to the Claremont Terminal 0," the Lehigh
Valley Re:lroad for shipment on the S.S. "Illinois, an
anerican-owned ship, to Vladivostok, Russia, but the owners
of the S.S. "Illinois, upon discovering it was a shipment
0,0 rubber, consigned to Russia, refused to take it. It is
utill on the dock of the Claremont Terminal.
On April 23d twenty tons of rubber came to the
... 4. Acclett Company of New York from Brazil. The firm
0,9 Steinhardter & Nordlinger, 99 Hudson Street, New York
City, is doing business in the importation of Brazilian
rubber.
Regraded Uclassified
169
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Page Three
If I receive any further information concerning
the above matters, I will be very glad to advise you at
once of the same.
Respectfully,
J. edgan Hoover
170
May I4, 1940
9:20 a.m.
Hello.
Nerry
Woodring:
Henry?
9.M.Jr:
Yes, Harry.
W:
Look, I've talked to my people over here about
these -- some of my own close advisers, about this
shadow plant and these others, and they are of the
opinion that maybe the time factor on taking
Continental and Lycoming, say, and letting them
develop their own motor -- they only, they say,
are building now 300 horsepower stuff -- to build
uo b1g ones, that the time factor would be a great
lag there. But they suggest, and I'm just giving
you this to think over before we get over there
so it won't be cold to you, you know
Right.
And they Bay that the solution of the thing is that
inasmuch 88 we have certain rights in the -- Wright
Aeronautical and the Pratt and Whitney and others,
that the thing to do 18 to take 6. plant like
Continental and Lycoming and then transfer over
to them, because they have -- transfer over the
manufacture of the Wright whirlwind or the Pratt
and Whitney, because they say that those people
have management there that's already -- has know-
ledge in building engines; that they have artisans
and skilled mechanics that are up on that and trained
in the fine machining of engines. And they think
that in a short time, about half of what the other
plan would -- the shadow plant would develop, that
these companies like that could start manufacturing
the engine that 18 already developed, and also
that Wright and Pratt and Whitney probably no doubt
have extra Jige and dies.
Well, I don't know but it sounds like B. very good
idea and at the same time it would give these people
a little bit more money to develop their own engines.
At the same time they could carry along their own
engine and it wouldn't be putting the Government
Regraded Uclassified
171
- 2 -
into the business of competing with other plants.
It would keep the Government out of the business.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it sounds very interesting. I've got Bob
Hinckley here; we're talking about it.
V:
Oh, are you? Well, I just thought I'd give you
that to think over before
H.M.Jr:
I'm going to tell him -- I'm going to bring him
along because he's got some very good ideas on
this.
V:
Yes, he -- I think 80 too. I think that would be
a good idea.
H.M.Jr:
Then we're seeing you at ten-thirty.
W:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
W:
Goodbye.
Regraded Uclassified
May 14, 1940
REVORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
For the purpose of coordinating and expedit-
ing the necessary preparedness activities of the
Government, I recommend the following:
I. That you obtain from Congress an appro-
priation of at least $100,000,000, to be expended
at your direction, for the purpose of expanding
plants and equipment in the industries manufacturing
airplanes, ordnance, equipment and munitions for our
military and naval branches where it is necessary to
bring production capacity up to the required standard.
II. That you create the following Committee
to be clothed with ultimate authority subject to your
approval and charged with the duty of increasing the
production capacity in the pertinent fields of indus-
try to the point where military needs can be currently
net within the period of the next twelve months. In
order that the needs of the Allied Powers now purchas-
ing military equipment in this country may be given
adequate and sympathetic consideration, I surgest that
you make the Secretary of the Treasury the Chairman of
the Committee. The other members should be the AB-
sistant Secretary of the Navy, the Assistant Secretary
of War, and the head of Civil Aeronautics Authority,
with authority for them to designate as alternates in
the various fields the heads of the activities under
sonsideration.
Regraded Uclassified
173
May 14, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
For the purpose of coordinating and expedit-
ing the necessary preparedness activities of the
Government, I recommend the following:
I. That you obtain from Congress an appro-
priation of at least $100,000,000, to be expended
at your direction, for the purpose of expending
plants and equipment in the industries manufasturing
airplanes, ordnance, equipment and sunitions for our
military and naval branches where it 10 necessary to
bring production capacity up to the required standard.
п. That you create the following Committee
to be alothed with ultimate authority subject to your
approval and charged with the duty of increasing the
production capacity in the pertinent fields of indus-
try to the point where military needs can be currently
not within the pariod of the next twelve months. In
order that the needs of the Allied Powers now purchas-
ing military equipment in this country may be given
adequate and sympathetic consideration, I aggest that
you make the Secretary of the Treasury the Chairman of
the Committee. The other members should be the Ag-
sistent Secretary of the Navy, the Assistant Secretary
of war, and the hand of Civil Aeronautics Authority,
with authority for them to designate as alternates in
the various fields the heads of the activities under
consideration.
Regraded Uclassified
174
Notes on Army Program Conference
at the White House, May 14, 1940, 10:30 A.M.
Secretary Woodring opened the conference by stating he
presumed its primary purpose was to discuss the air phase of
the national defense program, and that he felt very strongly
against the establishment of Federally owned engine factories.
General Marshall said that he had revised the figures for
national defense, and he proceeded to read the revised amounts
pointing out the differences between that list and the previous
draft. When he had completed reading, he pointed out that his
conception of this list W&S that it represented B. wellrounded
basis upon which expansion could take place. He added that he
thought it highly necessary to build & solid foundation, fill-
ing in the gaps now evident in the present army, and initiating
production of those non-commercial (critical) items which will
be neaded when the army is expanded.
General Marshall regarded this list AS a basic requirement
which could neither be overlooked nor reduced if a national
defense program were insugurated. To disregard this list, he
edded, would be to walk right into the middle of a national
scandal, Further, that this was not the time for recriminations
but the time for constructive effort.
Mr. Johnson rend two memoranda: one prepared in response
to the President's request, and the other prepared by Mr. Johnson
P.S. & compromise program. He promised that he would give copies
of these to Mr. Morgenthau. These memoranda were organized on
a triple basis: first, what was needed in the way of air force
today: secondly, what vas needed for increased protective force:
and, thirdly, for an augmented protective force.
Mr. Johnson said that the number of planes should increase
proportionately with the increase in the army during these three
stages. General Marshall disagreed with this relationship
insumuch P.S. the air force of the army should be similar to the
situation of the navy, namely, it should be at least 75 per cent
mobilized at all times.
Mr. Johnson said that the principal change in his compromise
memorandum was that it reduced the number of airplane factories
Regraded Uclassified
175
- 2 -
to be built from 30 to 16. Mr. Morgenthau suggested that the
President's suggestions be tabled, and that General Marshall
write the ticket for the Air Corps. General Marshall replied
that the first step vas to establish 8. sound base for the produc-
tion of pilots. Further, that at the present time, even though
the Allies were receiving four new planes for every one received
by the army, the latter did not have sufficient pilots trained
to handle this existing plane capacity. Mr. Morgenthau explained
that he would like to see the question of United States plane
capacity discussed spart from that portion of our capacity now
employed for Allied production.
He went on to say that General Marshall had laid down this
basic program and that certainly General Arnold ought to be able
to outline the sort of air corps program that should accompany
it. General Marshall pointed out that because of Allied orders,
the G.H.Q. Air Force reserve was now down to 15 per cent and that
It should be greatly increased.
It was General Brett's estimate that by January, 1941, the
total plane production capacity would amount to 15,000 planes
per year, of which 11,000 would go to the Allies, and 4000 to
the United States. On a monthly basis this would amount to 1250
planes per month, of which the army would receive 240, the navy
100, and the Allies 900.
Mr. Morgenthau pointed out that a 50 per cent increase in
the airplane industry as 8 whole would be necessary if the army
were to receive the number of planes it wished to get. Thus, if
there were a production of 22,000 planes per annum, the army would
be caught up on its program.
Mr. Morgenthau inquired as to the possibility of securing
this increased production, and General Marshall replied that,
although it vas B. sound idea, pilote were also needed. General
Arnold said that $106,300,000 would be needed for the initiation
of pilot training. Therefore, this amount of $106,000,000 for
pilots, plus five plane plants or $50,000,000, plus two engine
plants or $20,000,000 would total $176,000,000. representing in-
creased capacity. (This amount would also include approximately
$24,000,000 for pilot training.)
Mr. Morgenthau asked Mr. Hinckley what he thought about the
situation. Mr. Sinckley replied that he had an idea nimed at the
expansion of commercial airways to include freight, mail and
Regraded Uclassified
176
- 3 -
express service. Increased demand on the part of commercial air
lines for heavier equipment, for additional amounts of equip-
ment, and new types of equipment would stimulate domestic plane
and engine production along those lines which would be of the
greatest benefit to the army. Mr. Morgenthau thought that would
be a very constructive approach, and General Marshall was defi-
nitely interested in Mr. Hinckley's proposal.
Mr. Woodring insisted that the group had not yet worked out
the answers to the President's questions and that the material
vas not ready for presentation. Mr. Johnson countered to the
effect that the material in hand was exactly that desired and
gave a very clear picture of the situation.
Mr. Morgenthau inquired as to what legal right or what
leverage could be used to force engine manufacturers to license
other engine companies. General Arnold replied that he thought
there vas no legal right, but there was plenty of leverage which
could be used if it were politic to do BO,
Py.
PY:bj
5/15/40
Regraded Uclassified
May 14, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
For the purpose of coordinating and expedit-
ing the necessary preparedness activities of the
Government, I recommend the following:
I. That you obtain from Congress an appro-
priation of at least $100,000,000, to be expended
at your direction, for the purpose of expanding
plants and equipment in the industries manufacturing
airplanes, ordnance, equipment and munitions for our
military and naval branches where it is necessary to
bring production capacity up to the required standard.
II. That you create the following Committee
to be clothed with ultimate authority subject to your
approval and charged with the duty of increasing the
production capacity in the pertinent fields of indus-
try to the point where military needs can be currently
net within the period of the next twelve months. In
order that the needs of the Allied Powers now purchas-
ing military equipment in this country may be given
adequate and sympathetic consideration, I suggest that
you make the Secretary of the Treasury the Chairman of
the Committee. The other members should be the no-
sistant Secretary of the Havy, the Assistant Secretary
of War, and the head of Civil Aeronautics Authority,
with authority for them to designate as alternates in
the various fields the heads of the activities under
consideration.
And
Regraded Uclassified
white House May 14,1940 178
CHANGES MADE IN THE PROPOSALS
OF May 12, 1940
Cash
Contract
Appropriation
Authorization
Total
Proposals of May 12th
$560,027,623
$ 97,759,634
$657,787,257
Reduction of 27 bombers
-5,682,304
-8,500,000
-14,182,304
Reduction of 38,000 men and
shelter and essential items
therefor
-76,434,850
-
-76,434,850
Deferment of powder contracts
and transfer of requirements
from cash to contract
-17,611,681
A17,611,681
-
TOTALS.
$460,298,788
$106,871,315
$567,170,103
The manufacture of powder requires approximately one month. The manufacture
of the other components of 8 complete round of ammunition requires up to nine
months. It is essential, therefore, in any amminition program that contracts for
components be let well ahead of the manufacture of the powder. Furthermore, there
is available in bulk 20,000,000 pounds of World War powder which is good enough to
be loaded if it is to be used shortly thereafter and 6,000,000 pounds of new powder.
Therefore, there should be no delay in procuring all other components without delay.
B&LP Branch
14 May 1940
Regraded Uclassified
179
non-Commercial
BREAKDOWN OF PRINCIPAL CRITICAL ITEMS INCLUDED IN
$240,000,000 ESTIMATE
A.A. Guns, 90 mm
21
Sound Locators
170
Lead Computors
132
Guns, 37 mm A.A.
215
Machine Guns, Cal. 50 A.A.
568
Semi-automatic Rifles
45,770
Anti-tank guns, 37 mm
96
Mortars (60 - & 81 an)
982
Machine Guns, Cal. 50
670
Gun 75 mm modernized (Split Trail)
274
Howitzer, 75 mm Pack
53
Howitzer, 105 mm
60
Howitzer, 155 mm Hi-Speed
397
Gun, 155 Hi-Speed
256
Gun, 155 - New Long Range
8
Howitzer, 8"
24
Scout Cars
388
Light Tanks (156 Light & 32 Medium)
188
Tractors (Medium & Heavy)
659
Bridge Steel Portable
38
Searchlights Mobile 60"
175
Ponton Bridge 10 ton & 23 ton
10
Water Supply Equipment
43
Gas Masks
762,324
Cloth, O.D. Wood (yds)
5,011,518
Tents, Pyramidal
43,010
Field Ranges
844
R dio Sets, various types
7,201
Regraded Uclassified
130
Commercial
BREAKDOWN OF PRINCIPAL ESSENTIAL ITEMS
INCLUDED IN $74,000,000 ESTIMATE FOR EXISTING UNITS
(This does not include such equipment for the
38,000 men required to bring the Regular Army up to
280,000).
Motor vehicles
24,000
Tool sets
17,000
Blankets
350,000
Shoes, service, pairs
500,000
Raincoats
750,000
Suits, working, one piece
500,000
Suits, underwear
900,000
Field lanterns
1,600
Vacuum tubes for radio
30,000
Flashlights
10,000
Signal Panel sets
1,000
Sets camouflage equipment
350
Camouflage nets
2,000
Sets topographical equipment
115
Coils, barbed wire
14,000
Aircraft cameras
500
Rafts, penumatic (Air Corps reserve)
.500
Flying jackets
2,000
Parachutes
2,000
B&LP Branch
14 May 1940
Regraded Uclassified
181
BREAKDOWN OF PRINCIPAL SEACOAST DEFENSE ITEMS
(INCLUDING SEACOAST DEFENSE ANTI-AIRCRAFT EQUIPMENT)
CONTAINED IN THE PROPOSALS OF May 14, 1940.
1. Atlantic and Gulf Coasts:
B. Battery construction.- 155mm emplacements at Harbor Defenses of
New Beford, Narrsgansett Bay, Long Island Sound, Delaware, Chesapeake Bay,
Charleston, Key West, Pensacola, Galveston, and modernizing and improving
existing batteries at harbor defenses of Long Island Sound, Southern New York,
Sandy Hook, Delaware and Chesapeake Bay.
b, Seacoast fire-control materiel, for completing and modernizing
fire-control installations for sescoast armament and providing seacoast search-
lights at Harbor Defenses of Portland, Portsmouth, Boston, New Bedford, Narragan-
sett Bay, Long Island Sound, Southern New York, Sandy Hook, Delaware, Chesapeake
Bay, Charleston, Key West, Pensacola and Galveston.
C. Underwater defense,- Providing shore installations and mine equipment
for mine projects at Portland, Portsmouth, Narragansett Bay, Delaware and Chesa-
peoke Bay.
d. Antiaircraft material,- Antiaircraft guns, automatic weapons, fire-
control equipment, for Harbor Defenses of Portland, Portsmouth, Boston, New Bed-
ford, Marragansett Bay, L.I. Sound, Southern New York, Sandy Hook, Delaware,
Chosapeake Bay, Charleston, Key Rest, Pensacola and Galveston.
2. Puerto Ricor
a. Battery construction.- Construction of E 12-inch sescoast battery
at San Juan Harbor and construction of a. 155mm gun emplacements at six localities
on the Island of Puerto Rico. we hare the guns,
b. Seacoast fire-control.- Materiel and installation of fire-control
equipment for 12-inch seacoast battery of San Juan.
C. Ammunition storage.- Construction of storage magazines at Fort
Niles Depot.
d. Antiaircraft material.- Procurement of antiaircraft guns and fire-
control equipment for the Island of Puerto Rico.
3. Panama:
a, Battery construction.- Construction of tool houses and magazines for
75 and 155mm guns on both coasts.
b. Seacoast fire-control materiel,- The purchase of fire-control
equipment for existing batteries, Panama.
0, Searchlights- For the installation of searchlights and the con-
struction of roads to outlying batteries and asarchlight positions.
d. access AA materiel.- For the procurement of antiaircraft guns, automatic
reapons and fire-control materiel to meet existing shortages in the project.
WPD
3-14-40
Regraded Uclassified
182
INCREASE REQUIRED TO ADD 38,000
ENLISTED TO THE REGULAR ARMY AND BRING IT TO PEACE
STRENGTH (280,000).
Add cash requirements of $76,434,850.
In the revised proposal of May 14, 1940, a reduction is
made for the 38,000 enlisted increase and temporary shelter,
and commercial (essential) items of equipment for the 38,000.
The revision, however, does contain provision for the remain-
ing requirements in non-commercial (critical) items of equip-
ment for the Protective Mobilization Plan Force, which force
includes any such increase.
B&LP Branch
14 May 1940
Regraded Uclassified
white touse
may 14. 1940
183
SUMMARY OF ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE
IN ADDITION TO THE 1941 BUDGET AND THE SUPPLEMENTAL ESTIMATES OF $18,000,000,
EXCLUSIVE OF NEW AIRCRAFT.
Provision by Joint Resolution for the immediate increase of
15,000 enlisted men
$ 17,146,812
Antiaircraft equipment, both mobile and seacoast defenses.
47,383,264
Antiaircraft ammunition
16,775,060
Funds to speed up production of materiel on current contracts
and in the Military Appropriation Bill and the $18,000,000
of supplemental estimates now before the Senate
31,918,168
Commercial (essential) items still required by existing units
of the Regular Army and the National Guard
74,321,054
Modernization of combat airplanes:
Air Corps
5,000,000
Heavier and additional weapons and ammunition
23,188,200
Maintenance during fiscal year 1941 for the increase of 15,000
men
15,260,254
Remaining requirements in non-commercial (critical) items of
equipment for the Protective Mobilization Plan force
(less antiaircraft)
262,466,549
Plants to speed up ammunition production
44,275,000
Additional amounts for seacoast defenses less antiaircraft:
Atlantic Coast, U. S
6,799,016
Panama
2,585,206
Puerto Rico
3,559,010
Anchorage Air Base
8,752,560
Procurement Planning and Industrial Mobilization
7,739,950
TOTAL
$567,170,103
Cash appropriations
$460,298,788
Contract authorizations
106,871,315
TOTAL
$567,170,103
Including speed-up.
B&LP Br.
5-14-40
Regraded Uclassified
/
184
JOINT RESOLUTION
Authorizing $17,146,812 for the Military Establishment in
order to increase the enlisted strength of the Regular
Army for the balance of the fiscal year, 1940.
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That
there is hereby appropriated out of any money in the Treasury
not otherwise appropriated, to be immediately available, the
sum of $17,146,812 to be expended in the discretion of the
Secretary of War for all expenses incident to recruiting, main-
taining, and equipping during the balance of the current fiscal
year 15,000 additional enlisted men in the Regular Army, such
expenses to include but not to be restricted to pay, construction,
rations, shelter, sanitation, medical and hospital care, clothing
and equipage, transportation, armament and equipment, travel,
the purchase, maintenance, repair, and operation of passenger-
carrying vehicles, the employment of persons and the procurement
of supplies and services at the seat of government and elsewhere,
and other expenses necessary but not enumerated above.
Regraded Uclassified
185
Proposed obligation of 15,000 man increase in Regular Army
1. Complete the organisation of a sixth division
(part already in existence)
4,000
2. Provide essential supporting troops for a second
Army Corps
3,000
3. Complete the Mechanized Brigade
2,000
4. Organize one pack artillery regiment and complete
another already in existence
2,000
5. Organize an Engineer General Service regiment and
complete an Engineer aviation regiment
800
6. Organize two heavy artillery battalions
1,000
7. Fill shortages in existing medical units
400
8. Provide additional supply, administrative and
service units and personnel required by this
increase
1,800
Total
15,000
Regraded Uclassified
n
136
INCREASE IN THE REGULAR ARMY OF 15,000 MEN BY JUNE 30 AND OF 38,000 ADDI-
TIONAL BY SEPTEMBER 30, 1940, TO REACH PEACE STRENGTH (280,000)
To maintain until the end of the current fiscal year and equip with
essential items an increase of 15,000 men, will require
$ 17,146,812
To maintain during the fiscal year 1941 the 15,000 increase and
to maintain and equip the 38,000 additional with essential
items will require
91,860,504
The totals include funds for training, pay, travel, subsistence,
clothing; transportation; temporary shelter and temporary
hospital facilities; essential items of equipment, etc.
The appropriations involved are shown on the inclosure.
Encl.
B&LP Branch
11 May 1940
Regraded Uclassified
187
STATEMENT OF FUNDS TO BE APPROPRIATED BY JOINT RESOLUTION
Appropriation Title
Increasing Army
Additional
by 15,000 En-
Critical
Total
listed Men for
Items of
period May 11,
Equipment
1940 to June 30,
1940.
Salaries, A.G.O.
8
3,550
-
3,550
Salaries, C.S.O.
720
I
720
Printing and Binding
1
-
1
Contingent Expenses, War Dept.
3,000
-
3,000
Special Field Exercises
-
-
I
Welfare of Enlisted Men
3,800
1
3,800
Pay of the Army
284,142
I
284,142
Travel of the Army
468,498
-
468,498
Finance Service
5,022
I
5,022
Regular Supplies
12,259
,
12,259
Subsistence of the Army
172,730
I
172,730
Clothing and Equipage
4,095,837
39,820
4,135,657
Incidental Expenses of the Army
50,000
1
50,000
Army Transportation
4,452,434
114,405
4,566,839
Horses, Draft and Pack Animals
-
I
-
Barracks and Quarters (Temp.shelter)
4,211,854
I
4,211,854
Construction & Rep. of Hospitals (Temp.)
324,500
1
324,500
Signal Service of the Army
241,000
266,310
507,310
Medical and Hospital Department
51,110
-
51,110
Engineer Service, Army
139,167
773,685
912,852
Ordnance Service & Supplies, Army
399,858
661,645
1,061,503
10,831
I
10,831
Chemical Warfare Service, Army
Organized Reserves
360,635
1
360,635
15,290,947
1,855,865
17,146,812
OFFICE OF THE BUDGET OFFICER FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT
May 10, 1940.
Regraded Uclassified
ESTIMATES TO RAINTAIN AND EQUIP WITH ESSENTIAL ITEMS,
AN AVERAGE INCREASE OF 48,250 ENLISTED MEN FOR FISCAL YEAR 1941
(ACTUAL INCREASE 53,000)
Appropriation Title
Amount
Salaries, Office of Secretary of War
$
1,620
Salaries, Adjutant General's Office
143,520
Salaries, Office of Chief of Finance
23,580
Salaries, Office of the Quartermaster General
32,320
Salaries, Office of the Chief Signal Officer
34,260
Salaries, Office of the Surgeon General
61,560
Salaries, Office of Chief of Ordnance
48,000
Contingent Expenses, War Department
36,150
Printing and Binding, War Department
46,234
Special Field Exercises
3,180,000
Welfare of Enlisted Men
73,349
Pay of the Army
25,507,670
Travel of the Army
1,334,840
Finance Service, Army
92,500
Subsistence of the Army
7,907,758
Regular Supplies of the Army
1,965,168
Clothing and Equipage
10,322,785
Incidental Expenses of the Army
425,000
Army Transportation
9,639,736
Horses, Draft and Pack Animals
658,070
Barracks and Quarters (Temporary shelter)
13,606,871
Construction and Repair of Hospitals Temp.Shelter)
2,261,585
Signal Service of the Army
565,700
Medical and Hospital Department
918,016
Engineer Service, Army
1,771,000
Ordnance Service and Supplies, Army
3,409,117
Chemical Warfare Service, Army
220,842
Organized Reserves
7,573,253
TOTAL
$91,860,504
BOWD 5/10/40
Regraded Uclassified
3.
at
5-11-40
189
EXTENSION OF ESTIMATE ON ANTIAIRCRAFT ARTILLERY,
AMMUNITION AND OTHER ITEMS SUBMITTED TO THE PRESIDENT
BY THE SECRETARY OF WAR IN MEMORANDUM DATED MAY 9, 1940,
TO INCLUDE COST OF EXPEDITING DELIVERY ON A 3-SHIFT BASIS.
Additional
Cost to
Normal Cost
Speed Up
Total
Cost of speeding up deliveries of
articles now under manufacture
which pertain to the classes of
items listed below
$ 10,000,000
$ 10,000,000
Cost of new items to be menufactured
Item
Antiaircraft Artillery
$ 27,000,000
6,200,000
33,200,000
Antiaircraft Ammunition
22,000,000
12,800,000
34,800,000
teld Artillery Ammunition
3,250,000
1,300,000
4,550,000
for 106 How, 155mm Gun,
and 75 - Gan
Field Artillery Materiel
3,250,000
950,000
4,200,000
48 - 105 Howitzers
8 - 155 - Guns
24 - - 8" Howitzers
12 - 75
Pack Howitzers
Modernization of 3ª AA Ammunition
500,000
200,000
700,000
(Mechanical Fases)
Guns & Ammunition for Aircraft
25,000,000
8,500,000
$3,500,000
Sub-Total Materiel
$ 81,000,000
$ 39,950,000
$ 120,950,000
Facilities needed to provide
for manufacture of above
items and for storage
of ammunition
30,300,000
7,337,000
37,637,000
Total
$ 111,300,000
$ 47,287,000
$ 158,587,000
by Appropriations as follows:
Contract
Total
Cash
Ordnance Service & Supplies, Army
$ 101,664,500
$ 36,285,000
$ 137,949,500
Construction of Bldge & Utilities
20,637,500
-
20,637,500
$ 122,302,000
$ 36,285,000
$ 158,587,000
Regraded Uclassified
0
OCS
0
o
P
Y
CONFIDENTIAL
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
Subjects Status of Antiaircraft Artillery and Ammunition.
1, In compliance with your request, transmitted by General Watson,
regarding the status of antiaircraft artillery and emmunition, the follow-
Ing information is furnished:
ARTILLERY
Caliber
In Service and
Included in
Total
Total Re-
Funds Re-
under Order
1941
quirements
quired for
June 30, 1940
Estimates
Shortages
.50
1,140
o
1,140
2,710
$
5,500,000
11m
564
408
972
1,493
11,500,000
3 Inch
508
0
508
508
0
90m
72
89
161
350
10,000,000
Total -
$27,000,000
AMMUNITION (Complete Rounde)
50
41,535,000
2,740,000
44,000,000
100,000,000
1 7,000,000
37m
706,000
85,000
800,000
2,500,000
8,500,000
3 inch
842,000
0
842,000
952,000
2,500,000
90m
24,000
20,000
45,000
160,000
4,000,000
Total -
$22,000,000
Grand Total - $49,000,000
2. Time, in materiel requirements, is of course the dominant factor,
and approximately two years will elapse after appropriations are made before
deliveries can be secured on most of these items. This period could be
reduced by increasing the number of working shifts - and by paying more
for such procedure, end also by the adoption of industrial mobilization
methods.
This antimircraft materiel in of great importance. It is
largely defensive in nature, though most of it is of types essential for
the field army.
In submitting this statement of purely antiaircraft deficiencies,
I would like to comment on the fact that there are equally serious
shortages of other items of materiel. For example: 3t million dollare
for ammunition for 105mm howitzers, 155m guns, and 75mm guns; 3*
tillion dollars for 48 - 105mm howitzers, 8 - 155 - guns, 24 - 8-inch
howitzers and 12 - 75mm pack howitzers; 1 million dollars to modernize
3-1nch antiaircraft ammunition (change fusse to mechanical type), 25
million dollars for guns and ammunition for aircraft.
(SGD) HARRY H. WOODRING
Secretary of War
C
0
PUNFIDENTAL
T
Regraded Uclassified
191
4
SUMMARY OF ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE
(BEYOND 1941 BUDGET AND SUPPLEMENTAL ESTIMATES) THAT WILL BE SUBMITTED TO
THE WAR DEPARTMENT SUBCOMMITTEE, COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS, U.S.SENATE.
Additional funds to speed up production on current contracts
for materiel
$ 15,000,000
Additional funds to speed up production of materiel in the
Military Appropriation Bill and the $18,000,000 of
supplemental estimates now before the Senate
16,918,168
Remaining requirements in critical items for existing units
of the Regular Army and National Guard *
7,159,584
Remaining requirements in essential items for existing units
of the Regular Army and National Guard
74,321,054
Ft.
27 heavy bombers as an operating reserve
14,182,304
Modernization of existing combat airplanes
28,188,200
Additional amounts for seacoast defenses for Puerto Rico
and Panama #
15,890,125
Provision during fiscal year 1941 for the increase of 53,000
enlisted men
91,860,504
Remaining requirements in critical items of equipment for the
Protective Mobilization Plan Force
#
297,885,581
Essential facilities to speed up ammmition production .
44,275,000
Additional amounts for seacoast defenses, Atlantic Coast,
Continental United States #
18,467,415
Restoration of project as submitted to Congress for the
8,752,560
Anchorage Air Base, Alaska
Restoration of the program as submitted to Congress for Pro-
curement Planning and Industrial Mobilization
7,739,950
TOTAL ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS
$640,640,445
# Including speed-up.
B&LP Branch
11 May 1940
Regraded Uclassified
4
A
192
5-11-40
Statement on Program for the Air Corps.
The Acting Chief of the Air Corps states that the present
procurement program can not be accelerated unless this program 18
sugmented by such an increase of planes over and above the present
program as would justify an increase in existing productive facilities.
This would also involve an increase in the strength of the Air Corps.
The War Department has asked the Senate Appropriations Committee to
increase the amounts now carried in the House bill by $21,861,835 to
provide 109 planes for maintenance of combat units. The Senate Committee
WAB also informed that it is very desirable to provide 27 additional
heavy bombardment planes at an estimated cost of $14,182,304 to complete
an operating reserve in that type.
The status of estimates 1e as follows:
57 planes $6,530,109 provided by House
109 planes $21,861,835 submitted to Senate
27 planes $14,182,304 asked by Chief of the Air Corps
$42,574,248
This amount need not be included in any supplemental estimates
if it is to be covered in the 1941 Army Appropriation Bill. Further
sugmentation in the Air Corps personnel and equipment will not be
requested unless the situation as it affects this country becomes more
critical than is apparent at this particular time.
Regraded Uclassified
193
The Regular Army of the United States shall consist of ***
and such other officers and enlisted men as are now or may hereafter
be provided for. Except in time of war or similar mergency when
the public safety demands it, the number of enlisted men in the
Regular Army shall not exceed two hundred and eighty thousand,
including the Philippine Scouts.
Regraded Uclassified
(.194
May 14, 1940
My dear Mr. Hoover:
Thank you for your two letters of
May 10th, giving further results of
investigation of German funds in the
United States and of Mullen à Company.
yourfter Letter given 7 me.
I shall be glad to have you keep
me informed of any later developments.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. C.
195
May 14, 1940
My dear Mr. Hoover:
Thank you for your two letters of
May 10th, giving further results of your
investigation of German funds in the
United States and of Mullon & Company.
I shall be glad to have you keep
me informed of any later developments.
Yours sincerely,
(bunch) E Monganthan, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Heever, Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. c.
Regraded Uclassified
196
May 14, 1940
Ky dear Mr. Hoover:
Thank you for your two letters of
May 10th, giving further results of your
investigation of German funds in the
United States and of Mullen & Company.
I shall be glad to have you keep
no informed of any later developments.
Yours sincerely,
(Sagned) H. Morgesthau, Jr.
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, Director
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice,
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Uclassified
JOHN EDGAR HOOVER
197
DIRECTOR
Federal Bureau of Investigation
United States Department of Justice
Washington, D. C.
May 10, 1940
Personal and Confidential
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear 1/Γ. Secretary:
With further reference to the activities of
Muller and Company, I have received confidential infor-
nation to the effect that Muller and Company had requested
the Columbia Smelting and Refining Company to submit a
bid on 2,000 tons of electrolytic copper, 1,000 tons of
zinc, and 200 tons of tin for the Roumanian Government
Steamship Lines. I am advised that the Columbia Smelt-
ing and Refining Company is very doubtful as to whether
it will submit such a bid.
Any further information which I receive con-
cerning this matter I will gladly transmit to you.
Respectfully,
J. edgan Hoover
S8
May 14, 1340
4:45 0.0.
Mr. Garton
Mr. Graves
Cochren
Tr. Young
Thompson
Dr. HOPE
"2". Solliven
Tr. Cotton
Dr. White
"r. Schwerz
"". Foley
Urs. Flotz
Jrv McRevnolds will be here in the norning and
you (Thomason) could come on for 5 half # EPT
int tonein Mo the job and then about noon you leave and
be Tone for two weeks.
Mr. Thommson: Fine, I will be 2 nev men.
- Jr: I sent word to Mac he had better play volf
this afternoon. It Nould be the last chance be would have,
mg every Saturday afternoon he could have off for golf.
2% All weeks now, Thompson.
Mr.
Thoupson:
I think I em -ore tired than I
celline.
Wt,Jr: I thought if you would be here in the norning
- tell 117 what's happening end as soon ne he 18 full of it
7011 TO off end take your two full weeks. You have earned it.
Herold?
For those of you who are interested in the State of
you may or DAY not know that Mr. NeNutt -- not
Sowman Elder -- has naid us the full tax on
He has -iven us P check for 384,000, and Mr.
and Mr. Helvering recommended the acceptance and
Regraded Uclassified
199
- 2 -
did accept it 80 that the $235,000 on account of the Two
Per cent Club. So they gave us A check for $84,000.
So who am I to throw away money or refuse to take it?
Dr. White: $84,000 on $235,000?
HM.Jr: No penalty.
Mr. Graves: You get into pretty high brackets there.
HM, Jr: They just won't let the lawyers have anything
to do with this They just pay it. That settles the Two
Per cent Club. Right?
Mr. Sullivan: Yes.
HM,Jr: We have no case now, have we?
Mr. Gaston: Pretty expensive privacy. I don't doubt
he spent it for political purposes.
HM,Jr: That's his business and it's worth $84,000
to him not to talk. And, needless to say, we are not talk-
ing because it 16 against the law.
Just BO that none of you feel sorry or hurt poor me,
when Jesse Jones said he would rather have a 15-year real
estate loan than Government bonds, the nastier Jones gets
the more pleased I am that Carter Glase threw out the two
proposals personally. Senator Glass personally, I think
more than anybody else, let Jesse have it. So the nastier
he gets -- and he certainly was nasty -- the better I feel
about it that they gave him short work in the Senate, and
they certainly did. First time he has ever gotten trimmed,
isn't 1t?
Mr. Foley: On something he wanted very much for
himself.
Mr. Gaston: I certainly liked that phrase in
yesterday's report, "Mr. Jones said he had the President's
approval but it was noticed Administration supporters were
opposing it".
HM,Jr: Just wanted to say hello. Anybody got any-
thing? If you people want another laugh, George Harrison
Regraded Uclassified
230
- 3 -
called de today on something and he said, "I thought I
to ell you that Marriner Ecoles said I shouldn't
all you up in case the Government Bond Market went down,
time he VPS 601n6 to let you know personally." So I said,
"I vouid like you to call me." He seld, "Ave you asking
JE?" "Well, from now on I will call you." He said Eccles
toll an not to call me. So it's all right with me.
ICOTRE con tell Alson and Kintner first how he saved the
xmi harket and I wish you could have heard George Harrison
lave you ever heard of anything like that? Socles
told his not to call me on the Government Bond Market.
mobody elge was to talk to me. Amazing!
FML, I would like to see tomorrow or Thursday
Coloura Jecquin and it's in connection with the engine
for the so-malled bloch bonbers.
Mr. Young: Which do you prefer?
H.Jr: A little bit better Thursday afternoon.
Xr. Cotton: I have A rather academic question. How
yould you like the Treasury to vote on the Chilean loan?
It's carried anyway no matter how you vote.
PM,Jr: I saw it in the papers. Vote with the
Weinistration.
Dr. White: See which way Jones votes and vote the
other way.
Mr. Cotton: That's what I have done FO far.
HM,Jr: I warn you, it's a bad day to tackle me on
anything serious. I refuse to be too serious tonight for
I Ress I night cry.
Kr. Gaston: We save a general license to the Belgian
Cres.
HM,Jr: 11:30 Thursday for Jacquin. If anybody else
WANTS to come with him, all right, but I have a particular
Mensor for wanting to see him. And before you 60 home I
vant my Army papers back.
Regraded Uclassified
201
- 4 -
Mr. Young: What I wanted wasn't there. I wondered
if your filing system was bad.
HM,Jr: That goes in the safe tonight. All of them.
What are you (Sullivan) sitting on the end of your chair for?
Mr. Sullivan: Thurman Arnold called up. He was
disturbed on some problems we might be getting into on
purchases of crucial supplies that we don't know about
and wondered if he could see me tomorrow, and I wondered
if you wanted me to take Phil with me or find out first.
HM,Jr: Crucial? That's not military.
Mr. Sullivan: Crucial is the word he used.
The Maritime Commission -- I mean, the Budget is with
us on the opposition to the measure of the Marine B111.
That's what we discussed with Mr. Harris.
HM,Jr: That's when somebody buys something for
$25,000 and selle for $22,000,000 and doesn't want to
pay the tax.
Mr. Sullivan: The Budget wrote to us that they would
interpose no objection to our objections to the Bill, BO we
got shold of the Maritime Commission and found out the
Bureau of the Budget had not interposed any objections to
their introducing the Bill. So the Maritime Commission
thinks the Budget 1s with them. So we called back over to
the Bureau of the Budget and they said, "No, we are with
you fellows."
HM,Jr: In the room, the nicest word I can think of
1s they are a bunch of sissies. And that's a compliment.
C.K.? You got it under control?
Mr. Sullivan: Yes, we have it under control but we
are going to have a fight.
HM,Jr: We just licked Jones.
Norman?
202
- 5 -
Mr. Thompson: Mr. Bell 18 feeling fine and he had
clanned to come in tomorrow and thinks he will have to
stick to his plan.
HM,Jr: He might R6 well stay out until Friday.
Mr. Thompson: I urged him to and he said he wouldn't
be happy unless he came back.
HM,Jr: Do you think I should call him? I asked for
his and Mrs. Bell and both were not at home.
Mr. Thompson: I urged his family not to come in
because you said Friday, but he said he has it on his mind
and had to get back.
HM,Jr: Who an I fighting on this no tax on sale of
ships?
Mr. Sullivan: The Maritime Commission.
HM,Jr: Well, need any help?
Mr. Sullivan: Not yet.
HM,Jr: Holler.
Mr. Sullivan: Aye, aye, sir.
HM,Jr: Ed?
Mr. Foley: No.
HM,Jr: Herbert?
Mr. Geston: No. The State Department ruled our way
and various protective devices on ships, particularly the
degrugeing equipment. Incidentally, we got $8,000,000 on
the Coast Guard.
HM,Jr: oh, it's un on the Hill?
Mr. Gaston: It's un on the Hill. Do you know
what that does and crews? It increases the CAMPBELL from
190 to 175 men. It means, -- and you put guns on it. It
adds 75 men to the crew.
Regraded Uclassified
203
- 6 -
HM,Jr: In order to operate the guns?
Mr. Gaston: Yes.
HM,Jr: And if we had the money, how long would it
take to make gun mounts?
Mr. Gaston: At the mercy of the Navy.
HM,Jr: Incidentally, the Navy has in its bill
gune for the Coast Guard, $2,000,000. I don't know whether
the President thought it was so funny that tin hate in the
Navy WAB for us and then the Navy had the same thing. Do
we have tin hats -- our own hats on our men?
Mr. Gaston: I did not know it.
HM,Jr: Something new I take it.
Incidentally, how is Mason? I don't like to say too
much, but the last three or four days, what we have done and
been able to do to help the President on the War Department
Bill, 1f I never came to Washington for anything else I think
that will be worth having done. I want to also say in the
room that I consider General Marshall a great star. He's a
great fellow. Have great admiration for him. He's a
soldier.
Mr. Foley: Want to tell John about Hathcock tomorrow.
That's probably what Doughton is coming down for.
HM.Jr: Let it go until tomorrow. One thing: Better
get the story from Graves BO we get 8 good break. I'm
dropping some more Procurement people.
Mr. Schwarz: Right. We have been talking about it.
HM,Jr: The boys know this WAB quite a feud on.
Mr. Schwarz: They were up there, many of them, listen-
ing to him.
HM,Jr: Have they said anything?
Mr. Schwarz: Our boye here are glad we won. They
don't think any more of him as a result of his conduct,
his tactics.
Regraded Uclassified
204
- 7 -
HM,Jr: The way he acted, the better the victory.
After all he picked the battleground. I die not. He
initiated it and everything else. We are not going to do
anything
Mr. Schwerz: The result speaks for itself.
Hm,Jr: It took a little work.
Mr. Schwarz: He charged yesterday that we worked
over the weekend and they sat tight.
HM,Jr: Worked on who?
Mr. Schwarz: On the people on the Hill.
Mr. Foley: You worked on me Sunday.
HM.Jr: I did not do anything over the weekend.
Tried to see Glass and could not. All I did over the
weekend was Holland.
Mr. Sullivan: And you refused an invitation to the
races.
HM,Jr: That's right. Jones invited me to 60 to
the races on Saturday. It was a nice fight, but this
Army-Navy Bill the President 1s sending un 1s great stuff
and I feel happy I had A little something to do with it.
I must have spent four hours with General Marshall in
the last couple of days.
Dr. White: Bob Kintner was around trying to get
a story on preparedness.
HM,Jr: It's a question of knowing too much. I am
seting to help out. I would not be doing it if you had
9 Mar Department, but with Woodring and Johnson coming
into B meeting where they don't talk to each other, the
President had to use me because these fellows come into
A meeting and won't show each other 8 memorandum and
won't even talk to each other. The President calls me
his Moderator. That 1B terrible. O. K.
Regraded Uclassified
205
May 14, 1940
2:30 pm
Present:
Captain Collins
Mr. Graves
Mrs. Klotz
HM,Jr: We have been waiting for ten days to
gee you neople. This men Graves 18 so busy you
never can see him. Harold McNutt Graves.
Mr. Graves: Speaking of that, we have word
from our boys that our 2% Club 1s settled. That
the man paid the tax. I will leave with you a mem-
orandum, 1f you care to have it. They paid the tax
on all the income that was set up against the Club.
of course the implication 18 pretty strong that they
had some reason for not wanting us to know where
that money went, because they paid 384,000 to avoid
it.
I intend, unless you have something for me
to do, to go out there tomorrow for & couple of days
to 80 over the other cases hanging fire, McKinney,
Greenlee, McHale.
HM,Jr: O.K. I will take it home and read
it. You don't expect me to congratulate you, do you?
Mr. Graves: No.
HM,Jr: O.K. I just wanted to know.
Mr. Graves: Captain Collins and I have ore-
oared a memorandum which summarizes the situation in
the Procurement Division.
HM,Jr: When are you going to go out there?
Mr. Graves: I was planning to leave tomorrow.
Be back possibly Friday morning and possibly on Saturday.
Regraded Uclassified
206
-2-
HM,Jr: (Reading attached memorandum.)
"Re : Further Reduction of Force in the
Procurement Division.
The more important functions of the Procurement
Division may be classified as follows:
1. Purchasing for emergency relief projects,
supported by separate annual appropriations.
2. Permanent statutory functions, supported by
annual appropriations and performed for the
benefit of the Government departments gener-
ally. These include:
(a) The making of indefinite-quantity,
or term, contracts for commonly
used supplies;
(b) The disposition of surplus Federal
property; and
(c) The promulgation of standard speci-
fications for Government purchases.
3. Reimbursable services, supported by collecting
the costs from the departments receiving the
benefit of the services. These include:
(a) A warehouse for the storage, issue, and
delivery of supplies in common use;
(b) Fuel yards for the storage, issue, and
delivery of coal;
(c) A Garage for storing and servicing
Government trucks and passenger cars.
(d) A furniture shop; and
(2) A. typewriter repair shop.
To this list of reiumbursable services should be
added a function more recently assumed,
Regraded Uclassified
-07
-3-
nominally on & reimbursable basis --
(f) The making of purchases for certain
Government departments, principally
the Treasury, the Federal Works Agency,
and the Federal Security Agency, and the
purchasing of heavy equipment for the
Civilian Conservation Corps.
For a number of years the Procurement Division has
excended a creater amount for the functions enumerated
in paragraph 2 above than has been appropriated by Con-
regs for those functions. Similarly, it has expended
n, arester amount for the services enumerated in para-
fresh 3 above than it has collected from the departments
qualizing those services. In both instances, the defi-
ciency has been met by using funds appropriated by Con-
"ress for emergency relief ourdoses.
A survey which has just been completed shows that
Muring the 8-month period from July 1, 1939, to Febru-
DTJ 22, 1940, the emergency relief funds BO used amounted
to $623,295.10. For the entire fiscal year 1940, it is
estimated that this figure will approach $1,000,000.
So far as this condition was then known, it was
brought to your attention by our memorandum of February
6, and to meet the situation you authorized and directed
certain changes in the policy of the Procurement Division,
the Orincipal effect of which was to restore small buying
to the departments served, leaving the Procurement Division
to function as a purchasing agency only with respect to
relatively large-scale transactions. Almost 400 emergency
relief employees have now been dismissed as the result of
this change in policy."
HM,Jr: Out of the 400, please malce & note, I
want to know how many are placed in other Departments.
We once set up 2 committee for that purpose. Hopkins
218, two or three years ago.
Cantain Collins: They are supposed to go over
to a Registration Committee and re-register.
Regraded Uclassified
208
HM,Jr: I would like to know.
Captain Collins: Yes, sir.
HM,Jr: I would like to know. Please.
(Resumed reading)
"While this action has substantially alleviated the
difficulty, it appears from the study Just concluded that
it is not sufficient to insure a solvent position for
The Procurement Division. We now estimate that unless
further stens are taken, the Division's operations during
the fiscal year 1941, emergency relief transactions ex-
cluded, will show a deficit of approximately $365,000.
We are committed to the Bureau of the Budget and the House
Committee on Appropriations not to permit the further use
or emergency relief funds for functions unrelated to
emergency relief. We are, therefore, compelled to make
up this deficit by R further curtailment of expenditures
or by increasing service charges, or by a combination
of both these expedients.
"We propose to study each department and branch of the
Procurement Division with a view to effecting At once all
possible operating economies, and to increasing service
charges, beginning July 1, next to the extent that this
18 warranted and necessary. In any case, further reduc-
tions of personnel will be inevitable, possibly reaching
a total of from 100 to 150 persons out of 939 now employed.
in the District of Columbia."
HM,Jr: That's over and above the 400?
Mr. Graves: That's right.
HM,Jr: Gee whiz!
(Resumed reading)
"The necessary reductions will fall most heavily,
If not exclusively, upon the emergency relief employees
of whom there remain 309 on the District of Columbia
Payroll at the present time."
HM,Jr: Well, I have been over this once. I don't
Regraded Uclassified
209
-5-
Bee what else there 1s to do.
Cantain Collins: No, sir. We are still
going into it from every angle.
Mr. Graves: There 18 no other way.
HM,Jr: But please see what's happened to those
other people, will you, at once?
Mr. Graves. Yes, sir.
Now, there is one other thing I would like to
speak to you about at this time. You told me the
other day when we last talked about this that you agreed
with my recommendation, which concurred with Cantain
Collins, that at this time we make no effort to take
over further purchasing in the Procurement Division.
HM,Jr: That's right.
Mr. Graves: That's a matter that had been pend-
ing in the Bureau of the Budget, because the Bureau
made an engagement with us to get additional money if
it was decided to take over additional purchasing. I
went over Friday and spent hours there going overthis
situation and they fully acquiesce in the assertion
that we will not.
HM,Jr: Who's the fellow you go over to see?
Mr. Graves: Blandford, the ranking officer.
He feels we ought to do something constructive about
this and not leave the thing go with the abandonment
of this proposed increase in the functions of the
Procurement Division. So in that discussion this
proposition developed: that we would recommend, sub-
Ject of course to your approval because it will have
to be your recommendation to the President, the 1ssu-
ance of an Executive Order which will create an Advisory
Committee to advise with the Director of Procurement
with respect to operations of the Procurement Division.
I think it would be a good step practically, apart
from the desire of the Bureau of the Budget that we
Five this thing & constructive appearance. So I am
Regraded Uclassified
210
-6-
working that out with the Bureau of the Budget and
in due time we will bring some documents to you to
consider.
HM,Jr: O. K. It's a lousy suggestion, but
11 you think it needs window dressing I will go along
with you.
Kr. Graves: It 18 face saving and window
Aressing. That closes my business.
HM,Jr: Anything else?
Captain Collins: We had a meeting, just be-
fore I came over, in my office and Captain Heiss.
WSS down from the War Department to say that Dr. Feis
and Colonel Rutherford were over with the President
this afternoon for $65,000,000 additional, critical
materials.
HM,Jr: It came from the President?
Captain Collins: They mere with him this
afternoon. First I heard of it. So we will know
more after the meeting 1s over. The meeting 18 set
for 3 o'clock.
HM,Jr; They called you before the meeting?
Cantain Collins: Heiss mentioned it in the
meeting that Feis had asked Rutherford, in charge of
strategic materials, to go with him to the White House
at 3 o'clock this afternoon for a discussion of
$65,000,000. That's in addition to the $12,500,000
that went up the other day.
HM,Jr: I sent an estimate over for $90,000,000.
Captain Collins: Is that the one that was out
to $12,500,000?
HM,Jr: Yes.
I am for it. Everybody now
18 all excited about it. I get very much amused.
What other rood news?
Regraded Uclassified
211
-7-
Captain Collins: I just saw the paper when
I came in. There is no such thing as good news.
o0o-o0o
12
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
Day 9, 1940.
U. FOR THE
Re: Further Reduction of Force in the
Procurement Division.
The more important l'unctions of the Procurement
discion De 1.3 follows:
1. Purchasing for emergency rellef projects,
supported by seosrate annuel appropria-
tions.
Permanent statutory functions, supported
by annual propriations and performed
for the benefit of the Government de-
pertments generally. These include--
(a) The whing of indefinite-quantity,
or term, contracts for commonly
used supliec;
(b) The di: ozition of surplus Federal
_'ito arty; and
(c) The providetion of standard speci-
fications for Government purchases.
+=Reinbursable services, supported by collect-
inc the costs from the departments receiv-
inc the benefit of the services. These in-
clude--
(=) 2 marchouse for the storage, Issue, and
delivery of auguliss in compon use;
(t) Fuel yards for the Issue, end
delivery of coal:
Regraded Uclassified
223
Memo. for the Secretary--2.
(c) A garage for storing and servicing
Government trucks and passenger
cars;
(d) A furniture shop; and
(e) A typewriter repair shop.
To this list of reimbursable services should be
added a function more recently assumed,
nominally on a reimbursable basis--
(f) The making of purchases for certain
Government departments, principally
the Treasury, the Federal Works
Agency, und the Federal Security
Agency, and the purchasing of heavy
equipment for the Civilian Conserva-
tion Corps.
For e, number of years the Procurement Division has
expended a greater amount for the functions enumerated
in paragraph 2 above than has been appropriated by Con-
[Tess for those functions. Similarly, it has expended
L greater amount for the services enumerated in para-
graph 3 above then it has collected from the departments
utilizing those services. In both instances, the defi-
ciency has been net by using funds appropriated by Con-
[ress for emergency relief purposes.
A survey which has just been completed shows that
during the 8-month period from July 1, 1939, to Febru-
ary 29, 1940, the emergency relief funds 30 used amounted
to 1623,295.10. For the entire fiscal year 1940, it is
satimated that this figure will approach $1,000,000.
So far aa this condition was then known, it was
brought to your attention by our memorandum of February
D, and to meet the situation you authorized and directed
certain changes in the policy of the Procurement Division,
the principal effect of which was to restore smell buying
to the departments served, leaving the Procurement Division
to function as a purchasing agency only with respect to
relatively large-scale transactions. Almost 400 emergency
relief employees have now been dismissed as the result of
this change in policy.
Iclassified
1000. for the Secretary--3.
214
While this action has substantially allevisted the
illiculty, it appears from the study just concluded that
11 16 not sufficient to insure a solvent position for
the |rocurement Division. We now estimate that unless
further staps are taken, the Division's operations during
too fiscel year 1941, emergency relief transactions ex-
cluied, will show a deficit of spproximately 365,000.
13 are comitted to the Bureau of the Budget and the House
condittee on appropriations not to yermit the further use
of energency relief funds for functions unrelated to
anergency relief. We are, therefore, compelled to make
do this Maficit by a further curtailment of expenditures
or by increasing service charges, or by a combinetion of
oth these expedients.
We Tonose to study each department and branch of the
procurement Division with a view to effecting at once all
possible operating economies, and to increasing service
charges, beginning July 1, next, to the extent that this
is werranted and necessary. In any case, further reduc-
tions of personnel will be inevitable, possibly reaching
= total of from 100 to 150 persons out of 939 now employed
in the District of Columbia. The necessary reductions
will fall most heavily, if not exclusively, upon the
emergency relief employees, of whom there remain 309 on
the District of Columbie pay roll at the present time.
Assistant to the Secretary.
Director of Procurement.
approved
may 14,1940.
Regraded Uclassified
see ma ned portune File SISLATIVE - SECTION d
Rm. 170
TO AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION
215
FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
HEARING
BEFORE A
SUBCOMMITTEE OF THE
COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY
UNITED STATES SENATE
SEVENTY-SIXTH CONGRESS
THIRD SESSION
ON
S. 3938
A BILL TO AUTHORIZE THE PURCHASE BY THE RECON-
STRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION OF STOCK OF
FEDERAL HOME-LOAN BANKS; TO AMEND THE
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION
ACT, AS AMENDED, AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES
MAY 14, 1940
Printed for the use of the Committee on Banking and Currency
UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
231440
WASHINGTON : 1940
Regraded Uclassified
AMEND RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1940
UNITED STATES SENATE, SUBCOMMITTEE ON
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION MATTERS
COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY
OF THE BANKING AND CURRENCY COMMITTEE,
BOBERT F. WAGNER. New York, Chairman
Washington, D. C.
CARTER ODASS, Virginia
JOHN G. TOWNSEND, Ja, Delaware
The subcommittee met, pursuant to call, at 10:30 n. m. in room 301,
ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Kenturky
LYNN 2. FRAZIER, Nurth Dakota
Senate Office Building, Senator Robert F. Wagner presiding.
JAMES F. BYRNES. South Carolina
IOHN H. BANKHEAD, Alabama
CHARLES W. TOBRY, New Hampshire
Present: Senator Wagner (chairman of the subcommittee), Adams,
JOHN A. DANAHER, Connection)
ALVA If, ADAMS, Colorado
Radeliffe, Hughes, Herring, Smathers, Townsend, and Frazior.
ROBERT A. TAFT, Obio
FRANCIS T. MALONEY. Contreticut
Present also: Senator Glass.
OEORGE L. RADCIJFFE, Maryland
Senator WAGNER. The subcommittee will come to order, We will
PRENTISS M. BROWN, Michigan
proceed with a hearing on S. 3938 introduced by Senntor Glass. The
JAMES H. HUGRES, Delaware
CLYDE L. HERBING, Inwa
committee reporter will make the bill a part of the record at this
WILLIAM H. SMATHERS, New Jersey
point.
JOHN E. MILLER, Arkansas
(The bill, S. 3938, is as follows:)
D. WORTH CLARK, Idaho
SHERIDAN DOWNEY, California
(8, 11th, TRD Cong. ad ser)
A MLL To authorize the purchase by the Recanstruction Finance Corporation of Mork of Federal home-
keib hasks le and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act. as amended; and Par other purposes
Perjur LEVE, Clerk
He il enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of
SUBCOMMITTEE ON RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION MATTERS
America in Congress assembled, That (1) section 304 of the Act approved March
2. 1933 (48 Stat. I, 6), as amended, is amended further by inserting after the
HOBERT F. WAGNER, New York, Chairman
use "Sge. 304," and before the first sentence thereof the following: "(A), The
ALVA Fl. ADAMS, Colorado
GEORGE L. Maryland
JOHN G. TOWNSEND, In, Delaware
transtruction Finance Corporation, upon the approval of the Federal Loan
JAMES B. HUGHES, Delaware
LYNN J. FRAZIER, North Dakota
Administrator, may purchase at par any part of the stock of the Federal home-
CHARLES W. TOBEY, New Hampehire
loan banks owned by the United States, as evidenced by certificates, receipts, or
CLYDE L. HERRING, Iowa
otherwise, and the Secretary of the Treasury is authorised on behalf of the
WILLIAM H. SMATHERS, New Jersey
United States to sell such stock to the Corporation; and any stock se purchased by
D. WORTH CLARE, Idebo
the Corporation shall be held subject to the same conditions, requirements, rights,
BHERIDAN DOWNEY, California
and privileges now provided by law for or in connection with the ownership by
II
the United States of such stock, including all dividend and retirement provisions.
(b)"; and (2) section 304 of the Act approved March 9, 1933 (48 Stat. 1, 6), as
amended, and section 1 of the Act approved June 10, 1933 (48 Stat. 110), as
assuded, are amended further by inserting after the words "Seeretary of the
Treasury" strator". wherever they appear therein the words "or the Federal Loan Admin-
Ssc. 2, That (a) section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as
amended, in atuended further by substituting for the figure "$350,000,000"
appearing in the third proviso of the third sentence of the third paragraph thereof
the figure "$500,000,000": and (b) section 3 of the Act approved January 31, 1935
(49 Stat. I, 2), as attended, is amended further by substituting for the words
"January 31, 1945" appearing in the first sentence thereof the words "January
31, 1955''
Rsc. 3. That section 208 of the Act approved August 23, 1935 (49 Stat. 684,
706), as amended, is amended further by substituting (a) for the word "ten"
wherever it appears in the third sentence thereof the word "fifteen", and (b)
for the figure "40" appearing in the third sentence thereof the figure "60".
See, 4. That section 2 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as
Amended, is amended further adding immediately after the first paragraph
thereof the following:
1
Regraded Uclassified
2
AMEND THE BECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
3
"The Corporation in authorized to make payments
the approval of the Federal Loan a of - &
when installment payments are required sufficient to amortize 10 percent or
Secretary of the Treasury in amounts a to be
TM amendment permits such loans where 60 percent of the lown will be amor-
of the priocipal amount of the loan within a period of not more than 10 years.
capital stock at PAY or In payment of dividends from earnings.
tirel not change the requirements Bd to security, it does not change the ratio of
The within 15 years, instead of 40 percent within 10 years, The amendment
struction Act of 1982, or any other provision of law, the aggregate amount Can
Corporation Act. amended, section 200 (a) of the Emergency Retief and
Notwithstanding the provisions of section 0 of the Reconstruction Finater
does not the total amount B bank may have invested in such loans, which
payments, not exceed 60 percent of the amount of its time and savings deposits, DOP
notes, debentures, bonds. or other such obligations which the Corporation of
more may than its paid in and unimpaired capital, plus its unimpaired surplus funds,
or effected by reason of any cancolation or retirement of capital stock
authorized to bodies and have outstanding at any one Time shall not De docreased is
whicheyer in the greater.
The forget maturity makes a better loan from the standpoint of both the
REF, n. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation shall purchase stock of
bank and the borrower, because of the larger proportion of the loan that will two
Federal Imme-lown Taxik indor section I hereaf, OF retire capital or My dividends My
amortized It makes possible the stimulation of business and employment
under certion 4 hereof, in ao aggregate Amount not to exceed $300,000,000 to la
through financing the construction and rehabilitation of business buildings, and
determine by the Secretary of the Treasury: the Reconstruction Finance Cor-
given banks n. little more Intitude in finding profitable investments for some of
poration. upon the approval of the Federal Loan Administrator, to determine
them unemployed (onds, and enables them to serve better their communities. A
that portion of such instruction which shall he used for purchase of such stock,
for retirement of capital, or for payment of dividends hereunder.
prodent burrower may not be willing to have too large a percentage of his mortgage
mature in (ini short a period. Experience to recent years his proved that a [oun
Senator WAGNER. Senator Glass, do you eare to say anything in
regularly and property amortized seldom gets to trouble.
regard to your bill before we hear Mr. Jones?
Senator GLASS. No: I do not care to any anything at this time, I
I have discussed the bill with the President, and it has his approval.
introduced the bill by request.
Sincerely yours,
JESSE II, JONKA, Administrator,
Senator WAGNER Have you anything you would like to have tunde
21. part of the record at this point?
Senator WAGNER. We will now hear from Mr. Jones.
Senator GLASS, It might be well to introduce into the record à
letter 1 received from Mr. Jones.
STATEMENT OF JESSE H. JONES, FEDERAL LOAN ADMINISTRATOR,
Senator WAGNER. That will be mude n part of the record by the
WASHINGTON, D. C.
committee reporter.
Mr. Jones, may we hear from you with reference to 8. 3938, which
CEhe letter from Jesso II. Jones, Federal Loan Administrator, dated
as I understand is proposed legislation recommended by you and
May 13, 1940, is nx follows:)
introduced by Senntor Glass?
l'EDERAL LOAN August,
Mr. JONES, First I would say that I sent each of you a letter in
Washington, May 18, 1040
Hrm. CARTER GLARM
regard to the matter.
United States Kenate, Washington, D. C.
Senator WAGNER. No doubt all members of the subcommittee have
DEAR SENATOR GLASS I favor the adoption of the Glass hill, 8. 3938, for Ihr
the letter. And Senator Glass has put into the record the lotter he
following Peasons:
"ccived from you.
A It authorizes the return to the Trensury of 5300,000,000 from its inv
oMr. JONES. I tried in that letter to outline the purposes of the bill
meuts in letating agencies in keeping with the President's Budget message,
perioits the Resinstruction Finance Corporation, with the approval of the Pid
and to give our reasons for favoring the proposed legislation.
eral Loan Administrator, to determine what portion of said euro shall be returned
Senator WAGNER. All right.
(1) hy the purchase of all or any part of the $124,741,000 of the enpital stork of
Mr. JONES. This manner of giving the Treasury $300,000,000 in
the Federal Home Loan banks held by the Treasury; (2) by the retirement of
Reconstruetion Finance Corporation capital stock; and (3) by the payment of
accordance with the President's budget message is in our opinion the
dividends from enruings of the Corporation.
soundest and best way to do it from the standpoint of the Recon-
$300,000,000 cau be returned to the Treasury in this manner without affection
struction Finance Corporation, from which is expected the $300,000,-
Mar efficiency or impairing the solveney of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora
000,
time or the Home Loan banks, The stock in the Home Loan banks is a and
Divestment and Days dividends in execuse of the cont to the Reconstruction Finance
Senator TOWNSEND. You say "from which is expected the $300,-
Curporation of the money Decementy to buy such stock from the Treasury.
000,000." For what purpose is it expected?
B. It increasion the amount available for loans to raileoads by $150,000,000
Mr. JONES. To return to the Treasury capital to lending agencies
which la nocessary if we are to aid the roads in reorganizing, and mable them to
not now needed.
borrow At reasonable rates from private subreces, Also the general limitsine
date on maturities of Reconstruction Finance Corporation Indine in raised from
Senator TOWNSEND. Well, by that do you mean to sny that you
1945 to 1955.
have $300,000,000 of expital you do not need?
C. It permits the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to lary or make
Mr. JONES. I did not say it exactly that way, Sennior Townsend.
upon preferred strick in banks and insurance companies upon the request of the
can provide the Treasury with the $300,000,000 without impairing
Federal Loan Administrator, who A approved by the President, instead of upint
the request of the Secretary of the Treasury, only. as at present. This in a propor
the solvency or efficiency of the Corporation.
fruction of the Federal Loan Administrator.
Senator TOWNSEND. Do you mean to say that that is possible?
The Reconstruction l'inance Corporation in responsible for each and invest-
Mr. JONES. Yes: that is possible. Obviously and quite naturally I
ment and notest determine whether it shall be made. The amendment would
am trying to comply with the President's budget message, and to do it
facilitate the work and obviate unnecessary delay,
D. Under existing law national banks may make loans on improved farm
in the best and soundest way it can be done:
land and improved business and residential properties 10 an amount not to exceed
60 persent of the appraised value of the property when secured by A first mustime.
Regraded Uclassified
4
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
ASHERD THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
5
what you are trying to do, but if you bad your own way about If
Senator Townsend. I can understand that, that you (ee) the
Senator WAGNER Senator Townsend, what do you mean by
that the way you would do it?
Tiggular way"?
OWN capital stock in home-loan banks that is now owned by to
Mr. JONES. Very nearly. I think it is proper for the R. F. C.
Senator TOWNSEND. Not by IL method of going round the bush.
Mr JONES. Let me explain a little further, 1 did not finish what
Treasury. for the reason that it is contemplated that stock will the
1 had in mind when [ referred to the $124,741,000 of the $300,000,000.
repaid from time to time as the banks do not need the capital be
Now, if you had not had any question on your debt limit, or of needing
think the R. F. (', lins the organization and facilities better to bring
this money to be returned to the Treasury, [ had intended recommend-
that about than the Trensury, and I think we can keep in closer souch
big to the directors of the R. F. C. that we pay the Treasury out of our
Administrator, and 1 believe that plan would be sound. That would
with it. Banks are now under the supervision of the Federal Loan
earned surplus IL substantial dividend. I would have done that in my
event. and Ind talked to them about it before this question was PYPP
0008124,741,000
miscil. That amount prohably would have been not more than
Senator TOWNSEND (interposing). The real object back of nll this
$125,000,000. or perhaps $100,000,000, but I thought we had earnings
to keep going beyond the $45,000,000,000 debt limit, is if not?
enough au that we could give that much money back to the Treasury,
Mr. JONES. Well, nobody Ins told me what the object was, except
and that we should do it. 1 intended to so recommend before this
you now.
question was ruised If we pay them dividends of $100,000,000 and
Senator TOWNSEND. But you do know that, do you not, without
hur for stock then we would only have to reduce our amount by
nugbody telling you?
878,000,000 in order to give them the entire $300,000,000. If you
Mr. JONES. You ean testify to that, perhaps.
should raise the debt hmit or if they should not give the entire
Senator TOWNSEND. No: I do not want to testify to it. I your
$300,000,000, we would not have to reduce our expital by $75,000,000.
opinion no it.
We have outstanding at this time a total of $1,881,000,000, 1 think
bmly wanted to know my opinion about it, that
Mr JONES 1 shall not argue that, I might say, however, if any-
it 14, of investments, and in the main they are sound investments.
So we have $285,000,000 of earned surplus. I cannot imagine that it
Senator GLASS (interposing). That is what you are enlled up
would take more than $125,000,000 under any eircumstances to coyer
Senator TOWNSEND. Yes,
all losses That would leave us $160,000,000 of surplus, and that is a
Mr. JONES. I am going to give you no observation now that is not
sound surplus, and we could return that money to the Treasury if we
wanted to, So I had thought we would probably give them back
called for by your consideration of this bill but that is pertinent: If
[ were the Congress I would not hesitate to increase the debt limit
$100,000,000. I thought that would please the conservative element
to $50,000,000,000.
in Congress.
Semitor TOWNSEND. Is there not the prospect, in fact has there not
Seimtor TOWNSEND. We might not think it proper but at any Fate
made the statement that the President is going to send up on the
We do not think We ought to go round the bush, If we are going to
do it We ought to say: Let us increase the debt limit, but not go
Hill If recommendation that we raise probably $800,000.000 to
the R. F. C, and say to them, "We want $300,000,000 from you,
)
61.000.000,000 for armement, for the War and the Navy Depart-
and extract it like pulling teath.
ments and other purposes? If he does there is going to have to be
something done about the debt structure. And if that is coming why
amount? Senator GLASS. And then you say to issue bonds to cover that
don't we take it all at one time al bat?
Mr. JONES. Do you mean to borrow the money to do this?
Mr. JONES. And not do it piecemeal?
Senator Guiss, Yes,
Senator TOWNSEND Yes; why ask for this $300,000,000 now?
Mr. JONES. That is correct.
Mr. JONNS. That is for the Congress to determine.
Senator GLASS That would seem to show the situation.
Senator TOWNSEND. That has probably developed since you recom-
Senator TOWNSEND. Is not that irregular bookkeeping, Mr. Jonea?
mended this legislation.
Mr. JONES, Senntor, I would not say that it was nt all.
Mr. JONES Yes; that has been developing in the last few days pretty
Senator TOWNSEND. Is it not a new method of bookkeeping to say
last, and properly so, I suppose. But even in that event, Senator
the loast? We held hearings here and tried to keep other people from
Townsend, it would not hurt us at all to handle the matter in this way,
adopting that method, held those hearings a few years ago,
to give the Trensury back $250,000,000 or $300,000,000 if we did it
Mr. JONES. I think it is actually sound and proper for the R. V. C.
in this manner.
To own this stock, The stock pays dividends producing substantially
Semitor WAGNER. I do not see anything irregular about this.
more than cost to the R. F, C. Ithas substantial earnings and surplus,
What is there irregular about this. Senator Townsend? You indicate
and I will be very glad to give you that figure if you want it.
that it is an irregular method, and what is it? If you can spare the
Semitor TOWNSEND. I recognize that, but T think if the R. F. C.
Transfer of $300,000,000 why should not that be done?
lins $300,000.000 in stock it does not need it ought to put that money
Mr JONES. I see no reason why it should not be done.
buck in the Treasury in the regular way.
Senitor GLASS The Treasury raises no objection to that provision
Mr. Jones This is going to be n. regular way.
of the bill,
Senator WAGNER I understand that I would not subscribe to
sixthing that is irregular, because that conhotes there is something
wrong about this. 1 think it is perfectly proper
Regraded Uclassified
6
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
7
Mr. JONES. There is nothing irregular or improper about it.
Senitor GLASS, What is the reason for making this provision for
Senstor WAGNER. That is what I say,
Senator TOWNSEND It is adopting a method of bookkeeping that
T.P be done by the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the
purchase of the stock of Federal home-loan banks, now authorized
has not been the custom. Is not that a fact, Mr. Jones?
persons do what one is required to do now. And the Treasury is
to President, also by the lending agency? In other words, to have two
thing. Mr. JONES. Well, you have not had any custom on this sort of
opposed to it.
Senator TOWNSEND. Have you heretofore been accustomed to
Mr. JONES. 1 know. They do not want to give up the authority.
adopting this method of bookkeeping?
Mr. JONES. I said n. moment ago that we would have paid the
istrutor and in no senso a function of the Trensury. We are not
It Is clearly the function of the R. F. C. and the Federal Lonn Admin-
Treasury n dividend this year had this question not been brought up,
required to have the approval of the President or the Secretary of the
way? Senator TOWNSEND Well, that is all right; but why do it in this
Treasury in muking any other loan we muke, But in the hurry with
banking act, on March 0, 1933, the present procedure was
Mr. JONES. We would not have paid the $300,000,000 because We
your of up its to how we can help banks by putting in capital. In practice
could not have afforded it, but we could have returned some of our
if II bank-well. I will take Lynehburg because 1 do not think We have
enpital: I would rather buy this stock in home-loan banks than to
bid ony-applications from Lyneliburg.
reduce our capital because of the uncertainty in the world and the
Senator GLASS. No.
fact that the R. F. C. will be called upon undoubtedly to do many
Mr. JONES, If if bank in Lynehburg needed some capital they
things that privato capital and private interests will not do and can-
would gu to Richmond-
not afford to do, but that the R. F. C. can and should do as a Govern-
Senator TOWNSEND (interposing). You are talking now about any
ment agency.
national bank. 1 take it?
stock? Senator Townsend. Have you not authority now to huy that
Mr. JONES. Yes. If any bank needs capital, and in the CBSP I
started to illustrate with they would go to Richmond and make appli-
Mr. JONES. No; and the Treasury hús not authority in soll it,
ention to the R. F. C. Our agency at Richmond would investigate
That is the reason it is put here in this bill I might sity that this
the matter and determine whether in their opinion the capital was
manner of doing the thing is our own. We figured out this Dianner
needed. and if it was proper for the R. F. C. to put it in, and how.
of giving the money, It was not the suggestion of the Treasury
Our agent would come to us will n. recommendation. We would
Department. All they want is $300,000,000 and it is our business to
review it, I mean our exceutives and staff and the men in charge of that
find the best way to give it back to the Treasury without impairing
branch of our business.
the solveney and officiency of these corporations.
Senator TOWNSEND. You are speaking of the present plan and not
Senator WAGNER Welf. that in that Will you now go to the other
the future plan?
items of the bill?
Mr. JOXES: Yes, the present plan. Then they make their recom-
Mr. JONES. 1 am ready.
sundation to the directors of the R. F. C,, and they approve it.
Senator WAGNER. I think it would be better for you to proceed in
Then we send over a perfunetory letter to the Secretary of the Treasury
that way.
to the effect that X Bank of Lynchburg needed the capital, and that
Mr. JONKS. Does any other member of the subcommittée desire to
We thought it advisable to put iL in. That letter is turned over to n.
nek me any questions?
clerk. and that clerk considers the matter for A period, which has
Senator WAGNER (chairman of the subcommitter). Have any of
averaged 2 weeks in the last year, to determine whether in his opinion
the members of the subeommittee any questions they would like to
it should be done.
ask before Mr. Jones proceeds to discuss other items of the bill?
In other words, the policy there is taken over by the Treasury.
(A pause without response,)
Obviously the Secretary of the Treasury cannot know about all these
Mr. JONES. What is the next one?
varions and sundry things. He must operate through his hoards,
Senator WAGNER. The next is your $150,000,000.
through his clerks, Then that clerk determines, we will say, that he
Mr. JONES, The railroad loans?
does not think the bank needs that capital. So he turns it down. He
Senator WAGNER Yes: the railroad loans,
has to be persuaded and argued with, and that necessarily brings
Mr. JONES: We are out of available lending funds to prilronds.
about delay. To is not the way it should have been done in the begin-
and We are in that position by reason of an inadvertence in the
ning. but we had no other check then on the R. F. C, We say to the
drafting of the bill. which 1 think was in 1934. when we asked the
Treasury: You now have the Federal Loan Administrator, and this
Congress to give us outhority to guarantee railroad lorns as well as
plan would obviate a lot of delay and a lot of irritation, the irritation
to make thom. but to treat guaranteed loans the same 23th though they
being to people who need the money, people in the community affected.
were-tonms actually mades
Senator Gives. Have you not acquired stock in some five thousand
Semitor GLASS, Before we get to that let me SWV that we have not
or SIX thousand banks?
completed section 1 of the bill yet,
Mr. JONES. We have acquired capital notes of some sixty-two
Mr. doxxs. What clse do you wish?
hundred banks. This plan would remove all of the rough edges. It
is highly desirable and it in " plan that would avoid unnecessary delays
Regraded Uclassified
5-14-40
8
AMEND THE BECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION AUT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
9
and irritations. If you prefer to leave it like it is, do so, but
not the way the way it ought if should to be be done, done. The other way is not necessary an, the
Mr. JONES And we have gotten our money out of 2,700 of them.
They are gradually working out. We are having to nurse them und
disapproved your action?
Senator TOWNSEND. Have you bord exems where the Treasury has
to advise with them, although IL great many of them HTH no trouble
at all. There are II. low hundred of the 4,500 that need watching.
Mr. JONES. A good many of them. In addition to that it is the
need help. that we have to advise with. I do not think that ulti-
delay, the unnecessary red tape.
mately we will loso any money through our investment in banks; in
Senator TOWNSEND. Then they have approved over five Universand?
fact, I an sure we will not, notwithstanding the fact that we will have
Mr. JONES. Yes,
to take some substantial losses.
Senator TOWNSEND. And disapproved some?
Senator TOWNSEND. That will depend a good deal upon what
delay of 2 weeks and sometimes much longer, I could cite a
Mr. doxes, Yes, but not n grent many. We have on an average
happens to business, 1 mean in the matter of the banks.
310 JONES. Obviously so,
number of cases and I am sure you would probably agree with you the a
Senator GLASS. The taxpayers of the country should not be
R. F. C.'s findings. At all events, if the R. F. C. now thought it
required to boost mismanaged banks, Every one of them ought to
should buy stock in n bank, or lend on stock in et bank, and the Federal
have been allowed to fail that would otherwise fail, when the banks
Loan Administrator approved it, it still would have to have the
generally were failing.
visa proval of the President, and there it must be done through sumebody Rp-
Senstor WAONER. Right there, since we are discussing that section
of the bill, I think it is only fair to read the report of the Secretary of
to with it?
Senator TOWNSEND. Then the Comptroller's office has nothing to
the Treasury on it, on the section to which Mr. Jones has just referred:
Fuder esisting law the Reconstruction Finance Corporation may, upon the
Mr. JONES. The Comptroller's office and the Treasury are one and
request of the Secretary of the Treasury, made with the approval of the President,
the same,
for proferred stock in banks or insurance companies, OF make loans
Senator GLASS. It was not so intended by law. The Comptroller
amound by such stock. Soction 1 (2) of the bill would permit such purchases
of (autgred stock and such loans to he made upon the approval either of the
of the Currency is supposed to be an absolutely independent office
Secretary of the Treasury or the Federal Loan Administrator The reuson for
Treasury It requires him to report to the Congress.
The law does not even require him to report to the Secretary of the
this change in the law is not apparent. The extating provisions of law in this
report were engeted in 1933 As part of the emergency banking legislation. The
machinory established at that time for providing banks with needed additional
it is.
Mr. JONKS. That is the way it should be, but that is not the way
espital funds has worked satisfactorily. The Treasury (x aware of no compelling
region why the set-up should be changed at this time, and recommends against
Senator GLASS. You any that is not the way it is being done, but
the proposed change.
that is what the law requires.
Mr. Jones. May I comment on that?
Mr. JONES. That is correct. The Comptroller of the Currency has
Senator WAGNER Surely.
just as much authority as any other clerk in the Treasury and no more
Mr. JONES, It has worked satisfactorily because of the patience of
That is, he assumes no more authority. The general counsel
)
the R. F. C. and of the people who have had to have help. If that is
Senator TOWNSEND (interposing). Is that because he does not as-
the only place to get it you have to wait on the pleasure of the fellow
sume the authority that rightfully belongs to him, or because he
who is going to say yes or no 05 the case may be.
necedes to the wishes of the Secretary?
The Secretary states that he knows of no compelling reason. He
Mr. JONES. He accedes to tke wishes of the Secretary in order to
does not know of any reason to the contrary except that these clerks
hold his job.
in his office do not want to give up the powers they have of saying
Trensury? Senator Townsend. Is he appointed by the Secretary of the
yes or no. They would not know what a compelling reason was. I
Am speaking now of the clerks who do these things. It is not fair to
Mr. JONES. He is appointed by the President, but under the law
them because they do not understand it. There is not one who would
the Secretary of the Treasury employs the deputies and fixes their
know how to go into your city or town or community and determine
salaries, So it is an incongruous thing if I know what that word
whether IL bank should have more capital or not.
means, but it is so nevertheless.
1 am speaking a little bit critically of the Comptroller's office and
there is nobody in the Treasury who has ever run a business or a bank.
Now, getting back to the question of advisability of helping a bank,
of the Treasury but not near as critically as I could if 1 were to give
Vent to my netual feelings and opinion about the situation.
cannot. How in the name of goodness can they know what is proper? They
I think the present plan is restrictive. I do not think those clerks
would know how to examine a bank. If you were running EL good
Senator GLASS 1 think the R. F. C. has done wonderfully wise
bank they would feel they would have to find something to criticize.
work in administering an utterly unsound law, I do not think the
1 think the banks of the country would be better off without the office
taxpayers of this country should over have been required to boost
of the Comptroller of the Currency.
mismanaged und corrupt banks.
Senator TOWNSEND. I notice, Mr. Jones, in the concluding para-
Mr. JONES. We do own stock now in about 4,500 banks.
graph of your letter you say!
Senator GLASS. Yes,
I have diseased the hill with the President, and it has his approval
Regraded Uclassified
10 AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 11
Mr. JONES. Yes; I discussed every item of the bill with the
afternoon, dent, and it has his hearty approval. I did it as late as Saturday Presi-
Mr. JONES. I beg pardon. Senator Fletcher sent up II note to me
and asked what limit should be put on it. As I have said, Senator
Senator GLASS. It. is perfectly apparent to me that the Secretary
('onxens raised the question. I sent him back N note and said
authority. that the Administrator of the lending agencies wants to acquire also this
of the Treasury does not want to give up any existing authority;
$150,000,000 (I) addition to the present loans then outstanding and
commution 1 thought that would give us enough.
Sendtor Townsend. How much was that?
Mr. Joxis, About $800,000,000 total. But it was intended to givo
work. Mr. JONES. I do not want to acquire it. I want to facilitate the
ID n revolving fund of about $800,000,000. The language in the act
Senator GLASS. Well, you cannot do that except by acquiring this
de it came out did not permit this $450,000,000 that we then had out-
additional authority.
standing and committed, to become at part of the revolving fund. As
there loans are repaid that money dies insofar as reloaning is concerned,
Mr. JONES. Yes, The directors of the R. F. C. are not going to do
441 out present revolving fund is only $350,000,000. We had in the
any foolish things. You can rub my name out of the bill, and his, too,
bill last year and in the Wheeler-Lea bill, an increase of $150,000,000.
and the President's. and you have loaned $10,000,000.000 without
Your passed that bill last year and we are simply retiring that. So W/
the approval of the President or of the Secretary of the Treasury, and
are now outirely out of funds for railrond loans.
We ure going to get it all back.
Senator WAGNER. Do you still have applications for railroad loans
nec unterly bad law,
Senator GLASS: I think you have done remarkably good work with
coming an?
Mr. Joste Oh, yrs. And some of these railronds will come out
Mr. JONES. I thank you. This is up to you gentlemen,
of therourts, out of reorganization, and we have to help them because
Senator TOWNSEND. I think you have done n wonderful job, but do
not think you will get all the money back.
priyrde money will not help.
Senator TOWNSEND. What percentage of the enilrond lonns are
it.
Mr. JONES. We will get il all back, and bring some more back with
gmanted loans?
Mr. Josts. Very, very few. In two or three instances maybe
Senator TOWNSEND, Well, [ am afraid not,
Sendtor TOWNSEND What proportion of your $450,000,000 has
Senator WAGNER. What about this section of the bill?
been paul off? What is the amount of the louns to raibroads now?
Mr. JONES. There is no reason against it except that some clerk in
Mr. JOSES Including $202,000,000 of railroad securities We bought
the Treasury wants this power. I might say further that only about
(rom (he P. W. A., WP have authorized a total of $1,398,000,000 in
20 percent of the banks are national banks. Why then should the
valid learns. We have actually spent for those loans $896,000.000;
Comptoller's office, or the Secretary of the Trensury who is the
$405,000,000 los been repaid.
Comptroller's office, say whether a State bank can have some help (if
Senator TOWNSEND Of the $450,000,000, or was il portion of their
not, It should not he
de revolving fund?
Senator TOWNSEND. You are speaking of State banks that an
Mr. JONES, Some of it is the revolving fund. The most of it rep-
members of the Federal Reserve?
results the older loans, and some P. W. A. loans were sold, So WD
Mr. JONES. Of both. The Compiroller's office has absolutely
boxe outstanding now about $490,000,000 in váilroad securities OF
nothing to do with it member bank or a nonmember bank as to the
loans. and We have commitments HOW outstanding of something Tike
malter, and about 60 percent of our banks are nonmember banks, and
$10,000,000 more than our available funds, but our commitments are
only about 20 percent of them are national banks.
10/1 all taken. Therefore we can over-conimit some but not N. great
Senator TOWNSEND. In case you want to make a loan to IL State
dent
bank, what about that?
Senator Townsend Have you collected $10,000,000 from the
Mr. JONES. If it did not suit the fellow to approve it, where are
that is still in your revolving fund, or if you do collect
you? I Chink that is all I can say now on that subject. What is the
If you PAR still use it?
next thing"
Mr JONER. Yes, but we still need this $350,000,000.
Senator WAGNER You had just briefly referred to railrond loans
Senator RADULIFFE Those with the amount of your old loans
Mr. JONES. I started to any that when we asked for the privilege
unpaid anrount to about $450,000,000?
of guaranteeing a real estate lonn instead of making it, it was approved
Mr. JONES No: they antount to more than that,
by this committee. Senator Couzens was the most interested member
Senator RADCLIPPE You luid $490,000,000
at the time. Senator Flotcher was the chairman of the committee.
Mr. JONES. We have $155,000,000 of loans where railroads are in
and while il was on the floor the thought occurred to Senator Couzens
receivendaip. and we have as lot of loans where railronds are not in
that there ought to be a limit. 1 wassitting in the press gallery
receivership. like that B. & O. and the New York Central, and [
Senator GUASS (interposing), You meant railroad loans and not
real estate lonns.
carrot name all of them; but we have a substantial amount of loans
to reilroads not in receivership.
Mr. donks, I em talking about raifroad loans.
Senator RADCLIFFE I understood you to say that your outstanding
Senator Griss. But you soid real estate loans.
loans were about $490,000,000, with $10,000,000 of commitments,
and that your revolving fund was $350,000,000.
Regraded Uclassified
12 AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 13
authorized of $350,000,000 was put on.
Mr. JONES. since The this revolving limitation fund only applies to lonns made and
Mr. JONES. We have overcommitted a little.
Senator RADCLIFFE. But if you have exhausted $350,000,000
Sennior TOWNSEND. You have overcommitted $10,000,000
$140,000,000 had only $490,000,000, of old loans. that would seem to indicate that you have only und
Mr. JONES. That is right.
Senntor TOWNSEND. I still cannot get it through my skull and it
little confusing, but that is not the way it works out.
Mr. JONES. No; I cannot give you the exact figures, and it is
must be is little thick I suppose.
Senntor RADCLIFFE. It did not include the commitments. It is
Senator TOWNSEND. If the total loans are $490,000,000 and
only the loans actually made, I mean the $470,000,000.
have loaned all of the $350,000,000 revolving fund, and you must you
Senator TOWNSEND. You do not make commitments unless you
have it all the time, it would seem that you only have the difference
have the money. But Mr. Jones says he has made commitments of
between $350,000,000 and $490,000,000.
Senator RADCLIFFE. That is the why it struck me at first thought.
$10,000,000. Senator RADELIFFE. That other figure represented loans plus com-
commitments have not be disbursed?
Mr. JONES. Mr. Mulligan, do you know how much of our milroud
mitments. Senator TOWNSEND. All right, $471,000,000 plus $150,000,000.
Mr. MULLIGAN. The story about that is that out of $471,000,000
Senator RADULIFFE, Whatever the figure is,
there is $20,000,000 P. W. A., which I leave out; but with $471,000,000
Senator TOWNSEND. That represents $621,000,000 of which you
outstanding, $207,000,000 of which represents a part of the $350,000.-
have $350,000,000 in your revolving fund.
000 that has been disbursed since February 1, 1935, and the $264,000,-
Mr. JONES. Yes, sir.
000, a part of the old amount-there is $207,000,000 outstanding and
Senator TOWNSEND. That would leave $271,000,000 of old loans.
$152,000,000 of commitments.
Mr. JONES. That is right, or pretty close to it. But the fact
Senator TOWNSEND. But your total is $471,000,000.
remains that we have no more money with which we can make railroad
Mr. MULLIGAN. Yes, air.
loans or commitments, and we have need of this $150,000,000.
Senator TOWNSEND. And you have $350,000,000 in the revolving
Senator GLASS. If you have already loaned $491,000,000 why do
fund, and it is bound to be that amount and cannot be less because it is
you fix the limitation at $500,000,000?
a revolving fund.
Mr. JONES. The 500 million limitation, Senator, is merely increasing
Mr. JONES. That is right,
the revolving fund.
Senator TOWNSEND. The difference between $471,000,000 and
Senntor GLASS. By $10,000,000?
$350,000,000 is $121,000,000.
Mr. JONES. No, by $150,000,000.
Mr. JONES. Of the loans that were outstanding at the time when
Senator GLASS. If you loaned $490,000,000, it seems to me
Mr. JONES. Well, the limitation.
standing. the $350,000,000 limit was put on, we still have $264,000,000 out-
Senator TOWNSEND All you want here is to increase your revolving
Senator TOWNSEND. Then you have not loaned the full $350,000,000.
fund by $150,000,000?
Mr. JONES. It has not been disbursed. $207,000,000 of it is out-
)
Mr. JONES. That is all we want.
standing, and there are commitments for $252,000,000.
Senntor TOWNSEND. And you collect it out of old loans and bring
Senator RADCLIFFE. That is in addition to the $471,000,000?
it back; it is no new money?
Mr. JONES. Yes, sir.
Mr. JONES. No; we merely use the $150,000,000.
Senator TOWNSEND. Then you add your commitments
Senntor WAGNER. It is an increase of $150,000,000 by authoriza-
Mr. JONES. We have loans outstanding of $210,000,000, and have
tion-which I think you need, under the circumstances.
commitments of $152,000,000.
Mr. JONES. We undoubtedly need it; because when they go into
receivership, they have got to have it. There is no other place
mitments? Senator TOWNSEND. You have the $152,000,000 for your com-
where they can get it.
Mr. JONES. No. Add it to your $207,000,000.
It in exactly what we did last year when we asked for a $150,000,000
increase,
Senator TOWNSEND. Then that represents $359,000,000.
Mr. JONES. That is right. And we have only $350,000,000
Senator TOWNSEND. Next is an extension of your limitation of
Senator RADCLIFFE, Then your figure of $490,000,000 disregards
R. F. C. loans from 1945 to 1955. Why do you ask for an extension
the commitments.
now, when 1945 is 5 years off?
Mr. JONES. That included $264,000,000 of old loans.
Mr. JONES. Well, it is desirable, Senator, to be able to give longer
terms on these loans, There is a little confusion now in our law:
mitments. Senator RADCLIFFE The $490,000,000 did not include the com-
withe of it can be done and some cannot. Some kinds of loans we can
Mr. JONES. No. That represented loans outstanding at the time.
make for as long 12. period as we want to, and others we cannot.
Senstor TOWNSEND. What in the law limits it?
Senator TOWNSEND. When you make B. commitment you have the
money to loan, have you not, out of the $350,000,000?
Mr. JONES. I cannot explain it.
Mr. JONES. We expect to have it.
Senator TOWNSEND. What?
Seuntor TOWNBEND Well, you must have it.
Mr. JONES. I have been trying to get my lawyer to explain it to
me for 2 weeks, and he has not been able to do it; 80 I am sure I
connot do it to you.
Regraded Uclassified
14
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
CUEXO THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 15
made cannot be extended beyond 1945.
It just permits our extending loans. In some cases 0 loan ulready
Send of HUGHES How is real estate to get started to be developed
Senator TOWNSEND. Well, businessmen like you and The are terribly
of to proceed in any way if you do not have some loans? They have
handicapped, are we not?
pot to be financed.
Mr. JONES. We cortainly are-by lawyers.
Senator GLASS. Well, they ought not be financed by commercial
hunts Commercial hanks are supposed to be liquid and prepared to
and I think this one contains that many.
any sensible nction from any Congress that contains 156 lawyers:
Senator GLASS. As Mr. Jefferson said, it is impossible to expect
respond to any demand upon the deposits.
Senator TOWNSEND. What evidence have you, Mr. Jones, that
Mr. JONES, More, I think, Senator.
there is o real demand for this extension of time? That is the thing
that I want to know. 1 ford n real feeling that the banks Were now
Senator Humans. We sometimes make a mess of it, ns it is. I do
able to take care of all the applications they had, and that they wrro
not know what would happen if we had more lawyers.
duing II. Now, perhaps they are not. I should like to get your
Mr. JONES. That is desirable, Senntor, A man comes in and
reaction on that
made perhaps more than 4 years' time, to be able to pay his loans
Mr. Jossa. Well, 1 was waiting for Senator Glass to get through
back; and this would enable us to make it as long as 14 years.
Senntor TOWNSEND, I thought you had sufficient authority.
testifying. Senator Grass. Well. my testimony is that it is un attorly bad
Mr. JONES. We thought so, but we find we cannot extend B loan
provision of the bill that 1 introduced: and if I had had an oppor-
clarifying that.
that is already made. We ean innke a new one, and this is just
(muty 10 read the bill before I introduced it. 1 would have told you
so then: but Mike Flynn, of the Wall Street Journal, took the liberty
Senator HUGHES. That is occasioned by the wording of some of
of coming into my office and taking my paper out, without my knowl-
the sta utes, 1 suppose?
edge, and keeping me blind for about two hours and n half.
Mr. JONES. Yes,
Mr. JONES. I am going to try to convince you that it is a good
Senator SMATHERS. Or the lawyers' construction of them?
Mr. JONES. Yes, It is not II serious matter, It is desirable.
provision. Senator GLASS, You cannot do it; but go about.
Senntor HUGHES. It is not serious, if you can get this authority?
Mr. JONES. Let me by.
Senator WAGNER, Now we come to another controversial section-
Banks con now lond on real estate for 25 or 30 years,
section 3.
Senator ADAMS, Would you be good enough to spenk just is little
Mr. JONES. What is section 3, Senator?
londer, please?
Senator WAGNER That is extending real-estate loans from 10 to 15
Mr. JONES. Banks can now lend on real estate for 25 or 30 years,
Mr. JONES. Yes,
il the loan is insured by the F. H. A.; and that loan may be for 80 or
Senator GLASS. Well, I am learning something, now, about the bill
on percent of the cost of the property. So why not leuve it to the
that [ introduced.
judgment of the banker, if he wants to make an amortized loun on
Mr. Joxrs. One of your troubles is that you trust your friends.
Sometor GLASS. Yes, and 1 find that I cannot; because I am utterly
)
improved forms or business property that is income bearing and leave
it to his judgment whether he will make a loan running for half as long.
opposed to commercial bunks filling their vaults with real-estate loans.
Senator GLASS. What is the necessity for change, if he can make o
Goodness knows, they are filled up to the brim now with United States
lami for 25 or 30 yours?
bonds- 02 percent of all the indebtedness in the banks. And now to
Mr. JONES. You carmot do it on DI business property. There is
fill them up further with real-estate louns does not appeal to me
now ample credit for residential property. There is no place to go to
Mr. Joxes Senator, if you live with the proposition. 1 think you
borrow money on as business building of any character, except to life-
would feel differently.
insurate companies; and they largely lend 30 to 40 percent. They
Senator GLASS: Why. for 50 years a national bank was not permitted
claim to lend up to 50 percent, but they do not. It is very restrictive,
to make n. single, solitary real-estate loan: it WHS not permitted to own
Senathe TOWNSEND. But you can make all those loans-nny that
my real estate except the bank in which it conducted its business.
you have mentioned-from the R. F. C. account?
That happened for 30 years: and I do not see any reason why we should
Mr. JONES. Would you rather have the R. F. C. make them?
/
now liberalize that section of the bill. We liberalized it ones and made
Senator TOWNSEND I am asking you that question.
it 10 years instead of 5.
Mr. JONES. Yes,
Senator WAGNER You have the reports both from the Secretary
Senitor GLASS. Certainly 1 would rather have you do that. The
of the Trensury and the Federal Reserve System opposing that
commercial banks have no business londing their portfolios up with
particular provision: and I should like to hear from you.
lonis of this description.
Mr. JONES. Well, that is the best proof that it is right,
Senator TOWNSEND. If you can do it, how much demand have you
Senator HUGHES. Senator Glass, the State banks used to make a
buid that you have not been able to supply? That is the question 1
good many of those loans, and now they are not making them
luid
Senator GLASS. They are not making them?
Mr. JONES, Senator, 1 am trying to create a demand and I nin trying
Senator HUGHES. They are not making them.
to do something that will create work. for the building of a business
Senator GLASS. Well, they ought not to be made.
1
Regraded Uclassified
16
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 17
as well as a residence. We are all trying to get people back to work.
building or the moderuization or rehabilitation of a business building.
You cannot find in the United States a bank that has been hurt by
Senator TOWNSEND. I understand that; but I still wont to know
amortized real-estate loan on business property; and I challenge
you have been able to do it in the R. F. C, Everybody knows that if
an the Treasury Department to find one and come up and tell the com-
you have been able to do it.
mittee. I give them a week's notice.
Mr. JONES. We do not offer to do it.
Senator ADAMS. If you could confine your loans to 60 percent of
Senator TOWNSEND. Why?
the depressed value, that would be one thing; but the difficulty is in
Mr. JONES. Because we think the banks ought to do it.
boom values and it is in working up your tables of value.
Senator GLASS. They are not loans that are readily payable.
Senator TOWNSEND. Yes.
and bonds.
Mr. JONES. They are better, Senator, than loans secured by stocks
Senator ADAMS. I know that in our part of the West We went
through real-estate booms, and loans of 60 percent of the value proved
talking about real estate,
Senator GLASS. Well, I am not talking about gambling, now, am
to be bad because the value was wrong.
Mr. JONES. But the bank was not seriously hurt by that, because
Mr. JONES. Well, who borrows from the banks? I should like to
it did not make enough of them to hurt it.
have the banks have some place to invest their money.
Senator TOWNSEND. I was not arguing against that, but I have
Senator GLASS. Well, a great many people borrow from them who
been saying that I do not seem to be able to find enough demand for it
have no business borrowing from them.
Mr. JONES. You have not been looking for it, have you?
Senator TOWNSEND. Yes. I am president of a little bank down
Mr. JONES. Well, hardly enough borrow from them to enable them
to pay their expenses.
there, and [ was trying to find out from you if you had a demand
Senator GLASS. That is because the Government has gone into the
which you had to turn down, for loans of long standing. You say
banking business and has deprived the banks of that much business.
you do not have.
Mr. JONES. Senator, I repeat that 1 am trying to create a demand
Mr. JONES. Well, that is why I am opposed to having the R, F.C.
go into this. We try to help banks make loans.
and am trying to put people to work and to give the bank n. means of
Senator ADAMS. How much unused loan capacity is there now in
using these funds. It is better to put part of the funds in N. good loan
the R. F. 0.?
of that kind than to put it all in stocks and bonds.
Senator TOWNSEND. I agree with all that, but 1 do not think the
Mr. JONES. About a billion dollars.
demand is there.
Senator ADAMS. And there are 50 billions in the banks?
Mr. JONES. All right. It is only permissive; you do not have to
Mr. JONES. Yes, sir,
make the loans. If somebody wants to build a store building or
Senstor GLASS. Fifty billions of what?
rebabilitate A store building, and he wants to pay you back is thousand
Senator ADAMS. Deposits.
dollars a year for 15 years, or something like that, it enables you to
bonds? Senator GLASS. Yes; but deposits of money or of United States
make loans on which our bank examiners cannot come in and bit you
on the head and say, "Charge that off."
Senator ADAMS. They originally were money of depositors, which
Senator TOWNSEND. Well, in the bank of which I am president we
they put through the window.
now do that.
Senator GLASS. Yes,
Senator HERRING. All he is asking is that the national banks be
Senator ADAMS. A large part of the funds, of course, has gone into
Government bonds, as well as other loans.
permitted to do what you do, and to have its approved policy.
Senator GLASS. It is very necessary for a commercial bank always
Mr. JONES. No bank has been burt in this country from real-estate
lonns made by the bank, where the banker did not lend more than
to be in 8 position to respond to the demands on it.
Mr. JONES. Your deposits are insured.
60 percent of the value and where he loaned it on improved property;
Senator GLASS. This whole thing belongs to investment banking,
and you cannot find a bank in the United States that has lost on that
kind of a loan.
and it does not belong to commercial banks.
Mr. JONES. But you do not have any more investment banking;
Real estate that was held by banks when the trouble came, back
there is not any more investment banking, to speak of.
10 years ngo, lurgely was not on loans made on real estate: it was
where the loans had been made on stocks and bonds, and without
Senator GLASS. Well, "to speak of."
Mr. JONES. There never has been, Senator, any investment bank-
security, and so forth: and when the fellow went broke and his stock
ing in real estate, except these fellows who sold bonds-which we are
went down to nothing and the security Was of no value, they went
all against. There has never been any sound investment banking in
after the borrower and anid, "Give us some more security." And all
real estate.
be had. maybe, was A town lot or a little building or some kind of
Senator GLASS. There ought not be, by commercial bonks. "
loan. real estate; and the banking fraternity regards that as a real-estate
Mr. JONES. A few weeks ago or perhaps a few months ago when wa
It was not a real-estate loan at nll. It was a loan on stocks and
bad a little flare-up, some Government bonds went down 9 points
loan: and it was not a real-estate loan.
bonds that had not been amortized; and 80 it winds up as B. real-estate
and some went 6 or 5 or 7 or 8 points down.
Senator ADAMS. You mean thirty-seconds?
Regraded Uclassified
18 AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 19
Mr. JONES. No; points-from 109 to 107, or something like that
Government bonds but other securities and other bonds. They
Back in 1922 some of them went down 20 points-and not just
Senstor GLASS Well, not in that way.
Mr. JONES. We luive ability to make these loans, but we do not
down. They have quoted an equity value in newspapers; und the go
make them.
examiner goes in and says, "What is the bond worth?"
Senator GLASS Why?
"Well, it is worth X0."
Mr. JONES. Because we think the banks ought to have that oppor-
It cost 100, and he has the bank charge off the 14 points.
Servator TOWNSEND Not in governments: he cannot ask them Do
minity. Senator GLASS Oh, pshaw! You are not making them because
charge them down below par.
you do not think they are n sound proposition.
Mr. JONES. All right: but if he has to sell the Government bonder
Mr. Joses No: I beg your pardon; we could lend five or ten billion
who III los he gut to sell them 10?
dollars that we have not loaned because we have not been willing to
My point in that if you have " good mortgage Dinde under these
do 40
restrictions, and which is current. the bank examiner is nos going to
Senator WAGNER. 1 know that in New York there is no demand
and the bank examiner emnot bother you.
be able to tell you to charge il down. 11 does not depreciate in value,
for offer boildings just now.
Mr doxes. No; but New York is not the only spot in the country,
Birt if you buy some Bethlekem bonds at 90 or 100 and they (20
Senator WAGNER. But isn't that true?
down to 80, they will make you charge it down.
Mr. Josis Tt. is troe in New York and in Chicago. and it might
But all the top-luir bankers say, "That is all right. but do not make
be true in Philadelphia.
real-estate lonn."
We are now building office buildings in Houston, and we do not
Senator ADAMS. Part of it is the element of liquidity, and the other
need to horrow the money to do it. because we have them financed.
in III sufety | that is, the liquidity is in the bonds and the safety is in
That you cannot go on forever without building office buildings and
red estate.
hotels and spartment buildings and stores and theaters and things
Mr. Joses. Semitor, there is no Iiquidity in bonds. You try routny
that are just ns necessary as my part of your life.
Senator AGNER. Well, the other day I heard some testimony that
to sell 200 million of Government bonds and see where your liquidity
there was no demand for any investment money for those purposes
is. Who is going to buy them?
at dill. of the present, because we are so overbuilt in that regard that
Suppose you Iry to -oll trem today, or suppose you try to sell any
there will not be any demand for additional money for the construe-
other honds: There is no real marker. There is n quoted market but
non of that kind of building for some time to come.
nobody offers to buy and all anything, and there is DO reol quirket.
Mr. JONES. As I said a while ago, I am trying to cheate the demand.
Of course, HOW when we are dealing in these billions and billions,
Senator WAGNER. But we heard nothing about there being any
there is no market for these bonds,
difficulty in gotting loans. The difficulty Was in getting customers for
Sennitor TOWNSEND. That Wils the exidence yestorday
such II building. That is the reason it is not now being undert kvn.
Mr. JONES. Why, certainly. I would rather loive a good morigage
Mr. JONES. Well, as I said before. I am trying, if possible, to create
than these bonis: because the bank examiner can make me charge
something or fund something.
the bonds down. but he numot make me charge the mortgage down
Nothing in it can hurt. The only hurt in this is the hurt feelings
I bappen to have been in the real-este business for 40 yours, und
of the Comptroller's Office and the Treasury: They do not like it.
I know in is " soond business. 1 know il is us necessary to have
Senator GLASS. Why do you think this Government would he
office places of business and to have hotels as it is to have the elotice-
aboving commercial hanks, for 50 years, the right to make loans on
banks, you Wear: and in enght to have its place in fording mud its place in
Tral estate? Didn't the commercial banks get on fairly well then?
Mr. JONES. I do not think it was a good law.
You limit the amount the banker can lend to 60 percent of the
Senator GLASS. Woll, I do: I think it Was a good law. But I Wills
amount of las deposits; s(r the limitations will not permit any bruk
persuaded to let them make loans for 5 years and then some follow
to get hurt by these lonns, and in may do sonie good. It casmot do
any harm.
like you induced us to make an extension 50 that they could make
Sepator G.ASS. I just do not agree with you that the connuercial
them for 10 years; and now you want to make them for 15 yours.
Mr. JONES. I should like to make it 15; and the only objection that
banks have any business making loins on real estate.
Mr. JONKS. Senator, the commercial banks are too restricted now.
the Federal Reserve has got and that Eceles has got
Lot's let them do something.
Senator Guiss. I do not care anything about that.
Mr JONES. He wants to make it 20 years, hut he wants to rewrite
Senator GLASS. I do not know whether there are any restrictions.
the whole Federal Reserve Act.
on God's earth You are constantly giving the advice to let people
Senator GLASS. I know he does. If be keeps on much longer. it
debt. PUB in dobt. The eurse of this earth is that the whole world in in
mught to be rewritten: because they are ruining the system.
Mr. dones. Well, the Nation is in debt; and we have to follow the
leader, beven't we?
Regraded Uclassified
20
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 21
Senator WAGNER. He anys, on that point:
From the standpoint of the Treasury there appears to be no objection to the
The of Board the is not advised of any substanting TORRON for en iminediate liberalità
change* proposed by section 2 of the bill
tion existing power of national banks to make real estate loans
Beetion 3 would amond the existing law under which national banks may make
Mr. JONES. They have not waked up for 2 years, over there they
wal-estate loans in an amount not to exceed 60 percent of the appraised value
Senator WAGNER (reading):
loan of the principal within the 10 years, do AM to authorize such Jonne to be
of agreement provides for installment payments sufficient to amortise 40 por-
the real estate offered BS security and for a term not longer than 10 years, if the
have been nsleep and have nothing to do.
made out for " perfod of 15 years provided at least 60 percent of the principal Le
great and is or opposed immediate to urgency the enactment exists- of place-meal banking legislation where no
amortized within the IS years.
National banks can now make "real-estate Toans secured by first Hone upon
and so on. I am going to put the entire letter into the record:
approved real estate, including improved farm land and improved business and
residential properties" if the amount does not exceed "50 percent of the
TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
appraised value of the real estate offered an security" and for a term of not more
Washington, May 10, 1940.
than 5 years. Certain exceptions are made. For instance, the foregoing limitations
1940, requesting the views of the Treasury Department on 8. 3938, A bill &
My Dear Me. CHAIRMAN: Further reference is made to your letter of May
and restrictions do not apply to real estate loane which are insured under the
provisions of title Il of the National Housing Act, Another exception in that a
authorize the purchase by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of stock to
realestate loan may be made "in an amount not to exceed 60 percent of the
Federal home-loan banks; to amend the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of
appraised value of the real estate offered as security and for a term not longer
Act, as amended; and for other purposes.
than 10 years if the loan is secured by an amortized mortgage, deed of trust, or
Section 1 (1) of the bill would authorize the Resonstruction Finance Corpora
other such instrument under the terms of which the installment payments are
tion, upon approval of he Federal Loan Administrator, to purchase at par
sufficient to amortise 40 percent or more of the principal of the loan within a
of the Stock of the Federal bome-loan banks owned by the United States, and any
period of not more than 10 years." It in the italicized 40 and 10 in the preceding
would authorise the Secretary of the Treasury to sell such stock to the Recom
sentence which would be changed by the bill. The 40 would be changed to 00
struction Finance Corporation. The Secretary of the Treasury bolds $124,741,000
and the 10 to 15. Thus, national banks would be permitted to make real estate
of the capital stock of the Federal home-loan banks and although existing law
loans of longer maturity than at present, provided the higher amortization le
provides for the retirement of the stock held by the Secretary of the Treasury,
included. Prior to the enactment of the Federal Reserve Act, national banks could not
does not have any objection to section 1 (1) of the bill.
there is no provision authorizing the transfer or sale of such stock. The Treasury
make real-estate loans. Their power to do 60 has been progressively liberalized
Under existing law the Reconstruction Finance Corporation may, upon the
since that time, and there is n substantial body of opinion to the effect that it has
request of the Secretary of the Treasury, made with the approval of the Presio
been already too greatly liberalized. Accordingly, the Treasury recommends
dent, subscribe for preferred stock in banks or insurance companies, or make
against section a of the bill.
loans secured by such stock. Section I (2) of the bill would permit such purchases
The Secretary of the Treasury holds all the stock of the Reconstruction Finance
of preferred stock and such loans to be made upon the approval either of the
Corporation, in the total amount of $500,000,000. Section 4 of the bill would
Secretary of the Treasury or the Federal Loan Administrator. The reason for
authorize the Corporation, with the approval of the Federal Loan Administrator.
this change in the law is not apparent, The existing provisions of law in this
to make payments to the Secretary of the Treasury for the partial retirement of
respect were enacted in 1933 As part of the emergency banking legislation. The
the capital stock at par, or in payment of dividends on such stock from the earn-
machinery established at that time for providing banks with needed additional
Inp of the Corporation. Since, under existing law, the aggregato amount of the
capital funds has worked satisfactorily. The Treasury is aware of no competing
notes, debentures, bonds, or other obligations of the Reconstruction Finance Cor-
reason why the set-up should be changed at this time and recommends against the
poration Issued and outstanding is based upon the amount of the Corporation's
proposed change.
subscribed capital, the bill provides that the aggregate amount of such obligations
Under existing law the Reconstruction Finance Corporation may, with the
which the Corporation is authorized to issue and have outstanding shall not be
approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, and under such rules and regulations
decreased or affected by reason of the cancelation or retirement of any of the
as be may prescribe, sell on the open market the whole or any part of the preferral
capital stock of the Corporation. From the standpoint of the Treasury there in
stock, capital notes, or debentures of any national bank, State bank, or trust com
no objection to this amendment.
pany acquired by the Corporation. Section 1 (2) of the bill would change the
Section 5 provides that the aggregate amount used by the Corporation to par-
existing law so as to permit the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to sell such
chase stock of Federal home loan banks under section 1, or to retire the capital
securities with the approval of either the Federal Loan Administrator or the
stock of the Corporation or pay dividende on such stock under section 5, may not
Secretary of the Treasury. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation now has the
exceed $300,000,000, the aggregate amount to be determined by the Secretary of
authority to make such sales on its own initiative provided at least 60 days' motion
the Treasury. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation, with the approval of
of any proposed sale in given to the issuer or maker. (See sec. 5 (c) of the Hecon-
the Federal Loan Administrator, is to determine what portion of the aggregate
struction Finance Corporation Act, an amended.)
amount determined by the Secretary of the Treasury shall be used for the pur-
While the Treasury has no particular objection to this change in the law if 16
chase of stock of the Federal home loan banks, the retirement of the capital stock
divorced from the other changes referred to above, nevertheless, it in subject to &
of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, or the payment of dividends on the
general objection from the standpoint of the confusion that might arise when
capital stock of the Corporation. The Treasury has no objection to this provision.
subject. either one of two public officers can authorize action with respect to à particular
With the exception of the provisions to which objection le made above, the
Treasury Department recommends enactment of 8. 3038.
Reconstruction Finance Corporation to railroads, or their receivers or trustees,
Under existing law the total amount of loans, commitments, etc,, by the
I have been advised by the Director of the Bureau of the Budget that there is
no objection to the submission of this report to your committee, with the under-
may not eseeed at any one time $350,000,000 in addition to the loans and com
standing that no commitment would thereby be made with respect to the rela-
mitments made prior to January 31, 1935. Section 2 of the bill would raiso this
tionship of the proposed legislation to the program of the President.
limitation to $500,000,000.
Very truly yours,
The Reconstruction Finance Corporation may now make loans or advances
HERREUT E. GARTON,
to or renewals or extensions of loans or advances and may permit loans or advances
Acting Secretary of the Treasury
this run BD as to mature not later than January 31, 1045. Section 2 would change
Hon, ROBERT F. WAGNES,
date to January 31, 1955.
Chairman, Committee on Banking and Currency,
United States Senate, Washington, D. C.
Regraded Uclassified
22 AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 23
BOARD OF GOVERNORA OF TUE FEDERAL RESERVE STATEM
la encourage the enactment of State legislation similarly enlarging the
Hon. Поннит F. WAGNER,
Washington, May 1a, 1940.
of State lunks. On the other liand, since State banks can be members
Chairman, Banking and Currency Committee,
of of Congress and by complying with such conditions no Congress may
pown the Todetal Heserve System and can have their deposits insured only with the
United States Senate, Washington, D. C,
it to possible for Congress to require them to conform to the name
DEAR SENATOR WAGNER: of the This is in response to your letter of May 8,
impitations and restrictions in exercising their corporate powers the Congress has
requinsting to authorize 3417 expression Board's views with reference to 8. 1938. 1940,
presented for national banks.
of Federal the purchase by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation a NE
to order to eliminate unjust discriminations between various classes of banks
Act, home-loan batiks; to amend the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of stock
the jurisdiction of Congress and to place all of them on an equal con-
amended, and for other purposes,
peritive basie with respect to making real-estate loans, in to far as it lies within the
to in the 8, which would amend section 24 of the Federal Reserve Act
The soction only section of this bill which directly affects the Federal Remorve System
of therefore, it in respectfully recommended that, if section a of
paiwer the full - consted, il be coupled with a provision requiring all insured banks to
liberatize in some respects the power of national banks to make real estate would
authority of national banks to make roal estate loans, Section a relating
comply with the same limitations and restrictions no the of real-estate
lown de are applicable to national banks
hast 11 would represent only is partial approach to the problem In a bill loans
Yers Inily yours.
primarily with unrelated subjects, It would not in any way affcot the power dealing of
(Signed) CHESTER Monnet,
State monthor basis and other insured State banks to make such
Chester Morrill, Secietary.
ration of the existing power of national banks to make real estate loans and
The Duard to and advised of any substantial reason for nn immunito liberali-
Mr. JONES. Senator, when be comes to rewriting the Federal Ro-
opposed To the enactment of precement banking legislation where the in
Act. then he is going to want these louns made for 20 years, and
Invione immediate urgency exists. The existing laws are unallisfactory in many grow of
not 15. I know, because I talked to him
resultions and specific situations and emergencies. The Roard would profer
they reflect the commitative results of various attempts to neet competitive respects
Semitor GLASS Well, he is not going to rewrite the Federal Reserve
that further detailed amendments to the lanking laws be postponed will the
Act any time soon.
problem Can be given adequate consideration as part of A comprehensive review
Mr. JONNS. That is why I want you to fix this amount.
by Congress of the exeting banking laws, such as that which your committee has
Senator WAGNER. 1 will read to the committee that portion of the
been authorized to make pursuant to Senate Resolution No. 125
Therefore, if 8. 3938 in to he enacted. the Board would prefer that wetton 3 be
Secretary's letter which refers to this section:
omitted. If your committee is not disposed to wait section a from the bill,
Keelin a would amend the exisUng law uniler which national bank> may make
following: however, the Roard hopes that the committee will give consideration to the
reglistate Irvine In AD amount not to exceed no percent of the appraised value of
the not estate offered R- security and for 11. teem not lungor than 10 yours. if the
Section 24 of the Federal Reservo Act applies only to national banks and author-
lieu agreement provides for installment payments sufficient to aniortize 40 per-
izon them to make real estate loans secured by first llona (ii) improved real estate,
ent of the principal within the to years, NO Nº to authorize such Invoice to lin made
including improved form Inid and improved residential and business propertion,
for a period of 15 years provided at least 60 percent of the (vincipal in amortised
subject that: to certain Unitations and restrictions. It provides, among other thing,
within the IS years.
"The amount of any such Inan hereafter made shall not exceed 50 per centum
I think that describes that accurately.
of Has appraised value of the real estate offered as security and no such loan stall
National ean now make "real-estate loans regured by first liens apon
he made for a longer term than five years; except that (1) any such loan may be
approved regil estate, Including improved farm land and improved lusines- and
made in an amount list to exceed 60 per centum of the appraised value of the
residential properting" If the amount dues not exceed "30 percent of the appeared
cent estate offered AS security and for a term not longer than ten years if the loan
valued the real estate offered DEN security" and for a term of not more them à years
is decured by an amortized mortgage, deed of trust, or other such instrument
Certain exceptions are made. For instance, the foregoing limitations and restrie-
smoler the forms of which the installment payments are sufficient to amortize 40
time do not apply to real-estate loans which are insured under the provisions of
por centum or more of the principal of the loan within 48. period of put more than
Unle II of the National Housing Act. Another exception in that a contrestate
fon years. and (2) the foregoing limitations and restrictions shall not prevent the
logo may be made "In an amount not to exceed 60 percent of the apprained value
renewal OF extension of loans heretofore runde and shall not apply to real-estate
of The nigl estate offered as security and for a form not longer that 10 years If the
Act." which are insured Woder the provisions of Title II of the National Housing
has De recured by AN amortized mortgage, deed of trust, or other such instrument
under the forms of which the installment payments are sufficient to amortize 10
Section a of the bill would amend this provision NO no to permit amortized loans
of unore of The principal of the loan within a period of not more than 10
to be made for terms that longer than 15 years, Instead of 10 years, if the install
It is the italicized "40" and "10" in the proceding senteure which would
ment more payments are sufficient to amortize GO percept, instead of 10 percent, of
he clamped by the hill. The "10" would be changed to "BO" and the "JO" to
at real-extate lonos on All aimortization ousis, provided (bat the law were also amended
Tise Board would favor a liberalization of the power of national banks to make
of the principal of the loan within such period,
Than, national hanks would to permitted to make real-estato loans of
Langer maturity than at present, provided the higher amortization in included
Prior to the enactment of the Federal Reserve Aot, national banks could
instired the name time MQ as to do everything within the power of Congress to place all
under nal estate logue. Their power to do so has been progressively liberatized
The backs On an expiral competitive basis with respect to such business
that life and there IF a substantial body of opiniou to the effect that If has
tranks an for from oniform. Banks organized under the laws of some States
laws of the 18 States governing the making of real estate logius by State
been already too greatly liberalized. Accordingly the Treasury recommends
amount section a of the bill.
are permitted to make real-estate loans un a much more liberal basis than national
Laoks whereas banks organized under the laws of other States are sobject to
That is their comment on that section:
more severe Imitations than national banks. This places national banks at B.
Mr. JOYRS. He has had no complaint from anybody that it has
disadvantage in other States,
competitive disadvantage in some States and State banks at a competitive
been too greatly liberalized: I mean he has no complaint from my
>tates or which they were organized. it is Imposible for powers Congress to enlarge their
masmuels The all State hanks derive their corporate from the laws of the
banker, Because if you consider the banker who would make one of
there loons, if he won't make it, be won't make it. He does not med
enrporale birt Any enlargnment of the powers of national thanks lian III
n. law to tell him not to make it. If he would make it. be ought to he
permitted to make it. He ought to be permitted to run his bank.
Regraded Uclassified
24 AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION AUT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 25
Senator FRAZIER. Why is it that the average commercial bank
real been estate afraid loans? to make real-estate loans or, at least has not made any has
Senator FUARTER. They seem to have a different system than we
have, and perhops they do not have the crooked bankers that we have.
so, properly. it is the best security they can have if they make the the tomm
Mr. because JONES. Real estate loans have always been
Mr. JONES. Well, these banks are being run for profit, and they
ought to be allowed to run them as they see fit.
Senator GLABB. You would advocate no restrictions?
demand; and they want their funds in such shape that if the depositors on
Senator ADAMS. Another reason is that the deposits are payable
Mr. JONES. I do not think there ought to be many.
Senator WAGNER. Will you discuss section 4 and section 5 now,
come in, they can meet their demands. And you cannot cash real
Mr. Jones?
estate loans.
Senator TOWNSEND. Section 4 authorizes the R. F. C. to make
Mr. JONES. You can cash them better than Government bonds
payments to the Secretary of the Treasury for partial retirement of
with a man in your position.
Senator ADAMS. Well, of course, it is a terrible thing to disagree
its capital stock or payment of dividends.
Senator WAGNER. 1 do not see any objection to that.
Mr. JONES. Well, it is a fact.
Mr. JONES. That is not controversial, is it?
rather startling.
Senator TOWNSEND. Give an illustration of that, please. That is
Senator WAGNER. I should not think so.
Section 5?
Senator TOWNSEND. Why should you be required to purchase stock
you are judging the United States by Houston,
Senator ADAMS. You see, you are from Houston, and 1 think
of the Federal home loan bank? Why should you be required to do
You see, we have not had Jesse Joneses in all our towns, and
that?
they are not prospering like Houston.
Mr. JONES. I tried to answer that for you awhile ago, and I stum-
Mr. JONES. What did you want?
bled around n. good bit. I cannot do a very good job of answering
that.
Senator TOWNSEND I want an illustration of why real estate loans
Senator TOWNSEND. Perhaps I did not understand it, then.
can be cashed in better than Government bonds.
Senator ADAMS. It is just too plain, is it not?
Mr. JONES. If the occasion comes around where your banks are
Senator GLASS. Well, I confess to simplicity. It is the first time
required to pay out their deposits to the depositors, they can only
in the 40 years that I have been in Congress that I introduced a bill
pay them by the Government's printing money to pay them with.
What are your deposits-50 billions?
which I did not understand, but just because I had confidence in the
Senator ADAMS. Roughly.
man who gave it to me.
Mr. JONES. Thank you very much for that, Senator,
Mr. JONES. Suppose the depositors of 20 billions would come in
Senator FRAZIER. Are you going to vote for it now?
and ask for their money: Where are you going to get it? It is going
to be printed, and Congress is going to print it.
Senator GLASS. No; I am not going to vote for that real estate
Senator GLASS. Yes, and we are on an irredeemable basis now.
proposition.
Senator ADAMS. I have been embarrased; because 1 understood
Mr. JONES. I would a good deal rather have my money invested
that Senator Glass introduced the bill and 1 had confidence in it, but
in the property over there [indicating].
Senator GLABS. Yes, and it is difficult to determine what the
now my confidence is wabbling & little.
Senator HERRING. Mr. Jones, your thought is that if this is in-
property is worth. You would have to go through a process of delay:
creased from 10 to 15 years, it would encourage people to build build-
and in the meantime the man who deposited the money would be
ings, because they would know the deadline is not 10 years but is
gone out of the bank.
15 years, and you would have only 40 percent left unpaid instead of
is worth?
Mr. JONES. How are you going to determine how much money it
60 percent left unpaid, when it is due; and that would encourage
But once we could.
Senator GLASS. Well, I cannot determine that, and nobody can.
people, because they would have a breathing spell?
Mr. JONES. That is right. If you are B. prudent investor, you would
Mr. JONES. Nobody can determine it now.
be willing to let it como due in 15 years, but you would not be willing
to let it come due in 10 years.
Senator TOWNSEND. I am frank to say I am encouraged by what
Senator HERRING. And then there would be only 40 percent left?
Government bonds.
you say; but I have been afraid, before, that it was not as liquid 48
Mr. JONES. That is right.
Senator TOWNSEND. But the chairman has raised the point that
but I cannot get H. taker for it,
Senator GLASS. I have a piece of property I should like to sell,
there is no need for it.
Senstor FRAZIER. I believe it was the bankers who said that they
Senator WAGNER. I hve not heard any testimony of a need for it.
Senator HERRING. That may be the reason; the 10-year limit may
cannot make loans on real estate and on offices because the Comp-
troller's office and the examiners would not stand for it.
be the reason, whereas a 15-year limit might encourage it.
Mr. JONES. That is right. The Comptroller's office is too re-
Mr. JONES. Senator, I do not say it will put everybody to work,
strictive. That is why I say we would be better off without it.
but it may put somebody to work.
France has none.
Canada has no bank examiners; England has no bank examiners;
Senator GLASS. Anybody who cannot pay his debt in 10 years has
no business going in debt.
Regraded Uclassified
26 AMEND THE BECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT
AMEND THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT 27
Senator AGNER. Does the committee want to go into executive
Mr. JONES, I think it would be a very helpful amendment to the bill.
Sennior GLASS Ob, good gracious alive. You don't think any-
session now? Is there anything further?
thing of the kind,
Senator ADAMS. Mr. Chairman, were you going to have any further
Senator HUGHES. I think I have a. better opinion of it than 0. good
covered. That is where you permit $300,000,000 to go into the Treas-
discussion of section 5? I came Inte: perhaps that has already been
many members of it have, themselves.
The CHAIRMAN. Congress is all right when they vote our way, and
ury, so it will be available there to be spent by the Treasury and not on
Congress is all wrong when they vote against our way.
the indebtedness of the Federal Government.
Senutor GLASS. Well, they always vote against my way.
Mr. JONES. ] testified, Senator, that this was the R. F. method,
Senator HEBRING. We are going to vote with you on your bill here
with my cooperation and insistence, of giving to the Treasury
Senator GLASS. Well, I am not-not on that real-estate proposition.
$350,000,000 and paying it back out of the capital of these lending
Senator SMATHERS. I move we go into executive session.
Senator WAGNER (chairman of the subcommittee). Gentlemen we
my way.
agencies: and we can do this without impairing their solvency in
shall go into executive session.
outstanding, is it not?
Senator ADAMS. Your capital is represented by R. F. C notes
Thereupon, nt 12 o'clock noon, the subcommittee went into
executive session, and the committee reporter was excused.)
by Cougress in 1932.
Mr. JONES. Yes, the capital stock of $500,000,000 Was appropriated
Senator ADAMS. But you do not have anything that does not repre-
sent a borrowing from the Federal Treasury or n. borrowing for which
the Federal Trensury is responsible?
Mr. JONES. That is correct.
Senntor ADAMS. So it is pure bookkeeping?
Mr. JONES, Just bookkeeping; except I said before you came, I think,
that if this proposition had not come up, I was going to udvise the
R. F. C. to pay n substantial dividend back to the Treasury, out of
our enrnings this spring. Now we can, We have got a total gross
earnings of $285,000,000. I think at lenst $150,000,000 or $160,000,000
of it is perfectly sound.
Senator ADAMS. How much WHS charged off swhile back?
Mr. JONES. Nothing.
Senator ADAMS. Was an item charged off 2 years ago?
Mr. JONES. By Congress?
Senator ADAMS. Yes.
Mr. JONES. Yes: appropriations. But you appropriated the money;
10 was not our business, Congress appropriated R. F. C, money,
when they should have appropriated directly from the Treasury.
Senutor ADAMS. That is what we are doing here-usking you to
ourselves put money back. so that we can appropriate without borrowing it
Mr. JONES. That is right: We are putting some money back, that
you enn appropriate.
Senator TOWNSEND. Don't you think that since the question is
bound to come of the increase of the debt in the form of 800 million
or is billion. it ought to come up together and not piecemeal?
Mr. JONES. Senator, there is absolutely good reason for doing this
oven if you are going to increase the debt to $100,000,000,000
Senator ADAMS, Mr. Jones, if you had more confidence in Jesso
Jones than in Congress would you vote for this section 5?
with it: there is no bad bookkeeping in it.
Mr. JONES. I would vote for the bill. There is nothing wrong
Junes than I have in Congress.
Senstor ADAMS. [ was saying that I have more confidence in Jesse
Mr. JONES. Well. 1 haven't. I think Congress is all right.
Regraded Uclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to