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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 420
July 11 - 14, 1941
Regraded Unclassifi
- A -
Book Page
Appointments and Resignations
Bevis, Howard Landis (President, Ohio State University)
Dyketra, Clarence A. (President, University of
Wisconsin)
Graham, Frank P. (President, University of
North Carolina)
Keeser, Dexter M. (President of Reed College,
Portland, Oregon)
Leiserson, William M. (National Labor Relations Board)
May, Stacy (Economist)
Millie, Harry Alvin (National Labor Relations Board)
Rogers, Lindsay (Burgess Professor Public Law,
Columbia University)
Odegard recommends for Under Secretaryship of
Treasury - 7/11/41
420
73
- B -
Barth, Alan
Comment on landing of troops in Iceland - - 7/11/41
154
Berlin, Irving
See Financing, Government: Defense Savings Bonds
Bevis, Howard Landis (President, Ohio State University)
See Appointments and Resignations
Business Conditions
Heas memorandum on situation for week ending
July 12, 1941
479
- 0 -
China
See War Conditions
- D -
Dykatra, Clarence A. (President, University of Wisconsin)
See Appointments and Resignations
par 1 #
Engraving and Printing, Bureau of
Shortage of plate printers discussed at 9:30 meeting -
7/11/41
51
- F -
Federal Works Agency
See Unemployment Relief
Regraded Unclassified
- 1- (Continued)
Book Page
Financing, Government
Defense Savings Bonds:
Treasury House "flyer" describing opening -
7/11/41
420
143
Treasury Hour: Burgess congratulates HMJr -
7/11/41
146
Split infinitives in pledge card discussed in
Ickes-EMJr correspondence - 7/11/41
151,152
Field Organization Yews Letter, No. 8 - -
7/12/41
190
e) List of Federal officials to whom sent
442
Dietz (Howard) resume' of "possibilities inherent
in movies" - 7/14/41
407
a) Propaganda pictures to show American
people conditions in Germany, etc.,
discussed by HMJr, Purvis, Mr. and Mrs. Dietz,
and MacLeish - 7/18/41: See Book 422, page 175
Berlin (Irving) song: Report on requests for -
7/14/41
444
- H -
Housing
See United States Housing Authority
I I I
Icker, Harold L. (Secretery of Interior)
See Financing, Government: Defense Savings Bonds
Inflation
See War Conditions: Price Control
- J -
Japan
See War Conditione
Johnson, "Nucky"
See Tax Evasion
- K -
Keezer, Dexter M. (President of Reed College, Portland,
Oregon)
See Appointments and Resignations
- L -
Leiserson, William M. (National Labor Relations Board)
See Appointments and Resignations
Regraded Unclassified
- M -
Book Page
Mack, Clifton E. (Director, Procurement Division)
Appointed Treasury representative in defense aid
matters - 7/11/41
420
133,134
May, Stacy (Economist)
See Appointments and Resignations
Millis, Harry Alvin (National Labor Relations Board)
See Appointments and Resignations
Motion Picture Industry
See Financing, Government: Defense Savings Bonds
- 0 -
Oil
See War Conditions: Japan
- P -
Price Control
See War Conditions
- R -
Revenue Revision
Excess Profite Tax:
FDR's statement to Congress: Discussion by HMJr,
Currie, Gaston, Kuhn, Blough, and Foley -
7/11/41
18
a) Blough discusses study of representative
corporations since 1935
b) Kuhn draft, No. 1 - 7/11/41
30
c)
#
W
No. 2 discussed by HMJr,
Sullivan, Blough, White, Haas, Foley, Viner,
and Kuhn - 7/14/41
238,267
1) Currie has serious mental reservations
about Kuhn draft but likes Blough's
suggestions; thinks joint returns
(which FDR favors) should be mentioned
266
d) Blough's "suggested material on taxes"
discussed by Treasury group
282,299,317
e) Eccles consulted
305
f) Currie asked to review,
308
g) Lubin
#
.
.
310
h) Hillman # #
#
312
1) Henderson # "
-
315
J) Draft No. 3
358
k) Draft No. 4 as sent to FDR
391
a) Copies to above group
1) Draft again discussed by Treasury group and
Eccles, Currie, Lubin, and Henderson -
7/15/41: See Book 421, page 3
1) See draft. pages 82 and 96
- R - (Continued)
Book Page
Revenue Revision (Continued)
Excess Profits Tax (Continued):
FDR's statement to Congress (Continued):
n) Conference with FDR; present: HMJr, Smith,
Doughton, Cooper, and Sullivan; Doughton
displeased - FDR decides against message -
7/15/41: See Book 421, page 92
1) Copies to Eccles, Henderson, Currie,
Lubin, and Wallace: Book 421, page 113
2) Doughton asks HMJr what he should do
next; aske for copy of statement
prepared for FDR: Book 421. pages 182,
190 and 193
- S -
Sheary, Frank E.
Forrestal asks that Sheary be given consideration
for an appointment, possibly Foreign Funds
Control - 7/11/41
420
126
Straus, Nathan
See United States Housing Authority
- T -
Tax Evasion
Johnson, "Nucky": Biddle asks HMJr for help in
examining panel - 7/11/41
114,117
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
- U - -
Unemployment Relief
Post-defense plans discussed in Carmody's
(Federal Works Agency) letter to HMJr - - 7/11/41..
137
U.S.S.R.
See War Conditions
United Kingdom
See War Conditions: Military Planning
United States Housing Authority
Straus and HMJr talk over letter threatening
resignation - 7/11/41
5
a) Letter to Watson
b) Proposed message from FDR to Congress
c) Letter to Mrs. FDR
> I ,
Book Page
War Conditions
Airplanes:
Deliveries of two-and four-engine bombers and
flying boats, January 5-July 5, 1941 -
7/11/41
420
136
Shipments to United Kingdom and overseas commande -
British Air Commission report - 7/14/41
476
China:
Cotton goods (10 million yards) Purchase discussed
by HMJr and Mack - 7/11/41
62
by HMJr and Hamm (Office of Price Administration) -
7/11/41
64
Fox cable after numerous conferences in Shanghai
and on ave of leaving for Hong Kong - 7/11/41
170
Fox cable from Hong Kong - 7/21/41: See Book 423,
pages 200, 204, and 210
Fox cable from Chungking: Book 424, page 272
Exchange market resume' - 7/11/41, etc
162,225,477
Export Control:
Exports of petroleum products, scrap iron, and
scrap steel from United States to Japan, Russia,
Spain, and Great Britain, week ending
July 12, 1941
226
Japan:
Oil chipments - Wiley memorandum - 7/14/41
447
Ickes-HMJr conversation again decrying shipments -
7/15/41: Book 421. page 199
Lend-Lease:
British Relief:
$300 million in contract obligations - discussion
between Self and representatives of War
Department with a view to determining how
much of this amount could be handled through
elimination of "surplusage" in existing
British Lend-Lease requirements - 7/11/41
40
a) HMJr's letter to McCloy thanking him
for assistance - 7/11/41
42
b) Keynes' letter giving "second revision" -
7/11/41
184
Weekly report of purchases - 7/11/41
130
British export policy - memorandum from British
Embassy - 7/14/41
449
British Supply Council promises Stimeon statement
of productive effort in United Kingdom -
7/14/41
454
Military Planning:
Report from London transmitted by Halifax -
7/11/41
174
War Department bulletins:
German anti-aircraft dafense - 7/11/41
178
The Bran and the Hotchkies light machine-gune
in anti-aircraft defense - 7/14/41
499
- V - (Continued)
Book Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Price Control:
Inflation: See Revenue Revision
Minutes of July 8 meeting - 7/12/41
420
211
a) Attachments:
1) Amendment extending civilian allocation
program for borax and boric acid to
July 30, 1941
2) Civilian allocation program for material
used in motor-and electric-coach and
rail-car construction
3) Civilian allocation of 10,000 tons of
galvanised sheets and 5,000 tons of
black sheets for grain-bin construction
Purchasing Mission:
See also War Conditions: Lend-Lease
Vesting order sales - 7/14/41
468,469
Federal Reserve Bank of New York statement showing
dollar disbursements, week ending July 2, 1941.
470
U.S.S.R.:
Gold: Oumansky and Welles to discuss "immediate
exchange of notes between United States and
U.S.S.R. incorporating text of memorandum on
treatment of Soviet gold and silver" worked
out in October 1940 - 7/14/41
402
(See also Book 421, page 401 - 7/16/41)
a) Conference; present: HMJr. Bell, Foley,
Cochran, White, and Bernetein - 7/22/41:
Book 423, page 248
b) State Department--Cochran conversation -
8/2/41: Book 427, pages 151 and 273
c) Oumansky's letter to HMJr - 8/2/41:
Book 427, page 162
d) Gold: Deposite in United States; U.S.S.R.
production; etc, - White memorandum
prepared for Jesse Jones - 8/5/41:
Book 428, page 67
e) Up-to-date resume' - Cochran memorandum -
6/8/41: Book 430, page 40
1) Copy of HMJr's letter to Quannsky:
Book 430, page 44
1
TREASURY DEPARTI ENT
Washington
FOR RELEASE, NORNING NEWUPAPERS,
Press Service
Friday, July 11, 1941.
No. 26-44
7/10/41
Secretary of the Treasury orgenthau announced last night
that the subscription books for the current offering of
1-1/E percent notes of Series G of the Compodity Credit
Corporation closed at the close of business Thursday,
July 10, except for the receipt or subscriptions from holders
or Series D notes of the Corporation who tonder them for
purchase by the Secretary in a par amount eonal to the par
amount of notes of Series G subscribed for. The subscription
books will be closed for the receipt of subscriptions of the
latter class at the close of business Friday, July 11, at
which time the offer to purchase Series D notes of the Cor-
poration will terminate.
Subscriptions of either class addressed to 8 Federal
Reserve Bank or Branch, or to the Treasury Department, and
placed in the mail before 12 o'clock micnight of the respec-
tive closing days, will be considered as having been entered
before the close of the subscription hooks.
Announcement of the amount of subscriptions and the
basis of allotment will probably be made on Tuesday, July 15.
-000-
Regraded Unclassified
2
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
FOR RELEASE, MORNING NEWSPAPERS,
Friday, July 11, 1941.
The Secretary of the Treasury, by this public notice, invites
tenders for $100,000,000, or thereabouts, of 91-day Treasury
bills, to be issued on 8. discount basis under competitive bidding.
The bills of this series will be dated July 16, 1941, and will
mature October 15, 1941, when the face amount will be payable
without interest. They will be issued in bearer form only, and
in denominations of $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, $100,000, $500,000,
and $1,000,000 (maturity value).
Tenders will be received at Federal Reserve Banks and
Branches up to the closing hour, two o'clock P. m., Eastern
Standard time, Monday, July 14, 1941. Tenders will not be re-
ceived at the Treasury Department, Washington. Each tender
must be for an even multiple of $1,000, and the price offered
must be expressed on the basis of 100, with not more than three
decimals, 0. g., 99.925. Fractions may not be used. It is urged
that tenders be made on the printed forms and forwarded in the
special envelopes which will be supplied by Federal Reserve Banks
or Branches on application therefor.
Tonders will be received without deposit from incorporated
banks and trust companies and from responsible and recognized
dealers in investment securities. Tenders from others must be
accompanied by payment of 10 percent of the face amount of
Treasury bills applied for, unless the tenders are accompanied by
an express guaranty of payment by an incorporated bank or trust
company.
26-42
3
- 2 -
Immediately after the closing hour, tenders will be opened
at the Federal Reserve Banks and Branches, following which public
announcement will be made by the Secretary of the Treasury of the
amount and price range of accepted bids. Those submitting tenders
will be advised of the acceptance or rejection thereof. The
Secretary of the Treasury expressly reserves the right to accept
or reject any or all tenders, in whole or in part, and his action
in any such respect shall be final. Payment of accepted tenders
at the prices offered must be made or completed at the Federal
Reserve Bank in cash or other immodiately available funds on
July 10, 1941.
The income derived from Treasury bills, whether interest or
gain from the sale or other disposition of the bills, shall not
have any exemption, ES such, and loss from the sale or other dis-
position of Treasury bills shall not have any special treatment,
as such, under Federal tax Acts now or hereafter enacted. The
bills shall be subject to estate, inheritance, gift, or other
excise taxes, whether Federal or State, but shall be exempt from
all taxation now or horcafter imposed on the principal or interest
thereof by any State, or any of the possessions of the United
States, or by any local taxing authority. For purposes of taxa-
tion the amount of discount at which Treasury bills are originally
sold by the Unitod States shall be considered to be interest.
4
- 3 -
Treasury Department Circular No. 418, as amended, and this
notice, prescribe the terms of the Trensury bills and govern the
conditions of their issue. Copies of the circular may be ob-
tained from any Federal Reserve Bank or Branch.
July 11, 1941
5
8:37 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Nathan
Straus:
Good morning, Henry.
HMJr:
Hello, Nathan. Nathan, I've reed those
letters of yours very carefully.
S:
Yes.
HMJr:
And it's kind a like calling in the
doctor after the operation. Hello?
S:
Yes, yes.
HMJr:
And 1t's very difficult to give any advice.
Now, that you've written the letter, I'm
frank to say that if you had shown me the
letter to General Watson before you had
written it, I never - I would have tried my
best to keep you from sending it.
S:
Well, I surely would not then have sent it.
HMJr:
But now that you have sent it, I don't know
what to say.
S:
I see.
HMJr:
You sort of e1 ve him
8:
Well, of course, that's exactly the last
thing that I wanted to do.
HMJr:
Well, that's the
8:
And actually the General himself insisted
that - almost of the wording of the thing.
HMJr:
Well, I think he did you a great disservice.
S:
You do?
HMJr:
Yeah.
S:
I get you. He was - he went over the wording
of that and I said, "What about that?" He
said, "No, out that down". He said, "You
ought to bring this thing out in the open".
Regraded Unclassified
6
- 2 -
HMJr:
No, I think he did you a great disservice.
S:
I get you. Well, if I'm out I've got nobody
but myself to blame.
HMJr:
Well, I think it's unfortunate, I don't see
what else you can do but let the thing ride
now.
S:
Do you think there's any possibility at all
of getting the President to send B message?
HMJr:
Well, you've written a very strong letter.
You tell him that 1f he doesn't do it, you're
moinm to out. So
S:
I suppose the only thing if he doesn't do it,
18 to ouit, little as I like to.
HMJr:
Pardon.
8:
I BA18 I sunnose if he doesn't do it, the only
thing 18 to cuit, little 88 I like to.
HMJr:
Pretty strong letter, Nathan, you wrote.
S:
Yeah. I meant - maybe - well
HMJr:
What?
3:
I Bee what you mean. Well, I may have been
very much misguided there and I sort of did
what he suggested.
HMJr:
Well, he reve you very bad advice.
S:
I get you.
HKJr:
He gave you very bad advice.
S:
Perhaps I could call him un today and seck
to see him and Ask if there's any news on it.
If I let it ride, I know nothing will happen.
HVJr:
No, I think the President cot it and he's not -
If he'll read it cuietly and decide what he's
going to do
S:
I get you.
WMr:
You sent it July 7. That 1sn't very long.
Regraded Unclassified
?
- 3 -
S:
No. You think I should call the General
at all on it?
HMJr:
Oh. You see the President hasn't been seeing
many people for over a month.
B:
I see.
HMJr:
You see, it isn't just you.
S:
I get you.
HMJr:
And he hasn't been well and he Bees practically
nobody.
S:
I see,
HMJr:
He hasn't had a Cabinet in a month, you know.
S:
I see.
HVJr:
Today will be the first time we've had a
Cabinet in B. month.
S;
I get you. Well, I'm glad that you're telling
this frankly now. I guess I would have been
better advised to have asked you before I got
1t off.
HMJri
Well
S:
As you say, calling in the doctor immediately
afterward.
HMJr:
Yeah.
S:
If there's any chance at all of your mentioning
anything at the White House either today or
some other time, I'll surely appreciate it.
HMJr:
oh, 1f I get B. chance I will, but I wouldn't
have much feith on that.
S:
Uh hun. I get you.
HMJr:
But if I have a chance to be with him alone,
I'll bring it up.
S:
I cet you perfectly.
- 4 -
8
HMJr:
I mean, if I'm with him alone, I will - I
will bring it up.
S:
I know when you
HMJr:
But it's no use - it would be a mistake to
do it at Cabinet.
S:
Surely. I get you absolutely completely.
HMJr:
But I will do it and I'll Bee what I can
do if I should see him alone.
S:
I get you perfectly, Henry.
HMJr:
But I don't think I'd call up General Watson
today. I'd certainly let it ride at least
over the week-end. He might do something.
S:
I get you perfectly.
HMJr:
General Watson has no influence on policy.
S:
Well, you see, I was sort of told to do this.
Mrs. Roosevelt said to see Watson. I BAW
Watson. Told Watson I'd like to see the
President and he said, "Well you know how
busy he 18", and I told him this thing.
Then he seid, "Well put it down", and then
he even dictated those sentences about, "I
can leave with B. good taste in my mouth", etc.
HMJr:
Yeah, well a - that was bad advice.
8:
I get you.
HMJr:
Well
S:
Thanks ever 80 much, Henry.
HMJr:
Well, I'm not very helpful, but at least
I've been frank.
S:
Oh yes,
HMJr:
And I think that there's no use - I mean,
at least I'm giving you my frank and honest
reaction.
S:
I get you perfectly. Uh huh.
HMJr:
And I'll keep a letter, if I may and if
I do see the President alone, I'll see
9
- 5 -
if I can be of any help.
S:
Thank you ever 80 much.
HMJr:
I'd like to see the houses built and
I'd like to see you stay in Washington.
S:
Well, I'm very, very keen to stay down
here. It 18 becoming increasingly difficult.
HMJr:
But it 18 for all of us, Nathan. Everybody -
it's difficult for everybody.
S:
I see.
HMJr:
It isn't only you. I mean a lots of other
people that - I only heard the other day
Stimson said, he can't get to see the
President.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
I mean, it isn't only you.
S:
I see. Uh huh.
HMJr:
Well, let
....
S:
All right. Thank you very much.
HMJr:
Okay, Nathan.
S:
Goodbye.
Regraded Unclassified
10
FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY
UNITED STATES HOUSING AUTHORITY
OFFICE OF THE
DMINISTRATOR
WASHINGTON
U.S.H.A.
7-11-4
Friday. 11 A.M.
Dear Henry,
2 have just seen "Pa" and
he has returned too me my
letter which had been lying on
his desh. The letter is now
destroyed
Thanks for your excellent
advice. Please destroy your copy
"Pa" has suggested 2 tath to him
about the matter again next week.
But 2 think 2 would like to
wait for your further suggestions
Fondly
N.S
Dearaded
July 7, 1941.
Dear Pat
Confirming our conversation these are the facts. The USHA
has been cut out of the defense housing program. Under the
Lanham Act, Mr. Carmody gets the money and the credit for the
job. The USHA and its personnel do most of the work.
This situation was created when the Lanham Act was passed
last year. At that time the USHA was supposed to be unpopular
on the Hill. The real estate interests had twisted a speech of
a Negro on the USHA staff about Negroes and Whites living
"together" in some projects - to work up a lot of ill-will toward
me.
Last week when the President sent a message to Congress ask-
ing for $300,000,000 for defense housing under the Lanham Act, I
made up my mind to find out how the Congressional leaders felt
toward the USHA. I called on Speaker Rayburn and Congressman
McCormack. Each said emphatically that the USHA should get the
defense housing job wherever there are Local Housing Authorities.
They urged me to see the President and ask him to send a message
to Congress asking funds for the USHA.
That is why I called on you today. In his message on defense
housing last week, the President asked for only $300,000,000 under
the Lanham Act to provide 75,000 more defense houses, but said
that the indicated need between now and July 1, 1942 was for
125,000 houses. There is thus & need for $200,000,000 more for
housing to provide the 50,000 additional houses. I think I am
safe in saying that both Speaker Rayburn and Congressman McCormack
would welcome & message to that effect.
Of course, if the President asks Mr. Carmody, he will be told
that all is fine now and Straus has plenty of work. But the situ-
ation for me personally has about reached the limit. Mr. Carmody
doles out the funds, reserving all final decisions for himself and
never fails to remind me courteously, "Of course, the USHA couldn't
get these funds from Congress."
What worries me most is that the Local Housing Authority-USHA
mechanism built up over the last years, which might be the greatest
Regraded Unclassified
12
- 2 -
economic weapon to meet post-defense unemployment is being dis-
mantled and scrapped as more money goes to Mr. Carmody under the
Lanham Act and none comes to the USHA directly.
I feel that the time has come to find out where I stand.
I can leave with a good taste and with pride in what I have done
and tried to do -- if the President so desires. Four years ago
there were 46 Local Housing Authorities. Today there are more
than 600. Construction costs have been cut by the USHA, collabo-
rating with Local Housing Authorities, to 30% less than under
the old PWA program. Today our costs are below those of private
speculative builders. Agreements with organized labor have
practically eliminated strikes over the whole four-year period.
Labor has now agreed to work two shifts on defense projects at
the regular rate of pay. More than 650 housing projects - both
slum clearance and defense - are now under way. A great nation-
wide public housing program has been created and it will remain
as a monument to President Roosevelt and his administration.
As for me personally, I feel that if the President does want
me to continue it is fair to ask a public and official pronounce-
ment that will restore the confidence of Local Housing Authorities
throughout the country and show that the USHA has the President's
support. If for any reason the President feels that he would
prefer to have someone else carry on, there will not be the
slightest hard feeling and I am ready to step out at a moment's
notice.
Cordially yours,
NATHAN STRAUS.
General Edwin M. Watson,
The White House.
Regraded Unclassified
HOUSING FOR NATIONAL DATE
13
to the Congress of the United States:
In a message which I transmitted to the Congress on June 26, 1941,
I stated that data had been transmitted to 200 indicating that the
Government should be prepared to undertake construction of at least
125,000 additional defense homes between now and July 1, 1942. In that
message, I recommended the enactment of legislation which would permit
the construction of approximately 75,000 of these houses by providing
$300,000,000 increase in the authorization contained in the Act of
October 14, 1940 (Public No. 849, known as the Lanham Act), as amended
and supplemented.
In that message, I also stated that the effect of the national
efense program has not yet been fully registered on the housing market,
ince new plants are being brought into the defense program and increases
re under way in existing defense plants.
Be that all defense plants may operate at full efficiency, I be-
ieve that the Government should take immediate steps to provide the
0,000 additional defense homes which will be needed and which were not
rovided for in the legislative recommendation in my earlier message on
this matter. This additional authorization would enable the Government
to meet the need for defense homes, as now estimated, for the period
ntil July 1, 1942.
I, therefore, suggest to the Congress the enactment of legislation
mich would provide $200,000,000 in repayable loan funds to be used for
the construction of approximately 50,000 additional defense homes in
reas approved by the President. It is not necessary that these additional
Regraded Unclassified
14
- 2 -
aoneys be provided by direct appropriation from the Treasury. Instead
he loan funds should be obtained by a $200,000,000 increase in the bond
uthorization of the United States Housing Authority. The principal and
nterest of such bonds issued by the Authority would be repaid from the
eturns on the loans made by that Authority to meet the capital cost of
lefense housing projects constructed by local public housing agencies.
the loans would be made to public housing agencies (at such interest
ates as the President may fix) under the terms of the Act of June 28,
940 (Public No. 671) and no subsidies or contributions would be provided
r required.
On the basis of housing projects which have already been constructed
nder the provisions of Public No. 671 and are now occupied, I believe
hat such a program of repayable loans can be advantageously employed to
set the defense housing need in areas where local public housing agencies
re now functioning.
Since operations must commence now if housing is to be completed and
eady for occupancy in time to meet the needs for the current fiscal year,
urge early consideration by the Congress.
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT.
he White House, July , 1941.
Regraded Unclassified
13
July 2, 1941.
Dear Mrs. Roosevelt:
As I realize it may be many days before the
President 1a able to give me an appointment, I venture
to send on this draft of a message to Congress. It is
written, as you will see, to dovetail with the message
from the President last week asking the Congress for
certain funds for defense housing.
In last week's message, the President spoke of
the need for 125,000 units of public housing for
defense needs this year. However, the President re-
quested funds sufficient only for 75,000 defense units,
under the Lanham Act, ($300,000,000).
The message enclosed herewith would complete the
picture by requesting loan authorizations for the
United States Housing Authority sufficient to provide
the other 50,000 units ($200,000,000), the emiting
direct appropriations Cres We Preasury. The total of
125,000 new homes represents, may I venture to add, an
ultraconservative estimate of the actual need over the
next year.
By signing this message the President will reassert
the Administration's adherence to the principle of local
construction, local management, local autonomy. The
message would restore the confidence of Local Authorities
throughout the country, many of whom now believe that
their good work over the last few years is to be ignored
and that the United States Housing Authority - Local
Authority plan which they have labored to perfect is
being scrapped. The message will serve notice on Local
Authorities that they are to be put back in training for
the job that they will be called on to do at the end of
the defense emergency.
Regraded Unclassified
16
- 2 -
Housing which will be a neighborhood asset for
generations cannot be studied, designed and produced
in headlong haste -- as much of the defense housing
hitherto has necessarily been. The inferior quality
of some of the projects, on which you commented, is
due to the fact that appropriations have, in the past,
been asked for and made only at the eleventh hour.
Starting sixty or ninety days earlier may spell the
difference between projects that are eyesores and
housing that will raise the standard of living con-
ditions in the communities, without sacrificing the
necessity of getting the projects completed on time.
May I therefore venture to add the hope that the
President will not delay too long in sending this
message.
Believe me, with sincere appreciation of your aid
in putting the public housing program back on the right
track, as ever,
Very cordially yours,
NATHAN STRAUS.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Hyde Park, New York.
Enclosure.
Regraded Unclassified
17
July 11, 1941
9 a.m.
I just told T. V. Soong, after having discussed
it with Lauch Currie and Lauch Currie being present,
that I was very glad to have been able to send his
three messages to the President, but I felt that this
is a State Department matter and that he will have to
get his answer on the message from Chiang Kai-shek
to the Fresident through some other source, but I am
sure that Mr. Currie would be glad to help him.
My understanding with Currie, arrived at before
the meeting, was that he would mention it to the Pres-
ident today and try to get an answer. He asked could
he say to the President that I recommended that China
join up with Russia and I said no; that I wanted to
keep out of it.
I mentioned to Currie that we were thinking of
sending an economist to Russia and he said that he
would like to go.
17
July 11, 1941
9a.m.
I just told T. V. Soong, after having discussed
it with Lauch Currie and Lauch Currie being present,
that I was very glad to have been able to send his
three messages to the President, but I felt that this
is a State Department matter and that he will have to
get his answer on the message from Chiang Kai-shek
to the President through some other source, but I am
sure that Mr. Currie would be glad to help him.
My understanding with Currie, arrived at before
the meeting, was that he would mention it to the Pres-
ident today and try to get an answer. He asked could
he say to the President that I recommended that China
join up with Russia and I said no; that I wanted to
keep out of it.
I mentioned to Currie that we were thinking of
sending an economist to Russia and he said that he
would like to go.
18
July 11, 1941
9:00 a.m.
RE TAXES
Present:
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Blough
Mr. Foley
Mr. Currie
H.M.Jr:
Did you just have your breakfast?
Foley:
Yes, I had lots of time. I was called at
half past seven and 8. pleasant little voice
said Good morning".
H.M.Jr:
Go ahead.
Blough:
Well, I was going to report on the conversation
with Mr. Currie, but he is here and can re-
port on it himself, if that is necessary.
He has probably already talked to you about it.
H.M.Jr:
No. We have been over China and Tibet and
Burma.
Currie:
It is practically the same that I said to
Mr. Blough, Mr. Secretary, that I said to
you over the phone the other day. The two
points I had mentioned with the President
and to which he nodded, and the two additional
points I raised with you, that Mr. Blough and I had
further conversation in which we discussed
particulars a little bit and additional argu-
ments I thought might be made.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you (Blough) were going to give us
some good cases on excess profits as the
bill is written now.
Blough:
Yes.
Regraded Unclassified
19
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Have you got it?
Blough:
I have some material, Mr. Secretary. I don't
have exactly what I wanted to give you.
H.M.Jr:
Well, read it to us so everybody can get it.
Blough:
I have some copies. Well, let me - maybe
I have too much.
H.M.Jr:
Why don't you just sort of ad lib?
Blough:
I can easily do that, very easily.
H.M.Jr:
Do it that way.
Blough:
We have done this. We have gone through &
great number of corporations for the periods
since 1935. I have picked off twenty-five
non-financial and twenty-five financial cor-
porations which were particularly prosperous
and quite large in those earlier years and
have figures showing the percentage of return
on invested capital during that period, and
what they also earned in 1940. Some of those
have filed returns and some of them have not.
H.M.Jr:
Now, there isn't a day passes that I don't
regret that we ever gave them those ninety-
day extensions. We gave all these corpora-
tions ninety-day extensions. I have shut
down on them. We don't get the damn returns.
Blough:
On the basis of financial data, published
financial data, and not on the basis of
returns for these particular companies, we
have this sort of situation. We have our
old friend Coca-Cola, which is B. very -
has been thrown around a good deal, which
during thirty-six to thirty-nine appears
to have made about forty-three per cent
Regraded Unclassified
20
- 3 -
as an average return on its capital. Now,
in 1940 it made fifty-seven per cent on its
capital. Under the excess profits tax law
it will be taxed on the excess of the 1940
income over its average for the previous
years, with certain adjustments, but it will
not pay any tax at all, aside from the
regular corporate normal tax, or regular
corporation income tax, on any part of its
1940 income which is not in excess of the
forty-three per cent. It keeps on earning
that free from excess profits tax. The
Chrysler Corporation, according to figures
we have available, averaged thirty-two per
cent during this base period. It made about
forty per cent in 1940. There again, it
will be taxed on the additional but it will
not pay any excess profits tax on any part
of its 1940 profits, which represent merely
the continuation of the previous earnings.
The F.W. Woolworth and Company, with seven-
teen per cent in the base period, presents
a little bit different type of case, because
it made less in 1940 than it did in thirty-
six to thirty-nine, and there is where we
run into some difficulty with the Congress
men who say, "Well, if the concern earned
less under this defense program than it
earned before, should we subject it to an
excess profits tax, even though it was
making very handsome profits at an earlier
period?"
Consolidated Aircraft is one of the aircraft
companies who has jumped way up, but still
was making eighteen per cent during the
earlier period.
Aluminum Corporation of America is averaging
around twelve per cent, and it is up to about
Regraded Unclassified
21
- 4 -
twenty-one per cent now. It pays on that
additional, but not on any of the other
part. Now, we have some examples like that
also taken from the transcript cards, and
we have quite a substantial number which
are coming through today, and what I thought
might be desirable would be to write each
of these up in a short paragraph of about
six or seven lines, setting out the basic
facts.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. This is the meat of the thing. Have
you seen it?
Currie:
This I would regard as supporting data.
You want further discussion. I should
assume that the President's message or
letter would be cloaked in rather general
language, with perhaps one or two illustra-
tions.
H.M.Jr:
But he hasn't looked at this in over a year,
and I thought if we put this on his desk
he could pick out what he wants, but he ought
to really be sold on it, and I thought this
was the way to do it because he hasn't int-
erested himself in over B. year on this.
Currie:
But you would accompany these illustrations
with a suggested draft, would you not?
H.M.Jr:
Oh, yes.
Currie:
That is what I understood he wanted.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, yes. We can go back to our so-called
Treasury plan of last June and last month,
which does the trick.
Currie:
That is right.
Regraded Unclassified
22
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
Then the thing that Kuhn and I feel -
I don't know how Gaston feels, and Foley -
is that this shouldn't just be excess
profits.
Currie:
Oh, no.
H.M.Jr:
And that this is a part of the thing, but
then let the President get into the subject
of the whole question of prices and inflation
and that we have just got to do something
about it, and excess profits is part of the
picture, but there is the question of wages.
We were thinking of making it - trying our
hand at a fairly roundabout statement, which
he hasn't made, and it wouldn't do Henderson
8 bit of harm if this happened and then subse-
quently to the President, "Well, what do
you want in the way of legislation?" "Well,
I want 8. rood excess profits bill and I want
8. good price bill." If he kind of laid down
the foundation and - I don't suppose he has
talked about prices since we had that famous
meeting where he said, "Well, this is the first
time that I am the pupil and you are the
teacher," which is what, thirty-seven or
thirty-eight, do you remember?
Currie:
Yes, I remember.
Gaston:
Thirty-seven.
H.M.Jr:
I don't think he has ever said anything
from that day to this, has he?
Currier
Not that I know of.
H.E.Jr:
What do you think, Herbert, if we try to
do an all-round job?
Gaston:
I think it ought to be done. I think it
Regraded Unclassified
23
- 6 -
ought to be related to the emergency and
the absolute necessity for having taxation
because of the extreme need, and also to the
economic desirability and the economic
consideration that you - theoretically
you ought to be able to produce by taxation
the same thing that you can produce in the
way of excess production. You ought to be
able to match with taxation the excess
production that you are shooting away, but
because of the difficulties, because taxation
isn't a fully accurate instrument, you can't
fully do that, but you want to approach it
as near as possible.
H.M.Jr:
Have you got any ideas, Ed?
Foley:
No, I agree that it ought to be not just ex-
cess profits, because if you just do that,
it is going to be quite a slap in the face
to the committee and I think that the sooner
you can get the message down there the better
form the thing will take, because once the
bill is written and reported out by the com-
mittee --
H.M.Jr:
May I interrupt you?
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know whether I told you - evidently
I didn't - that Sam Rayburn was kind enough
to drop in to see me and I put this thing
up to him. I let him read the President's
memo in strictest confidence and he said,
"The President must send for Doughton and
Cooper before he does anything else," and
I wrote that to the President last night,
that I had spoken to Rayburn and he strongly
urged that before he do anything the thing
be laid - and that the bill was going to come
Regraded Unclassified
24
- 7 -
out a week from Tuesday, so that it will be
next week that the President should do it.
Foley:
Yes. This ought to go down before the bill
comes out. Otherwise, the committee will
feel that it is a rebuke to the committee.
H.M.Jr:
No, but that the President should send for --
Foley:
He has got to do both, it seems to me.
H.M.Jr:
He could have the message ready and say,
"Now, gentlemen, I would like to show you
this thing and go over it with you," but have
it all ready. I would like to have 8. finished
draft again and say, "Here is the message
and I would like to go over this with you."
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Then there can't be any bad feelings. How
much more have you got?
Blough:
Oh, I have more along the same line. I
also made some comparisons on the estate
taxes. Mr. Currie indicated he had spoken
to the President about that. I don't know
whether you would want to go into that in
this particular message or not.
H.M.Jr:
State taxes?
Blough:
Estate taxes.
Currie:
Estate and gift. They cut your proposals
way down on that.
H.M.Jr:
We can put it in and if he wants to cut it
out he can cut it out.
Currie:
No, he mentioned that as one of the things.
Regraded Unclassified
25
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
Fine. Why don't you do this? Couldn't you
and Kuhn begin to draft something SO you
would have it for me Monday?
Blough:
Yes. You recall the outline that was pre-
pared some weeks ago?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Flough:
It occurs to me that while that could not
be entirely used, that it would be much hap-
pier if the President would couch his mes-
sage in a pretty high level in which excess
profits is merely one of the conclusions
which flows from it, and that possibly some-
thing along the lines of the outline that
Kuhn and I worked on might be a starter.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I would go to it. I hate to ask you to
do something over the week-end, but if you
start now you may not have to work all week-end.
And then give a draft to the people in this
room for their criticisms.
Gaston:
There is going to be some resentment from
the committee, no matter how it is handled,
because it is well known the tentative result
the committee has arrived at, and that this
message will be a disagreement with that
result. You can't avoid that.
H.M.Jr:
Ferdie, I think I would show a copy in draft
form to Leon Henderson and one to Eccles,
and ask for their suggestions. I would show
it to Henderson and Eccles.
Currie:
I don't think --
H.M.Jr:
Is there anybody else in town who would be
interested? Lubin?
Regraded Unclassified
26
- 9 -
Currie:
Yes, Lubin would.
H.M.Jr:
Harry White. Then when I get back Monday,
we can go right to work again. I would like
to have these people see it if possible
between now and Monday, if it is physically
and mentally possibly.
Kuhn:
We can always get 8. draft up.
H.M.Jr:
You have got the basis for it. You had that
two weeks ago.
Blough:
It isn't & question of getting B. draft. We
can have the draft. The question is whether
the draft is one that satisfies us sufficiently
that we would want to show it around.
H.M.Jr:
Well, don't have your professional standards
too high. Get it around.
Currie:
Now, the point that Herbert mentioned,
Mr. Secretary, about resentment, I think
that we ought to make this not entirely
blame, but some praise in it, some things
that the committee has done that are very
good.
H.M.Jr:
They did get the three and a half.
Currie:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
That is a very good point. Congratulate them
on getting the three and a half.
Gaston:
You might mention that the situation is some-
what changed because of our expanding needs
also as a justification for the message.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Well, Ferdie, as I asking too much of
you two men?
Regraded Unclassified
27
- 10 -
Blough:
Not of me.
H.M.Jr:
How about you?
Kuhn:
No, it is fine. I can --
H.M.Jr:
Were you going away this week-end?
Kuhn:
That is all right, we can do this this after-
noon and get something on paper or tomorrow
morning.
H.M.Jr:
Were you going to go away?
Kuhn:
Only nearby.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I hate to ask it, but - are you willing
to do it?
Kuhn:
Oh, I would love to do it.
Blough:
Of course, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Well, there you are.
Kuhn:
It doesn't have to be long and it can't be
too detailed.
H.M.Jr:
If you would show it to these people, if you
had something, you could ask them to drop
over. That would be easiest, you see. Ask
them to come over to your room tomorrow
morning and say, "Here, gentlemen, let's
spend the morning on it, and if those people
don't want to come, at least we have done them
the courtesy of asking them to come. Is that
right?
Currie:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I would do it that way. I would just call
up these people and say you have got a draft
Regraded Unclassified
28
- 11 -
and you are working on it and in strictest
confidence would they drop in to your room
tomorrow morning. I would tell them today
that they can come in at ten o'clock tomorrow
morning and you will have something.
Kuhn:
Yes. I would like to get something down this
afternoon.
H.M.Jr:
Tell them if they can come over at ten o'clock,
that you would like to have them. If they
can't come, that is too bad, because I wrote
the President that I would have something
for him Monday. I sent him Blough's outline
of the tax bill as it stands now and then I
said I would have something for him Monday
and I think this would be good for Leon.
Currie:
Oh, yes, very definitely.
H.M.Jr:
Don't you?
Currie:
Oh, yes, very definitely.
Blough:
I think it is necessary Leon is approaching
this thing from the point of view of trying
to freeze the price. On the fiscal side we
make his task ever so much easier if we can
pull out through Savings Bonds and taxes the
money which otherwise would go to force the
prices up.
H.M.Jr:
Be sure and say that the Treasury is doing
everything it can to pull this money out
through the Savings Bonds. You see we de-
serve a little pat on the back for that.
And that the committee is doing all it can
through the three and a half billion taxes,
but it still leaves the job undone.
Regraded Unclassified
29
- 12 -
Blough:
Might it be well to indicate 8. little hint
that we will probably need some more taxes
a little later?
H.M.Jr:
Notice what I did yesterday when they asked
me? I said with the new picture - we had
to study the whole fiscal picture and I
couldn't say what we would do.
Blough:
Mr. Sullivan called up last night and won-
dered whether that meant something very
imminent.
H.M.Jr:
Did that spoil his golf game? All right,
thank you all.
Regraded Unclassified
30
Kuhis first draft
prepared 7-11.
I am sending this message to the Congress because there are
serious decisions that must be made on the home front, and made
now, if we are to muster all our strength for the tasks that lie
ahead. These are decisions of domestic economic policy. Their
scope is as big as the nation itself, as small as the pots and pans
in every American kitchen. But they are inseparably linked to
the defense of our country and the maintenance of freedom in our
world.
The time has come to act as vigorously against rising economic
dangers at home as we have acted, and intend to act, against the
rising tide of tyranny abroad.
The broad facts are well known to every member of the Congress,
and I do not need to recite them at length today. Our colossal
defense effort has now reabsorbed, directly or indirectly,
millions of those who have been unemployed in the last three years.
Our national pay envelope is fatter than ever before, and more
American workers are leading a more abundant life than ever before.
Our giant industrial strength is being roused as never before.
Our supplies of certain raw materials for civilian use are being
required more and more for the weapons of defense. And our effort
is only beginning.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
31
Congress has appropriated or authorized expenditures of
billions for the new ₱ fiscal year, but we are
still spending on defense at the rate of only 6 billion e year.
We must do better than this, much better, if we are to be sure of
keeping America strong and safe and free.
When payrolls rise and when vital raw materials are needed for
military purposes, we have the ideal conditions for & rising spiral
of prices. More and More money becomes available for fewer and
fewer things, and the natural response of prices is to go up. So
far we have managed to control and delay the rise in prices ten
times as well as we did in 1916, when somewhat similar conditions
existed. The rises 80 far have been nothing but danger signals.
I propose to heed those danger signals. This Administration
is determined to check the spiral before it can do any damage.
The consequences of inflation are too harmful to workingmen, busi-
nessmen and farmers alike for any responsible official to permit
the process to begin.
But this Administration cannot prevent inflation by waving
8 magic wand. The job calls for equal effort, equal understanding,
equal self-control, from every American group and every individual.
It calls for the same kind of unity which our people have shown
50 magnificently in the defense effort now and in other crises in
the past.
Regraded Unclassified
32
There sre, of course, many ways of checking & vicious
spiral of costs and prices.
One way, and the most effective, is to skim the cream from
urchasing power by putting current earnings to work for the
Government instead of spending them. Whether this is done
by taxation or by the purchase of defense bonds, it serves
the double purpose of keeping prices down and at the same
time of providing the dollars that are needed for defense.
Another way is to control prices by voluntary coopera-
tion of those who produce and sell the goods. These, and
many other methods, will help. We are using some of them
already.
The ways and Means Committee of the House of Representa-
tives is now drafting & tax bill which will raise $30 billions
in additional revenue, a contribution for which the Committee
deserves the thanks of the whole country.
The .reasury is about to begin the sale of tax anticipa-
tion notes, to male the payment of taxes prompter and easier,
and it is also approaching the first billion dollars in the
sale of Defense Savings Bonda to great numbers of people
The OPACS has been vigilant and vigorous in oringing
all possible pressure to bear whenever sharo price increases
have been threatened.
Regraded Unclassified
33
These are useful steps, but they are not enough. The
defense effort has grown to such giant proportions that it
now dominates our entire economic life. Bolder measures
are meeded now. In these days of total defense war a total
defense is called for. Our economy must be integrated for
defense, integrated as closely 88 our army and navy and our
planes that Fuara the skies.
A case in point is taxation, which provides by far the
iargest part of the billions that are needed for national
security. Our national thinking on taxation has changed as
rapidly t.5 Lite scale of the defense program itself. Two
years age, one year 820, it might have seemed fantastic to
stempt the raising of twelve billion dollars a year from
taxes, or to increase tax revenue by three and a half billion
dollars in B. single year. The American people have accepted
this goal with & cheerfulness that is a proof of their common-
sense and their patriotism.
Yet even the three End B. half cillion increase, even the
total goal of twelve oillion dollars from revenue, now
threaten to be inadequate in the light of the vast expansion
01 aerense spending. In the past week the Congress has been
asked for eight billion dollars in accitional expenditure
10P the Army and havy, on top of the thirty-three billion ap-
propriated for all purposes curing the fiscal year just ended.
Regraded Unclassified
34
1 know that we shall De able to raise still greater revenues
1: necessary; we can Le this job, and any job, if we set
ourselves to ao it.
But taxes are more than sources of revenue. Taxes can
and should be the most useful of all methods of curtailing
excess purchasing power, and therefore the best of all
methods of preventing inflation.
Dearaded
35
Moreover, taxes can and should be an adjunct to the
defense production program by reducing the competition for
the materials that are needed in the defense industries. We
do not have & limitless supply of steel, aluminum, rubber
and many other essential components of ships and planes and
guns. We can, to some extent, reduce the competition by
priorities; we can also give the right of way to defense pro-
duction by imposing stiff excise taxes on those articles and
materials that compete directly with the weapons of defense.
It is my hope that Congress will use the tax weapon un-
hesitatingly wherever the supply of & vitally important defense
material is blocked by unnecessary consumer demand.
The usefulness of taxes in the present emergency, quite
apart from their revenue-raising value, is still more apparent
in the field of excess profits taxes. It is 8. settled prin-
ciple of the American people that the makers of defense
weapons shall not grow rich out of their country's danger.
In accordance with this principle, the profits of defense
industries are already heavily taxed, and will be taxed still
more heavily by the time the pending tax bill is enacted into
law. It is also a settled principle, disputed by none, that
taxes shall be imposed in accordance with ability to pay.
In line with this principle, we have long had a graduated
Regraded Unclassified
36
individual income-tax, which grows steeper as it reaches
into the higher incomes.
But these two principles have not yet been followed
closely enough in the field of corporate taxation generally.
It is hard to think of any American business which is not
benefiting indirectly from the enormous expansion of purchas-
ing power caused by the defense program. Yet under the pre-
sent excess profits law scores of rich and successful corpora-
tions pay no profits tax at all. If they were earning huge
and consistent profits in the previous four years they are
allowed to keep those profits in this year of the greatest
emergency that we as a nation have faced for 150 years.
The defense plant that is producing the weapons to save
our freedom is taxed heavily if its profits have risen
sharply from its defense contracts. The non-defense company
that is producing, perhaps, a non-essential lurury, and pro-
no
ducing it at a. huge profit year after year, often pays/profits
tax at all, even if its profits are as high as forty-three
per cent of its invested capital.
Regraded Unclassified
37
To my mind this provision of the existing law is
inequitable and dangerous. It is inequitable because it
violates the principle that all should pay for defense in
accordance with their ability to pay. Companies that make
larger than average returns on their investment have, by and
large, a greater ability to pay taxes than other corporations,
and they can be called upon equitably to pay additional taxes.
We face unprecedented financial burdens today; it is fair
and economically sound to burden the prosperous concerns
relatively more heavily than the less prosperous.
The existing excess profits law is worse than inequitable.
It is dangerous because it tends to create in the minds of
millions of American farmers and workers the notion that
some, well able to pay, are not bearing their fair share of
the burden. The time may soon come when we shall have to
ask farmers and workers to accept new sacrifices for the
sake of their country. It will be difficult to expect farmers
not to ask for higher prices, difficult to expect workers not
to demand higher wages, if they feel that others are being
allowed to keep huge profits virtually intact. I know that
our farmers and workers will cooperate cheerfully, willingly,
patriotically, if they feel convinced that the rich and
successful corporations are doing their part.
Regraded Unclassified
38
The control of inflation and the prevention of great
resulting harm can therefore be achieved only through an
integrated effort along many fronts. In this great economic
battle the taxation front is an important sector, and a
sound excess profits tax is one of the key positions to be
won. When that position has been stormed and taken, there
will be no further justification for any citizens or groups
of citizens to aggravate the problem through price and wage
demands which must inevitably lead to further increases.
National interest comes ahead of self-interest in these
critical days. The defense of our country calls for 8.
united effort, in every field of our national life. We
have reached & point at which the course of profits, prices
and wages must somehow be controlled, firmly, fairly and
effectively, if our economy is to function without damage
to our people and to our sacred cause.
Regraded Unclassified
TO:-
39
MISS CHAUNCEY
Mr. Foley carried to Secy's
9:30 meeting today - 7/11/41.
MR. FOLEY
Regraded Unclassified
40
JUL 11 1941
Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Foley
1. At a conference held at 4 s'clock Thursday afternoon,
June 10, 1941, in the office of Assistant Secretary of War McCley
on the question of the War Department relieving the British of
$300,000,000 in contrast obligations for aircraft, it was decided
that Sir Henry Self would be asked to confer with Colonel Mayers
and Major Holland with & view to determining how much of this amount
could be handled through the elimination of "surplusage" in existing
British lend-lease requirements. The Army Air Corps will also com-
sider how much of the balance can be absorbed through "water" in
the appropriations for aircraft for 1942 recently enacted.
2. At a conference in the morning it had been decided that
there would probably be no difficulty In the way of the War Depart-
ment entering into contracts for tanks and tank engines amounting
to $44,000,000 to take the place of existing contracts between the
British Government and American manufacturers since there is appar-
ently sufficient leoway in the ordnance appropriations. However,
the matter was to be submitted by General Lewis and Colonels Aurand
and Taylor to General Wesson.
3. Under the proposed plan the British will be saved up to
$344,000,000 and will also obtain the tanks, tank engines, and air-
craft covered by the cancelled contracts. It is contemplated that
the War Department will lend-lease an equal amount of such armaments
to the British Government which the War Department is procuring
from the same American manufacturers. The War Department will pay
to the American manufacturers the ordinary price for these armanents,
and the British Government will pay the difference. This procedure
is possible where matching orders have been placed by the Sar Do-
partment for tanks, tank engines, and aircraft with the name speci-
fications as those ordered by the British.
At the meeting held at 11 c'clock in the morning, there were
present: Assistant Secretary McCloy, General Lowis and Colonels
Aurand, Taylor and Greenbaum for the Har Department; Sir Fredarick
Phillips and Messrs. Childs and Robinson for the British; Messrs.
Cox and Brown for the Division of Defense Aid Reports; and Mr. Kades
for the Treasury Department. At the meeting hold in the afternoon,
Colonel Meyers and Major Holland were present instead of General
Lewis and Colonels Aurand, Taylor and Greenbaum.
CLEAT
7-10-41
(Initialed) E. H. For Jr.
Regraded Unclassified
41
July 11, 1941
Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Foley
For your information
At the meeting in your office yesterday afternoon there was
some discussion of adequate publicity being given to the true facts
concerning the present British export trade, such as the interview
in the mashington Post by Mr. Keynes on July 10. In this conneo-
tion, I thought you would be interested in knowing that Congress-
man "Connor of Montana has introduced a resolution, H. Res. 206,
the purpose of which is to establish a special committee to be
composed of three members of the House, appointed by the Speaker,
to conduct an investigation as to:
(1) To what extent materials lend-leased to the British
are being exported in competition with American export
trade;
(2) To what extent Creat Britain is drawing upon resources
of the United States to supply domestic needs, at the same
time enabling British manufacturers to increase pre-war
British foreign trade; and
(s) Whether shipping facilities now available to Creat
Britein are adequate for its essential foreign trade and
to what extent additional shipping facilities from the
(Initialed) E. H. F.. 3r.
CLK:t
United States are needed for such purpose.
Regraded Unclassified
42
July 11, 1941
Dear McCloy:
I cannot tell you how much
I appreciate the exceedingly prompt
assistance which you have rendered
in helping to relieve the British
dollar situation.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) 1. Horgenthan, In
Mr. John J. MeCloy,
Assistent Secretary of War,
War Department,
Washington, D. C.
43
July 11, 1941
Dear McCloy:
I cannot tell you how much
I appreciate the exceedingly prompt
assistance which you have rendered
in helping to relieve the British
dollar situation.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) N. Horgenthod, m
Mr. John J. MeCloy,
Assistant Secretary of War,
Har Department,
Washington, D.C.
44
Dear McCloy:
I cannot tell you how much I appreciate
the exceedingly prompt assistance which you have
rendered in helping to relieve the British dollar
situation.
Sincerely yours,
John J. McCloy, Esq.,
Assistant Secretary of War,
Room 2503 Munitions Building,
Washington, D. C.
45
OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
DIVISION OF DEFENSE AID REPORTS
WASHINGTON, D.C.
July 11, 1941
MEMORANDUM
TO:
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM: Oscar Cox
Annexed is a suggested draft of a letter to
McCloy, thanking him for the prompt help which he has
rendered.
ose
46
July 11, 1941
9:30 a.m.
GROUP MEETING
Present:
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Thompson
Mr. White
Mr. Blough
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Haas
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Graves
Mr. Odegard
Mr. Viner
Mr. Foley
Mr. Kuhn
Mrs. Klotz
Mr. Bell
H.M.Jr:
This is wonderful, Ferdie. Here comes
fresh material.
Viner:
Have you already exhausted the old material
or slaughtered them or what?
H.M.Jr:
Between now and ten o'clock tomorrow morning
Ferdie and Blough have got to have a draft
on prices, labor, excess profits and so
forth and so on, and we have invited in
Eccles and Henderson and Lauch Currie to
criticize it and we are to have it ready
for the President Monday.
I didn't know whether Odegard was here or
in Harrisburg, or places West, but he is
here too, so Ferdie is going to draft by
Regraded Unclassified
47
- 2 -
himself this afternoon, is that right?
Kuhn:
Try it.
H.M.Jr:
With Blough, but with these - are you going
home this week-end?
Odegard:
Tonight.
H.M.Jr:
Good. And may I suggest that you don't
come back at least until Tuesday?
Odegard:
Thank you. I have two lectures to give
in New England.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, what days are those?
Odegard:
Saturday and Tuesday.
H.M.Jr:
Then you can get back Wednesday. Will that
give you any time to rest?
Odegard:
It will give me 8. day at home.
H.M.Jr:
Is that enough?
Viner:
You asked him whether that would give him
time to rest and he said it would give him
of day at home. He didn't say 8 day's rest.
It makes me curious.
R.M.Jr:
Why not come back Thursday and that will
give you a chance.
Odegard:
All right, thank you.
(Mr. Bell entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
How will that be?
Odegard:
Wonderful.
Regraded Unclassified
48
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
I should think it would be good. Get
back Thursday"
Odegard:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Isn't that wonderful, having Jake Viner?
Kuhn:
I already warned him we are going to send
S.O.S.'s out today.
H.V.Jr:
You are invited if you are here tomorrow.
Mr. Bell and I will receive it Monday.
We will let these boys work, you see.
And you (Bell) and I will take B. look at
it Monday.
Bell:
Not before Monday?
H.M.Jr:
No.
Norman?
Thompson:
I have a final clearance on the Park Road
building.
H.M.Jr:
Good. You and I ought to go in the real
estate business.
Klotz:
Yes, but it is some distance away, isn't it?
Thompson:
Well, it is just about ten or fifteen
minutes up Sixteenth Street.
I didn't know whether you had some instructions
on this other matter. He can't get by Civil
Service. It should have been before July 1.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, That is the husband of the nurse that
looked after all the Roosevelt children.
Thompson:
We are going to have 8 little trouble.
Regraded Unclassified
49
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, the colored man - couldn't he work
under the colored section that Graves has
got?
Klotz:
It is all Civil Service.
Thompson:
It is all Civil Service.
H.M.Jr:
Is there any free money around?
Thompson:
They have to be Civil Service.
H.M.Jr:
Roll him into Coast Guard. Seriously,
couldn't he - how about Coast Guard?
Thompson:
If he meets the --
Gaston:
They can always take people, but they have
no way of paying them. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Well anyway, it was 8 helpful suggestion.
This is one of the cases we have got to
do something on.
Klotz:
How about frozen funds?
Thompson:
That is all under Civil Service.
H.V.Jr:
Where does that leave the Democratic Party?
Bell:
They are all covered in. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
What did you say?
Bell:
I said they were all covered in.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you will have to find something.
Thompson:
All right, I will see what we can do.
H.M.Jr:
I will let them know, unless there are
a couple more nurses or something.
Regraded Unclassified
50
- 5 -
Thompson:
Well, I have told Miss Thompson in recent
letters that June 30 was the deadline.
H.M.Jr:
But this is one of those things that the
whole Roosevelt family is involved in.
Thompson:
Maybe some other branch of the Government,
FHA or something.
The President has issued regulations directing
that the Executive Officer of the Division
of Defense Aid Reports shall consult with
8 representative of the Treasury and the
Budget in fixing values of defense articles
and property and 80 on to or from the United
States under the defense --
H.M.Jr:
That comes under Bell.
Thompson:
Well, I have prepared a letter designating
Cliff Mack as a representative.
Bell:
This is evaluation of the material.
H.M.Jr:
Is that agreeable to you?
Bell:
Yes, I thought he was the best man.
H.M.Jr:
Just remember this, Dan, the final records
and statistics for all this Lend-Lease in
the Treasury after all should be in a place
satisfactory to you.
Bell:
Well, eventually I take it we will get it,
but I don't think there is anything being
done now in the way of getting signed
agreements or documents.
H.M.Jr:
Well, will you keep that in mind?
Bell:
Our man is in charge of the Records Section
over there.
Regraded Unclassified
51
- 6 -
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Bell:
We will eventually get it.
Thompson:
Mr. Hall over at the Bureau of Engraving
and Printing is facing a very critical
situation with respect to plate printers.
He can't - there is no Civil Service register
and he just can't find printers in the
United States and he has twenty-two plate
printers who have reached the age for re-
tirement this year, so we are asking the
President to get out an Executive Order
which would permit us to keep on plate
printers as they reach retirement age until
we can get some through Civil Service
registers.
I think it is 8. necessary thing to do. He
can't even get enough apprentices.
H.M.Jr:
Dan?
Bell:
We got three billion three cash subscriptions
up to last night.
H.M.Jr:
Wonderful.
Bell:
It will probably go over four billion in
the mail today. About half of it refunding,
which was all right. We will get the rest
of it today. The price has now settled
back to just where we figured it, seventeen-
nineteen.
H.M.Jr:
You are staying home tomorrow, aren't you
Bell:
I hadn't thought about it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I will think for you. Please, if
you don't mind my giving that kind of an
order.
52
- 7 -
Bell:
I don't mind. I appreciate it.
H.M.Jr:
Harold Graves?
Graves:
You asked me the other day to get you a
sample sticker for cars.
H.M.Jr:
Oh yes. Let "Cymbol" Odegard look at this.
Do you like it? Do you like that?
Odegard:
Well, the message isn't very clear.
Viner:
Is that settled?
H.M.Jr:
Oh yes.
Viner:
Then I like it very much. (Laughter)
Bell:
What is it for, automobiles?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Graves:
It isn't ours.
H.M.Jr:
No, I just wanted to see what somebody
else was doing. What else?
Graves:
I have a letter from Mr. Biow, who by
the way, will spend the day with us here
Monday, saying that Bulova Watch Company
are giving us eight weeks of their announce-
ments beginning July 19.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
Graves:
That is, I take it, that means that every
time they make their usual announcement
about Bulova watch time, they will mention
Defense Savings Bonds.
Gaston:
No commitment by Customs?
Regraded Unclassified
53
- 8 -
Graves:
I beg pardon?
Gaston:
No commitment by Customs.
Graves:
No, we are not committing anybody.
(The Secretary gave instructions to
operator to get Mr. Hamm or Mr. Ginsberg
on the phone.)
Foley:
Sounds like 8. delicatessen. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Don't you like to come back to a cheerful
crowd?
Viner:
I wish you had the right to be. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Where were we?
Graves:
You asked me to let you know this morning
about the return cards on the song.
They tell me across the street that the
number is still very few, and I have asked
them to give me 8. daily report on that,
which I will send in to you.
H.V.Jr:
All right.
(Secretary held telephone conversation
with Mr. Hamm.)
H.M.Jr:
The trouble is, this laughter going back
and forth over the phone.
Pell:
Does it record?
H.M.Jr:
Have you got everything fixed?
Graves:
No, I just started. (Laughter) Mr. Callahan
sends me a note for you of the time of this
Sunday broadcast. He thought you would like
to know it.
Regraded Unclassified
54
- 9 -
H.M.Jr:
Oh swell. Is it this Sunday
Graves:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Grand.
Gaston:
What time is it, Harold.
Kuhn:
One o'clock, Daylight Saving, isn't it?
Graves:
I don't know. The Secretary has the
memorandum.
H.M.Jr:
Read it out loud, will you, please?
Klotz:
"The Mutual program starts this coming
Sunday, July 13. I know the Secretary
will probably want to listen, and therefore
I am giving you the times it will be heard.
Twelve o'clock to twelve-forty-five, Eastern
Daylight Saving time, and eleven to eleven-
forty-five Eastern Standard Time. WOL is
the local outlet. They are not available
at the time of the actual broadcast, but
they are planning to make 8 recording and
rebroadcast it later."
Graves:
The hour is given there of that rebroadcast.
Klotz:
"This means it will be heard locally over
WOL from one-fifteen to two o'clock."
Graves:
We now have an acceptance from Mr. John
D. Stephenson for State Chairman in
Pennsylvania.
That is, you invited him three or four
days ago.
H.M.Jr:
Peter fixed it up?
Regraded Unclassified
55
- 10 -
Graves:
Peter fixed it up. That is actually true,
Peter did fix it up, and I am going to call
him this morning and offer to go up and see
him at Philadelphia some day next week.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you hold Tuesday for Detroit.
Graves:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I thought you were going to bring in--
Graves:
He wasn't here yesterday, but will be today,
Mr. Iseby, and if you have the time--
H.M.Jr:
It is terrible today. It is the tightest
day that I have got.
Graves:
All right, I will take care of it.
H.M.Jr:
You are coming in, aren't you, with Patterson
at eleven-thirty?
Graves:
Well, I have Senator Pepper, as I told you,
on my hands at eleven clock, and suppose
I come in if I am through, and if not--
H.M.Jr:
Why don't you tell Pepper that you have got
to be in here?
Graves:
All right, if you want me in, I will come.
H.M.Jr:
Sure. Kuhn is bringing in some artists at
eleven.
Kuhn:
It won't take long.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right, I don't need Harold for
that.
White:
In fact, they had better leave you out, Harold.
Graves:
I am through.
Regraded Unclassified
56
- 11 -
H.M.Jr:
This fellow - yes, I can see this man, if
somebody could bring him in - let Kuhn bring
in the fellow, Iseby, at eleven o'clock and
he can meet the artists too.
Graves:
The trouble is I haven't been in touch with
Iseby, and I don't know positively that I will
be before eleven.
H.M.Jr:
If he is here, let him come in with the rest of
the artists.
Finished?
Graves:
Finished.
H.M.Jr:
Harry?
White:
Here is that letter you have asked for from
Mr. Keynes. (Letter dated July 2.)
II.M.Jr:
I will take that to the country.
White:
I would like to comment on this purchase of
cotton cloth to this extent, see whether it
modifies your request for quick action.
The textile dealers, as you know, are trying
to break down the voluntary price fixing by
merely not offering the goods for sale.
Now, if the Procurement helps them out by
buying at a higher price--
H.M.Jr:
Let Leon Henderson worry about that. That
is his job.
White:
Yes, but you gave him twenty-four hours to
buy it.
H.M.Jr:
Two weeks. My job is to buy.
White:
But they have got a much stronger case if
they can come up before Congress and point out
Regraded Unclassified
57
- 12 -
that here they have badly needed goods that
they can't buy.
H.M.Jr:
Let Leon worry about it.
White:
It isn't only Leon's problem.
H.M.Jr:
Let him worry about it. He has a chance. He
can come back at me.
White:
All right.
Schwarz:
I have a letter to you from the Buffalo Courier
Express asking for 8. letter for a special edition
on the new Curtiss-Wright plant there.
H.M.Jr:
No.
Schwarz:
That is all.
H.M.Jr:
Anything on your trip yesterday?
Odegard:
I had a very nice trip. I talked about an
hour and a half with the man up there.
H.M.Jr:
Are we going to have trouble with every state,
with the Defense Commission?
Odegard:
I don't think so. We are not going to have
any trouble with Pennsylvania at all.
H.M.Jr:
Will you come in at eleven when these people
come in? If you haven't met them, I think you
would like to. Are you busy at eleven?
Odegard:
No, not that I know of. I can come in.
Graves:
We have had rumblings--
II.M.Jr:
Are you going to be busy?
Odegard:
No.
Regraded Unclassified
58
- 13 -
H.M.Jr:
Wouldn't you like to meet them?
Odegard:
Yes, I would.
Graves:
We have had rumblings of trouble of that kind
in New Jersey and Florida and Nevada, but I
think we are going to settle it all right.
haes:
I have nothing.
H.M.Jr:
Peter, this message that we are working on
is terrifically important. It is right down
the lines you were talking about, so any time
that you have got--
Odegard:
Yes.
Blough:
Apparently you have later information on the
tax bill than I have. I told you the bill
wouldn't be ready for the Committee until the
end of next week, but now it is apparently
going to be ready by the middle of the week.
H.M.Jr:
Tuesday a week, the Speaker said.
Blough:
Is when they are going to report?
I.V.Jr:
Yes.
Blough:
Well, they will then consider it this coming
week, during a part of the week. I understand
Ways and Means may meet as early as Monday.
The drafters won't be done by Monday.
11.M.Jr:
Well, all I know is that the Speaker said,
as I understood him - there are techni calities
I don't know - that it wouldn't get on the
Floor until Tuesday a week.
Blough:
Well, that is 8 little faster than we had
anticipated, but it presumably can be done.
Regraded Unclassified
59
- 14 -
Bell:
That ties in with the Budget information that
the House is trying to get away around the
twenty-third.
Kuhn:
Will you be able to ring up William Green,
Mr. Secretary, about that?
M.M.Jr:
If you will stay, I will do it right after this
meeting.
Kuhn:
Thank you.
Cochran:
I have circulated to our Chinese group this
letter that Mr. Bell mentioned yesterday on
Sir Otto Niemeyer going to China. I will give
Mrs. Klotz & copy, or do you want to see it
now?
H.M.Jr:
No.
Cochran:
There is nothing to do on it at the present
time. Jay Crane was in yesterday on this
Hungarian oil business. I took him in to
see Mr. Foley.
Foley:
Today is Senator Norris' eightieth birthday.
I thought maybe you might want to send him a
little--
H.M.Jr:
I have.
Foley:
llere is 8. report on the War Department
meetings yesterday morning and afternoon
that Kades wrote up. (Dated July 11)
H.K.Jr:
Shall I read it? Oh, yes, I want to read it.
I would like to take this to the country.
Foley:
There is another memorandum that might be of
interest to you. (Dated July 11) This is a
copy of the letter that you sent to the
Attorney General to go to the State Depart-
ment. (Dated July 11)
Regraded Unclassified
60
- 15 -
Marvin McIntyre sent 8. letter over from a
fellow by the name of Royal McKenna and
said, "This is the man I spoke to you about
on the telephone." If it is all right, I
will sign this letter. It is on some consti-
tutional questions, and we thank him for
bringing it to our attention.
H.M.Jr:
Anything else.
Foley:
No.
H.M.Jr:
Harry, would you write a little friendly
notefor me to John Carmody saying that
pardon my delay and I was so long in answer-
ing it, but I hope to have an answer for him
early in the week.
White:
Do it right away.
H.M.Jr:
And if you will give it to Mrs. Klotz, I will
sign it, but I am going to take this up to
the country.
I have been with Lauch Currie since a quarter
of eight this morning, and I haven't had &
chance.
Gaston:
On the request of the State Department yester-
day, we ordered detention of the Japanese
ship, the Yawata Maru of San Francisco, which
was to carry a consular party, because they
hadn't received adequate assurances from
Germany as to the American consuls in Germany,
and then later we canceled that request on
notification that they had received the proper
assurances late yesterday afternoon.
At the Defense Communications Board yesterday
we decided to prohibit the use of radio by
all foreign ships in American waters, which
can be done, I think, by changing FCC regula-
tions. Savage of State and Hassell of Post
Regraded Unclassified
61
- 16 -
Office, and Judge Townsend of Justice were
over and we discussed that matter of German
films being shown in the United States.
Savage said that all the State Department
was unanimous in wanting to have these
German films that are now being shown sup-
pressed. Townsend couldn't find any law
under which it could be done, and he was very
doubtful of the reaction if a bill to that
effect were to be introduced in Congress.
He thought it would cause perhaps an explo-
sion and interfere with other more important
matters, and I think he is correct. We
agreed to look into the question of whether
it could be handled by a freezing process,
a fund freezing process, but I am not entirely
sure that it is desirable if we could do it.
That is, the films now in the United States,
now being shown. As to the films which have
not arrived, the films to come, we agreed
that we would at least detain all German
films for a good look at them before we let
them in.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
Gaston:
Right.
Regraded Unclassified
62
July 11, 1941
9:39 a.m.
HiJr:
Hello.
Clifton
Mack:
Good morning, sir.
HMJr:
Hello, Mack,
M:
Yes sir.
HMJr:
Good morning. What about those 10
million yards of that cotton goods for
China? Did you get a clearance?
M:
We haven't yet. I called - I called the
General Counsel's office Just now to try
to get one of their fellows to go up with
us to see Henderson or his assistant.
They weren't available yesterday afternoon.
HMJr:
I'll call Henderson myself and tell him
he's got to clear it this morning.
M:
Very good.
HMJr:
Now, is - they' ve given you a price limit,
isn't that it?
M:
They' ve given us a price limit and I think
they're having meetings with members of
the industry.
HMJr:
How long has it been pending?
M:
Well, this has been pending with us for
a matter of a couple of weeks.
HMJr:
Okay, that's enough.
M:
Yes sir.
HMJr:
I'll - you know - I'm going to ask him to
call you or have somebody call you for him.
M:
Very good.
HMJr:
10 million yards, isn't it?
M:
Yes sir.
Regraded Unclassified
63
- 2 -
HMJr:
Okay.
M:
Yes sir.
HMJr:
Anything - hello?
M:
Now, what's that?
HMJr:
Anything else that you get stuck on,
on that, I'm willing to help.
M:
Well, thank you very much and I very
much appreciate it.
HMJr:
Right.
M:
Thank you sir.
HMJr:
Goodbye.
64
July 11, 1941
9:45 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
John
Hamm:
Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
How are you? Mr. Hamm, I tried to get
Leon and they say he 18 out at a hearing.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
And I just wonder what kind of an organiza-
tion you've not over there - whether you
can do something to help us out. We've
been fooling around for two weeks trying
to buy 10 million yards of cotton goods for
the Chinese and Clif Mack, the director of
Procurement says that he cannot buy at the
price that you give him. Hello?
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
Now, with the help of you people, I'd like
to clear that between now and sunset. I
want to buy it.
H:
All right. Mack knows the story, does he?
HMJr:
Clif Mack knows it. He's sitting in his
office waiting to hear from you.
H:
All right, I'll have one of our men get in
touch with him.
HMJr:
Between now and sunset, let's buy the 10
million yards for Ohina.
H:
All right, fine.
HMJr:
Will you help me?
H:
Surely.
HMJr:
Can I forget about it?
H:
You can forget about it. If we have to
lift the ceiling on this particular order
we'll get it some where.
HMJr:
Will you please because for two weeks -
Madame Chiang Kai-Shek needs a new drese.
Regraded Unclassified
65
- 2 -
H:
All right, we'll see that she has it.
HMJr:
Okay.
H:
Thank you, sir.
HMJr:
Thank you.
July 11, 1941
66
10:02 a.m.
%. B.
Green:
Hello.
HMJr:
Mr. Green?
G:
Yes sir.
HMJr:
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
G:
Yes sir.
HKJr:
How are you?
G:
I'm all right, thank you.
HiJr:
Mr. Green, I've been a little bit ambitious
in trying to arrange a radio round table to
be held in my office in trying to present
the Defense Savings Bonds program to the
country and the thought was on July 22 that
we'd have labor and business sit down with
me and talk the thing sort of informally
for a half an hour over B. coast to coast
station. Now, Mr. J. A. Phillips of the
Railroad Brotherhood has accepted. Mr.
Philin Murray has accepted. The President
of the National Association of Manufacturers
accepted and the President of the American
Chamber of Commerce and I'm very hopeful
that you would join me and these other
gentlemen in my office in this little program.
I think it would be very helpful to us in
our united front if labor and business and
the Treasury sit down together in the office -
in my office at the Treasury.
G:
Well, why do you bring the C.I.O in the
picutre?
HMJr:
Well, because
G:
They - they haven't shown any favorable
attitude, you know, to the whole program.
HMJr:
Oh, on our Defense Bonds, they've been
very helpful. I mean, they've sent out
letters and literature and they've been
buying and all their Unions have been
buying and they've really been awfully
good on this program. They got - Mr.
- 2 -
67
Murray came to see me - called on me -
told me anything that I wanted that
all of their Unions would get behind
and help buy. Then when we go into the
various businesses on these payroll
deductions, we're
G:
Well, their subordinate units don't show
that because they've been denouncing the
whole war program; the President is a
war monger, as you know.
HMJr:
Not Murray.
G:
Well, but their - their units.
HMJr:
Well
G:
And the man that controls the C.I.O. has
been doing the Bame thing.
U/Jr:
Well, he came in
G:
That's Mr. Lewis and he controls Mr. Murray.
HMJr:
Well, Lewis came in and gave us 8 check for
$50,000.
G:
I know that WaB purely an investment.
HMJr:
Yeah. But, you see Mr. Green, I think we've
all not to let by-gones be by-gones.
G:
I know, but you know how willingly we have
responded.
HMJr:
I know. You've been
G:
You know that, don't you?
HMr:
Oh, you've been magnificent.
G:
We don't need to
HMJr:
You've been nagnificent.
G:
But - but you know it's so embarrassing
and you ask us to do things that means
compromise of principles that we have
religously carried out and that 18 to
refrain from participating in a program -
68
- 3 -
programs with C.I.O. representatives.
I'm willing a thousand times to go along
with you and to join with you and the
Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Phillips and the
other representatives. But, it vould be
just like breaking my heart to sit down
with those fellows because I've refrained
from doing that ever since they've been
formed.
HiJr:
Well, I
G:
We regard them AB a rebel, rival movement
seeking to distroy the American Federation
of Labor.
IN:Jr:
Well, of course 28 you know, I've never
taken any
G:
And ours is the old institution here in
America, - been functioning for 75 years
and speaking for labor.
HMJr:
Well, because I - you know I've never taken
any part in any labor fights for or emainet -
you know and - but you can't overlook Mr.
Nurray and his organization and they're there
and they represent
G;
Well
WWr:
A lot of people.
3:
Couldn't the arrengement be made 80 we
wouldn't have to be - sit down together.
I could - I could get into it as e. representa-
tive of the American Federation of Labor
some way - separate and apart. I'll be glad
to do that.
HATE:
Well, you see the way I not this idea was
this. We arranged e program where we had
both the Republican and Democratic leaders.
Now, you take a man like Crawford from
Michigan, who 18 2.8 partisan a person as
you can find. Arthur Canner, who doesn't
want to fight and they set down with Senator
Lucas, Vice President and - at a round table
a counle weeks amo and they forgot their
partisanship and Senator Capper said, "This
is B. wood thing, whether we fight or don't
fight, we oucht to have this thing". He
Regraded Unclassified
69
forgot his partisanship end the program
went over beautifully. I thought, well
if the Democrate and Republicans can sit
down, why can't labor and business and
that's how I not the idea.
C:
Well, of course, labor as we represent it,
will do that.
HWr:
Well
G:
I
MJr:
Now look
G:
It will- it will
MJr:
Think it over.
0:
It will - well, I'll do that. I would
only do it simply because - because of my
devotion to our country and its democratic
"Jr:
Well that's - well that's on
to
Nothing else. I - it would be - it would be
setting aside my whole policy and subordinating
every feeling that I have. It would be under
great stress and feeling.
WJr:
Well, now look. Think it over. I'm appealing
to you on the basis of patriotism and may I
call you up Monday morning?
C:
All right, sir,
WJr;
Can I do that?
G:
Yeah. Yes sir. Oh yes sir.
Wr:
I'll call you up Monday.
0:
All right, thank you.
HWr:
Give it a good think.
G:
All right.
HMJr:
Thank you.
Regraded Unclassified
70
July 11, 1941
10:10 a.m.
HMJr:
Leo? Hello?
Leo
Crowley:
Hello. Yes.
HMJr:
This is Henry Morgenthau.
C:
Yes sir, how are you?
HMJr:
I'm fine. I just want to tell you how
much I appreciate your trying to be of
help to me on that Landis matter.
C:
Well, I appreciate that. While I can't
guarantee it, it's in better shape anyhow
than it was and he waen't quite as bad
when I left him and my feeling 18 that
we've got a fair chance of working that
out.
HMJr:
Oh, that will be wonderful.
C:
And I'll report to Eddie in a couple
days.
HMJr:
You think maybe Monday or Tuesday?
C:
Yes. I'll get a hold of him again Saturday
and take him out again and try and have
something for you Monday or Tuesday.
HMJr:
Well, that will be grand. Well, when you
get something let me know because I'm
tremendously interested myself.
C:
All right, I'll call you.
HMJr:
Ever so much obliged.
C:
Thank you.
Dearadod Unclassified
71
July 11, 1941
10:12 a.m.
Dean
Landie:
Hello.
HMJr:
J1m?
L:
Yes.
HMJr:
Henry talking.
L:
Yes.
HMJr:
Crowley feels that he made a little progress
last night.
L:
oh, really.
HMJr:
Yes.
L:
Really.
HMJr
And he said that he thought that - he doesn't
want to guarantee anything - but he said he
thought he saw a little sign of softening.
L:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
And he's taking him out again Saturday to
do a little more softening up and he said
he'd let me know Monday or Tuesday.
L:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
Which, I think was very interesting.
L:
Well, that's very interesting.
HMJr:
So, we may still get together.
L:
(Laughs)
HMJr:
But Leo was distinctly on the hopeful side.
L:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
Well, I'll let you know.
L:
All right, fine.
- 2 -
72
HMJr:
In the meantime, keep it open.
L:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Keep the door open.
L:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Please.
L:
All right, I shall.
HMJr:
Thank you Jim.
L:
Goodbye.
HMJr:
Goodbye.
73
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
EFENSE SAVINGS STAFF
July 11, 1941.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Here are a list of names which I may have men-
tioned to you in connection with the position for which
you had considered Dean Landis.
I thought you might like to have them for refer-
ence.
Respectfully yours,
Peter H. Odegard
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury.
74
Clarence A. Dykstra - President University of Wisconsin
Born in Cleveland, Ohio. February 25, 1883 - 58 years old.
Educated at University of Iowa - 1903; University of Chicago.
Taught at Ohio State, University of Kansas, University of
California, Secretary Chicago City Club, also
Los Angeles City Club.
Commissioner of Department of Water and Power- Los Angeles - -
1923-26; Director Personnel and Efficiency, same
department - 1926-30
City Manager - Cincinnati - 1930-37
President University of Wisconsin since 1937
Member technical advisory board, National Emergency Public
Works Administration
President International Association of City Managers - 1932-33
Member President's Com. Fiscal Relations, Fed. Gov't, and D. C.
Chairman Com. to Survey - "The Role of the Urban Community in
the National Economy" - National Resources Board
Member Exec. Com. - Tax Revision Council and Chairman, sub-
committee on allocation of functions between
federal, state, and local governments.
Hes been President of National Municipal League.
President of American Political Science Association.
Married. One daughter and one son.
75
Trank P. Craham - President University of North Carolina
Born in Fayotteville, North Carolina. October 14, 1886 - 54
years old
Educated at University of North Carolina, Columbia University,
University of Chicago, Brookings Institution,
and University of London.
Professor of History at North Carolina
President University of North Carolina since June 1930 - .
Vice Chairman National Consumers Advisory Board.
Chairman National Advisory Council on Social Security.
Member National Emergency Council.
Served in U. S. Marines as 2nd and 1st Lieutenant in 1st and
10th regisents for North Carolina, Enlisted
June 1918.
Regraded Unclassified
76
Lindsay Rogers - Burgess Professor of Public Law, Columbia University.
Born in Baltimore, Maryland. May 23, 1891 - 50 years old.
Educated at John's Hopkins - A.B. 1912.
John's Hopkins -- Ph.D. 1915.
University of Maryland - L.L.B. 1915.
Newspaper correspondent at Baltimore 1909-15.
Professor of Political Science at Univ. of Virginia - 1915-18
Research Assistant, U.S. Tariff Commission - 1918
Served during World War as 1st Lt. and on General Staff Corps
at Washington, D. C. until December 24, 1918.
Lecturer on Government at Harvard - 1920-21
At Columbia since 1920.
Now is Burgess Professor of Public Law - since 1929.
Has taught at University of South California, Amherst, University
of Virginia, University of Chicago on Walgreen
Foundation, - New School for Social Research.
Secretary Governor's Advisory Commission and Director of
Research Bureau, Cloak, Suit and Skirt Industry,
New York City - 1924-31.
Moreland Commissioner to investigate N.Y.State Dept. of Labor - 1928
Deputy Administrator N.R.A. - 1933
Chairman, Board of Labor Review, Public Works Administration -
1934-36.
Trustee of the Institute of Public Administration.
Author: Postal Power of Congress - 1916.
Problem of Government (with W.W. Willoughby) - 1921.
New Constitutions of Europe (with H. L. McBain) - 1922.
The American Senate - 1926.
Editor: Problems of Reconstruction - National and International - 1919.
The Finances and Financial Administration of N.Y. City - 1928.
Democratic Campaign Text Book - 1928.
77
Howard Landis Bevis - President of the Ohio State University.
Born in Bevis, Ohio. November 19, 1885 - 56 years old.
Educated at University of Cincinnati - A. B. 1908
University of Cincinnati -- L.L.B. 1910
Harvard University
-- S.J.D. 1920
Member of Law firm - Isaacs and Bevis - 1911-12.
In Ordnance Department, Air Service, U.S.A. - 1918-1919.
Professor of Law - University of Cincinnati - 1921-31.
Secretary Charter Amendment Commission - 1926.
Director of Finance of Ohio - 1931-33.
Judge on Ohio Supreme Court - 1933-35.
Director of Finance of Ohio - 1935.
Professor of Law and Government - Harvard University - 1935-40.
Democrat - Methodist - Mason. Married and has one son.
78
Harry Alvin Millis - National Labor Relations Board
Born in Paoli, Indiana. May 14, 1873 - 68 years old.
Educated at Indiana University
Ph. D. at University of Chicago - 1899.
Professor of Economics at University of Arkansas - 1902-03.
Has taught at Stanford, University of Kansas.
Director of Investigations for U. S. Immigration Commission
in Rocky Mountain and Pacific States - 1908-10.
Also for Illinois State Health Insurance Commission - 1918-1919.
Chairman Trade Board and also of Board of Arbitration
Men's Clothing Industry, Chicago - 1919-23.
Chairman of Economics Department, University of Chicago -
since 1928.
Member of National Labor Relations Board - 1934-35 and
again in 1940.
Regraded Unclassified
79
Milliam M. Leiserson - National Labor Relations Board.
Born in Reval, Esthonia. April 15, 1883 - 58 years old,
Educated at Universit y of Wisconsin -- A. B. 1908
Columbia University
- Ph.D. 1911
Sipert on unemployment, N. Y. Commission on Employers'
Liability and Unemployment - 1909-11.
Deputy Industrial Commissioner, Wisconsin - 1911-14.
Assistant Director of Research - U. S. Commission on
Industrial Relations - 1914-15.
Chief of Division of Labor Administration. U.S. Department
of Labor - 1918-19.
Chairman Labor Adjustment Board, Clothing Industry of
Rochester, New York - 1919-21.
Chairman Board of Arbitration, Men's Clothing Industry
of New York - 1921-23; Baltimore and Chicago - 1923-26.
Professor of Economics, Antioch College - 1925-37.
Member and Chairman National Mediation Board - 1934-36
Member N. L. R. B. since 1929.
Married. Has seven children.
Regraded Unclassified
80
Stear May - Sconomist
Sorn in Philadelphia, Pa. April 18, 1896 - 45 years old.
Discated at Amherst College
Ph.D. at Brookings Graduate School of Economics
and Government - 1925
Served with Motor Ambulance Co. 61, A.E.F. - 1917-19
Instructor in economics - Amherst - 1920-22
Instructor in economics - Brookwood Workers' College - 1922-23
Assistant Professor of Economics - Cornell Universit y - 1925-27
Mosistant Professor of Dartmouth College - 1927-32
Assistant Director for Social Sciences, Rockefeller Foundation
since 1932
Monther Consumers Advisory Board, N.R.A. - 1934-35
Homber Directors Council of Consumers Division of U.S. Dept.
of Labor - 1935.
sumber Business Advisory Council for Department of Comerce
since 1940.
Author: Control of linges - 1923
Public Control of Business - 1930. (with Dexter Keezer)
Regraded Unclassified
81
Dexter M. Keezer - President of Reed College, Portland, Oregon, since 1934.
Born in Acton, Massachusetts. August 24, 1895 - 46 years old.
Served with Machine Gun Battalion U.S.A. - 1917-1919
Educated at Amherst -- A.B. 1920 L.L.D. - 1938
Cornell -- M.A. 1923
Brooking's Graduate School of Economics & Gov't - 1925
Reporter on Denver Times - 1920-21.
Washington Bureau Scripps- Harvard Newspaper - 1927-28
Associate Editor, Baltimore Sun - 1923-33.
Professor of Economics at Cornell, Colorado, University of
North Carolina, and Dartmouth.
Consumers Advisory Board N.R.A. - 1933-34.
Member National Advisory Committee of N.Y.A.
82
July 11, 1941
10:18 a.m.
Senator
Connally:
Hello, Henry.
HMJr:
Hello, Tom?
C :
Yes. Hello, Henry. How are you?
HMJr:
How are you?
C.
I hate to bother you, but I've got to.
HMJr:
That's easy.
C.
Before Shepard died, he and I endorsed
jointly for reappointment
....
HMJr:
Yeah.
C.
Fred Pabst down at Galveston, who is the
Customs Collector.
HMJr:
Yeah.
C.
Now, he wasn't my man, but he was Morris'
man.
HMJr:
Yeah.
C.
And I endorsed him again with Morris.
HMJr:
Yeah.
C.
And I have been anxious to get him up here
and get him confirmed before this new
Senator gets up here
HMJr:
Oh, yeah.
C.
It may cause us some trouble.
HMJr:
I see.
C.
And it's hung up over there in your office.
Regraded Unclassified
83
- 2 -
HMJr:
I'll look into it right away.
C:
Now wait a minute. Let me tell you something
else while it's on me.
HMJr:
Go ahead.
C:
My secretary called up and got some fellow,
some young souirt down there in Gaston's
office, and he said they could not make the
appointment until they took it up with Flynn -
Ed Flynn, the National Chairman, and then
Mr. Flynn couldn't O.K. it until they took
it up with the Texas National Committeeman.
HMJr:
My God!
C:
Well, now, listen
HMJr:
Yeah.
C:
.....
they don't take up things, never have,
here, with National Committeemen where the
State's got Democratic Senators. And I just
want to know if I am going to have any say-so
about these things or are you going to turn
over the patronage of all this stuff to some
damn National Committeeman down in Texas. I
ain't going to etand for it.
HMJr:
Well, it's all Greek to me.
0:
Well, I know. I'm just telling you though
what your office 1s doing down here.
HMJr:
Well, I'll look into it.
C:
Now, when 8 State has Democratic Senatore,
they are supposed to know better about those
things than some National Committeeman and
Mr. Ed Flynn. Nov, I like Ed Flynn, but I
am not going to deliver what little patronage
that I've got control over to Flynn or the
National Committeeman or anybody else.
HMJr:
Would it be agreeable to you if I asked
Mr. Gaston to call you back, because he
handles all those
Regraded Unclassified
84
- 3 -
C:
All right, but I wanted you to know what's
going on down there.
HMJr:
He will either call you or come up and see
you personally.
C:
Well, if he calls me on the phone, it will
be all right.
HMJr:
Is that all right?
C:
Yeah. I'll talk to him on the phone; but
I want you to convey to him something about
who's going to run these things.
HMJr:
Well, frankly, I just don't know what the
arrangements are, but I will incuire.
C:
Well, I know, but you're responsible for
them. You are Secretary of the Treasury.
HMJr:
That's what they tell me.
C :
If you have given anybody any instructions
down there to take these matters up with
8 National Committeeman where you've got
Democratic Senators, well, I want to know
about it.
HMJr:
Well, it, Tom, I've got to find out what
instructions the White House has given.
C:
Well, I don't believe he gave you any such
instructions as that. If they have, I'm
going over to see the White House.
HMJr:
Well, I'll inquire and either I or Gaston
will either call you or come up to see you.
C:
All right, you needn't come; just call me.
That will be all right.
HMJr:
But I appreciate your letting me know.
0:
All right.
Regraded Unclassified
85
July 11, 1941
I talked to Miss Tully at 10:30 and told her
that I told Mr. Soong that I could not do anything
more to help him on this matter and he should take
it up through diplomatic channels. That was just
what the President said. After all, if Soong wants
to see him or Chiang Kai-shek has a message, they
have an Ambassador here and they should take it up
through the Ambassador. Miss Tully volunteered the
opinion she thought I was entirely right.
86
July 11, 1941
10:30 a.m.
RE TAX ANTICIPATION CERTIFICATES
Present:
Mr. Bell
Mr. Broughton
Mr. Kilby
Mr. Jones
Mr. Callahan
Mr. Sloan
Mr. Buckley
Mr. Edward
H.M.Jr:
Did you get my message that the Federal Reserve
wants to get in and help?
Bell:
Yes, we are going to see Ronald Ransom this
afternoon.
H.M.Jr:
Ronald Ransom wants to know what you are doing.
Bell:
We are having & conference this afternoon at
four o'clock.
H.M.Jr:
What are we going to do, put this on the radio?
Bell:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Bell:
Well, we have worked up a program of publicity.
The first thing I think you might look at would
87
- 2 -
be the little booklet of questions and
answers that has been designed. I have relied
a great deal on the Defense Staff to help
us out in this.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I like the cover.
Bell:
I think it is a good job for the time they
had.
H.M.Jr:
If I might make a suggestion, "To help you
meet the increased tax bills." I don't
like tax bills.
Buckley:
Increased taxes?
H.M.Jr:
Increased taxes.
Bell:
That is designed so it will fit into 8--
H.M.Jr:
If you don't mind, I wouldn't put that
sentence on the front at all. I think you
have got just that, "United States Treasury,
Tax Savings Plan,' and I think it makes a
better cover to drop your seal right down,
if you don't mind. If you drop it, you might
even make the "United States Treasury" a lit-
tle bit bigger.
Bell:
You would have to center it a little more,
wouldn't you?
Buckley:
We would have to put it in two lines.
H.M.Jr:
You could put "Tax Savings Plan", the seal,
and then the "United States Treasury Department."
Buckley:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
How would that be?
Buckley:
That would look all right.
Regraded Unclassified
88
- 3 -
H.W.Jr:
But no little--
Bell:
You don't like that?
H.M.Jr:
No.
Bell:
Any place?
H.M.Jr:
Not on the front, because it needs explaining.
Bell:
Well, it is explained.
H.M.Jr:
"Tax Savings Plan", that is enough. It is
a seal, and then the Treasury for the cover.
I mean, I don't think that is good.
Edward:
You had better save this last line on here,
"For the years 1941 and thereafter," because
that is not mentioned anywhere else in it.
We will have to put that in.
Bell:
Some place.
Edward:
Some place in there.
H.M.Jr:
But on the cover, I just would have "Tax
Savings Plan," your seal, and the "United
States Treasury."
Buckley:
All right, sir.
Bell:
Now, that is just 8. brief description of what
it is.
H.M.Jr:
Can I take a minute and read it?
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Sit down, Dan, and take the weight off your
feet.
It is funny, in the next sentence, you have
Regraded Unclassified
89
- 4 -
"the larger tax bills." I like this. I
think this is fine.
Bell:
That is their values. It seems to me we might
set out Series A and Series B a little better.
They are not centered.
On the back, you notice, there is also an
application blank.
H.M.Jr:
On the back?
Bell:
Yes. You can just tear that off and fill it
out.
H.M.Jr:
I think that is grand.
If I can just have my way on the cover, I will
go along with you on the rest. I think that
is fine.
Bell:
This is some preliminary work, just a schedule
of what we could do here in the Department.
We thought maybe it might be well for you to
write a letter to the banks explaining this
program and asking their cooperation and
maybe thanking them for what they have already
done. I think they would like to get that.
H.M.Jr:
Do you want me to do that, Edward?
Edward:
Yes.
Bell:
On the twenty-fourth we would begin mailing
to the Federal Reserve banks information in-
cluding the offering of circulars, SO that
we would have it by the twenty-ninth.
H.M.Jr:
Should the President buy the first one of
these?
Callahan:
A very swell suggestion.
Regraded Unclassified
90
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
What do you think?
Bell:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Is it the kind of thing.
Edward:
I think it would be a good idea to let the
people know the President pays his taxes.
A good many people probably don't think he pays
any. They probably think maybe the President's
salary is exempt.
Bell:
I think the people have an idea that all Govern-
ment salaries are exempt.
H.M.Jr:
I wouldn't want to do it before - I couldn't be
back until August 1. I will be back August 1.
Bell:
Well, that is --
H.M.Jr:
I could do it that night.
Bell:
The 31st?
H.M.Jr:
No, August 1. We can date him up.
Sloan:
It is all right.
H.M.Jr:
I think he ought to do it. I think he might
be glad to, Dan.
Bell:
Well, it certainly fits in with his program.
He has got a pretty good tax bill and he can
buy the Series A, certainly, to start out with.
H.M.Jr:
Well, now, would you have him buy - is B the
twelve hundred?
Bell:
A is the twelve hundred. B is the half
per cent.
H.M.Jr:
Would you have him buy both? He needs both.
Regraded Unclassified
91
- 6 -
Bell:
I think just the publicity that he is buying,
not saying what Series.
H.M.Jr:
I think he ought to buy both.
Bell:
He didn't say what Series Savings Bonds he was
buying. He just bought a Savings Bond.
II.M.Jr:
Well, I mean for him to say, for instance, he
is going to put aside a hundred dollars a month,
that isn't anything.
Bell:
I wonder if you need to mention the amount at
all, just say the President is buying --
H.V.Jr:
What harm? Supposing he bought two thousand
dollars 8 month and said, "I have got to put
aside half my salary." Supposing he said -
does he pay taxes on the fifty he gets?
Bell:
On the seventy-five, yes sir.
H.M.Jr:
How about on the fifty? Doesn't he get twenty-
five thousand for expenses?
Sell:
Oh, no, that is White House expenses.
H.M.Jr:
That isn't income. He pays on the seventy-
five. Supposing he said, "I have got to set
aside half my salary. I am going to invest in
these savings. I am going to invest" - whatever
it is, eighteen hundred or two thousand.
Bell:
Two thousand.
H.M.Jr:
He says, "I have got to do this, and I am
glad to do it. I am going toset aside half my
salary every month."
(Mr. Kuhn entered the conference).
H.M.Jr:
I think it would be good.
Regraded Unclassified
92
- 7 -
Callahan:
I think it would be an oxcellent idea.
Edward=
As Danny said & while ago, there are a good many
people that still have an idea that quite a
good many of Federal employees and State
employees are not paying income tax. You see,
there has been an exception in some cases
where the State did not tax Federal income and --
Bell:
Federal didn't tax --
Edward:
Federal didn't tax State income and if it were
brought directly to the attention of the Amer-
ican people that the President is paying taxes,
I think it would be a very fine thing.
H.V.Jr:
I think if he said, "A million Government
employees and I all pay taxes," and I am sug-
gesting that the President 70 on the radio
August 1, Ferdie, and say, "I have got to set
aside half my salary. Therefore, I am going
to buy two thousand dollars a month of these."
Bell:
And he could very well bring in the fact that
Federal and State employees both pay income
taxes and then he could say that he is buying
these to meet his tax bill. I think it would
be swell.
H.M.Jr:
I think he ought to do it. I say August 1,
because I am going to be away. I will have
to come back a day early. He may be up at Hyde
Park. He can do it up there.
Don't you think he ought to do it?
Kuhn:
It is good. Of course, there were a few kick-
backs from parties that are not friendly
people when the President bought his first De-
fense Bonds. The idea has gotten around that the
President is a very rich man with a huge salary
and "why does anything that he may do have any
relevance to what we little people ought to do?"
Regraded Unclassified
93
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, on the other hand, the fact that he
did it and the newspaper clippings gave us
a great break - it was a real push. You
people can think it over. I think he might say,
"I have got to set aside half of my salary
and I do it cheerfully and I am going to buy
that amount each month." That happens to fit
in. In the room here, very, very personally,
I heard Mrs. Roosevelt tell him last March,
"Franklin, I hope you set aside half your
salary every month and put it in the bank.
If you don't, you should. I can't tell you
the answer.
Bell:
I will bet that was good, too. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
I was sitting there and I heard it. I think
it is good.
Bell:
I do too, I think it is fine.
H.M.Jr:
Then I have got to say, "I would do the same
but the law won't let me. Therefore, we are
trying to get a bill through that I can do it."
Because he will say, "How about you, Henry?"
Bell:
Your wife can buythem. Then we can make
arrangements so we can accept them.
H.M.Jr:
Well, anyway, to get him to do it, I think
that would give the thing the right start
and then he can talk about the savings and
money not going in, people should put their
money aside and not let it go into automobiles
and ice boxes and that kind of stuff.
94
- 9 -
Bell:
Inflationary lines.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Bell:
The third is the seven million names that we
have on plates. We can run off envelopes
rather quickly and that is now being done.
Mr. Sloan tells me this morning he things
that will be completed by the twenty-seventh.
H.M.Jr:
Wonderful.
Bell:
We shall then begin mailing them so that they
will reach the farthest point away by the
first, mailing them pamphlets and any other
information you want to put in.
H.M.Jr:
What about the names of people that didn't
pay taxes last year, are you going to cut
plates for them?
Bell:
We haven't got the money, but - how many can
we out?
Sloan:
We have about five million names on Addresso-
graph plates of people who filed income
taxes. We don't know whether they paid or
didn't pay, but they are all on that list and
then we have nearly two million names of
owners of Savings Bonds 80 that gives us a
good list right off the bat.
Bell:
But there are nine million more names which we
could out if we had the money. We have got
about three hundred thousand dollars and
material that we can go ahead and out the
plates with. That will out what, about -
less than two million names?
Kilby:
A million and a half to two million.
H.M.Jr:
You can't cut but so many a week.
Regraded Unclassified
95
- 10 -
Bell:
That is right. It would take us almost a
year, I guess, to cut the full nine million
names, maybe a year and a half if we had the
money.
H.M.Jr:
Are these good names to circulate?
Bell:
Well, they ought to be potential taxpayers
this year.
Buckley:
I should think they are the finest list we
could get.
H.M.Jr:
Now, is there any way of picking those two
million that we cut?
Bell:
We can pick them as far as 1040 and 1040a
returns are concerned.
Buckley:
You can pick them above five thousand and
below. We can segregate them that way.
M.M.Jr:
I doubt whether there will be too many names
above five thousand.
Kilby:
About four million, we think.
H.L.Jr:
Let's start on that above five thousand, and
we can get some more money certainly within
the next six months.
Bell:
I should think SO.
H.M.Jr:
I would like to recommend that you start out-
ting the names above five thousand.
Bell:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
I would start that immediately.
Bell:
That is in process.
Regraded Unclassified
96
- 11 -
H.M.Jr:
What else?
Bell:
Then I think the collectors of Internal Revenue
should mail out with the tax bill - you know,
every quarter they mail you a tax slip and
they just put in the envelope information con-
cerning this tax note.
11.M.Jr:
Yes.
Bell:
Well, that is all concerning the mailing,
and now this is the radio.
H.M.Jr:
Before we get to that, what is the ABA going
to do?
Edward:
Anything you want.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I think that that circular which they
got out on their own on the other was a swell
job, and I wonder whether they wouldn't want
to maybe take this circular and adopt it or
get one out of their own?
Edward:
These fellows have done it here. They have
done just what the ABA did with the other
circular.
Bell:
And we are going to furnish each bank with a
supply of those.
Edward:
There is one thing I am going to do personally,
Mr. Secretary, in my bank. We pay our em-
ployees & bonus. I am going to pay them part
of that bonus in these things.
H.M.Jr:
Well, think about it, and see what the ABA
thinks. Put it up to them.
Edward:
I will do it. A good many banks have already
been writing in wanting to know when this
plan was coming through. They want to buy
Regraded Unclassified
97
- 12 -
them themselves, and they alsowant to sell
them.
Bell:
There are many banks, Mr. Secretary, that are
circularizing their depositors and asking them
to set aside a certain amount each month in
B. special account. I got a letter from my
bank the other day showing what taxes I would
pay under the House bill and under the Treasury
bill and saying that the facilities of the
bank are available to set aside in a special
account each month the amount of money that
would pay the taxes. A number of banks are
doing that.
H.M.Jr:
I have a friend who is sick in a hospital
and a friend of hers called me up and said,
"Well, now, her slip came in this week."
I had never seen one of these before. It was
from the Treasury reminding her that she was
to buy a Defense Bond this month. The
Treasury of the United States mails her a
slip saying, This month you buy so mich." I
had never seen one of those before.
Hell:
She must be on the regular purchase plan.
Sloan:
That is the regular purchase plan. We have
a return envelope, Mr. Secretary, especially
designed on the order of the old Veterans'
Bureau envelope, you know.
H.M.Jr:
I have never seen one.
Sloan:
I will see that you get one.
H.M.Jr:
I have got one, because I am picking this up
for this person.
Sloan:
We have nearly a hundred thousand people that
we mail these to. Most of them are on a monthly
basis.
Regraded Unclassified
98
- 13 -
H.M.Jr:
I had never seen one, but 1 am picking one up
for this friend.
Slown:
We would like to have a million like that
if we can get them.
Ruan:
Dan, was that letter from the bank keyed to
your particular personal case or was it tell-
ing--
Bell:
It gave the range, what you would pay if you
had an income between eight and ten, ten and
fifteen, fifteen and twenty, up to fifty or
sixty thousand dollars.
Kuhn:
I think that kind of thing in great detail is
one of the best things that the banks can do
for everybody, to get out complete tables of
every conceivable range of income and put
those things under the counter so that people
will be able to pick that up and find out how
much they will be likely to have to pay in
taxes.
Beil:
That is the best thing to bring it home to
the fellow that he has really got a tax bill
next March.
Kuhn:
Because otherwise he will wait until next
May to begin to worry about it.
Dell:
That is right.
Jr:
I won't go on the thirty-first if the Presi-
dent does it August 1.
Callahan:
You can go on with the President, though.
Jr:
That is all right. And you are going to substi-
tute this plan on the quiz boxes for the first
fifteen days of August?
Regraded Unclassified
99
- 14 -
Callahan:
No, we are not going to drop it. We plan
on this whole thing sort of carried on to-
gether, not ask for anything additional, but
cut down a little on the bonds and make it
all part of one thing.
Bell:
I understand they are have difficulty in
making up questions, so they wanted to kind
of cut down on that quiz box thing.
Callahan:
We plan to cut the quiz from six to three A
week.
H.M.Jr:
Does he get on the Treasury Hour too?
Callahan:
I haven't thought of that yet.
Bell:
I wouldn't mix them too much.
II.K.Jr:
I--
Callahan:
I think the way we have got it now it just
fits in.
H.M.Jr:
I am having 8. little fun.
Callahan:
Incidentally, they asked for it.
H.M.Jr:
What?
Callahan:
They asked for it.
H.M.Jr:
What?
Callahan:
Wanted to announce it on the Treasury Hour.
Bell:
Who asked for it?
Callahan:
The people who are running the Treasury Hour
program.
Beil:
Really?
Regraded Unclassified
100
- 15 -
H.M.Jr:
I think this is swell. I am delighted.
Now, will the printing and all - how many
of those circulars are you going to--
Bell:
We have ordered ten million, and they can be
run off very fast, and if we get the first
ten million--
H.M.Jr:
You are going to mail out seven million?
Bell:
Yes, it will be enough to give us a supply
for the first batch, and then we will get
some more right away.
H.M.Jr:
Not enough, Dan.
Sloan:
If we get some additional questions where we
have overlooked anything, we can reprint them
very quickly.
M.M.Jr:
How quickly?
Buckley:
They can do 8. million a day.
Sloan:
Within the first three or four days. Start
getting deliveries on the sixteenth, I think.
H.M.Jr:
Will somebody contact Stephen Early about the
President?
Callahan:
Yes.
Bell:
Want me to do that?
H.M.Jr:
I am looking to you on this other thing.
Kuhn:
Schwarz usually does it.
Callahan:
Well, I don't know.
H.M.Jr:
Schwarz does that, I think.
Regraded Unclassified
101
- 16 -
Bell:
On the radio thing too?
Kuhn:
Anything.
H.M.Jr:
Schwarz does that. He should have been here
anyway.
Bell:
Yes, he should have. I never thought of it.
I am sorry.
M.M.Jr:
Gentlemen, that sounds fine.
Bell:
I think we will be ready to shoot.
H.M.Jr:
I made a big contribution. I took three
lines off the front page of the book, Ferdie.
Bell:
Did you see it, Ferdie?
Kuhn:
No.
H.M.Jr:
I made a real contribution.
Thank you all.
Regraded Unclassified
102
TREASURT SCHEDULE FOR MAKING INFORMATION CONCERNING TAX ANTICIPATION
NOTES AVAILABLE 90 FEDERAL BANKS AND THE FUELIG QUEERALLY
July 2204
Prolisinary letter addressed to all banks explaining tax-
enticipation mates, asking for their cooperation in helping
targayers file applications, and thenking then for all their
afforts is behalf of the Treasury, including Savings Deads
sales.
July 24th
legin miling Treasury offering sirealar, 6 supply of
purphlets on tax notes, and a early of application blenks,
Press release for August 100, to all Federal Reserve
and to Collectors of Internal Invonte, (Delivery to be
completed by July 29th.)
July 27th
Bagin miling purphlete an fax motes to Internal Revenue
list, for which plates are available, and levings Dead list,
agreeming about 7,000,000 mass. This probably cas mt
be completed by August 1st, but should continue ustil completed.
July 30th
Regin mailing from Federal Before Banks to all hanking insti-
tatiens and others on 733 mailing list, treasury offering
sireular and Prose release, engyly of application Masks and
pumphlets, # as to reach destination by opening of business
August 108, date of
Cellectors of Internal Revenue should include with every tax Mll
hereafter mailed to a taxpayer information on the tax notos.
July 11, 1941
Regraded Unclassified
103
July " 1941
Mr. Slean
Mr. Callaham
Suggestions for Newspaper and Radio Publicity
Treasury Tax Sevince Plan
RADIO
July 29-30
Two announcements per day, 100 words each, on all
radio stations. These will tell of tax plan -
"starts" Friday, August 1st.
July 31
Secretary of the Treasury Morgentheu in fifteen-
simte address over CBS, NBC and Natual, amouncing
savings plan starts tonorrow.
August 1-10
Two daily announcements on all radio stations.
August 1-10
Three five-minate interviews by annovener with Under-
secretary Bell, These should be transcribed and
sent to all radio stations.
August 1
Five-minate interviews, prepared by us, for use a
radio stations in various citice, with Collectors of
Internal Revemes personally speaking at the radio
stations. Collectors will give details of savings
plan - factual information.
In brief, the radio plan contemplates the use of 14,800
radio announcements, cas network broadeast, and five-mimis inter-
views over 600 stations. Altogether, 2400 separate interviews, also
approximately 800 interviews with Collectors.
This program is intensive, but I as sure radio stations
will be glad to cooperate.
Regraded Unclassified
104
+
PRESS
July 29
General story for use is every daily, weekly
and foreign newspaper is country. This story
is to be sent out in advance, and collectors
should be given copies and asked to personally
visit newspapers. This story should be complete,
telling full story of tax plan.
August 2-15
Quis Boxes on Savings Plan - same newspaper list
now used on Defense Bond (ais. Tax Quis to be:
used six times in two weeks, Tuesday, Thursday,
Saturday - alternating with Bond Quisnes.
In addition, at least three stories should ⑈
out during first two weeks of August, to supplement first story.
I believe that there will be considerable publicity
on opening day, August lot, without pressure on our part. The
Secretary's speech will be printed on opening day and newspapers
generally will regard the tax plan as real mws.
Regraded Unclassified
105
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
July 11, 1941
Dear Mr. Morgenthau:
At the conference in your office this morning with
respect to the sale of Treasury certificates to be used
for the payment of income taxes, you asked me as to what
the American Bankers Association would do.
I am pleased to inform you that they have already
been furnished a copy of the pamphlet which you saw and
approved, outlining and describing these securities. It
will be published in full and complete form in the issue
of their magazine, "Banking", which will be distributed
to all the banks throughout the country on August 1.
They will also follow up and sponsor the program.
Ir. Bell told us of a. communication received by him
from one of the banks in Washington, which apparently is
being sent out to all of their depositors, giving informa-
tion as to comparative taxes. I have obtained a copy of
this communication from the Hamilton National Bank and I
em having the figures checked by Mr. Sullivan's office.
As soon as they are verified, it is our intention to ask
the American Bankers Association to sponsor a program by
all the banks throughout the nation, asking them to dis-
tribute this information. Thinking possibly you would
like a copy of this communication, I am enclosing it.
With my sincere regards, I am
Cordially yours,
V. 1. Edwards
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Enclosure
Regraded Unclassified
106
$
-
Hamilton National Bank
of Washington, D.C.
June 24, 1941
TO OUR DEPOSITORS:
The Secretary of the Treasury and Congress are preparing now income tax
bille, both of which recommend taxes for the year 1941 greatly in excess
of those that have been paid in prior years.
Feeling that the public generally does not realize the probable extent to
which their taxes will be raised, we are drawing the attention of our
customers to the situation BO that they might give some thought to future
taxes and begin immediately to lay saide regularly in B. separate "tax"
account such sums as might be needed to accumulate the necessary amount
to pay their taxes for 1941.
The following schedule showing the effect of the proposed bills gives some
indication of what might be expected by married couples without dependents.
Net income shown is after interest and taxes paid, contributions, losses,
etc. have been deducted from gross income and the personal exemption has
likewise been taken.
Net
Present
Congress
Treasury
Income
Taxes
Proposal
Proposal
2,500
11.00
38.50
72.00
3,000
31.00
85.80
152.00
4,000
70.00
180.40
312.00
5,000
110.00
308.00
506.00
6,000
150,00
435.60
700.00
8,000
317.00
756.80
1,131.00
10,000
528.00
1,166.00
1,628.00
15,000
1,258.00
2,545.00
3,073.00
20,000
2,336.00
4,338.40
4,800.00
25,000
3,843.00
6,505.40
6,824.00
We strongly recommend to our depositors that B. Tax Reserve account, to be
kept separate and spart from their other funds, be opened in our Checking
or Savings Department. This may be done without formality and can be 8.0-
complished by mil, if desired.
Cordially yours,
EC Graham
E. C. Graham
President
Regraded Unclassified
107
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 11, 1941
TO
Ferdinand Kuhn, Jr.
FROM
Herbert Morillat
PRESS OPINION ON TAXES:
TAX-ANTICIPATION NOTES
The Treasury's tax-prepayment plan has had a very favorable
reception in the press. It was given wide publicity in news columns
but so far there has not been much editorial comment outside of
Eastern city papers. Almost all papers which have commented have
been enthusiastic. These merits are seen in the new plan: (1) a
convenient method for taxpayers to meet their increased income tax
bills; (2) 8 steady flow of revenue into the Treasury; (3) less
need for the Government to rely on borrowing; (4) 8. check on in-
flationary tendencies by reducing purchasing power available for
consumer goods.
The tax-anticipation certificates are regarded as especially
attractive to corporate taxpayers. The Washington Post expressed 8.
doubt whether small taxpayers would take full advantage of the
certificates.
The Chicago Journal of Commerce struck almost the only sour
note. The Treasury's plan, it intimated, was devised solely for
the benefit of the Treasury, not for the taxpayer. Provision for
Regraded Unclassified
103
- 2 -
payment of taxes could always be made by farsighted taxpayers,
this paper said. The Treasury's eagerness to collect the money
now was simply a sign of the parlous financial state into which
New Deal fiscal policies have brought us.
Joint Returns
The Ways and Means Committee's proposal to require joint
returns from married couples has become the villain of the piece
in the eyes of many editorial writers. It has almost replaced
the failure to broaden the tax base as the No. 1 defect of the
new tax bill. The most extravagant charges are made against the
proposal: it will break up homes, encourage living in sin, place
the married woman in the status of 8. chattel, and nullify state
constitutions which provide for the community-property system.
Papers in community-property states have been particularly vocif-
erous. Their fire centers on the alleged invasion of states'
rights. The "feminist" argument is stressed in other papers.
Typical of these comments is the New York Herald Tribune's state-
ment that "so far as the legal, social and economic position of
Women in America is concerned", the joint return "would turn the
clock back & hundred years."
A lonely voice raised in support of the measure is that of
the Washington Post. It remarks that & marriage based on mercenary
considerations is not worth worrying about, that no question of
women's rights is involved, and that family income is a realistic
Regraded Unclassified
109
- 3 -
measure of ability to pay. It also points out the error of reports
that the requirement would add to the taxes of those in the low
brackets.
Recently there have been widespread newspaper reports that
the Committee will reconsider its joint return proposal because of
the volume of protests. Some editorial writers have observed cynical-
ly that Congressmen whose wives have independent incomes may push
such "reconsideration."
Excises
The cry of "Politics!" has greeted the Committee's excise tax
proposals as well as its income tax recommendations. Editorial com-
ment has stressed that the excises should reduce consumption of
durable goods as well as raise revenue. This, it is said, the Com-
mittee's bill fails to do. Such comment shows that the Henderson-
Ecoles proposals made 8. strong impression. The Committee has also
been criticized for passing up such revenue-producers as tobacco,
gasoline, and beer, and compiling instead a heterogeneous list of
excises bearing little relation to defense needs.
The 7% car tax has had a mixed reception, some papers welcom-
ing the comparatively light tax on the grounds that car-owners have
already been discriminated against, while others favor a higher tax
as & means of discouraging purchase of cars. With regard to taxes
on other durable consumer goods, the press has generally agreed that
Regraded Unclassified
110
- 4 -
the Committee failed to tax such goods heavily enough.
The announcement of the Committee's complete list of recom-
mendations for taxes to raise $31 billion was the occasion for a
general review of the tax program in many papers. No one is satis-
fied with the result. Conservative papers hit the failure to tax
low incomes more heavily in the form of income taxes or excises;
the liberal press condemns the Committee for making hash of the
Treasury's EPT plan and relying too heavily on excises.
Collier's Survey
A recent survey conducted by Collier's Magazine reported
that 82% of those canvassed (10,000 persons in 47 states) favored
& pay-as-we-go policy in financing national defense. 60% of these
favored reliance on sales taxes to raise the money, 22% favored
taxes deducted from wages, and 13% favored the income tax. The survey
has revived hope among those papers which have advocated a general
sales tax. In the poll's result they see a clear invitation to
Congress to consider such a tax.
111
July 11, 1941
10:55 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator:
Go ahead.
HMJr:
Clif?
Clifton
Mack:
Yes.
HMJr:
Did you hear anything from Mr. Hamm?
M:
I have not. I just left my office a
few minutes ago and I'm now in Graves'
office.
HMJr:
Oh, because I spoke to him and he said
he'd get in touch with you.
M:
Well, now, he may have called the office
after I left.
HMJr:
Well, get word - I expect to leave around
four - if anything happens during the day,
let Mrs. Klotz know, will you?
M:
I'll do that.
HMJr:
Thank you. Everything else all right?
M:
Yes sir. Fine and thank you.
Regraded Unclassified
112
July 11, 1941
10:59 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello, Herbert.
Herbert
Gaston:
I - after reading that record, I talked to
Matthews in the Democratic Committee, Flynn
being out of town, and he told me that he
just cleared it personally with Flynn and
it was all right for us to go ahead on
Pabst.
HMJr:
Would you mind getting in touch with
Connelly?
G:
I'll be glad to call him and also because
of the elight misunderstanding, Matthews
volunteered that he would also call Connelly
and assure him that we had not taken it up
with the National Committeeman, but that it
was okay with - that Flynn personally said,
"Fine".
HMJr:
Well, I think if you could call up - either
call up or go up and see him.
G:
Yes, I'll call him up.
HMJr:
He's quite excited.
G:
Yes, I could see that from the record.
HMJr:
Yeah.
G:
Of course, we have direct orders to refer
everything to Flynn.
HMJr:
Well, that's what I thought.
G:
Yes.
HMJr:
And he said he'd go over White House. Herbert?
G:
Yes.
HMJr:
Don't take the rap for the Treasury.
5
No.
HMJr:
And I think better than phone, I'd go up
and see him and tell him if those are our
order, those are our orders.
Regraded Unclassified
113
- 2 -
G:
Yes, yes.
HMJr:
Now, we just on politics, carry out the
orders of the President.
G:
Yes, yes.
HMJr:
Don't take the rap.
G:
No. Right.
HMJr:
All right, Herbert.
G:
Right.
114
July 11, 1941
11:58 a.m.
Francis
Biddle:
Henry, Francis.
HMJr:
Henry talking. How are you?
B:
I'm fine. Henry, I have a favor to ask,
which is this.
HMJr:
Granted.
B:
Well now, wait a minute. We're going to
try Nucky Johnson on Monday.
HMJr:
Wonderful. Do you want me to come down and
have my picture taken or go on the radio?
B:
(Laughs) Your intelligence prepared the case.
HMJr:
Yeah.
B:
There's new evidence of tampering. We're
going to look the jury up.
HMJr:
Yeah.
B:
We would like very much if you could let us
have some men to examine the panel of 50.
HMJr:
Yeah, who....
B:
Could you do it?
HMJr:
Sure.
B:
That will be splendid.
HMJr:
What kind of men do you want?
B:
Your intelligence people.
HMJr:
Oh, Internal Revenue intelligence.
B:
That's right.
HMJr:
Well, supposing - - who should they contact -
you?
115
- 2 -
B:
Sam Clark, who 16 head of the Tax Division.
HMJr:
Sam Clark?
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
Sam Clark.
B:
He's head of our Tax Division.
HMJr:
I know Sam.
3:
You know Sam.
HMJr:
Yeah. I'll have it done within the minute.
B:
That's perfect.
HMJr:
I'll have our fellows contact - I'll tell
Ed Foley to tell Internal Revenue to contact
Sam Clark and give him whatever he wants.
B:
Why, you're a peach.
HMJr:
No, that's easy. I want - I want Nucky
Johnson - he started my office - that case.
B:
Well, you're a man of action.
HMJr:
And how are you coming along yourself?
B:
Well, I don't just know. It's - see - it's
just. - I don't - I think everything 18
all right. I think it's Just being kind
of put off a bit.
HXJr:
Is there any truth that your senator from
Pennsylvania ien't friendly?
B:
He's written a letter to the President
endorsing me up to the sky.
HMJr:
Well, that's fixed.
B:
That had to be arranged. It was done without
my knowledge.
HMJr:
I see.
3:
All right.
Regraded Unclassified
116
- 3 -
HMJr:
Bo that's that.
B:
That's that. Yeah.
HMJr:
You coming to Cabinet today?
B:
No. Bob's going to be there, but I'm
coming over to see him sworn in. He's
going to be sworn in right afterwards.
HMJr:
I see.
B:
So, I'll see you there.
HMJr:
Well, more power to you.
B:
Thank you, old boy.
HMJr:
Goodbye.
117
July 11, 1941
12:01 p.m.
HMJr:
Ed?
Ed
Foley:
Yes, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
Solicitor General just called up.
He wants some help from Internal Revenue
intelligence to examine the panel on the
Nucky Johnson case on Monday.
F:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I told him we'd give him anything we've
got and tell Internal Revenue fellows
to get in touch with Sam Clark.
F:
Right.
HMJr:
And give them a help. Take care of it,
will you?
F:
You bet.
HMJr:
See that it's done.
F:
Okay.
HMJr:
I'm forgetting about it.
F:
All right, I'll do it.
HMJr:
All right.
118
July 11, 1941
ORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY'S FILES:
A meeting relative to the administration of Executive
Order 8389, as amended, was held in Mr. Foley's office at 4:00
p.m., July 11, 1941, attended from time to time by the following:
Messrs. Foley, Cochran, B. Bernstein, Pehle, E. M. Bernstein,
Dr. Viner and Mr. Aikin for the Treasury, Messrs. Acheson and
Luthringer for State, Messrs. Shea, Rosenwald and Jurenev for
Justice.
After considerable discussion concerning a Trade License for
Switzerland, it was agreed that the problem resolved itself into:
(1) the export of edibles and (2) of metals and minerals. Mr.
Acheson indicated that those in the latter category would probably
be reduced to a bare minimum. With respect to exports to Switzer-
land which are permitted, there was general agreement that Mr.
cheson should explore the possibility of channeling these through
an official Swiss Purchasing Commission.
Mr. Foley stated that a General License for Spain had been
granted.
Ir. Bernstein again brought up the urgency of establishing
& coordinated policy for handling patent applications. Mr. Shea
mentioned that Mr. Kreeger, of his Department, was presently pre-
paring & memorandum on this matter and that, as soon as it was
ready, his Department was prepared to give consideration to the
establishment of an Inter-Departmental Committee for handling
patent cases.
Mr. Bernstein said that a draft of the proposed TFR-300
reyort would be ready tomorrow and copies would be distributed
to the interested departments for their comment.
Regraded Unclassified
119
JUL 11 1941
My dear Mr. Secretary:
Receipt is acknowledged of the letter
dated July 8, 1941 (reference Le), signed by the
Acting Secretary of State, relating to the insti-
tution of forfeiture preceedings against certain
fereign flag vessels on which acts of sabotage
were committed in American ports.
I have transmitted a copy of that letter
to the Atterney General of the United States. A
copy of the letter of transmittal is enclosed for
your infermation.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) I. Worgenthan, It.
Secretary of the Treasury.
The Honorable
The Secretary of State.
FILE TO MR. FOLEY
ERF :rgs
7/10/41
By Measons#
Regraded Unclassified
120
COPY
July 10, 1941
My dear Mr. Attorney General:
Further reference is made to the letter from
you dated July 2, 1941, and its enclosure of a letter
from you to the Secretary of State dated July 2, 1941,
with respect to the proposed seisure and forfeiture of
certain sabotaged Italian and German vessels under see-
tion 8 of Title II of the Espionage Act of June 15, 1917,
40 Stat. 220 (U.S.C. title 50, see. 193). On July s,
1941, I replied to your letter and sent a copy of my PO-
ply to the Secretary of State. In my reply of July 3,
1941, you will recall, I stated that the Department of
the Treasury would direct seisure of the vessels concerned
imediately upon advice from the Department of State that
such seisure would not sontravene the foreign policy of
the United States.
I an new in receipt of a letter signed by the
Acting Secretary of State and dated July 8, 1941, a copy
of which is enclosed, in which that officer takes the
position that, since it appears from your letter to the
extra
Regraded Unclassified
121
Regraded Unclassifie
- 2 -
Secretary of State of July 2, 1941, that the President
has approved the institution of forfeiture proceedings,
it is unnecessary for the Department of State to alab-
crate further on its letter to me of June so, 1941.
Inasmer as in your letter to the Secretary
of State on July 2 1t was assumed that the President's
approval took into consideration your representation to
the President that the Department of State had no objec-
tions to the forfeiture propesal, it is felt that this
Department cannot, under the present sircumstances, pro-
cood with the seisure of the vessels involved. This
Department is still ready, however, 80 to proceed If the
Department of State or the President will advise m that
such seisure will not contravene the foreign policy of
the United States. Furthermers, this Department stands
ready, on the receipt of such advice, to adopt a seisure
of the vessels conserned made by agents of your Depart-
ment if you should desire to proceed in that fashion.
There seems authority for such adeption in seisure and
ferfeiture proceedings with respect to violations of the
122
- 3 -
customs laws. See in that connection United States V. Two
Automobiles and Five Cases of Whisky, (S.D. Calif. 1924)
2 F.(2d) 264; United States V. 579 Sacks of Whisky, (D. Mass.
1927) 28 F. (2d) 882; In PO Commercial Inv. Trust Cerpora-
tion, (W.D. N.Y. 1829) 31 F.(2d) 4941 Gelston V. Heyt,
(U.S. 1818) 3 Wheat. 246, 310; Dodge T. United States,
(1926) 272 U.S. 530.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
The Honorable
The Attorney General of the United States.
001 The Honorable
The Secretary of State.
Sent by Special Measenger 7-10-41 11 AM
ERF:rgs
7-9-41
copy
Regraded Unclassified
123
COPY
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Washington
July a, 1941
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I an in receipt of your two letters of July 2 and
July 3 with further reference to the institution of
forfeiture proceedings against certain foreign flag
vessels on which acts of sabotage were committed in our
ports.
The conduct of the foreign relations of the United
States is, under the Constitution, entrusted to the
President. It appears from a letter addressed to this
Department by the Attorney General under date of July 2,
& copy of which he states was sent to you, that the
President has given his approval to the institution of
forfeiture proceedings in these cases. In these sir-
cumstances it seems unnecessary for me to elaborate on
my letter to you of June 30, 1941 on the subject.
I
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
124
-2- .
I am addressing a similar communication to the
Attorney General.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Summer Welles
Acting Secretary.
3
125
0:
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Sounds mighty like Sheary
improves with age, doesn't it?
Rats 7.
fil Julner
)
16-19330
MR. FORRESTAL
Regraded Unclassified
126
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
WASHINGTON
July 11, 1941
Dear Henry:
Thank you very much for your note
about Sheary. If there is anything available
for him I shall be grateful, if not, I shall
be equally grateful for your trouble.
I'd like to catch you for lunch some
day next week - how about coming over and trying
some Navy grub?
Sincerely yours,
James him Forrestal
ok
The Honorable
100 wed
The Secretary of the Treasury
7/16/41
Washington, D.C.
7
-here'
127
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 8, 1941
Secretary Morgenthau
OM
E. H. Foley, Jr.
Personal and Confidential
On behalf of Frank E. Sheary, I object to
the obvious run-around. From Foley to the Acting
Secretary of the Navy, to the Secretary of the
Treasury to Foley is really too much.
As your General Counsel, however, I have
prepared a reply to Jim Forrestal's letter, and
I am referring Mr. Sheary's letter to the Foreign
Funds Control Section where I am sure it will be
given the attention it deserves.
9.15.7h
Attachment
128
July 8, 1941
Dear Jime
I have your letter of July $ end
the enclosed letter from Frenk L Sheary.
-I think Sheary is a little old
for bank examining. However, I have
referred the letter to the Foreign Funds
Centrol Section for consideration.
Sincerely yours,
Homerable James Ferrestal
The Under Secretary of the Ravy.
EHF:mp 7/8/41
129
July 7. 1941
My dear General Counsel:
I an in receipt of the attached letter
from the Acting Secretary of the Navy with
which was enclosed a letter from Frank E.
Sheary, from which I wish to quote:
"At the suggestion of your
Secretary, Miss Katherine
Foley *** .
If at some time convenient to Miss Foley
you could take this matter up with her, I
would appreciate it if the two of you would
discharge ability. this matter to the best of your
Very truly yours,
General Counsel,
honorable Edward H. Foley, Jr.,
Treasury Department,
Washington, D.C.
Regraded Unclassified
130
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
OFFICE of THE DIRECTOR
WASHINGTON
July 11, 1941
MEMORANDUM TO THE SECRETARY:
Weekly Report - Lease-Lend Purchases
(7/5 - 7/11/41)
Purchases to 7/5/41
$ 45,849,778.86
Purchases 7/5 to 7/11/41
2,504,930.80
Total to 7/11/41
$ 48,354,709.66
Requisitions Pending
Estimated Cost
Cleared By O.P.M.
$ 198,540,691.72
Awaiting Clearance By O.P.M.
17,344,677.00
Total Pending Requisitions
$ 215,885,368.72
Liaison has been established with OPACS in order that we will
be currently informed on price maximum determinations to avoid
delays in effecting purchases.
In
John Glifton E. Mack
Director of Procurement
Attachments-2
CONTRACT
(GQUISI-
NUMBER
CONTRACTOR'S NAME
TIONER
COM ODITY
QUANTITY
TOTAL VALUE
DA-TPS-290
Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.Inc.
China
Lubricating Oil 161,000 gals.
$ 73,255.00
DA-TPS-231 Caterpillar Tractor Co.
11.
Tractors & Spare Parts
122
561,929.14
II
DA-TPS-303 Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. Inc.
Aero Rocker Arm Grease 2,000 lbs
235.30
"
DA-TPS-302 Shell Oil Co. Inc.
Aeroplane Reduction Gear Oil
1,470 gals.
808.50
DA-TPS-247 The Dow Chemical Co.
U. K.
Dowtherm
448,000 lbs.
76,160.00
Il
DA-TPS-244 National Carbide Corp.
Calcium Carbide
300 S.T.
21,600.00
DA-TPS-413 Wickwire Spencer Steel Co.
"
Rope Wire
1,800.00
DA-TPS-333 Aeroaffiliates, Inc.
If
Boring Mill
1
15,565.00
DA-TPS-420 Southern Oxygen Co. Inc.
If
Electrodes
2,074.50
DA-TPS-322 S. B. Penick & Co.
Canada
Atropine Sulphate
8 oz.
102.00
DA-TPS-292 Chas. G. Stott & Co. Inc.
U. K.
Pen Points, 173 gr.; Pencils 125 gr.
613.23
If
DA-TPS-296
Photostat Corp.
Photo copying machine
1
5,200.00
DA-TPS-285 American-Marsh Pumps, Inc.
If
Fire Pumps
1,000
375,000.00
DA-TPS-317 R. P. Andrews Paper Co.
If
Drawing Ink
725 bottles
108.75
DA-TPS-90
International Harvester Export Co."
Harrow and Grain Drills 18 ea.
4,547.10
"
DA-TPS-289
Ralph B. Carter Co.
Pumps
2,500
544,300.00
131
If
DA-TPS-295 Barcalo Mfg. Co.
Wrenches
4,500 sets
2,070.00
Regraded Unclassifie
CONTRACT
REQUISI-
NUMBER
CONTRACTOR'S NAME
TIONER
COLL ODITY
QUANTITY
TOTAL VALUE
DA-TPS-298 Geo. P. Muth Co. Inc.
U.K.
Drawing Paper
200 rolls
420.00
"
DA-TPS-320 American Paper Company
Bags, Kraft Paper
53,000
91.70
DA-TPS-353 Huther Bros. Saw & Mfg. Co.
If
Saws, Circular Wood
260
1,527.00
DA-TPS-339 The Duff-Norton Mfg. Co.
II
Jacks
30
4,177.80
DA-TPS-331 Indianapolis Mchy.& Supply Co.
"
Milling Machine
1
3,825.00
DA-TPS-324 Wm. C. Ballantyne
tr
Labels Gummed
118.76
DA-TPS-357 The Phosphate Mining Co.
If
Phosphatic Fertilizer 5,000 Tons
147,375.00
DA-TPS-209 R. G. Le Tourneau, Inc.
"
Spare Parts for Scrapers and
Rooters
1,831.40
DA-TPS-334 J. L. Lucas & Son, Inc.
If
Lathes, Turret 3
5,250.00
DA-TPS-422 Wright Mfg. Div. of American
Chain
II
Hoist Chains
120
1,264.50
DA-TPS-412 Ehret Magnesia Mfg. Co.
If
Millboard Asbestos 66,000 lbs
3,135.00
DA-TPS-464 N.Y. Wire Cloth Co.
If
Cloth Wire Screen 300,000 Sq.Ft.
5,160.00
$ 1,859,544.68
Steel Purchases 7/5 to 7/11/41
$ 646,676.19
Decrease due to actual cost being less than
132
encumbered amounts previously used
$
1,290.07
Total Purch ses 7/5 to 7/11/41
$
0
0
133
P
Y
July 11, 1941
Dear General Burns:
For your information, I have designated Mr.
Clifton E. Mack, Director of Procurement of the
Treasury Department as the representative of the
Treasury in defense aid matters referred to in
section 1 of Regulation No. 1 of the Division of
Defense Aid Reports, approved by the President June 20,
1941, and promulgated in the Federal Register of
July 8, 1941.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) 1: Worgenthan, 11.
Secretary of the Treasury.
Major General Jamés H. Burns,
Executi ve Officer,
Division of Defense A1d Reports,
Office for Emergency Management,
Washington, D. C.
WNT;dm
File to Mr. Thompson
m
Messenger
Regraded Unclassified
134
JUL 11 1941
Mr. Clifton 2. Mask,
Director of Procurement,
Treasury Department.
Sirs
You are hereby designated as the Treasury representative
to consult with the Executive Officer of the Division of
Defense Aid Reports in matters of determination of the value
of defense articles, defense services and defense inform-
ation transferred or received by the United States, pro-
vided for under section 1 of Regulation No. 1 of the Division
of Defense Aid Reports, approved by the President June 20,
1941, and promulgated in the Federal Register of July s, 1941.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthan, Dr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
File to Mr. Thompson
WNT:da
By Messenger
Regraded Unclassified
135
July 11, 1941
My dear Mr. President:
I am sending you herewith a chart which
I have had checked by Mr. Lubin.
Please note that in the period from Jan-
uary 5 to July 5, inclusive, the Navy has received
only 100 flying boats and the British Empire, 87;
that there are only 896 flying boats on order, of
which 75 are for the British Empire.
Yours sincerely,
(signed) H. MORGENTHAU, JR.
The President,
The White House.
Copies to:
Secretary of War
Secretary of the Navy
Mr. Knudsen
Mr. Hillman
Regraded Unclassified
136
4-Magize Bonbers, 2-Magine Boaters, and Flying Rests*
Actual Deliveries January 5 to July 5. 1941, and
Scheduled Delivaries - of any 5. 1941
Covering Orders of the Aray, Buy, end British Regire
t
1
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
:
E
total
I Unfilled
Classification
deliveries
#
Netimated deliveries of millied orders
orders
and
Jamary 5
1
M of
1941
il
purchaser
1
#
19ke
$
July 5.
July 5:
:
I
#
#
:
1943
July 5. 1941
1941
I
il
to
m.
Sept.
Det.
In.
:
Dar.
Jan.
Feb.
Units-
I
I
Mar.
:
:
Welp n.
Apr.
May
June
1
July
:
:
Ang.
Sept.
#
Det.
I
Nov.
:
Dec.
Jan.
#
Feb.
I
Mar
Apr.
tributed
:
:
:
May
Imas
+-englas boabers
Are
51
3,178
6
9
19
35
43
58
79
66
ET
Navy
87
91
100
106
105
116
-
132
148
-
130
10#
130
149
149
145
149
906
Brittsh Expire
20
139
12
a
23
23
25
18
12
7
Total
71
3,317
18
30
kg
50
66
76
9%
93
57
67
91
100
106
108
116
132
1/M
130
108
130
199
149
145
149
908
2-engine beabers
Any
260
6,001
54
75
106
171
150
279
329
426
511
Bay
465
471
520
510
6
459
305
-
4
305
259
268
60
&
35
243
Britteh Expire
623
1,915
176
204
137
172
196
163
197
160
150
160
100
90
Total
1,103
7,924
230
279
243
343
346
442
526
590
675
625
571
610
510
Sin
305
305
259
264
60
35
243
Flying boate (4-engton
and 2-engine patrol
hosbers)
Aray
-
74
6
15
22
16
9
6
Hary
100
747
11
31
22
18
16
10
13
14
23
36
&
51
58
61
61
61
fil
61
61
Britteh Empire
2,
AT
75
6
3
5
11
14
16
14
3
Total
157
696
17
34
30
29
30
26
33
32
$
5
57
57
58
61
61
€1
fil
61
61
of
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Insurach and Statistics.
Propared July E, 1941.
Source: Reporte free individual companies.
Note: . Lease-land orders are placed by the Any and Bary and are classified as such rather than by the dessined recipient; therefore, the Brittsh Repire classification includes ealy British dollar contract orders.
Excludes spare parts.
Regraded Unclassified
137
C
0
P
Y
Dear Mr. Carmody:
I regret my delay in answering your letter
of June 21st. A hasty perusal was sufficient to
indicate that it raised matters which required
careful consideration. Unfortunately, I have been
terribly busy and have not yet had a chance to
give the matter further thought. I shall give it
my attention over the week-end.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Mr. John Carmody, Administrator,
Federal Works Agency,
Washington, D. C.
reginal
7/11 In. by Mr. White; sent to Mrs. Klotz
Origanal Document fil"
(Mr. White returned photostat to the Secy.)
HDW:1s
7/11/41
Regraded Unclassified
FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY
WASHINGTON
June 21, 1941
mo - THE INDISTRATE
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
With the approval of the President there has recently been set up
& NPA project, sponsored by the Federal Works Apency in cooporation
with the National Resources Plannin- Eoard, designated as the Public Work
Reserve, and having the following descriptions
*Secure and prepare information, data and estirates
to be used in the establishment of n. reservoir of
useful public projects to absorb post-cefense
unemployment."
It is hoped that this project will contribute to the sound planning of
public improvements and services essential to an expanding national
development following the present defense program.
In setting up the Public Work Reserve, it is intended that a hesis
be laid for a broed program of state and local work projects that may be
procecuted after the reduction of defense activities, in coordination
with the Federal Government's own six-year program of public work. The
Public ork Reserve encompasses every kind of public work that may be
projected. It divides itself naturally in two -- first, the capital
impro
programs of the states and municipalities of the Nation,
and
the programs of new or expanded public services that may be
plan
rejected for cities, counties, states, or even for regions.
hopeful that the Public Work Reserve shall be of maximum
aoh of the Federal Departments in encouragement of forward
plas
tates and cities for programs of capital improvement and of
es linked with the work of the Federal Government. It should
for us, if we are able adequately to coordinate 'efforts and
develop a projected program which will include the best
purposes, and the long ren e planning of every one of our
ments whose efforts involve state and local participation.
wish to maintain close coordination between the Public Work
Departments themselves. There are two things that I would
or you in this connection. They are:
It will be very helpful to us if you will inform us of the
[moies within the Department of the Treasury whose work involves,
100, state and local participation in either capital improvement
Regraded Unclassified
or public jervice pro rens, and indicate the person within the Bureau or
whom the staff of the Public Work Reserve may maintain continuous
Agency liaison contact for information and advice, or for specific help in estab-
lishing standards for the work a the Public Work (eserve or reviewing its
activities an occasion may crise, The Public work Reserve staff would easily
think of the con:ern 0. the Treasury Department 85 a whole wath state and
local risoal policy, but we want to make sure that we have contact with
every interested Bureau or Arency.
It will be equally \ereful if you will desi nate E. single person
for the Department as C. whole, who will serve as a coordinator or liaison
nan for the interests of the several Bureaus end Amendes concerned in
the program of the Public Work Reserve. The staff of the Public Work
Recerve will be in touch with each of the Agencies and Bureaus and with
the person there that you have suggested as the proper source of information and
advice, but it is also essential this the interests o: the Department AS
a whole be brought to EL focal point in-relation to the "ublic Work Reserve.
Thus, I ask for this second designation.
No would like to have the departmental representative join with
similar representatives of the other departments and the Federal Works Agency
in recurrent conferences, as occasion warrants, covering the full program
of the Public Work Reserve; how it can best banefit and serve the Federal
Departments: how it can be made most helpful to states and localities in
the development of their own projected pro/rams of capital improvements and
public service.
We shall also wish for acvice es to the state and regional representatives
of the interested Bureaus and Agencies in the Department of the Treasury
who 08.33 be helpful to the field organization of the Public Work Reserve. We
shall be earrying on EL series of conferences around the country in training
and acquaintance 01° the State Directors of the Public Work Reserve with
the program as a whole, and wish to incluse in those conferences the projected
or prospective programs of all interested Federal Departments. Consequently,
TO shall hope that the representative whom you may designate for the Department
of the Treasury can advise on setting up the schedule for these regional con-
forences and can participate in such conferences as may be necessary in meh-
ingto) to laying plans for the project as B whole. I am attaching to this
letter for your information and the information of interested Bureaus, and
any
son man whom you may desi mute for the Department, a directory of
the
organization of the Public Work Reserve and the field staff of
the
Resources Planning Board, serving as consultants to the Public
É
asked Mr. Jacob Baker, Consultant on Planning of the Federal
By. to assume responsibility for me in connection with the Public
70, and ho is available to rive further information on any matter
with it, as it relates to the Federal Departments.
Sincerely,
John M. Carmody
Administrator
Regraded Unclassified
DIRECTORY
PUBLIC WORK RESERVE
rice Agency
Public Work Reserve
E. C. Smith, Jr., Director
Washington, D. C.
lanning
noy
M. E. Scheidt, Technical Consultant,
Capital Improvements, Washington, D.C.
Charles Lawrence, Technical Consultant,
11 Resources
Public Services, Washington, D. C.
Inc Board
Angus Cameron, Liaison Consultant,
Other Federal Agencies, Washington, D.C.
YOUR
arring
Mrector
065 Planning
Regional Field Representatives:
von, D. C.
Alfred Roche
mitantis
465 West 14th Street
Lew Tork City
mille Itanley Parker
120 viston Street
Robert Lead
Boston, Massachusetts
745 Monadnock Building
681 Market Street
Sidney T Thomas
San Francisco, Callfornia
Roda 7222 North Interior Rldg.
Weshington, D. C.
J. Banks Hudson
907 Canal Pank Building
otto Credit
llew Orleans, Louisiana
Room 220 Federal Court House
Portia) Oregon
Charles liner
Suite 2320
C. 1.
Blekeck
222 First North Bank Drive
Room
Post Office Building
Chicago, Illinois
Borkell
lifornia
d.
580
thnex Building
Dalla
Regraded Unclassified
141
ML 11 1941
My dear Miss Gahagam:
I was glad to have your note of July 8.
When we begin to set up our State Defense
Bond organization in California, which I hope
will be within the next thirty days, we will
try to find & place for Mrs. MeAdoo. I will
ask our people to get in touch with you and
Mrs. Briggs.
Sincerely,
(Signed) E. Morgenthaw, Jr.
Miss Helen Gahagan,
California Democratic National
Committeewoman,
7141 Senalda Road,
Los Angeles, Calif.
HNG/mff
File to Mr. Thompson
112
0
P
HELEN GAHAGAN
Y
California Democratic National Committeevomen
July 8, 1941
The Donorable Henry Morgenthau
Sacretary 09 the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. Morgenthau:
Through correspondence forwarded to me my Mrs.
Roosevelt, It has come to my attention that Eleanor Vilson
YeAdoo, daughter of President Woodrow Wilson, 16 in P.
nosition of financial stringency and is urgently in need
of lucrative employment. She has been engaged in B. sories
of račio broadcasts, but these will soon be over, and it
18 succested that there might be a place she could fill
with reference to the sale of defense bonds and stamps,
I have talked with Mrs. Mary Brings, Postmaster
of the City of Los Angeles, about this. Mrs. Brigge
feels that it would be very advantageous to have a publicity
director appointed for this area, to promote the sale of
the defense bonds end stanns, and that Mrs. McAdoo would
he very well qualified to do this work, because of her
redio and speaking experience, her cherm of personality,
and the weight which her name would carry et this noint
in our nation's history.
It 18 my understanding that the power to make such
An amoointment resides with you. I AM therefore writing to
unre that you consider such en arpointment and to recommend
it to you. I hope very much that you may find such an
annointment desirable.
Sincerely,
/8/ Helen Gehagen
7141 Senalda Road
Los Angeles, California.
Regraded Unclassified
143
July 11, 1941
To:
The Secretary
Mr. Adams
Mr. Callahan
Mr. Dietz
Mr. Graves
Mr. Houghteling
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Mahan
Professor Odegard
Mr. Olney
Mr. Paige
Mr. Powel
Mr. Sloan
From:
Mr. Duffus
Attached is a copy of the "Treasury House" flyer
which was sent in quantity to all State Administrators
this week. C.D.
THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1941
Page 97
People Who Live in Glass Houses'-Sell Stamps
High Point
This is the design 01 top of the alligion Income
House
The house will be open for the sale of Defense Savings Name
from 10 A. Di. to 10 p.m. i days e work. Defense Bando will find la sold
hero Al the start, although assistance will las offered la progrative sun
chasers of the house United Press Infletins will to annument even
hair n
imulating Sales Big pays IIII BIT INTERESTING al Fourtevally
Arrom where the Tivasury Depart-
Trumn Home I'm which Defense
Ho the Millin Vice President Wallave darted
the live Savings Stamp from the file
lacking, Charlott Weikinger, Earla
Tradila Wall Cuirenan, and Mr. Wallmer
Glass House
Here's to
Exhibits
The Amy, Nave, 31a-
home last before its opening contenday,
rinia, and Cust Cuard have exhibita THE
The five hostesses, in their Line uni-
the grounds adjacent till the Treasury
forms and overseas caps, are la front of
House. Maive is A. curious crowderum
the building
an Army tank.
Marines on Hand
Annual the Marizes "lazided" time
Line near the Treasury Thomas In - Number time They had
structed a field for capable of musing 11 Form in entá us que
commetiung ther't wet please of have) weather, Other (patures
nf the Treasury House program include: Nows broadcasts, a daily
quiz (WRC, 1:45 m.). popular music over the poblic-adress
system. mililary recruiting stations on the grounds, service men
to anower guestions un the military equipment, and personal
appearances of stage and serven stars.
Regraded Unclassified
Pictured Above are Scenes and Stories About the
Opening of "Treasury House" on the Federal
Triangle in Washington
In addition to the Glass House where uniformed hostesses sell Stamps and answer
Bond and Stamp queries
there are displays by the Army
Navy
Marines
Coast Guard
Air Corps
daily band concerts
United Press
news broadcasts over a public address system
daily radio quiz broadcast with
Esso glass banks as prizes
each day for entire month of July designated as special
day for organization or group with speaker
special bands
parades.
201200
Regraded Uncla
145
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 11, 1941
TO
Secretary's files
FROM
Mr. Kuhn
(In connection with Secretary's memorandum to Mr.
Kuhn, dated June 25, re passing suggestion on
to Howard Dietz)
This suggestion was passed on to Mr. Dietz by the
Secretary himself on July 3, with the result that "America
the Beautiful" probably will be used as a three-minute
picture in technicolor.
146
July 11, 1941
Dear Randelph:
It was very good of you to write me
as you did on July 8 about our first radio
hour.
My own feeling is that every program
should have some of the impressiveness which
you and I both found in Charles Laughtem's
reading of the Gettysburg speech.
of course the first pregrams of any
radie series are experimental, and we shall
have plenty of opportunity during the Summer
to make good use of your ideas.
Sincerely years,
(Signed) Henry
Mr. V. Randelph Burgess,
55 Wall Street,
New York, New York.
FK/hkb
7/11/41
Regraded Unclassified
147
July 11, 1941
Dear Randelph:
It was very good of you to write no
as you did on July $ about ear first radie
hour.
My own feeling is that every program
should have some of the impressiveness which
you and I both found in Charles Laughten's
reading of the Gettysburg speech.
of course the first pregrams of any
radio series are experimental, and - shall
have plenty of opportunity during the Summer
to make good use of your ideas.
Sincerely yours,
ISigned) Henry
Mr. Y. Randelph Burgess,
55 Wall Street,
New York, New York.
FK/hkb
7/11/41
Regraded Unclassified
148
July 11, 1941
Dear Randelph:
It in - 40 you to write so
as yes did on July $ about our first radio
hour.
My own feeling is that every progrem
should have seme of the impressiveness which
you and I both found in Charles Laughten's
reading of the Gettyaburg speech.
of course the first programs of any
radio series are experimental, and - shall
have plenty of opportunity during the Summer
to make good use of your ideas.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) BANKY
Mr. 1. Randelph Burgess,
55 Wall Street,
New York, New York.
FK/hkb
7/11/41
Regraded Unclassified
149
W RANDOLPH BURGESS
55 WALL STREET
New YORK
July 3, 1941.
Dear Henry:
Thank you for sending me the tickets to the first Treasury radio
hour which some of my family and I attended with very great interest. It
was, ou the whole, # fine job, and I thought your own remarks came over
particularly well.
The great problem with this program is going to be to get just the
right tone and still be effective with the masses of the people who are much
more interested in listening to their favorite radio stars than they are in
learning about defense bonds. I confess to a good deal of besitation in
judging & thing of this sort because it is so hard to know what the average
person responds to. For what it is worth, I did have the feeling that the
opening of the program, and particularly the part preceding your own remarks
lost Impressiveness because of BO much jass, and I did not like the songs
about buying a bond for the same reason. I pass this reaction on to you with
the hope of being helpful, but with all modesty, because it is 50 hard to
Judge these matters.
Charles Laughton's reading of the Gettysburg address WBS magnifi-
cent. I believe that makes more of an appeal to more people than jazz and
songe. But that is, after all, the problem, to preserve 8 measure of in-
pressiveness and dignity while getting lightness of touch.
At any rate the whole program is B. good idea, and it would be in-
teresting to see how it affects the bond selling program. Somewhere in the
course of the program I hope that it may be possible to work in just a touch
of the substantial selfish arguments for buying bonds; that many people are
receiving more money than they ever saw before, and they ought to build up E
Regraded Unclassified
150
- 2 -
cushion of savings. I am sure Fred Allen is skillful enough to do that
with a light touch.
All this for what it is worth.
With best regards,
Sincerely yours,
Landagh
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
WRB.H
Regraded Unclassified
>
151
July 11, 1941
Dear Hareld:
Thank you for telling the about -
split infinitives. My sense of sheek is
even greater than yours, since the offense
was committed by this Department.
I hope to speedily change the
language of our pledge card and I also hope
that if you hear of any other sine of this
sort you will net fail to immediately let
me know.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Henry
Home Hareld Lo Ickes,
Secretary of the Interier,
Washington, D. Co
FK/hkb
7/11/41
Regraded Unclassified
152
R of
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
July 3, 1941.
My dear Henry:
I have had an even greater shock than the one
experienced when Hitler declared war on Russia. I note
this language on the pledge card that the Treasury is
using in its campaign to sell defense savings bonds or
stamps: "To systematically purchase," etc.
I have not read further for any additional outrages
on the English language. I simply haven't the courage
to do so,
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Secretary Morgenthau
153
DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF
ADVANCE NOTICE RADIO PROGRAMS
FRIDAY - JULY 11, 1941
Time:
3:45 - 4:00 P, M,
Program: Young Widder Brown
Station: WRC and National Broadcasting Red Network
Time:
8:00 - 8:30 P. M.
Program: Great Plays
Station: WJSV and Columbia Broadcasting System
Time:
8:30 - 8:55 P. M,
Program: Your Happy Birthday
Station: WMAL and National Broadcasting Blue Network
Time:
8:30 - 9:00 P. M.
Program: Uncle Wnlter's Dog House
Station: WRC and National Broadcasting Red Network
Time:
9:00 - 9:30 P. M.
Program:
Wings of Destiny
Station: WRC and National Broadcasting Red Network
THESE PROGRAMS PROMOTE THE SALE OF DEFENSE BOHDS AND STAMPS.
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
154
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 11, 1941
TO
Ferdinand Kuhn, Jr.
FROM
Alan Barth
THE NEW RAMPARTS
Defense
Newspapers found drama in the occupation of Iceland; they
handled the news with banner headlines. But most of them seemed
to miss the vital significance of the event; their editorials
hailed it as of paramount importance to American defense without
recognizing in it any radical departure from the preceding short-
of-war pattern.
A few commentators, however, saw in the landing of naval
forces on foreign soil B. genuine casting of the die, the commence-
ment of undeclared war against Nazism. These few took literally
the passage in President Roosevelt's message to Congress about
the meaning of which Secretary Knox observed, "There's no room for
any doubt."
Most newspapers -- especially those which have most ardently
exhorted the President to make immediate use of the United States
Navy to win the Battle of the Atlantic -- failed to grasp the full
implication of his words: "As Commander-in-Chief I have conse-
quently issued orders to the Navy that all necessary steps be
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
155
taken to insure the safety of communications in the approaches
between Iceland and the United States, as well as on the seas between
the United States and all other strategic outposts."
There were several causes for the editorial uncertainty over
the President's intent:
(1) The period of inaction which succeeded Mr. Roosevelt's force-
ful declaration of national policy on May 27 induced doubt that his
words would be translated into deeds. As The Washington Post re-
marked, the occupation of Iceland is "the first implementation of
Mr. Roosevelt's fireside address.'
(2) At 8 recent press conference in Hyde Park, the President re-
iterated the hope that the United States can keep out of war. His
remark dampened the expectations of those who had already abandoned
this hope and sought full-scale American intervention.
(3) The President's refusal a week ago to comment on Secretary
Knox's plea for immediate use of the navy led to the supposition
that he disapproved of such & course.
There has been almost universal endorsement of the move into
Iceland as 8. measure of defense. Even isolationists, judging from
the temperance of their comments, found it difficult to cavil at the
safeguarding of this strategic outpost. Indeed, the general reac-
tion indicates that the country has been all but completely won over
to the principle of dynamic defense which the President advanced in
Regraded Unclassified
156
- 3 -
his last fireside talk. The public seems, at last, to have fully
grasped the concept that defense, unlike charity, begins far from
home.
This thesis having been accepted, the strongly interven-
tionist newspapers now urge 8. further extension of it. They sug-
gest occupation of 8. wide variety of defense vantage points all the
way from Ireland to Dakar.
Anxiety
Critics of the Administration have found ammunition for fresh
attacks in certain recent statements from British sources. Generals
Wavell and Auchinleck were quoted in news despatches a few days ago
as foreseeing 8. need for American manpower. In addition, Prime
Minister Churchill's assertion that British troops would remain in
Iceland along with American marines was looked upon as heralding
joint military action by the two countries. Such possibilities
have provoked some degree of uneasiness among moderate commentators.
In this connection, there has been rather sharp division of
opinion respecting the amendments to the Selective Training Law
recommended by General Marshall. The strongly interventionist
papers have endorsed his proposals; the isolationist press has
condemned them as preparatory for an American Expeditionary Force.
The bulk of the comment on the subject has been rather inconclusive,
yet suggestive of certain misgivings. There appears to be a rather
Regraded Unclassified
157
- 4 -
widespread misconception that the law pledged the Government to
require of men selected no more than a single year of service. The
General's request for a lifting of the prohibition against the use
of draftees outside the Western Hemisphere has occasioned some con-
cern in the light of recent demands for a British invasion of Europe
from the west.
Action
President Roosevelt's action in reaching an understanding
with the Prime Minister of Iceland has been assailed on constitutional
grounds by a minority of newspapers. It is the contention of these
critics that the understanding amounted to 8 treaty and therefore re-
quired ratification by the Senate. Most commentators, if they al-
luded to this aspect of the matter at all, seemed to regard it as
wholly academic and to be relieved that the President had made it so.
In an address delivered just prior to announcement of the
Iceland decision, Bishop Hurley of Florida raised this academic
question in general terms by proposing that the President exercise
powers in the emergency without regard to Congress. This is a
proposition with which editorial writers find it difficult to agree
in the abstract. Yet the great majority of them have managed to
endorse the President in every instance when he has taken decisive
Regraded Unclassified
158
- 5 -
action on his own initiative. The record supports a shrewd observa-
tion made in a recent column by Mr. Walter Lippman: "Experience
has shown that the people have been reluctant to approve the neces-
sary measures while they were being discussed theoretically but
that they have approved overwhelmingly the specific measures when
actually undertaken." The American péople appear to regard strong
leadership now 8.8 synonymous with vigorous action in the direction
which they are clearly determined to take.
Regraded Unclassified
159
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 11, 1941
Ferdinand Kuhn, Jr.
TO
Helen Dallas
FROM
DEFENSE SAVINGS: GUNS OR BUTTER?
Newspapers in increasing number are taking the stand that
people must be prepared to "do without" for National Defense. In
order to build a barrier against inflation, it is being argued that
consumers must buy more Defense Savings Bonds and less of other
things, such as household appliances. It is noted that in this
country there may well be a shortage of household appliances, just
as there was a shortage of butter in Germany.
Some financial and editorial writers have pointed out that
there is 8 tendency among consumers at this time to buy ahead.
According to the Baltimore Evening Sun "there is plenty of evidence
to prove that householders are storing staple food products; also
that they are buying those semi-luxuries whose production and cost
may soon be affected by Government priorities and by the excise
taxes in the pending tax bill."
Other newspapers have expressed concern because people seem
to be buying Defense Savings Bonds out of their savings, rather
than out of their earnings. The American Banker says that what is
Regraded Unclassified
160
- 2 -
urgently needed is B. campaign to have the public buy Defense Bonds
out of current income. The Journal of Commerce points to increased
activity on the part of the Defense Savings Staff of the Treasury,
and notes that such a campaign for regular, systematic bond-buying
is in progress. The Washington Post editorializes: "Now the
problem is shown in its true dimensions -- how to tap income. Those
current savings constitute the reservoir which the Government needs.
Moreover,- by tapping that income, the Government would succeed in
accomplishing another purpose, namely, applying checks upon current
consumption."
In some localities where June sales of the Series E Bond held
up or even increased, financial writers say this is a sign that by
selling these bonds to small investors the Government is selling to
the very people who would otherwise spend the money on consumer
goods.
Few, if any, newspapers have confused the kind of inflation
that the Treasury is attempting to check with the type that occurred
in Germany after the World War. On the other hand, many papers,
even such small dailies as the Woonsocket (R.I.) Call, have at-
tempted to educate their readers as to the meaning of inflation.
There has been no evidence of panicky writing on the subject in any
newspapers.
Regraded Unclassified
161
- 3 -
Magazines Cooperate
The ruddy babe in the Uncle Sam hat who 8. week ago peered out
from the red, white and blue cover of the Sunday supplement, "This
Week," reminding 7,000,000 readers that they should buy United States
Defense Bonds, was the most recent contribution to the Defense Sav-
ings program from the magazine field. From the very beginning the
magazines have shown a willingness to cooperate.
The Defense Savings program had hardly been launched when
another big-circulation publication, Collier's, advised its readers
through an editorial to buy Defense Bonds. A little later the
Reader's Digest contributed 8. full back page featuring the Minute
Man and an appeal from Secretary Morgenthau, and early in June
Liberty published a featured article entitled "The Real Purpose of
Defense Bonds.
In addition to these "general reader" magazines, all sorts
of special-purpose publications have carried articles and promotion
pieces on the Defense Savings program. The of ficial magazines and
news letters of various organizations cooperating with the program
have given 8. great deal of space to it. These include the American
Legion's "Legionnaire" and the Knights of Columbus' "Columbia". In
addition, trade journals and house organs constitute another publi-
cations group that is beginning to carry articles and advertisements
on Defense Savings.
Regraded Unclassified
162
- Chausesy
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 11, 1941
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
CONFIDENTIAL
FROM Mr. Cochran
Registered sterling transactions of the reporting banks were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
£65,000
Purchased from commercial concerns £13,000
Open market sterling was quoted at 4.03-1/2. Transactions of the reporting
banks were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
25,000
Purchased from commercial concerns £2,000
In New York, closing quotations for the foreign currencies listed below
vere AS follows:
Canadian dollar
11-7/8% discount
Argentine peso (free)
.2385
Brasilian milrois (free)
.0505
Uruguayan peso (free)
.4380
Colombian peso
.5800
Mexican peso
.2070
Cuban peso
1-3/16% discount
Japanese yen
.2358
In Shanghai, the yuan vas quoted at 5-1/44, up 1/324. Sterling advanced
1# to 3.91-1/2.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Bev York purchased 25,000 Japanese yen from
& New York bank at the rate of .2359. The purchase was made by order and for
account of the Bank of Finland.
In response to a cable from the Federal Reserve Bank of Bev York, inquiring
whether the Svies National Bank would accept dollars and supply 600,000 Swiee france
to be used by the Central Bank of Turkey for payments on merchandise in Sweden,
the Svice National Bank cabled back that they were limiting their dollar purchases
to proceeds of Swiss exports and revenue on Sviss capital placed in the United
States. They also expressed willingness to buy dollars against Sviss france to
be used for living expenses in Switzerland.
Ve sold $1,995,000 in gold to the Bank of Brasil, which was added to the
earnarked account of the Bank of Brasil as fiscal agent of the Brazilian Government.
Regraded Unclassified
163
- 2 -
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that the Bank of Canada
shipped $3,405,000 in gold from Canada to the Federal for account of the Government
of Canada, for sale to the New York Assay Office.
The price fixed in London for spot and forward silver was unchanged at
23-1/41, equivalent to 42.21#.
The Treasury's purchase price for foreign silver was unchanged at 35#.
Handy and Harman's settlement price for foreign silver was also unchanged at 34-3/44.
Ve made no purchases of silver today.
H.M.P.
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
164
paraphrase or TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Madrid.
DATE: suly 12, 1941, e D.M.
NO. # 688.
This is in reference to telegram the. ⑉ sent to the
Department en the 1st day of July at , p.m.
All of my Pan American colleagues have acked me to
assist them in making available their dollar funds deposited
in Lisbon, Madrid and New York. My advise to then was that
their deveraments should be consulted.
WEDDELL
RR
EASVOL
YMA Ha ЭНТ oT
TECHNICY
not OF DEVICE ne 195
SE S M9 At JUL INCI
RECEIVED
18E U.A.
Regraded Unclassified
165
C
0
P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Y
WASHINGTON
In reply refer to
EA 840.51 Frozen Credits/2435
July 11, 1941
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and transmits
herewith copies of the persphrase of telegram no. 263, dated
July 9, 1941, from the American Embassy at Bogota, together
with a copy of the Embassy's telegram no. 249 referred to
therein, concerning the issuance of certificates of nation-
ality to Colombian citizens doing business with the United
States.
Enclosures:
1. No. 263 from Bogota,
July 9, 1941.
2. No. 249 from Bogota,
July 3. 1941.
Regraded Unclassified
166
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Bogota, Colombia.
DATE: July 9, 1941, 2 p.m.
NO. : 263.
This refers to telegram no. 249 sent by the Embassy
on July 3, 1941.
Yesterday it was suggested informally to the Commercial
Attache by the Commercial Section of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs that if a requirement 1a made for certificates of
nationality there be issued only one such certificate rather
than the requirement as at present assumed that each supplier
be furnished such a document by each importer.
The Secretary of the Bogota Chamber of Commerce (being a
quasi-official agency since it is required that all partner-
ships and corporations register before operating legally)
called in the afternoon yesterday to say that numerous requests
for certificates had been received and although the Chamber
of Commerce is willing to cooperate it did not wish to issue
duplicate certificates. He made the suggestion that there be
deposited one certificate with the Export Control Office in
Washington, this Embassy or some other agency to be designated.
Furthermore, the Chamber of Commerce is willing to give
notice of any change in status after the issuance of the
original certificate. This will not mean a great deal because
of the innefficiency of the Chamber of Commerce and because,
as the Department knows, any such certificates are without
Regraded Unclassified
-2-
167
value in the case of Germans many of whom have become
Colombian citizens purposely. Further, political beliefs
are not indicated by euch evidence and the requirements as
at present assumed would make it possible for many who are
known to be Fascists or Nazis to continue to carry on business
transactions with the United States as Colombian citizens
and at the same time handicap many who sincerely believe in
the principles of democracy.
One hundred and forty-three callers seeking information
in connection with the regulations have been received at
the Embassy since the 5th of July. There is 8. wide variation
in the instructions from American exporters. Some of them
demand a certificate which shows the customer's citizenship,
others demand an affidavit which has been notarized and
visaed by the American Consul while still others request only
that the names and nationality of the various members of
the firm be given.
Since affidavits, certificates, documents sworn to
before notaries, and simple statements, are being demanded
by hundreds of agents, it is imperative that as quickly as
possible the resulting confusion in commercial circles be
cleared.
BRADEN
LMS
EA:VCL
Cogy:bj:7-11-41
Regraded Unclassified
168
PARAFHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
PROM:
AMEMBASSY, Bogota
TO :
Secretary of State, Washington
DATED:
July 3, 1941, 4 p.m.
NUMBER: 249
SECTION ONE
Numerous requests have been received at the Embassy
for information as to the American action in the freezing
of funds and air mail transmittal of all available regu-
lations is requested. Information of specific nature is
desired regarding the countries, especially those covered
by Executive Resolution No. 8785, the status of Europeen
nationals resident in Colombia and the policy which the
local banking institutions should follow regarding travelers
checks. checks, and drafts drawn on banks in the United
States by such nationals.
Firms in Colombia are being informed of the necessity
of a new finance license which apparently must be obtained
prior to the issuance of export licenses. Instructions
have been issued to several agents to verify and report at
once on the nationality of all customers and upon the
nationality of those stockholders controlling more than
twenty-five percent of the stock in the case of corpora-
tions. A request has been made of one agent for an affi-
davit covering his nationality, date of esteblishment,
Regraded Unclassified
169
- 2 -
whether or not a refugee, and reference on the grounds that no
commissions can be paid "unlessyour records are submitted to the
Federal Reserve Bank."
TION TWO
The Ambassador wishes to have an opportunity of studying the
new regulations before making comment but desires to invite the
Department's attention to the confusion existing in importing circles
in Colombia. However necessary and advisable the regulations in effect
in the United States have caused ill will and much confusion in
Colombia and a minimum reduction is desirable. Requiring each agent
(there are 1248 American manufacturers represented in Bogota alone) to
make a survey such as indicated in the second paragraph of this telegram
will result in much duplication and confusion. The Embassy has been
gathering such material for years and there are now over 4,000 World
Trade Directory reports in Washington in addition to special studies
covering 639 German and Italian firms and individuals and the Embassy
expressed the hope that these data will be used wherever possible before
calling on private firms.
BRADEN
Regraded Unclassified
170
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
Ohina
FROM: American Consulate General, Manghas, via N.R.
DATE: July 11, 1941, 1 p.m.
NO.: 834
FROM A. MANUEL FOX FOR THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY.
We believe that in the past two weeks we have inter-
viewed everybody of any importance in business, governmental,
and financial field, including well over one hundred different
persons, with many of whom we have talked to and three times.
We have checked and double checked every point and phase,
and have collected a considerable volume of data, statements,
and suggestions which it will take sometime to analyse and
study, which ve plan to do on route to Hong Kong and in the
few days we shall be at Hong Kong. As soon as all of this
material has been digested, we shall prepare a report. Ve
feel sure that we have obtained a good grasp of the Shanghai
situation and that much good will and better understanding
have been created.
Spectators have made many attempts to circulate runers
but have not had much success. One day the rumor was that
to
I had said that five cours is the right figure stablised at,
and the next day about five and one-half cents. This vas
followed in a few days by a rumor that I had resigned and them
that I thought the right figure was five and one-quarter cents,
and that I did not like Shanghai, that we were not going
to support the market and that I had ordered the American
and British banks to stop selling exchange futures. Another
runer
Regraded Unclassified
171
-2-
rumor was that I had ordered the National City Bank to close
its Canton and Peiping branches.
We have, of course, not yet formed any definite con-
clusions and we shall not until ve have sifted the evidence.
We had & discussion of some of our tentative observations
and of the situation in general with Consul General Lookhart
pointing out that general surprise had been manifested,
that no control was exercised in connection with the
operation of the British-Chinese equalization fund, that
some (1) of these funds (1) and that such sufe-guiding
measures as the freezing of Chinese balances in the United
States would be welcome provided that exchange for recognised
commercial and other needs of Shanghai would be made avail-
able, that some of the views here concerning exchange and
trade appear to be unsound and (9), that no one connected
with the United States service here that we have met appears
qualified to observe, report, or (1) in regard to important
exchange matters.
We may need Dawson, who come to have an excellent
grasp of the agricultural situation, in Thungking and
Lockhart is willing to make him available for such service
for a short time. The decision all to the need of this
will be taken soon after I get back to Chungking. We have
found Campbell of the Hong Kong office very helpful and he
could be of future service to us in Chungking. Authority
is requested for him to report to us at Chungking for & week
or
Regraded Unclassified
172
-3-
or ten days. I believe, and Lockhart agrees, that it would
be a good idea for Lawrence Groves, the new Commercial
Attache at Shanghai, who I understand is IN route, to spend
a few days with no. I all leaving it to Lockhart to decide
the best time for Groves to visit Chungking,
One interview with Ernest Allman, one of the American
members of the Shanghai Municipal Council, may be of immediate
interest. Shimada, the Japanese Commercial Attaché, having
requested an interview, said that while it would be impossible
for him to say so publicly) the Japanese are anxious to ⑉
fapi stabilized because of the help this would give Japaness
business men and others. At the same time, they are
helping the Wanking Government circulate central reserve
notes. Appreciate inconsistency (9) of these two positions.
Shimada empbasized the Japanese desire for peace and their
hope that negotiations on financial matters might be held
between Japan, China, and the United States and that this
would lead to peace,
You have probably received a full report from the
Consulate concerning the now moves initiated by the
Yokohama Specie Bank during the last few days to have the
Shanghai Municipal Council accept central reserve notes.
This has been the subject of conferences between SERV no
and the chairman and some members of the Council. I have
seen each of the three American members and an urging the
importance of maintaining a sound position on this point
and of supporting fapi. I feel some concern with respect
to
Regraded Unclassified
173
to Allman. In view of the readiness of British members
of the Council to compromise on same many matters, it is
especially important that a firs stand be taken by American
members on this. Unless they de so, our Censul
position here will be difficult.
УЛАТЗЯОВ2 EHT oT
ДЕСНИСУГ
OELICE ot THE
AE & M9 Al JUL IMP
ТИЗМТЯА930 YRU2A39T
BECEINED
EA:FL:PAX
Regraded Unclassified
174
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
July 11th, 1941.
PERSONAL
AND
SECRET.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I enclose herein for your
personal and secret information a
copy of the latest reports received
from London on the military situation.
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Very sincerely yours,
Halifax
The Honourable,
Benry Morgenthau, Jr.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Unclassified
175
TELEGRAM FROM LONDON DATED JULY 10th, 1941
Naval.
Freetown attacked by one aircraft A.M/B.
Ships in harbour were hit by machine guns and
cannon-shells.
2.
British submarine sank heavily laden merchant
ship estimated 5,500 tons A.M/3 N.E. of Catania (Sicily).
3.
Royal Air Force.
During daylight 9th 3 Stirlings with strong
escort bombed aerodrome at Bethune. Thirteen enemy
fighters destroyed certain, three probable, seven
damaged. We lost 9 fighters but two pilots safe.
4.
Night of 9/10 140 aircraft sent to Aachen and
Osnabruck. Four missing.
5.
Night of 7/8. Wellingtons successfully bombed
Tripoli, on the following night Bengazi.
6.
Yesterday Hurricanes from Malta attacked float-
planes on the water at Syracuse destroying 3, damaging
five.
7.
On 8th twelve enemy aircraft bombed Daga aero-
drome at Malta destroying one Wellington.
8.
Military.
Libya. 8th. Small groups of enemy erroured
cars encountered frontier area, driven off by our
patrols. Matruh raided by aircraft night of 7th/8th.
811ght damage. Few casualties.
9.
Syria.
Our forces at Palmyra have gained touch with
northern Force half way between Palmyre and Dier in Zor.
/Coastal
Regraded Unclassified
176
- 2 -
Coastal Area. Part of our force has been
moved round east of Damour and is in position
covering Damour-Beirut road.
10. Russia. Finland.
Russians still hold Fishermans Peninsula
Murmansk Kendalaksha. Baltic States. Germans
pushing N.E. from Riga.
Ukraine.
Enveloping movement on Kiev apparently also
attempted to turn Dniester line from Tarnopol.
Regraded Unclassified
177
RESTRICTED
0-2/2657-220 No. 438 M.I.D., W.D. 12:00 M., July 11, 1941.
SITUATION REPORT
I. GERMAN-RUSSIAN FIGHT.
Ground: No reliable reports of changes in front lines.
Heavy fighting is going on in the following critical areas; Salla
(Finland), north of Ostrov, Polotsk, Bobruisk, Rogachev, Novograd-
Volynsk, Mogilev-Podolsk.
Air: German strategic bombing has extended to the Moscow-
Leningrad railway. This suggests progress of the German ground
thrust: Pskov-Novgorod.
II. GERMAN-BRITISH FIGHT.
Air: German. Small scale raids on Great Britain.
British. Aerial offensive continued. Day attacks,
involving few bombers and exceedingly strong pursuit escort, hit
Le Havre and Cherbourg. Night effort was divided between the Rhine-
land and the invasion ports.
III. MEDITERRANEAN FIGHT.
Ground: Syrian hostilities are still in progress.
Air: Axis. Raids on Cyprus and Haifa.
British. Attacks on Naples and on numerous points
in Syria, including Beirut.
RESTRICTED
Regraded Unclassified
178
CONFIDENTIAL
MILITARY INTELLIGENCE DIVISION
TENTATE LESSONS BULLETIN
WAR DEPARTMENT
No. 131
Washington, July 11, 1941
G-2/2657-235
NOTICE
The information contained in this series of bulletins
vill be restricted to items from official sources which are
reasonably confirmed. The lessons necessarily are tentative
and in no sense mature studies.
This document is being given an approved distribution
and no additional copies are available in the Military Intel-
ligence Division. For provisions governing its reproduction,
see letter TAG 350.05 M.I.D. (9-19-40) M-B-M,
GERMAN ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE
SOURCE
This bulletin is based partly upon the translation of an
article which appeared April 9, 1941, in Die Wehrmacht, a semi-
official German Army publication, and partly upon observations of
an American official observer in Berlin,
CONTENTS
1, GENERAL
2. COMMENT
3. CONCLUSION
CONFIDENTIAL
-1-
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
GERMAN ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE
1. GENERAL
The war in the Inst BE well as the var in the Went brought
various surprises to the enemy, chiefly through the use of new
armament and equipment, part of which was unknown and part of unreo-
ognized effect, In this category of armament belong, among others,
the 20-mm. guns of the army antiaircraft defense battalion - Flak*
Battalione - and the independent antiaircraft defense companies -
Flak* Companies. Even in Germany these units are for the most part
unknown, and only recently have they, because of their success,
attracted attention.
The antiairoraft defense battalions and antiaircraft defense
companies are infantry units, and as such they belong to the army
proper. These troops wear the field grey uniform of the army and
the identifying color insignia of the infantry, which serves to dif-
ferentiate then from their air force comrades, the antiaircraft
artillery.
The antiaircraft defense companies are completely motorized
and are. therefore, unusually mobile and especially suitable for
rapid employment. Each company has as guns with protective shielda,
mounted on self-propelled carriages. These weapons are ready for
action at all times.
Protection against enemy air attacke on marching units,
halto, barracks, bridging operations, river crossings, and narrow
passes or defiles 1s the principal task of the antiaircraft defense
company. Antiaircraft defense also assumes the task of defense of
artillery in its firing positions and in the assembly area and the
zone of action of the main attack. The countless enemy airplanes
shot down in the tangible result of the most careful training during
peace time, training in recognising planes of foreign types, and
training of men specially selected for measurement of ranges and
dexterity in servicing guns. One single antinircraft defense com-
pany in the West was able to report 32 planes definitely recognized
and shot down. Other companies have stated that they have shot down
10 to 20 Bristol-Blemheims, Hurricanes, Potez and other planes.
Enemy machines can be shot down by army antiaircraft units even
during flights over the Channel.
The word Flak is compounded from the words of the German term
Plieger Abwehr Kanone, which meane antiaircraft gun.
CONFIDENTIAL
-2-
Regraded Unclassified
180
CONFIDENTIAL
Against ground targets, the antiaircraft units have had &
success no less great. One antiaircraft defense company alone
reported the destruction of 16 enemy tanks, Where 20-mm. guns were
employed they were soon the terror of the enemy. The rapid rate of
fire of this automatic weapon, and the penetrating effect of its
explosive and armor-piercing shells, caused gape during countless
engagements which forced the enemy to break off the attack. Enemy
machine gun nests were cleaned out in very short time: bunkers were
neutralized by attacks on the openings; occupied villages and woode
were mopped up. By neutralization of enemy fire the path was
cleared for storming infantry units. Fire protection was given to
courageous pioneers bridging etreams: and the most stubborn enemy
was destroyed in house-to-house combat by well aimed fire.
No terrain was too difficult, no order impossible to carry
out. Unlimited confidence was placed in this army because of its
great successes. The command, "20-mm. gun forward!" was often
heard where the battle was thickest.
The men of the antiaircraft defense companies, just like
their comrades in the infantry. displayed conscientions devotion
to duty in performing their taske to the limits of their capacity,
and when the hymn of praise to the infantry is sung, the officers,
500's. and men of this new arm are included in it as true infantry-
sen.
2. COMMENT
Much investigation and discussion has taken place concern-
ing the question of whether German antiaircraft artillery units
from the German Air Force are organically assigned, or are more
or less permanently attached to units of the German Army. It is
believed that the normal antiaircraft complement of an infantry,
motorized, panzer, cavalry, or mountain division ie an antiaircraft
battalion armed with light and medium caliber materiel - 20-mm.
and 37-m, However, no positive evidence has been uncovered to
confirm this belief.
A reliable informant stated that in the West in May, 1940.
the antiaircraft defense of the German forces in the main attack
over the Meuse, from Dinant to Sedan, remained in the hands of the
German Antiaircraft Corps* commanders until the crossing was effected.
Then antiaircraft units were attached to other forces advancing on
their missions. Some of the panzer divisions in the spearhead of
the attack had as much as 8. regiment of antiaircraft attached,
The German Autiaircraft Corpe 18 an air force antiaircraft
unit composed of two or more antiaircraft divisions.
CONFIDENTIAL
-3-
Regraded Unclassified
181
CONFIDENTIAL
including heavy calibers - 88-mm, All German antiaircraft is at least
doal purpose artillery - antiaircraft and antitank. When control
of the air was definitely established by the German Air Force, the
German antiaircraft unite were released to perform their secondary and
other special assignments, which explains how these units were able to
destroy 80 many Allied tanks during the campaign in the West.
The statements made in the first part of this bulletin in-
directly confirm the belief that antiaircraft artillery from the Oor-
nan Air Force is not assigned organically to German Army units. They
also confirm the fact that there is a permanent need for light and
medium antiaircraft artillery with German Army units.
According to the beet information now available, German Air
Force antiaircraft artillery units are attached to German Army unite
for special missions - to comprise task forces. Upon completion of
the mission, the unit reverts to the control of the German Air Force.
The German Army antiaircraft units are armed with light and
medium caliber antiaircraft material - manned by infantrymen - which
are dual purpose weapons. It is thought that the battalion is the
normal complement for a field army and that independent battalions
and companies are available in the GHQ reserve. These independent
units may be attached to unite as small as a division.
It is believed that the training of these infantry antiair-
craft units is conducted at training centers of German Air Force
antiaircraft artillery.
3, CONCLUSION
Organic antiaircraft artillery of light and medium calibers
is needed by the German Army in the field.
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
182
THE BRITISH SUPPLY COUNCIL IN NORTH AMERICA
Box 680
Benjamin Franklin Station
Washington, D. 0.
July 12, 1941
D. W. Bell Esq.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Denr Mr. Bell,
In my letter of June 9th I sent you a revised list estimating
the value of the items which it would be administratively difficult
et the British end to handle under the Lesse-Lend arrangements. You
will remember that Mr Cox expressed the hope that we might find ways
of further reducing this list. We have now heard from London that,
as the result of their reviewing the position again, in the light of
the gradually improving administrative arrangements which are being
net up, they can foresee that a further reduction will in the end
be possible.
The new arrangements cannot be brought into force immediately,
but, when they are, the intention is to buy the following articles
through the Lease-Lend procedure, provided of course these articles
are eligible in that context:
Abrasives;
Timber:
Rutile, Bentonite, etc.
Borax, Resina, etc.
Efforts are also being made to bring a larger proportion of the
chemical manufactures and drugs within the Lease-Lend procedure, though
here also it will take from three to six months to set up the new
administrative arrangements efficiently.
Regraded Unclassified
183
- 2 -
The eventual result of this, as shown in the attached table,
is to reduce the total to $m98, or (say) $m100 in round figures.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) J. M. Keynes
COPY - dn - - 7/14/41
Regraded Unclassified
184
APPENDIX A
Thousands of dollars
First Revision
Second Revision
Machinery Components
37
37
Chemical manufactures, Drugs
30
5
Sundry Materials, machinery and
consumption goods
18
18
Vehicle parts
8
g
Abrasives
2
0
Rutile, Bentonite, Diatomaceous earth,
Tin residnes, Bismuth & miscellaneous
non-ferrous metals
9
0
Miscellaneous paper, Bgasse, cotton
and linen rage
3
3
Timber (other than Aero spruce and Aero
plywood)
3
0
Borax, Razorite, Sundry chemicals,
Fibestos & synthetic resins, Carbon
black, Pine tar, Rosin, Turpentine &
asphalt
6
o
Seede
4
4
Oil plant equipment
20
20
140
98
Regraded Unclassified
July 12. 1941
Files
Mr. Cechre
Kr. Livesey telephomed - from the Department of State at 12:15 moon today.
said that the Hays people had been pressing the Department of State for assistance
Is is necutiating in the month of August 6 reneval of their arrangement with the British
permit the payment of dollars to the American moving picture industry covering
rental 11 of films sent to the United Kingdom. It appears that these rentals amount
sately 10 $15,000,000 of this amount is Regland, leaving a balance of $35,000,000 which
sppreximately $50,000,000 assually. The industry has cause to utilise approxi-
11 (sels it mit necesenrily repatriate to United States each year. The arrangement
which the industry has with the British for the current year provides that
$12,500,000 shall be paid across. The nov fiscal year 1941-1942 begins with
October. Mr. Stayne of the Londom Babasey is now is the United States and is to
return to London shortly where he will be charged with the negotiation of the
arrangement. He formerly newisted Ambassador Kennedy on this subject. Mr. Steyne
is today in New York talking with the motion picture people.
Mr. Livessy stated that this subject has had the attention not only of the
Secretary of State himself, but also of the President, and that both have spoken
with Ambassador Halifax in behalf of the American industry's position. The State
Department people nov vanted to know from the Treasury whether the supply of dollars
which the British have aside from Land-Lease would permit the payment to the motion
picture industry of a more satisfactory na for this noxt fiscal year. Mr. Steyne
reggesta $17,500,000, or 50% of the not amount of $35,000,000. as a eum which be
thinks sight be made acceptable to both the British Treasury and the American
inhetry. The point is made that the motion picture people have already accumulated
approximately $30,000,000 of blocked assets is Lendon, and at the present rate this
recent will increase rapidly. Oa the other hand, the industry has kept its premise
vith the British to continue to supply the London market with its usual requirements
both as to quantity and quality of films. I told Mr. Livesoy that I could report
se improvement in the British position insefer as free dollars for such a purpose
is involved. The Treasury and Lease-Lend people had boon giving much attention to
relieving the Britleh shortage of dollars. 1 promised, however, to wpeak with my
colleagues in the Pressury on the subject and call Mr. livresy back by Tuesday
svening at the Latest.
m
Regraded Unclassified
186
THE S AMARICA WHATER
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR
WASHINGTON
SFFICE
July 12, 1941
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Many thanks for your note but I fear that
I an not going to be as successful as I hoped. The
major item is, of course, the Air Corps items and I
have not had much encouragement as to them.
Sincerely,
Joly
The Honorable
Henry Morganthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Regraded Unclassifie
187
July 12, 1941
TO:
The Secretary
Mr. Adams
Mr. Callahan
Mr. Dietz
Mr. Graves
Mr. Houghteling
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Mahan
Professor Odegard
Mr. Olney
Mr. Paige
Mr. Powel
Mr. Sloan
FROM:
Mr. Duffus
We have arranged with the District police department
to prohibit parking on the north side of E Street between 14 and
15 Streets from noon to 8:00 p.m. to make it easier for the
Service Bands to find parking space while giving concerts at
"Treasury House".
They have all been given copies of the official
parking stickers for their wind shields, such as is attached.
188
OF ICIAL
PARKING
'TREASURY
HOUSE"
Regraded Unclassified
189
July 12, 1941
TO:
The Secretary
Mr. Adams
Mr. Callahan
Mr. Dietz
Mr. Graves
Mr. Gerety
Mr. Houghteling
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Mahan
Mr. Olney
Professor Odegard
Mr. Paige
Mr. Powel
Mr. Sloan
Mr. Taplinger
FROM:
Mr. Duffus
News of The Day and Movietone News, released nationally
July 11, carry a Defense Savings story of four Hollywood starlets.
completing the sewing of a huge silk banner bearing the slogan,
"Buy Defense Savings Bonds".
This was arranged by Howard Dietz and Bob Taplinger.
190
PORDEFENSE
FIELD ORGANIZATION News Letter
BUY
LATTED
STATES
DEFENSE SAVING$ STAFF
BAVINGS
/SONDA
-
TREASURY DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, D. C.
July 12, 1941.
NUMBER 8.
TO THE FIELD STAFF:
The sale of Defense Savings securities now enters the third month. Re-
sults of sales in May and June will enable us to take stock of the effort
thus far.
The Defense Savings Bond sales since the program began on May 1, to
June 30 reached a total of $707,195,000 cost price. The total sales of De-
fense Savings Stamps during the same period amounted to $6,473,000.
During June the total number of bonds sold were divided approximately
as follows: Series E - 998,000 bonds for $98,725,000 cost price; Series F-
17,000 for $22,965,000 cost price; Series G - 77,000 bonds for $147,275,000.
The total number of stamps sold in June was 9,378,000 divided in the follow-
ing denominations: 10# - 1,629,000; 25$ - 6,271,000; 50$ - 919,000; $1.00 -
509,000; $5.00 - 50,000.
We are doncerned primarily with reaching the largest possible number of
bond buyers. The Series E denomination particularly is important as it is
the general choice of the purchasers. We can gauge the effectiveness of our
efforts, to a substantial degree, by the number of these bonds that go into
the hands of individual owners.
The effect of stamp purchases (the stamps being installment payments on
the bond), plus the Payroll Allotment Plan accumulations which are held until
the cost of a bond is reached, will begin to be felt in the future weeks and
months. The plans which provide for future bond sales-which have convenient,
consistent, systematic saving as a prime objective-are sound, important, and
should have full attention.
In addition, there are many more who can and will buy bonds every month,
out of income. They should be educated to do so. That is our important task
right now, An ever increasing number of monthly bond buyers should be our goal.
Sincerely yours,
GALE F. JOHNSTON
Field Director, Defense Savings Staff
Regraded Unclassified
191
31 STATE DEFENSE SAVINGS ADMINSTRATORS
Designation or appointment of nine additional State Administrators by
Secretary Morgenthau brings to 31 the number of states and territories in
which State Administrators of the Defense Savings Staff have been named,
The new men are:
ARIZONA
NEVADA
William P. Stuart
Robert L. Douglas
Collector of Interval Revenue
Collector of Internal Revenue
Phoenix
Reno
COLORADO
NEW MEXICO
Ralph Nicholas
Steven P. Vidal
Collector of Internal Revenue
Collector of Internal Revenue
Denver
Albuquerque
IDAHO
OREGON
John R. Viley
Ted R. Gamble
Collector of Interval Revenue
Portland
Boise
RHODE ISLAND
KANSAS
Jos. V. Broderick
Evan Griffith
Collector of Internal Revenue
Topeka
Providence
WISCONSIN
Frank J. Kuhl
Collector of Internal Revenue
Milwaukee
Below is a list of all 31 of the states and territorios in which there
now are State Defense Savings Administrators:
New England
East North Central
West South Central (Ctd.)
Connecticut
Indiana
Oklahoma
Maine
Michigan
Texas
Massachusetts
Wisconsin
Rhode Island
Mountain
Vermont
West North Central
Arizona
Kansas
Colorado
Middle Atlantic
Minnesota
Idaho
New Jersey
Missouri
Montana
Nevada
South Atlantic
East South Central
New Mexico
Florida
Mississippi
Georgia
Tennessee
Pacific
North Carolina
Oregon
South Carolina
West South Central
Washington
Tiest Virginia
Arkansas
-
Hawaii
- 2 -
Regraded Unclassified
192
INTRODUCING:
The Defense Savings Committee for Massachusetts
PONORARY CHAIRMAN:
CHAIRMAN:
Governor Leverett Saltonstall
Edwin C. Johnson, President,
H. A. Johnson Company, Boston.
STATE DMINISTRATOR:
Daniel J. Doherty
Industry
John F, Tinsley, President,
SUB-COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN:
Crompton & Knowles, Worcester.
Banking
Education
David E. Hersee, President,
Stanley King, President of Amherst.
Mussachusetts Bankers Assn.
Insurance
Labor
Charles J. Diman, Vice President,
Kenneth I. Taylor, Sec.-Treas.,
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.
State Federation of Labor.
Women's Organizations
Joseph &. Salerno, President,
Mrs. David A. Westcott, President,
Massachusetts Congress of
Mass. Federation of Women's Clubs.
Industrial Organizations.
Miss Anna M. Manion,
Professional
Past National Vice-President,
Hon. Paul A. Dover,
American Legion Auxiliary
Former Attorney General
of Massachusetts.
Postmasters
Charles H. Slowey, President,
Youth
Mass. Postmasters Association.
Don Moyer,
Regional Scout Executive.
Public Officials and Employees
Patriotic & Fraternal
Hon. Maurice J. Tobin
Dr. Wm. H. Griffin,
Mayor of Boston.
Past Department Commander,
The American Legion.
Laurence B. Flint,
Assistant Executive Secretary,
Clargy
Mass. Solectmen's Association.
Rev. James H. Doyle,
Assistant Director,
Public Utilitios
Catholic Charitable Bureau,
Samuel T, MacQuarrie,
Boston.
Boston-Edison Company.
Dr. William R. Leslie, Minister,
Agriculture
Brookline. St, Mark's Mothodist Church,
Charlie B. Jordan, President,
Mass. Farm Bureau Federation.
Rev. Brookline. Dr. Joshua Loth Liebman,
Speakers
Harold G. Jackson,
Trade
Past State Treasurer of the
Daniel Bloomfield, Manager,
Knights of Columbus.
Rotail Trade Board of Boston.
Publicity
Murtin B. Durkin, Exalted Ruler,
Arlington B. P. 0. E.
Regraded Unclassified
193
MISSOURI
St. Louis Organized to Reach All Groups
One of the largest Defense Savings Committees in the country is now
functioning in St. Louis under Chairman Thomas N. Dysart, President of the
St. Louis Chamber of Commerce, and Secretary E. W. Mentl.
30 sub-committees:
Automobiles
Oil and Gasoline
Bankers
Physicians, Dentists & Hospitals
Business and Civic
Post Office Employees
Churches
Public Utilities
City and County Employees
Publicity
Colored Division
Real Estate
Contractors and Engineers
Retailers
Educational Institutions
Savings and Loan
Federal Employees
Service Organizations
Hotels and Restaurants
Speakers' Bureau
Insurance
Suburban Mayors
Investment Bankers
Veterans Organizations
Labor
Wholesalers
Lawyers
Women's Division
Manufacturers
Youth Organizations
Many of the sub-committees plan to send to members of the groups for
which they are responsible, letters explaining the Program and reply cards
reading as follows:
Dear Mr. (Sub-committee Chairman):
We will gladly cooperate in the Defense Savings Committee
plan, and you may send us the following supplies:
1,
folders for employees
3. 2. We will personally present the program to our employees
counter cards
4. We will YES be NO glad to have a speaker from your Speakers'
Bureau to talk to our employees -YES NO
5. Please send outline for "Payroll Allotment Plan"
SIGNED:
Three major sub-committees are the largest, and an- analysis of the
composition of these committees is impressive and will be of interest:
On the Manufacturers Sub-committee, each of the following industries
is represented by one or more persons: beer, soft drinks, chemicals,
drugs, paints, lead and zinc, fans and motors, control equipment,
period
- 4 -
Regraded Unclassified
194
(St. Louis Committee-Continued)
line quipment, ment packing, dairy products, bread, evaporated milk,
tobacco, miscellancous food products, hospital equipment, cotton, surgical
auturos, beds, mattresses and bedding, structural steol, stoves and ranges,
castings, sheet metal work, barrels and kegs, wire rope, scrap iron, machino
tools, pumps, air compressors, boilor shop products, ordnance material,
mohine shop products, planing mill products, cooperage, wooden boxes,
store fixtures, printing, paper boxes, ink, shoos, leather products, mon's
clothing and uniforms, women's apparel, bags, tents and canvas products,
railroad cars, street cara, aircraft, and automobiles.
On the Wholesalers Sub-committees, the following lines are represented:
building materials, plumbing supplies, coal, coke, ico, drugs, chemicals,
paints, dry goods, clothing, shoes, women's apparel, machinery, grain,
live stock, butter, eggs and poultry, fruit and produce, groceries,
tobacco and cigars, furniture, floor coverings, hardware, sporting goods,
jowelry, lumber, office supplies, and paper.
On the Retailers Sub-committee, there are several representatives of
oneh of the following: downtown retailers, chain stores, groceries, drug
stores, hardware stores and florists.
*
Payroll allotment plans have been installed by many St. Louis concerns,
including:
ALL RAILROADS headquartered there
MEASUREGRAPH COMPANY
ALL MANUFACTURERS OF LADIES' GARMENTS
P. G. GEORGE COMPANY
COLE CHEMICAL COMPANY
PROGRESSIVE SERVICE COMPANY
GENERAL AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY WESTERN SUPPLY COMPANY
*
*
+
SOME ST. LOUIS IDEAS:
an doctors end dentists have been given ten copies of the descriptive
folder "For Defense Buy U. S. Savings Bonds" for their waiting
rooms.
The St. Louis Municipal Opera Association includes Defense Savings Bond
nossages in its weekly programs (which throughout the Summer season
are distributed to more than 10,000 persons nightly in this music-
loving community.)
Hotels and restaurants carry Defense Savings messages on their menu cards.
Several envelope companies include Defense Savings mossages on the flaps of
the business envelopes they print without any exponse to their customers,
-
Regraded Unclassified
195
NORTH CAROLINA
Winston-Salem Committee Moves Into High
2. Joint Committee for Defenso Savings of Winston-Salem and Forsyth
County, North Carolina, is reported to be fully organized and hard at work.
IV 16 setting a pace for other city and county committees in the state,
Senator Gordon Gray, Winston-Salem publisher, and James R. Fano, former
Mayor and bank president, are co-chairmen of the Joint Committee and Mayor
Richard J. Reynolds is the Honorary Chairman. These men were hoats to moru
than 80 committee members at a recent luncheon meeting addressed by Deputy
State Administrator Miles.
Sub-committee groups sat at individual tables at this luncheon and
remained thus after adjournment to map plans for their work.
The more important sub-committees, or sections, of this Joint City-
County Committee are:
Speakers Bureau
Schools, Churches and Colleges
Publicity
Civic Organizations
Banking, Building and Loan,
Merchandising Organizations
and other Financial Institutions
General Citizens
Industrial Groups
Rural Communities
Special decorations, Defense Savings posters and flaga made the Club
Room of the Robert Loe Hotel unusually attractive. These decorations are
to remain for at least two weeks for the benefit of the service clubs and
other organizations which hold their regular weekly meetings there. At
cach of these meetings, the Defense Savings Program will be explained by a
speaker provided by the Speakers Bureau of the Winston-Salem Committee.
Raleigh
Radio Station WPTF in Raleigh conducts a sidewalk quiz program three
tímoa c. week, giving Defense Savings Stamps as prizes. The person being
questioned pulls his question from a hat, and this slip of paper bears B
member which determines the value of the stamp prize. Those winning stamps
are urged to begin saving for a bond. This station also interviews promi-
nunt local citizens on various phases of the Defense Savings Program.
State Organization Endorsements
Strong endorsements of the Defense Savings Program have recently come
from the following North Carolina organizations:
American Legion - North Carolina Department
Postmasters Association
Retail Merchants Association
Civiten International, Carolina District
Veterans of Foreign Wars
- 6 -
Regraded Unclassified
196
TEXAS
Salary Allotment Underway and Popular
30,000 business firms in Texas have received B. simple mimoographed
message reading as follows:
"HAVE YOU BOUGHT YOUR SHARE IN AMERICA? If not, why
not see about it today?
"Defense Bonds and Savings Stamps are on sale in prac-
tically every community in TEXAS, and the purchase of
a bond or stamp today not only buys you a share in your
Government, but it will provide you with a safe invest-
ment for your future.
"Have you thought about offering your employees the
'Salary Allotment Plan?' Many organizations in Texas
have already done this and sund us glowing reports of
the results. If you are interested, you may secure de-
tails of the plans which have been submitted to us by
addressing Frank Scofield, State Administrator, Dofense
Savings Staff, Austin, Texas.
"Any suggestions you may have will also be appreciated
by this office."
Administrator Scofield advisos that thousands of responses to this
nossage have been received.
A. Monthly News Letter is now boing published by State Administrator
Scofield for Defense Savings Committeemen in his State.
30 girls volunteerod to spend their Fourth of July holiday in the
Texas headquarters office, handling the voluminous correspondence of
the Texas State Committee.
El Paso
144 business firms in El Paso employing 7,701 persons have made
Defense Savings salary allotment plans available to thoir employees.
A Spanish version of the official folder "For Defense Buy U. S.
Savings Bonds" was prepared by the El Paso County Committee.
Waco
Rubber stamps carrying an Amorican flag and the words
"Help Your Government
While You Save Buy U.S. Defense Bonds"
were prepared by the Waco Defense Savings Committee and given to concerns
which agreed to use them on the backs of all business envelopes.
- TRISTING -
- 7 -
Regraded Unclassified
197
"HAWAII WILL NOT FAIL!"
In a radio broadcast over KGU in Honolulu, Defense Savings Administra-
(or Fred H. Kanne opened the Defense Savings Program in the Territory.
"For upwards of 25 years, we have boasted of Hawaii's record
in the first World War," said Mr. Kanne. "The 1937 Joint Congres-
sional Committee reported, 'The loyalty displayed by the people of
Hawaii during the World War, when they excoeded their draft quota,
can cortainly be expected to be repeated if America should again
be engaged in war regardless of whom the onemy might be.'
"In addition to exceeding the draft quota in the first World
War, I might add that Hawaii at that time also surpassed its quote
of contributions in all other respects, including the purchase of
Liberty Loan Bonds
I am cortain that the people of this
Territory will not fail the Government at Washington in this
crisis in the affairs of our nation."
#
*
*
#
ARMY COMPANY 100%
One infentry company of the United States Army already has hung up a
DO per cent record in the purchase of Defense Savings Stamps, the War
Department has reported to the Treasury. This is Company C, 141st
Infantry, Thirty-Sixth Division, at Camp Bowie, Texas.
Company members signed up at the suggestion of Captain Thomas McClure
Williams, company commander, who called their attention to the campaign.
doing something for national defense dospite his illnoss. He worked out
Captain Williams, who was confined to a hospital, felt he should be
plan for voluntary stamp purchases and presented it to First Sergeant
Elihu L. Venable, who secured the cooperation of postal officers and won
the unaninous support of the men.
participation: One private bought his stamps just before going under the of
Some strenge errands were necessary in order to get the 100 per cont
other for an appendoctomy in a Brownwood, Texas, hospital. One member and
the wont to Fort Sam Houston, carrying stamps to an officer
in enlisted company man there. Two mon in the company guardhouse were among the
first to buy stamps.
#
*
Tic A String Around Your Finger
lobby of the intred, National Bank of New Rochelle, N. Yu reminds blue
Dressed white, and bluo costume, an attractive girl in all the
customers to buy First Defense Savings Bonds by tying red, white, and
ribbons on their fingers.
B
Regraded Unclassified
1 BS
INDIAN LEADER SUPPORTS DEFENSE SAVINGS PROGRAM
LI his wife, Anna Saunkeah, and their two sins, Jasper Jr., age N. and Elmer
TO ugo 14. in the studios of KOMA, Oklahoma City.
1. of Oklahomans gathered around their railios to hear The opening browleast of the "Trousury
to of first families visited The studios of the radio station to take part in local ceremonies
lo les write, Chief Saunkeah is Chairman of the Kiowa Tribul Council to overyday life- to-
Play I Murshal and is typical of the Indians who have made a place fin themselves up the few
done of Solas
Miss Mo. Hour" broadcast, Chief Saunkerb told II. C. Jones, State Defense SAVINGS Admins-
Pre That to World «Taff work among his people to secure their support for the nation-wide offort.
Regraded Unclassified
199
LISTENERS GUIDE
Some of the Programs
Which Will Boost
DEFENSE SAVINGS BONDS and STAMPS
During the Coming Week
MONTAY, JULY 14
PROGRAM
SPONSOR
NETWORK
10:30 - 10:45 AM (EST)
Big Sister
Lever Bros.
CBS
11:30 - 11:45 AM
Holen Trent
Edne W. Hopper
CBS
1:45 - 2:00 PM
Kate Hopkins
General Foods
CBS
9:00 - 9:30 PM
Lady Esther Seronade
Lady Esther
CBS
TUESDAY, JULY 15
3:15 - 3:30 PM
Stelle Dallas
Phillips
NBC-Red
7:00 - 7:30 PM
Johnny Presents
Philip Morris
NBC-Red
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16
2:45 - 2:55 PM
"Children Are Also People*
CBS
4:15 - 4:30 PM
Portia Faces Life
General Foods
NBC-Red
6:00 - 6:15 PM
Fred Waring
Liggett & Myers
NBC-Red
6:15 - 6:30 PM
Mr. Keen
Kolynos
NBC-Blue
8:00 - 9:00 PM
Millions For Defense "Tressury Dept.
CBS
THURSDAY, JULY 17
9:30 - 9:45 AM
Step Mother
Colgete
CBS
6:30 - 3:45 PM
Lorenzo Jones
Phillips
NBC-Red
4:15 - 4:30 PM
Portis Faces Life
General Foods
NBC-Red
FRIDAY, JULY 18
8:00 - 8:30 PM
Waltz Time
Phillips
NBC-Red
6:00 - 8:30 PM
Groat Plays
Philip Morris
CBS
8:30 - 8:55 PM
Your Happy Birthday
Axton-Fisher
NBC-Blue
SUNDAY, JULY 20
7:30 - 7:45 PM
Crime Doctor
Philip Morris
CBS
7:30 - 8:00 PM
One Man's Family
Standard Brands
NBC-Red
8:30 - 10:00 PM
Take It or Leave It
Eversharp
CBS
WEDNESDAY
*"CHILDREN ARE ALSO PEOPLE"*
2:45-2:55 PM
JULY 16
(THE CHILDREN BUREAU'S PROGRAM)
CBS
Miss Katherine 1. Lenroot, chief of the Children's Buresu, U. S. Depart-
nent of Labor, will speak on "Ways in which children can assist in the
National Defense Program through purchase of Defense Savings Stamps.
WIDNESDAY
MILLIONS FOR DEFENSE"**
8:00-9:00 PM
JULY 16
(THE TREASURY HOUR)
CBS
The tontative schedule of guest stars:
AL JOLSON
LARRY ADLER
ALICE DUER MILLER
THE ALDRICH FAMILY
BURNS AND ALLEN
LILY PONS
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ
WALTER O'KEEFE
- 10 -
Regraded Unclassified
200
SPECIAL PAMPHLET SENT TO UNIONS
The Treasury Department has just published B pamphlet, which will
be distributed widely throughout the renke of orgenized labor, entitled,
"Three Plans for Systematic Seving
for Members of Organized Labor."
Plan No. 1-- Individual members of a union agree to make regular pay-
ments to the treasurers of their unions of suma over and above
regular monthly union dues. Such additional payments are credit-
ed on the treasurers' books as "Defense Savings ellotments."
Plan No. 2- Unions buy with their own funds and carry on hend supplies
of Defense Savings Stemps for re-sele to their members.
Plan No. 3-- Unions arrange with employers for the establishment of
regular payroll allotment programs.
In transmitting this pamphlet to officers of international and ne-
tional unions, brotherhoods and federations, and local unions, the
Treasury states:
"This pamphlet contains three plans for systematic seving on
the part of members of your labor organization, for the pur-
pose of supporting the National Defense program by buying De-
fense Savings Bonds. The United States Treasury requests
that you consider these plans and adopt the one which 18 most
suitable for your organization and members.
The Treasury wishes to give every American citizen the oppor-
tunity to buy Defense Savings Bonda on E systematic basis, but
the willingness to buy must come from the people themselves."
PURCHASES INDICATE ORGANIZED LABOR'S ENDORSEMENT
The United Mine Workers of America has purchased Defense Sevings
Bonds to the limit. The Treasury recently received a check for $50,000,
signed by Thomas Kennedy, Secretary-Treasurer, and counter-signed by
John L. Lewie, President of the Union, to cover en investment in Sories
G Bonda.
Purchases of substantial blocks of Defense Savings Bonds have been
reported by the Minnesota State Federation of Labor; Local 584 of the
Milk Wagon Drivers Union in New York City: end by numerous other labor
organizations, including the Auto Mechanics Local, Master Meritime Lodge,
in Seattle, and the Carpenters Local of Longview, Washington.
Defense Bonds Are Tostimonial Award
Five $100 Defense Sevings Bonds were presented to Carl Holderman,
New Jarsey State Chairman of Labor's Non-Partisan League, at a testi-
monicl dinner given him by members of AFL end CIO unions.
- 11 -
Regraded Unclassified
201
MICHIGAN RETAILERS LAUNCH STAMP CAMPAION
Many retail stores in Detroit have had Defense Savings Stamps on
sale since early in May. However, on July 10 efforts to sell these
stamps through retail outlets were greatly intensified and the program
was extended to the entire state:
The Institute of Distribution and the National Association
of Food Cheins arranged for their members to use Michigan as a
test state for sale of Defense Savings Stamps.
The Michigan Chain Store Bureeu, representing 1,500 stores,
and the Michigan Retail Grocers and Meat Dealers Association,
representing WICO outlets in the state, urged their members to
sell Defense Savings Stamps.
The Michigan Retail Institute, representing 6 group of
trade associations 5 combined membership of 12,000, issued
8 special bulleten and ugged its members to cooperate. The
Michigan State Chamber of Commerce advised all local chambers
of the details of the plan.
State associations representing Michigan druggists, retail
hardware stores, dry goods stores, hotels and service stations
all joined in bringing the Dofense Savings Program to the atten-
tion of their members and in urging them to sell stamps.
Michigan radio stations, newspapers, and motion picture
exhibitors undertook a special drive to publicize the ovaila-
bility of Defense Savings Stamps at retail stores.
Leading Michigan business men who have had Defense Savings Stamps
on sale for some time in their stores report that their customers great-
ly appreciate the convenience of being able to buy these stamps when
they are making other purchases. With the full cooperation of all the
leading business men of the state, the sale of Defense Savings Stampa
through retail outlets will get 8 thorough test in Michigan.
SPECIAL MATERIAL AVAILABLE FOR RETAILERS
The next page of this NEWS LETTER is a reproduction of the pleque
prepared by the Defense Sevings Staff and available without cost to
stores which have Defense Savings Stamps on sale. Large posters with
this plaque in the center and in the border
"Save for Security
this store makes Savings Stamps available
to . Encourage Thrift end A1d Our Country's Defense"
have also been prepared. Full information with reference to the avail-
ability of this material is being given to State Administrators.
12 -
Regraded Unclassified
202
BUY
SAVINGS STAMPS DEFENSE
HERE
Regraded Unclassified
203
NEW MATERIAL PREPARED FOR BANKS
The American Bankers Association, which prepared and distributed to all
banks in the country a bulletin describing Defense Savings Bonds before
they were placed on sale May 1, has now made evailable additional material
which banks can use to sustain public interest in the program.
In 9. covering letter to all bank presidents, M. E. Selecman, A. B. A.
Director of Advertising, says in part:
"Now the first, or 'announcement' phase of the campaign is over.
From here on, it will be a matter of continuous public appeal
and education. To help you with your local advertising, the
A. B. A. Advertising Department has prepared the enclosed
naterial.
"Several innovations are included:
"The Defense Bond Envelope.
"The Buy-Me-A-Bond plan.
The Authorization card in the American Bankers Association's "Buy-Me-
A-Bond" plan reads 65 follows:
"I hereby authorize you, until further notice, to
charge to my checking account on the last business
day of the current month and of each subsequent
month (or each alternate month or each third month)
the amount of $
and use this smount to purchase
end deliver to me B United States Defense Savings
Bond, Series E, having a ten-year maturity value of
$
# Register Bonds In Name of
DEFENSE SAVINGS ON CHICAGO BILLBOARDS
The First National Bank of Chicago has placed large (24 sheet) posters
advertising Defense Savings Bonde on 160 prominently-located billboards in
Cook County, The posters show the Minute Men and read:
FOR DEFENSE and Investment
BUY United States Savings Bonds
Through Any Bank, Post office or
The First National Bank of Chicago
Other banks have been given permission to use this poster.
- 14 -
Regraded Unclassified
204
CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS DISCUSS PROGRAM
Vice President Henry A. Wallace led a round-table discussion on the
Defense Savings Program broadcast over the Columbia Broadcasting System net-
work recently. Participating in the discussion were:
Senator Scott Lucas of Illinois
Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas
Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn of Texas
Representative John W. McCormack of Massachusetts
Representative Fred L. Crawford of Michigan
They united in a radio appeal for "all kinds of Americans" to buy
Defense Savings Bonds and Stamps.
BOY SCOUT CAMP 100%
Every one of the 414 Boy Scouts at the first session of the Kansas City
Boy Scout camp at Osceola, Mo., bought at least one Defense Savings Stamp
and pledged themselves by resolution to purchase stamps continuously in the
future. It is expected that each group of boys attending the five remaining
sessions of the camp this summer will take similar action. At the end of
the camp session, six boys - one chosen from each group - will, with
appropriate ceremonies, present Covernor Forrest Donnell, Honorary Chairman
of the Defense Savings Committee for Missouri, a roster signed by campers
who have pledged themselves to participate in the Defense Savings Program.
TELEPHONE COMPANIES HELP
"Defense Bonds?" io the greeting used by telephone operators in Missouri
in place of the familiar "Number Please." All non-automatic telephone
exchanges in the state were asked by State Administrator Dan Nee to adopt
this method of bringing the Defense Savings Program to the attention of the
public. They responded enthusiastically.
MAIL PLUGS BONDS
Pitney-Bowes Postage Meter Company and the National Postage Moter
Company, Inc,, have designed slogan plates which many users of their equip-
cent are now using to advertise Defense Savings Bonds. In addition to the
plates designed by the manufacturers of this equipment, many users of
postage meter machines have designed their own slogan plates to boost
Defense Savings Bonds and Stamps.
"BABY" BONDS
be awarded as prizes.
Saby Popularity Contest" in which $500 worth of Defense Savings Bonds will
The merchants of Logansport, Indiane, are sponsoring an "All American
- 15 -
Regraded Unclassified
205
FILLED STAMP ALBUMS BUY BONDS!
Here are some ways to get them started:
SOLEONE buys a supply of stamps, places them in separate albums, and
resells them at such events as father and son banquets, club meetings,
patriotic rallies, community picnics, etc.
CLUBS purchase stamps with funds in their treasuries and present each
member with a stamp in an album at a meeting where the whole Defense
Savings idea is explained.
OUT-OF-DOOR INFORMATION CENTERS are astablished where Defense Savings
Stamps are on sale.
STAMPS ARE USED AS TIPS, to pay the boy who cuts the grass, or the
girl who stays with the baby.
THE PRESIDENT OF A CIVIC CLUB raises funds for his club's educational
fund or other special project in this way: He buys a $1 (or 35)
Defense Savings Stamp, places it in an album and presents it, with
appropriate remarks, to some other club member who is to add a stamp
to the album and pass it along at the next meeting to another member,
and 20 on until the album is filled.
A CLUB presents its new fathers with Defense Savings Stamps,
EMPLOYERS present their employees with the first stamp in a Defense
Savings Stamp album together with an appropriate message. (Many
concerns have not only done this, but have also promised to give
their employees the last stamps to complete their albums for exchange
for bonds.)
All of the above methods have been and are being used in various parts
of the country to start people on the road to ownership of a Defense Savings
Bond. Let the NEWS LETTER know of other ideas or stunts which are being
used to start folks buying Defense Savings Stamps.
*
#
This May Cost Him Plenty!
In a small city in Texas, every school child has received a 10$ Stamp
from a strong believer in Defense Savings. This anonymous benefactor has
let it be known that when a child has filled one card with Defense Savings
Stamps, he can secure, through the superintendent of schools, the first
Stamp on a second card.
- 16 -
Regraded Unclassified
206
TREASURY HOUSE DEDICATED
Pictured on the next page is "Treasury House," a colorful pavil-
Lion constructed in part of glass banks, which has been erected in the
parked square at 14th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, diagonally across
Lhe street from the Treasury Building, and presented to the Treasury
Department by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey.
Vice President Henry A. Wallace and Under Secretary of the Treasury
Daniel E, Bell participated in the dedication of the building on July 1.
Attractive hostesses in light blue uniforms will be on duty in
Treasury [{ouse from early morning until late at night, seven days a week,
giving information about Defense Savings Bonds and selling Defense Sav-
ings Stamps.
Defense Savings Bonds are not on sale at Treasury House. However,
a person who wishes to buy a bond is sold Defense Savings Stamps equi-
valent to the issue price of the bond desired and is then taken to the
Treasury in an Army "jeep" car where he exchanges the stamps for a De-
fense Savings Bond. Later, if it seens desirable, a post office employee
my be stationed at the building to issue bonds directly.
Varied attractions and programs have been arranged to interest the
public and arouse and sustain interest in Defense Savings:
Equipment of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard is dis-
played in the immediate vicinity of Treasury House.
Special Details of enlisted men guard this equipment and answer
questions concerning it.
Recruiting officers of the four services are on duty in "Defense
Square."
An Army bugler sounds "retreat" and "colors" each evening as the
colors come down from the Treasury House flagpole.
News bulletins from the United Pross are announced over a public-
address system every hour.
The "Easo Reporter" program is broadcast daily from the radio studio
awards those questioned, glass banks (similar to those used in
in Treasury House. A daily "quis" program is conducted which
the construction of the building) in which to start saving for
a Defense Savings Bond.
Personal appearances of stage and scroen stars; radio programs from
the NBC networks; Army, Navy and other Governmen motion pictures; Army,
Navy and Marine Corps band concerts; and many other special features are
planned.
- 17
Regraded Unclassified
207
DEFENSE SAVINGS INFORMATION CENTER DRAWS BIG CROWD
E
You of Treasury House in "Defense Square," Washington, D.C. Inset Viegi President Henry A. Wallaco
Defense Savings Stamps.
Here malay (le Washington We have further tangible evidence of the cooperation which America's industry
to to deferme program. The Standard Oil Company of New Jersey has crected II novel glass house
and has promitess a to the Treasury Department. Here one can sucure information concerning our Defense
Savings program. purchase Defense Savings Stamps. and view some of the types of military expiriment
Itained with funds which you BEP daily loaning to your Government through the purchase of these scourities."
-DANIEL W. BELL. Under Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
208
A. Typical Bank Program in Tulsa
Newspapers and billboard ads announce that the bonds are on sale
and push the slogans "FIRST - LET'S BUY BONDS AND STAMPS"
"The
beginning of an airport for National Defense is in the purchase of De-
fense Bonds"
...
"It's our country and we're all working to build
the defense that will keep it ours"
...
"Today's Minute Men are buy-
ing U. S. Defense Savings Bonds,"
Specially printed folders and blotters carrying the messages -
First Let's Combine Thrift with National Defense, "First Let's Buy
)efense Bonds," announce the bank's participation in program to all
customers
Draft authorization blanks, "Please charge my account
each
sonth and issue Defense Savings Bonds
" are distributed to all
who wish to save systematically
Slectric signs, posters and stickers in bank lobby indicate that
Defense Savings Bonds and Stamps are on sale.
Audichron, device which gives correct time to telephone subscrib-
ers, is equipped with record which advertises Defense Bonds - "Now
L5 the time to buy Defense Bonds; the time is
etc.
(This
device
will bring some one of a dozen different Defense Bond messages to
500,000 prospective purchasers each month.)
Zach bank employee is given one dollar's worth of Defense Savings
Stamps in an album as a start toward a bond and promised the final
dollar's worth to complete his album for exchange for a bond.
Payroll allotment plan is made available.
This is the program of the First National Bank of Tulsa. R.
Otis McClintock, president of the bank, represents the banking pro-
fession on the Oklahoma Defense Savings Committee.
Hundreds of banks throughout the country ere developing similar
programs to bring the Defense Savings Program to the attention of the
public and to keep it before the public.
BANK TELLERS IN KEY POSITION TO PUSH SALES
"Have you bought a Defenso Savings Stamp today?"
La the question on signs above the tellors' windows at the Amalgameted
Bank of New York. Tellers, armed with full information about Defense
Savingo Bonds and Stamps, started 284 customers savings stamps to buy
Defense Savings Bonds on the first day of their "campaign", according
to James 3. Murray, Vice President of the Amalgamated Bank.
- 19 -
Regraded Unclassified
209
These Lines Make One Think -
"He gave up 8 job in an air-conditioned office for maneuvers in the
U. 8, Tropics. What can you do? Save for Defenset"
-Savings Banks of Manhattan, Bronx, and
Westchester County, N. Y.
"SAVE for the defense of this nation,
for yourself,
for
your family, your children's education, your home -- BUY U. 5. DEFENSE
BONDS."
--The Huntington National Bank
of Columbus (Ohio)
"Not every man can shoulder 8 rifle, but every American can serve both
his country and himself by buying United States Defense Sevings Bonds."
--Banks of New Haven (Conn.)
"Millions of Americans ask 'WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP?'
...
To help --
and the need for your help is real -- purchase United States Defense
Bonds and Stamps!"
--Bowery Savings Bank of New York City
"FINANCING DEFENSE--The U. S. and Yours."
--Second Federal Savings and Loan Assn.
of Cleveland (Ohio)
"The answer to 'WHAT CAN I DO TO ARM AMERICA?' It takes men,
machines and money to build e strong National Defonse
-Wechovis Bank and Trust Company
of Winston-Salem (N. C.)
TODAY You Can Answer The Call of Your Country."
Mutual Savings Banks of Massechusetts.
The above are some "punch lines" from the many vigorously-worded
advertisements placed by financial institutions in their local newspapers
to arouse the public to the importance of participation in the Defense
Savings Program.
A very rough ostimate of the cost of this advertising 18 et the rate
of $1,500,000 to $2,000,000 8 year, according to Preston E. Reed, Execu-
tive Vice President, Finencial Advertisers Association. The more than
generous cooperation of the banks in the Defense Savings Program is greatly
appreciated by Treasury officials and the Defense Savings Staff.
20 -
Regraded Unclassified
Secretary Morgenthau
210
DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF
ADVANCE NOTICE RADIO PROGRAMS
SATURDAY - JULY 12, 1941
Time:
6:30 - 7:00 P.M.
Program: Wayne King
Station: WJSV and Columbia Broadcasting System
Time:
7:30 - 8:00 P.M.
Program:
Truth or Consequences
Defense Bonds will be awarded as Prizes
on this program in place of the usual
cash.
Station: WRC and National Broadcasting Co. Red Network
THESE PROGRAMS PROMOTE THE SALE GF DEFENSE BONDS AND STAMPS
Regraded Unclassified
296-A
211
MEMORANDUM
July 12, 1941
To:
PRICE ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE
From:
R. E. Thompson, Secretary
Attached hereto are the following:
1, Minutes of the meeting of July 8.
2, Amendment extending civilian alloca-
tion program for borax and boric acid
to July 30, 1941
3. Civilian allocation program for na-
terial and equipment entering into
motor and electric coach and rail-
car construction for city, suburban
and inter-city common carrier passen-
ger transportation.
4. Civilian allocation program for ma-
terial and equipment entering into
railroad, mine and industrial locomo-
tive construction: steam, electric or
Diesels
5. Civilian allocation of 10,000 tons of
galvanized sheete and 5,000 tons of black
sheets for grain bin construction,
Regraded Unclassified
296-d
212
CONFIDENTIAL
SUMMARY OF STENOGRAPHIC TRANSCRIPT OF MEETING or
PRICE ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE
July 8, 1941
11:15 Della
Chairson Nr. Henderson
Present: Kies Elliott, Messre. March, Stevens, Pike, Lubin, Clayton
0'Connell, MacKeachie, England, Barnes, Shields, Ballif,
Galoraith, Weiner, Ginsburg, Hoover, Plummer, Thompson
1. Price movements and price legislation
Mr. Henderson called attention to the fact that during the past
week there has been more discussion of prices and inflation than during
any previous comparable period since the creation of the OPACS. He
added that there has been a temporary hal: in the price advance as
shown by the Bureau of Labor Statistics index and indexes maintained by
various publications, that this does not indicate that B. method for keep-
ing prices in line has been found, but it does indicate that the general
purpose of OPACS to attack the more volatile and sensitive prices has
been justified.
Mr. Henderson stated that he had nothing new to report concerning
the proposed price legislation excopt that he expects to 600 the Pres-
idont this wook. Ro later added that an informal group is handling the
logislation at OPACS and thatJohn Harm is the point of contact. He askod
that committee members send their inquirios and any information they may
obtain as a result of discussions with members of Congress concorning the
logislative situation to this group in order that the OPACS may have a
catalog of the various points of viow.
2, Consumer protection
Miss Elliott reported on some of the activities in which her Division
is ongagod to protect the consumer, and stressód the constructive stop
taken toward roal consumer protection in the morging of the Consumer and
Price Stabilization Divisions. The Policy Section in the Consumer Division
is working closely with the Prico Division, bringing to its attention all
problems concorning general living standards in the country and All factors
which will affect consumer living. In the Consumer Relations Section a
field staff is boing built up (1) to find out whnt is happoning in cortain
localities and (2) to try to got to the consumers more intelligent inform-
tion nbout what is going on. For commplo, RD effort is boing mado to ronch
all types of people to educate thom concorning what sacrifices it will be
necessary to make in order that sufficient matorials Are available for the
defense program.
Regraded Unclassified
213
296-A
& Quality and Standards Section under Dr. Brady's direction is being
set up to help inform the consumer concerning what a dollar will buy.
The Consumer Division is also participating in a large mumber of meetings
to discuss not only what the Consumer Division is doing but also the role
of OPACS in the defense program and the program's general significance.
Mr. Henderson suggested that Miss Elliott send sample copies of some of
the publications issued by her Division to the members of the Committee
LA order that they may be advised of the types of service extended by her
Division.
3. Cotton textiles
Mr. Henderson reported that some of the textile people are expecting
B degradation of standards of textiles as one of the first accompaniments
of the price order. Miss Elliott stated that her division is cooperating
with the Bureau of Home Economics, and the retail people are also coopera-
ting, in analysing changes that are made, which information is then passed
on to consumers. Mr. Henderson added that there 10 also the fear in connec-
tion with the cotton textile order that prices to the consumer will keep up
though the mill margin has been limited,
Mr. Galbraith stated that converters' margine and prices have not yet
reflected the sharp upward movement in prices since February and that the
problem is now to keep them from responding, He added that one of the
most controverted questions in connection with the order is its retroactive
provision calling for the rewriting of previous commitments to the levels
established in the order, Be referred to inspired stories in the Wall
Street Journal and the New York Times to the effect that OPACS would soan-
don the cotton textile field and that it was scared out of the cottonseed
oil field. On the basis of the latter story. the cottonseed oil quotation
went up between 25 and 50 points yesterday. He said corrective information
would be published in this connection. However, work 18 going forward on
the cottonseed oil schedule and on studies of inventories in the industry.
Mr. Henderson referred to the large inventories in cotton textiles and
the improbability that the current high production 18 actually passing on
to consumers. Mr. Clayton added that on the basis of previous experience
it is probably true that large inventorios are being built up. Mr. Hender-
són stressed the importance of the cotton textile order in that it affects
to воше extent what the farmer gete for cotton and whether or not the Wage
and Bour Law will be maintained and added that an advisory setup will be
devised which complaints can be made to OPACS. Mr. MacKeachie added that,
since a good many Army bids had been held up until the order went into
effect, no real effect. on Government purchases had yet been soen.
4. Consumer credit
Mr. Henderson reported that the Executive Order on the control of
consumer credit has been completed and that B. meeting had been held with
Chairman Secles of the Federal Reserve Board and that arrangements were
being made for a meeting with Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthmu to
discuss 1t, If the order ie satisfactory to the Treasury, it is presumed
Regraded Unclassified
214
296-A
that it vill be placed in the hopper for clearance by all agencies to be
affected by it.
3. Rubber tires
Mr. Galbraith reported that, as indicated st the last committee meeting,
action on issuing a price schedule on rubber tires has been indefinitely
postponed, inasmuch a.e conferenceswith mass distributore, manufacturers and
dealers have indicated that there is little chance of a price advance which
would more than reflect the increase in cost of crude rubber and of cotton.
6. Lumber
Mr. Galbraith reported that the lumber situation 1a far from setia-
factory and that within the next two or three weeks it 18 probable that
schedules will have to be issued on certain grades and types of West Cosst
lumber.
7. Furniture
Mr. Galbraith reported that the furniture situation has improved since
the last meeting BA B result, at least in part, of cooperative activity
with the Federal Trade Commission which 18 looking into the justification
for claimed advances in cost, and partly due to pressure which OPACS has
put on the industry. The furniture showing at Merchandise Mart in Chicago
opened about 5 percent lower than the New York showing, and much more in-
terest 18 evidenced there in price stability than in New York.
8. Paper
Mr. Gelbraith reported that, unlese there 1a e rapid change for the
better, OPACS te prepared to ask the Federal Trade Commission to investi-
gate claimed cost increases in the paper industry.
9. Coffee
Mr. Galbraith stated that following preliminary meetings with the
State Department, OPACS representatives are meeting with members of the
Inter-American Coffee Committee this afternoon to try to get a meeting of
zinde on minimm price fixing in Brazil and Colombia instead of maximim
price fixing in the United States.
10. Petroleum
Mr, Galbraith advised that work is nov under way on a tentative sched-
ule in connection vith holding the prices on Eastern petroleum during the
late summer and early autumn of this year when the shortage vill be felt,
There velo general discussion of the situation in the petroleum Indue-
try and particularly of the threatened shortage in the Northeast. Mr. Pike
Regraded Unclassified
4
215
296-4
stated that the major problem in his mind is the action to be taken in the
evant of the diversion of 200 tankers instead of the 50 about which dis-
cussion VAE had at the last oil meeting held by Secretary Ickes. The 86D-
oral feeling was that works should go forward 0.0 rapidly as possible toward
the procurement of trakets, the building of pipelines. and any other mean-
ures necessary to assure ab adequate supply of oil,
11. Civilian allocation
Ks. Weiner reported that a series of conferences is being held with
the consumers' durable goods industry and with the major consumers of
motals outside of the railroad and construction fields to see what can be
done in view of the curtailment which is bound to come. An effort is being
made, through the participation of representatives of OPM's Labor Section
and the Defense Contract Section, to avoid curtailment resulting merely
from the application of priorities without consideration of the labor and
production facilities tinis released.
Later discussion brought out that the problem of civilian allocation
is further complicated by the fact that in practically no commodity except
alusime has there been B. definite estimate concerning military needs and
bence there is no estimate on the amount available for civilian allocation.
12. General economic over-all policy statement
Mr. Hoover reported that he is working on a series of conferences to
develop facts for his general policy statement. Thus far there has been
about a 13 percent increase in the processing of food, with the possibility
of still further expansion.
13. Accumulation of stock piles
Mr. Clayton reported on the problems the Metals Reserve Company faces
in accumulating stock piles because present consumption of manganese,
chrome, copper, tungsten, zinc, asbestos, etc., equals every ton that can
be found for importation. The only way to stock pile in these cases 18 to
take the material away from some industry or divert shipping needed to
bring in materials for private industry for transportation of stock pile
inventories.
Substantial progress has been made in stock piling rubber, princip-
ally because of the action of OPACS and OPM in curtailing rubber consump-
tion and because the Rubber Reserve Company is the sole buyer of rubber
for importation. Discussion disclosed that, in terms of maximum security,
action comparable to that on rubber should be taken in other commodities.
Though it is possible to control civilian consumption through the priority
power and control over shipping and inventories, the most effective sol-
ution is for the Government to be the sole buyer.
Mr. Clayton pointed out that a careful study of ten or twolve stret-
egic materials has shown that consumption in the United States is now
about 60 percent of the world's production and some of the important sources
Regraded Unclassified
296-A
- 5 -
216
of production are now inaccessible.
Mr. Stevens commented that the provision in Secretary Stimson's pro-
posal for importing defense materials without tariff permitting companies
to import materials duty-free for use in Government contracts was, in his
opinion, doubtful. He added that it would be simpler for the Government to
make the purchases and resell to companies which need materials for Govern-
ment contracts.
The committee adjourned at 12:30 p.m. to meet Tuesday, July 15 at
11:00 a.m.
OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
217
Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply
for release Saturday
PM 673
July 5, 1941
Because the total defense and civilian demand continues temporarily to exceed
the available supply, the Civilian Supply Allocation Division of the Office of Price
Administration and Civilian Supply today extended from July 5 to July 30, 1941, its
civilian allocation program for borax and boric acid used in manufacture of boro-
silicate glass. The original program was issued on June 6, 1941.
Text of the amendment extending the program in attached:
TITLE 32 - NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER XI - OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION
AND CIVILIAN SUPPLY
Part 1311 - Borax and Boric Acid
Amendment Extending Civilian Allocation Program to
July 30, 1941
On June 6, 1941, the Office of Price Administration and Civilian
Supply issued n Civilian Allocation Program for Borox and Boric Acid,
This program, unless extended, will expire July 5, 1941. The conditions
necessitating the formulation of the program. however, still prevail.
Accordingly, it is hereby directed that Section 1311.4, Effective date;
expiration, be amended to read as follows:
E 1311,4 Effective date: expiration. This program shall
take effect on the 9th day of June 1941, and shall, unloss
cooner terminated by the Administrator, expire the 30th day
of July 1941.*
This amendment is issued pursuant to Executive Order No. 8734,
Issued this 3rd day of July, 1941,
/s/ Loon Henderson
Leon Henderson,
Administrator
Certified to be a true copy
of the original
John E. Hamm,
Deputy Administrator
Regraded Unclassified
OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
218
Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply
for Monday AM release
July 7, 1941
PM 676
To insure adequate transportation facilities for the traveling public, the
Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply, through its Civilian Supply
Allocation Division, today issued en allocation program providing preferential
status on deliveries of materials and equipment used in the construction of care
and buses for urban or interurban lines.
A serious shortage of these types of passenger transportation equipment
exists. It was decided to alleviate the situation by placing coaches and rail-
care used on urban and interurban lines on an equal footing as to materials and
equipment with freight care and locomotives, for which allocation programs already
have been prepared.
The new program provides that deliveries of material and equipment necessary
for the construction of motor and electric coaches and rail-care for city, subur-
tan and inter-city common carrier passenger transportation shall be given prefer-
ence over all material and equipment going to any other civilian uses, subject
only to a prior preference to deliveries for all such material and equipment as
pay be required under contracts with the United States or any department or
agency thereof.
Text of the program follows:
TITLE 32 - NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER XI - OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION AND CIVILIAN SUPPLY
Part 1320 - Civilian Allocation Program for
Material and Equipment Entering into Motor
and Electric Coach and Rail-Car Construc-
tion for City, Suburban and Inter-City Com-
mon Carrier Passenger Transportation.
There is a critical shortage in the nation's coaches and rail-cars. The
total demand for material and equipment entering, directly or indirectly, into
coach and rail-car construction is presently in excess of the available supply.
It is necessary. therefore, to direct the distribution of such material and equip-
Regraded Unclassified
-2-
PM 676
219
gent in order to insure an uninterrupted and unretarded supply for coach and rail-
car construction.
Accordingly, pursuant to and under the authority vested in me by Executive
Order No. 8734, and particularly Section 2 (a) thereof, the following program for
allocation of coach and rail-car material and equipment among competing civilian
demands is announced:
5 1320.1. Preference rating on deliveries. All deliveries of material and
equipment necessary for the construction of coaches and rail-care shall be given
preference over all material and equipment going into any other civilian use,
subject, however, to B. prior preference to deliveries for all such material and
equipment as may be required under contracts with the United States or any depart-
sent or agency thereof. The preference rating provided hereby shall be equal to
the preference rating announced in 1313,1 and 1313.2 of this Chapter for material
and equipment entering into freight car construction and repairs.
*88 1320.1 and 1320.2 issued pursuant to the authority contained in
Executive Order No. 8734.
I 1320.2. Effective Date: Expiration. This program shall take effect
on the 5th day of July, 1941, and shall continue until terminated by the Administre-
10r.
Issued this 5th day of July, 1941.
Leon Henderson
Administrator
CERTIFIED TO BE A TRUE COPY OF THE ORIGINAL:
John E. Hamm, Deputy Administrator
Regraded Unclassified
OPTICE FOR EDERGLICY MANAGEMENT
220
Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply
For Monday AM Release
July 7. 1941
PM 677
Action to relieve a critical shortage of locomotives of all kinds was taken
today by the Civilian Supply Allocation Division of the Office of Price Administra-
tion and Civilian Supply through issuance of an allocation program giving prefer-
ential delivery status to materials and equipment essential to their construction.
Ry this move, OPACS places locomotive makers on a par with freight car build-
ers in their prior right to materials and equipment over other civilian used, The
allocation program for freight car materials was issued June 10, 1941.
Ingreative demand of the defense effort for iron, steel, and other materials
has entired scarcities. OPACS' allocation programs ein to insure an uninterrupted
and ticrutarded flow of supplies to civilian manufacturers of goods and equipment
most necessary to the public welfare. Additional railroad, mine and industrial
1000motives and freight care are urgently required.
Its latest allocation program provides that all deliveries of material and
equipment necessary for the construction of locomotives (steam, electric or Diesel)
"shall be given preference over all material and equipment going into any other
civilian use, subject, however, to & prior preference to deliveries for all such
materials and equipment as may be required under contracts with the United States
or any department or agency thereof."
Text of the program follows:
TITLE 32 - NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER XI - OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION AND CIVILIAN SUPPLY
Part 1319 - Civilian Allocation Program for
Material and Equipment Entering into Rail-
road, Mine and Industrial Locomotive Con-
struction: Steam, ElectRic or Diesel.
There 10 & critical shortage in the nation's locomotives. The
total demand for material and equipment entering. directly or indirectly,
Regraded Unclassified
221
- 2 -
PM 677
into locomotive construction is presently in excess of the available
supply. It is necessary, therefore, to direct the distribution of such
material and equipment in order to insure an uninterrupted and unretarded
supply for locomotive construction.
Accordingly, pursuant to and under the authority vested in ne
by Executive Order No. 8734, and particularly Section 2 (a) thereof, the
following program for allocation of locomotive material and equipment
among competing civilian demande is announced:
5 1319.1. Preference rating on deliveries. All deliveries of
material and equipment necessary for the construction of locomotives shall
be given preference over all material and equipment going into any other
civilian use, subject, however, to & prior preference to deliveries for
all such material and equipment as may be required under contracts with
the United States or any department or agency thereof. The preference
rating provided hereby shall be equal to the preference rating announced
in 1313,1 end 1313.2 of this Chapter for material and equipment entering
into freight car construction and repairs."
§§ 1319.1 and 1319,2 issued pursuant to the authority
contained in Executive Order No. 8734.
& 1319,2 Effective Date: Expiration. This program shall take
effect on the 5th day of July, 1941, and shall continue until terminated
by the Administrator.*
Issued this 5th day of July, 1941,
Leon Henderson
Administrator
CERTIFIED TO BE A TRUE COPY OF THE ORIGINAL:
John E. Hamm, Deputy Administrator
Regraded Unclassified
232
OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply
For Monday AM Release
July 7, 1941
PM 678
Aid for farmers facing a serious shortage of storage space for grain now
being harvested was assured today by Leon Henderson, administrator, OPACS, when
he issued a civilian allocation program providing for emergency preference ratings
on 15,000 tons of sheet steel to be used in construction of grain bins.
The program provides that emergency preference ratings effective for obtain-
ing such matorial shall be issued to the extent determined by the Office of
Production Management to be consistent with the defense program. The allocation
program includes 10,000 tons of galvanized sheets, of which approximately 6,000
tons have already been delivered to grain bin manufacturers, and 6,000 tons of
black sheets. In allocating the remaining tonnage of galvanized sheets the
director of Priorities will, as in the case of the tonnage already allocated, grant
individual preference rating certificates among manufacturers in such menner as
may be feasible.
More than 15,000 tons of steel could be used for construction of needed
grain bins at the present time but this is all that can be diverted from other
oritical demands, thus making it necessary to construct additional bins from other
materials, There is not sufficient time, however, to construct all the needed
bins from materials other than steel,
Text of the programs follows:
TITLE 32 - NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER XI - OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION AND CIVILIAN SUPPLY
Part 1321 - Civilian Allocation of 10,000
tons of Galvanized Sheets and 5,000 tons of
Black Sheets for Grain Bin Construction
There is A serious shortage in the facilities for storing grain now
being harvested. This grain must be preserved at all costs short of impairing
Regraded Unclassified
-2-
PM 678
223
critical military nocossities, The time is too short to permit construction of
all the required grain bins out of material other than shoot-stool. It is neces-
cery, therefore, to allocate 10,000 tons of Galvanized Sheets and 5,000 tons of
Black Sheets immediately, in order that necessary bins may be constructed to
contain the grain now coming from the land. The additional need for grain bins
must be net by the use of other suitable material, as R. total of 15,000 tons of
steel is all that can be diverted from other critical domands.
Accordingly, pursuant to the authority vested in me by Executive Order
No. 8734, and particularly Section 2 (a) thereof, the following preference rat-
ing among compating civilian demands is announced,
§ 1321.1. Preference Rating. 10,000 tons of Galvanized Shoets and
5,000 tons of Black Shoots for the construction of grain bins shall be given an
emigincy preference rating effective for obtaining such material to the extent
determined by the Office of Production Management to be consistent with the do-
fense program.
The preference provided horoby includes approximately 6,000 tons of
Dilvanized Sheets alroady delivered to grain bin manufacturors. In allocating
too remaining tonnnge, the Director of Priorities will, as in tho case of the
torenage already allocated, grant individual proference rating certificates among
manufacturers in such manner as may be fensible.*
-§ 1321.1 and 1321.2 issued pursuant to the authority contained
in Executivo Order No. 8734.
000 1321.2, Effectivo Date. This proference rating shall take effect
on the 5th day of July, 1941,
Issued this 5th day of July, 1941
Loon Henderson
Administrator
CERTIFIED TO BE A TRUE COPY OF THE ORIGINAL:
John E. Hamm, Deputy Administrator
Regraded Unclassified
224
July 12, 1941.
Mr. Cookres
Mr. Hondrey
At 11:50 a.m., Mr. Long of the Federal Receive Bank of New Terk reported the
following two transactions, according to information received from the Chase
National Banks
the New Yesk agescy of the Tekshans Specia Beak paid Chase
$2,000,000 for credit to the Bank of Bresil's I at the Chase.
The State Bank of the U.S.S.R., Neesew, confirmed the opening
w Chase of as irrevesable sight letter of credit in favor of
Licensiada Gasten Solema, Mexico, to cover a skipment of sisal.
(Mexice is as exporter of a form of sisal used is the production of
rope). Value of the credit was $412,000.
steals 7-22-41
Regraded Unclassified
225
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 12, 1941.
TO Secretary Morgenthau
CONFIDENTIAL
FROM Mr. Cochran
Registered sterling transactions of the reporting banke were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
£3,000
Purchased from commercial concerns
&
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York sold £15,000 in registered sterl-
Ing to the American Express Company.
Open market sterling held steady at 4.03-1/2, and there were no reported
transactions.
In New York, closing quotations for the foreign currencies listed below
were as follows:
Danadian dollar
11-13/16% discount
Argentine peso (free)
.2385
Brazilian milreis (free)
.0505
Uruguayan peso (free)
.4380
Colombian peso
.5800
Mexican peso
.2070
Cuban peso
1-1/4% discount
Japanese yen
.2358
In Shanghai, the yuan again improved 1/32# to 5-9/32 Sterling ad-
vanced 2-1/2# to 3.94.
There were no gold transactions consummated by us today.
No new gold engagements were reported.
2ml
Regraded Unclassified
226
EXPORTS OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, SCRAP IRON AND SCRAP STEEL
FROM THE UNITED STATES TO JAPAN, RUSSIA, SPAIN, AND GREAT BRITAIN
AS SHOWN BY DEPARTURE PERMITS GRANTED
Week ended July 12, 1941
:
:
:
JAPAN
RUSSIA
SPAIN
:
GREAT BRITAIN
:
:
:
:
TROLEUM PRODUCTS
Fael and Gas 011 (including
Diesel 011)
257,500 Bble.
-
-
521,000 Bbls.
Crude -
Blended or California
High Octane Crude*
70,000 Bble.
-
--
-
-
-
--
-
All Other Crude
Gasoline -
Gasoline A**
-
-
-
410,000 Bbls.
Gasoline "
11,760 Bbls.
-
55,800 Bbls.
667,574 Bbls.
All Other Gasoline
-
--
15,600 Bbla.
-
bricating 011 -
Aviation Lubricating 011***
37,726 Bbls.
-
--
60,419 Bbls.
All Other Lubricating 011
66,773 Bbls.
-
7,800 Bbls.
968 Bbls.
-
-
Tetracthyl Lead***
--
--
"loosters", such as Iso-
Octane, Iso-Hexane, or
-
Iso-Pentane
-
-
-
EAP IRON AND SCRAP STEEL
Fumber 1 Heavy Melting Scrap
-
-
4,709 Tons
I
All Other Scrap
-
15.407 Tons
--
--
Yice of the Secretary of the Treasury. Division of Research and Statistics.
July 14, 1941.
prom: Office of Merchant Ship Control, Treasury Department.
. Any material from which by commercial distillation there can be separated
more than 3 percent of aviation motor fuel, hydrocarbon or hydrocarbon
sixture - President's regulations of July 26, 1940.
Aviation Gasoline.
la defined in the President's regulations of July 26, 1940.
Regraded Unclassified
227
ML
PLAIN
London
Dated July 12, 1941
Rec'd 10:14 am,
Secretary of State
Washington
2976, twelfth.
FOR TREASURY.
With reference to paragraph 2 of the Embassy's 2877,
of July 7, the two day's House of Commons debate on pro-
duction has thrown no light on the Government's wage policy
question, the speaker having ruled that labor problems
which were outside the scope of the debate would bE dis-
cussed on the vote for the Ministry of Labor at a later
date. In fact although Bevin, the Minister of Labor, is
chairman of the "Executive" Production Council he was not
put up by the Government to reply to any part of the de-
bate, the Government spokesmen assigned being the Minister
of Aircraft Production and the Parliamentary Secretary to
the Ministry of Supply. No doubt this Exclusion of labor
and wages questions from debate was prompted by the fact
that Sir Kingsley Wood's negotiations with the T.U.C. and
Employers Federation have just been initiated.
WINANT
MG
Regraded Unclassified
228
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Viehy (Paris), France
DATE: July 12, 1941, 7 D.M.
NO.: 870
The fellowing is from Matthews for the Secretary of the
Treasury.
Reference is made to the Embassy's telegram No. 467,
4 p.m., dated April 21, 1941,
The following statement was made by an official of the
National Bank of Belgium, This official just passed through
Vichy. "All that remains of the Belgian gold at Kayes--
French West Africa--inamely, twe-thirds, is at the present
time en route either by truck across the desert toward
Colomb-Bechar or on the Miger near Damake'.' (Colomb-Beehar--
a rail head in French Moroese.)
The official further stated that "1t will all be in
Barlin in three months unless something happens to it on
route."
LEANY
10 THE
LECHNICY vs.
EA:PAK
office THE
BVI MII It bW 3 30
BEGEINED
Regraded Unclassified
C
0
229
P
Y
RS
GRAY
TOKYO VIA SHANGHAI & N.R.
Dated July 12, 1941
Rec'd 11:55 a.m.
Secretary of State
Washington.
1585. July 12, noon.
The Government announced last night the adoption
of a plan to revise the financial structure of the
nation which in effect will place the control of all
financial institutions in the hands of the Bank of
Japan. Capital will be more effectively mobilized,
the financial policy will be revised, changes will be
made in the accounting, budget and taxation systems.
The announcement which is lengthy will be studied by
the Commercial Attache who will discuss it in his next
week Russo-Japaness economic cable.
Sent to the Department via Shanghai.
Grew
LMS
eh:copy
7-16-41
Regraded Unclassified
230
PARAPHRASE OF TELEXGRAM SENT
TO: American Embassy, Istanbul, Tarkey
DATE: July 12, 1941, 2 p.m.
NO.: 25
A report has been received by AP from Istanbul,
under date of July 8, stating that bankers of Germany,
using funds secured from the occupied countries, are
purchasing French and Belgian holdings in Turkey. This
report is of interest to the Treasury Department, which
sake that you send by telegraph a repert on any information
on this matter you say have. This telegram is to be sent
at the expense of the Treasury Department.
Welles, Acting
(FL)
10 THE
LECHNICVI
011100 Y 1115
BYI 70F le bW S 35
18EYR in
EAILMW
BECEINED
Regraded Unclassified
231
RESTRICTED
0-2/2657-220 No. 439 M.I.D., W.D. 12:00 M., July 12, 1941.
SITUATION REPORT
I. GERMAN-RUSSIAN FIGHT.
Ground: So far as is known, no change has occurred in
the situation on the German-Russian front. Russians are organiz-
ing defense lines.
Air: No change in the general situation. Russian
attempts to bomb Rumanian oil fields renewed.
II. GERMAN-BRITISH FIGHT.
Air: German. Light attacks on Great Britain.
British. Offensive continued. Last night attacks
were made on German industrial targets and on Wilhelmshaven.
III. MEDITERRANEAN FIGHT.
Ground: No change in the situation.
Air: German attacks on Port Said and Tobruk.
RESTRICTED
CONFIDENTIAL
232
Purchase of Code
I 1 a I $
at 10:21, July 10, 2041.
Leaden, filed 14:50, Julp 12, 1941.
1.
k 1 I a were I % à
I I I I s I 1 E 1 ! a
securiary abjectives - drogged. 33 too of high explasive basks and yess -
enaliarios.
m Cress Britnin disgetched 730 fighters as
follows: any an offensive gatests, see in the protection of chipping, 199
a interception patrols, and 4th - special nimiens. Stores Starling -
droyped 24 team of high explosive bonto - while mother three
dropped 11 bear of high explesive benie - the abiggeste at to Duit. During
these rates which - currted one with - results, m - e ank-
aircraft certrity we assembered.
& Bad wather provented my Image beater
activity. 36 benbers wro disputched to - of viside anothed
is Ingland, the - of this atressis - not superol.
2.
& Mayabobod - 35 infestive fighters, 5 Long
reage bookers ml 20 recommines street.
in
the - exployed 10 nine-laying air-
eart, 15 fighters and de Lang mp Insters.
2. dair small onlo sparations against chipping
|
confidential
INFORMATION COPY
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
233
5.
s During the m of July 12th etc Spécifico
and , gilsts - lest. 2 Spitifice -
2 6 and 8 No-189's - - - e
and 1 Mo-109 - protobly destroyed, and 1 Mo-1487's at 1
wire damgel a day 11th. 2a addition to these already reported, e Re-111's
were destrayed the night of day 7-9.
4.
1 I I I I 1 a I
. I I 2 I I 1 I If Inc. 1
I Inc. B I a 1 and I a 2 4 I
- fighter opatrons vithin from the Reselan from w Control -
I 3 I I 2 Miles 6
-
Distribution:
Secretary of Yes
State
Department
thist of Staff, 6-2
My
Place
Division
Office
of
THE
Intelligence
6.
Ghief of the Amy Atr Forces
8
I
Asststant
Ghief of sents, 6-3
Air Gargo
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
234
6. Day of July 12. Only a few operations against
shipping vero carried ont.
3. Aireraft losses Beneried.
a British lesses, During the night of July 12-13, one beaker
crashed and two were unreparted. One Blenheim vas unreported from the
raid off Ijmuiden 08 July 12. Two Spitfires and two pilete were also
lost.
b. Avia leases. German lesses for July 12th were as follows:
6 Me-109r's and 2 Me-109's destroyed, 1 Me-1093 and 1 Me-109 probably
destroyed, and 6 Me-1097's and 3 Me-199's damaged.
A cable has been received by the Air Ministry from Cellier,
a member of the British missten in Hossev, containing information obtained
during a personal interview with Shaposhairev and Stalin. The Russians,
according to Stalin, are propared to meet any contingencies which say
arise. The I-18 fighter has demonstrated very good performance, hiving
a speed of 390 miles per hour. Concentrations of German tanks and treop
columns are being vigerously attacked, with good results by the Russian
Air Fores. Hany German benbers are being shot down by Russian fighters.
Cermany is using may young and inexperienced vilate. The Russians also
report having a tve-exgined bember expable of a spood of 300 siles per
hear and a reage, earrying B bomb load of one ton, of 4000 miles, or,
earrying a bomb load of three toms, of 1800 miles.
LEE
Distribution:
Secretary of Vali
State Department
Assistant Chief of staff, 0-2
Var Plans Division
Office of Naval Intelligence (2)
0.8.00
Chief of the Any Air Forces
Assistant Secretary of Treasury COMFIDENTIAL
Air Corps
Chief of COMP
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
235
Paraphrase of Code Cablegram
Received at the Was Department
at 10:30 a. July 13, 1941.
Ländon, filed 15:45, July 15, 1941.
1. Brittish Air Activity star the
Be Hight of July 11-12. an tens of high explosive bosine
and 1400 insendiary bembe were dropped upon Vilhelmshaves.
be Day of July 12. Dry dook facilities at Arques vare
attacked by 3 stirling bombers. & cervey off Ljmuiden and Toteshe
vas attacked by 12 Bleakeins, shipping in the Schelds by 6 Blenkeins,
shipping off Ameland by 11 Bleakeins, and shipping off Terel by 9 Nen-
heims. In all these raids Uniter showers were ensumatered and poor
results vare obtained. A total of 534 fighters were dispatched as
follows: interseption patrols, 80g protestion of shipping, 2045
offensive patrols, 2541 and special patrola, 46.
0. Nicht of July 12-15. During this night 61 bombers were
sent to attack comsentrations of stores at Brensa. One bomb of 4000
pounds struck between the Drumen railway station and the Deutsake
shipyards. The wather Valid bad, however, and only about one-half of
the bombers dispatched attacked the primary objective.
2. Germen Air Activity are Britain.
he Day of July 11, Germany operated against Ingland with
15 reconnaissance airent and 5 long range beabors. Over compled
territory, principally in the area to st. Oner, 290 fighters saintained
defensive patrols.
be Night of July 11-12. Dispatched were 15 long range bonbers
and 5 reconnaissance aireraft.
CONFIDENTIAL
INFORMATION COPY
Regraded Unclassified
Secretary Morgenthau
DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF
236
SPECIAL NOTICE
ADVANCE NOTICE RADIO PROGRAMS
SUNDAY - JULY 13, 1941
Time:
1:15 - 2:00 P.M.
Station: WOL
Program: "America Preferred"
This program is the premiere of a new series
sponsored by the Treasury Department over the coast
to coast network of the Mutual Broadcasting System.
Pierre van Passsen is the uarrator and Herbert Gaston,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, will speak from
Washington, introducing the series. Jaruila Novotna,
Metropolitan Opera star, will be the guest artist and
will sing in Czech, Aria from Dvorak's Opera Rusalka,
and in English, "Goin' Home", the Negro Spiritual used
by Dvorak for hie Largo in the New World Symphony.
Guest speakers on the program are to be Major
Alexander de Seversky and Dean Alfange, and the guest
drematic star is to be Claude Rains. Maurice Maeter-
linck, Edna Ferber, Countess Alexandra Tolstoy, Henri
Bernstein, and David Lu will be the greeters, being
introduced by Mr. van Passeen to welcome the new series
to radioland.
Regraded Unclassified
DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF
237
ADVANCE NOTICE RADIO PROGRAMS
SUNDAY - JULY 13, 1941
Time:
4:15 - 4:30 P.M.
Program: Olivio
Station: WMAL and NBC Blue Network
Time:
6:30 - 7:00 P.M.
Program: World News
Station:
WJSV and CBS Network
Time:
6:30 - 7:00 P.M.
Program:
Fitch Band Wagon
Station: WRC and NBC Red Network
Time:
7:00 - 7:30 P.M.
Program:
What's My Name?
Station: WRC and NBC Red Network
Time:
7;30 - 7:45 P.M.
Program:
Crime Doctor
Station:
WJSV and CBS Network
Time:
9:00 - 10:00 P.M.
Program:
Take It or Leave It
Station:
WJSV and CBS Network
Time:
11:00 P.M. - 11:15 P.M.
Program: Socony News
Station: WCAU - Philadelphia, Pa.
THESE PROGRAMS PROMOTE THE SALE OF DEFENSE BONDS AND STAMPS
238
July 14, 1941
10:10 a.m.
RE EXCESS PROFITS
Present:
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Blough
Mr. White
Mr. Haas
Mr. Foley
Mr. Viner
Mr. Kuhn
II.M.Jr:
John, I take it you know what this is about?
Sullivan:
I do now, yes.
H.M.Jr:
A memorandum to the President. I wrote the
President & letter suggesting that - he wanted to
do something, and I wrote him a letter sug-
gesting that he have Doughton and Cooper down,
and he said he would have them down and you
and me tomorrow to talk it over.
Sullivan:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
What I am trying to do is to get ready a
memorandum which I can send over to him to-
night which he could read and have before him
of what he would like to talk about to these
gentlemen tomorrow. Now, first I would like
to get something that satisfies me; and then,
if possible, we will try to satisfy the other
gentlemen in town who are interested in
inflation and taxes, if that is possible.
Regraded Unclassified
239
- 2 -
First I would like to be satisfied.
Now, these two memoranda that I have here
are helpful, but it is a question of melding
them. Just let me review what I have in mind.
It is this. I would like the President to
recognize - there is no use of any longer
talking about inflation because we have got
inflation on it, it is with us, it is here.
We can show the price charts - did you bring
your charts with you, George?
Hass:
Yes, I have a large and small edition.
M.M.Jr:
And I would like the President to recognize
the fact that it is here. It is no longer
something we have got to be afraid of. This
is the small chart?
hass:
That is right. It begins August '39 just
before the war.
S.M.Jr:
Burlap, a hundred and six percent; shellac,
ninety-six; cotton, fifty-seven; and 80 forth.
Tallow, one hundred thirty-five; cocoa, eighty-
seven. Where is my old friend lumber?
Haas:
That isn't in that group.
H.T.Jr:
Is there another group on that?
liaas:
We have the lumber prices, Mr. Secretary. The
Bureau of Labor statistics doesn't have it
in that particular index.
E.W.Jr:
Well, sixteen raw materials have gone from
about a hundred and eleven up to about a
hundred and fifty-two, weekly average. Food-
stuffs have gone from a little bit above a
hundred - no, I am wrong. Raw materials have
gone from about a hundred and twelve to a
hundred and forty-one, and foodstuffs from
Regraded Unclassified
240
- 3 -
a low of a little over a hundred to about a
hundred and fifty-five. So you can't talk about
this is something that we have got to be afraid
of. It is on. I would like the President to
recognize this and one of the reasons I want
him to recognize this is 30 that he will do
something to make it possible for Leon Hender-
son to have the tools with which to work.
Now, under this thing there are certain
things - I mean, I would like to have this
attached to the thing I send to him tonight
when we say, "Inflation is on us." I would
like to say that - now, as to the Treasury's
part of the inflation thing, Congress has
given us, 1, everything that we need to draw
out the people's savings. We have got all of
that. And that thing is going very nicely.
And the President would have understood that -
we have gotten started with the Bonds and
Stamps and on August 1 we are going to start
on the tax anticipation notes, so that is
nicely underway. On the bill, on the tax
bill, Congress has done a good job in
attempting to raise the three and a half bil-
lion, but in order to make this thing, and
subsequent tax bills which will have to
follow, sit well, businesses, irrespective
of their previous earnings or their base
or anything else, have to make a fair con-
tribution of their earnings in excess of an
equitable amount.
Now, the way the bill is written now, it
doesn't do that. The thing that I wanted
then was to - "And, for example, Mr. Doughton,
here is company number one, two, and three."
Some examples, you see.
Now, I have worked with the President for eight
years on tax bills. If anyone will take the
trouble to look up the memorandum that Mr.
Regraded Unclassified
241
- 4 -
Magill and I took up to liyde Park when we were
invited to spend the evening with the Presi-
dent on it - and it finally got down to about
nine o'clock at night when he gave us two
hours and we got just to number one. I have
never gotten anywhere. He is not interested.
But he did write me about excess profits, and
he is interested in excess profits, and I think
it is a mistake to talk about anything else,
because we will never get anything further.
If he talks about excess profits and backs
up the so-called Treasury plan, that strengthens
our hand tremendously with the Committee
because they then know the President is behind
us; and, if we subsequently want to go up and
say we think you ought to do this or do that,
the President once having backed us on excess
profits, our position is much stronger. To
go into these thousand and one other things,
I think it is a mistake. He is not interested.
In eight years I have never been able to get
him to do it.
Sullivan:
You mean to back us up on excess profits in
this bill?
D.E.Jr:
I want him to back us up on the Treasury plan
on excess profits.
Sullivan:
You are having that changed in this bill?
H.M.Jr:
Oh, very much SO. I have been all over this,
confidentially, with the Speaker, and he is
with us, and the plan I am following is
Speaker Rayburn's advice to me, how to
handle it. He told me to do it this week,
because the bill would be reported out a
week from Tuesday. He said, "The President
must do it this week." I am following his
advice. He said, "What is the matter with
the bill," and I told him what was the matter
with it from the standpoint of excess profits.
Regraded Unclassified
242
- 5 -
He said, "That makes sense to me." So I am
just going through the thing, and then, as
I say, if the President will say, "Well, now,
this is the thing that I don't like. There
are other things, but this is the thing.
I want the Treasury plan, and this is why I
want it, the way you gentlemen have written
it, and it permits these companies and so
forth to get out, and the laboring man has
got just as much right to ask for increased
wages just as long as this company can earn
forty-five or fifty or sixty percent without
paying an excess profits. In order to have
an equitable relationship, I have got to have
this kind of a bill."
And then at the end, I would like to give a
plug for Leon Henderson so as to lay the
ground for him, simply say, "Now, of course
this won't come up before your Committee."
I take it it doesn't, is that right?
Sullivan:
What?
5.V.Jr:
Leon Henderson.
Sullivan:
Price control?
R.V.Jr:
Yes.
Sullivan:
No.
H.M.Jr:
But at least he can say, "Much as it wants it,
the Executive end has been unable to cope with
things." Let's take a look at things. There
they are. But I have said consistently we would
fight this thing tooth and nail, and we have
done everything we can with existing machinery,
and here is the situation, and at a not too
distant date, I am going to ask for proper
legislation to meet this situation, you see,
and that lays the ground for the next thing to
Regraded Unclassified
243
- 6 -
follow.
Now, very, very roughly, that is the way I
feel; and, if you don't all shoot at once,
one at 8. time, each talk until he is out of
breath, I don't care who starts. We will
let each fellow talk, just as long as you
don't all shoot at the same time.
Foley:
Would this be in lieu, Mr. Secretary, of a
message to Congress, I mean this discussion
between the President and Doughton and
Cooper?
H.M.Jr:
This thing is to tell these gentlemen what the
President has in mind. I am going to put in,
from my standpoint, 8. hundred percent what I
would like to have. Let's say he takes my
memorandum as it is written. Then he dis-
cusses it. It gives these men the chance to
say, "Well, that is all right, Mr. President,
we will go along with this, but we can't go
along on that." Then based on the results of
our conference with these people, I take it he
will write a message, you see. But the pur-
pose is discussion just like we are having now,
and after discussion we come back and the
President writes a message to Congress, un-
less they say, "All right, Mr. President, you
don't have to write a message, we will give you
what you want." If they say, "Well, if that
is what you want, all right, we will give you
what you want," then he won't have to write a
message.
But you see, what I have been trying to do here
is - I have said it to anybody that would
listen to me, whether it is Lauch Currie or
Harry Hopkins, who keeps saying, "Are you
satisfied with the bill," and I say, "No,
what about the President? He won't help me.
Should we talk to him?" "Yes." Anybody who
Regraded Unclassified
244
- 7 -
will bring it to the President's attention,
wonderful, but I can't get the President
interested.
The day after Sullivan appeared, the Presi-
dent had 8. morning press conference, and I
asked him to say something. The Ways and
Means Committee sat there and did nothing
waiting for the President's press conference,
and he did nothing, and they said, "Well,
he is not interested in it." Right?
Sulliven:
Yes.
H.L.Jr:
So what I have been trying to do is, he will
only do 80 many things. Up to now, he just
hasn't been interested, and if we have the
opportunity to lay the Treasury's problem
plus the old, old problem on inflation and
Lauch Currie's theory, I am a hundred percent
in opposition to it, that we should sit back
and wait until the bottle necks are broken
and get increased production, and the Presi-
dent shouldn't talk about inflation and throw
the spotlight on it, I am just a hundred per-
cent in disagreement with it. He can say
whatever he wants. There is no use talking
any more about the danger of inflation. It
is right on us. We are right in the midst
of it. While you wait until OPM has re-
organized and the Aluminum Company increases
their plant and steel increases their plants
and - they gather up the aluminum pots. It
is unbelievable. They are going to gather
up the aluminum pots and sell them to the
junk dealers. Let the junk dealers sell them
back - the money they get for that they are
going to give to the airplane companies to buy
new aluminum. That is the way it was explained
in Cabinet. It is just unbelievable. Some-
body said, "You had better call it off." "Well,
we have had our publicity. It is too late now."
Regraded Unclassified
245
- 8 -
Sullivan:
Say that again.
H.M.Jr:
As I got it Friday, the aluminum is guing to
be gathered - everybody has got to give up
their pots. Now, what you are going to buy
in place of it, I don't know. It is going to
be sold to the junk dealers. From the junk
dealers, it goes for the use of anybody that
wants to buy it, and the money that they get
for it, they give to the airplane companies
to buy, what do you call it, virginal alumi-
num?
Blough:
Virgin.
H.M.Jr:
I told my Missis as far as she was concerned
she could hang on to her pots. Why give them
to the junk dealers?
Viner:
Well, it is important that they get out of the
kitchens.
H.M.Jr:
If--
White:
They will get out of the kitchens faster if
they donate them for defense.
R.M.Jr:
Well, everybody is very - Ed, you start it.
What is the matter with what I am saying?
Foley:
There is nothing the matter with that. I
think that that is fine. The thing that
bothers me is what comes after the meeting
and the timing of that. It seems to me that
8. message discussing a tax bill that hasn't
been reported is a little bit unusual.
H.M.Jr:
Now, Ed, don't worry about that.
Now, look, you have got the Speaker who advised
us, and Doughton and Cooper are going to have
a chance to advise the President on that.
What?
Regraded Unclassified
246
- 9 -
Foley:
Sure.
Well, they know much more about it than we do.
B.M.Jr:
Well, they know more about it than I do. I
won't say they know more about it - but I mean,
that is the advice - do you mind my just saying
that? I mean, don't worry about that part of
it.
Foley:
No.
L.
If that is what the Speaker wants and Doughton
and Cooper have a crack at the President, I
wouldn't worry about that.
Foley:
The only thing that I was going to lead up to
was this: that perhaps we might be considering
the result of the conference which I think is
admirable to be something like this. When you
appear before the Ways and Means - I mean
before the Finance Committee on the Senate
side, you can say all these things about un-
distributed profits, excess profits, and the
changes in the tax laws that you think are
necessary, and then the President can back you
up at a press conference.
H.M.Jr:
No. The die is set on this. As far as the
procedure for the next twenty-four hours, Ed,
it is set.
Foley:
Well, I agree with the procedure for the next
twenty-four hours. I was looking beyond that,
5.M.Jr:
Well, personally knowing - I don't think any-
thing will be accomplished unless the President
sends a message to Congress. Nothing that
Sullivan or I can say will have theslightest
effect.
Sullivan:
You are entirely correct, sir.
Regraded Unclassified
247
- 10 -
H.M.Jr:
I mean, the die is absolutely cast against
us in the Senate. I can go up there and tear
my gory locks and they will just laugh at me.
White:
Ed, the emergency period justifies breaking
precedents at various times.
H.M.Jr:
It is 8. perfectly dignified, highly proper way
to proceed. And the main thing is to try to
get the President to put his mind on this
thing.
Sullivan:
That is right. I am in hearty accord with
that, and I think the other thing that goes
along with it is that I think if there could
be announced some recognition of the fact
that price control needs to be buttressed
with taxes on nonessential consumption goods,
and I don't know whether Leon would be re-
luctant to have that recognized or not, but
that is what he has been trying to do all
along is have us help him on his price con-
trol.
H.M.Jr:
I think he would be delighted. That is what
he has been talking about.
White:
You say taxes are nonessentials?
Viner:
I think the commodity phase has to be carefully
thought out because you are using your - those
taxes now for a new set of purposes, whereas,
as I see it, the drafts I have seen, you have
discovered the deepest roots you have dug in
the past, and you are going deeper in the
same ones rather than adjusting it to the new
problems, and I would say there - my thinking
is superficial, I haven't spent much thought
on it - but that is the essential commodities,
the scarce ones, that you want to tax.
Sullivan:
That is right.
Regraded Unclassified
248
- 11 -
Viner:
It is the ones that it will be necessary
to ration, and I would let moving pictures
and ice cream sodas and cigarettes, I
would let them be produced without any extra
taxation now as long as they are not using
resources that anybody wants for any other
purpose. You are going to have & problem to
maintain national income while building the
war machine. You are going to have the prob-
lem of maintaining morale and of making people
think they are getting something out of their
wages. Let them have those cheap and in
volume that don't interfere, but then slam down
on the things like aluminum.
B.A.Jr:
If I understand Currie, you are half way be-
tween Currie and myself, but I wouldn't even
say that, because I agree with you a hundred
percent.
Sullivan:
He is half way between Currie and Leon.
h.M.Jr:
Yes, that is what I was groping for.
Viner:
Well, check up on Leon, because I haven't
talked to him.
H.M.Jr:
But you haven't--
Viner:
I haven't talked to him--
H.V.Jr:
What you say would agree with me entirely.
Viner:
Wouldn't you, Harry?
White:
Yes. I think there are two objectives here
which they are likely to confuse. One is the
question of making available at not too high
a cost necessary raw material for our defense
effort. There is et quite - which is the one
that you were directing yourself against.
Regraded Unclassified
249
- 12 -
The other objective which may be confused
in this is preventing the index of general
prices to rise as 8 result of taxes.
Maybe that is what Henderson has in mind.
Viner:
Well, there is a third objective, and that
is that if things are going to be rationed,
they are going to go high unless you have
& very rigid price control. This is where you
get the windfalls.
The Treasury gets it instead of the person
who happens to hold the stock.
White:
That is right, but you don't ration movies.
You only ration these goods, and that is
why you have the additional necessity for
imposing taxes.
Viner:
I would aosl say this, Mr. Secretary, I
think it would be discreet at this stage
to assume that you are not going to have
serious difficulties with other agencies
of the Government, that if they get to-
gether, they can work out a scheme which
will suit you and them.
H.M.Jr:
We have started on that basis.
Regraded Unclassified
250
- 13 -
Vinor:
I don't know anything about the record, but
the last couple of days I have had a chance
to talk to 8. number of people, and have
learned something of what is going on, and my
guess is that you could get an administration
policy on the commodity tax side - I am not
talking about excess profits at all now -
which would fit in to what the Treasury ought
to want. That is just a guess. You would
find that Currie and Henderson and OPM
would all be willing to play in with what I
would think would be 8. good set-up on the com-
modity tax side, so that we oughtn't to get
in the spirit that necessarily we are going
to find we have either divergent aims, which
I don't think we do, or divergent theories.
R.M.Jr:
Who would you - who could I talk to at OPM?
Viner:
I would say one person you might talk to
is Sidney Hillman because he talked with me
yesterday and I know that he is looking around
and he has been talking around town and I
think he has got some interesting ideas and
is looking for a light. I think he sees the
problem right. He has got one of your angles.
He says, "How can I tell my labor people that
they mustn't ask for incresses in raises if
their cost of living rises without an obvious
justification in it in wer needs?" He wants
B. - something on the tax side to fit in.
White:
That is the excess profits tax.
Vinerr
He is thinking of individual commodities, too.
H.V.Jr:
He is not interested in excess profits
unle sa he has changed.
Vinerr
I didn't hear any word on that.
White:
Hillman isn't?
Regraded Unclassified
251
- 14 -
H.M.Jr:
No.
White:
That is very strange.
H.V.Jr:
I asked him originally.
White:
Maybe he didn't understand it.
H.V.Jr:
I asked him months ago.
White:
Well, certainly he doesn't represent labor
then, because labor is very definitely
interested in an increase in excess profits
and would go a hundred per cent down the line
with what you have just indicated.
H.M.Jr:
Well, look, again let me come back to this,
Jake: The important thing is to get something
on paper, which I believe, that is it. Then,
after we get as near combined as possible,
then we can show it to other people, but the
way it is now we haven't got anything down
yet that I can put my name to. Right?
Viner:
Well, the only - only one more word. I would
say there that on these documents, I think
it would be very good technique if I am right
in sensing that there hadn't developed any
frictions or - it would be very good tech-
nique to get these people together at the
framing stage.
H.M.Jr:
We have done that. We have asked everybody.
I never thought of Sidney Hillman, but we
have asked Lubin and Currie, Eccles, Hender-
son. The only person we didn't ask was OPM.
That is why I asked you who to talk to over
there.
Viner:
Well, I think Hillman has been talking with
Henderson very much.
Regraded Unclassified
252
- 15 -
Blough:
Your point was, have such a conference in
the drafting stage and not later.
Viner:
At least if later we are very, very careful
to present these as tentative ideas and not
8.8 something frozen.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Jake, let's get something on paper first
that I can go down the line on.
Viner:
Well, would you want to commit yourself at
an early stage?
H.M.Jr:
Jake, but let me get something down --
Viner:
Oh, you mean your own. Oh, sure.
H.M.Jr:
Let me get something down first that I am willing
to try to feel.
Foley:
There isn't much time.
White:
I think Kuhn could help --
H.M.Jr:
Something that I can sell myself. At least
if I meet these people, "What does the Treas-
ury think?" and I can answer.
White:
I don't think Kuhn can shoot at both objectives
without making - getting bad results on both,
that a memorandum for the President I think
he would make very different than a speech
for the Budget and I think that here he has
attempted the latter and it is not suitable
for your first purpose.
H.M.Jr:
He understands that.
Kuhn:
That is right.
White:
Well, what I say -- --
Regraded Unclassified
253
- 16 -
H.M.Jr:
He understands that.
Kuhnt
Harry, on that point, if there is a speech or
message, it has got to be in general terms,
but if there is to be & memorandum for the
President to discuss with Doughton and Cooper,
that can be much more specific, an entirely
different kind of document.
White:
That is right.
H.V.Jr:
Well, the fact that it isn't that is nobody's
fault but my own, 30 I go back again to the
kind of things that we want on the memorandum.
Personally, I would like to head off Number
One with something about inflation and why it
is on us, you see.
White:
The danger in that point being rather not
what exists at present, but that we have not
yet reached anything like full effort and
if we are getting price rises under present
effort, therein lies the great danger when
we go into the full effort.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Harry, don't make it--
White:
Well, when you say inflation is upon us,
I am a little bit --
Viner:
I would say it threatens. I see, that is
8. selection of highly sensative commodities,
and I want to see what does the BLS look
like.
Haas:
It was seventy-five. in August, 1939 and it is
a hundred on that chart. It is eighty-seven
now.
Blough:
Which is quite a lot.
White:
Well, you can so define it, but that has hap-
pened any number of times before. I think
Regraded Unclassified
254
- 17 -
you can make 8. stronger case when you say,
"If that is the kind of price rise we get
with spending only twelve billion 8. year,
what is going to happen when we increase
it?"
Viner:
It is not at all clear to me that the
increase that has taken place to date
is an undesirable one, taking all into
account. Also, I don't think the President
ought to admit that he has already lost con-
trol of the situation.
White:
Right.
Viner:
Because there is doubt as to whether --
H.M.Jr:
I don't agree with you at all. That is the
whole trouble around Washington. We are al-
ways covering up.
Viner:
Not me. You can't accuse me of that.
H.M.Jr:
We are always on order. Everything is on
order. Now, why not call a spade a spade?
White:
You can do that by citing the facts of
the price index, but I don't think you
should call it inflation.
H.M.Jr:
You will never get legislation for Henderson
unless he calls this thing a spade. What do
you want, Jake, what more do you want?
Viner:
I would say that is 8. little excessively
conservative, that is all.
H.M.Jr:
Who, you or me?
Viner:
You. I wouldn't frighten the public by
telling them this thing is on already. I
would say it is an imminent threat. That I
Regraded Unclassified
255
- 18 -
think it is. If we did nothing more, it is
coming, but I wouldn't say it is here. The
threat is here. I would put it this way
and there is 8 compromise.
Kuhn:
But this is not a public statement we are
discussing. It is something to be told to
these two congressional leaders at the White
House tomorrow.
White:
I don't think you are justified in telling
them that, either.
Viner:
Yes, say the threat is here.
H.M.Jr:
I am simply amazed at you.
Viner:
It is the feeling that Henderson has or others
that prices are going up.
H.M.Jr:
I am amazed at you people. I don't know what
you want.
Blough:
Isn't it partly this, that the word "inflation"
has certain connotations to the general
public which the present situation does not
quite yet justify?
Viner:
That is right.
Blough:
But that strictly speaking it is inflation,
but the public doesn't understand the word
to mean quite the same thing?
White:
On technical grounds you might question that
too.
Viner:
I would say, speaking as 8. technical economist,
we have had inflation. But then, we have
had some years in the spring, and a decrease
in the fall.
Regraded Unclassified
256
- 19 -
White:
Define what you mean as "inflation". You
don't mean the same thing.
follows:) (Telephone conversation with Mr. Doughton
257
July 14, 1941
10:48 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Wait a minute, gentlemen. All right, go ahead.
Operator:
Go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Robert
Doughton:
Hello, Henry. How are you?
H.M.Jr:
I'm fine. How are you?
D.
Oh, I'm not much to brag on, but still, I'm
getting along, I reckon.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
D.
What's the news?
H.M.Jr:
Well, I got a message that you, Jere, and John
and I will meet the President at eleven tomorrow.
D.
Well, that's what I want to check up with you
on.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
D.
I don't - I didn't know a thing about what it's
about; but I wondered if it wouldn't be a good
idea if, at least for the present it would be easy -
of course, the President called to keep it out
of the papers - and if 80 if we could get round
by your office and get in some way and not get it
in the papers too much?
H.M.Jr:
Well, I don't know what the President has in
mind, Bob. But that would be something you'd
have to take up with General Watson.
D.
Yeah. Well
wait 8 minute, I had that in mind.
You know the Republicanshas been going along pretty
well on this tax bill.
Regraded Unclassified
258
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
D.
You see we'll be down there - they'll see
8 hundred buggers, you know.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
D.
Alwaye looking for some excuse - well, I won't
say that, but they do very often avail themselves
and take advantage of some. They'll be holding
some private conferences and not letting them
in.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
D.
I don't know - you don't know what it's about,
do you?
H.M.Jr:
Oh yes, I know what it's about: but I meant 88
to whether he wants it - whether he wante it
known or not.
D.
Whether he wants it kept out of the nacers.
H.M.Jr:
That I don't know.
D.
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
But that will be something that - if you
don't mind - I'd take up with General Watson.
D.
All right. I'll call the General and see
what he has to say.
H.M.Jr:
All right. If I can be of any service, let
me know.
D.
All right. Thank you very much.
H.M.Jr:
Good-bye.
D.
Good-bye.
Regraded Unclassified
259
- 20 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, now, where were we? We were getting
down to technical questions.
White:
I think it is a little more important than
that. Viner says that technically we have
inflation, but when he says that he is defin-
ing inflation in a way which is very differ-
ent from what I think you have in mind when
you say "inflation". As he defines it, it is
not necessarily bad. It might well be good.
You would have to examine it. As you are
defining it, it is something that is bad,
and if that is the way you want to use it,
I say that even on technical grounds you might
doubt whether we have inflation here.
H.M.Jr:
Are you people willing to talk about price
rises?
Viner:
I am willing to talk about an imminent threat
of inflation in the evil sense and that -
of the necessity of taking more precautions
than we have yet taken if we don't have it
in pretty full sweep before the end of the
next twelve months.
H.M.Jr:
I will tell you what I am going to ask.
I am going to ask you two gentlemen (Viner
and White) to give me, just as condensed
as you can - well, White, Haas and Viner,
just give me what you people think the Presi-
dent should have, not as a public statement,
as 8 memorandum to him on the theory that he
is not aware of what is happening to the
prices and what has happened during the
last twelve months, what we should do to
make him aware - what has happened where we
have only spent these few billion dollars
and with forty or fifty billion dollars on
the books. If 8. few billion dollars has
done "X", what the balance will be and what
steps have been taken through the legislative
Regraded Unclassified
260
- 21 -
end of the Government to keep these things
from getting out of line and at the same time
to reduce consumption of those things which
are 80 highly necessary for defense purposes.
Now, do you think the three of you could give
me something right after lunch on that?
White:
Isn't that 8 large part of your statement?
H.V.Jr:
No, it isn't, just that part. Don't you
think that that is 8 separate thing as long
as --
Blough:
I don't quite see how you can separate it
because you go on from there. The first part
of what you said I think could be separated.
The last part, you got into the question of
how to meet it, and when you get into the
question of how to meet it, then you have
fiscal means, tax means, and so on.
H.M.Jr:
All right, then, I will just keep them down to
a definition, something that will satisfy the
three of them, and then if you (Blough)
would carry on from there, you see.
Flough:
I think they might go beyond definition
to the threat, where we are and the threat
of what is likely to happen, and then --
White:
Well, that is what the Secretary --
H.M.Jr:
I am not going to limit them. If the
three of those gentlemen would get together
and come back here and - we will say at two
o'clock, you see. Just taking that end of
the thing, and then, Blough, if you could
pick this thing up, you see, any place you
want, but particularly on that part where
the excess profits bill - the bill as written
now falls short of the Treasury plan, and
give examples. Is that right, John?
Regraded Unclassified
261
- 22 -
Sullivan:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Where the present bill differs from the
Treasury plan and where it falls short.
Sullivan:
Yes. I think that you will recall that I
asked you if this was aimed at 8. change in
the present bill.
H.V.Jr:
Yes.
Sullivan:
I think I would be doing something less than
my duty if I didn't tell you that I don't
think the House Committee is going to change
and I think the importance of the conference
is going to be the effect on the next bill.
H.M.Jr:
No, I am sorry. You can't sell me that.
Sullivan:
I am not trying to sell you anything. I
just want to give you my opinion on that.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right - you may perfectly well
be right, but again all I am trying to do is
to bring the President up to the minute on
the situation as the Treasury sees it, in
consultation with these other agencies after
we get something down, you see. Now, there-
fore, this is a question of information,
and if we can get this thing down in writing,
where does the present bill differ from what
the Treasury wants 8.8 far as excess profits,
you don't have to philosophize, just the facts.
Blough:
Would it not be desirable in addition to
tie it in with these other measures?
H.M.Jr:
If you can, 30 much the better.
Sullivan:
I think it would.
H.M.Jr:
After I got the facts, I thought Kuhn could
take them and make they readable and delectable.
Regraded Unclassified
262
- 23 -
Blough:
May I suggest that I do what I can to hook
a piece on to what these gentlemen are going
to do, which will cover the ground 8.3 well
as I can, and then Kuhn can take it --
R.M.Jr:
You do it as well as you can, but the main
thing is, if these three men will write -
I am not asking them to do it differently.
I think they are pretty close together. If
you three men will write & statement as to
what you think the present price situation
is, so that the President will be aware of
it, and what can we look forward to if the
thing continues at the present rate, and
what we should do about it. Harry, is that
all right?
Shite:
Fine.
R.V.Je:
Is that charging you?
White:
Fine.
H.M.Jr:
I wouldn't bring any outsiders in at this
stage. It is difficult enough. We have got
enough cross currents here.
Foley:
That is right.
White:
Yes. I think there should be no disagreement.
N.Y.J.:
You and Viner evidently think that the present
amount of price rise doesn't hurt us.
Viner:
I said that I am not sure that it has gone
further than was desirable. I am not sure
that it hasn't been positively desirable.
Thite:
I think it should be brought to his attention.
Viner:
But I am seriously concerned 8.9 to the future.
Regraded Unclassified
263
- 24 -
B.V.Jrs
But granted since the spring of thirty-seven
the President hasn't said a word about prices --
White:
It is time. It is definitely time he said
something.
H.M.Jr:
And Henderson has an impossible job.
Write:
And I think that moving into the period that
we appear to be, I think Henderson must have
greater powers, and therefore that is another
reason why the President should be made cognizant.
I think he also needs more power.
E.M.Jr:
Anyway, do you know what I want at this stage?
Viner:
I think so, yes.
T.V.Jp:
Do you, George?
Bans:
I think SO.
H.M.Jr:
Harry?
White:
Yes.
Foley:
I think you have simplified it very much.
9.M.Jr:
Royr
Plough:
I think I can see the outline.
H.M.Jr:
Lo you think I am on the right track?
Kuhn:
Yes.
Poley:
So long as we are planning on a conference to
bring the President up to date, make him aware
of the problem, I think everybody in this
room is in agreement; there will be no trouble.
White:
where did you get the rate of six billion & year
expenditure? This is a very low figure.
Regraded Unclassified
264
- 25 -
Viner:
Six billion, that is right. It was budgeted
for six.
Blough:
It is this last year.
Regraded Unclassified
265
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 12, 1941
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Kuhn
These rough drafts, one in general terms and one more specific,
have been shown to Mr. Gaston, Mr. Foley, Mr. White, Dr. Viner and
Vr. Currie. I attach a brief summary of Mr. Currie's telephone
comments.
Leon Henderson was delighted to hear about the President's
intentions, and said that he would be thinking about the subject
over the week-end. He will be going to Atlantic City Monday for
the day, to make 8 speech, but Mr. Hanun will be available any
time you want him on Monday. He indicated that he was strongly
in favor of linking taxes to prices, and also felt that the state-
ment ought to be broad and general in scope.
Mr. Eccles also said that he would be at your disposal any
time Monday, for as long as you would need him.
Mr. Bell was not at the office today, but I shall get these
drafts to him over the week-end 80 that he can be primed on Monday
morning.
3.K.
Regraded Unclassified
266
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE July 12, 1941
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Kuhn
Lauchlin Currie said on the telephone that he had serious
mental reservations about the Kuhn draft, but that he liked the
Blough suggestions very much.
He did not like the idea of linking taxes and inflation,
and thought that the Kuhn draft was too much 8. "clarion call
against inflation". He felt that as long as we have idle man-
power in this country there is no need for an over-all reduction
of consumer production.
He thought that the President's statement ought to express
two principles: (a) equality of sacrifice, and (b) keeping
civilian demand in line with the capacity to produce. The tax
bill, he said, is not really designed for 8. reduction of civilian
demand.
He said one omission in both the Kuhn and the Blough drafts
was the matter of joint returns. He thought that the President
wanted to favor joint returns, and also wanted the Treasury's
position on this matter made perfectly clear.
J.K.
Regraded Unclassified
me where
second
diabt
267
Rough Draft
I am sending this message to the Congress because there
are serious decisions that must be made on the home front,
and made now, if we are to muster all our strength for the
tasks that lie ahead. These are decisions of domestic economic
policy. Their scope is as big as the nation itself, as small
8.8 the pots and pans in every American kitchen. But they are
inseparably linked to the defense of our country and the
maintenance of our freedom.
The time has come to act as vigorously against rising
economic dangers at home as we have acted, and intend to act,
against the rising tide of tyranny abroad.
The broad facts are well known to every member of the
Congress, and I do not need to recite them at length today.
Our colossal defense effort has now reabsorbed, directly or
indirectly,
millions of those who have been unemployed
in the last three years. Our national pay envelope is fatter
than ever before, and more American workers are leading a more
sbundant life than ever before.
Our giant industrial strength is being roused as never
before. Our supplies of certain raw materials for civilian
use are being required more and more for the weapons of
defense. And our effort is only beginning.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
268
Congress has appropriated or authorized expenditures of
billions for the new fiscal year, but we are
still spending on defense at the rate of only 6 billion a year.
We must do better than this, much better, if we are to be sure
of keeping America strong and safe and free.
When payrolls rise and when civilian supplies of commodities
run short because of defense needs, conditions are ripe for a
rising spiral of prices. More and more money becomes available
for fewer and fewer things, and the natural response of prices
is to go up.
The rises so far have been nothing but danger signals. I
propose to heed those danger signals. This Administration
is determined to check the spiral before it can do substantial
damage. The consequences of inflation are too harmful to
workingmen, businessmen and farmers alike for any responsible
official to permit the process to make further headway.
But this Administration cannot prevent inflation by
waving a magic wand. The job calls for effort, understanding,
self-control, from every American group and every individual.
It calls for the same kind of unity which our people have shown
BO magnificently in the defense effort now and in other crises
in the past.
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
269
There are, of course, many ways of checking a vicious
spiral of costs and prices.
One way, and the most effective, is to skim the cream from
purchasing power so that current earnings are put to work for
the Government instead of being spent on private consumption.
Whether this is done by taxation or by the purchase of
defense bonds, it serves the triple purpose of keeping prices
down, of providing the dollars that are needed for defense, and
of releasing scarce materials for military use.
Another way is to control prices by voluntary cooperation
of those who produce and sell the goods. These, and many other
methods, will help. We are using at least three methods already.
The Ways and Means Committee of the House of Representatives
is now drafting 8. tax bill which will raise $31 billions in
additional revenue. I should like to express my thanks and the
thanks of the whole country for the energy, thought and courage
with which the committee is carrying out its great task.
The Treasury is about to begin the sale of tax anticipa-
tion notes, to make the payment of income taxes prompter and
easier, and its sales of Defense Savings Bonds to great numbers
of people are now approaching the first billion dollars.
The OPACS has been vigilant and vigorous in bringing
all possible pressure to bear whenever sharp price increases
have been threatened.
Regraded Unclassified
- 4
270
These are useful steps, but they are not enough. The
defense effort has grown to such giant proportions that it
now dominates our entire economic life. Bolder measures are
needed now. In these days of total war a total defense is
called for. Our economy must be integrated for defense,
integrated as closely as our army and navy and our planes that
guard the skies.
A case in point is taxation, which provides a large part
of the billions that are needed for national security. Our
national thinking on taxation has changed as rapidly as the
scale of the defense program itself. Two years ago, one year
ago, it might have seemed fantastic to attempt the raising
of twelve billion dollars a year from taxes, or to increase
tax revenue by three and a half billion dollars in a single
year. The American people have accepted this goal with a
cheerfulness that is 8. proof of their commonsense and their
patriotism.
Yet even the proposed increase of three and a half billions,
even the total goal of twelve billion dollars from revenue,
now threaten to be inadequate in the light of the vast
expansion of defense spending. In the past week the Congress
has been asked for eight billion dollars in additional
Regraded Unclassified
- 5 -
271
expenditure for the Army and Navy, on top of the thirty-three
billion appropriated for all purposes during the fiscal year
just ended. I know that we shall be able to raise still
greater revenues if necessary--and it may be necessary before
long. We can do this job, and any job, if we set outselves
to do it.
But taxes are more than sources of revenue. They are more
than a democratic method of paying for the immense and
indispensable services which the Government renders to every
citizen. Taxes can and should be, also, the most useful of
all methods of curtailing excess purchasing power, and there-
fore the best of all methods of preventing inflation.
Moreover, taxes can and should be an adjunct to the
defense production program by reducing the competition for
the materials that are needed in the defense industries. We
do not have 8. limitless supply of steel, aluminum, rubber
and many other essential components of ships and planes and
guns. We can, to some extent, reduce the competition by
priorities; we can also give the right of way to defense
production by imposing stiff excise taxes on certain articles
or materials that compete directly with the weapons of defense.
It is my hope that Congress will use the tax weapon un-
hesitatingly wherever the supply of 8. vitally important
Regraded Unclassified
- 6 -
272
defense material for defense purposes is blocked by unnecessary
consumer demand.
The usefulness of taxes in the present emergency, quite
apart from their revenue-raising value, is still more apparent
in the field of excess profits taxes. It is a settled
principle of the American people that the makers of defense
weapons shall not grow rich out of their country's danger.
In accordance with this principle, the profits of defense
industries are already heavily taxed, and will be taxed still
more heavily by the time the pending tax bill is enacted into
law. It is also a settled principle, disputed by none, that
taxes shall be imposed in accordance with ability to pay.
In line with this principle, we have long had 6. graduated
individual income-tax, which grows steeper as it reaches into
the higher incomes.
But these two principles have not yet been followed
closely enough in the field of corporate taxation generally.
Only & minority of American business is not benefiting,
directly or indirectly, from the enormous expansion of purchas-
ing power caused by the defense program.
Yet under the present excess profits law scores of rich
and successful corporations pay no excess profits tax at all.
If they were earning huge and consistent profits in the
Regraded Unclassified
- 7 -
273
previous four years they are allowed to keep those profits
now, although this is the year of the greatest emergency
that we as 8 nation have faced for 150 years.
The non-defense company that is producing, perhaps, a
non-essential luxury, and producing it at & huge profit year
after year, often pays no profits tax at all, even if its
profits are as high as forty-three per cent of its invested
capital.
To my mind this provision of the existing law is in-
equitable and dangerous. It is inequitable because it
violates the principle that all should pay for defense in
accordance with their ability to pay. Companies that make
larger than average returns on their investment have, by
and large, a greater ability to pay taxes, for every dollar
of profits, than other corporations, and they can be called
upon equitably to pay additional taxes. We face unprecedented
financial burdens today; it is fair and economically sound
to burden the prosperous concerns relatively more heavily
than the less prosperous.
The gaps in the existing excess profits law are worse
than inequitable. They are dangerous because they tend to
create in the minds of millions of American farmers and
workers the notion that some, well able to pay, are not bear-
ing their fair share of the burden. The time may soon come
Regraded Unclassified
- 8 -
274
when we shall have to ask farmers and workers to accept new
sacrifices for the sake of their country. It will be
difficult to expect farmers not to ask for higher prices,
difficult to expect workers not to demand higher wages, if
they feel that others are being allowed to keep huge profits
virtually intact. I know that our farmers and workers will
cooperate cheerfully, willingly, patriotically, if they feel
convinced that the rich and successful corporations are doing
their part.
The control of inflation and the prevention of great
resulting harm can be achieved only through an integrated
effort along many fronts. In this great economic battle
the taxation front is an important sector, and a sound excess
profits tax is one of the key positions to be won. When that
position has been stormed and taken, there will be no further
justification for any citizens or groups of citizens to
aggravate the problem through unwarranted price end wage
demands which must inevitably lead to further increases.
National interest comes ahead of self-interest in these
critical days. The defense of our country calls for a united
effort, in every field of our national life. We have reached
a point at which the course of profits, prices and wages must
somehow be controlled, firmly, fairly and effectively, if
our economy is to function without damage to our people and
to our sacred cause.
Regraded Unclassified
275
7/12/41
Suggested Comments on the Tax Bill
Committee to be congratulated
The Ways and Means Committee 16 to be congratu-
lated on holding firmly to the goal of #3.5 billion
of revenue from the tax bill, despite the high tax
rates which achieving that goal requires. It is
important that the yield of the tax bill shall not
fall below that level. In fact, it 18 apparent from
the size of the appropriations and the pressures of
consumer purchasing power on prices that taxes even
beyond this amount will have to be raised not later
than next year. For the time being, however, the
$3.5 billion goal is & good one and we should digest
these taxes before going on to still higher ones.
Excess profits tax
The excess profits tax plan tentatively adopted
by the Committee 10 an improvement over the present
excess profits tax. The revenue will be much larger
although to a. considerable extent this is due merely
to higher rates. Some of the larger defense industries
with low rates of return in the base years will pay
excess profits tax, whereas they are now exempt.
Regraded Unclassified
276
- 2 -
However, the excess profits tax plan fails to
correct one fundamental weakness of the present law.
It exempts from the tax profits in excess of B. reason-
able return on invested capital unless those profits
are also in 6X0088 of the profits of the base period
Rind of
years. Thus, the profits which for more than 8 genera-
tion have been defined as excess profits is not taxed
under a law which is called an exosss profits tax law,
Failure to tax such profits is unfortunate for a number
of reasons:
(1) The highly prosperous, well established
corporation which has been making 30, 40, 50 percent
or more on its invested capital has a much larger ability
to pay taxes than a corporation which has been earning
only 3, 4, or 5 percent on its invested capital, even
though the dollar incomes of the two companies are the
same. Taxation of corporations in accordance with
ability to pay calls for higher taxes on the profits
of corporations in excess of reasonable average return.
(2) The corporation which has been making high
returns in the base period years is given & competitive
sadvantage over newly organized concerns or concerns
which have been struggling to establish themselves.
Regraded Unclassified
277
- 3 -
The latter types are limited to a much smaller tax-
free return than are the former. The effect is to
confirm monopolies in their control and to protect
well established prosperous businesses against
competition.
(3) If we are to expect all classes of society,
including laborers and farmers, to accept the eacrifices
of the emergency period and not to press for every
possible dollar of advantage, they must be convinced
that sacrifices are being distributed according to
ability and that no one 18 making unreasonably large
profits. The stability of our prices and wages 1a
thus to 8 considerable extent dependent on the imposi-
tion and enforcement of a true excess profite tax.
Estate and gift taxes
It would seem that in the new revenues provided
by thevtax bill tentatively adopted, estate and gift
taxes have not been sufficiently tapped. Under exist-
ing law & person can give away $40,000 during his
lifetime plus $4,000 each year to each of any number
of persons without paying any gift tax. At his death
his estate is allowed an exemption of $40,000 plus an
insurance exclusion of an additional $40,000. Thus,
Regraded Unclassified
278
- 4 -
a person may have a very substantial fortune without
being subject to any estate or gift tax under existing
law, or if a tax is paid the effective rates will be
very low because of the exemptions and the two separate
rate schedules.
As 8. result of the high exemptions there are only
about 12,500 estates each year large enough to be
subject to the Federal estate tax. This is only one
percent of the approximately 1,200,000 adults who die
each year in the United States. A situation where
99 percent of the population 16 exempt from this tax
should be corrected, especially since the estate tax
is one of the very few taxes which can be imposed in
accordance with the principle of ability to pay.
Furthermore, considering our needs for revenue
and the desirability of applying the ability to pay
principle, the present rates of the estate and gift
taxes are far too low. It seems to me that the Committee,
in providing relatively small increases in tax rates
and in failing to lower the estate and gift tax exemp-
tions, has not made appropriate use of these taxes in
this period when all tax burdens are becoming increasingly
heavy.
Regraded Unclassified
279
- 5 -
Excise taxes
I note that the Committee has placed A rate of
7 percent on passenger automobiles while imposing
rates of 10 percent on a number of other manufactured
commodities, including some which have no bearing on the
defense program. The Committee may have held down the
automobile tax in the feeling that they did not wish
to burden automobile purchasers. I do not believe
that 8. higher tax would have the effect of being
burdensome. The production of passenger automobiles
will undoubtedly have to be greatly restricted, It
would be extremely difficult to prevent price rises on
cars sold by retailers or the setting up of a "black
market" in new and slightly used cars. The excise tax
will in all probability come out of windfall profits
which otherwise would be secured by profiteers in
automobiles, Accordingly, I believe the tax on auto-
mobiles should be very much higher than that provided
by the Committee, probably at least 15 or 20 percent.
It would also be well to resiamine the durable
consumers' goods field to 800 if any additional items
can be found which might be subjected to exoise taxes.
I realize that not all commodities competing with
Regraded Unclassified
280
- 6 -
defense are suitable for excise taxation but where
they are suitable the incidental effects of the tax
in discouraging demand and in reducing windfall profite
should not be overlooked.
One of the excise taxes which I believe would be
unfortunate 18 the annual use tax of $5 on automobiles.
There are approximately 32,000,000 automobiles being
operated in the United States and the owner of every
car, big or small, old or new, would pay the same tax.
This proposed tax 1a the same on the low priced old
automobile or truck which a small farmer receiving
very little cashincome in the course of the year is
obliged to own to carry on his farming operations, and
the fine new Cadillac or Lincoln which the owner has
only for pleasure. I believe this 1e the nearest thing
to 8. poll tax we have ever had in the Federal tax system.
Even the carriage tax of 150 years ago had classified
rates depending on the size and fineness of the carriage.
Furthermore, the Treasury informs me that they have
never had the problem of collecting a tax from such a
huge number of people and that they anticipate the
enforcement would be difficult and expensive.
Regraded Unclassified
281
- 7 -
Suggested tax bill to remove inequities and plug loopholes
I understand that the Committee is limiting this
bill to the accomplishment of a strictly revenue-
raising job and that the problems of removing tax
inequities and plugging loopholes, which must be met
from time to time, are being postponed until later,
I believe this was a wise decision but I would urge
the desirability of doing the other job also. There
has been no opportunity such revision since 1938.
From the viewpoints of the taxpayer and the Treasury
& considerable number of matters have arisen which
require attention and when the tax rates are high
these inequities and loopholes take on a larger
importance than ever.
Regraded Unclassified
282
July 14, 1941
2:00 o'clock p.m.
RE EXCESS PROFITS TAX
Present:
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Blough
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Bell
Mr. Foley
Mr. White
Mr. Haas
Mr. Viner
H.M.Jr:
Where are the fellows that were going to have
the first piece?
Blough:
They are probably writing it.
(Messrs Foley, White, Haas and Viner entered
the conference).
H.M.Jr:
Did you fellows all have a good two-hour
lunch? Is the stenographer writing it?
Viner:
We didn't quite succeed in doing in the two
hours what was a three-months job, but I
think we are within fifteen minutes of it.
Gaston:
He is good.
Viner:
Sure, I am good. (Laughter)
Gaston:
It is a three-hour job.
White:
You can take the next eleven weeks off.
Viner:
Things are coming from stenographers from
three or four quarters, and it will probably
be somewhat of a mess, but I think it has
Regraded Unclassified
283
- 2 -
material in it, because we used out assis-
tants instead of doing it ourselves. We
think it is going to be pretty good.
White:
Give us another half hour and we will have it
ready.
H.M.Jr:
Do you want to be excused?
White:
We prefer it, yes, at least I would.
H.V.Jr:
What would you do in the next half hour?
Viner:
The stuff has been thrown together and it is
coming from the stenographers. We would like
to have a last look to see if it didn't get
garbled in transmission and what not.
H.M.Jr:
Why not let's hear what he (Blough) has and
then we will go back and pick yours up.
Viner:
Sure.
Blough:
It was 8 short hour for me, too.
Kuhn:
Roy is good.
Blough:
No, I had 8 draft.
H.M.Jr:
What do you do, have two drafts, one that
I ask for and one that you think I ought to
have?
Blough:
No. I mean, I used this morning's draft and
just refurbished it 8. bit.
H.M.Jr:
Read it out loud.
Blough:
Well, I have 8 few copies here. I don't have
enough.
H.M.Jr:
I am surprised at you fellows. I would say
Regraded Unclassified
284
- 3 -
the only reason I asked you people to do it
in two hours, I thought it was an accumulation
of a lifetime of knowledge.
Haas:
You have got something there.
Blough:
You can't get your mental filing cabinets
open that fast.
Viner:
You know what happens to a lifetime's accumu-
lation of anything. Lots of dust and mold
gather on it, and you have to scrape it off.
H.V.Jrs
Jake, I think the Washington week-end is
good. You had better stay here a couple more.
All right, go ahead.
Blough:
Well now, the idea is that we already have the
problem laid out and the dangers, and so on.
H.V.Jr:
All been done?
Flough:
1hat has all been done. This is awfully
sketchy at the beginning, but I have indicated
how I think possibly we could lead in to the
tax end of it. "Important steps have al-
ready been taken or are being taken. The
Congress has made provision for a campaign to
withdraw, through borrowing, savings which
might otherwise be used for the purchase of
goods. The campaign to sell bonds and
stamps is well under way." And that can
be expanded. "On August 1 the Treasury
Department places into operation 8. plan for
selling tax anticipation certificates which
will facilitate the prepayment of income
taxes and will more promptly withdraw
purchasing power represented by such taxes.
The Ways and Moans Committee is holding firmly
to the goal of three and a half billion dollars
of revenue from the tax bill. Every effort
has been made to use voluntary means for
limiting price rises."
Regraded Unclassified
285
H.M.Jr:
Well now, I think that opens up swell, I
like that. It is very good.
Blough:
"Those steps are not sufficient to meet
the imminent threat of 8. dangerous price
rise. Further action should be taken in 8
number of directions. It is my intention to
ask Congress for the power to regula te
prices. The efficacy of that regulation will
be enhanced through an intelligent tax policy
formulated with price control in mind." That,
I should think, might be expanded there.
H.V.Jr:
I sent you all copies of what Henderson said
over the ticker on his speech.
Blough:
Yes. "It is important that the yield of the
tax bill shall not fall below the three and
8 half billion dollar level. In fact, it is
apparent from the size of the appropriations
and the pressures of consumer purchasing
power on prices that taxes even beyond this
amount will have to be raised not later
than next year." The language is bad there,
as Viner pointed out. "For the time being,
however, the three and & half billion dollar
goal is a good one and we should digest these
taxes before going on to still higher ones.
"The demands for the most scarce commodities
and the large windfall profits which dealers
and others may make by evading price control
should be reduced through excise taxes in-
posed on the goods which compete with defense.
Thus the tax on passenger automobiles might
be made much higher than the seven per cent
provided by the Committee. The Committee
may have held down the automobile tax in
the feeling that they did not wish to burden
automobile purchasers.'
Regraded Unclassified
286
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
Just 8 second. That Isn't quite clear. The
"may have held down".
Blough:
May have not been willing to go higher.
H.V.Jr:
Do you mind doing it the other way?
Blough:
"The Committee might have been not willing to
raise the automobile tax higher than that
in the feeling that they did not wish to
burden automobile purchasers. I do not believe
that a higher tax would have the effect of
being burdensome." You can strike the "I"
out. "The production of passenger automobiles
will undoubtedly have to be greatly restricted.
It would be extremely difficult to prevent
price rises on cars sold by retailers or the
setting up of 8 'black market' in new and
slightly used cars. The excise tax will
in all probability come out of windfall profits
which otherwise would be secured by profiteers
in automobiles." There may be some inconsis-
tency here, with the idea that we are going
to have price legislation, but I don't think
SO.
"Automobiles are mentioned only as 8, most
important example. There are & number of
other commodities in this same class also."
H.V.Jr:
Do you mind putting that before, the demands
are more scarce?
Blough:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Simply say, "I am going to take automobiles
as an illustration," and then give the thing.
Plough:
"The tax on passenger automobiles might be
made much higher," and so forth and so on,
and then, "Automobiles are mentioned only as
Regraded Unclassified
287
- e -
a most important example. There are a number
of other commodities in the same category. The
demands for such commodities and the large
windfall profits which dealers and others may
make by evading controls," and so forth.
H.V.Jr:
Please.
Blough:
"A basic revision of the excess profits
tax plan is also very desirable. The
excess profits tax plan tentatively
adopted by the Committee is an improvement
over the present excess profits tax. The
revenue will be much larger although to 8
considerable extent this is due merely to
higher rates. Some of the larger defense
industries with low rates of return in the
base years will pay excess profits tax,
whereas they are now exempt.
"However, the excess profits tax plan fails to
correct one fundamental weakness of the present
law. It exempts from the tax profits in
excess of a reasonable return on invested
capital unless those profits are also in
excess of the profits of the base period
years."
H.M.Jr:
Now, again, may I suggest that this come first,
and then some of the larger defense industries
would follow that? Give the unfavorable one
first and the favorable one last, because
the President wants to emphasize the unfavor-
able one.
Blough:
Well --
H.V.Jr:
You could just switch it around.
Blough:
But I am now going on to elaborate the unfavor-
able.
Regraded Unclassified
288
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Blough:
The idea was, although you have done one thing
good, it is pretty bad in other respects.
R.V.Jr:
All right.
Blough:
"A study by the Treasury Department shows that
one out of five profit-making corporations
with assets of one million dollars and over
averaged more than ten per cent net income
on their reported equity capital during the
years 1935 to 1938, and that one out of twenty-
five companies made more than thirty per cent.
"A manufacturer of tractors with approximately
forty-five million dollars equity capital
averaged approximately eighteen per cent after
taxes on that capital during the base period
years 1936 through 1939."
H.V.Jr:
Now - and he pays no excess profits?
Blough:
Well, most of these companies made more in
forty than they made in thirty-nine and pre-
vious years, and they paid relatively little,
but they do pay some.
H.M.Jr:
I see. All right.
Blough:
And I see the point there. I will have to
elaborate that. The point is not that they
don't pay any excess profits.
Sullivan:
They pay on the excess over the eighteen per
cent.
Blough:
But they don't pay any excess profits tax on
any of the eighteen per cent.
K.M.Jrs
I think that isn't quite clear.
Regraded Unclassified
289
- 8 -
Blough:
All right, I can dress that up, I am sure.
H.M.Jr:
Go ahead.
Blough:
"A company which has practically a monopoly
on one of the important defense materials" --
H.M.Jr:
Something like this: After paying all of
his taxes, he still makes eighteen per cent
on his capital.
Sullivan:
Free from excess profits taxation.
H.M.Jr:
No, I was going to say after paying all forms
of Federal taxes.
Viner:
He doesn't.
Blough:
He did through thirty-six to thirty-nine, that
is right.
H.M.Jr:
But - well, what does he do under the law as
it is drafted?
Blough:
Under the law as it is drafted, they take the
earnings before taxes instead of after taxes
in making the computation. He is going to be
hit somewhat harder under the law as drafted.
H.M.Jr:
If you don't mind, this example doesn't do the
point. The point I want to get is, how much
is this fellow going to make on his invested
capital after he has paid all his Federal
taxes? Is he going to earn eighteen per cent
or what?
Blough:
No, 8. great deal more than eighteen per cent
after he has paid all his taxes.
H.M.Jr:
Any way you put it, Roy, old man, I don't
think you have brought it out.
Regraded Unclassified
290
- 9 -
Blough:
there are two things to be brought out.
Let's see if either of them --
H.M.Jr:
See if this statement that I am making is
correct. This is what I told the Speaker,
without any experts around. I most likely
was wrong. I said that if a company was able
to earn & million dollars 8. year from thirty-
seven to thirty-nine, inclusive, after paying
all Federal taxes, that the bill as drafted
would still permit him to earn that million
dollars.
Blough:
It is not quite correct.
Sullivan:
For your purpose it was. The only thing that
makes it incorrect is the shift.
H.M.Jr:
Well, but for my purpose --
Sullivan:
Yes, you could --
H.M.Jr:
Now, the point that I want is, if it is true -
I don't know whether it is true and this is
what I want, and I want it simple just like
I said it, only if it is true - that if these
people - their earnings, so to speak, were
frozen on an average of those four years
and that might have been forty per cent on
the capital during that average period, he
can still earn that same forty per cent.
Blough:
In the case of this tractor manufacturer,
if his earnings were frozen at the thirty-six
to thirty-nine average, he would have had
eighteen per cent after taxes.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, but you see where you missed - he makes -
but what does he do under the bill as drawn?
Does he still make the eighteen?
Blough:
Very close to it.
Regraded Unclassified
291
- 10 -
Sullivan:
Practically.
White:
You could say virtually the same.
H.M.Jr:
but you don't say it.
Blough:
I go on after the examples --
H.M.Jr:
But for each one. I would let it sink in
through the repetition.
Blough:
I see.
H.M.Jr:
Through the base period this fellow was able
to earn eighteen per cent on his invested
capital after he paid all his taxes. The
way the bill is drawn, he still will earn
the eighteen per cent.
White:
He still will earn practically the same
amount.
H.M.Jr:
You repeat that each time, if what I am saying
is true.
Blough:
What you are saying is true.
Sullivan:
Yes, it is.
H.M.Jr:
Then I would drive it in by repeating it each
time.
Blough:
Instead of having one paragraph on the top
of page five, you would put it with each exam-
ple.
B.M.Jr:
Sure.
Blough:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And as the bill is drawn, that condition
would still exist.
Regraded Unclassified
232
+ 11 -
Viner:
He says it on the next page.
H.M.Jr:
But it is so far off, Jake, that by the time
you get there you say, "What the hell, what
is the matter with that?"
Blough:
I see the point, Mr. Secretary. Well then,
the same criticism applies to all of these
and also to two or three other examples.
E.M.Jr:
Page five.
Flough:
"These are some of the more prosperous companies.
The excess profits tax law now in operation,
as well BS the tentatively approved bill,
allows them to earn free of tax practically
as much as they did in the base period. The
kind of profits which ever since the excess
profits tax of 1918 has been defined as excess
profits, is free from tax under 8 law which is
called an excess profits tax law." Then
probably there should be a paragraph:
"Failure to tax such profits is unfortunate
for & number of reasons."
H.M.Jr:
Just a moment, please. Oh, for the President's
use the tractors are all right. What is the
defense monopoly that you mentioned?
Blough:
Aluminum Company of America.
H.M.Jr:
All right, then, say Aluminum Company of
America. Let him decide whether he wants
to use it or not.
Blough:
Might put it in parentheses so he could leave
it in or leave it out. The next one is Coca-
Cola. Then the tractor company is Caterpillar
and I have Chrysler Motors.
H.M.Jr:
Got a steel company, have you?
Regraded Unclassified
293
- 12 -
Blough:
We may be able to find 8 steel company with
that sort of record, but steel companies didn't
make that sort of records.
H.M.Jr:
How about Savage Arms or Western Cartridge?
Blough:
They did very well in 1939. I am not sure
their average was good enough. We will check
into that.
Sullivan:
That would be the unfortunate example to use
because they are making so much more now than
they made in the base period.
H.M.Jr:
And they get hit.
Sullivan:
Oh, socko.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Then you go on with one.
Blough:
"Failure to tax such profits is unfortunate
for 8. number of reasons:
"(1) The highly prosperous, well established
corporation which has been making thirty, forty,
fifty per cent or more on its invested capital
has a much larger ability to pay taxes than
a corporation which has been earning only
three, four, or five per cent on its invested
capital, even though the dollar incomes of
the two companies are the same. Taxation of
corporations in accordance with ability to
pay calls for higher taxes on the profits
of corporations in excess of reasonable aver-
age return.
"(2) The corporation which has been making
high returns in the base period years is
given a competitive advantage over newly
organized concerns or concerns which have been
struggling to establish themselves. The
Regraded Unclassified
294
- 13 -
latter types are limited to a much smaller tax-
free return than are the former. The effect
is to confirm monopolies in their control and
to protect well established prosperous busi-
nesses against competition.
"(3) If we are to expect all classes of
society, including laborers and farmers, to
accept the sacrifices of the emergency period
and not to press for every possible dollar
of advantage," and thus bring about more
inflation, "they must be convinced that
sacrifices are being distributed according
to ability and that no one is making unreason-
ably large profits. The stability of our
prices and wages is thus to a considerable
extent dependent on the imposition and enforce-
ment of B. true excess profits tax."
H.M.Jr:
Now, it is all right with me. Here is my
schedule, so we don't misunderstand each
other. At four o'clock I want to send some-
thing to the President, see, and I am going
to say in the thing, that this is still in
rough form, that we want to polish it up
here in the Treasury and we are going to show
it to these half-dozen people tonight and
tomorrow morning and we will give him another
draft when we come over here at eleven, but
I want it to go over at four. If I don't get
it over there, he won't read it. So if you
will do this and get it over and then we
will have copies and I will write the letters
to the various people I want to send It to.
Sullivan:
Are we going to leave this now?
H.M.Jp:
Yes.
Sullivan:
I question the last sentence in the first
paragraph on page two.
Regraded Unclassified
295
- 14 -
White:
Will you excuse us, Mr. Secretary? We
need every minute then.
H.M.Jr:
"hen conference? are you going to come back, after my press
White:
Well, we need - to weave it in with this, we
need at least an hour altogether, to make
a finished job of it.
H.M.Jr:
I will see you sharp at 3:30. That is an hour
and five minutes. That will give you a five
per cent bonus.
Sullivan:
I think there is an implied --
H.M.Jr:
Go ahead.
Sullivan:
An implied promise of no more taxes on forty-
one income, which I think is unfortunate.
H.M.Jr:
All right, Roy, take it out. Have you got
any suggestions, Herbert?
Gaston:
No, not at all.
H.M.Jr:
Dan?
Bell:
What is the purpose of it, Mr. Secretary?
I don't get the idea. There is no recommen-
dation or anything. Is it a message to Cong-
ress or just a public statement?
Foley:
To bring the President up to date for his dis-
cussion tomorrow.
H.M.Jr:
The President of the United States wrote me
a letter that he wanted to do something about
excess profits, you see. I wrote him back
after talking with the Speaker of the House
and asking his advice. He said the President
296
- 15 -
just couldn't send a message to Congress
unless he saw Doughton and Cooper first.
Well, he is seeing Doughton and Cooper and
Sullivan and me tomorrow at eleven. Now,
what I am trying to do is to prepare some-
thing for the President, who hasn't thought
about this, and get the facts to him and give
him the Treasury viewpoint or my viewpoint
on the thing, so that he will read it tonight,
and I want to show it to Henderson and Eccles
and Currie and somebody from OPM and let them
chew on it tonight. I am going to invite
them to be here at 8:30 tomorrow morning and
get their suggestions.
Bell:
That is the only purpose of this memorandum?
This is not going to be made public, is it?
H.M.Jr:
No, no. The President should have this and
then after he has seen it and talked to these
people, he will turn to Sullivan and me and
say, "Now, prepare 8 letter or 8. statement,"
or "Don't do anything," but this is to
inform the President, but not for public con-
sumption.
Bell:
It is all right from that standpoint.
H.M.Jr:
It is the kind of thing - like I said to
noy, "Give me a memorandum what happened on
the tax bill." He gives me 8 memorandum and
I give it to everybody in the nine-thirty
group. It hasn't got out yet.
Rell:
You are going outside the nine-thirty group
tomorrow.
H.M.Jr:
We will do the same thing with this. We will
give it to him and it is his property, and I
am going to tell each person, "Now don't
forget, this is the property of the President
of the United States," you see. He may say,
Regraded Unclassified
297
- 16 -
"Well, I don't want to do anything." He may
say, "Well, do it this way." There is one
way I hope he won't do it, and that is a
letter to Doughton.
Bell:
That answers my question. It doesn't appeal
to me as a message.
Foley:
It is not supposed to be, Dan.
H.M.Jr:
They started off with a message this morning
because I asked them to give me one and after
doing it this morning I wanted to save Gaston's
and your time. I mean, I have done nothing
than this all morning. Nothing has jelled
yet, so you haven't missed anything except
that I saved your time.
Gaston:
I read Ferdie's draft Saturday and I thought
that was along the general line of the argu-
ment you will probably want to use.
H.M.Jr:
It is an argument and this is 8. memorandum,
that is the difference.
Viner:
Mr. Secretary, how does this - how is this
supposed to fit in to the other memorandum
that we have been working on?
H.M.Jr:
Well, yours is sort of 8 preamble.
Viner:
But it is to be part of a joint document?
H.M.Jr:
Yes. I mean - I envisage that you fellows
are coming in with the over-all thing.
Viner:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
And this is the tax end of it.
Viner:
Then it fits, although I imagine that they
298
- 17 -
will go back now and take out a few tax
comments we have in there. I don't know.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that is all right.
Kuhn:
Roy ties it up beautifully in the last para-
graph there with the preamble. You start
on prices and then show how taxes affect
prices and then at the end you clinch it, and
I think it is good.
H.M.Jr:
Shall we meet again at 3:30? Have I overlooked
anybody? Has anybody any suggestions?
299
7/14/41
Suggested Material on Taxes
Important steps have already been taken or are
being taken. The Congress has made provision for a.
campaign to withdraw, through borrowing, savings
which might otherwise be used for the purchase of goods.
The campaign to sell bonds and stamps is well under way.
On August 1 the Treasury Department places into opera-
tion a. plan for selling tax anticipation certificates
which will facilitate the prepayment of income taxes
and will more promptly withdraw purchasing power repre-
sented by such taxes. The Ways and Means Committee is
holding firmly to the goal of $3.5 billion of revenue
from the tax bill,
Every
effort has been made to use voluntary means for limit-
ing price rises.
Those steps are not sufficient to meet the imminent
threat of a dangerous price rise. Further action should
be taken in & number of directions. It is my intention
to ask Congress for the power to regulate prices. The
efficacy of that regulation will be enhanced through
an intelligent tax policy formulated with price control
in mind.
Regraded Unclassified
300
- 2 -
It is important that the yield of the tax bill
shall not fall below the $3.5 billion level. In fact,
it 18 apparent from the size of the appropriations and
the pressures of consumer purchasing power on prices
that taxes even beyond this amount will have to be
raised not later than next year. For the time being,
however, the $3.5 billion goal is a good one and we
should digest these taxes before going on to still
higher ones.
The demands for the most scarce commodities and
the large windfall profits which dealers and others may
make by evading price control should be reduced through
excise taxes imposed on the goods which compete with
defense. Thus the tax on passenger automobiles might
be made much higher than the 7 percent provided by the
Committee. The Committee may have held down the auto-
mobile tax in the feeling that they did not wish to
burden automobile purchasers. I do not believe that a
higher tax would have the effect of being burdensome.
The production of passenger automobiles will undoubtedly
have to be greatly restricted, It would be extremely
difficult to prevent price rises on care sold by retailers
or the setting up of a "black market" in new and slightly
Regraded Unclassified
301
- 3 -
used cars. The excise tax will in all probability
come out of windfall profite which otherwise would
be secured by profiteers in automobiles.
Automobiles are mentioned only as a most important
example. There are a number of other commodities in
this list also.
A basic revision of the excess profits tax plan
is also very desirable. The excess profits tax plan
tentatively adopted by the Committee 18 an improvement
over the present excess profite tax. The revenue will
be much larger although to a considerable extent this
1e due merely to higher rates. Some of the larger
defense industries with low rates of return in the base
years will pay excess profits tax, whereas they are
now exempt.
However, the 0x0055 profits tax plan fails to
correct one fundamental weakness of the present law.
It exempts from the tax profits in excess of a reason-
able return on invested capital unless those profits
are also in excess of the profits of the base period
years.
Regraded Unclassified
- 4 -
A study by the Treasury Department shows that
one out of five profit-making corporations with assets
of $1 million and over averaged more than 10 percent
net income on their reported equity capital during
the years 1935 to 1938, and that one out of 25 companies
made more than 30 percent.
A manufacturer of tractors with approximately
$45 million equity capital averaged approximately
18 percent after taxes on that capital during the base
period years 1936 through 1939.
A company which has practically & monopoly on one
of the important defense materials had earnings after
taxes during the base period years averaging approxi-
mately 19 percent of the 1940 invested capital.
A large manufacturer of beverages received during
the same period earnings after taxes averaging over
25 percent of its 1940 reported equity capital. An
automobile corporation on the basie of published
financial statements averaged over 30 percent of its
1940 equity capital during 1936 to 1939.
Regraded Unclassified
303
- 5 -
These are some of the more prosperous companies.
The excess profits tax law now in operation, as well
as the tentatively approved bill, allows them to earn
practically as much as they did in the base period.
The kind of profits which ever since the excess profits
tax of 1918 has been defined as excess profits, is free
from tax under a law which is called an excess profits
tax law. Failure to tax such profite is unfortunate
for a number of reasons;
(1) The highly prosperous, well established
corporation which has been making 30, 40, 50 percent
or more on its invested capital has a much larger ability
to pay taxes than a corporation which has been earning
only 3. 4, or 5 percent on its invested capital, even
though the dollar incomes of the two companies are the
same. Taxation of corporations in accordance with
ability to pay calls for higher taxes on the profits
of corporations in excess of reasonable average return.
(2) The corporation which has been making high
returns in the base period years is given a competitive
advantage over newly organized concerns or concerns
which have been struggling to establish themselves.
Regraded Unclassified
304
- 6 -
The latter types are limited to a much smaller tax-
free return than are the former. The effect is to
confirm monopolies in their control and to protect
well established prosperous businesses against
competition.
(3) If we are to expect all classes of society,
including laborers and farmers, to accept the sacrifices
of the emergency period and not to press for every
possible dollar of advantage, they must be convinced
that sacrifices are being distributed according to
ability and that no one is making unreasonably large
profite. The stability of our prices and wages is
thus to a considerable extent dependent on the
imposition and enforcement of a true excess profits
tax.
Regraded Unclassified
305
July 14, 1941
2:39 p.m.
Marriner
Ecoles:
Hello.
HMJr:
Marriner?
E:
Yes, Henry.
HMJr:
Good afternoon.
is
How are you today?
HMJr:
I'm fine. We're working hard on 8 memo-
randum for the President which I have to
give him at eleven tomorrow.
Hello.
E:
Yes.
HMJr:
Now what I'd like to do - - it 1sn't finished
yet. I'm going to try and finish it between
four and five and send it over to you 80 you
could read it tonight.
E:
Yeah.
HMJr:
And I'm calling a meeting at my office at
eight-thirty tomorrow morning.
E:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Some of your friends will be here. Is that
too early?
E:
That's all right. I can - it's 8 little
early for me, but I can make it.
HMJr:
Well
E:
I'll have to go home earlier tomorrow night.
\Laughter)
Regraded Unclassified
306
- 2 -
HMJr:
What? Well, don't go to bed tonight.
E:
Yeah. (Laughter) That's fine. That's a good idea.
HMJr:
Well, the point 1e, there's no use having
it at nine or nine-thirty and then take
suggestions and not be able to incorporate
them.
E:
That's right.
HMJr:
See what I mean?
ta
That's right.
H&Jr:
Pretend you're on Daylight Saving. That
makes it nine-thirty.
E:
Well now, who's going to be there?
HMJr:
Well, there'll be Lubin and Currie and I
hope Henderson, somebody from OPM.
is
Uh huh.
HkJr:
What?
E:
O.K.
HMJr:
Those people I'm sending copies to.
in
Well, could I bring Post over with me?
HMJr:
Surely. Surely.
in
Well, you say that'll be over about four
o'clock?
HMJr:
Well, no I wouldn't - no, I - the earliest
that it could be is five. I'll have them
call your secretary in case you're not
there to find out where the stuff
E:
No, I'll be here until seven.
Regraded Unclassified
307
- 3 -
HMJr:
Oh.
E:
I'll be here in the office until seven.
HMJr:
All right.
E:
So any time
HMJr:
Yeah.
E:
Then I'll get over it tonight
HMJr:
Yeah.
E:
and meet in the morning at eight-thirty
in your office.
HMJr:
That's right.
E:
Okay, then.
HMJr:
Thank you.
E:
All right. Good-bye.
308
July 14, 1941
2:42 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Currie.
HMJr:
Hello.
Lauchlin
Currie:
Hello.
HMJr:
Lauch?
C:
Yes.
HMJr:
This statement that we're working on
C:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
for the President, ought to be ready some
time around five.
C:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
I'm going to send it over to you, and then
I'm asking - Eccles has already accepted -
you, and anyone else I can get.....
C:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
to meet at my office at eight-thirty,
80 that if you have any suggestions, I can
incorporate them; because I'm seeing the
President at eleven.
C:
Eleven in the morning.
HMJr:
Yes.
C:
Okay.
HMJr:
We'll get it into your hands tonight wherever
you are.
Regraded Unclassified
309
- 2 -
C:
Yeah. On the - going to a dinner - this
Canadian-American Economic Committee Group,
but I can get out of that, I guess.
HMJr:
Well, I'll get it over to you; and I'd
appreciate your criticisms and we'll take
it in the morning.
C:
Yeah. You said - that's eight-thirty tonight,
you meant?
HMJr:
No, eight-thirty tomorrow morning.
C:
Oh, eight-thirty tomorrow morning. Oh, that's
all right then. Yeah.
HMJr:
No, eight-thirty in the morning. I know you
like that hour.
C:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I'll have coffee here for you, if you want
it.
(Laughter)
C:
No, I'll be there.
HMJr:
All right.
C:
That's - I haven't got any place on my
calendar for eight-thirty, though. It
starts at eight-forty-five.
HMJr:
No, eight-thirty at the Treasury.
C:
All right.
HMJr:
Thanks.
C:
Thanks.
HMJr:
Thank you.
310
July 14, 1941
2:45 p.m.
Isador
Lubin:
Hello. How are you?
HMJr:
Hello, Lub. Are you far from me now?
L:
No, I'm across the street at the moment.
HMJr:
Lub, we're preparing a memorandum to the
President for eleven o'clock tomorrow on
taxes and prices.
L:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I hope to have it ready at five.
L:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I'm going to get it into your hands.
L:
Okay.
HMJr:
And I'm asking Eccles and Currie to meet
at my office at eight-thirty tomorrow
morning.
L:
Yeah.
HMJr:
And I'd like your criticisms.
L:
All right. I'll be there.
HMJr:
Suggestions. Eight-thirty A.M.
L:
All right. Tell your secretary to leave a
copy in my office in your building, and I'll
be there around six.
HMJr:
Do you want any coffee served here tomorrow
morning?
L:
I don't know. I doubt it. I get up too
early for that.
Regraded Unclassified
311
- 2 -
HMJr:
I'll have some coffee ready anyway for
you fellows.
L:
All right. Eight-thirty at your office.
HMJr:
Right.
L:
Swell. Good-bye.
HMJr:
Good-bye.
312
July 14, 1941
2:46 p.m.
Sidney
Hillman:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
How are you?
H:
Very good, thank you. How are you?
HMJr:
Fine.
H.
Very good.
HMJr:
Mr. Hillman, the President called down the
leaders in the Ways and Means Committee
tomorrow at the White House at eleven o'clock.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
And we're preparing in the Treasury for him
a statement on prices and inflation and
taxes.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
Now, I don't know who in OPM particularly 1s
interested or would like to see it before we
show it to the President.
H:
I certainly would like to see it. Very much.
HMJr:
All right. Now I tell you what I'd like to
do. It'll be finished around five o'clock
tonight.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
I'm also showing it to Eccles and Currie and
Lubin and Henderson.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
And I'm inviting these gentlemen to come to
my office at eight-thirty tomorrow morning and
313
- 2 -
tell me what they like and don't like about
it.
H:
Well, of course, Lubin could represent me.
HMJr:
No, I'd like - no, Lubin 18 here for the
President, you see.
H:
Yeah.
HMJr:
But I wanted you, if you would, for the OPM.
H:
Well, five o'clock I've got my - what we call
OPM Staff Meeting.
HMJr:
Yeah.
H:
That takes in the heads, and that will last
until about seven o'clock.
HMJr:
Uh huh.
H:
See? So if you have got five o'clock, I can
send over someone to represent me.
HMJr:
I'll send over
The statement would be
finished.
H:
I see. By five o'clock.
HMJr:
And I'll send it to you.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
But then we're not going to have a meeting
on it until eight-thirty tomorrow morning.
H:
I see.
HMJr:
Do you think you'd care to come then?
H:
Well, if I can, I will.
HMJr:
Yeah.
H:
If you send over, I'll appreciate it.
Regraded Unclassified
314
- 3 -
HMJr:
I'll send it over to you, and at eight-
thirty tomorrow morning we're going to
consider it; and anybody that's got any
suggestions, I'd like to have them.
H:
Very good.
HMJr:
Thank you.
H:
Yes, sir.
315
July 14, 1941
2:55 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Henderson's
Secretary:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
This 18 Mr. Morgenthau speaking.
S:
Yes, Mr. Morgenthau.
HMJr:
I'm working on a memorandum for the President
for eleven o'clock tomorrow.
S:
Hello.
HMJr:
On prices.
S:
Yes.
HKJr:
Mr. Henderson knows about it.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
And I'm asking the people like Mr. Eccles
and Mr. Currie to meet at my office at
eight-thirty tomorrow morning.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
In order to give me the - Hello.
S:
Yes.
HMJr:
In order to give me the benefit of their
suggestions.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
Now, could you get this off in a telegram
to Mr. Henderson?
S:
I'll try to reach him. I think he's en route
back from Atlantic City. He made a speech
up there this morning.
Regraded Unclassified
316
- 2 -
HMJr:
I know. Now where should I send this
memo to?
S:
Send it over here to us, sir.
HMJr:
Where?
S:
2501 "Q" Street.
HMJr:
Okay. And then you'll see that he gets
it?
S:
I'll see that we get ahold of him some way.
Eight-thirty tomorrow morning in your
office.
HMJr:
That's right.
S:
Righto.
HMJr:
Thank you.
317
July 14, 1941
3:30 p.m.
RE EXCESS PROFITS TAX
Present:
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Blough
Mr. Bell
Mr. Foley
Mr. White
Mr. Haas
Mr. Viner
H.M.Jr:
Everybody is going to be here at eight-thirty
tomorrow morning.
Kuhn:
Henderson?
H.M.Jr:
Couldn't get Henderson, but his secretary is
taking care of it. Do you want me to do you,
Roy?
Blough:
There are one or two paragraphs that I would
like to read. I must say, I have seldom been
quite so frantic as I have trying to get this
done this afternoon.
H.M.Jr:
It just shows how good you are.
Blough:
The better you are, the more frantic you get,
is that it? I am sorry, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right.
Blough:
I should have said, "The better I am, the more
frantic I get."
Regraded Unclassified
318
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
That is what I thought you meant.
Blough:
That is what I meant.
The first page I am just holding out because
I assume they will take their first page and
that will be the way in which they will fit it
in. I would like to read, though, two or
three paragraphs fitting together some of the
later material.
"It is important that the yield of the tax bill - If
I am sorry, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Take your time.
What is this, a change? Is this the way it is
going to read?
Blough:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
It is down to three pages now?
Blough:
No, there are a couple coming yet from the
typists, but I can read the whole thing pretty
much as it will be.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Blough:
"It is important that the yield of the tax bill
shall not fall below the $3.5 billion level.
In fact, it is apparent from the size of the
appropriations and the pressures of consumer
purchasing power on prices that taxes even
beyond this an ount will have to be raised not
later than next year."
Then leaving out the sentence which says any-
thing about--
Sullivan:
That is right.
Regraded Unclassified
319
- 3 -
Blough:
"In formulating the excise tax program, an im-
portant consideration should be the diversion
of producers and consumers demand from scarce
commodities which compete with the defense
program.
"Thus the tax on passenger automobiles might
well be made much higher than the seven per-
cent adopted by the Committee. The Committee
may have decided not to impose a higher tax
because they did not wish to burden automobile
purchasers. It is probable that a higher tax
would not have much effect on prices to auto-
mobile purchasers. It would be extremely
difficult to prevent price rises - 11 this is
all mixed up. Either I or my secretary -
"It would be extremely difficult to prevent
price rises on cars sold by some retailers or
the setting up of a 'black market' in new and
slightly used cars.
There is B. sentence omitted that says, "Pro-
duction will be much lower than last year,
and that must be put in. Then from that it
follows that it would be extremely difficult
to prevent price rises because of that cut in
production.
"The excise tax will, in all probability, come
out of windfall profits which otherwise would
be secured by profiteers in automobiles.
Automobiles are mentioned because they are per-
haps the most important examples. Other com-
modities which may be in the same category should
be examined to determine whether an excise
should be imposed and, if so, whether it should
be on the final product or on a scarce material
entering into the product."
Mr. Viner suggested that enlargement.
"Through such taxes, the demands for the most
Regraded Unclassified
320
- 4 -
scarce commodities and the large windfall
profits which may be made by those evading price
control would be reduced.'
And I am wondering whether that may have helped
the excise portion in Mr. Sullivan's mind any.
Sullivan:
You say that the increase in taxes is not go-
ing to be borne by the purchaser, Roy?
Blough:
In automobiles, I say that.
Sullivan:
I don't think our experience justifies that re-
mark, do you?
Blough:
I don't think we have any experience bearing
on it, because next year the number of auto-
mobiles produced will be reduced, tax or no
tax.
Sullivan:
And they will all be sold.
Blough:
And they will all be sold, tax or no tax.
Sullivan:
That is right, and your theory is that because
there will be a shortage of supply, in re-
lationship to the demand, that the people
will pay that increased tax themselves?
Blough:
The people are going to pay higher prices
whether there is any tax or not, and that
the tax will come out, not so much of the
consumer in higher prices, but out of these
intermediaries who are selling the cars and
who are going to get higher prices even if you
impose legislation. Some of them are going
to get higher prices. If you would rather
leave that idea out, I am entirely willing
to do so.
Bell:
Would that come out on trade-in values, where
you increase your trade-in values? Is that
Regraded Unclassified
321
- 5 -
the way they cover that up?
Blough:
In part.
Bell:
windfall. Otherwise, I don't see how you get it out of
Sullivan:
It seems to me when you are selling a scarcity
commodity, Roy, you can pass on all the tax
you want to pass.
Blough:
May we continue the discussion shortly?
M.N.Jr:
Yes.
Blough:
Suppose we had ten cars to be sold to ten
people, and the price of cars was set at,
let's say, five hundred dollars. Now suddenly
we have only five cars to be sold, and there
is still the same number of people wanting
them and wanting them as badly. You can get
more than five hundred dollars for your car.
Now, the question that arises is, can you get
still more for your five cars if there is &
tax on them? and I think, if the market is
quite free, the answer is, "No." You will not
get any more for your cars. I am inclined to
think that where you have a partially con-
trolled market, as this would be, that there
would be - part of it would come out of the
consumer, and that this statement is probably
too sweetening, but I think a. large portion of
it will not come out of the consumer.
Sullivan:
That statement might come back to haunt you,
Roy, when you were talking in favor of certain
types of taxes for--
E.M.Jr:
Let it go tonight, and you can come in with
suggestions too, if you want to tomorrow; but
we have got to go to press.
Regraded Unclassified
322
- G -
Blough:
Well, that was my understanding, Mr. Secre-
tary.
Yes, go ahead.
Blough:
We are on the next page now. I haven't num-
bered these pages because they could fit in
more easily.
"A basic revision of the excess profit tax
plan is also very desirable. In some re-
spects, the excess profits tax plan tenta-
tively adopted by the Committee is an improve-
ment over the present excess profits tax.
The revenue will be much larger, although to
a considerable extent this is due merely to
higher rates. Some of the larger defense
industries with low rates of return in the
base years will pay excess profits tax,
whereas they are now exempt. However, the
excess profits tax plan fails to correct one
fundamental weakness of the present law. It
exempts from the tax profits in excess of a
reasonable return on invested capital unless
those profits are also in excess of the profits
of the base period years. Substantial numbers
of companies make large earnings. 1 study by
the Treasury Department shows that one out of
five profit making corporations with assets
of one million dollars and over averaged more
than ten percent net income on their reported
equitable capital during the years 1935 to
1938, and that one out of twenty-five companies
averaged more than thirty percent. The manner
in which the present law and the Committee's
tentative plan exempt important amounts of
excess profits is shown in the following
examples.
"After paying all taxes, an automobile company,
Chrysler, made during the base period years of
1936 through 1939 approximately twenty-eight percent.
Regraded Unclassified
323
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Wait a minute. I think in sending this out
to these other people we had better leave that
out. Don't you think so?
Blough:
It is against the law to send it out with that
in.
M.M.Jr:
Strike it out.
Blough:
Do you want it striken out of the copy that
goes to the White House also?
H.W.Jr:
Yes.
Blouch:
All right.
"Twenty-eight percent on the basis of published
financial statements as the company has not
filed its excess profits tax return. Practically
all, ninety-five percent, of this amount can
be earned tax free under the present law and
under the Committee plan after deducting a
computed excess profits tax on the 1940 earn-
ings above the base period average the company
still has left twenty-four percent of its In-
vested capital under the present law and
twenty-one percent under the Committee pro-
posal."
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me. The average company still has left
twenty-four percent of - isn't it "on."
Blough:
"On", it should be. "Twenty-four percent return
on its invested capital."
R.B.Jr:
I am right, am I not?
Plough:
Yes, sir, that is a slip. It might have been
left "an income of twenty-four percent of,"
in which case it might be all right.
I have the other two sheets now.
Regraded Unclassified
324
- 8 -
11.W.Jr:
I need one clean copy for the President, and
then there are five other copies I should
have.
Blough:
Yes.
H.E.Jr:
The only hurry is the one to the President,
you see.
Blough:
Well, I--
S.M.Jr:
Have you got plenty of help back there?
Blough:
I have help. I can't be two places at once,
but as soon as I am through here I will take
it out and get it going again.
B.M.Jr:
Yes. Go ahead.
Blough:
"The tax returns of the manufacturer--"
M.M.Jr:
I mean, there is one clean copy for the Presi-
dent. We will get that started with & reason-
able number of carbons, and then she can do some
more if we have to. For instance, Eccles is
in his office until seven. Henderson isn't
there. We can save those until later, you see.
She has to make two runs, I suppose.
Go ahead.
Blough:
I will have these examples in somewhat better
shape by morning also.
H.M.Jr:
All right, that is all right.
Blough:
"The tax returns of a manufacturer of tractors
with approximately forty-five million dollars
of equity capital indicate that after all taxes
it averaged approximately 18 percent during
1936-1939, which amount continues to be tax-
free.
Regraded Unclassified
325
- a -
"A company--"
H.M.Jr:
Read a little faster, Roy.
Blough:
"A company (Aluminum Company of America) which
has practically & monopoly on one of the
important defense materials had earnings after
taxes during the base period years averaging
approximately 19 percent of the 1940 invested
capital, which it can continue to earn tax-free.
"A large manufacturer of beverages (Coca-Cola)
can continue to earn free of tax over 25 percent
of its 1940 reported equity capital.
"Thus, large amounts of the kind of profits which
ever since the excess profits tax of 1918 has
been defined as excess profits, is free from
tax under a law which is called an excess
profits tax law."
Now, that is a little argumentative. I don't
know if you want that.
H.M.Jr:
Don't let's argue about it now.
Blough:
Now the rest of it is just the same.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Now, look, get this thing started. Have you
people got anything that you could let him
have? Do you need any help down there?
Blough:
The shortage is in pica typewriters, Mr.
Secretary. We have two pica typewriters, but
it will only take about fifteen minutes for
that to be rerun.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Go ahead.
Blough:
We will do it this way with those changes.
Regraded Unclassified
326
- 10 -
H.M.Jr:
And if Mr. Sullivan or anybody else wants to
argue with you afterward, they can; but see
the thing through, you see, and then come
back. I am sitting here waiting.
Blough:
Well, may I come back before I come with the
papers or not until I come with the papers?
H.M.Jr:
No, come back to listen to. these other three
sharks.
The chances are nine out of ten he won't look
at this draft, but I promised it to him this
morning, originally. Am I right, Dan?
Bell:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
I will never forget. I think that Roswell
Magill must have spent a minimum of three
months getting a statement ready for the
President. He had fifteen items, and he
never got further than one. He came to my
bedroom up at Hyde Park after the meeting,
and he said, "God, I might just as well go back
to teaching. This is terrible." I said, "No,
this is just Roosevelt. You did all right."
He says, "I never got beyond number one."
I said, "What did you think you were going to
do." Gee, he felt awful.
Kuhn:
What was it, the same kind of thing?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
He worked all summer on the thing.
Sullivan:
Was that on the loophole?
H.M.Jr:
In connection with & tax bill, just the prepara-
tion. I get a little philosophical about it.
I am doing it at eight-thirty tomorrow morning.
Regraded Unclassified
327
- 11-
He says, "It is terrible." I said, "What?" and
he says, "The wisdom."
Kuhn:
Viner is wonderfon on statements, though. He
has a very sharp eye. He can tell where some-
thing is wrong.
Rell:
He is a great critic.
Kuhn:
Wonderful.
H.M.Jr:
I say - did you see the figures on the bonds,
just statistics? They are wonderful.
Rell:
the E's are going up, I understand. That is
very important.
Gaston:
That shows the effect of the propaganda, the
E's going up.
Kuhn:
Sure.
H.M.Jr:
It was very satisfactory. We will have a billion
by August 1.
Bell:
Well, that is the place where we want to get
the money, too.
(Mr. Haas, Mr. Viner, and Mr. White entered
the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
Is it all out of Viner's pipe now?
Viner:
No, sir.
H.M.Jr:
God, we have done Blough, you know.
Viner:
I know. You mean he is dead? (Laughter)
H.V.Jr:
No, he can work under pressure. (Facetiously)
(Secretary on White House phone.)
Regraded Unclassified
328
- 12 -
Hello
Miss Grace Tully, please
Hello, Grace
We are working on a tax statement for the
President. What would be the latest I could
get it over to you and you could get it to the
President
Well, if I give it to some Secret Service fellow
to give it to you to give it to him, do you
think it might work
Right
Right
Thank you
H.M.Jr:
Do you (White) want to read it?
White:
Do you want it read aloud?
H.M.Jr:
I will read. I don't read very well, though.
Foley:
Let Harry read it.
White:
I will read it, if you like.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
White:
"The Present Price Situation.
"Since the beginning of the war, wholesale
prices have risen about 16 percent, of which
rise the greater part has occurred during the
past five months.
"The cost of living index has increased 5-1/2
percent since the beginning of the war.
Regraded Unclassified
329
- 13 -
"The index of 28 basic commodities has increased
48 percent since the beginning of the war. This
latter constitutes--"
H.M.Jr:
What do you mean, "beginning of the war"? That
doesn't date it.
Bell:
September '39.
Haas:
August '39.
H.M.Jr:
Well, if we don't have time now, for tomorrow's
statement, do you mind saying August, '39?
White:
Right.
There will be a lot of changes that will have
to be made.
"This latter constitutes a danger signal of
inflation which must not be ignored. The
wholesale price index always lags greatly be-
hind the index of basic commodities, while the
cost of living index does not show anything like
the full effects of inflation until long after
the seeds of inflation have taken deep root."
H.M.Jr:
Just a second. Yes.
White:
"The pattern of price rises summarized above
roughly rosembles the price movements during
the first two years of World War I -- little
rise in the cost of living, a moderate rise in
the wholesale price index, and & sharp rise in
basic commodities. Apparently we are at the
same point in price history as in 1916 -- on
the edge of inflation."
H.M.Jr:
Is that you, George?
Haas:
That is everybody.
330
- 14 -
S.M.Jr:
It is good, anyway.
Thite:
"The forces making for further price rise are
both potent and persistent:
"(1) Estimated Defense spending during the
fiscal year 1942 will be two and a half times
as much as in the fiscal year 1941, exclusive
of any extension of the Defense program since
July 1.
" (2) More important in its bearing on the
danger of inflation than the figures for ex-
penditures of the coming year are the estimates
of deficit spending. The net deficit for the
fiscal year 1942, as estimated by the Director
of the Budget, will be $12.8 billions, com-
pared with $5.1 billions for the previous
fiscal year. This assumes the present tax
structure. If the present tax bill is passed
by Congress, the deficit will be reduced by
$2-1/2 billions--"
Sullivan:
Three and a half.
Sell:
Two and a half.
Sullivan:
No, that is right.
White:
If
but it will still be twice that of fiscal
1941."
H.M.Jr:
Again for tomorrow, no one can follow that.
The deficit will be reduced by two and & half
billion, but it will still be twice that - I
never liked that - twice that of fiscal year
'41.
Viner:
Put the figure in.
A.M.Jr:
Yes, the figure.
Regraded Unclassifie
331
- 15 -
Viner:
It will still be ten billion, which is twice
that of 1941.
M.M.Jr:
That is right.
Bell:
Is the President going to understand the two
and 8 half billions?
H.M.Jr:
What?
Bell:
I wonder if the President will understand this?
H.M.Jr:
I doubt it.
Viner:
Well, then you could add that the revenue yield
of the new tax bill in its first year--
R.M.Jr:
The two and a half has to be spelled out, and
that twice the fiscal year '41, those things,
but I am not going to bother with it tonight.
White:
"This deficit does not take account, moreover,
of the new defense expenditure estimates just
submitted by the President, and whatever is
expended on account of these estimates during
fiscal 1942 will be added to the deficit,
unless it is offset by yet additional taxes.
"(3) During the past year the inflationary
force of the Federal deficit has been supple-
mented by--"
S.M.Jr:
Just a minute, please. Why do you put in that
about "yet additional taxes"?
White:
There might be more taxes in addition to the
three and a half billion.
Viner:
Taxes not yet proposed. If there is still
another tax bill in addition to this tax bill.
White:
I think it can be deleted.
Regraded Unclassified
332
- 16 -
H.M.Jr:
I don't like that sentence. It is kind of
thrown in there.
White:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Just cut out that part about its being offset.
Go ahead.
White:
"(3) During the past year the inflationary
force of the Federal deficit has been supple-
mented by an expansion of bank credit. Total
loans of all member banks expanded by an esti-
mated $2.8 billions, or by 20 percent during
the fiscal year 1941. This rise, moreover, has
been proceeding at an accelerated pace -- 33
percent of the total estimated increase taking
place during the final quarter.
"(4) To the fiscal and monetary factors likely
to cause price increases during the next fiscal
year, the physical factors of reduced shipping
space and other difficulties in the way of
imports should be added.'
H.M.Jr:
I don't get that.
Haas:
Prices will go up, and you can't get ships.
Viner:
Prices will go up, because imports are cut off.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
White:
"Though there are factors appearing to check
inflationary trends, such as some surplus--"
Viner:
Operating.
White:
Operating, yes.
".... " to check inflationary trends, such as
some surplus stocks of agricultural commodities,
Regraded Unclassified
333
- 17 -
unemployment - unemployed labor resources, and
partially employed production facilities, most
of these factors were present in the fiscal
year 1941 in greater degree and yet did not
serve to restrain price rises even though the
forces making for price rises were then much
weaker. It would, therefore, be unwise to
count on these to any important extent.
"Important governmental steps have already been
taken or are being taken to check inflation.
"Every effort has been and is being made to
limit price rises through voluntary cooperation
of OPACS. These measures to restrain price
rises though they have unquestionably been
helpful are inadequate to meet the situation
confronting us. We have gone only a small
part of the way--"
H.M.Jr:
Is that the end?
White:
The rest of the way is on one page.
Kuhn:
That leads into Roy's stuff.
White:
No, there is a page before Roy's, and I am not
50 sure it leads in very smoothly. It should
have been ready by now.
Kuhn:
Voluntary cooperation by OPACS.
Viner:
No, with OPACS.
H.M.Jr:
Am I crazy, that as bank loans go up excess
reserves go down?
Gaston:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
You don't say anything about it.
Viner:
It is the bank loans. It is not the excess
334
- 18 -
reserves. Excess reserves are unused in-
flationary power. They don't inflate them-
selves. It is the loans. Excess reserves go
into action.
H.M.Jr:
It is funny nobody wrote that. The newspapers
always say - well, this morning, all the papers
had a story, "Excess reserves are down because
bank loans have gone up."
Viner:
That is excess reserves exercising their in-
flationary power.
Gaston:
They are no longer hanging over the money
market.
Viner:
They are now in operation.
Gaston:
Tom Smith today was telling how they are getting
a lot of overflow business. Banking is very
active in that part of the country. There are
a lot of accounts for the local banks to
handle.
H.M.Jr:
All I have done is this and signing mail for
Defense Savings Bonds.
Where is the third page?
White:
George has gone to look for it. It was in
George's outfit that it was done.
Viner:
Have you got it now, George?
Haas:
Yes.
Viner:
Here he is, on the spot.
White:
Oh, here it is.
George, I just said this was done in your
place.
Regraded Unclassified
335
- 19 -
Gaston:
You got it out of Harris, didn't you, George?
Haas:
What, this one?
Gaston:
Yes.
Haus:
This is such a mess I am not sure of anything.
H.M.Jr:
You fellows act as though you were being rushed.
White:
Well, I think the interesting thing in this
document is what we have left out. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Why?
White:
The table was full of it. We have only gone
a small part of the way it will be necessary to
go.
"We must attack the problem on all fronts if
we are successfully to prevent inflation. We
present below some specific tax proposals. The
problem cannot, however, be met by tax measures
alone, but must be attacked on a broad front
by a variety of methods. In addition to these
tax proposals, we recommend supplementary
action along the following lines:
"(1) OPACS must be given the power to fix prices
where necessary. Price fixing must be regarded
as 8 supplement to priorities and rationing."
H.M.Jr:
You have got "a complement".
White:
"Without the power to impose a ceiling on
prices where necessary, the task of restricting
prices is made much more difficult. The mere
possession of such power tends to make the exer-
cise of that power unnecessary. On the other
hand, in the absence of inadequate fiscal
Regraded Unclassified
336
- 20 -
program to mop up excess buying power, the
attempt to prevent unwanted price increase
by fiat is bound to break down here as it has
done elsewhere, when unaccompanied by these
supplementary methods."
H.M.Jr:
Let me read that. You put a mouthful in that.
Sullivan:
It is an awfully good paragraph.
White:
It is not clearly stated.
R.M.Jr:
Wait a minute. "On the other hand, in the absence
of an adequate fiscal program."
White:
That really should be a paragraph and the idea
is to show that mere price fixing is not nearly
enough. It will break down unless it is supple-
mented by a fiscal program.
Viner:
And by other methods --
H.M.Jr:
What is the matter with our fiscal program?
Why isn't our fiscal program adequate?
Viner:
Not heavy enough.
Sullivan:
That is the purpose of this entire memorandum,
to indicate that we are not going to absorb
sufficient additional purchasing power.
H.M.Jr:
That is right. All right.
White:
It is not wholly clear, the way it is,
but that was what we intended.
Bell:
It doesn't seem to me to be necessarily a part
of that OPACS power.
Viner:
What doesn't?
Bell:
Last sentence.
Regraded Unclassified
337
- 21 -
Viner:
Oh, yes, it is.
Sullivan:
Trying to show the relationship between the
OPACS power and the fiscal program.
Foley:
Eitherone isn't adequate in itself.
Viner:
You need a battery of things. That is the
point we tried to make.
White:
I think Dan's point is that the transition
is not well pointed out.
"(2) Increase the supplies of goods required
for military and civilian needs. Increased
output is in itself a major objective of our
defense program and the most effective and
desirable means of preventing inflation.
There should be further exploration of the
possibilities of inducing expansion of pro-
duction facilities and labor supply where
such response could not be expected to occur
automatically.
"(3) Extension of the present system of
priorities to include systematic rationing of
scarce supplies to consumers.
"(4) Extension of the general controls over
bank credit.
"(5) Extension of controls over--"
Viner:
"Establishment."
White:
If
Establishment of controls over the
entire field of consumer credit."
"(6) Creation of controls over capital issues.
"(7) An extension of the Social Security
program along lines by which greater coverage
Regraded Unclassified
338
- 22 -
and contributions would increase the inflow
of funds from current income - 11 George, will
you continue?
H.M.Jr:
I will do it.
IT during the emergency and would not
involve any substantial increase in the out-
flow.
'(8) A reduction of non-essential Federal
expenditures and the Federal lending and under-
writing program, such as non-emergency housing
expenditures and mortgage guarantees.
"(9) Promotion of economy in State and local
governmental expenditure and a curtailment of
their borrowing for non-emergency expenditures.
"Even with substantial action along all of these
lines it seems probable to us that a substan-
tial amount of undesirable price inflation will
occur in this fiscal year if our tax program
is not carried farther than has as yet been
proposed. We, therefore, urge that the tax
program now under consideration by Congress be
reexamined in the light of the following con-
siderations.
White:
And then will follow his.
H.M.Jr:
May I say this? We have been doing a lot of
kidding. For the time involved, I think you
people have really donea masterpiece. I am
delighted. Here is the thing, gentlemen.
You can go on with this through until mid-
night, you see.
Now, you (Blough) are going to have yours in
a few minutes, aren't you?
Blough:
Double spaced, Mr. Secretary.
Regraded Unclassified
339
- 23 -
White:
Well, I am having this double spaced.
Blough:
You are?
Foley:
Marvelous. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Now, what I would do is, I need an original
for the President, and then five other copies.
Miss Chauncey has the letters.
Viner:
Mr. Secretary, one more thing. I didn't hear
what you said about midnight. I would like,
if it is possible--
H.M.Jr:
May I read my letter to - that I have written
to the President?
Viner:
This is in connection with the form here.
That when you present it you say that there
are little rough edges that we are--
H.M.Jr:
Let me show you what I have written to the
President.
Bell:
At the top of page three, you say, "We present
below some specific tax proposals." I didn't
understand that Mr. Blough's memorandum repre-
sented tax proposals.
H.M.Jr:
Where is that?
Bell:
First paragraph at the top of page three.
They are really comments on it.
H.M.Jr:
See if this is all right.
"My dear Mr. President:
"I am enclosing herewith a draft of the
memorandum which we have prepared in the
Treasury. I have sent copies in strict
Regraded Unclassified
340
- 24 -
confidence to Chairman Eccles, Hillman,
Currie, Lubin, and Henderson. They are
coming to my office at eight-thirty tomor-
row morning to give me the benefit of their
suggestions and criticisms.
Therefore, when I see you at eleven, I will
give you a second draft which will incorporate,
wherever possible, the suggestions of these
men."
You see?
Viner:
Well, now, we can polish up here in prepara-
tion for tomorrow morning.
H.M.Jr:
That is right.
White:
I think in your note to Eccles and the others,
I think it might be a little helpful if you
would suggest that this is a rough draft, and
we are polishing it off.
Viner:
Yes, but a draft without changing--
H.M.Jr:
Would you like, "I enclose herewith"- and put
in my own handwriting - "a rough draft"?
White:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
Does that make everybody happy?
Viner:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Well, now, "I am sending you herewith, in
strict confidence, a rough draft"?
Viner:
"In rough draft." Say, "in rough draft."
H.M.Jr:
"A rough draft."
I tried out the most marvelous new movie seats.
Regraded Unclassifie
341
- 25 -
I think I am going to have one in Mrs. Klotz's
room.
H.M.Jr:
Did you try it?
Chauncey:
It is very comfortable.
White:
I should imagine it would help all around if
you had regular evening movies once a week,
and we wouldn't get our programs confused,
if you have got good seats and good movies.
H.M.Jr:
It is a little bit too subtle for me, Harry.
What program?
White:
I never know what evening to set aside for the
movies here.
Sullivan:
How about a matinee, Harry?
White:
Well, my wife wants to see them too.
H.M.Jr:
What happened last Wednesday? Is that the one
you are complaining about?
White:
Well, no.
H.M.Jr:
I am not planning to give one this week.
Viner:
I have been told I didn't get my glass bank.
Sullivan:
What glass banks?
H.M.Jr:
Two banks for both of them. When are these
things going to come through? When is yours
going to come through?
Blough:
I anticipate them within ten or fifteen minutes.
H.M.Jr:
Six copies?
Blough:
It will be about half an hour before I have six.
Regraded Unclassifie
342
- 26 -
H.M.Jr:
And I would like one at the house.
Now, you were questioning something, Dan.
Bell:
I said in this memorandum it says at the
top of page three that there are set out
below specific tax proposals, and I didn't
look upon Roy's memorandum as containing
tax proposals.
Gaston:
Quite right.
H.M.Jr:
Can that be changed?
Sullivan:
"Some tax suggestions.'
Bell:
They are more in the nature of comments.
White:
Well, Dan's point is that they are not pro-
posals, but comments.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, and the President hates the word pro-
posals. I would say, "Some tax comments."
Haas:
"Some comments on the present tax bill."
(Telephone conversation with Vice President
Wallace follows:)
Regraded Unclassified
343
July 14, 1941
4:22 p.m.
Operator:
Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello.
Henry
WAllace:
Hello, Henry.
HMJr:
Hello. How are you?
V:
Oh fine, Henry. On this thing the President
asked me to survey for him, on this economic
defense thing
HMJr:
Yeah.
W:
..... would it be possible for you to meet
tomorrow afternoon?
HMJr:
Yes.
X :
Would two o'clock be O.K.?
HMJr:
Two-fifteen would be a little bit better.
W:
Two-fifteen? All right.
HMJr:
Two-fifteen gives me a chance to have my
tomato juice.
W:
That's right.
HMJr:
Where, Henry?
W:
Why, the Senate's meeting tomorrow; and if
it could be in my office over in the Capitol
Building.....
HMJr:
I'll be there.
W:
Two-fifteen tomorrow.
HMJr:
May I bring somebody with me?
Regraded Unclassified
344
- 2 -
W:
Yes. It would be fine.
HMJr:
All right. I'd be glad to come.
W:
We'll try and have enough chairs.
HMJr:
Thank you.
W:
I thought I'd have Jesse and Secretary Hull
has been designated, but I don't think he'll
be here tomorrow.
HMJr:
Yeah.
W:
And
HMJr:
This 18 on this question of
W:
Economic defense. It's rather in the inter-
national aspect of it, I would say.
HMJr:
Right. I'll be there, and if I may
W:
The objective of it 18 to see - get the
judgment of - of this group of four Cabinet
members as to whether there should be an
Executive Order to set up something of the
sort and if 80, what should be in the
Executive Order.
HMJr:
Right. Then you don't mind if I bring a
couple of my boys with me?
W:
Well, I think a couple would be & plenty.
(Laughter)
HMJr:
What?
W:
I think a couple would be a plenty. But
HMJr:
Yeah.
W:
I think a couple would be all right.
HMJr:
Well, I'd like to bring White, for one.
345
- 3 -
W:
Yeah. That'll be fine.
HMJr:
And I don't know who else has been working
on it. I'll find out.
W:
Good. That'll be fine.
HMJr:
Thank you.
W:
Good.
346
- 27
-
H.M.Jr:
Who else has been working on this?
Have you?
Gaston:
Well, it touches the things I have been doing
very closely. Of course Ed has been working
on some suggested orders on this thing and
has gotten into it different times.
...E.Jr:
But you have been working on it too?
Caston:
Well, we have the Export Control policing and
I have been nominally a member of Maxwell's
Policy Committee which never decides policy.
M.M.Jr:
Well, maybe I had better take nobody up and
say, I can't decide until I talk it over here.
Foley:
Well, what they are talking about, I assume,
is the Executive Order that we talked about
with Justice many, many months ago when we
wanted to have all of that put here in the
Treasury.
Gaston:
I think Ed has probably been all around the
problem from different angles better than any-
body else.
M.M.Jr:
I think I will TO alone. I can't take up
three people. You heard him. I had better go
alone. If you people have any chance, breath-
ing spell - I won't commit myself on anything.
That is the best way.
Now, where were we?
Did you have any other suggestions, Dan?
Bell:
No. I think pages one and two were being re-
written to take in those other suggestions.
H.M.Jr:
Now, what else?
Regraded Unclassified
347
- 28 -
What are you fellows doing? Are you tied up on
this thing?
White:
Well, no, they are just typing it.
H.M.Jr:
Keeping you here five minutes, does that hold
up anybody's working?
White:
No, as far as I am concerned, the typists are
typing it.
I.V.Jr:
Well, will the people out the thing in Miss
Chauncey's hands, and the economists' thing
comes first and the other thing comes second.
You had better staple them together, you see.
Kuhn:
Do they fit together all right?
N.M.Jr:
Not quite, but that is something unimportant.
Blough:
May I suggest that if we put a roman two and
tax comments on the top of the first page of
our material, it still won't fit at this time,
but it will look better.
Chauncey:
It will be a memo in two parts?
H.M.Jr:
That is right.
Chauncey:
And Dr. White will send me some and Mr. Blough
will send me some?
H.M.Jr:
It ought to be here soon.
Is there anything particular I should know
about this foreign thing?
R.M.Jr:
While you were out of the room, White, Wallace
called up, and the President has asked him to
get State and everybody together tomorrow at
two-fifteen, and I asked if I could bring up
& couple, and he sort of hesitated. Well,
Regraded Unclassified
348
- 29 -
I decided I had better go up alone, I guess.
White:
You know, I think he has been asked to head
up--
H.M.Jr:
The President asked him to send for the four
Cabinet members.
White:
I think he has been asked to head up the
economic warfare.
Gaston:
The main feature of the situation is that
Maxwell, as Export Control Administrator, is
rapidly extending his powers. It is pretty
hard to tell just where the policy decisions
originate, but he has accumulated terrifically
formidable powers and shows every disposition
to extend them, and I think it seems to all
the rest of us that there should be some over-
all policy control that really works to watch
that thing.
H.M.Jr:
I think what I am going to do, on second
thought, is this: It gets down to the ques-
tion of drafting, doesn't it, a bill?
Gaston:
Yes.
Foley:
An Executive Order, not 8 bill.
H.M.Jr:
Well, all right, and if anybody has any extra
time and they want to tell it to Foley, then
I will take Foley up with me, so if anybody
has anything they want to tell him, go ahead.
But you (White) have got to concentrate tonight
on this tax thing, and tomorrow, so you are
not available.
White:
Whatever you say. It is immaterial.
H.M.Jr:
Please don't, Harry. I will try not to make
Regraded Unclassified
349
- 30 -
any commitments, you see. My feeling,
Herbert, is this, just so it gives you 8
chance to go after it. My feeling is this:
I frankly don't want anything to do with it.
Gaston:
Well, I think that is right. It is going to
be terrific.
H.M.Jr:
Now, do you want to take the position - is
there anything that you want to sell me that the
Treasury should do? You might just as well
do it now as any time. My inclination is to
keep out of it. I think we have got just
about all we can swing now, and a little more.
Foley:
Well, we are in it up to our ears with this
freezing control. We are in it more than
Maxwell, Mr. Secretary, because we have got
hold of the thing and Maxwell hasn't. Max-
well is only out on the fringe. Ours is an
overlapping and a much more comprehensive con-
trol than Maxwell's.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that is on--
Foley:
The movement of credits, the movement of funds.
H.M.Jr:
But when it comes to imports?
White:
Well, yes. The decision - it is all involved
in the exchange control, but the decision as to
what imports or exports to permit as distinct
from the blocked countries does not reside in
this Committee and does reside in Maxwell's
Committee and should reside, probably, in the
State Department, but it should be operated
through this Committee, so that I don't think
you can step out of the picture because you
are in with both feet, but I do think that
there are some areas in which the Treasury
is not in and doesn't want to go in.
Regraded Unclassified
350
- 31 -
Viner:
Also you have to do policing--
Gaston:
We have to do a lot of administrative work,
wherever the policy is made.
White:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right.
Gaston:
But we do tangle with the policy on the
credit stand, where we just can't dodge it.
Foley:
Can't dodge it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, this isn't something--
Foley:
You will have to take your place on the Com-
mittee.
H.M.Jr:
I am not unfamiliar with this. I mean, you
are involved less in this tax thing than any-
body else.
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
I know this stuff. Well, anyway--
White:
I think the State Department is more concerned
in fighting Maxwell than anybody else, and I
think I would let them do it.
H.M.Jr:
In fighting him?
White:
Yes, opposing him. He is treading much more
on their territory than anybody else.
Gaston:
He proposed a bill which undoubtedly is going
to be killed, but which went into censorship
and control of communications, control of
shipping, control of financing, control of
imports. It was an amazing document that he
allowed Faddis to introduce, but I think that
Regraded Unclassified
351
- 32 -
bill is dead.
Viner:
Herbert, isn't there another bill that has been
drafted by Smith or in Smith's shop--
White:
Yes, not & bill but an Executive Order. It is
the one we went over.
H.M.Jr:
Will you (Kuhn) ride home with me? I am leaving
now.
Kuhn:
Yes.
White:
Which was much preferable to what Maxwell
designed and which I thought was going through.
I don't know what held it up.
H.M.Jr:
May I thank all of you very much for the job.
I think you have all done a swell job. And
I will be here tomorrow at eight twenty-nine.
Gaston:
Would you like this same group?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, very much.
Who is going to bring Sullivan in?
Sullivan:
Who do you think is going to unlock the door
for you when you get in? Sullivan?
H.M.Jr:
Then I am afraid I will not be present.
This is the only other thing. Oscar Cox called
me up, couldn't he see me on tax amortization.
Sullivan:
Who is this?
H.M.Jr:
Oscar Cox.
I said, "No, thank you," that I had two men who
considered it the apple of their eye. The names
were Foley and Sullivan, and he could see either
352
- 33 -
one or both of them, but I wasn't interested.
I just thought I would tell you.
Sullivan:
Well, they tried to--
H.M.Jr:
I told him I wasn't interested, and he could
see either one of you.
Sullivan:
They tried to put us in the hole on this thing.
H.M.Jr:
But I want you to know that if anybody quotes
me, it ain't SO.
Sullivan:
Right.
H.M.Jr:
Well, thank you all. I will be here in the
morning, and Sullivan is acting as doorman.
Regraded Unclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to