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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 529
May 16 - - 19, 1942
- A -
Book Page
Agriculture
New York State: Mobile farm labor camps - Senator Mead-
Agriculture-Treasury correspondence - 5/18/42
529
104
Airplanes
Comparison of American and German production -
5/16/42
31
Shipments to British Forces - Kamarck report - 5/18/42..
131
Argentina
See Latin America: Uruguay
# Board of Economic Warfare
- B -
Board of Economic Warfare
Exports to Sweden and Argentine Funds to be discussed
at meeting of Board in Wallace's office at Capitol -
5/19/42
274
a) Minutes of meeting - 5/21/42: See Book 531,
page 161
Bolivia
See Latin America
Business Conditions
Haas memorandum on situation, week ending May 16, 1942 -
5/18/42
91
- C -
Canada
See Silver
Central Banks
Conference proposed in accordance with Rio resolution:
Collado-Southard conversation - 5/18/42
137
China
Central Bank advised Treasury Certificates of
Indebtedness or Treasury bills best suited for
investment of funds of type now on hand - 5/19/42.
297
Sterling Fund, 1939 - Adler advises Stabilization Board
resolved to take over management and control of -
5/19/42
298
Columbia Power Administration
See Interior, Department of
Communist Party
See Federal Government
Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company
Lewis, Frank J. (Chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago):
Arrangement with Bank for purchase of Government
securities later sold to Bank at profit reported
to Eccles by HMJr - 5/19/42
247
ea) Eccles-HMJr conversation 5/22/42: Book 530, page 290
Council of State Governments
See State Governments, Council of
Cuba
See Latin America
- b) Lewis resigns from Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago -
6/24/42: Book 542, page 161
earaded
- I -
Book Page
Federal Government
(Communiet Party
(German-American Bund
Membership as ground for dismissal from Federal
employment - report of Interdepartmental Committee -
.
5/18/42.
529
113
Financing, Government
Refunding: Securities to be refunded in May 1942 -
ownership of, as of March 31, 1942 - 5/19/42
243
a) Conference; present: HMJr, Bell, Haas,
Buffington, Lindow, and Baker - 5/20/42:
See Book 530, page 1
1) Maturities up to December 31, 1942,
exclusive of Treasury bills: Book 530,
page 9
b) Rouse-HMJr. conversation: Book 530, page 10
c) Conference; present: Treasury group, Eccles,
Szymcsak, and Piser - 5/20/42: Book 530, page 21
1) Direct and guaranteed bonds and notes -
calendar of - as of April 1, 1942:
Book 530, page 38
d) Offerings to be made May 25, 1942 (Home Owners'
Loan Corporation and Reconstruction Finance
Corporation): Book 530, page 178
e) Public Debt operations estimated for June and
July 1942 - 5/22/42: Book 530, page 289
f) Report on refunding - Bell memorandum -
5/29/42: Book 534, page 74
War Savings Bonds:
Southern Pacific Railroad bulletin, May 1942; devoted
largely to campaign - 5/16/42
8
Sales, May 1-15 - 5/16/42
16
Progress report - 5/18/42
73
Series F and G Bonds down to 83.3% of quota; ways and
means of improving situation discussed by HMJr,
Graves, Bell, Buffington, Gamble, Haas, and Tickton -
5/19/42
214
a) Lawyers to be contacted with a view to
recommending investment of trust funds - 5/19/42..
233
Victory Fund Committees (See also Book 522): HMJr's
letter of appreciation to members - 5/19/42
236
a) To be used for financing other than War Savings
issues - 5/29/42: Book 534, page 79
1) Sproul protests: Book 534, page 80
a) Eccles-Treasury conference - 6/2/42:
Book 535, page 147
Finland
National expenditures and war budget - 5/16/42
39
*Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
See Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company
- G -
Book Page
Gasoline
Ration books "tie-in" with Internal Revenue use stamps
discussed in Office of Price Administration-Treasury
correspondence. 5/18/42
529
67
German-American Bund
See Federal Government
- H -
Health Supplies Survey
See War Production Board
Home Owners' Loan Corporation
See Financing, Government: Refunding
- I -
Illinois National Bank and Trust Company, Continental
See Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company
Interior, Department of
Columbia Power Administration: Ickes' letter
concerning pending legislation 5/18/42
108
Italy
War Financing: Cable from American Legation, Bern,
Switzerland - 5/18/42
151
- I-
Keppel, Francis (State Department)
See Revenue Revision
- L -
Latin America
Argentina:
See Latin America: Uruguay
- Board of Economic Warfare
Bolivia:
Agreement discussed by White and Ambassador - 5/18/42..
138
a) Tin contract discussed by Ambassador and State
Department - 5/23/42: See Book 531, page 168
Conference; present: Treasury group and Ambassador - -
5/26/42: Book 532, page 18
a) Draft of agreement: Book 532, page 20
Cuba: Silver certificates - legislation authorizing
issuance of additional: Cable from American Embassy,
Havana - 5/18/42
144
a) Probable basis of gold purchase contract with
Cuban Government
Uruguay: Argentina assistance offered Government in meeting
increasing deficit in budget - cable from American
Embassy, Montevideo - 5/16/42
37
- L - - (Continued)
Book Page
Lend-Lease
Operating report, week ending May 16, 1942 - 5/19/42.. 529
-293
Lewis, Frank J. (Chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago)
See Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company
- X -
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
See Secret Service
McKeough, Raymond S. (Congressman, Illinois)
Paul asks HMJr to urge FDR to back him; valuable on
Ways and Means Committee - 5/19/42.
264
a) HMJr's letter to McKeough - - 5/27/42:
See Book 532, page 222
Mexico
See Silver
Military Reports
Coordinator of Information reports:
British Political Warfare Executive weekly German
directive - 5/16/42
40,42
British Political Warfare Executive weekly French
directive - 5/16/42
45
British Home Intelligence report, week ending
May 11, 1942 - 5/18/42
158
British operations - - 5/16/42, etc.
49,50,157,300
Kamarck summary - 5/19/42
301
- N -
New York State
See Agriculture
- 0 -
Office of Scientific Research and Development
See Secret Service
- P -
Plato
See Rothschild, Walter N.
Procurement Division
See War Production Board
- R - -
Rate Schedules
See Revenue Revision
Reconstruction Finance Corporation
See Financing, Government: Refunding
Refugee Governments
Financing by United States discussed by Berle and HMJr -
5/19/42
212
- R - (Continued)
Book Page
Revenue Revision
Rate Schedules: Paul (7) memorandum on conference with
Joint Committee at request of Doughton: Committee
rates too low, Treasury rates too high - 5/16/42..
529
4
Educational and Charitable Institutions: Taxation of
income derived from business and limitation of
present exemption from estate taxation of all
bequests for
a) Discussion at 9:30 meeting - 5/19/42
165
b) Treasury letter (proposed) to Francis Keppel,
State Department
161
Withholding Tax: Helvering memorandum concerning -
5/19/42
252
a) Congressmen's impression that Bureau opposes
collection at source on administrative grounds
reported to HMJr by Paul - 5/19/42
262
b) Paul recommends before House Ways and Means
Committee - 5/20/42: See Book 530, page 77
c) Helvering's real attitude Paul memorandum -
5/21/42: Book 530, page 181
Rothschild, Walter N.
Plato quoted on income tax - 5/18/42
82
- S -
Schenck, Joseph M.
See Tax Evasion
Scientific Research and Development, Office of
See Secret Service
Secret Service
Personnel desiring to enter armed services - FDR inquires
concerning delay - 5/16/42
1
a) HMJr's letter to FDR assuring him "men's
personal wishes will control"
2
b) General Watson-HMJr conversation 5/18/42
55
Office of Scientific Research and Development asks for
two agents at Massachusetts Institute of Technology - -
5/18/42
90
Silver
Canada and Mexico: Purchases by United States under
agreement compared with total silver imports from two
countries - 5/16/42.
29
Southern Pacific Railroad
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
State Governments, Council of
Committee from war agencies appointed by FDR to meet
with; HMJr a member 5/19/42
250
Conference in Jones' office - 5/20/42: Book 530, page 18
Sweden
See Board of Economic Warfare
- T -
Book Page
Tax Evasion
Schenck, Joseph M.: Progress on case reported by
Helvering - 5/18/42
529
86
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
- U -
Uruguay
See Latin America
- V -
Victory Fund Committees
See Financing, Government: War Savings Bonds
- V -
War Production Board
Health Supplies Survey: Procurement Division to be
represented - 5/16/42
17
War Savings Bonds
See Financing, Government
1
May 16, 1942
Chief Wilson
Secretary Morgenthau
The President of the United States called no
at nine-thirty Friday night and said he understood that
four members of Secret Service had got commissions and
five had arranged to get their commissions with the
Army and were about to go in when somebody in the
Treasury said that they couldn't go. I told him I knew
nothing about it, and I'd look into it at once. I wish
you would do 80; and if anybody is holding up their
commissions, I'd like to know why and please get word
to me wherever I as immediately, as I want to make a
report to the President.
See letter to
Pres. dated 5/16
and lan. with
General Watson 5.18
Regraded Unclassified
2
May 16, 1942
My dear Mr. President:
I an informed by Chief Wilson
that, to date, 9 men from the White House
detail have received commissions in the
Army or Navy. In regard to the 5 men who
wanted to get commissions in the Army, I
have issued instructions to Chief Wilson
that they should be permitted to earry out
their own personal wishes in the matter.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) 1. Norgenthaw, IN
The President,
The White House.
n.m.c.
S.S. agent 10:25
Regraded Unclassified
3
MEMORANDUM
May 16, 1942.
I talked with the Secretary this morning at 8:30 en route
to the Treasury. I explained to him that the members of the Victory
Fund District Committees were volunteers and in no case exercised any
authority for the Treasury. It therefore seemed logical to approve
their appointment without the complete investigation contemplated in
the organization memorandum. The Presidents of the Federal Reserve
banks who have submitted District Committee memberships to us will be
advised to proceed with appointments after names have been approved
by Mr. Bryce and me. The presidents will be asked to confirm acceptance
to the Secretary in order that he may send a letter expressing his
appreciation. The Secretary stated he would not be willing to sign
several hundred letters individually but I suggested some other method
might be worked out.
He also read and approved the telegram Mr. Eccles proposed
sending to all Federal Reserve bank presidents this morning which
stated that the names of Executive Managers must be submitted and
approved before appointments could be announced. These names should
be fully investigated inasmuch as certain managers will be paid repre-
sentatives of the Treasury.
The Secretary indicated that he might want to use these
Committees on F and G Bonds the last week in May and therefore urged
completion of the set-up as soon as possible.
This procedure was the subject of discussion in Mr. Eccles
office, yesterday afternoon at 2:30 at which Mr. Bryce and I were
present.
Mr. Eccles asked that we discuss with him bank officers
appointed to the District committees.
G.T.
Regraded Unclassified
May 16, 1942
MEMORANDUM TO THE FILES
polatly
Rann
On Thursday Mr. Doughton called in the morn-
ing and asked me to appear at the Clerk's office
for a conference with him and Mr. Stam. I went to
this conference, taking with me Mr. Blough and
Mr. Tarleau. Mr. Stam appeared later. Mr. Doughton
indicated to us that Stam's rate schedules were too
low and our rate schedules were too high, and he
wanted us to confer privately outside the Committee
in order to see whether we couldreconcile our views.
He said that if we could not, he would like each of
us to statethe furtherest we would be willing to go,
Stam in the upper direction and we downward. Thurs-
day afternoon, and again on Friday, Stam's staff and
our staff conferred on this subject.
On Thursday afternoon I, alone, worked out with
Mr. Stam and Mr. Price a general tentative agreement
along the following lines:
A 5 percent normal tax, $1,000 low bracket
structure instead of $500. Some relief between
$3,000 and $10,000, lower surtaxes reaching an 80
percent top surtax, plus 5 percent normal, or a total
of 85 percent hit at $100,000 instead of $200,000,
as in Stam's schedules.
These lowering of rates would necessitate some
increase of lower rates in order to reach the tenta-
tively-agreed, halfway-between figure for the entire
rate schedule.
The next. day, Friday, we met and gave Mr. Stam
the result in revenue yields. His schedule of rates
applied to the Ways and Means base produces $2,400
millions additional income taxes. Our schedules pro-
duce $3.5 billions. The new compromise plan, called
the "X" plan, produces about $3 billions. Stam then
Regraded Unclassified
5
- 2 -
indicated that he was unwilling to accept the "X"
plan or any plan substantially higher in yield than
$2.4 billions. He expressed the thought that the
increased individual income taxes could not exceed
the increased corporate tax of $2.5 billions. In
the meantime, on Thursday afternoon, Blough and I
rode home with the Secretary and indicated to him
the general tentative agreement and the revenue
results therefrom. The Secretary was unwilling to
make any such compromise because it would stultify
him in the Senate. Mr. Blough, Mr. Tarleau, and I
prepared a memorandum presenting our views on this
point, urging upon the Secretary the advisability
that he agree if Stam would agree. A copy of this
memorandum is attached hereto as Exhibit A.
On Saturday morning Mr. Stam and his staff
again met with us and we discussed burdens at vari-
ous brackets and possible alternatives. Nothing
came of this discussion, and at 12:00 o'clock Stam
and I went to Mr. Doughton's office at his request
for a conference. Mr. Doughton called into his
office for a conference, Congressmen Cooper, Disney,
Boehne, and Robertson.
Mr. Stam and I made a report to this group of
our futile efforts to agree, I making it very clear
that we had constructed the new "X" schedule in the
hope of an agreement with the idea of recommending
it to the Secretary and the President only if Stam
should agree. Since he did not agree I declined to
lower our rates in any way. The group expressed the
desire to have presented to it a number of alternate
rate schedules running from 2.4 to 3.5 in order that
the Committee might study the taxes in various brackets
and determine for itself what rate structure it would
adopt. I was requested to furnish on Monday, rate
schedules bringing $2.7, $3.0, $3.25, and $3.5 bil-
lions. Stam was requested to present the burden
tables, etc., with respect to his $2.4 billions.
To repeat, it was made very clear at this con-
ference that none of these schedules (including the
6
- 3 -
"X" schedule), except the 3.5 schedule, repre-
sented the Treasury's views, and Mr. Disney said
that he understood that the Committee was giving
us a mandate. I asked Mr. Doughton if he were
"ordering" us to produce these schedules and he
said that he was "directing" us to do so.
At this conference I also mentioned our desire
to present to the Committee our recommendations as
to the $25,000 limitation and they said that they
would be glad to give me the opportunity to do 80.
Photoclat to
Mr. White 5/18/42
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
May 16, 1942.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
I have your letter in regard to
the calling of a conference of
Finance Ministers of the United
Nations. It is my thought that the
studies now in progress should be
continued in conjunction with the
State Department and the B.E.W.
and the Export-Import Bank.
You might speak to me about
this again after you have done
this and after you have got the
opinions of the Secretary of
State and the Under Secretary of
State.
F. D. R.
8
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 16, 1942
TO
The Secretary of the Treasury
FROM Mr. Houghteling
I feel sure that you will be greatly pleased
to see the attached copy of the "Southern Pacific Bulletin"
for May, a large part of which is devoted to the War Sav-
ings campaign conducted jointly by the railroad and its
labor unions. They are driving strong for 100% partici-
pation and 10% allotments.
1
PACIFIC LINES
das
Southern Pacific
BUY BONDS VICTORY
Bulletin
MAY 1942.
LOS ANGELES SHOPS
THE NO GET
BOND WAGON
:
BAYSHORE
1
PORTLAND
THE
UNITED WE
STAND
SACRAMENTO SHOPS
MEN WORKING
- BUY
AMERICA À SHARE IN
SAN LUIS OBISPO
..MGS
Regraded Unclassified
2
S. P. Bulletin
Washington Commends Southern
Pacific People
To THE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC:
I
AM most encouraged to learn of the program being
of war bonds during the coming fiscal year. This
started April 20 to enlist every one of sixty thou-
will require the investment of over 10 per cent of
sand Southern Pacific employes in a voluntary pay-
the national income. The success of your campaign
roll savings plan to buy war bonds. The Treasury
for 100 per cent participation among Southern Pacific
believes that through voluntary cooperative effort
employes will be strong proof that we can do this
undertaken jointly by management. labor and gov-
job by the democracy method of voluntary action,
ernment we can reach our goal. which is the
and will show that you are doing your share in a
purchase by the American people of $12,000,000,000
big way to assure American victory.
(Signed) HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Payroll Allotment for Bonds-and VICTORY!
J. G. Luhrsen. executive secy. of the By. Labor Execu-
tives Assn. (in a letter drafted for all chief executives of
HORTLY after dispatching the above message to Southern
Ry. Brotherhoods): "The need for greater participation and
Pacific employes, Secy. of the Treasury Morgenthau
increased purchases of bonds is very urgent, and we again
announced the beginning of a nation-wide drive to have all
appeal for support of every worker. This (Bond Campaign)
American workers set aside 10 per cent of their income for
must be an all ONI effort; we are at war.
Nothing short
the purchase of War Savings Bonds through Payroll Savings
of full and complete participation will do."
Plan. In support of both the SP Drive started April 20 and
John Kearney, president of the SP Club of San Francisco
the National Drive to start July 1, representatives of SP Man-
(speaking for the numerous other clubs on Pacific Lines):
agement, Brotherhoods, and Clubs made these pertinent state-
"Practically every SP Club has invested a large part of its
ments:
treasury in Savings Bonds. Through direct solicitation,
A. T. Mercier-President. Southern Pacific: "A share of
through the stimulation of Victory dances, drawings, and
your pay check for a share in your country is today's best in-
meetings, we are bending every effort to see that every mem-
vestment. War Savings Bonds will help your country today
ber of every club signs up for payroll deduction."
and take care of you tomorrow. You can buy conveniently and
regularly through Southern Pacific's payroll deduction plan."
Your government, your management, your organizations,
your clubs urge you: SIGN UP NOW!
KEEP 'EM ROLLING!
HUNDREDS OF GENERAL OFFICE FOLKS PARTICIPATED IN YES
SMASH
THE
ASSIS
VOLUNTARY
PLAN
FOR
PAYROLL
PURCHASE
OF
WAR
BONDS
MEN WORKING
Unclassified
3
100% SIGNUP IS THE AIM
Railroaders Rally to Systemwide Campaign
For Payroll Purchase of War Savings Bonds
AMERICA takes the offensive! This is
ganizations, SP Clubs, and the manage-
news of the hour as bombs rain
ment. Working together in committees
on Tokio, as plane production is speeded,
they are making a systematic solicitation
and as Mr. and Mrs. John Q. Public divert
on every division, in every department,
more and more of the national income to
asking every employe to sign a payroll
support of the war effort. Railroaders, as
allotment form. Simultaneously with this
usual, are in the thick of things. There
solicitation, an effort is being made to
are railroaders at Corregidor; railroaders
determine the value of bonds purchased
UNCLE SAM'S armed forces, the men who will
carry the war direct to the Axis, were typified at
are transporting those vital planes, yes
by SP'ers aside from payroll allotments.
the General Office Bond Rally April 20 by pop-
and flying them, too; and railroaders on
This figure is desired only that due na-
ular Johnny Lake, formerly of the Motive Power
and Passenger Traffic Depts. He was interviewed
the home front have launched an offen-
tional recognition will be given railroad-
by Walter C. Fell. Principal speaker at the rally
sive to promote the purchase of War Sav-
ers as a craft for the patriotic response
was A. F. Gaynor, division chairman, BoIRC,
Lodge 890, Pres. John Kearney spoke for the SP
ings Bonds by payroll deduction.
they have already given in bond pur-
Club, sponsors of the rally. Others participating
On April 20 the Bond Drive opened
chases.
were: Emmett Fitspatrick, Harold Martin, Enid
DeMond, Bernice Maker, Shirley Rogers and sev-
with a bang! All over Pacific Lines com-
Throughout the magazine you will find
eral others from the "Babes in Bediam" cast.
mittees swung into action and reverbera-
evidence of Bond Campaign activity. The
tions came from El Paso, Tucson, Phoenix,
pictures speak for themselves in telling
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento,
the story of enthusiasm and cooperation
north to Klamath Falls and Portland, east
that greeted the efforts of committeemen
to Sparks and Ogden. Small reverbera-
in this Drive. Many individual members
tions they were, only scratches of pen on
of these hard working committees are
stiff white cards, but translated they read
seen in the various pictures. We'd need
"Death to the Axis Powers". Those cards,
another twenty pages to publish pictures
requesting payroll allotments, and coming
of all the committees, but while we can't
in to the Local Treasurer's office by the
publish their pictures, we can pass along
hundreds, are the railroaders' pledge to
a word of praise for the fine work they
support the national war effort.
are doing without exception.
By May 20, when the initial phase of
Final and complete results will not be
the drive will end, it is believed that
known for some time yet but early returns
every railroader on Pacific Lines will have
are encouraging as railroaders realize the
been solicited to buy bonds through pay.
definite advantage of systematic saving
roll deductions-and to keep on buying
through regular and continued purchase
them. The drive was organized by rep-
of bonds through payroll allotments.
EVERYWHERE committee meetings and railies
resentatives of railroad brotherhood or-
If YOU haven't signed, do it NOW
are being held to stimulate Bond sales. Here Supt.
J. C. Goodfellow is addressing Tracy group, With
him are Trainmaster P. D. Robinson, Jas. E.
LLY THAT GOT THE WAR BOND SIGNUP CAMPAIGN OFF TO AN INSPIRING START
McCormick, and C. E. Tyner, Local Chm. BofLE.
PAYROLL ALLOTMENT PLAN FOR
BUYING WAR BONDS NOW REVISED
H
ERE are the facts about the payroll
are allowed because they add up to an
allotment method of purchasing
even purchase price.
War Savings Bonds. The method is sim-
What You Get: You get back in bonds
ple, and designed to fit railroaders' needs.
every cent you pay in. The railroad not
Recently, it was revised to improve cer-
only does not make a profit of any kind,
tain features. But some misunderstand-
but assumes the considerable expense in.
ings still seem to exist regarding the plan
volved in the administration of the plan.
50 we hope you'll help us put things
The money accumulated for bond pur-
straight by passing along these facts.
chases is kept in a special trust fund on
Please read them and then talk them over
which no interest is given. This money is
with other SPers, some of whom may not
not withdrawn until your bond is actually
know of the revisions made.
issued and mailed to you. In addition to
In General: A bond purchase is
this, the Company advances its own funds
started by simply filling out, signing, and
to buy bonds from the Government
returning the payroll allotment form to
in advance of their actual issuance to em-
your supervisor or campaign committee-
ployes. These are kept on hand 50 that
man. This form tells what denomination
they can be handed over to you without
bonds you want to buy, and how much
delay when you complete your purchase.
you want taken out of your paychecks to
These expenses are assumed by your Com-
pay for it. The auditor makes these deduc-
pany to afford you a convenient and
tions and, when they amount to the price
practical method of buying bonds.
of your bond, the bond is mailed to you.
When Do You Get the Bonds: When
That's all there is to it.
your deductions amount to enough to pay
How & When You Pay: Your deduc-
for a bond of the denomination you are
tion must be at least $1 a month. You
buying, a bond is issued in the name or
may have the deduction made from either
names you requested and goes forward to
the first or second period paycheck. If the
you by mail, or as otherwise directed.
deduction amounts to $10 or more each
Now here's a point to remember: your
month, you can split your deduction and
bonds will be dated as of the first of the
have one made from each paycheck. To
month in which you complete payment.
simplify the accounting, your deduction
must be made in multiples of 50 cents,
Changes-Cancellations: You can
unless you are signing up for one or more
change the amount, you can change the
bonds each month, in which case deduc-
deduction period, you can change the
tions such as $18.75, etc., are permitted,
form of registration; you can do any or
and may be split between paychecks. Al-
all of these things simply by preparing a
though they do not come out in even
new allotment form and indicating what
changes you want to make. You can cancel
50 cents, deductions of $3.75 and $6.25
(Continued on next page)
5
"Bulletin" Swamped with 100% Groups
we asked for it, we got
estimated the response of our railroaders
was too heavy for us to
in a matter of this importance.
handle. We're talking about the informa-
The telegrams, mailgrams and memos
ton regarding the departments that were
flooded in. They're still coming in, and
100% in payroll allotment during the
if the names of 100% departments were
first five days of SP's Bond Buying Cam-
laid end to end they'd stretch right over
paign. When the campaign opened on
to Japan and cause the Emperor no end
April 20 we thought a good feature for
of uneasiness. That's just what they
the May Bulletin would be a list of de-
caused us, for it soon became evident that
partments that had hit the 100% mark
a bulky supplement would have to be
in the first five days. So out went a tele-
provided for the Bulletin just to list de-
gram to Department and Division heads.
partment, office, gang and station names.
So far, so good: but evidently we under-
Then, too, there was some misunder-
standing in the first reports as to just what
the 100% was to cover. Some depart-
The Allotment Plan Revised
ments considered themselves 100% when
everyone in that department had bought
(Continued from opposite page)
or subscribed for a bond, whereas what
the deduction at any time and the full
we wanted were names of departments
amount accumulated, if not enough to
that had reached 100% in PAYROLL
purchase a bond, will be returned to you.
ALLOTMENT for bond purchases.
And if your paycheck is insufficient in any
It was all very impressive, these re-
period to cover the deduction, that deduc-
ports from remote sections of our railroad,
tion is simply suspended to avoid a heav-
from the varied crafts, from laborers,
ier deduction out of A subsequent check.
from executives; all singing a song
Summary: The entire plan has been
of 100% that grew louder in volume as
set up with one idea in mind; to make it
each hour swelled the total. A loud song,
easy for YOU to buy bonds. In one sense,
a triumphant song, that song of 100%
it is simply a savings plan through payroll
from the Southern Pacific railroaders, and
deduction. If there are details you don't
while its very volume drowned out our
understand or if any phase of the present
plan for printing names and figures, that
plan is still undesirable to you, talk it
same volume will make a loud and un-
over with your employing officer. He has
pleasant noise for the ears of Adolf,
the detailed facts and can help you.
Benito, and Hirohito.
OVER THE TOP in the first days of the campaign went . number of departments, offices
and other groups with 100% signup for payroll allotment purchase of War Bonds.
It's a pity that space does not make it possible to print pictures of all such groups,
for it would make an imposing array. However, here are two of them: (top) Tucson
Stores, where W. E. Larson is storekeeper: and (bottom) the 2nd shift at Sacramento
Frog Shop, which group gave Foreman G. E. Morris a full signup, back on Mar. 23.
NUPS EVERYWHERE typify the response
oaders are giving the Payroll Allotment Cam-
El for War Bond purchases.
(1) H. H.
ers, Sacto. Saw Mill, makes out application
Committeeman C. G. Murphy and R. R. Deal
on approvingly. e (2) Carman Mike Geor-
es reports his $6,250 purchase of bonds. With
are Sparks carmen A. Hargraves and A. J.
son. The trio has $13,350 in bonds. (3) Tuc-
drafting room gave the application forms
ntion; I-r: Gus Schneider, Bob Porter, "Army"
istrong. Paul Bartholomeux, Bob Hall.
At El Paso Shops Committeemen F. N.
wder and J. G. Black sign up Robt. Putman
additional bonds:
(5) Asst. Mas. Mech.
D. Vance congratulates some of Sparks' com-
100%
leemen whose departments have bought or
ed up 100% for bonds, I-r: Pete Smith, L. K.
(rd, L. Holly, A. W. Rock, W. L. Ford,
Brough, L. Zuning.
(6) Walter Seal, asst.
L supt., explains payroll allotment forms to
IP of Taylor yardmen at LA. Seated is Ed.
ivan ready to sign.
(7) Immediately after
(lly at LA Shops, five clerks were kept busy
ling up men for payroll allotment or declara-
of previous purchases. (8) The same spon-
ous response occurred the opening day of the
paign at West Oakland Commissary, where
G. E. Mackinnon, Genl. Chm. DCC&W
Larche and Instr. Waiter Ed. Prohman
signup. . (9) Engineer M. W. Nason
pplication for payroll allotment at
(10) Train Dispatcher B. F. Brum-
Bakersfield, joins in the parade with his
Istant Division Engineer W. M. Jaekie, com- (11)
lature on an allotment application.
teeman at Oakland Pier, gets the signa-
of Head Draftsman Chas. J. McConaughy.
Regraded Unclassified
TRACY (1) got its campaign off to good Bin
with a raily MC'ed by Trainmaster P. D. Robie.
son. wartime movies, Stores Dept. Menican
band, Boy Scout exhibition, talks by Supt. I.C
Goodfellow and J. E. McCormick, businessmas,
GENERAL OFFICE (2) followed up the Coun
Yard rally (picture PE. 3) with visits to all pris.
cipal offices by members of the SP Speaken
Club accompanied by attractive young ladie
who distributed the Payroll Allotment Pledge
Cards. (3) Committee, 1-r: E. G. Fitspatrick,
E. C. Nevin, Albert E. Miller, Phil Young
Frank DeAcosta, Ed Gibson, James Joyes
Not in the picture: Ed Plate, George Prey.
SACRAMENTO (4) Committeemen whose de-
partments had subscribed 100% to the Alletment
Plan only three days after campaign opened
Standing. 1-r: W. P. Hansen, G. A. Ericksen,
Varina M. Sawyer. R. H. Hulick, N. A. Simon-
sen. Seated: I. 8. Wilson, J. A. Silva, E. Ens-
bury and J. A. Collins. Division as a whole will
making vigorous drive for a full 100% signs.
COLFAX (5) Master Mechanic L. E. Lonergo
(right). Sacto. Div. committeeman, with group
of 100% bond holders and subscribers. Lonerger
also visited Truckee and other stations on the
Sierra "hill" in behalf of the bond campaign
ROSEVILLE (6) Carmen in the train yard, wig
with fellow workers at the Car Shops,
100% bond owners even before the present
paign started, through efforts of Genl. Car Forth
man A. S. Teal and Clerk Guy S. Steward
SAN LUIS OBISPO (7) "rails" H. Blackburt
E. Sarmento, W. Turney, R. Duncan, R, Mo
Knight made sure their picture with bond poster
gave display to department's accomplishment
of 1206 days without any reportable accidents
COAST DIVISION (8) timekeepers F. J. Ryan,
Bob Church, 0. R. Rogers doing a bit of check-
ing of rosters as assistance to Committeems
Jim Knudsen and Geo. Knudsen in distributing
allotment pledge cards at Superintendent's Of.
SAN JOAQUIN'S drive was plenty active, W. E
Grazier (9), Lo. Chm. MofWE, out among de
B&B gangs; Victoriano Ysararoz (10). creasing
watchman, setting fine example: and everywher
the committeemen are being well received.
W. OAK. STORES (11) was typical of almost
all other Pacific Lines units of that department
in quickly going 100% for Payroll Allotment
A full department pledge was in near prospect.
7
Veteran Passenger Officer Is Retired
Frank Lathrop's Legion
7
of Friends Include Many
of World's "Big Names"
RINGING to a close a colorful rail-
road career of nearly forty years,
Frank C. Lathrop, general passenger agent
for the Central Southern Pa-
cific with headquarters at San Francisco,
retired from active duty on May 1. His
successor is to be announced later.
Probably no railroad official in the
country enjoys a wider acquaintanceship
among international celebrities than Mr.
Lathrop, who has played "host" to poten-
tates and presidents, kings and queens,
8
as well as stars of stage, screen and radio,
traveling over his railroad's lines.
Mr. Lathrop's personal files would be
the envy of any international autograph
FRANK C. LATHROP
collector. Among these are notes from
"big names" throughout the world, in-
1923. He estimates that during his long
cluding every United States President
period of service he has traveled more
since Theodore Roosevelt. He has a wide
than 250,000 miles.
friendship among high ranking U. S.
Widely known in railroad circles,
Army officers and numbers among his
Lathrop is first vice president of the San
close friends Generals George Marshall,
Francisco Tourist & Convention Bureau
Douglas MacArthur and John J. Pershing.
and has been active in promotion of
9
In personal appearance, Mr. Lathrop
tourist travel to the Pacific Coast.
closely resembles the late President War-
ren G. Harding. Once, while accompany-
PAYDAY DOLLARS FOR BONDS
ing the presidential party from Seattle to
San Francisco, many persons mistook him
Railroad Book of outstanding nature
for the chief executive.
is This Fascinating Railroad Business,
Starting with the Southern Pacific in
published by Bobbs Merrill and written
1903 as a passenger agent at Los Angeles,
by Robert S. Henry, asst. to president of
after having had traffic experience with
the AAR. The book tells what railroad
other companies dating from 1896, Mr.
service is, how it's produced, what it
means to all of us, and tells it not in a
Lathrop held various passenger depart-
technical treatise, but from the viewpoint
ment positions in Los Angeles and Pasa-
of the layman who is interested in the fas-
dena, coming to San Francisco in 1912
cinating facts behind trains and of the
as assistant general passenger agent. He
railroad man who is interested not just in
had held his present position and that of
his own part of the performance but in
assistant passenger traffic manager since
the business as a whole.
TRACY'S NEW TURNTABLE was ready for operation on March 20, the 110-foot table
replacing an 80-footer, and equipping this busy division terminal to better handle
today's heavy volume of traffic. The installation was carried on by engineering and
maintenance crews working under the direct supervision of Division Engineer O. M. Bar-
low, B&B Supervisor J. F. Harbor, Roadmaster W. M. Gates, Asst. Engineer K. C. Brun-
ner, B&B Foreman Wm. Ferber and Section Foreman Geo. Minotto. This picture was one
of a series taken by Locomotive Engineer Dave Welch to record stages in the installation.
R. M. Beals
R. L. Bouque
J. W. Mitchell
J. R. Davidson
c. H. Grider
R. J. Crowe
J. 0, Min
OFFICERS ALL are the above stalwarts of the armed service, and all former
bombing tactics.
Beals is a first lieutenant now serving up north at
SP'ers too. 1st Lt. Davidson was supervisor of foundry operations at Sacra-
Ft. Lewis, Washington. As a railroader the smiling lieutenant signed the
mento Shops, is winding up a stay at Engineer Replacement Training
payroll at the Eugene yard office.
A storesman at West Oakland
Center at Ft. Leonard Wood, Missouri, will report to 753rd Railway Shop
Genl. Stores was Ensign Bouque before going on active service with the
of U. 5. Engineer Battalion.
Lt. Grider was a clerk in Lease Agent's
navy. He is son of S. L. Bouque, asst. to geni. storekeeper, is a cradus
office, was commissioned Feb. 28, is now with the Academic Dept. of the
of University of California, has been assigned to Naval Training Station .
Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga. Crowe worked at our Kirkham
San Diego since January of last year.
Mitchell, now a Heurenant of
St. Station in Oakland, is the son of Agent J. Crowe of Alameda, A member
an infantry outfit in Tacoma was a yardman at Eugene, is the son of D. H
of the Naval Reserve, he completed his training at Corpus Christi, was
Mitchell, former car inspector at Eugene, now retired. Ensign Adam
commissioned an ensign, specializes in the intriguing business of dive
with the Navy Air Corps in the Pacific, was cost analyst at Tucks
NEWS FROM THE FRONT-FOR AND ABOUT
RAILROADERS IN ARMED SERVICE
REETINGS to you, men-all two
stands 6 feet 31/2 inches in his stocking
thousand of you. That's what we said,
feet and he wasn't in his stocking feet
TWO THOUSAND, and even that
when he talked to us. Our neck's still
number is probably outdated by now for
stiff from looking up, but we wish all
SPers are going into the armed service
of you who come to the General Office
so rapidly and in such great numbers that
would visit us in room 210 and tell us
we just can't keep up with them. The
what's cookin',
variety keeps up, too. As witness Private
SLOAN & SLOAN are brothers, railroaders,
Shouldn't tell tales on a captain, may-
Wm. P. Wheeler, SF district passen-
navy men. Peter G., left, worked for Supt.
be, but we have it on good authority that
of Transportation, James J. was a clerk
ger clerk now sliding over the snows
Capt. H. H. Wittekind attacked so fero-
in Personnel Dept. The young gobs are
of the great Northwest with A ski troop
sons of P. K. Sloan, secy. to President.
ciously during bayonet practice that it
outfit, and Sailor E. A. Reupert, Bakers-
took three soldiers to get the bayonet out
field brakeman, who's fighting his share
of the dummy. Wittekind, district ma-
in the armed service. Shobert railroaded
of this man's war in a submarine.
terial supervisor in the Stores Dept., El
on the Portland Division.
We're feeling a little small as this is
Paso, was a member of the Reserve Corps
Walter Way, a fireman on the Sacra-
being written, and all because of a visit
of the Railway Engineers before his in-
mento Division, is now with the navy at
from A genial soldier named Robt. E.
duction March 20.
a destroyer base. The navy is old stuff
Durham who did his railroading in the
There's going to be a surprised private
to Walt, for he served his first hitch
Stores Dept. down El Paso way. Bob
in Uncle Sam's army when Hubert J.
from 1930 to 1934. Says "hello" to rail-
POLE CLIMBER is Private Kenneth E.
Shobert sees his picture in this issue.
roaders in and around Roseville.
Haines who is skinning up a pole at Camp
Shobert's folks sent us his picture
Army men Willis Childress and Joseph
Roberts during training in Wire Commun-
ications. Haines was asst, signalman on
might be a hint for you parents whose
J. Hopkins, formerly of the SP commis-
the Salt Lake Divn. That he can do much
sons were former railroaders and are now
sary at El Paso, will be interested to know
more than climb poles is attested by the
medals be has won for rifle marksmanship.
INTO A SHELL HOLE drives 1st Sgt. Walter E. Newman to mark the spot where a shell
presumably fired from an enemy submarine, landed harmlessly in an oil field north of $150
Barbara some weeks back. Newman (right) was a yard clerk at West Oakland before joining de
army, and his railroad friends were quick to tell the Bulletin about this picture, which will
widely published in newspapers throughout the country. (Photo from Press Association, Inc)
May, 1942
9
that Cmsy. Agt. W. H. "Bill" Barker
says he's going to join up himself if he
loses any more of his men.
By the way, a word to you fellows
With the Philippine Forces
whose pictures have appeared in the
Bulletin: If you want a few extra copies
W
ITH the Battling
to send to Tom, Dick, and Harry (maybe
Boys of Bataan,
we should say Marian, Edith and Jane),
and fighting elsewhere
drop us a line and we'll send them to
in the Philippines along.
you as long as the extra copies last.
side the valorous Ameri-
Paul w. Fife will soon be wearing
can-Filipino troops, are
bats on his uniform. He left for Officers'
men who but a few
Training School in Georgia, April 15.
Paul, son of Bayshore Master Mechanic
months ago were rail-
L. T. Fife, formerly worked in the Motive
roading for the Southern
Power office, SF.
Pacific. Just how many
The Chief Engineer's office held its
SP'ers there are among
own with the army last month. They
those immortals with
James Rehn
Ramon
Garela
Ray
McCarthy
gave up Bill Black, Jr., blueprinter, but
Wainwright's forces is
got back Draftsman W. L. Budde, who
not known. Five have been reported
J. E. Rehn of Tracy. Ramon Garcia,
was recently given an honorable medical
thus far. Lieut. Raymond McCarthy,
sectionman on Rio Grande Division,
discharge.
San Joaquin Division brakeman, was
once reported killed in action, was
There seems to be an awful lot of
last heard from just before Christmas
with the New Mexico Coast Artillery
"best outfits" in this Army, Navy, and
with his infantry unit at Fort McKin-
units overpowered on Bataan. His
Marine Corps of ours. Just about every-
ley. He had been called up with re-
father is Sectionman Eulalio Garcia
one we hear from belongs to the "best."
serve officers in February a year ago,
of Deming. Also from Rio Grande
Private Stan Griffin goes them one better
Division, and with Garcia's outfit,
in his letter to fellow worker Jim Hig-
Corp. James E. Rehn, Western Divi-
gins in the Freight Claims, Griffin
sion clerk, radio operator with the
were George E. Darling, clerk, and
says his outfit is "absolutely the best."
Signal Corps, was last reported on
Warren D. Graves, water service
Cebu Island. His father is Yardman
We claim a hand in the promotion of
helper.
Jim Inman, army cook whose picture
appeared in the March Bulletin. Just
after the magazine came out, Jim was
FAMILY TRIO (right)
made Mess Sergeant and transferred to
consists of Sergt. M. N.
El Paso. Nice going, Sarge!
Bass, Corporal Norman
A. Bass and their father,
"The best to the Band" is the word
D. L. Bass, Sr., who died
from Private H. T. Quaid, former
recently. Both boys were
checker at 4th and Berry, SF, and leader
popularly known yard-
men at Roseville, where
of the drum section in the SP Band.
their father was also a
Quaid is right at home in the army-
former yardman and Pe-
lice Judge of that city.
he's with a drum corps outfit.
Norman was last re-
All of us send regards and good luck
ported in Arizona and his
brother's army address
to all of you. Keep up the good work.
was last in Los Angeles.
We'll be with you again next month.
HORSEMAN is Private J. T. Shepler
BUNDLED UP is Private William P.
now at a California Camp with a
Wheeler-and for good cause. He's
cavalry outfit. We're inclined to be-
with the ski troops in the Northwest
lieve that Shepler is a natural for the
Sector where the climate is inclined
cavalry because every time we asked
to get a little rough in the cold way.
him for a picture of himself he sent
Bill worked in both Passenger and
us a picturé of A horse with him mere-
Freight Depts. in SF, did his first ski-
ly a part of the background. Shep-
ing back east, was prominent in ski-
ler railroaded at LA General Shops.
ing activity of SP Club at Norden.
READY, AIM, FIRE! and judging by the expression on the face of Maride
Spencer W. Blackburn he's got a dead bead on the target. Blackburn was
an electrician's apprentice at the Sacramento Shops before joining
the marines. He's now a private in training at Camp Elliott. Blackburn's
father is asst. chief clerk in Motive Power Department, Sacramento,
10
In the Service of Their Country
The following names of SP'ers in the U. S. lighting forces sup-
plement those published in recent issues of the "Bulletin." There
remain mony additional names to be published in later issues.
II. J. Shobert
David K. Purman
Gerald R. Hughes
SALT LAKE DIVISION
ROHSE, T. J., Navy.
Purtiand Divn.
8an Joaquin Divn.
Los Angeles Divn.
ROSENTHAL, D. E., Navy.
ALDOUS, Claire, Marines.
SANBERG, Harry E., Army.
DALEY, Max L., Army Air Corps.
LILE, Keith H., Army Air Corps.
SANDERSON, Howard W., Army.
SANDERSON, W. G., Army.
REED, Jack R., Army.
SANFORD, Thole L., Army.
SCHIVELEY. C. A., Army.
STEVENS, Harold B., Navy.
SCHOENNOELHL, R. L., Army.
SCHRADLE, M. J., Army.
SULLIVAN, T. P., Army.
SCHRINER, C. 8., Army.
SWARTZ, Kyle F., Lt., Army.
SHERER, V. J., Army.
RIO GRANDE DIVISION
SINCLAIR, D. K., Army.
SJOSTROM, G. L., Navy.
BAROS, Tobias, Army.
SKINNER, M. W., Army.
BURT. Max, Army,
SMITH, C. D., Navy
EATON, Jesse Randoll, Army.
SMITH, D. C., Navy
ERMINE, James J., Army.
SMITH, G. A., Navy.
GOLDEN, John S., Army.
SMITH, W. T., Army.
HAAS, Floyd 8., Army.
SMITH, W. A., Marines.
HELEMAN, Cecil W.. Army.
SMYTH, E. F., Navy.
1. Johnson
B. R. Blakkolb
John P. Courtney
HOSKINS, Stanley W., Navy,
SPRIGGLE, A. F., Army.
hata Divn.
Sacto. Shops
Los Angeles Shope
JAMES, Lealie H. Army.
THOMAS. A. R., Navy.
JONES, Virgil F., Navy.
THORSELL, K. V., Navy.
LAMB, J. D., Jr., Navy.
TRIPLETT, Jake, Army.
LOCKE, Harry R., Army.
TUTTLE, R. H., Navy,
LOWENSTEIN, Albert G., Army.
VANORDEN, Wealey, Army.
MIRANDA, Ramon O., Army.
WAGNER, C. L., Navy.
MONTOYA, Domingo, Army.
WAY. Ladrue J. Army.
QUINN, Leonard T., Marine Corps.
RAMON, Justo, Army.
WEAVER, Charles W., Jr., Army.
WEIK, J. W., Army.
ROBERTS, E. A., Army.
WHEALON, 8. T., Army.
ROQUEMORE, Prentiss D., Army.
SMITH, Eldridge R., Army.
WHITAKER, William C., Army.
SNYDER, Admiral Dewey, Army.
WHITESIDE, L. M., Army.
STULL, H. C., Capt., Army.
WILLIAMS, D. F., Army.
WILSON, L. G., Army.
TYRA, Ernest R., Army.
WILSON, W. L. Navy.
PORTLAND DIVISION
WINN, O. M., Navy.
T. J. Oaks
ALDRICH, Donald R., Army.
WIRFS, R. 8., Army Air Corps.
Walter Way
Edward R. Bush
San Joaquin
Sacramento Divn.
Accounting. SF
ALLEY, Charles H., Army.
WITHERS, R. 8., Army.
WOSTREL, Al. B., Army,
BANASKY, Sol A. Navy.
YOHN, J. L., Army.
COLLINS, Chester A., Army.
DOVE, James B., Navy.
SACRAMENTO DIVISION
DRAKE, Woodrow B., Army.
POSBACK, Christian, Army.
ALLISON, Geo. W., Army.
BAS3, M. N., Army.
HENDRICKS, James, Army.
KULICK, C. W., Navy,
BASS, Norman A., Army.
LADEEN, R. H., Army.
HENNING, Donald J., Army.
HOSKINS, Gilbert J.
LAJOIE, E. R., Navy.
ISOLA, 1. Army.
LASSEGARD, H. H., Army.
LEARY, D. J., Army.
SCOTT, Walter J., Army.
LIDDELL, J. D., Corp., Marines.
SHEDD, Gordon J., Army.
LISTER. L. B., Navy.
SWARTZ, David, Army.
LOPUSON, N. R., Army.
WALSTROM. E, M., Army.
MacGREGOR, D. C., Army.
MANN, J. A., Army.
SAN JOAQUIN DIVISION
MANN, Willis W., Army.
POSTER, Harold E.
B. M. Bradley
Carl H. Heukrodt
W.R. Schroeder
MASON, J. A., Marines.
NARON, Upton W., Army Air Corps.
Portland Divn.
Los Angeles Shops
Sacramento Shops
MEISENHEIMER, V. E., Army.
TOMMER, Newton W., Army.
MELTON, A. B., Navy.
TINSLEY, Ferris W., Coast Guard.
MERCER, M. E.
WALLACE, Vernon D.
MEYERS, Frank R., Army.
MEYERS, J. D., Army.
WESTERN DIVISION
MISETICH, R. A-, Army.
AINSLEE, John H., Army.
MOSHER, M. L. Army.
CECIL, Joe, Army.
MUSIC, William, Army.
CONNERS, 8. W., Army.
NADEAU, E. W., Army.
DIXON, Joseph, Army.
OLSON, Raymond L., Army.
GILBERTI, Joseph, Army.
PACK, George, Navy.
GUTTE, Jack Clark, Navy.
PACKARD, D. C., Army.
ISAACSON, Allen E., Army.
PALADIJCZUK, 8am, Army.
JANSEN. Vincent W., Navy.
PERRY, L. O., Army.
JARNAGIN, Gus L., Army.
PETERSON, H. M., Navy.
KEEPE, William W., Army.
PHILLIPS, Marion R., Army.
KEY. George B., Army.
PLAISTED, W. K., Army.
KLEBAS, Albert, Army.
J. Hernander
E. It. Reupert
Willis Childress
REDMAN, D. E., Army.
KOENIG. Raymond F., Army.
Sacto. Shops
Ban Joaquin Divn.
Dining Car Dept.
REGHITTO, W. J., Army.
KOVACICH. Anthony. Army.
REID. Maurice, Army.
KOWSKE, Edward V., Army Air Corps.
HILEY. Curtis B., Navy.
KRANTZ George W.. Army.
Frederick Selb
John Lundeen
J.E. Axparren, Jr.
ROBERTS, D. J., Army.
LACHMAN, Charles A., Army.
Equip. Ser. Acts.
Pass. Traffic, LA
San Joaquin Divn.
These Boys Fight With Their Lives-
Help em With Your Fighting Dollars
Regraded Unclassified
11
LACORTE, Emiliane M., Navy.
GREENBERO, M. A., Army.
LAFLEUR, Edmond A., Navy.
ORIFFITH, P. L., Army.
LAGERSON, Victor, Army Air Corps.
HAWTHORNE, Robert E., Army.
LEAVITT. Relfe W. Marine Corps.
HETHCATE, W. E., Army.
LENRICH, Frank, Army.
HODGE, Irs W., Army.
LEWIS, Mike, Army.
JONES, B. H., Army.
LIPANOVICH, Michael, Havy.
KLINE, Wm. H., Army.
LOERA, Edmundo, Army.
LAMPUM, M. T., Army,
MacDONALD, Frank R., Army.
LEIKER, V. C., Army.
Francis T. Eagen
a. H. Billings
Cart Pacilini
MACKI, Jack L., Army.
LEONARDI, A. D., Army.
Real Estate-Tax
Portland Divn.
Bacramento Divn.
MANNING, George, Navy.
NAPPI, L. J., Army.
McARTHUR, R. E., Army Air Corps.
NEW, L. R., Army.
McCRAY. Orville R., Army.
POINTER, R. G., Army.
McCUTCHEN, Edward L., Army.
QUAID, H. T., Army.
McKENNA, Warren, Army.
REZENDES, George, Army.
McLAUGHLIN, Edward P., Navy.
RUTHNICK, H. C., Army.
McMILLIN, Ernest J., Army.
STANK, James J., Army.
MEDINA, Oliver R., Army.
TINER, Melvin 8., Navy.
METZINER, Harry T., Army.
VAUGH, Ward D., Army Air Corps.
MITREA, Nicholas J., Navy.
VEHMILLION, L. J., Army.
MOORE, V. E., Army.
WOOD, Ernest, Army.
MOORE, William, Army.
MULLIGAN, Jack, Army.
SHASTA DIVISION
NELSON, John, Army.
BUTTERS. Norval W., Army.
NISICH, Peter. Army.
HALL, Barnard, Army.
NIX, Harold J., Army.
HOLBROOK, Earl L., Army.
NIXON. William C., Army.
HOPKINS, R. N., Army Air Corps.
Harold H. Sharpe
N.D. Petrichella
W. R. Vextor
NOLAN, John M., Army.
ROSENDAHL, Harold, Army.
El Paso Shope
Los Angeles Shops
Ban Josquin Divn.
OBERO, Rex B., Army.
WOLCOTT, D. J., Army.
O'LEARY, H., Army.
PEER, Kenneth N., Army.
LOS ANGELES DIVISION
PIVER, Tony N., Navy.
BALDWIN, James H., Army.
PITTA, Joaquin G., Navy.
BLEWITT. Eugene C., Navy.
PRITZMICH, Mike, Navy.
BLIGHT. James E., State Guard.
PROVENCIO, Arturo, Army.
BORUFF, William E., Army.
QUIRK, Joseph W.. Army.
CALLAND, Warren W-, Army.
REEVES, Stewart C., Army.
DENT. William M., Army.
RICHARDSON, John W., Army.
RUBALCAVA, J. C., Marine Corps.
EGGLESTON, Kenneth W., Navy.
RUBALCAVA, Robert E., Navy.
ENOUF, Leo J., Navy.
SARGENT, Charles R., Navy.
FISH, Stephen L., Army.
SCHNABEL. Edward J., Navy.
POLEY, Archie T., Army.
SCHUPP, Harvey R., Army.
FRAME, Peter N., Navy.
SCHWEITZER, Laurence, Army.
GANTUS, John M., Army.
SCOTT. Vincent, Army.
GRANER, Donald J., Army.
J. D. Lamb, Jr.
G.L. Miller
SCOTT, Walter A., Army.
GRAY, Robert A., Army.
Ed. L. Lambert
SHEARER, Wm. B., Army.
GREEN, Edmund L., Army.
Purchasing, 8F
Rio Grande Divn.
PMT Co.
SLEIN, John J., Army.
SMITH, Kenneth C., Army.
GENERAL SHOPS
SOLORIO, Jesse, Army.
DAVIDSON, J. E., Lt., Army (Sacto)
STERLING, Feltus F., Army.
DISMONI, Steve J., Army (LA)
STEWART. Samuel D., Army.
GRIFFITH, E. 8., Army (Sacto)
STOKES, Milton L. Army.
HARDY. Michael 8., Army (LA)
STORCH, George B., Army.
HENDERSON, Victor R., Navy (LA)
STUART, Victor A., Army.
KIDWELL, Thos. L., Navy (LA)
TIFFANY, George O. M., Navy.
LONGO, Leroy, Army (LA)
TILLMAN, Howard R., Army.
MARGRAVE, Hugh T., Army (LA)
TROAKE, Herman W., Marine Corps.
MAXEY, Quinton, Army (LA)
VOTAW, Earl A., Army.
MILLER, Edward D., Army (LA)
WATKINS, William L., Army.
McCAULEY, Harry N., Army (Sacto)
WEBSTER, Richard J., Army.
MONTAGUE, Chas. A., Army (LA)
WELCH, Claude E., Army.
NASH, Jack, Navy (El Paso)
WELSCH, Virgil W., Navy.
PIZARRO, Leonzo D., Army (LA)
WHITE, Frederick E., Army.
W. J. McNell. Jr.
Kenneth c. Smith
G.A. Nichols
SCHIRO, Pete, Army (Bacto)
WHITLOCK. Carleton, Navy.
Sacramento Divn.
Western Divn.
Bacramento Stores
SMITH, Joe, Army (Bacto)
WIGGINS, David P., Army.
UMENHOFFER, Lyle E., Army (LA)
WILLIAMS, John W. Army.
WILLIS, Aubert E. Army.
GENERAL OFFICES
WILSON, Owen O., Navy.
Operating
WILBURN, James C., Navy.
BLOAN, James J., Navy (Pors.).
WOOD, Cyril, Army.
SLOAN, Peter G., Navy (Trans.).
YATES, John C., Army.
Engineering
BLACK, Bill, Jr., Army Air Corps.
COAST DIVISION
FULTZ, Cecil E., Army.
BENDOTOFF, Alexander, Army.
Real Estate & Tax
BRODERICK, A. J., Army.
EAGEN, Francis T- Army.
CADY, R. L., Army.
CALL, L. T., Army.
Purchasing
CAVALLI, A. M., Army.
AKERS, Albert, Jr., Navy (LA)
COEN. J. J., Army.
Accounting
COOK, J. M., Army.
ANTHONY, Thomas G. (APA). Army
Roy c. Williams
Melvin 5. Tiner
L. J. Collins
COSS, C. K., Army.
BAILEY, James A. (APA), Army.
Western Divn.
Cosst Divn.
Los Angeles Shope
DAVIS, Robert N., Army.
BISHOP, Don (APA), Army.
KAMES, J. P., Lt., Army Air Corps.
BUSH, E. R. (AD), Army Air Corps.
GARCIA, R. 8., Army.
(Continued on page 14)
M.J. Williams
Extel V. Orr
W.J. Gautier
San Joaquin Divn.
Sacramento Stores
Sacramento Divn.
A Share of Your Check Each Pay Day
Is the Easy Way in War Bond Buying
LADIES BRIDGE LUNCHEON annual feature of S. F. SP Club's calendar, was held April
Palace Hotel. Club members and friends enjoyed lunch and cards, heard some of the song his
the forthcoming Club Musical, "Babes in Bedlam." Committee is pictured at far right: Stati
Margaret Donahue, Gertrude LaFortune, Ruth McNab. Seated: Chairlady Jean Smogrow, Fae Bei
INFORMATION MEN pictured above answer pass-
LOS ANGELES folks combined patriotism with safety at the mass meeting of shopmen
enger questions in the new Information Bureau at
below, held on March 27. Two large United States flags were presented by LeRoy H. Walters. chain
Sacramento District Office. The compact unit car-
of the safety committee, to Shop Superintendent James Bean. A service Bag was displayed and
ries six lines, is manned by Head Information
announcement made that over 80 stars would be added to it immediately to represent shopmen
Clerk Frank H. Bower (near camera), Clerk J. L.
joining the armed forces. F. W. Ferrara entertained with accordion music and Machine
Adams (also in picture). Roy Kirschmann, and
Oliver made the feature safety talk of meeting urging individual acceptance of responsibility is
Robert McGee. "Small but busy" describes office.
shops' cooperative effort. Oliver's talk, his first at a safety meeting, compared the job of winning
RAMENTO was the scene of the ceremony pictured below showing workers in the Spring Shop
cation, March 13, Jefferson's Birthday, was attended by color guard of VFW, American
acramento Shops standing at attention just after their new flag was raised for the first time.
on members, and other "uests. Master of ceremonies was Legionnaire Walter Hewton, blacksmith.
against accidents with the job of winning the war, pointing out that "the outcome of both
WELL PROTECTED is Dorothy Kennedy of L. A.
ends upon the cooperation of each individual." He used the recent Red Cross and Savings Bond
SP Club with escorts from the Navy, Marine Corps
opaigns as example of what could be accomplished through the full cooperation of all, concluding
and Army. Occasion was party given 60 service
the statement, "If our safety movement and war effort are to be successful, every individual
men by SP Club members, March 22. Day started
learn to think and set teretbes" - At the left standing in front of the U.S. and service
with drive through L. A. and suburbs, included
merio end radio studios wound 90
S.P
14
In the Armed Forces
(Continued from page 11)
KELLY. Philip (AGA), Army.
McDERMOTT, Waldo D. (AMA).
SOUTHERN FACIFIC
RIPPON, Paul V. (AMA).
SEIB, Frederick (AESA), Army,
STUART. R. J. (ACE), Army Air Corp.
SWANSON, Paul E. (APA), Navy.
STORES DEPARTMENT
ANDRADE, Manuel M., Army (W. Oak.)
CAMILLO, Joseph D., Army (W. Oak.)
CLIPFORD, Patrick J., Army (W. Oak.)
COREY, Clarence L., Army (W. Oak.)
EMERY, John F., Army (Bayshore)
PEIBUSCH, Martin Hans, Army (St'ry)
GIANNOTTI, Chas. G., Navy (Bayahore)
GILKEY, Norman, Army (Brooklyn)
GUGEL, Fred W., Army (Bayshore)
JOHNSON, Verne W., Marines (W. Oak.)
JOHNSON, Wilton H., Army (Bayahore)
KELLEHER, Timothy P., Army (W. Oak.)
KOEFFER, J. A., Army (San Luis Oblspo)
JUST LIKE NEW is our Geary St. Ticket Office in San Francisco. The exterior, shown
LISCOMB, Kenneth A., Army (Bayahore)
above, has been refinished and features the brilliant color of our Daylight trains over the
entire facade. Simplicity is the keynote of interior fittings, with new fluorescent light-
RINALDI, James L., Army (W. Oak.)
Ing accentuating the blended color arrangement especially designed for this office.
SANTI, Michael, Army (Stationery)
THOMPSON, Conrad A., Army (Bklyn.)
WITTERIND, H. H., Capt., Army Paso)
FREIGHT TRAFFIC
ANDERSON, A. C. (DFO-SF), LA, Army.
BENEDICT, H. B., Lt. (GFO-SF), Army.
BERGSTROM, L. T. (DFO-SF), Army.
BOYCE, B. W. (GF-LA). Army.
BURDICK, H. M. (GFO-SF), Navy.
CAMPBELL, W.B. (GFO-LA), Navy.
CARTER, A. W. (S.L.). Army.
CHANDLER, A. B. (GFO-SP), Navy.
COOK, Geo. W. (GA Pitt.), Navy.
EDWARDS, H. Spokane, Army.
FLANAGAN, A. P., Lt. (DFO-8F), Army.
GREGORY, W. A. (DFO-SF), Navy.
HABELT, M. (GFO-SF), Navy.
HARRIS, W. R. (Phoenix), Navy.
KILLMER, G. F., Jr. (DFO-SF). Army.
KOEBER, K. T. (GFO-SF), Army.
LINSTAD, 2., Phoenix, Navy.
LUCAS, P. G., Lt. (GFO-SF), Army.
MARKS, L. H. (SF). Army.
MARKWART, J. (GFO-SF), Army.
MARSHALL, F. W., Bac'to, Army.
MATHER, C. 8., Jr. (GFO-SF), Navy.
MATHIAS, W. M. (GFO-LA), Army.
McKIM, R. M. (GFO-LA), Coast Guard.
FOUR MEN é A CAR: the men are SP carmen, L-R: F. W. Thompson of Dunsmuir, N.
McVEIGH, L. T. (GFO-SP). Navy.
Reynolds and J. E. Gaunt of Sacramento, and M. A. Mathewson of Los Angeles. The car is an
PEEBLES, W. L. (GFO-LA), Army.
all steel box, manufactured by Bethlehem Steel Co. at Johnstown, Pa., where the carmen are
RIORDAN, J. M. (GFO-SF), Army.
checking specifications. 8P's 1942 building program calls for 2100 new cars of this type.
RUPPEL, A., Fresno, Army.
WEST OAKLAND ROUNDHOUSE group pictured below met on March 30 for discussion of
SIMMONS, D., El Centro, Navy.
safety methods. The meeting was opened by J. Splendorio, chairman of the Safety Committee,
SMITH, R. C. (GPO-LA), Army.
to keep in service for defense. Master Mechanic E. R. Auton also stressed the need for fuls
who spoke of various accidents at the roundhouse and emphasized the need of avoiding them
SWETT. L. M. (GFO-LA), Army.
THOMPSON, H. F. (GFO-SF). Army.
manpower on the railroads today to move service men and equipment. Announcement was
WHEELER, M. P. (K. Falls). Army.
the last two months in bond drive conducted by G. Greelman, J. Splendorio and A. Scoggafava.
made at meeting that roundhouse forces had purchased $350 worth of War Bonds during
WICK, R. z. (GFO-Port.), Army.
WIERSEMA, K. C., Capt. (SF). Army.
INFORMATION ESTICKETIONS
HER
SCENES AT SHIPSIDE pictured above were taken at docks in BF
men often work from three to fear days to satisfy the train travel
following the arrival of transport bringing evacuees from war torn
requirements of the overseas voyagers. e (8) Navy personnel at
(1) Temporary SP Ticket Office established at
docks: L-R: Lt. R. 9. Kimbell, Chaplain H. M. Peterson, Capt. E.
Pacific aress.
the pier with Passenger Agents Walter H. Anderson, W. E. Godt-
U. Reed, Mrs. W. K. Kilpatrick, chairlady Navy Wives Emergency
fredson ready to help with the transportation problems of passen-
Service, Ensign E. O. Cox, Lt. R. F. McMahon, Yeoman C.
gers traveling overland.
(2) DPA T. Louis Chess (seated) dis-
F. Pullen. (4) Passenger Agents B. C. Harvey, Tom Keedy,
cusses plans for handling evacuee's requests with Passenger Agents
and Fred Schorcht at second SP Ticket Office. SPers work
T. C. Keedy and W. E. Godtfredson. As many as five SP passenger
closely with morale officers of the Navy Relief Department.
Oakland Engineers will observe
Jones to the Rescue: Robert Lillie, en-
Susie to Sambo: Manager Bill Hud-
route to Los Angeles, got off the train at
son of "ND" Telegraph office, Coast
the 57th anniversary of Division 283,
BofLE, with a dinner at Hotel Oakland
Fresno for a stroll. He strolled too far,
Div., SF, had to re-name the black kitten
May 30. Chairman S. O. Sanden and his
returned to find his train gone. Losing
recently picked up off the tracks by a mes-
active committee are expecting a record
your train is awkward under any condi-
senger and made the office pet. Originally
attendance and promise a program of en-
tions but for Mr. Lillie, ninety years old,
named "Susie," the kitten now answers to
tertainment and speaking that will sur-
it was doubly so. To the rescue came
"Sambo." This, not because of any protest
pass even the best of former years. Mrs.
Ticket Agent P. C. Estes, but highest
from Surie Johnson in the Division En-
Harriet Rodriquez heads the committee
honors must go to Walter H. Jones, a re-
gineer's office across the hall, but simply
of auxiliary ladies who will assist in
tired SP engineer, Roseville, who hap-
because "Sambo" is more appropriate to
staging the event.
pened to be in the station. Estes wired the
kitty's color and gender.
train conductor to assure Lillie's daugh-
Capt. Escalle Speaks: To E. E. Es-
ter, Mrs. Ada Keel, that her father would
A New Bataan: There's a new
calle, asst. chief clerk in the Asst. Genl.
be well cared for. Jones, on his own initia-
Bataan under the American flag
Auditor's office, came a letter of thanks
tive, bought two bus tickets and accom-
these days. It's an army station lo-
recently from the Millbrae Parent-Teacher
panied the elderly traveler to Los Angeles
cated on SP's Fernley-Klamath Falls
Association. Escalle, captain of the Aux-
via Greyhound. The reunion at Los Ange-
line, named Bataan some time ago
iliary Police under the Millbrae Civilian
les between father and daughter com-
by SP officials with a fine flair for
Defense organization, spoke before the
pleted'a saga of thoughtfulness and kind-
timeliness. "Avenge Bataan" is the
Parent-Teachers on the defense prepara-
liness. Hats off to Pensioner Jones.
motto of the men at SP's Bataan.
tions being taken. That his listeners
Dream Comes True: When Horace
found his words highly reassuring was
Heidt, playing with his orchestra in Rose-
Eggs Wing Back: Speaking of eggs
the subject of the letter.
ville, asked Oliver Moulton, SP switch-
flying back in your face, give a thought to
man, to sing two numbers with the band,
Alex "Scotty" McAdams, carman at Sac-
PMT Enlists: The PMT boys are
he made a dream come true. Sonester
ramento Shops. "Scotty" has been raising
proud of the fact that they are giving
Moulton is known as the singing switch-
prize homing pigeons for over twenty
man around Roseville, and his outspoken
years. Recently be shipped twelve pigeon
transportation to more and more army
aspiration has long been to sing with a
eggs to Cardena. On arrival, the shipment
encampments each week. The army has
consisted of twelve baby pigeons, and
been quick to graip the advantage of
"name" band.
three months later all twelve of them flew
this coordinated rail-truck service and the
long of the PMT'es is "We're in the
Oopal. Slipal A lot of people do a lot
over 200 miles right back to McAdams
and "home."
army now."
of checking to see that news appearing
in the SP Bulletin is accurate, but in
spite of our "check; double-check: triple-
Bailroader vs. Gardener: Round-
A Wish for Nugent: When Terminal
check" policy, we slip occasionally. Phil
house Foreman J. McDonald of Santa
Supt. M. A. Nugent recently celebrated
Kelly's friends called in to tell us that
Barbara is torn between two urges. As a
his 25th Wedding Anniversary, his yard.
we'd called him "Pete" in the April issue,
railroader he's enthusiastic about the new
men expressed the hope that his golden
and Norman Wiley himself corrected the
tracks being installed at his roundhouse,
jubilee would also be celebrated in Los
news of his promotion. Seems he's ASST.
but as a gardener he's not so enthusiastic
Angeles, proving his popularity at home
Personnel clerk in charge of clerical em-
about having to take up his beautiful
and abroad.
ployment.
lawn to accommodate them.
Regraded Unclassified
ating Expenses were $00,432,26), or
$17,053,209 more than the expenses for
the same period of last year; a 39 per
cent increase.
Federal retirement and unemployment
insurance taxes
unted to $2,567,192
and other railway six accruals to $9,061.
915; a total of $11,629,107. After de-
ducting these taxes and $4,448,095 of net
rentals for use of equipment and joint
facilities, there was left Net Railway
Operating Income of $16,902,833, or
$5,624,112 more than the net railway
operating income for the same period of
HISTORY MAKING was the above parade as, for the first time a parade crossed Into
1941.
Mexico without entrance formalities at the border. Part played by SP is told below.
Out of Net Railway Operating In-
come, and Other Income consisting of
SPERS IN PARADE ACROSS THE BORDER
dividends and interest on securities
owned, rentals and miscellaneous income,
G
ALA indeed was this year's Desert
international border between the two
must be paid the interest on bonds and
Cavalcade, annual pageant and pa-
friendly republics in this unprecedented
equipment trust notes in the hands of
rade held in the Imperial Valley, which
gesture of good will made possible by
the public, and other fixed charges. For
this year featured the SP Club band of
War Department authorizations from
the three months ended March 31, 1942,
Los Angeles. On April 11 the parade,
both Washington and Mexico City.
the final result was a Net Income of
culminating three days of festivities,
In the evening, the band played a spe-
$10,608,767, which compares with a net
started in Calexico and crossed the inter-
cial concert for several hundred service
income of $4,437,629 for the same
national boundary into Mexicali, Mexico,
men who had taken part in the day's
period of 1941.
making the first time an SP Club band
ceremonies. Soloists and majorettes out-
has played in a foreign country.
did themselves in presenting 2. fast-
WAR BONDS KEEP EM FLYING
Supt. H. R. Gernreich, GPA Geo. B.
moving program and were generously ap-
Hanson and GFA V. F. Frizzell attended
plauded at every turn. The entire LA unit
the celebration as did many members of
was complimented by the Calexico-Mexi-
Historians and other "rail fans" will
the SP Club of Los Angeles.
cali committee for the fine help given in
be interested in the "Spike of Gold" ar-
Over 25,000 persons viewed the long
further strengthening international good
ticle that is featured in the current issue
parade on its international good will
will, and for otherwise assisting in mak-
of Trains, which article reviews epic
excursion. Armed troops of the United
ing the annual Imperial Valley event a
events in the building of the first trans-
States and Mexico marched across the
complete success.
continental railroad.
TYPICAL SCENES of the big day down Mexico way:
(2) Mex-
Supt. H. R. Gernreich. Many prominent personages from both
ican Drum and Bugle Corps snap to salute as American colors pass
Mexico and the Imperial Valley exchanged good will greetings at
by.
(3) A group pictured at the party for service men sponsored
this meeting.
(4) Leading the SP Club Band in the night parade:
by American Legion officials. Standing, third from left: Ed. Henig,
L-R: Vyonne Livingston Bush, V. F. Frizzell, Betty Thorson,
commander of Calexico American Legion Post: fourth, GFA, V. F.
G. B. Hanson, J. R. McCuiston, SP agent at Calezico. (5) "God
Prizzell. Standing at extreme right are GPA Geo. B. Hanson and
Bless America" lustily rendered by Americans dawn Mexico way.
SPARKS FLAG CEREMONY: pictured above is general scene as flag is raised for the
first time. At left: Mrs. Allen Rock, wife of Local Chairman of Carmen, presents flag
to Military Guard. Speakers' stand holds company officials, army officers, political
leaders.
Right: Supt. L. P. Hopkins and Governor E. P. Carville take ride in jeep.
OLD GLORY IS GIVEN SALUTE AT SPARKS
IN Sparks an impressive ceremony, SP'ers at
Morrison, Asst. Master Mech. H. G.
dedicated the new flag pur-
Vance, County Commissioner C. B. Shel-
chased by shopmen and raised over the
ley, Secy. of System Federation Earl Ash-
roundhouse for the first time on April 23.
brook, Oliver Hansen, Dr. H. Earl Bel-
Company officials and employes, political
nap, Geo. Steiner and Seth Burgess.
leaders, officers and men of the armed
BUY BONDS THE PAYROLL WAY
service joined in an inspiring meeting that
was described in the Sparks Tribune as
"one large family gathered together to
100%-Two Ways: When Store-
dedicate themselves to service under the
keeper J. T. McDonald of Tracy sent us
the names of storesmen making up his
Stars and Stripes."
100 per cent bond buying department, he
The program opened with musical se-
added the pertinent remark that these
lections by Sparks High School Band
men are also 100 per cent wearers of
after which Sheet Metal Worker G. Nar-
safety shoes. Incidentally, the citizens of
ramore introduced Supt. L. P. Hopkins
Tracy recently elected McDonald to the
who acted as master of ceremonies. After
City Council.
IN OAKLAND the folks of the Kirkham Street
brief opening remarks Hopkins intro-
Freight Station followed the trend of the day
over the railroad and bought their own Bag. Be-
duced Major W. A. Gavin of the U. S.
BONDS TO BACK OUR BOYS
low: Larry Hickerson, Mervyn Baggett raise it.
Army who was followed at the micro-
phone by Governor E. P. Carville. Mrs.
Soldiers' Party: The San Francisco
Allen Rock, wife of Local Chairman of
Women's Chamber of Commerce served
Carmen, then presented the flag to the
as hostess to about 2500 service men at
Military Guard and it was raised to the
the Hospitality House on April 14.
top of the 72-foot pole as army bugles
Prominent on the committee were SP's
played "To the Colors". The Pledge of
Barbara A. Pell and Genevieve L. Beane,
Allegiance was given, followed by a mo-
through whose solicitation 75 cakes, 13
ment of silent prayer. The program closed
dozen easter eggs and a cash donation
with singing of the National Anthem by
were given by SP employes. Also in at-
Mrs. August Frohlich, daughter of Engi-
tendance were thirty young ladies from
neer E. Hecox, accompanied by Mrs. Lula
SP Disbursements office, acting as Junior
Grimmer.
Hostesses at the dance. That the party
Others taking part or assisting in the
was outstanding is attested by the report
program, included: Mayor D. J. Fodrin
given by personnel of Hospitaltiy House,
of Sparks, Chief of Police A. J. Basse-
who stated that this was the first party
mier, Brig. Genl. J. H. White, Capt. H. F.
where the boys stayed their entire leave.
Hayes, Master Mechanic J. E. Stone,
To the hard working Barbara Pell and
Asst. Supt. A. F. Green, Div. Engr. G. L.
Genevieve Beane, congratulations.
Regraded Unclassified
18
SOCIALS
S P CLUBS
ATHLETICS
SP CLUBBERS ARE WAR BOND BOOSTERS
LOS ANGELES: Featuring a new out-
BAKERSFIELD: Big doings al the
ing every month, the club recently went
Druids Hall on April 16 when the SP
down Mexico way in a big way. (See pic-
Club held a box social and dance, Music
tures, page 16.)
Second Victory Dance
was furnished by L. S. Benjamin and his
on April 18 in the PE Ballroom went
SP Club Orchestra. The auctioneering
over the top with the usual bang.
of Vice-President C. A. Simmons boosted
Tommy Brockmiller sent out the call
the sales figures to prosperity heights.
for softball players. Says he's going to
First, the Helpers; second, the Super-
field a team that will blast City League
visors; third, the Clerks: that's the order
opposition in all directions.
Over
of the teams at the finish of the Bakers-
eighty orphans were given a happy outing
held Winter Bowling League. The Sum-
at the recent Shrine Circus. The day, fea-
mer League, consisting of eight mixed
turing pink lemonade, elephants and
fivesomes, is already under way.
clowns, was sponsored by the club.
That club members haven't lost sight of
PORTLAND: From our "City of Roses"
the military in their activities is amply
friends comes word that all is in readi-
proved by pictures on page 20.
The
ness for the great swim of May 16 when
burnt cork is ready, the interlocutor is
club members will take over the North-
polishing his speech, the end men are
east YMCA pool for an evening of
sharpening their wits-another way of
splashing and shaking water out of their
L. A. GET TOGETHER was is the nature of a
saying that the Minstrel Show is all set
respective ears.
Captains for the
Hard Times party attended by employes of SP,
PR, LAUPT, Harbor Belt and Carloading Com-
for a gala performance sometime in June,
seven teams in the newly-organized SP
panies, March 28, sponsored by Lodge No. 30 of
Softball League: Carl Wood, Fred Kim-
BofRC. Purpose: stimulation of savings bond and
ball, Clif Evanson, Joe Colatorti, Al
stamp sales. Above: Prizewinners Beulah Allen,
SP Clerk: Ray Summerfield, Bernardine Conry.
SACRAMENTO: Activity of the Capi-
Thompson, Paul Streight, Joe Resnick.
Bottom (standing): The judges, S. A. Curry, C. H.
tal City Club revolves around its recently
President of the league is Paul Streight:
Thompson, G. B. Hanson: also 3. B. Haines, lodge
secretary. (Front): W. J. Roundtree, BofRC Div.
organized baseball team. Outstanding
secretary-treasurer, Al Thompson.
Chairman, and his assistant, R. V. Rachford.
members: Tom Glaviano, Jim Herrero,
First prize in the defense drawing from
Pete Venesin, Henry Nunes, Joe Mungo,
club membership cards went to G. A.
Allen Zutz, Benny Silver, Harry Pala-
Bentley of Stores Dept. Other winners:
midi, Primo Dalessando, Steve Zupan,
Bill Carse, H. C. Munhollon, R. F. Ab-
and Joe Smith. The boys got off to a
bott, Agnes Kennedy, G. H. Concon,
tragic start, not so much because they
F.D. Stady, H. R. Demmon, J. R. Gwynn,
lost their opener 10-3, but because of
W. W. Kloster, Jennie Klemm, and H.B.
the name of the opposition that downed
Axtell.
And before we forget men-
them: The Dreamland Dance Team.
tion of that fine club dance, see picture
Shame, men, shame!
on page 20.
TRACY: May 20 is the date for the
TUCSON: Wat caused suspension of
opening of the Softball season in Tracy.
the Arizona-Texas Class C Baseball
Manager Clarence H. Davis has organized
League so the SP nine that won the City
a tram from the store department, shops,
and State Championships last year has
and clerical employes. In addition a team
P LINES
entered the local Semi-Pro League. Man-
is being formed among the yardmen and
ager Carlos Carrillo is confident that his
others but is still in the formative stages.
boys will repeat their league win without
These two SP outfits will battle other
much trouble.
With the race for the
VERSATILE ATHLETES are those pictured above.
industrial teams in the City League.
They're from the Tucson Shops and at the moment
SP Bowling championship entering its
they amiling over winning à Southern League
final stages, the Motive Power team still
LA LEGION: SP Daylight Post 576 of
basketball championship just as they were smiling
holds a two-game lead but is hotly pur-
a few months age over winning State semi-pro base-
Los Angeles reports that recent meetings
ball championship. The scores of playoff series
sued by the News Service, Machinists,
have been well attended, with the 40&8
against El Centro were thrillers: 57-51; 48-49;
Clerks, and Pipefitters. Still anybody's
headed by Comrade Mark Law furnishing
16-36, Seated: L-R: Phillip Grace, Jr., Henry
race. The individual big five: Spangler
Hanson, Jr., Carlos Carríllo. Standing: Atsulfo
entertainment after short business ses-
Gardea, Bobby Castillo, Eddie Gallego, Alex.
(190), Nelson (188), Magers (180),
sions. War activities forced cancellation
McMina, capt. Hero was Sharpshooter Carrillo.
Hammonds (178), Carlos Carrillo (176),
of their plans to send a boy to Boy's State
this year, and forced suspension of the
HOT AFTER TITLE in the SF Industrial League are these gain of the SP Club basketball
school award for the time being. Every-
team. Next two games decide the issue. Frant: Julie McKinney, Ruth Morris, Marian Morgan,
Betty Seput. Jeanne LeQuatte. Standing: Mary Homesley, Alice Goessel, Mary Nelson, Nell
thing is in readiness for the joint meeting
Arp. Barbara Hogan, Kathleen Hansell, Pat Anthony, Gertrude Cook. Not present: Alma Plum.
of the four L.A. railroad legion posts to
be held early in May. SP Daylight Post
will act as host at this meeting.
SAN FRANCISCO: Swinging into
mid-season, the SF Club reports wide
spread activity along many fronts.
Picture items cover "Babes in Bedlam
(next page): Girls' Basketball (this
page): and the Ladies Bridge Lund
con (center page).
Manager Orgin
Klamroth and Director Juanita Ellis of
the SP Glee Club are still calling for 5P
voices to practice Mondays at 5:15 PM
IN FINE SHAPE were these chorus cuties of the "Babes in Bediam"
sell, Jean Garassino, Marjorie McDonald, Barbara Boles, Jean
cast when this picture was taken shortly before the musical comedy
Crowe, Isla Lee Smith, Dorothy Roddy, Violet Meseke, Helen
of the SP Dramatic Club of SF was to go into production. Left to
Hadley. Other chorus members, Betty Sanford and Lillian Hol-
right: Patsy Dunn, Rosemary DeClerq, Mary Laveaga, Kay Han-
brook, were not present at the time this picture was taken.
nament.
Cliff Olsen, manager of
Men's Softball, says to overlook the loss
"BABES IN BEDLAM" PROMISES TO BE A HIT
of the opening game, reports his stars will
be hard to beat from here in.
Repre-
RECORD the attendance appeared in store
College in "Alto Palto," California. Larry
sentatives' Meeting and Dinner on April
three-night presentation of
Lewis is in charge of stage settings and
7 was the usual combination of business
"Babes in Bedlam", original three-act
W. K. Smith assists Fell in directing.
and fun. Good turnout.
May third
musical comedy to be staged by the SP
Principals include Dorothy Gross, Tom
was SP Night at the Shrine Circus.
Dramatic Club of SF at the Community
Fante, Enid De Mond, Norman Wiley,
Ticket Chairman Joe Pine reports a
Playhouse, May 6-8-9. The show boasts
Joe Pyne, Don Coulter, Beatrice Benja-
heavy ticket sale.
a cast of 60 employes in songs, dances
min, James McCann, Lorraine Kelliher,
and other entertainment, written, directed
Anatole Bratoff and Jack Crawford. Also
SF Speakers: The new plan of meet-
and produced by SP employes. Walter C.
featured in specialties are Marjorie Mc-
ing twice monthly at dinner has met with
Fell, SF city passenger agent, wrote the
Donald, Jean Garassino, Grant James
fine response from members of the Speak-
book and Emmett Fitzpatrick, of the Tu-
Halsing, Mary Laveaga, Harold Martin,
ers' Club in SF. Recent chairmen include
reau of News, composed the music and
Ray Cone, Bernice Maker, Shirley Rogers.
F. G. Clisham, C. G. Barber, Geo. P.
lyrics for the play, which centers around
The show also will be presented at sev-
Smith. Recent guest speakers: Chief Yard
some very unusual goings-on at Bedlam
eral military encampments.
Clerk M. O. Leonhart, Asst. Aud. Freight
Accts. H. J. Kihn, DPA T. Louis Chess.
nis won the Golden Gloves contest for
Those interested in attending future meet-
the State of Oregon, will represent the
ings, call Clay Cather on Local 2689.
state in the National Amateur try-outs at
Boston.
Stores Baseball: Two giants met
when SP tangled with Bens Golden Glow
Salute to Sacto. Stores: We give the
in the opening baseball game of the
nod to Sacramento Stores for (1) the two
1942 season. Sad to relate, Ben's boys
fine new Bags, purchased by them, now
glowed too brightly for the SP'ers by the
flying over Stores building and garage;
score of 5-3. The railroaders bounced
(2) splendid spirit exhibited by Fire
back the following week to score a 2-1
Warden Al Pinney and his bomb-defense
win over the Bercovich nine, but again
squad; (3) File clerk Mable Lawrence,
took it on the chin from Naval Reserve
who just returned from a visit with her
in an eleven-inning thriller, 7-6.
two stalwart sons, both of the U. S.
BIRTHDAY GREETINGS from the gala
at the Supt's office in 8F were given to
Army: (4) Foreman Neal Sullivan,
R. E. L. Jones, head steno., in the form of
Battling Quinn: A mean man in the
president of Hibernians who recently
a birthday cake and giant card. Pictured
boxing ring is Dennis Quinn, son of
handed a check for $375 over to Navy
are Betty Moore, Marguerite Engel, Joan
Geston, R. E. L. Jones, Lois Manchester,
Yardman C. D. Quinn of Eugene. Den-
Relief in the name of that organization.
Orpha Wachter and Marjorie Loughridge.
HARD WORKERS are the SP women employes of Portland and
SOME FUN in the LA Medical Department, Apr. 18, when
Brooklyn pictured below gathered at the home of Marie Lowes,
nurses and secretaries gave a bridal shower for Carla Shoup,
clerk in Master Mechanic's Office, to work on quilts, aighans.
socy. Gifts were presented by Carol Rosenberger, Lillian Cohn,
When completed, these coverings are distributed to the public
dressed as bride and groom. L-R: Carol Rosenberger, Lillian
schools in Portland that have been designated as air raid shelters.
Cohn, Mrs. Shoup, Carla Shoup, Blanche Lineer, Dr. Lineer, Flor-
The Indies have received commendations for their workmanship.
ence Brown, Helen Twitchell, Marjorie Camphell, and Mary Wood.
evening and incidentally gave the CIUD team . good
sendoff for proceeds from the dance were used to buy equip.
ment for that organization. Hostesses were Mrs. Edith Evans
and Mrs. Verna Plotts. In line with the times, door prime
awarded were war savings stamps. The winners: A. McNeil
D. Tylor, R. C. Knight, J. O'Dare, P. D. Lewis, J. L. Card.
A. P. Mishler, Ed Cantoni, J. C. Layton, G. Goenyer, M. P.
Hardesty, and C. A. Boles. More Club news on page IL
EVERYBODY'S HAPPY in the picture above
and with good reason. Girls from the supt's
office in Bakersfield are congratulating M. L.
Jennings on his promotion to superintendent
of Portland Division, and they all con-
gratulating Leila Pyle (at Jennings' right)
on her coming marriage. (See page 23.)
"GOOD LUCK, BERT" was keynote of the sur-
prise party given B. W. Mitchell (right) when
he returned to Los Angeles for a day follow-
ing his promotion from asst. supt. there to
supt. of San Joaquin Division. Supt. H. R.
Gernreich presented him with a fine radio on
behalf of his former office workers. Repre-
sentatives of other departments spoke briefly,
congratulating Mitchell on his appointment
and extending every wish for continued success.
SOLDIERS & SAILORS are receiving attention from the SP
Club of Los Angeles as the pictures at the left and below
will testify. Picture at left shows the culmination of
the party given for 60 service men recently. Through ar-
rangements made by club members, these men were taken
for an extended drive through Los Angeles, Hollywood and
Beverly Hills, visiting radio and moving picture studios.
In the evening the club sponsored a dance, with girls from
the club acting as hostesses to the service men. Many of
the soldiers had never before been in Los Angeles, said
outing was the best given them since entering the ser-
vice,
Below: Officiating at the drawing for the lucky
bond winner at the Victory Dance of April 18, LA club officers
are pictured with service men guests. L-R: K. P. Ginn, pub-
licity; B. L. "Doc" Cook, president; Sailor Frank Harrison:
Martin Carr, VP; Marine Joe Ingle: E. M. Griffin, VP; and
Charlie Lewis, treasurer. Prizes were $70 in bonds, stamps.
GET ACQUAINTED NIGHT or the air rais waruens at es Market Street
brought out the 117 wardens pictured below. They had previously met in four
business sessions under the direction of Chief Air Raid Warden V. P. Dailey.
but the meeting on April 21 at the new Tivoli was for sociability. Several
short talks were made by various wardens and a motion picture showing the
bombing of Pearl Harbor exhibited. Duty of these wardens is to supervise
evacuation of the General Offices in case of blackouts and air raids. Trial
evacuation of the tenth floor personnel was recently completed in three minutes.
21
AMONG THE
VETERANS
WHO RETIRE
Coast: J. F. Cullinane, car inspector
LA Divn. in 1915, was promoted to ma-
at Watsonville Jet., retired March 1 after
chinist in 1023 and retired in that a.
continuous service at that location since
pacity April 30. All service on LA Divn.
J. M. Stanich. car inspector in
Annuity applications approved: Foun-
SP. 1925. April 1. Stanich jotned SP in 1022
tain A. Brown, janitor: Michael O'Den-
and served all his railroad career on the
nell, yardman: 1. T. Painter, yardman.
Coast Divn.
John Musacchia Joined
Shops: Los Angeles: Charles D. Moul-
SP in 1918 as A track laborer on the Coast
tgn, bollermaker helper, retired Peb. 12.
Divn. and retired in this capacity, effec-
All service was in this capacity in the
tive April 1. Patrick King, clerk
LA Shops. e Thos. E. Royse started with
checker at Drumm Street Station, who
SP an car builder, 1913, promoted to
has been in the Genl. Hospital for some
freight carman in 1932. retired in that
months, took his retirement last Feb-
capacity March 28. All service in LA
ruary He has had continuous service
THROTTLE TO FARM is the transition
Annuity WILL approved for
Annuity applications have been ap-
made by Engineer 5. H. Rogers, shown here
since 1906.
proved for Ed. Fergus, freight carman:
as he prepared to leave El Paso April 4 on
Michael Sugrue, trucker.
Frank P. Knowles, bollermaker. Sac-
last run to complete 44 years with SP and
Sacramento: Edward T. Williams be-
ramento: Annuity applications have
then retire to his Upper Valley cotton farm.
gan service with SP in 1919, retired last
been approved for John W. Armstrong,
(Picture from El Paso "Herald-Post.")
April 9. All service was as switch-tender
coremaker: Narciso Gorl. blacksmith
on Sacramento Division.
Annuity ap-
helper: Wm. M. Raugh, bollermazer:
and Bob Kelly. 6 As the Bulletin neared
plications have been approved for Kd.
Frederick G. Toomey, sheet metal worker.
press time these appointments were
Apostolos, section foreman: A. R. Merri-
General Office: Annuity application
announced on Western Division: L. a.
them, pumper: C. T. Newton, conductor.
has been approved for Mins Aurie J. An-
Smith to Stockton as unst. supt.: E. D.
Portland: Henry D. Ryan retired as
derson, clerk, Equip. Service Accounts.
Moody to ast. supt., Oakland Pier; be la
Incomotive fireman, March 30. He began
succeeded by A. 8. McCann se terminal
SP service In 1900, but continuous ser-
supt., Went Oakland.
MAKE PAYDAY A BOND DAY
vice dates from 1917. All his service was
Accounting: Following the death of
on the Portland Divn.
Annuity appli-
A. W. Lawrence, W. W. Willson became
cations have been approved for Wayne
Arnold, B&B carpenter; Luke H. Bo-
Promoted & New Jobs:
auditor of passenger accounts. Willson
started with BP in this same office in
lander, telegrapher-clerk; Thomas E.
Operating: Following the promotion
1909 working up through positions of
E. Woods, brakeman.
of operating officers announced In last
head government clerk, asst. chief clerk,
Bio Grande: Stephen H. Rogers, 1000-
month's Bulletin, R. E. Hallawell, asst.
and special accountant until his ap-
motive engineer, retired April 4 after
supt. of Sacramento Div. since 1940.
pointment M asst. auditor in November
forty-four years' service, dating back to
of 1941. He is succeeded as asst. auditor
transferred to Los Angeles in the same
his start as a fireman in 1898. He was
capacity. He was succedeed by V. M.
of passenger accounts by former special
made switch engineer in 1904, road engi-
accountant L. E. Colligan. Culligan
Petterson. former asst. manager of per-
neer in 1905. His entire railroad career
sonnel. Petterson started as a clerk in
joined BP In 1906 and has served his
was spent on the Rio Grande and Tucson
Portland: was in the Army for a time
entire career thus far to passenger ac-
divisions. (Picture, this page.) An-
and rejoined SP in 1919; was amt. train-
counta with the exception of a short
nuity applications have been approved
master and trainmaster on Portland
period in General Auditor's office. Culli-
for John T. Hamel, clerk; Francis A.
Div., went to Western Div. as train-
gan is succeeded by former special ac-
Rehrig, brakeman.
countant Tom Cunningham, who in
master in 1939; and became asst. man-
turn is succeeded by Herman Nelson,
Shasta: John H. Wagner, locomotive
ager of personnel in 1940. . Effective
former asst. special accountant.
engineer, retired March 31. He started
April 10, Geo. DeYoung WM appointed
service as fireman in 1901 on Sharta
asst. manager of personnel with head-
Freight Traffic: Promotions are an-
Divn., transferred to Sacramento Divn.
quarters in 8F. DeYoung joined BP in
nounced for the following in Geni.
in 1904, was promoted to switch engineer
1914 as station clerk on San Joaquin Div.
Freight Office, SF. R. J. Harries, Wm. T.
in 1900, made road engineer in 1907. All
Following short time as brakeman. he
Altken, E. c. Doyle, E. c. Conroy, G. G.
service was on the Sacramento and
transferred to Coast Div. station service
Hughes, M. J. Gagnon, R. G. Glbbs, Wm.
Shasta Divisions. Annuity approved
In 1916. In 1919 he became local chair-
Hazeirigg, F. W. Loucks, D. E. Lee, W. D.
for Antonio Rossetto, track laborer.
man for Brotherhood of Railway Clerks,
Frey, B. T. Warner. F. T. Doyle, E. E.
Los Angeles: Preston H. Wofford be-
rising to general chairman of that or-
Greenwood, and F. M. Calder.
gan SP service as engine watchman on
ganization. from which position his sp-
Passenger Traffic: With the an-
pointment was made. As reported last
nouncement that G. W. Hudkins for-
month. J. F. Koenig WM called into mill-
merly agent at Huntington Park, had
tary service before he could get his feet
joined the navy. Southern Passenger
squarely under bis desk as asst. train-
marter at Portland, He to succeeded by
"MIKE" KROMBECK, agent-telegrapher
H. J. Davis, former brakeman. Promo-
at Bakersfield has retired after 32 years
tions in the supt's office, Coset Div., in-
with the SP. Wire Chief N. P. Gidley was
volve Norman A. Sorenson. former trans-
one among the large group of (ciende who
portation clerk, now division station su-
gathered around Krombeck on the last day
oervisor: Morris H. McCurdy from asst.
at his key to present him with a gift, eat of
his remembrance cabe, and wish him well.
head timekeeper to general transporta-
tion clerk. Warren A. (Jack) Welch takes
over as asst. head timekeeper. . c. H.
Nell and T. S. Boyer were appointed to
nonitions of aret. trainmaster at Imlay.
Neil joined BP as student brakeman in
1925. Boyer was brakeman In 1930. trans-
ferred to yardman in 1939. The transfer
of 5. J. Bullough to Tracy resulted in
promotion of Machinist L. L. Huston to
night roundhouse foreman at Montallo.
Huston has served 8P since 1917 in
roundhouse capacities on Balt Lake Divi-
sion. Promotions to the Genl. Man-
ager's office Involve H. E. Eyler to gen-
eral clerk, E. A. McDowell to secy. to
"BILL" PIERCE, Bashing the personality
genl. manager, W. T. Tose to secy. to
that was him such popularity as telegraph
asst. gent. mgr., W. Kingston to appro-
lineman on Los Angeles Division, exhibits
priations clerk. R. P. Waldmann to file
the Bas watch from Telegraph Dept. friends
clerk, W. C. Lundin to Jr. appr. clerk.
and handy traveling bag from Santa Bar-
New faces in that office Include: Chris-
bara "rails" presented him when he retired
tine Jensen, Kathryn Pierce, Betty Gin-
recently after service with SP since '05.
ley, Lorene Smallfield, H. G. Hanthorn
Regraded Unclassified
OUTCOINE
HARRY STROHLEIN (inset), popular chief clerk of the Corporate
the 33th anniversary of his starting work with SP as a stenographer
Accounts Bureau, Ant. General Auditor's Office, was tendered a
back in 1907. Asst. General Auditor P. J. Kendall (far left) -
pleasant surprise April 15 when . small group of his many General
tended the official greetings. Stroblein was a secretary, head clerk,
Office friends joined with his Acct. Dept. associates to observe
and special acct. before advancing to his present position in 1929.
District reports that R. J. Mahan be-
brakeman, Ogden, April 9.
Pension-
comes TF&PA at Riverside, W. A. Frost
ers: Chas. McBride, sec. foreman, Feb. 23.
becomes agent at Huntington Park,
G. A. Baldwin was named relief agent,
San Joaquin: Arthur R. Dugan, ma-
chinist, March 30.
Pensioner: Fred M.
H. c. Hall was made station passenger
agent at LA. B. R. Haley appointed to
Wasgatt, agent-telegrapher, March 30,
night military train service head clerk,
Los Angeles: Erra B. Thayer. team
and H. L. Woodward made night chief
track foreman, LA, March 25.
Harold
clerk Pullman reservation agency, LA.
J. Lange, yardman, March 28. Henry
B. Cade, conductor, April 2. Horace
PMT: Wyatt H. Smott, formerly at
A. Humelsine, yardman, April 9.
Al-
PMT Garage, Los Angeles. has been
bert E. Hillier, boilermaker, April 17.
transferred to the PMT Sacramento-
Pensioner: Wm. J. C. McClurkin, con-
Williams run. PTE Driver Gordon R.
ductor, March 19.
Bradford has moved from Marahfield to
Corvaills, Ore.
Rio Grande: Pensioner: Wm. J. Per-
PROMOTED are G. Nelson (left) to Audi-
tiller, section foreman, April 8.
Engineering: The Chief Engineer's
tor of Miscel. Accts., and V. M. Petterson
office says "bello" to Arthur W. Jenkins,
to asst. superintendent, Sacramento Div.
Tucson: Robert M. Jarratt, district
blueprinter, Marcella Young and Frances
painter. March 21: Orlando N. Smyth,
Miller, stenographers: says farewell to
brakeman, March 31.
Whiteford, trucker, SP, April 3. Harry
Steno John E. Pedersen, who recently
J. Erne, machinist, April 7. Pension-
Shasta: our D. Ward, B&B carpenter.
joined the Berkeley Police Force.
ers: Joseph Brown, conductor, April 11;
April 10, in Genl. Hospital.
Howell A. McNair, agent, March 24;
BONDS SPEED VICTORY
Frank Rellly, section foreman, April 11;
Shops: Bacramento: George Brown,
drill operator, in Genl. Hospital, March
John A. Sully, yardman, March 25:
29.
G. H. Laufer, airman, March 20.
Died:
Oliver M. Wells, brakeman, March 20.
Tom B. Calhoun, carman, March 2.
Western: Frank D. Smith, boller-
Dominic Catalano, bollermaker
Accounting: A. W. Lawrence, auditor
maker, March 22.
Harry Brannan,
helper, April 3, in Genl. Hospital. Pen-
passenger accts., April 20 in Genl. Hospi-
yardman, March 27. Patrick Dolan,
sioners: H. B. Holmdrup, shopman.
tal after a short illness, Lawrence had
section foreman, April 5.
Pensioners:
April D, at Butter Hospital; Sterling
continuous service from 1894, all of It.
John P. Lombard, clerk, April 17: Peter
Cook, blacksmith, April 5, in Los An-
with the exception of the first six
A. Johnson, cabin watchman, April 12:
geles: Charles R. P. Redman, upbol-
months as ticket clerk, spent in Aud.
Edward Stad, conductor. April 1; Elliott
sterer, April 7; Napoleon Starnes, shop-
Pass. Accts. office, He became head clerk
T. Wright, conductor, April 12.
man, April 13; Fred G. Alcott, April 14.
in 1906, special accountant in 1918, asst.
in Red Bluff; Wm. D. Shonefelt, dept.
aud. pass, accounts in 1931, and auditor
Portland: Warren Abercromble,
foreman. March 30: John Thomas Spang-
passenger accounts in 1041.
switchman, April 12, in Genl. Hospital.
ler, car Inspector, March 19.
El
Paso:
Coast: W. H. Fine, master car repairer,
Ed. J. Johnson, machinist at Brook-
Francisco J. Nava, upholaterer. April 19.
lyn
Shops,
April
11.
Wm.
5
Bayahore Shops, died April 19 after an
DeWitt,
Illness of & few weeks, His funeral, in
63, engineer, March 29. after forty years'
MAKE YOUR DOLLARS FIGHT
service with SP.
Los Angeles, was attended by many offi-
Pensioners: R. C.
cera and long time associates. Fine
"Dad" Harden, well loved veteran. and
started with 8P in 1922 as passenger car
for many years chief dispatcher at
Married:
builder in LAGS after previous railroad
Marshfield. Harden retired in 1932, died
experience. In 1933 be was made depart-
March 17; M. H. Crandall, conductor,
Draftsman Joe Smith, of the Chief En-
ment foreman of passenger repairs, and
Mar. 19; E. W. Barker, carpenter, April 7.
gineer's office, journeyed to Reno April
16, where Charlotte Gwin became Mrs.
in 1935 general foreman of the car dept.
Sacramento: William Schnoor, freight
handler, April 15.
Smith.
Absence of Johnny Couden
He came to Bayshore in 1938.
W. G.
Dominic P. Cata-
Colthurst, clerk SP Freight Station,
lano, bollermaker at Roseville Round-
from Bay region golf courses started
March 4.
Henry Mann, yardman, SF.
house, in Genl. Hospital, April 3.
March 24, beginning of bis married life.
March 17.
Patrick Byrne, machinist
James Wm. Godding. yardman, after
Bride: Mary Drake. John's a clerk in allo the
helper. Bayshore, March 31.
Francisco
being struck by auto, March 31.
Genl. Passenger Office, SF.
An
Pen-
Zonchetta, steel carman, Bayshore.
ratiroad romance culminated in the ITUMPS
eloners: Wm. C. Flook, clerk, April 16:
March 18.
Manuel Lopez, track In-
riage of Walter Olsen and Peggy O'Net
Wm. J. McEnerney, car foreman, April
borer. Ban Jose, as result of auto acel-
April 16. Both work in Aud. Miscl. Ad-
10; John M. Wright, conductor. March 9.
dent, March 12.
Martin L. Haworth,
counts,
John P. Dodds of the name
Salt Lake: E. c. Ingram, fireman,
conductor, SP. March 37.
Hugh
office married Alva Starnes April 25
Sparks, March 31.
Herbert King,
Leita M. Pyle joined the army by mary
Regraded Unclassified
May, 1942
rison, une of SP's popular telephone op-
erators in Portland, to E. K. Strandhoim,
also of Portland, at Pinole on April 12.
The beneymoon was in Ban Francisco.
BUY BONDS THE PAYROLL WAY
Born:
To Mr. and Mrs. Fred II. Stelers, &
daughter, March 10. Siefere la a cabouse
supply man at Brooklyn Stores, e Bon
number two arrived at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Greene, April 2. Greene
is clerk in superintendent's office, Port-
land,
Mr. and Mrs. James Toney TO-
cently announced the arrival of Mervic
ARMY COUPLE Mr. and Mrs. Edward B.
Ziegier pictured on their wedding day,
C. Toney. Papa la OS&D clerk at Oak-
April 12. The charming bride is the for-
land Freight Terminal. From down
mer Leila M. Pyle, ant. personal record
south on the Rio Grande comes word
clerk and Bulletin Correspondent In Bakers-
that Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Mulchahoy are
field. Ziegler is an air corps staff sergeant.
celebrating the arrival of a boy, Ray,
ALL RAILBOAD was the marriage of June
born April 9. Mulchahey La asst. engineer
Tregaskie to Frank Hunter in Oakland,
riage when ahe exchanged "I do'n" with
at El Paso,
T. S. Boyer, recently pro-
March 15. June is the daughter of Mr. and
Staff Sgt. Ed. B. Ziegler, April 12. Leila
moted to nast, trainmaster at Imlay had
Mrs. L. H. Tregaskis, train baggageman at
Oakland. Hunter works in the Information
is asst. personal record clerk and Bul-
another reason for celebrating: & new
Bureau of SP's Ticket Office, Oakland.
letin correspondent in the superinten-
son on March 20. From Sparks comes
dent's office at Bakersfield. e June Tre-
word of new arrivals at the homes of
pounds, March 28. Sacramento Shops
gaskis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. H.
Mr. and Mrs. Nello Glannotti (daughter,
reports birth of sons for: Mr. and Mrs.
Tregaskis (train baggageman, Ogden-
March 18), and Mr. and Mrs. Manuel
David Lang (burner in Welding Shop),
Oakland), became the bride of Frank
Garcia (son, March B). Gianotti la as ma-
March 18; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Robison
Hunter, Pass. Dept., Oakland, March 15.
chinist, Garcia a bollermaker helper,
(machinist), March 20; Mr. and Mrs.
Los Angeles reports the marriage of
It's a baby daughter for Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Colombani (shopman), March 26;
Yardman Carl K. Olson, Yard Clerk Gene
Mark Salel, April 11. Salel la electrician
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde M. Hanger (Sacto.
H. Lorona, Brakeman R. M. Bopp, March
at West Oakland,
To Mr. and Mrs.
Stores), April 8. Daughters for: Mr. and
10; Porter Nathan E. Wills, Stevedore
Wm. L. George, a daughter, Margaret LA
Mrs. Wm. Davis, April 10; Mr. and Mrs.
Thos. N. Walton, March 5; Stevedore
Verne, March 28. Father Bill works in
Alvin Clark (machinist), April 12; Mr.
Wm. A. Hinson, March 22; Clerk John E.
the Auditor Passenger Accts, . J. B.
and Mrs. Robert E. Tremaine (machin-
Moss, March 29; Electrician Robt. B.
Hardman, Genl. Freight Traffic, SP,
Ist), April 19; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ven-
Thielen, April 12.
From Sacramento
crashes this column with the birth of a
and (Erecting Shops), March 16.
Shope we hear of the marriage of Ma-
grandson, Kenneth Howell, weight eight
Greta Ivene is the new baby girl in the
chinist Anthony Gomes to Kay Super-
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Ricken-
lane, April 19; Machinist Helper Joseph
bacher since March 26. Dick works for
Bruno Costello to Josephine Peters,
Southern Pacific
PMT in supt's office, Preano.
PMT
April 12; Clerk John Thomas to Grace
Driver Raymond Luke of Bacramento re-
Cassinelli; Brass Moulder Miche Orbe,
porta that he and Mrs. Luke are celebrat-
April 12; Machinist Helper Ralph All-
log the arrival of Roberts, 7 pounds
good, April 9; Geo. D. Fisher to Myrtle
Bulletin
strong. March 20. Clyde Hanger and
Clough, March 29; Switchman Phillip
wife Jean are mighty, mighty proud of
Yoder of Salem to Miss Edith Mohr,
Volume 26, Number $-Published monthly
that 7-pound bundle named Les Martin,
March 15.
Telegrapher W. Denham
by Southern Pacific Bureau of News.
residing at the Hanger home since April
of Salem to Mary Woodworth, March 29.
65 Market Street, San Francisco
a. Clyde is head tracer clerk at Bacra-
-
Section Poreman Willis F. McGee of
ERLE HEATH, Editor
mento Gen'l Stores. Another proud pape
Mohawk, Tucson Div., to Leavaine Old-
among storesmen Le Barney Wright cele-
ham in El Centro, March 3. Sheet
GBO. P. SMITH, Asst. to Editor
brating arrival of Michael Lee. At the
Metal Worker Helper Wm. Boss Gunther
In the interest of and distributed free to
moment Barney la on leave of absence
to Ruth Meaders, in Yuma, April 10.
active and retired employes. Signed contri-
while serving with the U. 8. Army.
Section Stockman J. A. Monahan of
butions of news items and pictures regard-
Stores Dept. at Dunsmuir, to Audrey
ing employes or activities of the railroad
To Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy M. Leale, a son,
Savage, April 30.
are invited, and should reach the aditor by
James Michael, Feb 15. Leale is a brake-
Miss Maxine Mor-
the 15th of the month.
man on the Const Divn.
e
"Bulletin" Correspondents-They'd like to Have You BUY BONDS!
TERN DIVISION: Walter E. Lake, lease agent, Oakland Pier. Assis-
SHASTA DIVISION: W. L. Minor, Dunamuir. Assistant: Frank Peyton,
state Henry Loretz, Oakland Pier; E. O. Ornelles, West Oakland
Klamath Falls.
rd; R. Rooney, Water Service Dept.: J. P. Francis and T. Vander-
art, West Oakland; R. J. LeClert and E. R. Stevenson, Tracy:
STORES DEPT.: Jack Griffle, Gen'l Storekeeper's Office, 8. P. Assta-
jekton. Illip P. Healy, Gen'l Freight Terminal, Oakland; A. B. Caughey,
tants: c. Pine, Bacramento; F. M. Connett, West Oskland; F. J.
O'Donnell, Los Angeles; E. g. Cummings, EL Paso; c. S. Boroughs,
Portland; W. P. Beall, West Oakland.
AMENTO DIVISION: J. A. Collins, nas chief clerk, Sacramento.
SACRAMENTO GEN'L SHOPS: Fred Moseley, W. J. Lambert, R. R. Johnson.
distant: W. c. "Sparky" Hellbron, Roseville.
Los ANGELES GEN'L Snore: Carl G. Randall.
LAKE DIVISION: George Greenwood, sup't sec'ty, Ogden. Assia-
NEW: Bruno Tassone, Sparks: D. DeGroot, Montello: Burton Howard,
EL PASO GEN'L SHOPS: Ellis Crysler, general clerk.
titn: G. A. Gillett and D. Buswell, Imlay.
TELEGRAPH DEPT.: Miss "Pat" Dowd, general clerk, San Francisco.
Assistants: Evelyn Cutter, "BD", Ban Prancisco; c. E. Weish, "UN",
LAND DIVISION: Howard E. Balley, secty to ass't superintendent,
Tucson: Fern Liston, "HU", Los Angeles; J. K. Brent, "H", Baora-
Hand. Assistants: All agents and roadmasters' clerka.
mento; J. W. Clark, "SW", XI Paso; L. V. Hawkins, "DW", Portland.
DIVISION: J. A. Knudsen and Marty Boland, 3rd St., San Fran-
TRAFFIC DEPT: Durothy Ferie Johnson, Gen'l Freight, B.P.: 1. R.
bo, Assistants: T. J. O'Conner, Ban Luis Obispo: F. J. McCabe,
Jarman, Gen'l Pass., 8.F.; Paul Streight, Gen'l Freight, Portland,
tsonville Junction: R. McClintock and 5. W. McCarley, Ban Jose.
Chas. Mulks, Gen't Freight, L.A.; Chas. G. Shea, Oen'l Pass., L.A.:
JOAQUIN DIVISION: Tom Billingsley and Lella Ziegler, Bakersfield.
L. & Helmer, Dis. Pass., B. P.: Al Walling, Dia. Pass., Oakland: Frank
detants: AL Anderson, Presno; E. W. Smith, Bakersfield round-
Wisdom, Dia, Pass, L A; E. D. Culp, Seattle,
Geo, Bennett, Mojave,
GENERAL OFFICES: Norman Wiley, Ass't Gen'l Auditor; 0. W. Hellwig,
as DIVISION: Walter 8. Olson, sup't secity, Los Angeles.
Auditor Misc. Acounts: Russcit Knox, Auditor Cap. Expenditures:
Sants: Jas. B. Steele, Taylor Roundhouse: Max M. Damon, L. A.
G. D. Frey, Aud. Disbursements; H. F. Woods, Aud. Freight Accts.:
light Station: K. P. Ginn, SP Club.
Herman Nelson, Aud. Pass. Accts.: Everett Dial, Central Timekeeping:
ON DIVISION: Leroy Magers, ass't chief clerk, Tucson. Assistants:
August Cheyrias, Equipment Service; Beth G. Parliman, Law: W. C.
ke Quibais, Tucson: Eddle Anaya, Yuma; D. B. Darsey, Phoenix:
Allen, Dining Car: R. 2. Detting, Chief Engineer; W. J. Hayes, Pur-
C. Collier, Gila; Max Richards, Globe.
chasing: A. L. Frits, Freight Claim; Bert Ream, Operating.
sistents: R. U. McLean, El Paso: L. B. Armstrung, Tucumeari;
DEANGE DIVISION: Bobt. B. Hall, head clerk. Div. Egr., 22 Paso.
PACIFIC MOTOR TRUCKING: V. L. Richeda, Ban Francisco, Assistants:
E. R. Smith, Portland; O. M. Melsheimer, Los Angeles: Allen Hansen,
D. Robin, Deming: Geo. Pergusua, Douglas; J.B. Stearn, Carrianto.
Tumon.
Regraded Unclass
10
May 16, 1942
Letters to the following, attaching 8. photostat of letter from
Mr. H. W. Anderson, Vice President of the General Motors Cor-
poration, giving results of the payroll allotment plan for sale
of War Savings Bonds, described to Ways and Means Committee on
April 16, 1942. Signed HMJr. Copies to Thompson. (HNG)
Hon. Robert L. Doughton,
Hon. Peter G. Gerry,
Hon. Raymond S. McKeough,
Hon. Joseph F. Guffey,
Hon. Knute Hill,
Hon. Prentiss M. Brown,
Hon. Arthur D. Healey,
Hon. Clyde L. Herring,
Hon. Aaron Lane Ford,
Hon. Robert A. Taft,
Hon. Allen T. Treadway,
Hon. Robert M. LeFollette, Jr.,
Hon. Frank Crowther,
Hon. William H. Smathers,
Hon. Harold Knutson,
Hon. George L. Radcliffe,
Hon. Daniel A. Reed,
Hon. Edwin C. Johnson,
Hon. Roy 0. Woodruff,
Hon. James J. Davis,
Hon. Thomas A. Jenkins,
Hon. Arthur H. Vandenberg,
Hon. Donald H. McLean,
Hon. Arthur Capper,
Hon. Bertrand W. Gearhart,
Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.,
Hon. Frank Carlson,
Hon. John A. Danaher,
Hon. Benjamin Jarrett,
Hon. Walter F. George,
Hon. Richard M. Duncan,
Hon. David I. Walsh,
Hon. A. Willis Robertson,
Hon. Alben W. Barkley,
Hon. Patrick J. Boland,
Hon. Tom Connally,
Hon. Milton H. West,
Hon. Josiah W. Bailey,
Hon. Thomas H. Cullen,
Hon. Bennett Champ Clark,
Hon. John W. Boehme, Jr.
Hon. Harry Flood Byrd
Hon. Jere Cooper,
Hon. Wesley E. Disney,
Hon. Frank H. Buck,
Hon. John D. Dingell,
Hon.
The above list of letters were all mailed from Mr. Graves'
office.
11
My 15, 1942. MAY 16 1942
Hg dear Mr. Dingell:
You will recall that on April 16 officials
of the General Motors Corporation, with repre-
sentatives of the workers, described to the
Mays and Heans Committee a ompaign about to
be insuranted for the purpose of increasing
the participation of the Company's employees
in the payroll allotment plan for the sale of
War Sevings Bonds.
I - - that you will be interested in
reading a letter which I have received this
morning from Mr. E. N. Anderson, Vice President
of the Corporation, describing the results of
the campaign, and I take pleasure in enclosing
a copy for that purpose.
Sincerely,
(Signed) 1. Mergenthau, 19.
Hu. John D. Dingell,
House of Representatives,
Weshington, D. c.
HNG:ew
Regraded Unclassified
12
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
BROADWAY AT 57 TH STREET
NEW YORK, N.Y.
Washington Office
-
17TH AND EYE ers. as. W,
May 15, 1942
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. 0.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
Mr. Gamble, of your office, inquired as to the result achieved
from the campaign starting on April 16 to increase participation in the
purchase of War Bonds.
This campaign was known as the "GENERAL MOTORS EMPLOYES BOND
DRIVE FOR VICTORY."
We are pleased to inform you that from an employe participation
of 314 percent as of April 1, the participation of all General Motors
employes now stands at 99.2 percent as a result of this drive. As
a percent of the payroll, the participation of employes increased from
1.9 percent for March to 6.9 percent for April.
General Motors has ninety seven plants and units within the
United States. Employes of each of these unit- have subscribed for
and purchased War Bonds far in excess of our expectations. In eighty four
of these units, 100 percent of the employes are purchasing War Bonds.
In the remaining thirteen units, between 95 percent and 99.9 percent of
employes are perticipating.
There is attached a list of General Motors plants and units and the
percent of participation of each of them.
The following is & summary of the results of the drive:
BEFORE CAMPAIGN
AFTER CAMPAIGN
MARCH 1942
APRIL 1942 .
Number of Employes Working (U.S.)
222,819
235,090
Total Payroll
$51,224,330
$54,457,053
Number of Employes Purchasing Bonds
70,295
233,197
Amount Subscribed for Purchase of Bonds
$965,529.50
$3,756,173
Subscription Per Employe Per Month
$13.73
$16.10
Bond Purchases as a Percent of Total Payroll
1.9%
6.9%
Percent of Employe Participation
31.55
99.2%
*These are prelimary figures based upon individual employe pledges and
projected on , monthly basis.
Regraded Unclassified
13
- 2 -
The bond drive was developed and directed by experienced executives of
the Corporation with splendid cooperation from all employes. In the mass
meetings, various representatives of employes played an active part in building
up patriotic interest and enthusiasm for the entire program.
In reviewing the foregoing, consideration should be given to the short
period of time since the drive started. Among the points stressed in the
promotion of bond sales were the following:
1. Furnishing necessary funds for the war effort.
2. Establishing reserves to help carry employes through any
post-war readjustments.
3. Constructively decreasing available purchasing power in line
with diminishing supplies of consumer goods.
The employes in the plants are currently averaging 46 hours of work per
week and earnings have been stabilized at high levels. Barnings were low
during December, January and February as a result of the curtailment" of non-
defense production.
While the results are gratifying to date, the next phase of the progra
will be directed toward encouraging employes to increase their weekly 07
monthly subscriptions. The slogan will be: "NOT LESS THAN ONE BOND PER
EMPLOYE PER MONTH."
We anticipate an increase in weekly and monthly subscriptions as the
war program develops and hours of work and overtime pay are increased.
I wish to take this opportunity to express our appreciation for the help
and cooperation we have received from the Treasury Department in preparing this
campaign and which we feel contributed materially to its success.
HW.Cinderson: Very tmly yours,
H. W. Anderson
Vice President
hwa-em
encl.
NERAL MOTORS EMPLOYES BOND DRIVE FOR VICTORY
SALES STANDINGS
*
*
14
CONGRATULARTORY FINAL STANDINGS
X
PARTICIPATION
RANK
Aeroproducts
100%
1
Allison
100%
1
Argonaut
100%
1
Brown-Lipe-Chapin
100%
1
Buick Lotor
100%
1
Cadillac
100%
1
Chevrolet - Atlanta
100%
1
Chevrolet - Aviation Engino # 2
100%
1
Chevrolot - Baltimoro
100%
1
Chevrolet - Bay City
100%
1
Chevrolet - Bloomfield
100%
1
Chevrolet - Exporimental
100%
1
Chevrolet - Flint
100%
1
Chevrolet - Grey Iron Foundry
100%
1
Chevrolet - Indianapolis
100%
1
Chevrolet - Janosvillo
100%
1
Chovrolet - Kansas City
100%
1
Chevrolet - Motor & Axle
100%
1
Chevrolot - Muncie
100%
1
Chovrolot - Norwood
100%
1
Chovrolot - Oakland
100%
1
Chovrolot - Spring & Bumpor
100,1
1
Chovrolet - St. Louis
100%
1
Chovrolot - Tarrytown
100%
1
Chevrolot - Tolodo
100%
1
Chevrolet - Transmission
100%
1
Doloo Appliance
100%
1
Doloo Brako
100%
1
Dolco Rudio
100/-
1
Dolco Romy - andorson
100%
1
Doloo Romy - Antioch Foundry
100,"
1
Delco Romy - Muncio
100%
1
Dotroit Diesol
100%
1
Dotroit Transmission
100,1
1
Eastorn ..ircruft - Baltimore
100%
1
Eastorn ..ircruft - Lindon
100,:
1
Eastorn Mircraft - Tarrytown
100,1
1
Eastorn ..ircraft - Trenton
100%
1
Eloctro-Notive
100%
1
Fishor - Contral Development
100,
1
Fisher - Contral Enginooring
100,
1
Fisher - Contral Plants
100,3
1
Fisher - Cloveland
100%
1
Fisher - Dotroit ..ircraft
100,1
1
Fisher - Detroit Stamping
100,
1
Fisher - Dic & Machino
100,
1
Fisher - Export
100)
1
Fisher - Flootwood
100;'
1
**PULASE TO YOUR EMPLOYES PLEASE GIVE YOUR STORY TO YOUR NEWSPAPERS
Regraded Unclassified
-2-
15-
Fisher - Garage
100%
1
Fishor - Grand Rapids Stamping
100%
1
Fisher - Lensing
100%
1
Fisher - Momphis miroraft
100%
1
Fishor - Pontino
100%
1
Fishor - Service
100;:
1
Fishor - Tank
100,7
1
Floot Salos
100,1
1
Foroign Distributors
100%
1
Frigidaire
100,3
1
G. E. I. C.
100%
1
G. M. A. C.
100%
1
G. If. Building
100,3
1
G. M. Instituto
100%
1
G. 14. Oversoas
100%
1
G. 14. Proving Ground
100%
1
G. X. Rescarch
100%
1
Guide Lamp
100%
1
Harrison Radiator
100,1
1
Hyntt Boarings
100,3
1
Inland "fg.
100%
1
Modern Housing
100,
1
Mornino Products
100,3
1
Motors Holding
100,
1
Motors Insurance
100,3
1
Now Doparture - Loridon
100,5
1
Packard Eloctric
100,1
1
Rochostor Products
100,:
1
Saginaw !'c.lloable Iron
100,
1
Saginaw S. G. # 1
100%
1
Saginaw S. G. Machino Gun
100,5
1
Southorn California
100,
1
Sunlight Elcotric
100,0
1
United Motors
100,3
1
..C Spark Plug
99.99
2
New Doparture - Bristol
99.97
3
Fisher - Entire
99.96
4
Fisher Tornstodt
99.9
5
Oldsmobile
99.9
5
Chovrolet - Entire
99.89
6
Chovrolot Goor & axlo
99.84
7
Chovrolot Contral Office
99.79
8
Now York Contral Office
99.73
9
Fishor - Flint # 1
99.7
10
AVERAGE ALL GENERAL HOTORS
99.3
Dotroit Contral Office
99.46
11
Doloo Products
99.2
12
Eastorn Mircraft - Bloomfield
98.8
13
Cloveland Diesol
98.43
14
Pontiac
98.0
15
Chevrolet - Forgo
97.8
16
Buick Aviation
95.0
17
-2-
15-
Fisher - Garage
100%
1
Fisher - Grand Rapids Stamping
100%
1
Fishur - Lensing
100%
1
Fishor - Momphis miroraft
100,1
1
Fisher - Pontine
100%
1
Fisher - Service
100;
1
Fishor - Tank
100,7
1
Floot Salos
100,:
1
Foreign Distributors
100%
1
Frigidairo
100%
1
G. E. I. C.
100%
1
G. R. A. C.
100%
1
G. Id. Building
100,3
1
G. M. Instituto
100%
1
G. 14. Oversoas
100%
1
G. % Proving Ground
100%
1
G. If Resoarch
100%
1
Guide Lamp
100%
1
Harrison Radiator
100,1
1
Hyntt Boarings
100,3
1
Inland Yfg.
100%
1
Modern Housing
100,
1
Mornino Products
100%
1
Motors Holding
100,
1
Motors Insurance
100,:
1
Now Doparture - Loridon
100,
1
Packard Eloctric
100,!
1
Rochostor Products
100,:
1
Saginaw "c.lloable Iron
100%
1
Saginaw S. G. # 1
100%
1
Saginaw S. G. Machino Gun
100,:
1
Southorn California
100,2
1
Sunlight Elcotric
100,:
1
United Motors
100,3
1
..C Spark Plug
99.99
2
New Doparturo - Bristol
99.97
3
Fisher - Entire
99.96
4
Fisher Tornstodt
99.9
5
Oldsmobile
99.9
5
Chovrolet - Entire
99.89
6
Chovrolot Goar & xlo
99.84
7
Chovrolet Contral Office
99.79
8
New York Contral Office
99.73
9
Fishor - Flint # 1
99.7
10
AVERAGE ALL GENERAL HOTORS
99.2
Dotroit Contral Office
99.46
11
Doloo Products
99.2
12
Eastorn Mircraft - Bloomfield
98.8
13
Clovoland Diosol
98.43
14
Pontiac
98.0
15
Chovrolet - Forge
97.8
16
Buick Aviation
95.0
17
Sales of United States Savings Bonds
From May 1 through May 15, 1942
Compared with sales quota for same period
(At issue price in millions of dollars)
#
Series I
:
Series y and G
:
Total
2
Actual Sales
:
Quota,
:
Sales
:
Actual Sales
:
Quota,
:
Sales
:
Actual Sales
:
Quota,
:
Sales
Date :
:
May 1
:
May 1
:
to Date
:
:
May 1
:
May 1
: to Date
#
:
May 1
:
May 1
: to date
:
Daily
:
to
:
to
: as x of
2
Daily
:
to
:
to
: as $ of
:
Daily
:
to
:
to
: as $ of
:
:
Date
:
Date
:
Quota
:
:
Date
:
Date
:
Quota
:
:
Date
:
Date
:
Quota
1
$ 12.7
$ 12.7
$ 14.0
90.7%
$ 7.3
$ 7-3
$ 9.0
81.1$
$ 20.0
$ 20.0
$ 23.0
87.0%
2
11.6
24.3
25.7
94.6
7.9
15.2
16.0
95.0
19.4
39.4
41.7
94.5
4
22.3
46.5
47.8
97.3
10.3
25.5
29.5
86.4
32.6
72.0
77.3
93.1
5
8.9
55.5
57.8
96.0
7.6
33.1
37.1
89.2
16.6
88.6
94.9
93.4
6
18.4
73.8
70.5
104.7
15.6
48.8
49.8
98.0
34.0
122.6
120.3
101.9
7
23.2
97.0
84.0
115.5
12.1
60.8
60.3
100.8
35.3
157.9
144.3
109.4
8
17.2
114.2
98.0
116.5
6.4
67.2
69.3
97.0
23.6
181.4
167.3
105.4
9
14.5
128.7
109.7
117.3
5.6
72.8
76.3
95.4
20.0
201.5
186.0
108.3
11
23.3
152.0
131.8
115.3
8.1
50.8
89.8
90.0
31.3
232.8
221.6
105.1
12
9.4
161.3
141.8
113.8
4.6
85.4
97.4
87.7
14.0
246.8
239.2
103.2
13
15.8
177.1
154.5
114.6
9.0
94.4
110.1
85.7
24.8
271.5
264.6
102.6
14
16.9
194.0
168.0
115.5
7.7
102.1
120.6
84.7
24.6
296.2
288.6
102.6
15
14.9
205.9
182.0
114.8
6.8
108.9
129.6
84.0
21.7
317.9
311.6
102.0
16
193.7
136.6
330.3
15
215.8
150.1
365.9
9
225.8
157.7
383.5
20
238.5
170.3
405.8
21
252.0
180.8
432.8
22
266.0
189.8
455.8
23
277.7
196.8
474.5
25
299.8
210.3
510.1
26
309.8
217.9
527.7
Regraded Unclassified
27
322.5
230.5
553.0
28
336.0
241.0
577.0
29
350.0
250.0
600.0
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Research and Statistics.
May 16, 1942.
Source: Actual sales figures are deposits with the Treasurer of the United States on account of proceeds of sales of
United States savings bonds. Figures have been rounded and will not necessarily add to totals.
18, 16
tite
JOB says that Kr.
termarly 27 with Mr.
served with
that he is very
this project is
lise. Ao has
comparable assign-
10.
TOM: MB. GASTON
TO:L2
May 19
0
Mack states that he
have
rly with
Mr.
served with
that he is very
this project is
lyin his line. Be has
had comparable assign-
FROM: MR. GASTON
17
1
MAY 16 1942
Dear Mr. May:
I have received your letter of May 13,
with regard to a survey of health supplies in
the United Nations. I wish to designate Mr.
John c. Driver, statistician, Procurement
Division, as the representative of the
Treasury Department.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthau. Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
Mr. Stacy May,
Director, Statistics Division,
War Production Board,
Washington, D. c.
FCR:ds
Photo file n.m.c.
By Messenger Veach 10:00
Orig File next to Cliften mack
10. mn. Maston's office
WAR PRODUCTION BOARD
WASHINGTON, D.C.
IN REPLY REFER TOI
May 13, 1942
The Non. Henry Morgenthau
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Subject: Health Supplies Surveyl/
Dear Mr. Secretary:
The policy of the United States and of all other
governments has been to accord to health supplies a posi-
tion of importance in wartime programs equal to that of
armament and of basic economic activities.
A Survey of Health Supplies in the United Nations
has been insugurated in accordance with the directive by
Mr. Lauchlin Currie, Administrative Assistant to the Presi-
dent, transmitted to Mr. Donald M. Nelson, Chairman, War
Production Board, and to no.
Directive: The directive specifically states the following
points for development in the Health Supplies
Survey:
Phase "1. To reconcile available data of United States Army
and British War Office experience with medical
supplies and adapt existing supply tables to the
major theatres of present and anticipated oper-
ations;"
Ref.: Memoranda of March 31, 1942, April 7, 1942, April 11,
1942, and May 2, 1942, to Dr. Stacy May, Dr. Vergil
Reed, Mr. N. L. McKlroy, War Production Board
Ref.: Directive of March 17, 1942, The White House
ICTORY
BUY
Regraded Unclassified
The Hon. Henry Morgenthau
May 13, 1942 - 2
Phase "2. To estimate military requirements of the United
Nations on the basis of men under arns in each
theatre;"
Phase "3. To determine world sources of supply, production
and the possibilities of expansion, with due re-
gard to essential needs of civilian population;
and
Phase ⑉4. To develop immediate and long range plans for the
supply of all military areas with minimum shipping."
To comply with the provisions of the directive, a
general Survey of the entire supply and requirements situation
is necessary. The preliminary outline for this Survey has
been organized and submitted to Mr. Currie and has been ap-
proved by him.
Identity:
Health Supplies are considered to include botanical
and animal drugs, medicinal chemicals, biological products,
surgical dressings, surgical instruments and equipment, and
other related products. The Survey will include strategic
and critical raw materials necessary for the extraction,
manufacture, processing or fabrication of such health supplies.
Responsibilities:
Responsibility for the assembly of data has been
assigned to Dr. John N. McDonnell, Research Adviser to the
Health Supplies Branch.2/ His staff already has accumulated
background information for this Survey and is prepared to
serve as the focal point for assembly of the remainder, with
the cooperation of the other agencies concerned,
With the object of minimizing duplication of effort
and expediting the work, the over-all task has been sub-divided
tentatively into portions which it is believed can be handled
advantageously by the respective war agencies.
Cooperation will, of course, be mutual. The activities
of each agency may be expected to gain in effectiveness through
the existence of this clearing house for health supplies information.
Ref.: Memorandum of April 2, 1942
Regraded Unclassified
The Hon, Henry Morgenthau
May 13, 1942 - 3
Organization:
With your cooperation, it is our belief that the
project can be handled most expeditiously without meetings
of representatives of the agencies involved. It is our in-
tention to make such time-consusing conferences unnecessary
by periodic reports on the status of the project, and by
free current inter-change of views among the respective
agencies.
In order that all agencies may be acquainted with
the organization of the Survey, a full schedule of the sug-
gested responsibilities of each agency is attached. This
division of the work has been arrived at after considerable
study, and the individual responsibilities are believed to
correspond closely with the data and channels available in
each agency. Comments are welcome, nevertheless, if it
appears to any of the agencies that there are discrepancies
in the schedule,
In order to assure proper responsibility and proper
channels in both directions, it seems essential that a single
representative for the purpose of the Survey be designated
by each agency. This representative will be responsible for
seeing that his agency's portion of the work is carried out
and transmitted to the clearing house, and will serve at the
same time as a medium for keeping his agency informed of the
status of the project.
Will you please designate such a representative
in writing this week?
Data covering the factors shown in the accompanying
outline are requested by Monday, May 25, on the following
highly critical items.
Agar
Digitalis
Arsphenamine
Emetine
Acid ascorbic
Ergot
Acid nicotinic (and amide)
Ipecac
Acid tannic and nutgalls
Morphine
Atabrine
Necarsphenamine
Atropine
Opium
Belladonna
Procaine
Caffeine
Quinine
Cinchona bark
Riboflavin
Codeine
Sulfanilamide
Regraded Unclassified
The Hon. Henry Morgenthan
May 13, 1942 - 4
Sulfadiazine
Sulfaraphenamine
Sulfapyridine
Theobromine
Sulfaguanidine
Thiamine hydrochloride
Sulfathiazole
Requests for comparable statistics on other critical
items will be made from time to time as the Survey progresses.
Very truly yours,
Stacy May
Director
Statistics Division
Regraded Unclassified
Health Supplies Section
Statistics Division
WAR PRODUCTION BOARD
May 12, 1942
HEALTH SUPPLIES SURVEY
DIVISION OF RESPONSIBILITY AMONG DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES
War Department
Office of the Surgeon General, Medical Department
Requisitions, orders and deliveries of health
supplies for (a) United States Army; (b) United States
Navy; (c) Lend-Lease Nations, by military and by civilian
destination; (d) American and other Red Cross; (e) the
several foreign war relief groups.
Headquarters Services of Supply, Commodities Division
1. Requirements information covering the following
units in the Army: (a) Office of the Surgeon-General, for
the ground force; (b) Air Corps; (c) Quartermaster Corps.
2. Bills of materials for each commodity covered.
This information will provide the basis for calculating raw
material requirements and for assistance in determining
scarce and critical materials.
Navy Department
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Office of the Surgeon-General
Commodity requirements for (a) Navy on direct
purchase (itoms not obtained by the Surgeon-General's Office
of the Army); (b) Marine Corps, if separate from the Navy
supplies; and (c) Coast Guard.
Federal Security Agency
Public Health Service, Office of the Surgeon-General
Requirements for (a) Marine hospitals; and (b) Public
Health Service. Technical assistance of the Public Health Service.
Regraded Unclassified
Technical assistance of the Public Health Service will
provide data on regional health problems, on epidemiology
in domestic and foreign areas, and on replacement items
for scarce commodities.
Office of Civilian Defense
Office of the Director
Estimates of the commodities required for civilian
defense in first aid posts, emergency posts, casualty stations,
and for use in base and civilian hospitals.
Treasury Department
Procurement Division (Representative from this Division)
Requirements for those agencies for which the
Procurement Division purchases health supply commodities.
Narcotic Tax Unit
Supply and consumption data for narcotic items.
Alcohol Tax Unit
Supply and consumption data for alcohols.
Tariff Commission
Chemical Section
Production and consumption data of certain
important commodities obtained on regular monthly schedules.
Department of Commerce
Census Bureau
Production and consumption data of certain
important commodities obtained on regular monthly schedules.
Foreign Trade Statistics Division
Monthly reports of imports and exports.
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Drug and
Chemical Division
Past consumption, and source data, both foreign
and domestic, for important commodities and raw materials.
War Production Board
Health Supplies Branch
"All available data contained within its files
concerning production and stocks of commodities in the field.
Division of Civilian Supply
The Health and Medical Supplies Branch will determine
civilian requirements upon the basis of available supplies of
raw materials and finished commodities. Puch of the data
necessary will be available from the files of the Health Supplies
Section, Statistics Division. Where domentic allocations are
necessary, this group will evolve and recommend such programs.
Other Branches
The various commodity Branches of the "ar Production
Board will provide production and other essential data concern-
ing the materials for health supplies. These include branches
handling chemicals, aluminus, copper, stool, nickel, rubber,
and textiles.
Department of Agriculture
Burcau of Plant Industry
Date on cultivation and supply of botanical drugs
from domestic sources.
Office of Lond-Lease Administration
The Office of the Administrator
Requirements for health supplies by lintions receiving
Lend-Lease assistance, ecific as to items and quantities.
Board of Economic Marfare
Office of the Director
Specific requirements for health supplies for the
Central American and South American countries and the Dominion
of Canada and other friendly Nations, with the exception of
Regraded Unclassified
of those receiving Lend-Lease aid. Determination of
production, stocks and requirements data on health supplies
in accordance with the "Commodity Basic Data Report" for
all Nations other than those receiving Lend-Lease Aid.
Cooperating Agencies
Considerable general cooperation and technical
assistance will be requested from the following agencies
and organizations in the course of the survey:
National Research Council, Committee on Medical and
Health Problems.
Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services, Health
and Medical Committee
Office of Scientific Research and Development, Committee
on Medical Research
Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs,
Economic Warfare Division
Office of Price Administration, Price Division, Chemical
Soction, Drug Unit
The State Department
The Maritime Commission
Formulation of the program of development for
Phases 1, 2 and 4 of the Health Supplies Survey will take
place in the immediate future and a succeeding memorandum
will outline the respective functions and method of cooperation.
Copy of the proposed "Commodity Basic Data Report" for the
Allied Nations, together with detailed operating instructions,
will be attached to communications to interested agencies.
Regraded Unclassified
THE BRITISH SUPPLY COUNCIL IN NORTH AMERICA
28
BOX 680
TELEPHONE: REPUBLIC 7860
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STATION
WASHINGTON, D. c.
May 16, 1942.
My dear White,
I gave you a-memorandum about a fortnight
ago containing figures of our estimated future financial
position, and asking that in view of our probable deficit
the air contracts as well as the ordnance contracts should
now be taken over. You asked me on that occasion what
delay there normally was between payment on the contracts
and the actual export of the planes. I have consulted
Air Marshal Hill on this and,he now tells me that it has
always been our policy to ship the goods intended for
export as quickly as possible. The actual delay depends
largely on the availability of shipping, but the over-all
average is somewhat on the order of twenty-one days. Thus,
there would be likely to be in the U.S.A. at any time dur-
ing the coming months, some three weeks stock of delivered
material.
As the delay in shipping is evidently, for
the most part, quite short, it does not seem to me that,
if later on our financial position is seriously deterior-
ated, it is likely that any satisfactory remedy could then
be found by purchase by your Government of material coming
off our contracts but not yet shipped. I feel sure that
the cleanest and easiest method must be by the take-over,
in some form, of our outstanding contracts, and I very much
hope that you will once more review this possibility.
Yours sincerely,
Hhillips
Dr. H. D.
Director of Monetary Research,
United States Treasury,
Washington, TAM 1. C.
notatvity
deserved
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
29
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 16, 1942
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM Mr. White
SUBJECT: Silver Purchase Agreements
The table below compares our silver purchases from
Canada and Mexico under agreement with total silver imports
from these two countries. We have bought no silver under the
new Mexican agreement, and purchases under the Canadian agree-
ment declined to zero by the end of last year. Total silver
imports from Mexico have been well maintained in recent months,
while imports from Canada are running somewhat lower than last
year.
FROM CANADA
FROM MEXICO
Imports
Treas. Purchases
Imports Treas.Purchase
under Agreement
under Agreement
(In thousands of ounces)
1936
16,692
7,497
64,925
55,464
1937
18,642
9,759
68,179
52,545
1938
29,496
14,439
96,454
15,001
1939
24,018
12,136
79,947
1940
20,550
11,672
73,536
1941
18,844
7,131
73,749
0
1941
Jan.-Mar.
4,501
1,427
18,581
Apr.-June
4,789
1,952
17,524
July-Sept.
5,499
2,852
19,749
Oct.-Dec.
4,055
900
17,895
O
1942
Jan.-Mar.
3,512
0
19,201
o
April
1,384
O
6,304
0
Includes import of 6,687,000 OZS., special Treas. purchases
of March, April, May 1938.
Includes import of 35,000,000 OZS., a special Treas. purchase
of December 1937.
Regraded Unclassified
30
-2-
The Canadian agreement, under which we undertake to
buy up to 1,200,000 ounces a month, has been in operation
since March 1936. The first Mexican agreement, with a monthly
limit of 5,000,000 ounces, was in operation between January
1936 and March 1938. The second Mexican agreement, with a
monthly limit of 6,000,000 ounces, has been in operation since
December 1941.
31
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
MI
DATE May 16, 1942
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Kamarck
Subject: Of Possible Interest: Comparison of American and
German Airplane Production
German and American Airplane
Production
German
U. S.
Production
Production
December, 1941 #
March, 1942 ##
Type
Pursuit
950
776
Light and medium
bombers (including
2-engine naval patrol) 1040
624
Heavy bombers
60
156
Total-basic combat
2,050
1,556
Trainers
300
1,369
Other military types
(transports, observa-
tion, etc.)
250
537
GRAND TOTAL
2,600
3,462
* Source: U.S. War Department, TM 30-450, "Handbook on German
Military Forces."
** Source: War Production Board, compiled by U.S. Treasury,
Division of Research and Statistics.
Regraded Unclassified
32
- 2 -
Comments
In spite of all the publicity about our airplane
production achievements, we have no reason for complacency.
1. The Germans still produce 500 more basic combat
planes a month than we do, or 2,050, compared to 1,556.
2. According to C.O.I., the British reported some
time ago that the Germans had increased their plane produc-
tion in the winter of 1942 by 15 percent. The comparison
between German December figures and our March figures,
therefore, may actually understate our lag behind the Germans.
C
33
0
P
Y
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
May 16, 1942
In reply refer to
FD
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
copies of telegram no. 260, dated May 15, 1942, from the
American Consulate General, Sydney, Australia, reporting
receipt from the Commonwealth Bank on May 13 of Havy bill
no. 3861 of May 5, 1942, drawn by Lieutenant Patroney in
the amount of $322,800.
The Treasury may disregard the last paragraph of
the telegram which concerns administration of State
Department telegraphic codes.
Enclosure:
From Consulate, Sydney,
no. 260, May 15, 1942.
Copy:bj:5-16-42
C
0
34
P
Y
ALH
Sydney
This telegram must be
paraphrased before being
Dated May 15, 1942
communicated to anyone
other than a Governmental
Rec'd 7:22 a.m.
agency. (BR)
Secretary of State,
Washington.
260, May 15, 5 p.m.
"Reference is made to the Department's telegram
no. 173, May 1, 11 p.m.
Received from Commonwealth Bank today".
Navy bill no. 3861 May 5. 1942, drawn by Patroney
Lieutenant J. G. Scuerr for $322,800.
Referring to the Department's telegram no. 174, May 2, 3 p.m.
will Department designate code group for above quotation.
PAIMER.
RR
eh:copy
5-15-42
Regraded Unclassified
35
TELEGRAM SENT
HRL
Chungking
This telegram must bE
paraphrased before being
Dated May 16, 1942
communicated to anyone
other than a Governmental
Rec'd 11:01 a.m.
agency. (BR)
Secretary of State,
Washington.
562, May y 16, 9 a.m.
FROM ..DLER FOR SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
"TF 37
OnE. Miss Chumley of board secretariat Escaped
from Hong Kong at the End of March writes from Kweilin
Taylor secretary of American Community working
closely with Chairman Hunt and Frese active in com-
munity affairs and in good health.
Two. Federal RESERVE Bank of NEW York's
statements of account to February 28 and SET of
credit and debit advices posted March 26 received
May 12."
GAUSS
WSB
36
INCOMING CABLEGRAM
Date: May 16, 1942
From: Chungking.
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
#12
With regard to the two new accounts in the names of
Allied Victory U. S. dollar bonds and the U. S. dollar
savings certificates, we are instructed by the Ministry
of Finance to ascertain your views and advice as to the
possibility of investing portion or whole of these de-
posits in gilt edged securities such as Government bonds
or Treasury bills to earn some interest. Please cable.
(signed) Central Bank of China.
(Received by telephone from Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, N. I.
May 18, 1942)
TV
Regraded Unclassified
37
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: AMERICAN EMBASSY, Montevideo, Uruguay.
DATED: May 16, 1942, 2 p.m.
NUMBER: 390.
Reference 18-made to Department's telegram no. 220,
April 16.
An important official of the Bank of the Republic
has now made available to us the information given below,
which 1s strictly confidential.
Approximately a month ago, a Buenos Aires banking
group, realizing that the Government of Uruguay badly
needed funds to meet the increasing deficit in the
budget, offered the Government a five year ten million
peso loan, the terms of which would be: With the group's
funds, the Bank of the Republic to purchase and bring
to Uruguay in gold bars five million dollars, the Bank
on the security of the gold to lend to the group ten
million pesos to be loaned to the Government, and on
maturity of the loan to deliver the gold to the group.
The Bank of the Republic consulted the Central
Hanover Trust Company with regard to the regulations
governing the exportation of gold before completing the
transaction, and refused to conclude the bargain upon
being told that export licenses were not granted for
gold intended for private parties.
It 1s
Regraded Unclassified
38
-2- #390, May 16, 2 p.m., from Montevideo.
It is the understanding of the Embassy that an
export license to cover the shipment was granted. The
Department may desire to take steps discreetly to ensure
that the shipment is not made, even though it 1s in-
formed that the Bank of the Republic does not plan to
carry out the deal.
DAWSON
39
Reclosures
COPY No."
(Classification)
(For Record Bestion only)
MILITARY INTELLIGENCE DIVISION W. D. G. S.
MILITARY ATTACHÉ REPORT
FINLAND,
(Country reported on)
Subject WAR DEPARTMENT BUDGET POR 1942,
1. G. No.
6420
(Driet descriptive title)
From M. A.Helsinki,FinlandReport No.
523
Date
May 16. 1942,
Source and degree of reliability:
Statute Book of Finland, January 9, 1942.
SUMMARY.-Here enter careful summary of report, containing substance succinetly etated; include
important facts, names, places, dates, etc.
Total National Expenditures
11,069,735,000
War Department budget: 22.04% of total expenditures 2,439,787,400
Distribution by originator
Routing space below for use in M. I. D. The section indicating the distribution will place a check mark in
the lower part of the recipients' box in case one copy only is to go to him, or will Indicate the number of copies
in case more than one should be sent. The message center of the Intelligence Branch will draw & circle around
the box of the recipient to which the particular copy is to go.
OHQ
0-1
G-8
0-4
WPD
ONI
State
Comm.
Miss.
F.B.L
A.W.C.
C.&G.
Ind. Coll.
Export
8.8.
Control
X
I
A. o, of 8.
Chist in
MA Bec.
FL Bec.
Bee. Bee.
Trans.
CIB
880
P.sofT.
Inf.
Coord.
Coord.
G-1
Bec.
Boc.
OLLA
Tank
Cont.
of Int.
Center
2
Air
BE
CE
BE
EX
WE
FR
LA
Bit.
Cost.
Dism.
Field
ASW
USW
ASWA
Pers.
2
4
CHIEFS OF ARMS AND SERVICES
Inf.
Car.
FA
CAO
ДО
AAT
it
Armd.
Ord.
QM
CWS
Med.
Engr.
Fin.
Attaché at
OG Phil,
OG Pa.
OG Haw.
Enclosures:
VAR DEPARTMENT
O. C. B. IT (Rev.)
a. & PRINTING INFICE
Regraded (Clastification) Unclassified
Wer Department Budget for 1942,
The following is the War Department Budget for the fiscal year
1942 which coindides with the calender year:
Finnmarks:
Pay of the Army
640,345,200
Rations
340,000,000
Uniforms and equipment
115,800,000
Barrucks and quarters
36,500,000
Purchase and maintenance of horses
52,700,000
Purchase and mointenance of wer material and vehicles
288,000,000
Fuel and lubricants
100,000,000
Portifications
1,800,000
Other real estete
107,400,000
Transportation, travel end per diem
60,000,000
Miscellaneous expenditures
40,050,000
Civic Cuards, excepting pay end travel
50,000,000
Coast Guards (budget of the Ministry of the Interior)
27,379,900
"
R
"
or
"
"
#
Border Guards
81,143,100
Powder Factory
31,157,300
Cartridge
"
68,732,300
Rifle
"
29,787,500
Gun
if
85,¥7,500
Shell Loading Factory
7,456,800
Airplane Fectory
111,71,000
Shipbuilding Yard
16,924,200
Clothing Factory
4,563,90
Fuze Factory
31,88',500
Army and Air Force repair shops
18,162,600
Allowances to families of men on active service and
pensions to war veterans and invalide (budget of the
Ministry of Social welfore)
81,871,000
TOTAL
2,439,787,400
Total National Expenditure
11,069,735,000
war Department budget - 22.04 % of total expenditures.
Rate of exchange: $1.00 to 48.85 Finnmarks.
Notes by the 11/4. 10 in previous budgets, the revenues of the
Government factories are shown to be equal to the expenditures but
from the examination of the whole budget it appears that these items
should be regarded as military expenditures.
The ordinary military expenditures are not perceptibly larger
than in the 1941 budget (see Report 271-6420), with the exception of
pensions. It is evident that the enornous wer expenditures (according
to Swedish newspepers at least 2 billion Finnmarks monthly) are prin-
cipally covered by means of Government loans. It 18 also evident that
there will be supplementary budgets.
Details regarding the expenditures for the Army Navy and Air
Force are not available.
*
G. S. huthsteiner,
Colonel, G.S.,
Militery Attache.
From:M/A. Helsinki, Finland. Report No. 523. Date: May 16, 1942.
2 -
Regraded Unclassifie
Date May 16, 194219
To:
Secretary Morgenthau
From:
Mr. Kamarck
The attached directive of
the British Political Warfare
Executive outlines the British
Government's policy towards the
German people. You might find
it of interest.
41
PWE war aims, for Germany only, are to be given by
means of two or three definitive talks explaining speeches
of Churchill, Cripps and Eden. These talks are not to be
an appeal to the German people but rather by way of state-
ment of fact. The German people will be told what to ex-
pect and left to make their own choice.
Using Churchill, Cripps, and Eden as text, the Direc-
tive calls for the following line:
(a) The certain knowledge that Germany can't win is
being concealed from the German masses by the Nazis.
(b) The Germans' choice is between a protracted war
followed by anarchy and chaos and an action inside Germany
to shorten the war and save her from anarchy.
(c) By citing relevant quotes from speeches by Churchill
Cripps and Eden, PWE lans to show the German people what
their action must be, namely to destroy Hitler and his gang
and to reestablish respect for internal and external law.
(d) This action must take place before, not after,
the United Nations are victorious.
(e) Example of Norway or Holland is cited to those in
Germany who say they can do nothing. These examples prove
that civil courage without weapons can avail against the
Gestapo.
(f) The United Nations are ready to welcome as Allies
anyone, whatever his creed or race, who risks his life in
war against Facism and National Socialism. Anyone who re-
mains neutral we will treat as an enemy.
(g) Thus Germany can be saved from protracted war
and anarchy only by Germans. The United Nations can and
shall defend their liberties during and after the war; they
cannot redeem Germany. Only the Germans can do that.
Regraded Unclassified
42
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
May 16, 1942
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Henry:
The attached is from the British Political
Warfare Executive German Directive for the week end-
ing May 22.
Sincerely,
Biu
William J. Donovan
43
PWE war aims, for Germany only, are to be given by
means of two or three definitive talks explaining speeches
of Churchill, Cripps and Eden. These talks are not to be
an appeal to the German people but rather by way of state-
ment of fact. The German people will be told what to ex-
pect and left to make their own choice.
Using Churchill, Cripps, and Eden as text, the Direc-
tive calls for the following line:
(a) The certain knowledge that Germany can't win is
being concealed from the German masses by the Nazis.
(b) The Germans' choice is between a protracted war
followed by anarchy and chaos and an action inside Germany
to shorten the war and save her from anarchy.
(c) By citing relevant quotes from speeches by Churchill,
Cripps and Eden, PWE plans to show the German people what
their action must be, namely to destroy Hitler and his gang
and to reestablish respect for internal and external law.
(a) This action must take place before, not after,
the United Nations are victorious.
(e) Example of Norway or Holland is cited to those in
Germany who say they can do nothing. These examples prove
that civil courage without weapons can avail against the
Gestapo.
(f) The United Nations are ready to welcome as Allies
anyone, whatever his creed or race, who risks his life in
war against Fascism and National Socialism. Anyone who re-
mains neutral we will treat as an enemy.
(g) Thus Germany can be saved from protracted war and
anarchy only by Germans. The United Nations can and shall
defend their liberties during and after the war; they cannot
redeem Germany. Only the Germans can do that.
Regraded Unclassified
44
-2-
PWE German, Italian and French Directives all call fα
the utmost caution in handling news of the Eastern front.
PWE asks for Germany that the vital passages from Russian
and German communiques be given together with a cautious
interpretation based on daily advice from the War Office.
45
DIRECT at
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
May 16, 1942
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Henry:
Attached is the British Political
Warfare Executive French Directive for the
period ending May 31.
Sincerely,
Bu
William J. Donovan
Attachment
46
Following is the Political Warfare
SECRET
French Directive for the period ending May
3300RDIKATOR OF INFORMATION
1. A unique attempt is made in this directive
to cover fundamental objectives which are as follows:
a. To demoralize the German military
and civil forces of occupation.
b.
To hinder use by the enemy of French
Economic resources.
C. To convince the French people, and
particularly those in the unoccupied zone that the
government of Laval cannot be an independent power
representing France itself, and that, because the Germans
know they can make it do what they want, it is fostered
by them.
d. Restoration of French confidence in
Britain and British policy particularly as regards
post war policy.
e. To convince the French that no terri-
torial designs on the French Empire are held by the British.
f. To maintain the morale of the French
people and to prepare them for active cooperation with
the allied forces of liberation.
2. Long-term tasks included in directive
in order of priority as follows:
a. To treat air raid precaution measures
at least twice a week for the purpose of diverting
Nazi controlled anti-aircraft weapons from the Eastern
Front and Germany to France. Material prepared by
Regraded Unclassified
47
-2-
Political Warfare Executive will be forwarded
SECRET
this campaign will be explained in full short
OF INFORMATION
the main, it is meant to create a demand for mone
protection against RAF raids in France.
b. At least once weekly, advice for
Commando raids to be given.
c. To expose the real Nazi schemes and
plans to Balkanize France.
d. Hints on scientific listening.
e. Admiralty themes for French mer-
cantile fleet and French navy.
f. Economic exploitation of occupied
countries and France by Germans.
g. Allied resources and war production,
especially the United States.
h. Appeals to peasants which are intended
to limit the movement of food from farms to cities.
i. Appeals to French youth.
3. The above long-term tasks were listed
for the first time and, in subsequent discussions, are
subject to revision. If our French section and planning
board would send their views and list of long-term
tasks and fundamental objectives for discussion and
comparison here it would be useful.
4. In order of importance, PWE lists the
following tasks for the coming fortnight:
a. By linking the following points,
to convince the French people that all is not well
in Germany.
1. German internal troubles,
especially manpower problem.
Regraded Unclassified
48
-3-
2. Fear of RAF offensive
SECRE
3. Inability of Germans
or
INFORMATION
air warfare on all fronts.
4- German terrorism and oppression
in France and all occupied countries.
5. Radio and press censorship in
Europe to hide truth from France.
6. Comparison of German position
in 1942 with that in 1940 (caution is given to prevent
impression that an immediate crack-up in home front
is at hand. This task is connected with the funda-
mental objective a.)
b. The myth of Laval's cleverness
should be broken.
c. The socialist new order of Europe
which Germans and Laval are trying to sell to French
workers should be debunked. This can be done by
showing the new slave labor of conquered Europe and
also the German methods of treating their own working
classes and by stressing Laval's personal wealth and
past life. Emphasis can also be placed on the pro-
gressively better position of British and American workers.
d. French should be convinced that no
designs on French Colonial possessions are held by
United Nations. This is linked with the fundamental
objectives d and e, which must, during the present
fortnight, become tasks. Also called for is constant
repetition of American and British statements on
Martinique and Madagascar.
Regraded Unclassified
49
13
U.S. SECRET
BRITISH LOST SECRET
OPTEL No. 161.
Information received up to 0700/16.
1. NAVAL
One of H.M. Destroyers engaged two armed
enemy trawlers off the Channel Islands on 14th/15th
and left them sinking. She had no damage or
casualties,
A destroyer depot ship and a transport
in convoy to Middle East, struck mines off Cape Agulhas
on the afternoon 15th. The former was in no
immediate danger of sinking.
A 7,000 ton British ship was attacked by
raider on 10th and abandoned a thousand miles South
West of Cocos Islands.
An attack by human torpedoes was attempted
at Alexandria on the 14th/15th. The enemy failed to
penetrate the defences and four prisoners were taken.
2. MILITARY
BURMA: Western Front: There was no contact
with the enemy in (?the Kalowa) Area up to the 12th.
Our withdrawal in this area is continuing.
Eastern Front: Chungking Comminiques
of the 15th reported that Japanese had captured
Tingyueh 50 miles West of Yungchang and were striking
Westwards across the Irrawaddy from Bhamo.
3. AIR OPERATIONS
WESTERN FRONT: 15th. 8 Hurricane bombers
with fighter escort attacked enemy minesweepers off
the Aherbourg Peninsula. They sank one, probably
sank another and damaged a third. Our fighters
destroyed a German bomber and damaged two other aircrai
off the East Coast,
15th/16th. Fifty bombers
were sent sea mining off the East Coast of Denmark and
Heligoland in good weather. Four of them are missing.
Seventeen Hudsons were sent to attack two convoys
totalling twenty ships off the Dutch Coast. Both
located and preliminary reports indicate that
were three and possibly four ships were left burning and
three more were damaged. Six Hudsons are missing and
three others crashed on return.
MALTA: Between 1515/14th and 1100/15th
about eleven bombers and 120 fighters attacked or
destroyed five enemy aircraft, probably destroyed
patrolled the Island. Our Fighters and anti-aircraft
one and damaged eight. We lost one Spitfire.
BURMA: 13th. Our aircraft attacked river
craft near Schwegyin and the Aerodrome at Akyab.
14th. River craft on the Chinawin
River were again attacked and other aircraft bombed
Magwe and Myitkyina Aerodrome.
Regraded Unclassified
13
COPY NO.
BRITISH MOST SECRET
Regraded Unclassifi
(U.S. SECRET)
OPTEL No. 162
Information received up to 7 A.M., 17th May, 1942,
1. NAVAL
Reconnnissance aircraft yesterday sighted the pocket battloship LUTZON
with five destroyers steering south off the Skaw.
Reference OPTEL No. 161, the destroyer depot ship has arrived at
SIMONSTOWN. It is reported that there are 385 survivors from seven shipe sunk in
the outward HALIFAX convoy last week.
R. MILITARY
BURMA. KALEWA was occupied by the Japanese on the 14th. The withdrawal
of our forces northwards continues.
LIBYA. There is increased onemy activity behind their forward positi
in the area twenty to forty miles south-west of GAZALA.
RUSSIA. In the KHARKOV area, the Russian attacks are continuing against
stubborn German resistance. In the CRIMEA, the Germans have made further progress.
The German Air Force has maintained an intonse air effort against the Russian offen-
sive in the KHARKOV sector during the past few days, this has resulted in a decided
slackening of their attacks against the BLACK SEA ports and the CRIMEA.
3. AIR OPERATIONS
WESTERN FRONT. 15th/16th. 86 mines wore laid successfully. The attack
by 17 Hudsons, 11 of which were R.C.A.F., on convoys off the Dutch coast was very
successful, 2 ships of 2500 tons and 1 of 4,500 tons were left burning, 7 others
between 2,000 and 6,000 tons are claimed as hit and a near miss WILD made on a 5,000
ton ship.
16th. Our fighters carried out seven small offensive operations against
inor objectives in occupied territory without making contact with enemy aircraft.
hey also shot down one German bomber off East Anglia and damaged dnother. Six Mo
09 attacked shipping in PLYMOUTH SOUND; anti-aircraft fire from destroyers shot
own one and damaged another. 16th/17th. Fourtoun aircraft were sent sea-mining
If HELIGOLAND and the east coast of DESMARK. Fourteon Boauforts with torpodoes
are sent to attack the PRINZ EIGEN which WILD reported steaming south at high spoed
rom TRONDHJEM, but failed to locate her. Six Hampdene laid mines in conjunction
1th this operation.
51
- 2 -
MALTA. Between eleven A.M. 15th and twelve thirty P.M. 16th fifteen
bombers, escorted by over 100 fighters, attacked or reconnoitred the Island without
causing serious damage. Fighters destroyed five enemy aircraft, probably destroyed
three and damaged five. One Spitfire crashed on landing (pilot safe) and another
was destroyed on the ground.
4. NORWAY
On the fourteenth May, the German Air Force oporated ten Focke Wulfs
200 (four-engined, long range bomber) from NORWAY against the United States shipping
North-East of ICELAND. There are now believed to be between forty and fifty Focke
Wulfs 200 in the German Air Force.
5. GERMANY
Confirmation of the serious locomotive situation referred to in Hitler's
latest speech is provided by a report that the construction and repair of loco-
motives and wagons in GERMANY are to be given & priority equal to those of air-
craft, tanks and submarines.
52
AMHERST COLLEGE
PROGRAM OF THE CXXI
COMMENCEMENT
ed
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM QUADRANGLE
SUNDAY XVII MAY
MDCCCCXXXXII
ORDER OF EXERCISES
I
Prayer
Commencement Chaplain
EDWIN HILL VAN ETTEN, 1905
II
Music
The Spacious Firmament
Joseph Haydn
AMHERST COLLEGE CHOIR
III
Address
LAURENCE BRADFORD PACKARD
Anson D. Morse Professor of History
IV
Music
Periti autem fulgebunt ut fulgor aetherus
Felix Mendelssohn
AMHERST COLLEGE CHOIR
V
ЯЗСЯО
John Dennett Fernald
West Newton, Massachusetts
Everett Gladding Fuller
Woodbury, New Jersey
Conferring of the Degree Bachelor of Arts
Robert John Gilfert
Teaneck, New Jersey
Randolph Gilman
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
Edwin Howard Gilson
Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts
RITE
William Henry Goelitz, Jr.
Oak Park, Illinois
Dandridge Murdaugh Gray
Bronxville, New York
Alexander Alexander, Jr.
Garden City, New York
Robert Kidder Green
Crestwood, New York
Pawling, New York
Craig Gordon Allen
William Henry Greene
Rochester, New York
Syracuse, New York
Mark Banfield Baker
Edward Emery Gregg
John Mason Betts
Evansion, Illinois
Pelham, New York
Charles Michel Griffith
Robert Caldwell Black
New York, New York
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
George Gregory Grim, Jr.
Clinton Hamlin Blake, Jr.
Great Barrington, Massachusetts
Hillside, New Jersey
Howard Jolivette Gross
Robert Eldredge Blood, Jr.
New Hampton, New Hampshire
Newton Highlands, Massachusetts
William Edward Harper, Jr.
John Jacob Blumberg
Elizabeth, New Jersey
Manhasset, New York
Thomas Southworth Harrison
William Leland Bonnett
Brooklyn, New York
Indianapolis, Indiana
Burton Henry Harwood, Jr.
John Oscar Bower, Jr.
yncote, Pennsylvania
South Glastonbury, Connecticut
Albert Herman Hastorf, III
Robert Barrett Bravo
asbington, D. C.
Vestfield, New Jersey
John Tower Heald
David Broadbent
Providence, Rhode Island
South Weymouth, Massachusetts
Edmond Hardesty Heisler
Edmund Alden Brown
Plainfield, New Jersey
ynnewood, Pennsylvania
Robert Lincoln Hicks
William Cooper Browning
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Swampscott, Massachusetts
William Curtis Holdsworth
Clarence Jay Buckman, Jr.
Langhorne, Pennsylvania
Amberst, Massachusetts
James Braddock Hurd
Douglas Parker Butler
Worcester, Massachusetts
Barrington, Illinois
Robert Edmund Johnson
Henry Louis Butterworth, Jt.
Worcester, Massachusetts
Oak Park, Illinois
Porter Keach Johnston
Richard Wadsworth Case
Longmeadow, Massachusetts
Dallas, Texas
Eric Arthur Jones
James George Chapman
Seneca Falls, New York
Greenwich, Connecticut
William Nicholas Jones
Robert Gooddell Church, Jr.
Teaneck, New Jersey
Meriden, Connecticut
Wilmer Deaver Kehne
Alden Gould Clayton
Frederick, Maryland
Providence, Rhode Island
Willard Kitts
Eric Marbe Cohn
Honolulu, T. H.
New York, New York
Edward Joseph Kneeland
Jay Binswanger Cohn
New York, New York
Holyoke, Massachusetts
James Lay Knight
Thomas Richeson Collins, Jr.
Warsaw, Missouri
Clayton, Missouri
Theodore Woods Lacey
George Lloyd Cowan, III
Arlington, Massachusetts
Edgewater Park, New Jersey
Robert Shields Law
Kenneth Raymond Crittenden
Brooklyn, New York
Glen Ridge, New Jersey
Frank John Leahy
Pelham, New York
Merriam Davis
Windsor, Connecticut
Alexander Cooper Leonard
Thomas Robert Davis
Bennington, Vermont
Bronxville, New York
Harry Alexander McDonald, Jt.
Detroit, Michigan
Allen John deCastro, Jr.
South Norwalk, Connecticut
Robert Knox McKechnie
Wayne Elliot Dorman
Cleveland Heights, Obio
Washington, D. C.
Mano McLaughlin
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Jurgen Henry Doscher, Jt.
Sweetwater, Texas
Robert Drummond McMullin
Waban, Massachusetts
Frederic Curtiss Eastman
Framingham Centre, Massachusetts
Willard Charles McNitt, Jr.
Winnetka, Illinois
James Fairclough
bite Plains, New York
Bradford Talmadge Main
New Haven, Connecticut
Richard Everett Fallow
Vest Hartford, Connecticut
Richard Robinson Major
Bronxville, New York
the common enemy is received with special grati
Regraded Unclassified
Herbert Putnam Mason, Jt.
Plattsburg, New York
Homer Frank Trautmann
Manhasset, New York
Gordon Campbell Menzies
Syracuse, New York
William Evert Traver, II
Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts
Edward Grosvenor Merrill
Warwich, New York
William Sutton Webber, 3rd
Gloucester, Massachusetts
Alan David Miller
New Rochelle, New York
James Hervey Wells
Batavia, New York
George Henry Millington
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Homer Orson White, Jr.
Glenolden, Pennsylvania
Thomas Edward Mulroy
Marblehead, Massachusetts
James Platt White, Jr.
Winchester, Massachusetts
Charles Babcock Nevins
Winnetka, Illinois
William Homer Whorf
Winchester, Massachusetts
Yonkers, New York
Thomas Clinton Wickenden
Richard Joseph Newman
Short Hills, New Jersey
Richard Boynton Page
Weston, Massachusetts
Richard Purdy Wilbur
North Caldwell, New Jersey
Arthur Walden Palmer, Jr.
Haverford, Pennsylvania
Lawrence Edward Willard, Jt.
Saco, Maine
William Henry Patch
Jenkintown, Pennsylvania
William Powell Williams
Saint Louis, Missouri
Ward Harris Patton, Jr.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
CUM LAUDE
Theodore Tuttle Peck
Shaker Heights, Obio
James Kermott Alexander
Robert Thomas Pfeifer
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Englewood, New Jersey
French
Harlan Buddington Phillips
Mount Vernon, New York
Binghamton, New York
John Townsend Burgess
Franklin Hopton Preston
Belleville, New Jersey
Economics
Charles Vincent Ramsey
Glen Rock, New Jersey
John Carson Rather
Brooklyn, New York
John Jonas Chester, III
Columbus, Ohio
Arthur Marshall Raymond
Hingham, Massachusetts
American Studies
William Ely Ripley
Shaker Heights, Obio
Miner Dunham Crary, Jr.
Northport, New York
William Hexamer Rodgers
Merion Station, Pennsylvania
Philosophy
Ralph Eugene Rollins, Jr.
La Jolla, California
Perry Woodruff Davison
Texas City, Texas
John Robert Rowley
Narberth, Pennsylvania
Physics
Harold James Savage
Westfield, New Jersey
Bruce Charlesworth Dein
Honesdale, Pennsylvania
Perry Alden Sawyer
Hackensack, New Jersey
Political Science
Clinton Robert Scharff, Jr.
Detroit, Michigan
David Plumb Eastburn
Irving Lawrence Segal
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Worcester, Massachusetts
Music
William Robert Shera
Scarsdale, New York
Henry Harlow Skinner, Jr.
Yakima, Washington
Richard Woodbury Farwell
Winnetka, Illinois
Economics
Trygve Bjorn Sletteland
Madison, Wisconsin
Obed Finch Slingerland
Albany, New York
Raymond Dante Gozzi
Mount Vernon, New York
Howard Persifor Smith, IV
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
English
William Johnston Smythe
Amberst, Massachusetts
Albert Fox Houghton
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Alan Wilson Steadman
Greenfield, Massachusetts
History
Thomas Ashley Stebbins
Deerfield, Massachusetts
Allen Hathaway Howland
Walpole, Massachusetts
Franklin Stockbridge
Baltimore, Maryland
Economics
George Arthur Stuart
Baldwinville, Massachusetts
Grosvenor Pierce Taylor
Donald William Kittelberger
Queens Village, New York
Greenfield, Massachusetts
Economics
Franklin Charles Thomas, Jr.
Martinsburg, West Virginia
Paul Farr Thomas
John Hugh Liedtke, II
Tulsa, Oklahoma
El Paso, Texas
Mark Lawrence Thomsen
Philosophy
Cleveland, Obio
the common enemy is received with special grati
Regraded Unclassified
Mitchell Stanley Matuszko
Hadley, Massachusetts
Irvin Chaffee Plough
Amberst, Massachusetts
Chemistry
Biology
John Hollister Risley
Waterville, Maine
John Hutchins Reber
Sinking Spring, Pennsylvania
Fine Arts
Philosophy
Gerrit Hubbard Roelofs
East Aurora, New York
Sherborne Baston Simonds
Worcester, Massachusetts
English
Biology
Albin Joseph Sigda
Holyoke, Massachusetts
Donald Laurence Thomsen, Jr.
Brookfield Center, Connecticut
French
Mathematics
Henry Goodwin Storrs
West Chester, Pennsylvania
Richard Storer Ward
Templeton, Massachusetts
Biology
Chemistry
Harrison Greenwood Taylor, Jr.
Worcester, Massachusetts
Thomas William Wilcox
Evanston, Illinois
Economics
English
Rufus Johnston Wysor, Jr.
Shaker Heights, Ohio
History
SUMMA CUM LAUDE
MAGNA CUM LAUDE
Elbert Bartlett Harvey
Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Theodore Spaulding Bacon, Jr.
Springfield, Massachusetts
History
History
Thomas Lynn Johnson
Chatham, New Jersey
Robert French Belding
Northampton, Massachusetts
Chemistry
Mathematics
James Turner Kaull, Jr.
Newport, Rhode Island
William Hugo Bergstrom
Bingbamton, New York
English
Biology
George Crawford Buck
Meriden, Connecticut
VI
German
Robert James Good
Lincoln, Nebraska
Conferring of the Degree Bachelor of Arts
Chemistry
John Leslie Green
HONORIS CAUSA
Clayton, Missouri
History
Eric Pratt Hamp
Frank Lusk Babbott, Jr.
East Orange, New Jersey
Bernardsville, New Jersey
Latin
Austin Dudley Barrett
Kew Gardens, New York
Ralph Lyman Harding, Jr.
Eric Kenneth Marks
New York, New York
Shaker Heights, Obio
History
Samuel Reid Russell, Jr.
Wilmington, Delaware
Carl Frederick Johnson
William Peabody Simons
Longmeadow, Massachusetts
Springfield, Massachusetts
History
Mitchell A. Kohn, Jr.
Biology
Schenectady, New York
John Abbott Lindsay
Andover, Massachusetts
Fine Arts
the common enemy is received with special grati
Regraded Unclassified
VII
IX
Conferring of the Degree Master of Arts
Conferring of Honorary Degrees
ROBERT THURLOW Hood
B.A., Amherst, 1940
Master of Arts
WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN JACKSON, 1892
WILLIAM GERRISH METCALF
B.A., Oberlin, 1940
Doctor of Humane Letters
GERALD MILLER
CHARLES WOOLSEY COLE, 1927
B.A., Oberlin, 1940
ORDWAY TEAD, 1912
ROBERT WASHBURN MAYNARD, 1902
JOHN VINCENT OSMUN
B.S., Massachusetts State College, 1940
Doctor of Divinity
THEODORE MEYER GREENE, 1918
VIII
Doctor of Laws
Awarding of Medals for Eminent Service
JOHN JAY McCLOY, 1916
GEORGE WALTER WITNEY, ex-1912
LUTHER ELY SMITH, 1894
SAMUEL BOWLES KING, 1902
HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR.
Secretary of the Treasury
the common enemy is received with special grati
Regraded Unclassified
X
Music
The Star Spangled Banner
Francis Scott Key
AMHERST COLLEGE CHOIR AND AUDIENCE
XI
Benediction
Commencement Chaplain
EDWIN HILL VAN ETTEN, 1905
ed
The audience is requested to remain standing while the Trustees,
Faculty, Invited Guests, and Graduating Class leave the quadrangle.
the common enemy is received with special grati
53
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
Chungking, May 17, 1942.
Mr. Henry Morgenthau Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D.C.,
U. S. A.
Dear Mr. Morgenthau,
I acknowledge with pleasure and
thanks the receipt of your letter of March 21, a copy
of which, received by telegraph, was forwarded to me
through the courtesy of Ambassador Gauss on March 25.
Before your kind message came, I
had sent you, through the American Embassy, an appre-
ciative telegram upon the conclusion of our negotia-
tions on financial aid to China. It would therefore
appear that our messages came across each other on the
ethereal highway.
I would like to take this occasion
to express to you once more my deep appreciation of
your friendship for and faith in our people and Govern-
ment, because without your foresight and cooperation
during the discussions the Loan would not have been
consummated so expeditiously.
Your confirmation that the finan-
cial assistance given by the United States to China is
one example of the United Nations' good faith in ful-
filling their pledge to pool their resources to defeat
the common enemy is received with special gratification.
54
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
- 2 -
Perhaps it would be superfluous for
me to assure you and through you the American Govern-
ment that the past record of our Government in adher-
ing to the aims and intent of Agreements entered into
with the U.S. Treasury, to which you have so kindly
referred, will be fully maintained with respect to
this new Loan Agreement. America has proved herself
China's friend in need and I have every reason to be-
lieve that America's confidence in China will be vin-
dicated.
INO
Yours sincerely,
NNW
H.H.Kung of They
adv
я
ThesenT
SAIT AS DUA
so solatviCI
vistegoM
55
May 18, 1942
4:55 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello. Are you feeling better?
General
Watson:
Hello there. E.M.W. speaking.
HMJr:
Yes, are you feeling better?
W:
Is this H.M., Jr.? Yes, I am, really.
HMJr:
Did the doctor find you all right?
W:
The doctor said I was okay.
HMJr:
Good.
V:
outside of my general debility.
HMJr:
Yes.
W:
Now, look here, I just wanted to check. I'm
telling the Army any time one of these Secret
Service men applies, that the Army should
consider it on its merit and take him in if
they wanted to. Is that right?
HMJr:
That's right.
W:
Good.
HMJr:
Did you see the letter I wrote to the President?
W:
No, but I haven't seen that - it's what I was
trying to get - but I heard the Chief here of
our section told me, and I just wanted to verify
it.
HMJr:
Well, I didn't - what evidently happened was
that there were four or five men
W:
Yes, I know.
HMJr:
that wanted to go in, and the Chief talked
to some Captain in the Army - I don't know who
looks after you now that - Walter Smith isn't
there any more, you know.
56
- 2 -
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
And evidently - I don't know whether they
wanted desk jobs or not, but I got this 1m-
pression, which may not be correct, that what
Wilson says, if they want to fight, all right;
but if they just want to get desk jobs, why he
thinks they ought to stay in the - to look
after the President.
%:
Yeah.
HMJr:
But the President called me himself, and I told
Wilson that if anybody wants to go into the
Army, let them go.
W:
Regardless of whether it was deek or field.
HMJr:
Yes, inasmuch as that's the way the President
evidently feels.
W:
Good. That's all right.
HMJr:
What?
W:
That's all right.
HMJr:
Because the President said to let these five go.
W:
Good. I knew about that.
HMJr:
That makes fourteen now.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
But I just feel that if the President. feels
that way and that each - it's up to the Army
to decide whether they want it or not.
W:
Surely.
HMJr:
Okay?
W:
Fine.
HMJr:
Thank you.
W:
Good-bye. Thank you.
57
May 18, 1942
5:25 p.m.
Mrs. Dorothy
Roosevelt:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
How do you do.
R:
How are you?
HMJr:
I'm all right, thank you.
R:
I expect to be in Washington Thursday. I
wondered if there was a chance of seeing you.
HMJr:
Surely.
R:
What would be a convenient time?
HMJr:
Now, let me just see. Thursday, Mrs. Roosevelt?
Thursday - what - let me just - no, I - in the
afternoon?
R:
Yeah, any time.
HMJr:
Three o'clock?
R:
Fine.
HMJr:
Three o'clock Thursday.
R:
In your office.
HMJr:
In my office.
R:
That's fine. Thank you 80 much.
HMJr:
Thank you.
R:
All right.
co - Mr. Foley
58
May 18, 1942
5:58 p.m.
John
Pehle:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
I was - good evening. I wanted to get Ed, but
he's left. I was curious to know what progress
you were making with the APC.
P:
Well, we haven't made any progress.
HMJr:
Really?
P:
Homer Jones, who was supposed to get in touch
with me, didn't do it.....
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
and I asked Ed today whether I ought to
get in touch with him, and he thought not. I
understand Markham called last week.....
HMJr:
Yeah.
P:
and said something about the APC still
wasn't clear as to why it couldn't - the Executive
Order couldn't divide up the functions. Now
we've discussed that with them several times,
and I think they ought to know by now why it's
impossible to do that.
HMJr:
Ed thought that you shouldn't?
P:
What?
HMJr:
Shouldn't get in touch with Jones.
P:
Well, Jones 18 supposed to get in touch with
me, and I'm sure he knew that.
HMJr:
Well, should I call Crowley and tell him?
P:
Well, I assume that he's up to date, Mr.
Secretary.
HMJr:
Well, I don't - I don't think that that should -
I'd Just as lief call up Crowley and tell him
59
- 2 -
that you're waiting there.
P:
Well, you don't need to do that. I'll be glad
to call Jones myself and say, "I understood we
were to get together and I haven't heard from
you, and how about it."
HMJr:
Well - and tell him that Mr. Crowley and I are
meeting
P:
All right.
HMJr:
tomorrow at three-thirty.
e,
I'll do that right away.
HMJr:
We're meeting tomorrow at three-thirty.
P:
Now I'll remind him of that.
HMJr:
See? And the thing was to have been settled.
P:
That's right.
HMJr:
Oh, I think that Ed advised badly. I think
that not having heard from him - who said that
he would get in touch with you?
P:
I suppose Leo did.
HMJr:
Well, anyway
P:
The message that I got from Ed was that Homer
Jones was to get in touch with me.
HMJr:
Well, I don't know - all this finagling
P:
(Laughs) But I'll be glad to call him right
away.
HMJr:
If I hadn't heard from the man, I'd have called
him up right away. You call him up, will you?
P:
Certainly.
HMJr:
And if he's gone, call him up the first thing
in the morning, and say that Mr. Crowley and I
60
- 3 -
are getting together tomorrow at three-thirty,
what about it.
P:
All right, I'll do that.
HMJr:
See?
P:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
Please.
P:
Right.
may 18, 1942
Supreme Court of the United States
Mashington,D.C.
Dran Wortor Henry:
to anold professor law
Entitled to academic prejudicer-
at least ? have dues ! bued
the deepect, is a biar against
the a du tera fion of Love or ary
degreer feed to I freatly
rejoice Had in conferring
a doe for ate ourson Am here
my own Eskeared 19 luca health,
war true to He beah standard
in acdar duig her Louses -
in are king public a Uertadion
of pride and fra titude for
and Ligh -
public
teroices.
Enderg usered
62
OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
LEON HENDERSON
ADMINISTRATOR
May 18, 1942
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D, c,
Dear Henry:
Dave Ginsburg told me of his conversation
with you regarding the reporting of my Ways and Means
testimony. I enclose the comparison of newspaper
reports which you requested.
However, I raise the question most in-
tensely as to whether any resurrection of this
matter would be of help. I believe most strongly
that it would not and I trust you will tell the
President of my opinion. For my part it would
certainly suit our purposes if the whole matter
were allowed to drop.
Very sincerely,
Lean
Administrator
FORDEFENSE
BUY
UNITED
STATES
EAVINGS
BONDS
-
Regraded Unclassified
63
MEMORAN DUM ON PRESS TREATMENT OF LEON HENDERSON'S
TESTIMONY BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
COMMITTEE ON MAY 11, 1942, AND TREATMENT OF
CORRECTIVE STATEMENT ISSUED THE FOLLOWING DAY:
Representative Papers Examined - May 12 and May 13:
A
New York Times
New York Herald Tribune
Chicago Sun
Philadelphia Record
Baltimore Sun
Washington Times-Herald
New York Journal of Commerce
Wall Street Journal
- O - o - o - o - 0-0- - -
Summary - Only one newspaper of those examined - the Wall Street
Journal - had a completely accurate account of Mr. Henderson's May 11
testimony, accurately headlined. One other - the Baltimore Sun - did
not touch upon the subject of wages.
The two major press associations, the Associated Press and the
United Press, had well-balanced stories, accurately qualifying the
reports (via committee members) of what Mr. Henderson 8 aid. Headlines,
however, gave emphasis to the wage freeze".
All but one of the seven other papers examined, carried pro-
minently head-lined accounts on the first page (Philadelphia Record
gave it page 9) playing up the "Wage Freezing" angle.
could not be located
Mr. Henderson's statement of the following day, giving an in
accurate presentation of his position,
at
all
four
of the nine papers. In two others it was buried under a small heading
in the inside pages with a minimum of space - about 2 inches. Only
two papers - the New York Journal of Commerce and the Baltimore Sun
(which was accurate on the first day) - gave any substantial treatment
of the second-day stay.
Paper by Paper, the treatment on each day was as follows:
NEW YORK TIMES - May 12
Page One, Column Three - Four-Bank head:
Henderson Urges
Wages Be Frozen
To Avoid Inflation
- -
House Committee Members
Say He Advocated Step,
Warning Situation Is
Dangerous
Also Asks Forced Savings, etc.
- 2 -
64
Story - by Henry N. Dorris - fairly well qualified, but went beyond
other papers in intimating, according to committee members, that he
would "go to President Roosevelt to insist that wage controls be added
to his present powers to fix commodity prices." Account of Mr.
Henderson's testimony and press conference accurate in RP account
carried on P. 12 without headline.
NEW YORK TIMES . May 13
Arthur Krock on Page 12 under 2-col. head "Henderson and Wages"
refers in passing to Mr. Henderson's statement, but confines story
chiefly to editorializing on President Roosevelt and Bernard Baruch's
formula, etc.
- o - 0 - 0 - 0 -
NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE - May 12
Prominent Headline, Page 1, Col. 1, says:
.
Wage Ceiling Is Advocated
by Henderson
He Also Calls for Forced Savings***etc.
- 0-0-0-0-
Story makes flat statement bearing out headline without qualification
until third parragraph. Story runs full column and run-over.
NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE - May 13
No news story could be found on Mr. Nenderson's statement. Leading
editorial entitled "Leon the Leaper" congratulates Mr. Henderson on
belated di scovery of the need for wage freezing.
- 0 - o - o - 0 -
CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE - May 12
Eight-Column Page One Streamer head in Boldface Type-
FREEZE PAY, HENDERSON ASKS
Story by Willard Evans qualified so as to freeze all wages that are
not sub-standard.
-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-
CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE May 13
Mr. Henderson's corrective statement not located.
- 0 - o - o - o -
- 3 -
65
CHICAGO SUN - May 12
Page One, Column One - Large Black Head:
Henderson Proposes
Drastic Levy; Freezing
of All Wages and Salaries
Advisable, House Told
Story by Cecil Dickson not qualified as to source until third paragraph
CHICAGO SUN - May 13
Two-ince United Press summary of Mr. Henderson's statement carried near
bottom of Page Four with small headline.
- 0 - O - 0 - o -
PHILADELPHIA RECORD - May 12
(The only standard newspaper examined without a Page One Story)
On Page 9 under a Black Head at top of the column:
Salary Freezing;
Stiff Tax Urged
by Henderson
Used story of United Press, which was well qualified as to source,
i.e., "according to committee members
PHILADELPHIA RECORD - May 13
on page 6
Buried under a small head, is a 2-inch piece referring to Mr. Henderson's
correcting statement.
- 0 - 0 - o - 0 -
BALTIMORE SUN - May 12
Page One, Column Three -
Cites Danger of
Inflation; Asks
Tax Hike.
Story, by Frank Kent Jr., is accurate and wages are not mentioned at all.
BALTIMORE SUN - May 13
Gives prominent play to Mr. Henderson's corrective statement using
virtually the full substance.
- 4 -
66
WASHINGTON TIMES-HERALD - May 12
Page One, Column Three - Black Headline:
Henderson for Forced Saving Phan
OPA Also Favors Wage Freezing
Story, by Virginia Paisley, poorly qualified as to source until third
paragraph. (This same story under three@column black head on "Pay
Freezing and Compulsory Saving" appeared in New York Daily News)
WASHINGTON TIMES-HERALD - May 13
No story on Mr. Henderson's corrective statement could be located.
-* 6 - o - 0 - 0 - 0 -
JOURNAL OF COMMERCE & COMMERCIAL (New York) - May 12
Two-Column Large Head on Page One
OPA Head Asks Wage Freezing;
Wider Tax Base
Story unqualified as to source.
JOURNAL OF COMMERCE & COMMERCIAL (New York) - May 13
Prominent Head at top of Page 6
Henderson for Rise in
Sub-Standard Pay
AP story carried in full
- 0 - 0 - 0 - o - 0 -
WALL STREET JOURNAL May 12
Three-column headline on Page 2
Henderson Asks Stabilization of Wages; Farm
Prices; Backs Cut in Personal Tax Exemptions
OPA Head Opposes Sales Levy
As Adding to Difficulties
Of Rationing
Story the most accurate of any examined; well qualified where the single
reference is made to wage freezing.
WALL STREET JOURNAL - May 13
No news story on Mr. Henderson's corrective statement, but leading
editorial comments caustically on "Not Grapping the Nettle".
67
MAY 18 1942
Honorable Leon Henderson,
Administrator,
Office of Price Administration,
Washington, D. C.
My dear Kr. Henderson:
I have your letter of May 14, 1942, carrying the
symbols R2:2:WSS, together with copy of a communication
addressed by your office to the Postmaster General, both
regarding the desirability of issuing gasoline ration
coupon books as an adjunct to the sale of the internal
revenue stamps for evidencing payment of the Federal tax
on the use of motor vehicles which becomes due July 1,
1942.
As the result of discussions by representatives
of the Bureau of Internal Revenue with representatives
of your office during the past several weeks, steps have
been taken whereby the use tax stamps will be serially
numbered. June 10 has been tentatively set as the date
on which the use tax stamps for the fiscal year 1943 will
go on sale in the post offices and in the offices of the
Collectors of Internal Revenue.
I an not officially informed of the results of your
endeavors to secure the aid of the Post Office Department
in issuing the gasoline coupon books incident to the sale
of the use tax stamps. In any event, there seems to be
no obstacle in the way of tying in the serial number of
the stamp with the gasoline coupon book issued to a motor
vehicle owner and the Bureau of Internal Revenue is pre-
pared to cooperate with you in every reasonable way toward
& successful solution of your problem.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthau, and
Secretary of the Treasury
Phato file n.m.c.
File
Regraded Unclassified
OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION
COMMISSIONER
WASHINGTON, D.C.
TC
LEON HENDERSON
Temporary Building "S"
OFFERSAL NEVENUN
MAY
Refer to R2:2:WSS
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. Morgenthau:
During the last several weeks representatives of
the Fuel Rationing Branch of this office have had a series
of discussions with representatives of the Bureau of
Internal Revenue concerning the joint issuence, through
the post offices, of the motor vehicle use tax stamps and
the basic gasoline rationing coupon books which are to 60
into effect July 1, 1942.
It is my understanding that P.O. e result of these
discussions representatives of the Bureau of Internal
Revenue are of the opinion that such a joint issuance would
have material advantages for the enforcement of the use tax
stamp collection. since no motor vehicle owner could obtain
a gasoline ration coupon book without first purchasing a use
tax stamp. The serial number of the use tax stamp would be
placed on the gasoline ration coupon book as A means of
identification.
The proposal for joint issuance during en initial
registration period in June has -1so been presented to the
Post Office Department, and there is enclosed nerewith a
copy of the formal request which has been mede to the Post-
master General. Frenk C. Walker.
This letter is to request your approval of the
proposed joint issuence of the use tax stemp with the basic
gasoline rationing coupons.
Very truly yours,
Leon Henderson
FORDEFENSE
Leon Eenderson
BUY
Administrator
UNITED
STATES
SAVINGS
BONDS
-
Regraded Unclassified
Temporary Building "S"
Refer to: R2:2:WMS
The Honorable
Frank C. Walker
Postmaster General
Post Office Department
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Walker:
The permanent plan for gasoline rationing 1s
scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 1942. No have con-
sidered several methods for the distribution of the basic
gasoline ration coupon book. We have found that the school
system is not available for use as a distribution system,
and wo have discovered that other alternatives, such as
distribution through state motor vehicle offices, are in-
practical.
After a series of conferences between represent-
atives of your office, the Bureau of Internal Revenue and
the Fuel Rationing Branch of this office, we are convinced
that the most satisfactory method for the distribution of
the basic gasoline ration coupon books is through the post
offices at the time the motor vehicle use tax stamp is sold
to the owner during an initial gasoline rationing registra-
tion period from June 10 to July 1. This method provides a
sufficient number of local distribution points in each county
throughout the rationed area; it permits the gasoline consumer
to acquire his coupon book and his use tax stamp in one visit;
and it aids in the collection of the revenues from the sale of
the use tax stamp.
This letter is to request the Post Office Depart-
ment to assist us in this important part of the war program.
For your information, the procedure required for
this method of distribution would include the following steps:
Regraded Unclassified
The Konnrable
From: niver
1. -10 files of rice 101-17 ::
form "no 0.17 occupting
out flow 3016 oft f:ice
sen:
2. ... net ffien - Plant - recintribute
forms -6--- Has :- att officer.
Wallents :- - ti - wretten
PRODUCT -- at = - lication
core (+2) of Id. lie pt asser 14
and address the 10-1.00 vr the motor vehicle
- : : of 1100 of % Trivia are
. . --t Visit (104) ini -N:--
lication c-m. number of :- use 1.,
-I-n works - ...... if 16000
mg) :- one 1:10
inc y - at
by ilems revented :, it -
4. cat of .00 clare - re - Informati A
10 L 1- card vit t - -1 :- 7.51.0 Y - 1010 registration
certificate or :- lie nt.
5
- . . . ant of:ice clere could write OR the from of bille
coulon book 4.0 requested Concriptive
in 110ml'- r. -, :ve of --- ! care number -At
-or:-1 number of : e - --- 11.- : .
J.
-- get office clare would 11% 1-0 revorse 0100 of
L.e 11:1- st parjett 1104 -- at. - are office date
-trom return :- e :10.00 L st 01- state
registration card visi the cou où book -nd 110 use tox
- 110-11 Card* will 10 cost 15
unserembled : receiving pointe of
the ffice of rice aministration.
Ithough I re-lien that : 1- :.com *D ditional t.ax
OR Line 0-1 flice evertment. which 1- strendy corrying 11. full
of the --- burden. : believe list your organisation CAR
provide in most effective 'no efficient 50-20 of n-klar 11.
distribution.
Very truly yours.
Leon wanderson
deinistrator
Regraded Unclassified
71
THE
Regraded Unclassified
71
TREASURY BILLS
May 20
May 13
May 6
April 29
Amount offered
$250 M
$250 и
$150 M
$150 M
Bids tendered
567
546
355
375
Low rate
0 3/
0 2/
.245%
0 1/
High rate
.372%
*376%
.372
.356%
Average rate
#365,
.368
.358
.335
Amount in New York
$101 H
$ 92 M
$ 63 M
$ 90 M
Amount in Chicago
71
101
58
29
Amount in San Francisco
....
15
6
2
4
Amount in balance of country
63
51
27
27
1/ $50,000 bid at 100.000; $5,000 bid at 99.980 , next low rate 0.198%
2/, $5,000 bid at 100.000; $10,000 at 99.985, next low rate 0.245%
Il
$98,000 bid at 100.000 and lower; next low rate 0.237%
May 18, 1942
72
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
May 18, 1942
FROM
Mr. Vincent F. Callahan
Recently you indicated a desire to see
the newspaper results which occurred over the country
in connection with the launching of the Quota drive
the first of this month.
Mr. Kuhn suggested that we get together
the clippings carrying this material which have already
come in and send them to your house so that, when you
had 8. few moments, you would have the opportunity to
look through some of them.
The bundle of clippings we are sending
to you represent those that have already been sent
in from eight points over the country.
Similar clippings are being collected
for us at thirty-four points in all, so this collection
represents only a partial showing. It will, however,
give you an indication of the way newspapers through-
out' the United States used our initial material on
the Quota drive.
73
May 18, 1942
TO:
HAROLD N. GRAVES
SUBJECT: PROGRESS REPORT FROM WAR SAVINGS STAFF
QUOTA CAMPAIGN
War Bond quotas for the month of June have
already been sent to the field and will be given to the
newspapers on May 25 for release in morning papers June 1.
State quota figures for June will be released in the after-
noon papers on May 25.
PAYROLL SAVINGS
The Payroll War Savings Plan has now been adopted
by 76,330 firms throughout the country. Of the 30,400,000
employees of private concerns, 19,986,685 now have the plan
available to them. In addition, a total of 1,471,862 or
33 per cent of the 4,400,000 employees of Federal, State and
Local Governments may now purchase Bonds through the Payroll
Savings Plan.
- 2 -
74
PAYROLL SAVINGS (Continued)
General Motors Corporation reported that as of May 15
more than 99 per cent of its 236,000 employees were invest-
ing almost 7 per cent of their wages in War Bonds through
the company's Payroll Plan.
PLEDGE CAMPAIGN
News and radio bureaus for the Greater New York
Pledge Campaign have been set up and arrangements have been
made with the W.P.A. Writers Project, the New York Chapter
of the American Newspaper Guild, and with the Press Photographers
Association to furnish volunteer professional personnel in
promoting the Campaign.
A group of reporters and photographers will cover
every one of the 109 districts in the five boroughs on a
volunteer basis.
To aid the Campaign photo coverage, the Press
Photographers Association of New York, and photographers of
New York newspapers and News Photo services will donate their
time. In addition, the Photographers Association has volunteered
to arrange for the use of newspaper and news photo services'
facilities for processing negatives and prints on 8. gratis
basis.
- 3 -
75
PLEDGE CAMPAIGN (Continued)
Radio promotion of the Greater New York Campaign
will start with an All Star Show featuring famous personalities
of stage and screen, probably on a statewide hook-up with all 14
New York City radio stations participating.
Numerous appearances by Minute Men are being
scheduled on all stations. Special interviews, religious
programs, dramatic sketches and spot announcements are being
prepared. Each station in the Greater New York area is
assigning a member of its staff to serve as liaison officer
between the station and the War Savings Pledge Committee.
NEWSPAPER CARRIER SALES
With sales of 3,678,002 ten-cent Stamps reported
since May 7 by the newspaper carrier agents of 880 newspapers,
sales by the carriers to date total 279,786,878, in ten-cent
stamps, or their equivalent in Bonds or Stamps of larger
denominations.
VICTORY HOUSE
With daily feature purchases by famous actresses and
actors attracting large crowds, the Victory House in Los Angeles,
California, continues to average War Stamp sales of $ 3,000
daily, and to date has generated the sale of more than
$ 4,000,000 in War Bonds.
Victory House in Allentown, Pennsylvania, reports sales
of War Bonds and Stamps of $114,000 since its inauguration six
weeks ago.
- 4 -
76
RALLIES
Kate Smith sold $78,000 worth of War Bonds in one
hour at a special booth set up in Rockefeller Center in
New York City. In addition she purchased $50,000 herself.
CHICAGO "CHEZ PAREE"
Management of the "Chez Paree" Night Club in
Chicago reported $1,252,300 in actual cash through the sale
of at least $1000 bonds to each person attending a special
party on Sunday, May 17. The management invited personal
friends and provided dinner and entertainment featuring
Danny Kay's orchestra. A miniature United States Treasury
Department was set up on the floor, cash accepted and Bonds
issued.
SPECIAL
An interesting example of the way in which War
Savings Stamps may be used as tips for waiters, porters, taxi
cab drivers, etc., was reported this week by C. P. MacGregor,
a New York radio executive. His "Tips for Victory" cards
carry Stamps of various denominations.
PRESS
A series of seven self-explanatory attachments shows
typical results made in publicizing special articles by "name"
writers in newspapers; the use of Quota slogans, War Bond
- 5 -
77
PRESS (Continued)
copy and special covers in various types of magazines; use
of Minute Man insignia on all major race track programs;
and typical use of the feature "What You Buy with War Bonds"
in more than 2500 newspapers. Also attached is a booklet
showing samples of editorial cartoons on the Quota Campaign.
A scrapbook on the use of War Savings material by movie
and radio fan magazines with a combined circulation of
8,000,000 readers is also attached.
RELIGIOUS PRESS
Reprints of War Bond editorials appearing in the
GRACE EVANGELIST OF ST. LOUIS, CATHOLIC STANDARD and TIMES
of PHILADELPHIA, THE ALBANY LOCAL EVANGELIST, and THE NEW YORK
TEMPLE EMANUEL MESSENGER were sent out this week to 750
religious publications.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE PRESS
Special War Bond material in mat form was sent to
1,000 foreign language publications in connection with "I
Am An American Day".
Typical example of use of the Secretary's letter
on the Quota Campaign by foreign language papers is attached.
- 6 -
78
LABOR PRESS
Fifty-four chapters of the American Newspaper
Guild are now cooperating with the War Savings Program and
have appointed members to serve on a volunteer basis as
local press representatives. Copies of current issues of
the GUILD REPORTER and EDITOR AND PUBLISHER, newspaper trade
magazines, with articles outlining these activities, are
attached.
RADIO
Mrs. Morgenthau was scheduled as a guest speaker
on the Fred Allen broadcast over the nationwide CBS Network
on Sunday, May 17, from 9 to 10 P.M., EWT, in connection with
"I Am An American Day". The program also featured Paul Robeson
in "The Battle Hymn".
Special Bond and Stamp announcements featuring "I
Am An American Day" copy were sent to all radio stations.
The "Roll Call of the Nation" program was broadcast
407 times by 455 of the nation's stations.
"Voices of the People", featuring Bonds and Stamps
and quota copy, was broadcast 23,346 times by 392 radio stations.
"Women's Part in the War Bond Quota", a round-table
discussion, will be conducted by Mrs. Henry Morgenthau, Jr. on
Thursday, May 21, from 10:30 to 11:00 P.M., EWT, over the
coast-to-coast NBC Network. Those who will take part in the
- 7 -
79
RADIO (Continued)
program discussion are: Jan Struther, author; Edna Woolman
Chase, Editor, Vogue Magazine; Luise Rainer, actress; Mrs.
Jeanett Simpson, factory war worker; Mrs. Clarence Hewitt,
war worker's wife; Mrs. Philip Jones, farm wife and member of
a typical American family.
One of the programs in the Treasury Star Parade Series
entitled, "Education For Death", has been voted a certificate
of merit by the Women's Press Club of New York.
The Payroll Savings Plan has now been installed by
478 radio stations, of which 380 report one-hundred per cent
employee participation.
BUSINESS PUBLICATIONS
A total of 362 business publications, with a combined
circulation of 3,405,719, advised they are using our latest
advertising release.
FARM PUBLICATIONS
The second in a series of public advertising releases
for farm publication copy, "Winning the War Begins on the Farm",
(proof attached) also went to 47 audited farm publications with
an approximate aggregate circulation of 18,000,000 farm readers.
- 8 -
80
LABOR PUBLICATIONS
The fourth advertising release for labor publications
entitled "A Call to Action!" went to a list of 460 labor
publications. Proof is attached.
Sales of United States Savings Bonds
CONFIDENTIAL
From May 1 through May 16, 1942
Compared with Sales Quota for Same Period
(At issue Price in millions of dollars)
1
Series I
:
Series 7 and G
:
Total
I
Actual
Sales
#
Quota,
:
Sales
:
Actual Sales
:
Quota,
:
Sales
:
Actual Sales
:
Quota,
: Sales
Date
:
1
May 1
:
May 1
: to Date
#
:
May 1
:
May 1
:
to Date :
:
May 1
:
May 1
: to Date
#
Daily
:
to
:
to
: as $ of
:
Daily
:
to
:
to
#
as x of :
Daily
:
to
:
to
I as $ of
:
:
Date
:
Date
:
Quota
:
:
Date
:
Date
I
Quota
:
:
Date
:
Date
: Quota
1
$ 12.7
$ 12.7
$ 14.0
90.7%
$ 7.3
$ 7.3
$ 9.0
81.1%
$ 20.0
$ 20.0
$ 23.0
87.0%
2
11.6
24.3
25.7
94.6
7.9
15.2
16.0
95.0
19.4
39.4
41.7
94.5
"
22.3
46.5
47.8
97.3
10.3
25.5
29.5
86.4
32.6
72.0
77-3
93.1
5
8.9
55.5
57.8
96.0
7.6
33.1
37.1
89.2
16,6
88.6
94.9
93.4
6
18.4
73.8
70.5
104.7
15.6
48.8
49.8
98.0
34.0
122.6
120.3
101.9
7
23.2
97.0
84.0
115.5
12.1
60.8
60.3
100.8
35.3
157.9
144.3
109.4
8
17.2
114.2
98.0
116.5
6.4
67.2
69.3
97.0
23.6
181.4
167.3
108.4
9
14.5
128.7
109.7
117.3
5.6
72.8
76.3
95.4
20.0
201.5
186.0
108.3
11
23.3
152.0
131.8
115.3
8.1
80.8
89.8
90.0
31.3
232.8
221.6
105.1
12
9.4
161.3
141.8
113.8
4.6
85.4
97.4
87.7
14.0
246.8
239.2
103.2
13
15.8
177.1
154.5
114.6
9.0
94.4
110.1
85.7
24.8
271.5
264.6
102.6
14
16.9
194.0
168.0
115.5
7.7
102.1
120.6
84.7
24.6
296.2
258.6
102.6
15
14.9
208.9
182.0
114.8
6.8
108.9
129.6
84.0
21.7
317.9
311.6
102.0
16
14.3
223.2
193.7
115.2
5.2
114.1
136.6
83.5
19.5
337.4
330.3
102.1
8
215.8
150.1
365.9
19
225.8
157.7
383.5
20
238.5
170.3
408.5
21
252.0
180.8
432.8
22
266.0
189.8
455.8
23
277.7
196.8
474.5
25
299.8
210.3
510.1
26
309.8
217.9
527.7
27
322.5
230.5
553.0
28
336.0
241.0
577.0
29
350.0
250.0
600.0
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Research and Statistics.
May 18, 1942.
Source: Actual sales figures are deposits with the Treasurer of the United Sti 00 on account of proceeds of sales of
United States savings bands. Figures have been rounded to nearest hun cod thous ad and will not necessarily add to totals,
82
AY 18 1942
Dear Valter:
Thank you for sending se the quotation from Plate,
contained is your letter of May 13, 1943.
Apparently sany things have changed in the last 2800
years, including our ideas about the income tax. Plate
some to have considered an income tax wajnet to the just
and more than just to the unjust. I don't know what con-
trast he had in mind--pessibly scale ansester of the sales
tax. In any event, the income tax seems today to be the
best available tax from the combined standpoint of revenue
and equity and we are recommending that 11 be substantially
increased. I hope Plate vas wrong!
One quotation for another--you say be interested in
reading Anatele France on the cales tax. Inclosed 10 a
quotation from Penguin Island, page 49. Beek II, Chapter IV,
of the Modern Library edition.
Cerdially yours,
(Signea) Henry
Mr. Walter N. Rethschild,
432 Fultom Street,
Breeklyn, New York.
Enclosure
File n.m.c.
Capies to Thompson
REPIRTS
5/18/42
Regraded Unclassified
83
WALTER N. ROTHSCHILD
422 FULTON STREET
BROOKLYN, N.Y.
May 13, 1942
The Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Henry,
I thought you would be interested, in case
you have never run across it, in a quotation from
Plato, in the period 427-347 B.C., which reads:
"When there is an income tax, the just
man will pay more, and the unjust less,
on the same amount of income".
With kind regards,
Cordially yours,
beto
WNR:LT
Regraded Unclass
84
Regraded Unclassified
THE FIRST ASSEMBLY OF THE ESTATES
OF PENGUINIA
"Bulloch, my son," said old Mael, "wo ought to make & census
of the Penguins and inscribe each of their names in a book."
"It is a most urgent matter," answered Bulloch, "there can
be no good government without it."
Forthwith, the apostle, :1th the help of twelve monks, pro-
coeded to make a census of the people.
And old Mael them saids
"Now that we keep a register of all the inhabitants, we ought,
Bulloch, my son, to levy a just tax so as to provide for public
expenses and the maintemance of the Abboy. Each ought to contribute
according to his means. For this reason, By son, call together the
Elders of Alea, and in agreement with them we shall establish the
tax."
The Elders, being called together, assembled to the number of
thirty under the great sycamore in the courtyard of the wooden
monastery. They were the first Estates of Penguinia. Three-fourths
of them were substantial peasants of Surelle and Clange. Greatauk,
as the noblest of the Penguins, sat upon the highest stone.
The venerable Mael took his place in the midst of his monks
and uttered these words:
"Children, the Lord when he pleases grants riches to men and
he takes them away from them. Now I have called you together to
levy contributions from the people se as to provide for public ex-
penses and the maintenance of the monks. I consider that these
contributions ought to be in proportion to the wealth of each.
Therefore he who has a hundred exen will give ten; he who has ten
will give one."
When the holy 5021 had spoken, Morio, a labourer at Anis-on-
the-Clange, one of the richest of the Penguins, rose up and said:
"0 Father Mael, I think it right that each should contribute
to the public expenses and to the support of the Church. For my
part I an ready to give up all that I possess in the interest of
my brother Penguins, and if it were necessary I would even cheer-
fully part with my shirt. All the elders of the people are ready,
like no, to sacrifice their goods, and no one can doubt their abso-
lute devotion to their country and their creed. "No have, then,
only to consider the public interest and to do what it requires.
Now, father, what it requires, what it demands, is not to ask much
from those who possess much, for then the rich would be less rich
and the poor still poorer. The poor live on the wealth of the rich
and that is the reason why that wealth is sacred. Do not touch it,
85
- 2 -
to do so would be an uncalled for evil. You will get no great profit
by taking from the rich, for they are very few is number; on the con-
trary you will strip yourself of all your resources and plunge the
country into misery. Whereas if you ask a little from each inhabitant
without regard to his wealth, you will collect enough for the public
necessities and you will have no need to enquire into each citizen's
resources, a thing that would be regarded by all as a most vexatious
neasure. By taxing all equally and easily you will spare the poor,
for you will leave them the wealth of the rich. And how could you
possibly proportion taxes to wealth? Yesterday I had two hundred
exem, to-day I have sixty, tomorrow I shall have a hundred. Clunic
has three cows, but they are thin; Nicclu has only two, but they are
fat. Which is the richer, Clunie or Nicelu? The signs of opulence
are deceitful. What is certain is that everyone eate and drinks.
Tax people according to what they consumo, That would be visdom and
it would be justice."
Thus spoke Morio amid the applause of the Elders.
"I ask that this speech be graven on brense," cried the monk,
Bulloch. "It is spoken for the future; in fifteen hundred years the
best of the Penguine will not speak otherwise."
The Elders were still applauding when Greatauk, his hand on
the pommel of his sword, made this brief doclarations
"Being noble, I shall not contribute; for to contribute is
ignoble. It is for the rabble to pay."
After this warning the Elders separated in silence.
As in Rome, a new census was taken every five years; and by
this means it was observed that the population increased rapidly.
Although children died in marvellous abundance and plagues and
famines came with perfect regularity to devastate entire villages,
new Penguins, in continually greater numbers, contributed by their
private misery to the public prosperity.
(From Penguin Island. by Anatole France, Book II, Chapter IV,
Page 47)
Regraded Unclassified
85
- 2 -
to do 80 would be an uncalled for evil. You will get no great profit
by taking from the rich, for they are very few in number; on the con-
trary you will strip yourself of all your resources and pluage the
country into misery. Whereas if you ask a little from each inhabitant
without regard to his wealth, you will collect enough for the public
necessities and you will have no need to enquire into each citizen's
resources, a thing that would be regarded by all as a nost veratious
neasure. By taxing all equally and easily you will spare the ppor,
for you will leave them the wealth of the rich. And how could you
possibly proportion taxes to wealth? Yesterday I had two hundred
oxem, to-day I have sixty, tomorrow I shall have a hundred. Clunic
has three cows, but they are thin; Nicelu has only two, but they are
fat. Which is the richer, Clunie or Nicelu? The signs of opulence
are deceitful. What is certain is that everyone eats and drinks.
Tax people according to what they consume. That would be wisdom and
it would be justice."
Thus spoke Morio amid the applause of the Elders.
"I ask that this speech be graven on bronse," cried the monk,
Bulloch. "It is spoken for the future; in fifteen hundred years the
best of the Penguins will not speak otherwise."
The Elders were still applauding when Greatauk, his hand on
the pommel of his sword, made this brief declarations
"Being noble, I shall not contribute; for to contribute is
ignoble. It is for the rabble to pay."
After this warning the Elders separated in silence.
As in Rome, a new census was taken every five years; and by
this means it was observed that the population increased rapidly.
Although children died in marvellous abundance and plagues and
famines came with perfect regularity to devastate entire villages,
new Penguins, in continually greater numbers, contributed by their
private misery to the public prosperity.
(From Penguin Island, by Anatole France, Book II, Chapter IV,
Page 47)
Regraded Unclassified
86
Commissioner Helvering says nothing in
+7
S requires the Secretary's approval.
wire memo was sent to the Secretary as a matter
of information only.
Shows 6-182 eb
CALL
87
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
May 18, 1942
ADDRESS REPLY TO
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
AND REFER TO
this matter
Memorandum for the Secretary:
In accordance with the provisions of R. A. No. 1014,
dated September 14, 1939, paragraph 12, the case of
today heing
Joseph M. Schenck for the years 1937 to 1941 has been ex-
cepted from the decentralization procedure for the rea-
sons stated in an order to Deputy Commissioner Mooney, a
in onnection with
copy of which is attached hereto.
Mr. Schenck's income tax casesfor the years 1935 and
1936, as well as a gift tax case, which cases are pending
before the United States Board of Tax Appeals, Dockets
#103213 and #89242, have previously been excepted from the
decentralization procedure with your approval. The tax-
payer, through his duly authorized representatives, has
requested that prempt field investigations be made of his
anything
1938, 1939, 1940 and 1941 returns in order that his Federal
tax liability for 1935 to 1941, inclusive, may be deter-
mined at an early date.
Regraded Unclassified
88
- 2 -
Memorandum for the Secretary.
Mr. Schenck's 1937 return was examined in connection
with the field investigation made for the years 1935 and
1936 and this year is receiving consideration at the
present time in the Income Tax Unit in Washington. Field
investigations will be ordered promptly for the years
1938 to 1941, inclusive, in the offices of the Internal
Revenue Agents in Charge of the Los Angeles Division and
the Upper New York Division, some of the returns for
these years having been filed in Los Angeles and others
in New York.
Considering all the circumstances surrounding the
case of Mr. Schenck, it is believed that the Government's
interests will be best served by having his case for the
years 1935 to 1941, inclusive, managed under one super-
vision.
Commissioner.
Attached:
Copy of order to
Deputy Commissioner Mooney.
as
89
IT:R15:AJ
JJL-11846
MAY 18 1942
Memorandum for Deputy Commissioner Mooneyn
In accordance with the provisions of R. A. No. 1014, dated
14, 1939, you are advised that the case of Joseph M.
Schenek for the years 1937 to 1941, inclusive, has been excepted
from the decentralisation procedure.
The texpayer's representative in a recent letter has stated
that Mr. Schenek desires to effect an early settlement with the
Bureau of his liability for Federal taxes for all years 1955 to
1941, inclusive.
Mr. Schenck's income tax case for the years 1956 and 1986, as
well as a gift tax case, have previously been excepted from the
decentralisation procedure. These cases are pending before the
United States Board of Tax Appeals, Docketa #103213 and #89242.
À field investigation for the year 1957 was completed consurrently
with the years 1956 and 1936 and the case for this year is now under
consideration in the Income Tax Unit in Washington. Field investi-
gations by the Los Angeles end Upper New York Divisions for the
years 1988 to 1941, includive, will be ordered promptly. Some of
the returns for these years were filed in Los Angales and others
in New York. The issues occurring in the years 1955 and 1936 and
the action taken by the Governamt as to such years affect 1937 and
subsequent years also.
Since this case for 1985 and 1956 is pending on appeal before
the Board of Tax Appeals, the year 1937 10 receiving consideration
in Washington in connection with the field investigation already
made, the years 1958, 1939, 1940 and 1941 are to be made the subject
of field investigations in two widely separated field divisions, and
as the action already taken for 1955 and 1936 will have its effect
on subsequent years, it is concluded that the Government's interests
will be best served by having Mr. Schenck's case for 1955 to 1941,
inclusive, managed under one supervision.
(Signed) Guy T. Heivering
Commissioner.
Regraded Unclassified
90
May 18, 1942.
MEMORANDUM
TO:
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM: Mr. Gaston
The Office of Scientific Research
and Development asks for the continuous
services of two Secret Service agents
to safeguard personnel and protective
devices at the Radiation Laboratory at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
at Boston where some extremely secret
research is under way. They will reim-
burse us. The men can be provided from
the Boston office. I recommend that the
request be approved.
O.K. HM Jr
HEG:pm
Daston
Regraded Unclassified
91
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
CONFIDENTIAL
DATE May 18, 1942
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Hass
Subject: The Business Situation,
Week ending May 16, 1942.
Summary
(1) Retail trade continues at a somewhat slower pace,
which has probably been due in part to the imminence of retail
price ceilings, effective today. The actual volume of depart-
ment store sales in the early part of May fell below year-
earlier levels. Dollar sales ran only 6 to OR percent above
year-earlier levels, while prices were up about 19 percent.
(2) The general price level has shown the first recession
since early in February. The BLS all-commodity index in the
week ended May 9 declined 0.1 percent to 98.6 -- a figure
31.5 percent above the pre-war level of August 1939. Basic
commodity prices on the whole have shown little change
recently.
(3) The cost of living continued upward in April, prior
to the influence of the price ceiling order. The BLS cost-of-
living index in that month rose 0.7 percent over the previous
month, and stood 16.7 percent above the pre-war level of
June 1939. Clothing costs led the rise, showing a gain of
2.7 percent.
(4) The output of steel ingots last week rose to the
highest level on record as a result of a 1-point rise in the
operating rate to 99.6 percent of capacity. However, demand
for steel continues to run ahead of production, with orders
carrying ratings of A-10 or higher amounting to 117 percent
of capacity. Direct and vital indirect war requirements are
aggregating nearly 99 percent of the industry's maximum out-
put.
(5) Due to heavy military requirements, particularly for
cantonment and warehouse construction, the delivery of soft-
wood construction lumber to civilian users, by nearly all
mills, has been banned for 60 days. The lumber will go to the
Army, Navy and Maritime Commission. Larger supplies of raw
materials for current war needs should become available as &
result of last week's reported major policy decision to virtu-
ally eliminate longer range expansion of war plant capacity.
Regraded Unclassified
92
- 2 -
General price control developments
The first week of wholesale trade under the general
wholesale price ceiling was marked by a series of OPA rul-
ings which have partially allayed the confusion in the trade
over administration of the ceiling order. As the regulation
for retail prices becomes effective today, announcement of
additional orders and adjustment procedures are expected. In
some lines, noticeably in woolen goods, retail sales are re-
ported to have dwindled considerably, and wholesale sales to
have halted, pending further instructions concerning the prio-
ing of seasonal textiles and goods sold under Government con-
tracts.
OPA rulings issued last week included the following:
(1) Retail ceilings on specified seasonal goods
shall be determined by applying last season's
percentage mark-up to a cost figure which
cannot exceed the highest manufacturer's
price in March.
(2) Retailers whose margins are lowered, or even
eliminated, on articles not making up a sub-
stantial portion of their total volume, must
absorb the difference or seek relief from
their suppliers.
(3) Retail prices established under fair trade
contracts, where there is any conflict be-
tween existing State fair trade laws and
the general price order, are to be subject
to the order.
Cost of living rises in April
Although living costs as of April 15 (prior to the
ceiling order) rose to a new war-time high, the advance may
not have carried average retail prices above the high point
of March, on which the price ceiling 1s based. (See
Chart 1.) In such case, living costs may show relatively
little decline from the April level after the ceiling becomes
effective. Nevertheless, costs of certain items will be
lowered, and chief among these will be many food and clothing
items.
The BLS cost-of-living index for mid-April rose 0.7 per-
cent above that of March, and was 16.7 percent higher than
the pre-war level of June 1939. Clothing prices advanced
93
- 3 -
sharply for the third successive month, and their nearly
vertical rise has practically caught up with the advance in
food costs. Clothing costs increased 2.7 percent during the
month, and food costs 0.8 percent. Rent, fuel, and light
costs were unchanged, but other costs increased to some
extent.
Some retail food prices due for reduction
Retail prices for selected foods in 51 cities monthly in
1940, 1941, and through mid-April 1942, are shown in Chart 2.
The chart has been brought more nearly up to date with estimates
of prices as of April 28, made on the basis of confidential
information supplied by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for
19 cities. These indicate a marked general rise during the
latter part of April. of the selected foods shown separately,
prices for pork chops, round steak, and bread are subject to
the general ceiling order. Butter and egg prices -- not under
ceilings -- are likely to rise, since the Department of
Agriculture is supporting wholesale prices of butter at a
minimum of 36 cents a pound for the rest of the year, and had
earlier announced a rising scale of fixed buying prices for dried
eggs.
Wholesale commodity prices hesitate
The BLS all-commodity index receded very slightly to 98.6
in the week ended May 9, immediately before the general price
regulation became effective in wholesale commodity markets.
This was 31.5 percent above the level of the pre-war month of
August 1939.
Basic commodity prices last week continued to follow an
irregular course, with little net change. (See Chart 3.) The
BLS price index of foodstuffs advanced to a new high, but the
index of industrial raw materials declined somewhat. The rise
in foodstuffs prices was featured by advances in prices for
hogs and steers, which were buoyed by Government purchases of
pork and by livestock producers' withholding of offerings.
Cottonseed oil prices advanced as a result of an adjust-
ment of the OPA ceiling. Wheat and corn prices were somewhat
lower, but barley advanced to a new war-time high. Butter
prices declined as Government buyers stayed out of the market.
Price ceilings and futures trading
The effect of price control on futures trading was demon-
strated again last week with the announcement of the closing of
the New York Cocoa Exchange, following liquidation of existing
Regraded Unclassified
94
4
contracts. Since the ceiling was placed on cocoa prices,
trading on the Exchange has consisted chiefly of exchange of
futures for actuals, gradually eliminating most of the open
contracts. The Cocoa Exchange was the tenth commodity ex-
change to close as a result of the war. The others were those
dealing in silk, rubber, copper, tin, lead, zinc, hides, sugar,
and coffee.
Pressure on sugar supplies lightened in East
A sharp decline in demand for refined sugar has occurred
recently, as sugar hoarded by householders and industries 1s
coming into use under rationing. As a result, refined sugar
is being moved by rail from the South into warehouses in the
deficit area in the North, and the OPA has ordered beet sugar
offerings restricted to its normal western territory.
Cuban planters, as well as planters in this country, are
reported hesitant about planting for a large 1943 crop because
of uncertainty as to United States requirements, which appear
to have been lowered by rationing and by curtailment of the
alcohol program from high-test molasses.
Lag in retail trade continues
Department store sales have continued to lag recently,
probably due in part to the effects of the maximum price
regulations which go into effect on retail prices today.
Thus in the week ended May 9 the gain over year-earlier levels
narrowed to 6 percent from 8 percent in the previous week.
(See Chart 4.) Furthermore, the figures mentioned contrast
markedly with the cumulative sales gain of 20 percent shown
thus far in 1942.
The unit volume of department store sales in recent
weeks has actually fallen noticeably below year-earlier
levels, since retail prices of typical department store items
on May 1 were 18.7 percent above those of a year-earlier,
thus much more than accounting for the recent moderate gains
in dollar sales. Retail prices on May 1, as measured by the
Fairchild index, were 0.8 percent higher than a month earlier.
All of the major groups comprising the index showed gains
during the month, with an advance of 1.3 percent in men's
wear leading the rise.
Preliminary reports from the New York area indicate that
department store sales improved slightly last week, with more
favorable weather conditions tending to offset the restrain-
ing influences of gasoline rationing and the imminence of
Regraded Unclassified
95
- 5 -
retail price ceilings. Dun and Bradstreet's nation-wide week-
ly survey of retail trade showed that average dollar sales
last week were approximately equal to year-earlier levels,
thus indicating a rather noticeable decline in actual volume.
Steel output at new high
As a result of & 1 point rise in operations to 99.6 per-
cent of capacity, the tonnage of steel ingots scheduled for
production last week was the highest on record. (See
Chart 5.) Although an operating rate of 99.9 percent was
reached in the weeks ended May 19 and June 23, 1941, the in-
dustry's capacity at that time was lower. Steel operations
during the current week are scheduled at 99.2 percent of
capacity.
Steel ingot production in April fell moderately below
the previous month's record output, but it was more than
5 percent greater than in April 1941. In the face of some
earlier predictions of an actual decline in this year's steel
output, aggregate production in the first 4 months of 1942
exceeded year-earlier levels by more than 4 percent. Ship-
ments of steel plates in April rose about 2 percent to a new
high, and Maritime Commission requirements are reported to
have been met for the second consecutive month. Neverthe-
less, it was indicated that a permanent solution to the
troublesome steel plate problem would not be had until addi-
tional plate mill capacity was in production.
War needs absorb nearly all steel output
Despite the attainment of virtual capacity production
by the steel industry, demand for steel is still well above
production, and WPB officials indicated last week that fur-
ther restrictions will be imposed on consumption. Thus it
was stated that demand during the current quarter carrying
ratings of A-10 or higher amounts to 117 percent of the
industry's capacity. Direct war requirements of the Army,
Navy, Maritime Commission and Lend-lease amount to nearly
67 percent of total capacity. In addition, allocation pro-
grams for mines, railroads, exports, etc., account for
another 14 percent, while new construction vitally essential
to the war effort, such as for rubber, steel and aluminum
plants, 1s taking 18 percent of capacity. Thus direct and
vital indirect war requirements alone are currently aggre-
gating nearly 99 percent of the steel industry's total
capacity.
Regraded Unclassified
- 6 -
96
Plant expansion program to be out
The shortage of raw materials, the dire need for more
ships, and the belief that war developments may reach, a
climax in the near future, have apparently resulted in a major
shift in emphasis in the conduct of the war production pro-
gram. A spokesman for the WPB at the end of last week is
reported to have stated that virtually all contracts for war
plants which cannot be completed and in production by mid-1943
would be canceled. This move would tie in with the reported
desire of the WPB to concentrate available supplies on the
production of arms and munitions rather than on the plants
in which they would be made in the more distant future. It
was further indicated that, while construction will be
pushed on projects like synthetic rubber and aviation gasoline
plants, the scope of steel plant expansion, for example, would
be cut down considerably.
Scrap dealers licensed
An improvement in the flow of steel scrap to mills has
contributed to the recent rise in steel output. Nevertheless,
in order to secure greater control over the scrap industry,
the OPA recently ordered the licensing of all dealers in
scrap, waste and salvage materials, effective May 20. The
licensing will apply not only to dealers in iron and steel
scrap but also to those handling other scrap materials for
which maximum prices have been established, such as aluminum
and zino scrap, waste paper, scrap rubber, etc.
In issuing the order, Price Administrator Henderson
indicated that evasions of price schedules have presented
difficult problems and that a more comprehensive enforcement
technique was deemed necessary. Considerable significance
would appear to attach to this move, since OPA will thus be
able to force the hand of violators of price regulations by
revoking their licenses.
Construction lumber deliveries restricted
Due to heavy military construction requirements, the
WPB last week banned for 60 days the sale and delivery of
softwood construction lumber for civilian uses by all but
the smallest mills. Delivery from mills will be made during
this period only to the Army, Navy and Maritime Commission.
The apparent purpose of the move 1s to enable the Army to
obtain urgently needed lumber for the erection of canton-
ments and warehouses.
Regraded Unclassified
Chart 1
COST OF LIVING AND SELECTED ITEMS
97
JUNE 1939 = 100
1939
1940
1941
1942
PER
PER
CENT
CENT
112
112
108
108
COST or LIVING
104
104
100
100
124
124
120
120
FOOD
116
116
112
112
108
108
CLOTHING
104
104
100
100
RENT, LIGHT,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS
AND HEAT
AND MISCELLÁNEOUS
96
96
J
$
D
M
J
5 o N D J F M A M J J A $ o N D J F M A - J
1940
1941
1942
1939
SOURCE: B.L.S.
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury
C - 413
I = j I 1
Regraded UInclassified
FOOD PRICES. RETAIL
JAN.
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
NOV.
PERCENT
PERCENT
RETAIL FOODS"
(1940-100)
130
130
125
125
1942
120
120
115
115
110
110
1941
105
105
100
100
1940
95
95
90
90
JAML
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
NOV.
Selected Basic Foods
MAR.
MAY
ALT
SEPT
NOV.
JAM
MAR.
MAY
AAY
SEPT.
NOVE
JAM.
CENTS
CENTS PER
CENTS
CENTS PER
PER DGZ.
10 La. SAB
PER DOZ.
10 LB. BAG
WHEAT FLOUR"
EGGS*
52
52
54
54
1942
48
48
50
50
J941
44
44
1942
46
46
1940
40
40
JAM.
MAR.
MAY
au
SEPT
NOV.
42
42
CENTS
CENTS
PER LE
BREAD
.
PER LA
1941
9.0
9.0
38
30
8.5
1942
8.5
1940
1940
8.0
8.0
34
34
1941
7.5
7.5
JAM.
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
BOX
30
30
CENTS
CENTS
PER us
PER LB.
BUTTER*
48
26
26
48
JAIL
MAR
MY
ALT
SEPT.
BOX
CENTS
CENTS
PER LA
PER LR.
PORK CHOPS*
44
44
46
46
1942
40
40
1941
42
42
36
36
1940
38
38
32
32
JAN.
BAR.
MAY
MY
SEPT
NOV.
CENTS
CENTS
1941
PER LB.
PER LS.
1942
ROUND STEAK",
34
34
44
:
1942
30
30
40
40
1940
1941
1940
26
20
36
36
$2
32
==
=
-
MAR.
MAY
au
5
-
JAR.
-
-
any
SEPE
NOT
- Let figures are for April 26. detimated
- - 51 Cillies, als
6
Chart
- of - - di - -
I 1 1 I
Regraded Unclassitled
MOVEMENT OF BASIC COMMODITY PRICES
AUGUST 1939-100
PERCENT
PERCENT
PERCENT
PERCENT
Weekly Average
Daily
220
220
200
200
200
200
190
12 Feedstuffe
190
12 Foodstuffs
180
180
180
180
160
170
170
160
140
140
160
16 Row Industrial
160
Materials
AS Row Industrial
Materials
120
120
150
150
100
140
140
100
as
28
7
M
a
a
4
"
at
#
.
.
#
29
.
6
a
JUNE
AUG.
OCT.
DEC.
FEB.
APR.
JUNE
AUG.
OCT.
DEC.
FEB.
MAR.
APR
MAY
JUNE
1941
1942
1942
PERCENTAGE CHANGE FOR INDIVIDUAL COMMODITIES
Aug. 1939 to May 15. 1942
Dec. 6. 1941 to May 8,and May 15. 1942
PERCENT
Cottonsed Oil IS&AX
PERCENT
12 Foodstuffs
12 Foodstuffs
Noge ansx
+40
Hoge ITESX
120
Tollow INL7X
Lard INJX
+30
Coooo MM.7X
Marley PL/X
Lord 17.7%
Com sasx
Corn ALIX
Coffee 772%
+20
80
Barky M.BX
Whent 684X
Steers M3X
Steere 65.0%
Cottormed Oil est
Butter 884X
+10
Butter 40%
Tollow 7.92
40
Sugar 6.9X
Sugar 30.8%
Wheat 1.1%
o
Coffee ex
Coose A
0
-10
Aug
May 15
Dec.6.
May8
May IS
1939
1942
1941
1942
1942
PERCENT
PERCENT
16 Raw Industrial
16 Raw Industrial Materials
Materials
Flowed 44.6%
&
Cotton IMM
120
/
Buriqo AMAX
+30
Print Cloth past
Flanned 71.5%
Cotton N.SX
Zino sex
+20
Load IIIX
80
Who/ 42/2
Print Cloth 78%
Mideo M.72
Zine #
4a. Screp.dem JE.PX
Rubber MAX
+10
0% Change
Shellec. Tin.
Load FROM
Copper
40
Albain 8272
Mides. Silk,
17.1%
0
St. Scrept don.
Rubber.
Copper N.OX
St. Scrap. asp.
am -
Who -1.00
Tin 4.6%
-10
0
May IS
Dec.6.
May 4
May IS
Assin -MI
Aug
1939
1942
1941
1942
1942
Bundep -4R
"Black lines indicate commedities under price callings
99
- é - - of - -
P-84-0
Chart 3
Regraded Unclassified
Chart 4
100
DEPARTMENT STORE SALES
1935 . '39 - 100, UNADJUSTED
JAN.
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
NOV.
PER
PER
CENT
CENT
Weekly
260
260
240
240
220
220
200
200
180
180
160
160
140
140
120
120
'41
'42
100
100
80
80
'40
60
60
JAN.
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
NOV.
Office of the Secretary of be Trumy
- of - and Male
c - 390
Chart 5
101
STEEL INGOT PRODUCTION
PER
CENT
Per Cent of Capacity
100
'41
42
80
:40
60
40
Amer. / and 8. Inst.
20
JAN.
MAR.
MAY
JULY
SEPT.
NOV.
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury
Division of Research and Statistics
c- 419
102
May 18, 1942
For the Secretary
Attached is 8 copy of a letter just received from
our District Chief Examiner in Dallas.
mhr
Upm
ó
103
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
o
P
Y
Office of
venth Federal Reserve
District
Comptroller of the Currency
May 15, 1942
Comptroller of the Currency
Washington, D. C.
Attention: Mr. C. B. Upham
Sir:
This has further reference to our telephone conversation of
May 13, relative to oil production loans carried by national banks
in this district.
My information is that the Railroad Commission of Texas has
authorized six days' production for the first half of the current
month, and while no order has been announced by the commission, it
is believed that another six days of production will be authorized
for the last half of the month, making a total of twelve days' pro-
duction for the entire month.
My information also is that storage facilities are running
about to capacity in some localities and pipe lines have materially
reduced the amount of oil that they will receive. In some cases the
pipe lines are now taking only about forty per cent of that normally
permitted to run. Under these conditions, it is evident that oil
production loans now carried cannot be paid out at the rate anticipated
when the loans were made, and in many cases, will have to be rewritten
on different payment terms. Banks in Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, and
San Antonio, where the principal portion of the oil production loans
in this state are carried, have been contacted, and without exception,
they fully realize existing conditions and are going along willingly
and without complaint with the loans they now have, but are making no
new loans of this character of any consequence. Information along
this line is that no borrower is to be pressed on account of restric-
tions in production and use, when otherwise the loans are c onsidered
good.
You may feel fully assured that the national bank examiners
in this district are not taking any unreasonable position relative to
oil production loans on account of present restrictions. The banks
and the bank examiners have 8 full understanding of the situstion and
I am thoroughly convinced there is no cause for any criticism of either.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) W. A. Sandlin
W. A. Sandlin
Chief National Bank Examiner.
WAS:b
104
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
1
WASHINGTON
STATE
the
May 18, 1942
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Dear Mr. Secretary:
There is attached a copy of a letter which I have just
sent Senator James E. Mead relative to the establish-
ment of mobile labor camps. This letter was sent in
reply to two requests received by Senator Mead indi-
cating the great need for these camps in New York State
in 1942. After our discussion yesterday I thought you
would be interested in this letter.
Sincerely yours,
Claude
Secretary
Enclosure
COPY
105
Honorable James M. Mead
United States Senate
Dear Senator Mead:
Thank you for sending us the letters you received from Mr. John E.
Johnson, Chairman of the Genesee County Agricultural Defense Com-
mittee, LeRoy, New York, and Mr. Charles Parker, Chairman of the
County War Board of Niagara County, Lockport, New York, about the
need for facilities to house migrant farm laborers in these sections
of New York State.
A serious farm labor shortage is expected in many parts of New
York during the coming crop season, due both to industries in
nearby communities absorbing much of the labor usually available
for this purpose and to the increase in farm production called for
under the Food for Victory Campaign which is now being stressed
throughout the Country.
The Farm Security Administration, in cooperation with other agencies
and groups, made a study of this situation, and as a result that
Administration expects to be able to provide five Mobile Migratory
Labor Camps to operate in the State of New York during the coming
crop season where the need appears greatest. It is expected that
Niagara and Genesee Counties will each be served by a camp.
As you know, provision for construction and operation of Migratory
Labor Camps was stricken from the Agricultural Bill in the House of
Representatives contrary to the recommendation of the President.
It is hoped that before final passage of the Agricultural Appropria-
tions Bill this situation will be remedied.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary
Enclosures
MA e) YAM SACI
Am allent06
C 1
This meeting
THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE with m
UNITED of
WASHINGTON
sullware
May 18, 1942
Dear Henry:
In accordance with the President's
suggestion made in his letter of May 16th,
copy of which is enclosed, I an calling a.
meeting of this committee and the Executive
Committee of the Governors' Conference in my
office at the Department of Commerce, Wednes-
day, May 20th, at 10 A. M. Your presence will
be greatly appreciated.
Sincerely yours,
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. c.
107
COPY
THE WHITE HOUSE
Washington
May 16, 1942
My dear Mr. Secretary:
As you know, divergent State laws and regulations are
impeding many phases of the war effort. These impediments
to full production were discussed at your comference last
week between representatives of the State governments and
Federal war agencies. Specific solutions must be developed.
The Council of State Governments has suggested that I
appoint a committee from the war agencies to meet with the
Executive Committee of the Governor's Conference and formu-
late these solutions.
I an appointing you chairman of the committee from the
Federal Government. Other members are the Secretary of the
Treasury, the Attorney General, the Under Secretary of War,
the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the Chairman of the
War Production Board, the Director of the Office of Price
Administration, the Director of the Office of Defense Trans-
portation, and the Chairman of the War Manpower Commission.
I suggest that you communicate at once with Mr. Frank
Bane, Executive Director of the Council of State Governments,
and arrange a meeting of your committee with the Executive
Committee of the Governors' Conference early next week.
Sincerely yours,
/a/ Franklin D. Roosevelt
The Honorable
HTRATHY Y)
The Secretary of Commerce
laws la VW NO
BACK a
30,770
OLL
Regraded Unclassified
108
MAY 18 1942
Dear Harolds
I have your letter of May 15. 1942, calling
attention to pending legislation providing for the
establishment of a Columbia Power Administration.
I an glad to have your full explanation of
this matter and I am having the will studied w
representatives of this Department and hope to give
you a report on the proposed legislation within the
course of the next few days.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jc.
Secretary of the Treasury
The Henorable,
The Secretary of the Interior.
DWB:ce 5-18-42
Regraded Unclassified
109
Regraded Unclassified
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
MAY 1 5 1942
Dear Henry.
a
For almost two years I have sought to secure legislation that would
enable the Bonneville Power Administration to provide the necessary leader-
ship in the program for acquiring utility properties in the Northwest and
setting up a coordinated public development. The culmination of this effort
has been the recent introduction in the two houses of Congress of exendments
to the Bonneville Act, R. R. 6889, H. R. 6890, and 8. 2430, all of which are
identionl bills providing for the establishment of a Columbia Power Adminis-
tration. They are largely the work of Senator Bone of Washington. I believe
that it is of great importance that this legislation become law during this
session of the Congress.
For many years a vigerous popular movement in that region has been
attempting to effect these acquisitions. The huge Federal investment in the
Columbia River dams, together with the expressions of Congress in the Bonne-
ville Act respecting the disposition of the power from that project, has
given that movement new impetus. The Northwest is a public power area and
the continued existence of private utilities in the region is an unpopular
and uneconomical anachronism. The smooth transition from private to public
ownership of utility properties is a vital concern to the owners of those
properties, to the public agencies that seek to distribute electricity, to
the consumers, and to the Government. Even if the welfare of all of the
groups involved were not a matter of concern to the Federal Government, its
heavy investment in power in the region and its role of principal producer
and wholesaler of energy would make the Government necessarily a party at
interest in the matter of these acquisitions.
The war has magnified the importance of the acquisitions. No soheme of
operation under diversified ownership will effect the degree of coordination
of the electrical facilities of this heavily electrified region necessary to
achieve the greatest output of power and energy with the least expenditure
of oritical materials. Every kilowatt of power in this country is important
to the war, but in the Northwest every kilowatt is crucial. The region is a
storehouse of critical war materials that can only be unlooked through the
availability of large quantities of electric energy. About 95% of the eleo-
tricity being generated at the Federal facilities in the region is being put
directly into industries essential to the war. The only alternative to legis-
lation permitting Bonneville to effect immediately an acquisition program
that is inevitable in this area would be to resort to emergency expedients
110
that would either be ineffective or would be many times more expensive to
the Goverment than the orderly acquisition procedure provided in the pro-
posed legislation. That is the reason, I an sure, that the President, who
has kept closely in touch with this matter for a number of years, wrote to
Senator Bone with respect to his bill as follows:
"I an glad to ⑉ that you have introduced a bill in the Senate which
will authorise the acquisition by public bodies of the utility properties
in the Northwest without increasing the indebtedness of the Federal Treasury,
and provide an orderly means for returning to the Federal Government its
investment in the power facilities at Bermeville and Grand Coulee. Both
aspects of your bill are important in connection with the prosecution of
the war. It will be helpful to the Federal Treasury to have the finances
of Bonneville and Grand Coulee placed on a self-sustaining basis, and it is
of great importance to our production program that the Bonneville-Grand Coulse
power system, which is now almost entirely devoted to the manufacture of
materials of mr, should be auguented by the acquisition of other utility
properties in the Northwest, Your bill will mean more airplanes, more ships
and more rew materials and implements of war."
The prospects for securing this legislation are exceedingly favorable,
particularly since the President has indicated that it will have the support
of the Administration. of course there will be the inevitable opposition
and it can be counted upon to seise every opportunity to divide those who
favor the measure. For that reason I hope that it will be possible for all
the agencies of the Federal Government that report on the bill to favor its
enactment and to suggest as few modifications in language as my be consistent
with securing workable provisions. The bill does not embody all of the
features that I would like to have had included. It is in a very real sense
a compromise. But because the and sought is of such great importance and I
an convinced that the provisions as they now stand have a real chance for
enactment, I as willing to forego any betterments upon which I might otherwise
have insisted.
The fiscal provisions som particularly advantageous at this time because
they set up the Government's Northwest power program on a business-like,
pay=as=you-go basis. These features of the bill are substantially those
worked out by conferences with representatives of various agencies of the
Government and embodied in the draft of legislation prepared by the Bureau
of the Budget and introduced last November by Congressman mill as H. R. 6076.
Officials of your Department were particularly helpful in working on this
matter. The provision for the issuance of revenue bonds rather than obli-
gations fully guaranteed by the Treasury is a new one in this bill. This
Regraded Unclassified
111
exception to the procedure contained in earlier drafts resulted from ⑉
ferences that Senator Bone had with colleagues in the Senate and with
members of the House. It was generally felt that the Congress would be
unwilling to pass the bill unless provision were made to finance the acqui-
sitions without increasing the indebtedness of the Treasury. The revenue
bond provisions of the bill accomplish this end. I an certain that the bill
can not pass unless this feature is retained,
I em aware that the Federal Government has not heretofore resorted to
revenue bond financing in circumstances such as these, and I understand that
there may be considerations against the widespread use of this method. How-
ever, none of these considerations obtains with respect to the issuance of
revenue bonds for financing the acquisitions contemplated in the current
legislation.
The use of revenue bond financing, especially in connection with public
power programs, has a. great deal of precedent in state and municipal practice.
The record of revenue bonds issued for this type of enterprise 18, I believe,
unblemished by default. Interest rates on such bonds have been low, indeed,
in many instances, lower than rates paid by the same governmental bodies on
their general obligation bonds. Revenue bonds have maintained relatively
stable values when other mmicipal securities have fluctuated. In the North-
west, particularly, the history of this type of financing is a. long and
honorable one. Mr. Foley, your general counsel, wrote some axcellent articles
on the subject of revenue bond financing as a result of his experience with
these securities in the Public Works program.
The revenue bonds contemplated by the proposed legislation would be issued
against acquired facilities that would enhance the value of the Government's
power properties. They would be supported by earnings many times in excess
of their debt charges. of course, each of the acquisitions, under the terms
of the bills as well as under prudent administrative practice, must stand on
its own feet. However, the bonds that would be issued to acquire electrical
facilities in the Northwest would be amply secured not only by the income
derived from the use of the properties that they would represent but also by
the tremendous income producing value of the Federal facilities in the area.
Any discussion of the possibility of a default would be purely theoretical.
The Bonnoville Power Administration is now deriving about $500,000 per month
from its sales of power. Before the end of this year its income from power
sales will be on the basis of $1,000,000 per month. Its operation and main-
tenance costa will be in the neighborhood of $2,000,000 per year. This heavy
oushion makes the security of the proposed bonds already a case of super-
erogation without the imposition of further guarantees by the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
112
It is contemplated in the bills that the system-wide acquisitions of
utility properties would be accompanied by the resale of the distribution
properties to local bodies and occperatives. Incidentally, these local
agencies would issue revenue bonds against the properties that they acquired.
Only the major generating stations and transmission facilities would be
retained by the Columbia Power Administration and integrated with its con-
structed system. The Administration as well as the local public agencies
would thereby secure necessary properties without having to pay heavy severance
damages that would be imposed by piecemsal acquisitions. The bonds to be
issued against the facilities retained by the Administration would represent
only a fraction of the price of the purchased properties. The distribution
facilities that would be sold to local groups would provide customers and
increased revenues for the Federal system,
Subsequent to the introduction of the Columbia Power bills we have had
direct evidence of the soundness of the revenue bond proposal. A number of
representatives of recognised banking groups, including The First Boston
Corporation, Lehman Bros., Blyth & Co., Inc., and Halsey, Stuart & Co., Inc.,
have sought out Senator Bone and members of my staff to discuss the marketing
of these bonds. Moreover, eminent bond counsel have been consulted in this
matter and have indicated that the bill would provide an appropriate basis
for the issuance and sale of revenue bonds. It is generally believed that
they could be sold to bear interest rates commensurate with those paid by the
United States on its general obligations.
In the circumstaness, I hope that the practical considerations that I
have outlined may prevail and that your Department will be able to render a
favorable report on the Columbia Power bills now before the Senate Commerce
Committee and the Rivers and Harbors Committee of the House, Joint hearings
on the bills may be expected in the next few weeks.
If I or members of my staff can be helpful to you in going into this
matter more fully, please do not hesitate to call upon me.
Sincerely yours,
(Sgd.) HAROLD L. ICKES
Secretary of the Interior.
lays WA le 38
IVERINGA
OKL CE
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
m 113
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
May 18, 1942.
MEMORANDUM
FROM: Interdepartmental Committee on Investigations Pursuant to Public
No. 135.
TO: Executive heads of departments, agencies, and independent estab-
lishments.
SUBJECT: Membership in the Communist Party or German-American Bund as
ground for dismissal from Federal employment.
NOTE: The following memorandum prepared for the
Interdepartmental Committee is being made
available to executive heads for use in
administration under Public No. 135.
1. The question has been raised whether the membership of a Federal
employee in the Communist Party or the German-American Bund is ground
for his dismissal.
If the Party and the Bund advocate "the overthrow of the Government
of the United States by force or violence," or advocate the "overthrow
of our constitutional form of government in the United States," the
answer must be in the affirmative. The first test appears in the recent
appropriation acts (see paragraph 4, below); the second appears in the
Hatch Act (see paragraph 5, below).
Whether or not a showing is made as to the advocacy of force or
violence, it would seem that a member of the Party or the Bund is by
reason of that fact alone subject to removal from Federal employment
under section 652 of title 5 of the United States Code, which provides
for removal "for such cause as will promote the efficiency of said
service."
(OVER)
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
2. The Intention of Congress. It has long been the clear inten-
tion of Congress to outlaw and condemn subversive elements -- which
Congress regards as being most plainly exemplified by Communists and
Bundists. This intention is reflected in the Federal employment statutes,
and definitely expressed in certain other legislation. Two statutes make
specific mention of the Communist Party and the German-American Bund. The
first is the Selective Service Act of September 16, 1940, 50 U.S.C.A. App.
sec. 308 (1). Congress there inserted an express statement of its policy
that whenever there is a vacancy in any employment because of the induction
into the armed services of an employee, "such vacancy shall not be filled
by any person who is a member of the Communist Party or the German-
American Bund." The second statute is the Emergency Relief Appropriation
Act, June 16, 1940, 54 Stat. 611, 620. It is there provided that no
person belonging to the Communist Party or the Nazi Bund Organization
"shall be given employment.or continued in employment on any work project
prosecuted under the appropriations contained in this joint resolution."
The same act calls for an affidavit from certain individuals that the
affiant is not a Communist and not a member of any Nazi Bund Organization.
Mention may be made also of the recent amendment to the Foreign
Agents Registration Act (Public Law 532, April 29, 1942). That act con-
tains general language concerning membership in an organization which
advocates the overthrow of our form of Government by force or violence.
In the debate in Congress, it was urged that express mention be made of
the Communist Party and the German-American Bund. Because of the inter-
national political situation, such language was omitted. Yet most speakers
emphasized that the act, as passed, was intended to cover and does cover
Regraded Unclassified
114
- 3 -
membership in the organizations just named. It was simply deemed politic
to avoid any specific labels. See Cong. Rec. V. 88, P. 827.
There can be no doubt that Congress regards the dismissal of Commu-
nists and Bundists from the Federal service as not only desirable but
mandatory.
3. Removal under section 652. The Civil Service Act provides that
civil service employees may be removed only "for such cause as will pro-
mote the efficiency of said service," Act of August 24, 1912, 37 Stat.
555, 5 U. S. C., sec, 652. This section has recently been invoked by
the Secretary of Labor in removing an employee who was affiliated with
the Communist Party and whose employment was therefore felt to be inimical
to the efficient operation of her Department. See Matter of Miller
(opinion of August 1, 1941). The Secretary of Labor, after reviewing the
evidence, relied solely on section 652. She found that the employee was
a leader in organizations dominated by Communists; that the employee had
solicited another person to join the Party; that the employee, if not a
Party member, at least accepted the Party's discipline; that the employee's
usefulness as a government worker had been impaired; and that the employee's
retention would undermine the confidence of the public in the employing
Bureau,
The Miller case is clear precedent for the dismissal of Communists
and Bundists from the Federal service.
Even stricter controls apply to employees of the War and Navy Depart-
ments, of the Coast Guard, and of their field services. Section 652 ex-
tends no protection to such employees, and they can be dismissed whenever
their immediate removal is "in the opinion of the Secretary concerned,
(OVER)
Regraded Unclassified
- 4 -
warranted by the demands of national security." Act of June 28, 1940,
54 Stat. 676, sec, 6. The same result is achieved with regard to em-
ployees of the Military Establishment by the act of July 2, 1940, 54 Stat.
713, 5 U. S. C. 653. All this seems to do is spell out in broad terms
still greater discretionary power in limited instances without detracting
from the broad interpretation of section 652 employed by the Secretary
of Labor.
4. The Appropriation Acts. Another approach to the problem appears
in the recent appropriation acts. Those acts provide that no funds are
to be allocated to pay any salary or other expense otherwise authorized
"to any person who advocates, or who is a member of an organization that
advocates, the overthrow of the government of the United States by force
or violence." A partial list of acts using substantially the quoted
2)
language is as follows:
Public Law 13, March 17, 1941, Sec. 3, Title 3;
If
23, March 27, 1941, Sec. 4;
If
28, April 5, 1941;
If
29, April 5, 1941, Sec. 3, Title 3;
If
71, May 23, 1941, Sec. 4;
If
88, May 31, 1941, Sec. 305;
"
135, June 28, 1941, Sec. 504, Title 5;
11
136, June 28, 1941, Sec. 7;
If
139, June 30, 1941, Sec. 10;
If
143, July 1, 1941, Sec. 12 (b);
II
144, July 1, 1941, Sec. 3;
II
145, July 1, 1941, Sec. 5;
II
146, July 1, 1941, Sec. 704;
#
148, July 1, 1941, Sec. 10;
If
150, July 3, 1941, Sec. 303;
If
282, October 28, 1941, Sec. 301;
If
353, December 17, 1941, Sec. 502;
11
422, January 30, 1942, Sec. 301;
19
441, February 7, 1942, Sec. 112;
II
463, February 21, 1942, Sec. 301;
"
474, March 5, 1942, Sec. 401;
11
495, March 10, 1942, Sec. 305.
3
Regraded Unclassified
115
- 5 -
All of these acts impose criminal penalties on persons of the pro-
scribed class who accept Federal employment and derive wages therefrom.
The subversive employee must also restore to the United States the wages
he has wrongfully obtained. See 18 U. S, C. secs, 80, 81, 83; 28 U. S. C.
secs. 279, 280; 31 U. S. C. sec. 231.
Whether the Communist Party advocates the overthrow of the Government
by force or violence is a point which has been much mooted. At one time
the Party almost certainly did 80. In 1938, or perhaps earlier, the Party
line is said to have changed and violence is said to have been repudiated.
The Bridges case is relevant. An effort was made to deport Bridges
because of his connection with the Communist Party. In December 1939,
Dean Landis ruled that Bridges on the evidence was not then a member of
the Communist Party and accordingly recommended against deportation. On
September 29, 1941, Judge Sears found that Bridges had been a member of
the Communist Party and held that sufficient ground existed for his
deportation, the statute having been amended to make past membership in
subversive organizations a basis of deportation. Judge Sears held that
the Communist Party was still advocating overthrow of our Government by
force and violence. On January 6, 1942, the Board of Immigration Appeals
overruled Judge Sears as to Bridges' connection with the Communist Party,
but said nothing as to the Party or its aims.
The case law on the subject relates chiefly to the period prior to
1938, and hence is not decisive if in fact the aims of the Party have
changed. Dean Landis points this out in his Bridges opinion and adds,
at page 7:
If * * * Not only is there the possibility that the
characteristics and objectives of the Communist Party of
(OVER)
Regraded Unclassified
- 6 -
the United States of America have changed, but it is possible,
in the light of changing economic and political conditions, to
view the type of radical advocacy indulged in by that party as
now 80 indefinitely related to force or violence as to cast
doubt upon its appropriate inclusion within the ban of the statute.
See Antolish V. Paul, 283 Fed. 957, 959."
In the deportation cases, the courts have found almost uniformly that
the Party has advocated the use of force and violence and have held in
consequence that membership in the Party was in itself grounds for de-
portation. These cases arose under the deportation statutes now contained
in the act of October 14, 1940, 54 Stat. 1141, 8 U. S. C. sec. 705, et seq.,
and the act of June 28, 1940, 54 Stat, 673, 8 U. S. C. sec. 137. The
chief difference of opinion in the decisions relates to questions which
are not relevant to our inquiry, i.e., whether or not an individual member
has in fact subscribed to the aims of the Party, and as to the time of
2)
his membership. The latter point is the only one on which the Supreme
Court has ruled in this field. See Kessler V. Strecker, 307 U. S. 22
(1939), where the Court avoided our problem by refusing to pass upon the
adequacy of the evidence concerning the purposes and aims of the Communist
Party. The Circuit Courts in the past have generally agreed that the
Communists urge the use of force and violence. In some cases, the in-
dividual under scrutiny conceded that the Communist Party did advocate
force and violence, but his contention was that the evidence did not
establish him as a member. There follows a selected list of cases in
which it was held, or stated in dictum, or tacitly assumed, that the
Communist Party did advocate force and violence:
United States ex rel, Kettunen V. Reimer, 79 F. (2) 31,5 (C.C.A. 2, 1935)
United States ex rel. Ohm V. Perkins, 79 F. (2) 533 (C.C.A. 2, 1935);
United States ex rel. Yokinen V. Commissioner, 57 F. (2) 707 (C.C.A. 3
1932);
Berkman V. Tillinghast, 58 F. (2) 621 (C.C.A. 1, 1932);
Regraded Unclassified
116
- 7 -
Wolck V. Weidin, 58 F. (2) 928 (C.C.A. 9, 1932);
Jurgans v, Seaman, 25 F. (2) 35 (C.C.A. 8, 1928);
Kenmotsu V. Nagle, 44 F. (2) 953;
United States v. Tapolcsanyi, 40 F. (2) 255 (C.C.A. 3, 1930);
United States ex rel. Vojewvic v, Curran, 11 F. (2) 683 (C.C.A. 2, 1926):
Kjar V. Doak, 61 F. (2) 566 (C.C.A. 7, 1932);
Vilarino V. Garrity, 50 F. (2) 582 (C.C.A. 9, 1931);
Murdoch V. Clark, 53 F. (2) 155 (C.C.A. 1, 1931);
Branch V. Cahill, 88 F. (2) 545 (C.C.A. 9, 1937);
United States ex rel. Fernandas V. Commissioner, 65 F. (2) 593
(C.C.A. 2, 1933).
Compare:
United States ex rel. Vajtauer V. Commissioner, 273 U. S. 103 (1927)
(discussion of evidence);
Strecker V. Kessler, 95 F. (2) 976 (C.C.A. 1, 1938), (membership in
Party not per se cause for deportation),
affirmed on other grounds, 307 U. S. 22 (1939).
5. The Hatch Act; "Overthrow." The Hatch Political Activity Act
of August 2, 1939, makes it unlawful for any Federal employee "to have
membership in any political party or organization which advocates the
overthrow of our constitutional form of government in the United States."
53 Stat. 1147, as amended July 19, 1940, 54 Stat. 767 (18 U.S.C.A. sec.
61 (i)). It provides further that any person violating this prohibition
is to be immediately removed from the employment rolls. There is no men-
tion of "force and violence." The Hatch Act thus differs from the various
appropriation acts just discussed- a difference which may simplify our
problem. Some contend that the Communists do not now advocate the use of
force or violence; yet few would deny that the Party is striving to replace
"our constitutional form of government" with something entirely different.
Compare Chafee, Free Speech in the United States (1941) P. 222,
Yet the Hatch Act does present certain difficulties of interpretation.
What, exactly, is meant by the words "overthrow of our constitutional form
of government"? Many political parties advocate peaceable changes.
(OVER)
Regraded Unclassified
- g -
Numerous constitutional amendments have been effected in the last few
years. If "overthrow" means more than change, it may return us to the
old test of force and violence.
Similar remarks may be made concerning the application of the Hatch
Act to the German-American Bund, though here we have the additional fact
that the Bund can probably be regarded as essentially an enemy group.
6. Summary. There appear to be three bases for removing from
Federal employment rolls all members of the Communist Party and German-
American Bund: First, under the broad powers contained in section 652
of the Civil Service Act; second, under the Hatch Act, without need of
establishing the advocacy of force; third, by virtue of the various
appropriation acts, though here the advocacy of the use of force and
violence must be shown.
If an administrator decides to take action in a particular case,
the use of section 652 would seem to involve fewer difficulties of fact
and law than the second and third alternatives mentioned above.
117
MAY 18 1942
My dear Mr. President:
I an enclosing report on our exports
to some selected countries for the period
ending April 30, 1942.
Faithfully,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthan, and
Secretary of the Treasury
The President,
The White House.
Enclosure.
By Measenger reach 9:45
5/19/42
HDWsmoh
5/14/42
Ref. to Secips office
Regraded Unclassified
SECRET
118
May 14, 1942
Exports to Russia, Free China, Burna and other
blocked countries, as reported to the Treasury
Department during the tom-day period ending
April 30, 1942
1. Exports to Russia
Exports to Russia as reported during the ten-day period
ending April 30, 1942 amounted to nearly $51,000,000 as
compared with approximately $67,000,000 during the previous
ten-day period. Motor trucks and land planes were the two
principal items. (See Appendix C.)
2. Exports to Free China and Burna
Exports to Free China during the period under review
amounted to about $2,827,000, of which military equipment
accounted for more than ninety percent. (See Appendix D.)
No exports to Burna were reported.
3. Exports to France
No exports to France were reported during the period under
review.
4. Exports to other blocked countries
Exports to other blooked countries are given in Appendix A.
Most important were exports to Switzerland and Sweden amounting
to $223,000 and $155,000, respectively.
ISF/efs
5/16/42
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
SUNMARY OF UNITED STATES
DOMESTIC REPORTS 90 SILECTED COUNTRIES
AS REPORTED 90 THE TREASURY IMPARTMENT
FROM EXPORT INCLARATIONS RESERVED
DURING THE PERIOD INDICATED V
July 28, 1941 to April so, 1942.
(In thousands of dellars)
July 28
to
Period ender
Period online
Total
Hear,
April 20
April D
Demestic Emerts
U. S. S. R.
$230,881
$66,850
$80,958
$448,689
we China
65,531
5,335
2,827
73,003
Durna al
11,557
639
-
12,196
France 3/
6
-
-
6
Occupied France
2
-
-
2
occupied France
28
-
-
28
Spain
2,845
4
w
2,30
Svitserland
7,690
2,093
223
10,006
Sveden
17,472
19
155
17,646
Portugal
8,488
256
a
8,795
French North Africa y
6,283
IV
-
6,383
Treasury Department, Division of Monetary Research
May 12, 1942.
w Hany of the export declarations are received with a lag of several days or more,
Therefore this compilation does not accurately represent the actual shipment of
a particular period. The longer the period covered, the cleser will these figures
come to Department of Commisse revised figures.
al From September 11, 1941 to date - 10 is presumed that a large percentage of
material listed here, consigned to Darm, is destined for Tree Orina.
3/ Includes both Occupied and Uncompled France through week ending October 4, 1941.
Occupied and Unocoupied France separated thereafter.
4 Includes Merocco, Algeria, and Tumisia.
of Loss them $800.
5/12/42
Regraded Unclassified
APPENDIX B
SECRET
Exports from the U. s. to Free Gaine, Burna and
120
U.S.S.R. as reported to the Treasury Department
July 28, 1941 - April 30, 1942
(Thousands of Dellars)
Experts to
Exports to
Free China
Exports to
Burna 3/
U.S.S.R.
July 28 - Aug. 2
393
Aug. 4 - Aug. 2
4,523
Aug. 11 - Aug. 16
309
Aug. 18 - Aug. 23
N
Aug. 25 - Aug. 30
1
2,
Sept. 2 - Sept. 6
204
Sept. 8 - Sept.13
2,281
Sept.15 - Sept.20
3,822
5,217
Sept.22 - Sept.27
110
Sept.29 - Oet.
4
1,225
2,333
Ost. 6 - Oct. 11
5,312
1,157
Det. 13 - Oct. 18
6,
5
Oct. 20 - Oet. 25
1,
Oct. 27 - Nov. 1
4,772
Nov. 3 - Nov. 8
1,672
342
Nov. 10 - Nov. 15
4,
2,851
Nov. 17 - Nov. 22
w
1,228
1,021
Nov. 24 - Nov. 29
3.5
3,239
1,364
Dee. 1 - Dec.
6
3,6
00. 8 - Dee. 13
2,337
18
12,040
NO. 15 - Dee. 20
iii
4,5
Dee. 22 - Dec. 27
1
196
1,4
Dec. 29 - Jam. 3
35
2
Jan. 5 - Jam. 10
91
3.99
1,073
Jan. 12 - Jan. 17
1,695
Jam. 19 - Jan. 24
Jan. 26 - Jam.
31
6,938
Feb. 1 - Feb. 10
1,054
13,315
Pob. 20 - Feb. 20
4,853
583
Feb. 20 - Feb.
26
5/
Mar. 1 - Mar.
10
23
Mar. 10 - Mar. 20
8,058
Mar. 20 - Mar. 31
y
Apr. 1 - Apr. 10
4,836
447
Apr. 11 - Apr. 20
5.355
639
Apr. 21 - Apr. 30
-
Total
876,296
$11,063
0449,180
These figures are in part taken from copies of shipping manifosts.
Figures for exports to Free China during these weeks include exports
to Rangoom which are presumed to be destined for Free thina.
It 10 presened that a large percentage of exports to Durse are
destined for Free China.
Beginning with February 1 figures will be given for 10-day period
instead of week except where otherwise indicated.
-day period.
-1-day period.
recoury Department, Division of Monetary Research
May 14, 1942
ISF/efs 5/14/42
SECRET
121
APPENDIX e
Principal Exports from U. s. to U. 5.5. a.
as reported to the Treasury Department
during the ten-day period ending
April 30, 1942
(Thousands of Dellars)
TOTAL EXPORTS
$ 50,958
Principal Items:
Motor trucks
6,424
Landplanes - benbardment
4,800
Dried 088 products
3,037
Lard
2,275
Landplanes - pursuit, interceptor and fighter
1,930
Sausage, canned
1,841
Other aircraft parts and accessories
1,792
Military tanks - medium
1,761
Irea and steel sheets and strips
1,757
Pork, canned
1,633
Explosive shells and projectiles
1,231
Military tanks - light
1,223
Copper wire, insulated
Aireraft engines
Arsor plate
Tires and inner tubes
Steel bare
721
Aireraft engine parts and assossories
Diesel marine engines
Relief supplies - clothing
Pork, pickled or salted
626
Metallie eartridges
592
Treasury Department, Division of Mometary Research May 14,1942
ISF/efs
5/14/42
Regraded Unclassified
SECRET
APPENDIX D
Principal Exports from U. 8. to Free Ohina
as reported to the Treasury Department
during the ton-day period ending.
April 30, 1942
(Thousands of Dollars)
TOTAL EXPORTS
$ 2,827
Principal Items:
Military equipment
2,653
Road rollers
84
Auto replacement parte
n4
Medicinal chemicals
16
Vitamines and vitasterels, n.e.s.
10
Photographie apparatus and supplies
10
Treasury Department, Division of Monetary Research May 14, 1942
ISF/efs
5/14/42
123
MAY 18 1942
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I an enclosing copy of report on our
exports to some selected countries for the
period ending April 30, 1942.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthaw, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
The Honorable,
The Secretary of State,
Washington, D.C.
Inclosure.
n.m.c.
By Messenger reach 9:45
5/19/12
5/15/42
HDW:meh
Res. to Secip office
124
MAY 18 1942
My dear Colonel Denovan:
I an enclosing copy of report on our
exports to some selected countries for the
period ending April 30, 1942.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, in
Secretary of the Treasury
Colonel William J. Donovan,
Coordinator of Information,
Old National Institute of Health Building,
25th and E Streets, N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
Enclosure.
By Messenger Yearh 9:45
NDW:mob
5/19/42
5/15/42
Ref to Secy's office
125
MAY 18 1942
My dear Mr. Perkins:
I an enelosing five copies of the
report on our exports to some selected
countries for the period ending April 30,
1942.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthau. Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. Mile Perkins,
Executive Director,
Board of Economic Warfare,
Room 3710,
Department of Commerce Building,
Washington, D. C.
Enclesures.
By Messenger . 9:45
5/19/42
HW:meh
5/15/42
Return to Secip office
Regraded Unclassified
126
MAY 18 1942
Dear Mr. Chen:
I wish to congratulate you OR the
excellent address which you made to the
United States on May 6th under the auspiess
of the Chinese-Anerican Institute of
Cultural Relations.
The confidence which you expressed in
the American people is, I an sure, not
misplaced, and day I say that we, on our
part, have the utmost faith that the
Chinese people and their Government, as in
the past, will do their utsost to help
defeat the COMBOR foe.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthan, 19.
Secretary of the Treasury.
Mr. X. P. Chen,
Chairman, Stabilization
Board of China,
Chungking, China.
n.m.c.
ISF/efe
Copin WDrW hire.
5/15/48
Return to Secy's office.
127
OFFICIAL LISTENING POST
of
BOARD OF INFORMATION
REPUBLIC OF CHINA
The following was transmitted by the Chinese International Broadcasting
Station IGOY, Chungking, China. Recorded and transcribed by Dr. Charles
E. Stuart, 461 East Main Street, Venture, California.
May 6, 1942 - 1430 G.M.T. - 9635 K.C.
Note: The following is a transcript of the speech given by Mr. K. P. Chen,
a prominent alumus of the University of Pennsylvania. He is well known
in Washington Government circles. Mr. Chen is now Chairman of the Chinese
Currency Stabilization Board and was former head of the Chinese Foreign Trade
Commission. While in Washington he negotiated the first American Loan to
China at war. Mr. Chen speaks under the auspices of the Chinese-American
Institute of Cultural Relations.
My American friends: I an glad of this opportunity which the Sino-
American Cultural Association has given me to speak to my friends in
America. First of all as an alymus of the University of Pennsylvania I
wish to bring greetings to By Alsa Mater from all graduates of the University
now in this country. I also wish to take advantage of this opportunity to
say "helle" to all the friends which I have made during By many visits to
America.
Ever since my student days over thirty years ago I have enjoyed the
most satisfactory personal as well as business relations with By many
friends in America first in my school days at the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania and subsequently through long experience in bank
ing and business. I have learned to admire American business efficiency and
ways of life and often dreamed of the immense possibilities of Sine-American
cooperation in the advancement of common ideals.
In recent years my experience gained through the two financial
missions which I took to the United States on behalf of my government and
work of the currency Stabilisation Board convinced no of the existance of
a. long standing common interest which underlies the traditional friendship
Regraded Unclassified
128
-2-
between the two countries.
Now,since the eventful day on December 7th our traditional friendship
has ripened into an alliance. Not only & common interest but a common destimy
now binds us together, a common ideal inspires us and all our common actions
lead to the attainment of the common objective of defeating the Axis.
As I stand here speaking to you, my friends, I can vividly visualise
to myself the millions and millions of sen and women in the United States
mobilised for war production. I can see them busily working day and night
in factories, in shipyards and in the numberless offices that have lately
sprung up in response to war needs and requirements.
I can see how millions of the flowering manhood of America are pouring
into training camps to emerge again as fliers and expeditionary forces
destined sooner or later for some distant parts of the world to fight the
cause of liberty.
I can see your determined looks and your burning zeal. I want to
salute you all. Friends, I want you to realise, as no doubt you do, that
free peoples of the entire world are looking up to you, to every one of you,
for the great part you are playing and are bound to play in delivering the
crushing blow to the aggressors and for even the greater task of remaking
this world to our liking.
I am speaking to you from Chungking, the spot from which the Chinese
people have for nearly five years directed their struggle against the
Japanese aggressor. I need not tell you the devastations we have borne, the
sacrifices we have made in defense of our freedom. Right at this moment
fiercest battles are being waged in Burma where our main link with the
outside world and chief route of communications with America and other
democracies is at stake.
I know you understand fully the gravity of the situation and there
is no need for me to remind you of it. If I take this opportunity to
Regraded Unclassified
129
mention it, it is because I want you to know that however overwhelming are
the odds we are determined to fight on until TO win. I wish to give special
emphasis to the fact and to assure you that though temporarily out numbered
and short of equipment we are determined to match our flesh and blood against
the bombs and shells of the ensury so that every minute we thus help to gain
may be used by you in the manufacturing of aras, of tanks, of bombers and of
battleships.
It is truly heartening to read reports from the United States that you
are making satisfactory progress in your war production. We people here
have an implicit faith in American efficiency. To thoroughly realise that
the reason you have not been able to produce more than you do now is because
the energy had the clear advantage of a head start and the fact that they
had this head start is because aggressors are always better prepared than
their peaceful neighbors, just as bandits are sure to be armed while the
houses which they go to rob are usually unarmed.
We know that although you are not well prepared, because you never
aim to attack others, once you are attacked, once the bandit is in your
yard and once your mind is made up to beat back the attack and capture the
bandit we know that you mean business. We know that once your mind is made up
you mean business. Without fear of exaggeration we can say this war is the
biggest business that human beings have ever engaged in. I think that we
all share the feeling that unless we make this business a success we will
not be able to pursue any other business in peace and happiness.
This war 1s a war of life and death, a was the which all that makes
life decent and worthwhile living 10 at stake. The rest of free mankind and
contingents of your om soldiers are fighting tenaciously on all fronts,
are all confident that you will soon bring forth the production which will
turn the tide of this titanic struggle.
Regraded Unclassified
130
No have faith in America's mastery of war economy and technique.
The challenge to turn out as many goods as fast as possible was answered
by the American industrial machine with its customary energy, initiative
and ingenuity. The prerequisite of victory is getting the right goods to
right places. The triumph of American war production 1s already assured.
Fe in China no less confidently await the triumph of American war distri-
bution.
Regraded Unclassified
131
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 18, 1942
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Kamarck
FROM
Subject: Shipment of Planes to British Forces
ny
1. In the week ending May 12, 1942, a total of
118 planes of all types (112 combat planes) were
shipped to British forces.
2. The Royal Air Force squadrons in the United
Kingdom have now received over 1,000 combat planes in
1942 from the United States.
3. The proportion of American plane production
going to the British forces might be of interest. In
the first three months of 1942, the British received
one-quarter of our total combat plane production. They
took a greater proportion of our pursuit planes (31 per-
cent of total production) than of any other type. Heavy
bombers were least favored; only four percent of our
heavy bombers went to the British. The detailed table
follows:
Percent of total American
production Jan. 1, 1942-
March 31, 1942, shipped to
Type
British forces
Pursuit
31 percent
Light and medium bombers
23
If
Naval patrol bombers
19
"
Trainers
6
If
Heavy bombers
4
"
Total combat types
25
"
(excluding trainers)
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
132
Table A - Shipments by Area
Week
Total Shipped
Total Shipped
Ending
in 1942
since
May 12,1942
to date
Jan. 1, 1941
To the United Kingdom
Light and medium bombers
22
248
1,419
Heavy bombers
3
50
154
Naval patrol bombers
0
8
110
Pursuit
44
686
997
Army Cooperation
12
71
102
0
Trainers
0
24
Total to the United Kingdom
81
1,073
2,806
To the Middle East
Light and medium bombers
0
192
522
Heavy bombers
0
0
5
Pursuit
11
205
1,053
Army Cooperation
0
12
12
Trainers
0
8
150
Total to the Middle East
11
417
1,742
To the Canadian Forces
Light and medium bombers
0
35
203
Heavy bombers
0
1
1
Naval patrol bombers
0
23
31
Pursuit
0
30
72
Trainers
6
323
1,564
Total to the Canadian Forces
6
412
1,871
To the British Pacific Forces
Light and medium bombers
0
121
216
Naval patrol bombers
0
0
27
Pursuit
20
175
343
Trainers
0
0
105
Total to Pacific Forces
20
296
691
To the British Indian Forces
Pursuit
0
40
40
Total to Indian Forces
0
40
40
Totals
Light and medium bombers
22
606
2,360
Heavy bombers
3
51
160
Naval patrol bombers
o
31
168
Pursuit
75
1,136
2,505
Army Cooperation
12
83
114
Trainers
6
331
1,843
Grand Total
118
2,238
7,150
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
133
Table B - Shipments by Types
Week
Total shipped
Total shipped
Ending
in 1942
since
May 12, 1942
to date
Jan. 1, 1941
Bell Airacobra
0
314
468
Boeing B-17
1
12
32
Boston III
0
10
34
Brewster Buffalo
0
o
168
Cessna Crane I-A (AT-17)
5
45
45
T-50
0
86
700
Consolidated Catalina
0
31
168
Liberator
2
39
128
Curtiss Kittyhawk
31
414
796
Tomahawk
0
0
544
Douglas Boston I,II, and III
0
o
492
Fairchild 24 R-9
12
73
95
Glenn Martin Baltimore
0
195
263
Maryland
0
o
150
Grumman Martlet II
0
46
87
Lockheed Hudson
8
277
1,247
Lightning
0
3
3
Ventura I
0
12
12
Ventura Bomber
14
106
106
North American B-25B
0
6
6
Harvard II
1
52
949
Mustang
44
359
439
Pitcairn Autogiro
0
0
5
Stearman PT-27
0
148
149
Vought-Sikorsky Chesapeake
o
0
50
Vultee Stinson 0-49
o
10
14
Grand Total - All Types
118
2,238
7,150
Regraded Unclassified
134
Table C - Plane Shipments to the British by Weeks
Week
Light and
Heavy
Naval
Army
Ended
medium
bombers
patrol
Pursuit
Coopera-
Trainers
Totals
bombers
bombers
tion
Weekly aver-
age of ship-
ments in 1941
36
2
3
28
1
30
100
January 6,1942
24
0
5
30
4
9
72
January 13,1942
3
0
2
58
o
42
105
January 20,1942
8
0
o
14
o
60
82
January 27,1942
24
0
1
100
5
13
143
February 3,1942
9
0
3
10
4
4
30
February 10,1942 33
0
3
59
0
4
99
February 17,1942
12
0
2
41
7
0
62
February 24,1942
33
0
2
86
7
1
129
March 3,1942
26
0
1
80
6
0
113
March 10,1942
29
2
0
78
1
0
110
March 17,1942
34
1
0
94
8
0
137
March 24,1942
94
9
12
79
o
84
278
March 31,1942
49
1
0
58
4
10
122
April 7,1942
69
2
0
8
4
5
88
April 14,1942
55
7
0
86
6
29
183
April 21,1942
55
11
0
43
15
34
158
April 28,1942
35
10
0
39
o
26
110
May 5,1942
14
2
0
98
0
4
118
5"
May 12,1942
22
3
o
75
12
6
118
Total shipments
since Jan.1,1941
to date #
2,360
160
168
2,505
114
1,843
7,150
These totals include shipments of planes made in 1942 prior to March 17, which are not
in
the
weekly
totals.
Regraded Und assified
135
May 18, 1942
Memorandum on the Telephone Conversation
between Mr. White and Mr. Acheson
Mr. White called Mr. Acheson and stated that the rate on Swiss
francs for non-commercial purposes has been rising; that the Swiss
are determined to prevent the Swiss banks from providing francs for
non-commercial purposes at the official rate; and that we are now
unable to secure a supply of Swiss francs from the Bank of Portugal.
Under the circumstances, Mr. White felt that there were only
two ways of securing the Swiss francs we need and of keeping the
Swiss franc rate from rising:
1. By special bargaining arrangements along the line of
the recent license for the transfer of $3.2 million
from Switzerland to Spain.
2. An agreement with the Swiss to provide Swiss francs
for non-commercial purposes on the same terms as for
commercial purposes.
Mr. White indicated that an agreement would be superior for
our purposes and that to secure such an agreement we must be
ready to substitute special license requirements for the present
general license requirements in connection with Switzerland.
Mr. Acheson replied that on Friday Mr. Noel Hall, the British
Minister, had spoken to him on the same subject and that he had
suggested that we work out a complete agreement with the Swiss on
financial and commercial matters. Mr. Acheson asked Mr. White to
join him in a discussion of this question with Mr. Hall and
Mr. Stopford.
Mr. White stated that the problem was not an urgent one in
the sense of requiring a decision within a few days. However,
our policy on the question should be considered broadly. He
added that it would be highly desirable to have our policy and
the British policy on such financial arrangements in harmony.
In that way we can present a. common front.
Regraded Unclassified
136
- 2 -
Division of Monetary
Research
Mr. Acheson suggested that the meeting be held at 4:00 o'clock
Wednesday, May 20th, in his office. It was tentatively agreed that
the time would be held open for this meeting unless Mr. Acheson's
office notified Mr. White to the contrary.
Mr. Acheson then entered into a discussion of the problem of
lend-lease in reverse. He will send to Mr. White a memorandum of
the meetings at the Treasury which Mr. White will examine. The
Secretary can then call the group together and, after agreement,
put the question up to the President.
One point that must be considered is whether remaining payments
falling due after June lst on contracts entered into by the British
before lend-lease can be taken over. There is no question of reim-
bursing the British for past payments. Presumably, the goods covered
by the payments falling due after June 1st will be made available to
the Joint Munitions Board.
On lend-lease in reverse, it has been agreed that these arrange-
ments should cover all supplies originating locally or employed
locally. Separate agreements on the question can be entered into
with the United Kingdom and the Crown colonies, and with Australia.
New Zealand has indicated that it wishes the same sort of agreement.
India will present a special problem. For the time being, South
Africa is out of the picture.
Regraded Unclassified
137
MEMORANDUM TO THE FILES
May 18, 1942.
Subject: Central Bank Conference in accordance with Rio Resolution VI.
In accordance with Mr. White's instructions, Mr. Southard phoned
Mr. Collado on May 16 to ask him for further information concerning
the Central Bank Conference proposed under Resolution VI at the Rio
Conference. Mr. Southard said it was our understanding (a) that the
conference relates entirely to freezing control problems and (b) the
Treasury Department will be the responsible agency in United States.
Mr. Collado assured Mr. Southard that the Treasury Department's
understanding is correct with reference to both points. He said Mr.
White would recall that considerable work had been put on Resolution
V - the freezing control resolution - at Rio, but that Resolution VI
got less attention. In Mr. Collado's opinion the substance of Reso-
lution VI should have been included in an extra article in Resolution
V. Collado said that he had not wanted a conference called on the
subject but that the Peruvian who was head of the committee had insisted
on a separate resolution and wanted it primarily a Central Bank reso-
lution because he himself was a Central Bank official and because in
Peru the Central Bank administers freezing control. Mr. Collado com-
plained that this was another one of the resolutions muffed by Wayne
Taylor.
Mr. Collado assured Mr. Southard that the State Department has not
written the Federal Reserve Board in connection with Resolution VI and
that it concerns the Federal Reserve people only insofar as the Treas-
ury Department wants it to.
Requests have been sent by the Economic and Financial Advisory
Committee to the other countries for their suggestions as to the agenda
of the conference. Replies are coming in and will be circulated in
mimeographed form shortly.
Mr. Collado thinks that the conference will probably follow the
pattern of the Maritime conference called under the auspices of the
Advisory Committee last year. At that conference Summer Welles, as
Chairman of the Committee, was temporary chairman of the conference
but a maritime man was named permanent chairman. There were two
United States members who equally shared United States responsibility.
In the case of the proposed conference on Resolution VI, Mr. Collado
suggests that possibly a State and a Treasury representative would be
selected. Speaking only for himself, he would think that they would
either share responsibility or that the Treasury man might be named
the senior, but he made it clear that he had not heard either Mr.
Welles or Mr. Berle express an opinion on this matter.
ras
Regraded Unclassified
138
MEMORANDUM TO THE FILES
May 18, 1942.
Subject: Bolivian Stabilization Agreement.
Having received a satisfactory reply from the Banco Central of
Bolivia to our questionnaire, Mr. White arranged a meeting with the
Bolivian Ambassador on May 14. Prior to this meeting Mr. Southard
telephoned Mr. Livesey to notify him of it and to find out whether the
State Department had any new views on the matter of the proposed
stabilization agreement. Mr. Livesey said that the Standard Oil pay-
ment of $1.7 million was made to Bolivia on April 26 and that there
was, therefore, less pressure on us to complete the negotiations for
the agreement. The current problem in the State Department with reference
to Bolivia relates to the tin contract negotiated by Defense Materials.
The higher price for tin was granted to Bolivia by United States in
order to encourage production of additional tin. The State Department
is currently engaged in trying to get some sort of statement from the
Bolivian Government that it will take no step through taxes or other-
wise which would take away from the tin producers the price increase
and consequently nullify its effect. The present proposal, Mr. Livesey
explained, is to get the Bolivian Ambassador to write a letter along
those lines. It is hoped by the State Department that the consultation
provision in the stabilization agreement will provide added protection
against any appreciation of the boliviano or any other change in the
Bolivian foreign exchange policy which would have the effect of reducing
the boliviano income of tin producers. Mr. Southard assured Mr. Livesey
that there would be ample opportunity at the meeting for this State
Department problem to be presented.
At the meeting on May 14 (covered in 8 memorandum from Mr. deBeers
to Mr. White) the Bolivian Ambassador was told that a draft agreement
would be handed to him sometime during the following week. After the
Bolivian Ambassador left the meeting, the above problem was discussed
(see Mr. deBeers' memorandum) with the result that Mr. Livesey agreed
to see what could be done to add to the note being drafted for the
Bolivian Ambassador's signature some reference to modifications in
exchange control in addition to the present reference to taxes.
On May 16, Mr. Livesey informed Mr. Southard by telephone that
Defense Materials would insert a reference to exchange control in the
note which it is hoped the Bolivian Ambassador will agree to sign.
He suggested that the Treasury wait until State gets a reaction from
Bolivian Ambassador to this draft note before we hand our draft
stabilization agreement to the Ambassador. Mr. Southard assured Mr.
Livesey that we would wait on this matter until we heard from the State
Department. Mr. Southard then informed Mr. Bernard Bernstein that
there was less need for haste in the Bolivian matter.
Jus
Regraded Unclassified
Treasury Department
139
Division of Monetary Research
Date May 18
19 42
To:
Miss Chauncey
From: Mr. White
Please call to the attention
of the Secretary.
140
- OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON, a c.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
May 18, 1942
In reply refer to
FD
The Secretary of State presents his compliments
to the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and
encloses copies of telegram 2710, dated May 16, 1942,
from the American Embassy, London, England, transmitting
a message for the Secretary of the Treasury from
Mr. Harriman.
Enclosure:
From Embassy, London,
no. 2710, May 16, 1942.
BEEHAN
FORDEFENSE
BUY
UNITED
WEBEYBCH
STATES
MAVINGS
DE
BONDS
141
LSH
PLAIN
London
Dated May 16, 1942
Rec'd 3:25 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington,
2710 sixteenth.
PERSONAL FOR SECRETARY MORGENTHAU FROM HARRIMAN
William H. Schubart raturning efter six WEEKS
assisting Appleby on agriculture end food studies.
HE has had also opportunity to talk to many people
and believe you will find his observetions on c. number
of other matters of interest to you. HE is planning
to call on you on his return.
WINANT
DD
Regraded Unclassified
COPY
142
TRIPLICATE
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 18, 1942
No. 7344
Subject: Telegram Received by the Financial Attache of the French
Embassy of Rio de Janeiro from the Finance Minister of the
Vichy Government
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
The Honorable
The Secretary of State,
Washington, D. C.
Sir:
I have the honor to report that the Financial Attache of the French
Embassy has received the following telegram from the Finance Minister of
the Vichy Government:
"With regard to the sum of approximately four million france and
6,000 Pounds Sterling which Brazilian Government has deposited with the
Bank of Brasil (instead of French banks as agreed) in respect of interest
on Federal loans, please do the following: a) ask what is the milreis value
of these deposits; b) ask that interest due on August 1940 be also paid;
c) ask that transfer of these sums be assured by Brazilian Government (as
per decree of March 8, 1940) eventually through free currencies (escudos
or Swiss francs): a) ask that these sums may be ascribed to EBA, in case
transfer is refused.
"With regard to Bahia Docks & Port Bonds, 5.1/2%, President of Bond-
holders Society wishes to know milreis value of half-year payments not
yet transferred. Please obtain this information from Mr. Pilon, 15 Rua
Senador Paulo Egydio, Sao Paulo (Bondholders' agent). Furthermore, please
request permission of Brazilian authorities to apply these milreis to the
benefit of EBA.
"Dourado Railway Bonds: Liquidator has no information as to milreis
value of payments due after last payment. Kindly ask the company itself,
3 Rua Boa Vista, Sao Paulo."
EBA is the Empreza Brasileira de Aguas (see my Despatch No. 7286 of
May 11, 1942).
The Financial Attache of the French Embassy has replied as follows:
"Contemplated conversion of French loans with guaranteed exchange (4% -
1925 and 4.1/2%-1937) will affect some Brasilian holders. One of them, with
Regraded Unclassified
143
- 2 -
2-1/2 million francs worth of 1937, suggests bonds be handed in to
French Embassy here for annulation, since it is impossible to send safely
to France. Value in francs of fresh bonds would be credited him in
France. Please instruct what answer I am to give."
Respectfully yours,
For the Ambassador;
John F. Simmons,
Counselor of Embassy.
File No. 7344
WEF:ms
A true copy of
the signed orig-
inal. (1) ms
Copy:bj:6-12-42
Treasury Department
144
Division of Monetary Research
Date May. 20,
19 42
To:
Miss Chauncey
From: Mr. Southard
This is a copy of the new Cuban
Law on the basis of which the Secretary
will probably sign a gold purchase
contract with the Cuban Government.
I do not believe it need be brought
especially to his attention but I
think it should go in his files.
C
o
145
P
Y
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
May 18, 1942
In reply refer to
FD 837.5151/145
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
a copy of despatch no. 3954, dated May 5, 1942, from the
American Embassy, Habana, Cuba, concerning the enactment
of legislation authorizing the Cuban Government to issue
additional silver certificates and to adopt other fiscal
measures.
Enclosure:
From Embassy, Habana,
no. 3954, May 5, 1942.
Copy:bj:5-19-42
Regraded Unclassified
146
No. 3954
Habana, May 5, 1942
AIR MAIL
(Enactment of legislation authorizing
Subject:
(the Cuban Government to issue addi-
(tional silver certificates and to
(adopt other fiscal measures
The Honorable
The Secretary of State,
Washington, D. C.
Sir:
Supplementing the Embassy's air mail despatch No. 3439 of
February 10, 1942, file No. 851.5, enclosing a copy and translation
of a Presidential message to Congress recommending the enactment of
legislation which would authorise the Government to issue additional
amounts of silver certificates to be backed by gold bullion, dollars
or dollar exchange, and to adopt other fiscal measures, I have the
honor to report that the legislative measure recommended by the
President, which had been approved by the Senate on February 28, was
passed by the House on April 30 and signed by the President on May 2,
1942. There is enclosed a copy and translation of this law (No. 5)
as promulgated in OFFICIAL GAZETTE No. 266 of May 4, 1942, the text
of which does not substantially differ from that proposed by President
Batista in his aforementioned message.
According to the Embassy's information, arrangements have already
been made with the Bureau of Printing and Engraving for the printing
of silver certificates of various denominations in two lots of
25,000,000 and 23,000,000 pesos (face value), respectively, which the
Cuban Government proposes to issue under the authority granted it by
the present law. An additional 58,000,000 pesos in silver certificates
are to be printed later to be used mainly for the purpose of replacing
mutilated and worn-out certificates already in circulation. Negotiations
between the Cuban Government for the purchase of the gold coverage for
the new silver certificate issues have, it is understood, already been
initiated.
It might be added that the above law was opposed in the House by
the Autentico and ABC members of the Opposition who allege that the bill
had been reported out of the Finance and Appropriations Committee without
due regard to prescribed congressional procedure and who reportedly pro-
pose to institute unconstitutionality proceedings against the law on the
ground that it was not approved by two-thirds of the members of Congress.
They apparently have in mind Article 253 of the Cuban Constitution under
which the Government may not negotiate loans unless approved by two-
thirds each of the members of the Cuban Senate and the House. There
147
-2-
appears to be some doubt, however, that the foregoing provision of
the Cuban Constitution applies in this particular instance. At any
rate, usually well-informed Treasury sources do not believe that
such an appeal, if actually filed, would be upheld by the Supreme
Court.
Respectfully yours,
Ellis 0. Briggs
Charge d'Affaires ad interim
Enclosures:
1. Clipping from the OFFICIAL
GAZETTE No. 266, May 4, 1942
2. Translation thereof
File No. 581.5
AFN/hmc
Copy:bj:5-19-42
Enclosure No. 2 to despatch No. 3954
148
of May 5, 1942, from the Embassy at Habana
Translation
(From OFFICIAL GAZETTE OF the Republic of Cuba,
No. 266, May 4, 1942)
LAW NO. 5
Article I. Article 180 of the Code of Commerce will be amended
to read as follows:
"Banks will maintain in their vaults in legal tender
currency, as reserves, at least one-fourth of the amount of
the deposits of all kinds which they hold.
"The Executive at any moment may reduce the amount of
the reserves in national currency set forth in the preceding
paragraph but it in no case may be less than 12-1/2 per cent
of the amount of the deposits. The President of the Republic
will also periodically and in accordance with the market re-
quirements, fix the proportion of the several kinds of legal
tender currencies which must compose that reserve."
Article II. The Executive is authorized to issue silver certifi-
cates to be guaranteed by the gold, dollars or dollar exchange in the
possession of or purchased by the Treasury General of the Republic.
The guarantee in dollars or in dollar exchange shall include the
obligation of the Government of substituting the guarantee as soon as
possible, in order that it may be definitely established in the manner
set forth in the following article.
Article III. The guarantee of the certificates issued in accordance
with this law is fixed as follows: For each silver peso placed in cir-
culation in the form of a certificate there will be deposited in the
Treasury General of the Republic in accordance with the formalities
established in Presidential Decree No. 161 of January 26, 1935, an amount
of gold equivalent to at least 98/100 of the gold content of the peso, of
the weight and fineness established by Article I of Decree-Law No. 410
of August 10, 1934, $0.98 in United States currency or in dollar exchange.
The gold guarantee of this issue may also, as long as the circumstances
warrant, be partially or wholly deposited with the Treasury of the United
States or with a Federal Reserve Bank of said Republic and in that event,
there will be delivered to the commission established by the above mentioned
Decree No. 161 of January 26, 1935, a certificate issued by the afore-
mentioned entities certifying to the existence of the deposit and that the
same may not be withdrawn without the presentation of that certificate.
Regraded Unclassified
149
-2-
Article IV. Upon presentation and delivery of any certificate
to be issued under this law, the Treasury General of the Republic will
deliver to the bearer in Cuban metal money an amount equal to the nominal
value of the certificate presented for conversion.
Article v. The President of the Republic is authorized to negotiate
with the appropriate entity for the engraving and printing of the new
silver certificates of the same denominations and designs previously
authorized in the amount which is believed necessary for the strictest
compliance with the present law. He may also negotiate for the printing
of silver certificates in 500 peso and 1,000 peso denominations with
such designs as he believes appropriate.
Article VI. The Executive is also authorized to purchase at the
rate of 35 pesos /dollars? per troy ounce, hold [conservar] or sell gold,
as well as dollars or dollar exchange, and to negotiate loans with
national or foreign banking entities for the purpose of implementing such
operations, and may give in guarantee for such loans the gold or dollars
held by the Republic. The proceeds from the loans authorized by this
law will be destined exclusively to the purchase of gold, dollars or
dollar exchange and said loans must be paid within & period not exceeding
120 days. The Executive is also authorized to pay for the gold purchases
a commission not exceeding 1/2 of 1 per cent.
Article VII. While the engraving and printing of the certificates
referred to in Article II of this law is taking place, the Executive is
authorised to place in circulation the engraved and printed but únissued
silver certificates which may be in the Treasury General of the Republic
under the custody of the commission created by Decree-Law No. 406 of
August 10, 1934. As soon as the certificates referred to in Article II
of this law have been engraved and printed, they will be substituted, in
custody for those which may have been put in circulation, with all the
formalities prescribed by Decree-Law No. 406 of August 10, 1934.
Article VIII. The profits which might be derived from the issue
authorized by the present law will be applied first to defraying the ex-
penses incurred by the operations authorized by Article VI thereof and
any remaining balance to meeting the cost of the silver certificates to
be printed in accordance with the authorization granted by this law and
the Law of June 23, 1938.
Article IN. The President is authorized to issue Treasury certifi-
cates or Treasury notes, the amount in circulation of which may not ex-
ceed 6,000,000 pesos, for the purpose of borrowing from any banking insti-
tutions or entities or by subscription the amounts which are considered
necessary to meet obligations of the current budget, or to substitute
revenues to be received later and which are indispensable to meet
obligations of the regular or extraordinary budget, the interest charges
and expenses on which [notes] say not exceed 4-1/4 per cent per annum.
The notes referred to in the foregoing paragraph may also be dis-
counted by the Treasurer against any account, loan, liquidation or fund
which is not needed at the moment, excluding such as are destined for
payment of the Foreign Debt.
Regraded Unclassified
150
-3-
The maturity date of these notes may not exceed one year, and
for thear payment pertinent receipts will be pledged as the Executive
may decide.
Article X. There is established a surcharge of 25 per cent on
the port improvements and tonnage taxes referred to in Articles 175
and 176 of the Customs Ordinances as regulated by the Law of February
9, 1938, and Decree-Law No. 491 of January 7, 1936.
The proceeds from the surcharges mentioned above will be devoted
to the defense and protection of the navigation, the coasts, bays, keys
and ports, and the President is authorized to pledge the receipts ob-
tained from the surcharges in contracting the projects or in issuing
notes or negotiating loans destined to the purposes mentioned above.
Revenues collected thus obtained shall be part of public (budgetary)
revenues.
Article XI. All laws, decree-laws, orders, decrees and other
legislative dispositions opposed wholly or in part to the fulfillment
of this law are derogated, and the law will become effective upon its
promulgation in the OFFICIAL GAZETTE of the Republic.
I therefore order that the present law by fully complied with.
Signed at the Presidential Palace in Habana, on May 2, 1942.
F. RATISTA
President
Carlos Saladrigas
Prime Minister
Oscar Garcia Montes
Minister of the Treasury
Translated AFN:ed
Copy/hmc
Copy:bj:5-19-42
C
0
151
P
Y
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Washington
In reply refer to
FD 865.51/1116
May 18, 1942
fl
The Secretary of State presents his compliments
to the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and
encloses a copy of despatch no. 2249, dated March 20,
1942, from the American Legation, Bern, Switzerland,
concerning Italian war financing.
Enclosure:
From Legation, Bern,
no. 2249, March 20, 1942.
eh:copy
5-19-42
Regraded Unclassified
COPY
Bern, March 20, 1942
152
No. 2249
Subject: Italian war financing.
Via air mail pouch
The Honorable
The Secretary of State,
Washington.
Sir:
I have the honor to provide the following summary of a comprehensive
report from Milan on Italian var financing, published in a recent issue of
the German newspaper Die Deutsche Volkswirtschaft:
It is recalled that during the six year period preceding Italy's entry
into the var the country had spent for extraordinary purposes a total amount
of Lire 82 billion. Extraordinary expenditure for the period let July 1940
to 8th October 1941 amounted to Lire 76 billion, corresponding to an average
monthly war cost of about Lire 5 billion. According to official statements
made last year, war costs correspond to about 77 percent of national income
and, according to the budget estimates for 1941/42, about 69 percent of
expenditure must be covered by extraordinary means, a larger proportion than in
other belligerent countries. The outbreak of war found Italy's financial system
not unprepared, BO that the transition to a war footing took place without
friction. Extraordinary expenditure of Lire 82.435 million in the six years
1935/40 plus Lire 45 billion extraordinary expenditure for the first eight
months of the financial year 1940/41, was covered from the following sources:
Lire 2 billion 9-year Treasury bonds 1943, 6.836 million 5 percent rentes,
6,405 million 5 percent redeemable loan, 21,990 million 5 percent Treasury
bonds 1949, 11,657 million partial proceeds up to February 1941 of the 5
percent Treasury bonds 1950, 2,787 million proceeds of the special issue of
Treasury certificates 1944, 3,007 million issue of bank-notes, 1,376 million
growth in value of the reserves of the Bank of Italy, 27,735 million ordinary
1-year Treasury bills and 12.333 million current account credits from various
institutions and banks. The remainder of about 30 billion required to make up
the above total vas raised partly by means of advances from the Bank of Italy.
In November 1941 the Minister of Finance stated that accrued war expenditure
for the period July 1940 to October 1941 had been covered chiefly by extra-
ordinary means, namely the net proceeds of two issues of 9-year Treasury bonds
1950 (more than Lire 34 billion), ordinary 1 to 12-month Treasury bills (about
21 billion), additional proceeds from the 5 percent real estate loan (more than
200 million), liquid funds deposited with the Treasury by various corporations,
insurance companies etc. (more than 10.3 billion) and special Treasury certificates
against advances from the Bank of Italy (7.4 billion). This means that more
than five-sixths of the total outlay was met out of saving funds. Taxation does
not play the same part in var financing in Italy as in other countries; for in
Italy the tax burden at the outbreak of var had reached a level which did not
allow an appreciable rise. Though the tax charge in Italy represents only
about 24.8 percent of the national income, it must be borne in mind that the
bulk of tax revenue is raised by medium and small income. Taxation in Italy
vas intensified as far back as 1934/35, BO that at the outbreak of the war the
Regraded Unclassified
153
-2-
margin left for heavier taxation was smaller than in other countries. This is
why revenue from taxation increased by only 7 percent in the first year of war
Regraded Uncl
financing, though, partly as a result of the lira devaluation, the present tax
yield is 65,5 percent above that for 1934/35. These figures explain the moderation
shown by the Government with regard to the introduction of new additional charges
on the community. A completely different attitude is noticeable with regard to
extraordinary taxes, vis. excess profits tax, dividend tax etc. A preponderant
role in Italian war financing is played by loans. Between June 1930 and June 1935
the Italian State debt rose from Lire 90,4 billion to Lire 107,4 billion, and
after the period of sanctions, autarkic tendencies and military enterprises, the
debt must have risen to an appreciably higher amount. No official figures are
available, but the extent of the increase can be gauged from the following data:
total liabilities (consolidated, permanent and redeemable, etc.) of the State
accounts rose from about 126 billion in 1934/35 to about 210.5 billion in 1939/40.
Nevertheless, Italy's public debt may still be assumed to have kept within the
limits corresponding to the production potential of the nation. Italy's national
income is steadily growing and the public debt burden need not necessarily weigh
more heavily as it rises; nor need it lead to an increase in the tax burden, as
is shown by the relation which expenditure for the interest service on the State
debt bears to revenue: though interest on the public debt rose from 4,653 million
in 1927 to 6,876 million in 1939 and 8,033 million in 1940, in percentage rate
of total revenue the change was only from 24 to 23 and 25-26 percont. The do-
clining share of the interest service in total expenditure is more clearly re-
flected in the following table:
Interest in $ of
Interest Total expenditure total expenditure
(In million Lire)
1934/35
4,469
20,850
21,43
1937/38
6,190
38,640
16,02
1939/40
6,876
56,140
12,24
Since the outbreak of war three Government loans have been issued: in February
1940 Lire 16 billion of Treasury bonds were taken up (10.6 billion in cash and
about 5,4 billion by conversion); the loan of February 1941 brought in Lire 18,6
billion (about 15,3 billion in cash and over 3 billion by conversion), while the
third loan, issued in September 1941, brought in, in cash alone, about Lire 20,2
billion. The three loans were all of the same type: 9-year premium Treasury bonds
at 5 percent, exempt from taxation. The two 1940 loans were issued at 97,50 and
thus have a yield of 5.35 percent. From & level of Lire 67,3 billion in 1935,
the total of savings capital at post offices, banks etc. rose to 93,3 billion in
1939 and to 115 billion in June 1941. Deposits at savings banks totalled Lire
19,45 billion at the end of 1940 against 17,5 billion at the end of 1939. This
latter rise is the more remarkable since extensive subscriptions to war loans were
being made during the same period. As shareholder in the big banks and admi-
nistrator of the Cassa Depositi e Prestiti, the State has control over savings
capital to the extent of nearly Lire 100 billion out of 116 billion - namely, 40
billion at post offices, 26 billion in savings deposits at banks (21 billion being
held at big banks of national interest), 11,5 billion at public credit institutions
and about 20 billion at savings banks and institutions granting loans against
-3-
154
personal chattels. The Cassa Depositi e Prestiti, whose chief function is to
centralize post office savings, plays a leading part in war financing: during
the period from the middle of 1934 to the middle of 1941 it financed extra-
ordinary expenditure to an amount of more than Lire 26 billion. Since savings
represented by the resources of insurance companies, in so far as they are
liquid, are of importance for war financing, the report mentions the upward
trend in the receipts of such companies: life assurance premiums totalled Lire
679 million in 1936 and 1.372 million in 1939; social insurance contributions
amounted to 992 million in 1938 and 2.675 million in 1940, while accident in-
surance contributions rose from 350 million in 1935 to 574 million in 1939. In
spite of its recent expansion, savings capital formed in the normal way does not
suffice to cover the cost of the war. Up to the present, however, the Government
has not resorted to forced saving. Instead it has sought to encourage saving
by directing and restricting consumption and a marked increase in savings has
been noticeable since the introduction of these measures. At the same time the
exhaustion of stocks, the decreased scope of business in many lines with a
corresponding decrease in capital requirements and the postponement of renewals
of plant have released substantial resources in industry which have sought invest-
ment to & large extent in Government securities. To ensure that increased savings
are directed into the necessary channels is the purpose of the measures taken
in regard to share-holdings, real estate transactions and the restrictions of
bank credits.
Respectfully yours,
Daniel J. Reagan,
Commercial Attache
Original and seven copies to the Department.
DJR/AG/bdb
A true copy
of the signed
original. (1) BDB
Copy:eh:bj:5-19-42
Regraded Unclassified
155
My 18, 1942
E. waste
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additional
is gold for the Dectrom a - to the the Risk of
in order to increase the busine mid boketings in this eventry.
this 8024 will to parchased with the proceeds of United States
Treasury bills w follows:
.
Reg
I that No. MAY that the 7ml would - svailable to nates $6,000,000
in gold a the 20.
EDITIONS (2) 5/18/42
Regraded Unclassified
C
11480
0
156
P
Y
SS
PLAIN
Ankara
Dated May 18, 1942
Rec'd 8:43 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
441, eighteenth.
The Turkish Government has enacted a decree which
went into effect on May sixteenth establishing a license
system for all exports from Turkey. According to this
decree all Turkish products and manufactured articles
and all articles of foreign origin which have been in-
ported into Turkey whether with or without payment of
duty as well as merchandise in customs warehouses may be
exported from Trukey only after the issuance of an export
permit by the Ministry of Commerce.
STEINHARDT.
CSB
Copy:bj:5-25-42
157
COPY NO.
13
BRITISH MOST SECRET
(U.S. SECRET)
OPTED No. 163
Information received up to 7 A.M., 18th May, 1942.
1. NAVAL
Two of H.M. trawlers, which were attacked by aircraft without damage
off the Portuguese Coast, shot down one of the attacking aircraft.
The transport ship which struck a mine off CAPE AGULHAS has sunk.
2. MILITARY
BURMA. Our withdrawnl continues without contact with the enemy,
the main body of the Burma Army is now in the TAMU area.
RUSSIA. Large numbers of motor boats and small craft have been
concentrated in ports on Northern Coast of the SEA OF AZOV, probably with the in-
tention of following up across the KERCH STRAIT if the Russians are forced to
evacuate the Peninsula.
3. AIR OPERATIONS
WESTERN FRONT. 17th. 12 Bostons with 16 Squadrons of Spitfires
no escort, were sont to attack shipping at BOULOGNE, bursts were soon in the docks
and on the Gare Maritime. À total of 12 Squadrons of Spitfires carried out 3 sweep
over Northern France and 13 Spitfires patrolled over sen rescue Inunches. In all
those operations, 9 enemy fightors were destroyed, 7 probably destroyed and 13
damaged. Nine Spitfires are missing, one pilot safe. In the ovening 52 Constal
Command Aircraft, including 27 Torpedo-Carrying Beauforts, were sent to attack and
shudow the PRINZ EUGEN off the Southern point of NORWAY. Proliminary reports
indicate two hits with torpodoes, five onemy fighters were destroyed. Seven Benu
forts, one Hudson and one Benufighter are missing.
17th/18th. 88 aircraft wore sent out, including 18 R.C.A.F. and
one New Zoaland - sea mining sixty, BOULOGNE 27. Eight are missing, including one
R.C.A.F. About 140 mines wero laid successfully.
MALTA. Between three P.M. 16th and one P.M. 17th, a total of nbove
thirteen bombors and eighty fighture made sporadic attacks on the Island, causing
only slight damage. Our fighters destroyed eight enemy aircraft, probably dostroyo
two and damaged seven. One Spitfire was lost.
Regraded Unclassified
158
GOOD ORGANING
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
May 18, 1942
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Henry:
The attached is the British Home Intel-
ligence report for the week ending May 11.
Sincerely,
Bill
William J. Donovan
159
In eleven regions a definite rise in public spirits
is noted. The remaining two are described as "steadily
confident". The reasons are: Madagascar, Coral Sea, con-
tinued RAF offensive and--
Churchill's speech which had a tonic effect. It
met with general enthusiastic approval. Its effects:
stimulated militancy, increased confidence, silenced fretting
over inaction and reestablished Churchill as the natural
leader of people at this time. The main discussion con-
cerned the gas warning but there is little discernible
nervousness concerning its possible use by the enemy againt
Britain.
Concerning Madagascar, many are puzzled by the American
attitude and by the United States continued "willingness
to negotiate with Vichy about Martinique". Some would have
preferred outright material support by the United States,
but there is also satisfaction that "we did it on our own,"
because of British prestige.
Confidence was inspired by Coral Sea that the U.S.
Navy is now "well in at last in full cooperation" whatever
the proportion of losses may be.
The fall of Corregidor was considered inevitable.
There is praise and admiration for the heroic stand of the
U.S. forces.
Belief is growing in an early victory, even this
year.
An important hardening of the British attitude is
revealed by the special report of the public reaction to
the German proposals for a bombing truce. "General tone
suggests public feeling of ruthlessness toward the German
people is increasing."
Regraded Unclassified
160
-2-
Although only a few people appear to have heard of
the proposals, among those in all classes who have heard
of them, there is very strong sentiment against it. This
applies equally in raided and non-raided areas. Comment:
The British in accepting the truce would be throwing away
a supreme advantage. Distrust of German promises. Despite
possibility of reprisals, the public is strongly in favor
of increased bombing of Germany.
RAF destruction of workers' houses and "non-military
targets whether by accident or by design" is regarded with
indifference, resignation, not regret. Northeastern Region
reports "Any weakness of the Air Ministry towards Germany
might result in the Government's being turned out of office."
162
Dear Mr. Keppel:
In the light of our discussion of the other day, I think it
may be helpful if I restate the Treasury's two tax proposale affect-
ing educational and charitable institutions. These proposals seek
to accemplish tve things: The first, to tax certain income which
some educational and charitable institutions my derive from bust-
sess, and the second, to limit in a moderate var the present exemp-
tion free estate taxation of all bequests for educational and
charitable purposes.
is you know, charitable sad educational corporations are not
subject to the corporate income tax. Some of these institutions,
however, have so far departed from the purpose of the statutery exemp-
tion as to engage in trades and businesses completely unrelated to
their charitable or educational functions. A college my operate a
hotel, yet the hotel's earnings are exempt from tax: as erphans' have
may operate a water works, a electric pover and gas company, and oil
and pl wells, yet the earnings of these businesses are exempt; 6
sharitable organization my operate a bathing beach, yet the earnings
of the beach are not subject to tax. This invelves a serious less of
revenue to the Government, and is obviously unfair to privately evact
business of the same cert. We feel that the time has case to provent
this Less and this unfoirmes.
We have suggested. therefore, that educational or charitable
serporations should be taxed on the income from a trade or business
which is not necessarily incidental to their exempt activities. Thus,
there is no thought of taxing as institute for the welfare of the
blind II the proceeds from the sale of articles unde w its OVR blind
patients. There is ao thought of taxing the income from college is-
firmaries, dermiteries, and cafeterias, which furnish an excellent
example of the type of activity the Treasury has no decire to reach.
Ve have also suggested that it night be desirable so allow a not
exemption of $5,000 regardless of the nature of the business activity
in question.
Regraded Unclassified
163
- 2 -
Our second proposal valid outlined in w/ statement of March 3rd,
to the Ways and Hease Committee, in which I suggested that the
estate tax deduction allowed on account of bequests to efusational
and charitable institutions be limited to a persentage of the estate
from which the bequest is made. My statement 414 not specify any
exact percentage, but the Treasury has is sind a limitation of 60
persent of the entire not estate, including both life and remainder
interests. Such a limitation has proved fair and reasonable in New
York and in manywather States; moreever, 11 is consistent in principle
with the 15 percent limitation on deductions applicable for income
tax purposes. We also contemplate that this 50 percent limitation
should not apply to relatively small estates.
Ye do not believe that such & limitation will interfere with the
flow of property to educational institutions except in extraordinary
cases. After all, the present high rates of tax on estates have tended
to stimulate educational and charitable bequests which otherwise night
not have been nade. Such a limitation as the Treasury has proposed on
the present 100 percent exemption would help to prevent the tax free
transfer of large cetates to foundations operated by the surviving
relatives, or foundations which for other reasons should not be en-
titled to full exemption. It would, therefore, help to eliminate one
form of tax avoidance which is particularly out of keeping with the
unprecedented needs of the Government for revenue at this time.
Furthermore, it 10 surely not unreasonable that the Government under
whose protective laws the estates were accumulated, and whose primary
obligation 10 to care for its citizens, should receive a pertion of
estates along with private educational and charitable institutions.
The suggested limitation would help to distribute the estates of our
nest fortunate citizens zere fairly - the various agencies, pub-
lie and private, which must help the least fortunate.
ve have studied this problem long and carefully is order to be
sure that our proposale would not endanger the welfare of the integ-
rity of privately endoved schools or charities. Ve age convinced
that the proposals are an insurance against abuses rather than a
threat of any conseivable kisd. Ve certainly would be apposed to any
such threat, since one of the purposes for which we are fighting this
Regraded Unclassified
164
- $ -
var 10 to prevent that State centrol of - educational and
religious life which has already been applied is every Azie-deminated
country, and which would eurely be applied here if our enemies should
via.
Sincerely yours,
Randelph B. Paul
Assistant to the Secretary
Francis Keppel, Esq.,
State Department,
Washington, D. C.
REP:BTE
5/19/42
Regraded Unclassified
165
May 19, 1942
9:30 a.m.
GROUP
Present: Mr. Gaston
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Bell
Mr. Graves
Mr. White
Mr. Foley
Mr. Paul
Mr. Blough
Mr. Thompson
Mr. Haas
Mr. Buffington
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Odegard
Mrs. Klotz
H.M.JR: Randolph Paul says he wants to get away.
For the first time last night I read this letter of Paul's
to Dr. Keppel, in which he suggested two things, and
inasmuch as I don't happen to agree with him, I will give
the other people a chance.
One is, let's say that a church or institution owns
a plant, is left a plant, a factory, and that income from
that factory should be taxed, even though it might be owned
by Vassar College or by the Cathedral.
MR. GASTON: Corporate taxes?
H.M.JR: Yes. On the second proposal, not more than
half of anybody's fortune should be left to charity. I
go along with him on that, provided - I think that you
should exempt anywhere from the first twenty-five--
MR. PAUL: We haven't quite made up our mind, but we
mentioned in there the exemptions of the lower estates.
166
- 2 -
H.M.JR: Anyway up to the first fifty thousand, or
something like that, up to a hundred, could be exempted,
but anything over that I don't have any disagreement. But,
after all, a person may leave to a church or to a college
or any form of charity, cash, or is more apt to leave
a business, and I don't see why that institution shouldn't -
if the principle is right that a charitable institution
or a church is to be tax-free, then I don't see what
difference it makes whether it gets cash or whether it
has an interest in the business. But I think in these
times, where their sources of income, new sources, are
going to be so very limited - I don't want to prejudice
this audience, but you can take your own - I just think
it is bearing down unnecessarily hard on a group that is
going to feel it the worst of all anyway. But you can
state your case. I mean, I want the benefit of somebody
else's advice.
MR. PAUL: Of course we are only proposing that the
business income of these institutions and not their ordinary
investment income be taxed, and we are trying to get at what
I regard as pretty flagrant abuses of the exemptions. For
instance, one orphan's home had a utility, water works,
oil wells and so on, five or six different types of business.
Now, if the business is separately taxed, that is, if the
institution has the stock of, say, General Motors, the
Government is getting a tax on that business and only the
investment income is coming out of the company to the
institution.
We are not after that type of thing, nor are we after
things that are perfectly incidental and connected with
the business of the institution. For instance, we wouldn't
want to tax a dormitory run by a college, or that sort of
thing, or the proceeds of the sale of articles made by an
institution for the blind. Where an institution goes out-
right into the market and runs a business and there is no
tax on the business, as there is on General Motors, before
its income comes to the institution, we think there ought
to be a tax.
167
- 3 -
MR. WHITE: There might be one economic argument to
support that. I don't know how much it is worth. If
institutions or operating businesses are not taxed they
can operate them much more inefficiently and still main-
tain them, because they have a considerable advantage
over their competitors. It also means, therefore, that you
introduce an unfair element in competition. The chief
social disadvantage would be the fact they could continue
to operate inefficiently, which would be a social loss.
MR. PAUL: It is an unfair competition because they
have paid no taxes, and that unfairness of that competition
is accentuated at the time when the rates of tax are very
high.
H.M.JR: Has anybody complained on that angle? I
have had no complaints.
MR. KUHN: The complaint in the papers was chiefly
on the second point, limiting the tax-free estates that
are left to charity, and I think they have all exaggerated
the thing and distorted it, made it seem that the Treasury
was taking control of the charities and the schools in
question.
MR. SULLIVAN: I don't agree with you. I an heartily
in accord with the first point, Mr. Secretary, I think
Randolph is entirely right in proposing that business
income of charitable institutions should be subject to
tax for the very reason that Harry stated, that they may
be in competition with other like ventures that are subject
to tax;and I think that is wrong. A college isn't set up
to do anything except teach and to supply its students
with the necessary service. If they go outside that field,
run a dance, or bowling alleys, open to the public, they
should pay a tax on what they earn on that part of their
plan. The thing that is going to hurt the charitable in-
stitutions is the second point, because I think you can
take almost any college and you will find that the con-
tributions from living benefactors is 8. very small pro-
portion of the total contributions that come to it. They
are largely supported by endowments that are left by will.
168
- 4 -
I think there have been abuses of it, and I think it can
be corrected without going all the way. But I think
that point two will do a great deal more to hamstring
charitable efforts by exempt institutions than point one.
H.M.JR: What do - when you talk about point two,
you mean the inheritance? You are not in favor that they
should limit, that not more than half of a big estate should
go to charity?
MR. SULLIVAN: I think there is some point somewhere
along the line, but I don't know and I don't think it has
been determined where this point is to be.
MR. PAUL: We have determined in our own minds--
MR. SULLIVAN: I think that may be one reason for the
uneasiness of the charitable institutions.
H.M.JR: I can defend that, say a million-dollar
estate, not over half of it should go to charity. I can
defend that because I believe in that.
MR. BLOUGH: Tax-free to charity; they can give it
all to charity, but only half of it is tax-free to charity.
H.M.JR: Yes.
MR. PAUL: We have in mind a half, and that is a
limitation which has been sanctioned by many State statutes.
We have in the statute now a very much more stringent
limitation with respect to the income tax.
H.M.JR: It is half tax-free.
MR. BLOUGH: Half is tax-free, but they can give it all,
if they want, to charity.
H.M.JR: That's all right, but I think at this time,
where certainly - certainly this year people are not going
to be able to give to private charities the way they did
last year, or anything like it, and a lot of people
Regraded Unclassified
169
- 5 -
are going to have to cut it out and then suddenly - I
never heard of the thing until I read this last night.
MR. PAUL: There are a lot of cases on it, Mr. Secre-
tary, on the first point, of people running bathing beaches,
utilities, oil wells, all kinds of businesses.
H.M.JR: But look, why crack down on a charitable
institution? Let's say two-thirds of them are being
run well - when Congress won't do this much on tax exempts,
future or past, or on oil-well depletion - I mean, it just
doesn't seem necessary. I mean, these people are going
to be up against a wall. A lot of them are going to go
under the end of this year or next, going to. be wiped
out. Why should we be the hand to hang the hat?
MR. SULLIVAN: That is the very point I make on the
second one. They have two sources of income; one is
contributions from living benefactors, and I agree with
you that they are going to be practically nil from now
on. The other source of income, support from them, comes
from bequests.
MR. PAUL: There are very few of those bequests that
are more than fifty percent of the estate.
H.M.JR: John, on the one thing - as far as I am
concerned, I am not debating.
MR. SULLIVAN: That is all right then.
H.M.JR: It is debatable, but in my mind I can defend
my own position. I say "mine"; in the final analysis I
have got to defend it when I am pressed on it. You can see
the building-up in the hands of one or two groups tremendous
properties, on the one hand, and on the other hand, the
Federal Government getting absolutely no benefit from an
estate which was built up under Federal protection.
MR. SULLIVAN: I agree with you that this is wrong.
170
- 6 -
H.M.JR: I mean, here a man is permitted to do
business and protected and made - possibly he earns a
million dollars, he dies, and the Federal Government
gets no benefit.
MR. WHITE: He isn't giving away his money. He is
giving away the Government's money, anyway.
MR. GASTON: I think that is true of the first point.
Take 8 case like the Garfinckel store where he gave the
residue of his estate to the YWCA; that business has a
certain value as a going business. Assume that during
his lifetime the man was giving the whole income of the
business to the YWCA. He was giving it subject to
taxation on the business profits, and he dies and he
leaves this to the YWCA, the whole business. Then,
if you free that from taxation from business profits,
he is not giving what he possessed as an individual; he
is giving something with perhaps double value. Where does
it come from? it isn't his. It comes out of the Government.
It comes out of the tax rolls, what he is giving. You have
greatly increased the value of that business when you give
it free from taxation.
MR. WHITE: That isn't the decisive consideration.
MR. GASTON: That is one consideration.
H.M.JR: Herbert, you are right, but here I sat in
this chair for eight years, and I never worried about it.
Nobody has ever written to me about it. I haven't had a
single complaint, and in a year in which charities are
going to get the worst blow that they have ever had, I,
as Secretary of the Treasury, should say - let's say
that Garfinckel's - I don't know, the business was left
to support the YWCA--
MR. GASTON: As a matter of fact, I think that was
left in 8. will which is still subject to taxation.
H.M.JR: Let's say it wasn't, and let's say that the
171
- 7 -
income from that is a hundred thousand dollars a year.
Then I come along this year, and let's say I am success-
ful and Garfinckel has to pay a tax, as a result of which
this private institution may get twenty-five thousand
dollars.
MR. GASTON: Well, if he were making a hundred
thousand dollars and giving that to the YWCA before death
and left the business to the YWCA, he would still be
giving the hundred thousand dollars a year to the YWCA.
If he is giving it tax free, he might be giving it two
or three or four hundred thousand dollars a year.
H.M.JR: I am the executive manager of the YWCA here
in Washington, and I have had a budget of a hundred
thousand dollars, which comes out of profits of Garfinckel's;
never mind what happened before or what it is worth. I
have been doing this now for the last ten years, and then
along comes the Treasury all of a sudden and says, "That is
wrong. Garfinckel's has to pay a tax," and I am cut down
to twenty-five thousand dollars. That is what is going to
happen.
MR. WHITE: I think the Secretary is right, that it
is not a question of the merits of the case. The Secretary's
position is that it can't be an extremely important thing;
it never came up before. Quantitatively, it can't be an
important thing; why pick this particular moment to do it,
if it isn't acute? I should imagine that the totals involved
would be very small. Am I wrong?
MR. PAUL: There are a lot of recent cases showing
that it is being done on quite a wide range.
H.M.JR: Randolph, I went out on the end of a limb
on municipal State tax exempts outside of the Treasury.
I haven't been able to get a single person to make a
public speech to support me. That may be one percent
exaggeration. I will do the thing on oil wells; I will
do the thing on joint returns; I will go the limit
on every form of taxation which involves several
Regraded Unclassified
172
- 8 -
hundred million dollars, and I will do it year after year.
I will go back up in the Senate, and I am going to ask
again for the oil wells and I will repeat my whole self
over again; all right, but then why make myself vulnerable
on an unimportant front on this thing?
MR. PAUL: It seems to me you are more vulnerable on
the other point.
H.M.JR: Which one?
MR. PAUL: On the limitation.
H.M.JR: I believe that these big estates should be
broken up.
MR. WHITE: Isn't there a compromise possible? Why
don't you put this thing in effect five years or three
years or four years from today so they will continue to
get whatever income they have been getting, in this
difficult period. You have established your principle.
Give them an opportunity to establish their business
during that period; if they don't want to operate it as
they should, then you won't be cracking down during a
period, say--
MR. PAUL: We must keep in mind we are not trying to
tax this investment income of this. There we collect
the taxes in corporate form.
H.M.JR: But my case is correct, isn't it, that if
Garfinckel's has been producing a hundred thousand dollars
a year, and that income has been going to charity, and
now we have put on a corporate tax, the chances are they
won't receive more than twenty-five thousand.
MR. PAUL: If Garfinckel's is owned individually,
and that is passed to the YWCA, we would be trying to get
a tax, that is correct; the YWCA is running Garfinckel's.
On the other hand, if the YWCA just gets the stock of
Garfinckel's, Garfinckel's is taxed as 8 corporation
and all that comes to the YWCA is dividends.
173
- 9 -
H.M.JR: Yes, but that isn't the case, they own it
individually.
MR. PAUL: If you are thinking of individual owner-
ship it is true there may be a reduction in what the
YWCA gets.
H.M.JR: That is what your suggestion applies to.
MR. BLOUGH: Is your point, Mr. Secretary, suppose
they have had Gerfinckel's for ten years and they have
been getting a hundred thousand a year, and now we put
the corporate tax of forty percent on, or whatever it is,
they get sixty thousand instead of the hundred thousand?
H.M.JR: It would be more than that, wouldn't it?
MR. BLOUGH: Not unless they
H.M.JR: How much would they get?
MR. BLOUGH: They would get what was left after the
corporate tax.
H.M.JR: Well, with the excess profits and everything--
MR. BLOUGH: If they have excess profits, the profits
are probably going up; they won t get any less.
H.M.JR: Certainly the tax will average fifty percent.
MR. BLOUGH: It depends on what is happening to their
profits.
H.M.JR: Whatever it is--
MR. BLOUGH: It will be reduced, of course.
H.M.JR: It is safe to say it will be out in half.
MR. PAUL: It would be seriously cut, probably
nearly in half.
174
- 10 -
H.M.JR: In this year, I don't think it is important
enough.
MR. GASTON: Mr. Paul's proposition certainly is an
equitable one. Whether it is wise in this particular
situation, of course, is another matter, but it is certain-
ly an equitable proposition.
H.M.JR: I am not arguing on the equitable side. I
haven't said that. Is it smart to do it in this year,
that is all.
MR. PAUL: If you are not talking about the merits,
I have got a definite policy question there.
H.M.JR: That is why I am bringing it up now. On the
merits I am with you. As to the timing, I think it is
bad.
MR. GASTON: There is another feature, where a man
gives only a portion; he may give his stock, maybe ten
percent, twenty-five percent, or a partnership, or maybe
seventy-five percent, and in all those cases they get it
subject to taxation. It is only when he gives the entire
complete business for their ownership in fee that they can
possibly escape taxation.
H.M.JR: But take, for instance, I have seen it -
I don't know what it is, I mean, what the setup is, but
there is the Christian Brothers' Monastary in California
that make a lot of wine and if they own that, which I
take it that they do, I suppose they pay no tax on it,
is that right?
MR. PAUL: That is right.
H.M.JR: And if this thing went through on this wine
business they would pay a tax like anybody else?
MR. PAUL: That is right.
MR. SULLIVAN: They should.
175
- 11 -
MR. GASTON: And there is still another consider-
ation.
H.M.JR: I would like to see you two boys go out
and make a speech on it.
MR. SULLIVAN: Any time.
H.M.JR: All right, I will put you on the air
tomorrow. (Laughter)
MR. FOLEY: They will admit it.
MR. SULLIVAN: Sure.
MR. FOLEY: The last time I was up there they
talked about that very case, Monsignor Ready said
they ought to pay a tax. They are in competition with
business. They are selling a wine.
H.M.JR: Try it out at noon today.
MR. FOLEY: They will admit it.
MR. GASTON: This can be a very big avenue of tax
evasion.
MR. SULLIVAN: Don't try point two.
176
- 12 -
MR. GASTON: In 8. period of increasing taxation you
increase the incentive to evasion by this method by fake
charitable organizations, and so on, organizations formed
to hold businesses under the guise of charity; and the
very fact that our taxes are going up very steeply adds to
that incentive.
H.M.JR: Well, Herbert Gaston, I agree with all of you
on the theoretics, and so forth and so on, but I have said
again and again I don't want to take this fight at this
time. I have got enough fights.
MR. SULLIVAN: You are picking a difficult half of the
fight here, sir.
H.M.JR: Well, I have got plenty of fights. I don't
want to fight the Community Chests of America on this whole
thing.
MR. SULLIVAN: That is what you are doing on point
two. The first one isn't one percent of the fight you
have on point two.
H.M.JR: Point two I would enjoy fighting.
MR. PAUL: Would you accept the idea, Mr. Secretary,
that White suggested of establishing a principle now to be
put into effect as of, say, three years from now?
H.M.JR: Oh, I would drop it. I would drop it.
MR. BELL: Why don't you compel them to dispose of
the property within a period, or thereafter be taxed?
MR. PAUL: That is what we mean. That is what Harry
had in mind.
H.M.JR: When will this come up?
MR. PAUL: It probably won't come up for a couple of
weeks.
177
- 13 -
H.M.JR: All right, let's have another fight. I
will think about it. There is one other thing, oh, yes,
the New York times today, and this is the second or
third time - if you want to walk out on me, it is all right.
MR. PAUL: I just want to ask one more thing before I
go. Do you think that anybody from the Treasury should go
to Pat Boland's funeral Thursday?
H.M.JR: Is it tax-exempt?
MR. PAUL: Use a lot of gasoline.
MR. WHITE: Ferdie Kuhn, publicity man?
H.M.JR: Don't you, when a man gets up and says, "Mr.
Chairman, I suggest a committee, make that fellow chair-
man? You (Paul) suggested it. I think you should go.
MR. SULLIVAN: I think Treasury certainly should be
represented. He is as good a friend as we have ever had
on that committee.
H.M.JR: Norman, who should go, outside of me?
MR. THOMPSON: I think perhap S Mr. Sullivan should go.
MR. PAUL: I haven't got any clothes to go.
H.M.JR: Want to go?
MR. SULLIVAN: No, I don't want to go, but I think
somebody should go.
H.M.JR: Are you willing to go?
MR. SULLIVAN: Of course, I would be willing to go.
H.M.JR: I would like you to go.
MR. SULLIVAN: All right, I will.
H.M.JR: What else? As i say, in the papers this
morning on the front page, it is the second or third time it
178
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has appeared that the Treasury is studying and has a plan
for rationing money. Of course, we don't know whether we
are going to recommend it or not. My memory is hazy on
it. As I remember it, there was a study - Harry grabbed
it and said, "I haven't finished the study on it. As
I remember, the thing was dropped, and I think you,
narry, recommended it be dropped. Is that right?
MR. WHITE: I don't know whether I recommended it be
dropped; I think I recommended not to be pushed. John
McCormack came in to see me. Chick Schwarz called me up.
He said that he had the idea that Treasury had 8. fight on,
Treasury was pushing this particular program, and he
doesn't know much about it, that he woul like to see
more of it. We agreed he had better see me, because I
wanted to disillusion him that the Treasury was pushing it
and that there was a fight on.
He came to see me yesterday. I explained 8. little bit
about it, and he pressed on the point whether it was a
Treasury program. I said, "It is not." I said, "Everybody
in town is studying it, and the study is only in a prelimin-
ary stage; there are all kinds of difficulties, and so on.
I didn't read the story, but that is the background of it.
H.M.JR: Well, is there any reason why we shouldn't
tell the rest of the press that we have dropped the study?
Is anybody studying it?
MR. WHITE: We haven't dropped it, really, it is going
on. I don't think'we should be ashamed to say that we have
dropped it. I do think we should avoid as much as possible
any notion we are fighting other agencies on it. Is there
any of that in it?
H.M.JR: Let me explain the background on this thing.
Carey, the Secretary of the CIO, tells me that there is a
difference of opinion between he and Phil Murray, on the
one hand, being a hundred percent for volunteer savings,
and Hetzel and - who was the attorney - Lee Pressman, having
doubts about it, so forth and so on, and it is they who are
feeding this thing to - this is all very much in the room -
Leon menderson's crowd, 80 much so that Gilbert told Paul
Regraded Unclassified
179
- 15 -
that at a meeting with labor representatives, labor said
they were going to dump us overboard. It turned out it
was the Pressman-Hetzel crowd. Carey said that they do not
talk for Murray and the CIO, and that was borne out in
another case about this man Hinckley when they demanded that
I see him. I told Carey I would see them - it was Hetzel
who asked to bring in the man, the head of the Government
employees union, and I said to Mr. Carey, "Please get word
to Phillip Murray; if he wants me to see him, all right,
but I have gone over the whole thing, and I am satisfied
he should not be reinstated." Carey said - this is not for
quotation - "I don't see why he ever hired the man in the
first place, I never would hire him." And the word came
back from Mr. Murray that he was entirely satisfied.
(Mr. Blough and Mr. Paul left the conference.)
H.M.JR: I wouldn't see Hetzel on that. Now, Carey
furthermore tells me that among the Henderson crowd they
are scared of rationing, they can't do it, they don't want
to do it. And, therefore, what they are trying to do is to
shove the Treasury into the position of rationing of money,
see? So, I sort of put two and two together and think that
this is 8. sort of - the thing is we are being needled by
the Henderson crowd to try to put us in the position as
though we were in favor of rationing money; and it is a con-
tinual drive on Harold Graves and me, an attack on our
volunteer plan. Therefore, unless the thing is under serious
study, I would like to tell Schwarz to tell the people that
We are not studying, I mean, that the matter--
MR. WHITE:
is held in abeyance.
H.M.JR: I would like to kill it, see? I would like
to kill it. I can change my mind.
MR. WHITE: I don't know all the reasons. I don't
think it is that important. Anyway, the fact that you say
you killed it won t make it impossible for you to change
your mind later if you want to resuscitate it.
H.M.JR: If somebody can convince me the way I con-
vinced myself on lowered exemptions - three months ago I
180
- 16 -
said I wouldn't - I can always change my position, but I
would like to kill it because I need - the men in the
field are doing a volunteer job and can't have all these
termites working on them all the time if the volunteer plan
is going to succeed. This is just another termite; maybe
the Treasury wants to ration money - naturally, if you are
going to ration money, people aren't going to buy volunteer
bonds.
MR. WHITE: I don't understand that deduction or con-
clusion.
MR. HAAS: That would help.
H.M.JR: Well, it is just another plan, George.
MR. HAAS: I mean, if it was effectively done. I
think the problem is doing it effectively. If it was
effectively done, you set aside in a category money that
has no place except to buy bonds or to hoard it.
MR. WHITE: There might be the charge that in order
to aid your program of volunteer saving you are going to
come out with this. That might make some logical sense.
I don't know how effective it would be, but I think the
whole thing is not important whether we say the Treasury
is studying it or not, because no one is seriously contem-
plating at this moment drafting a bill or presenting a
plan. There is a lot of discussion. Other agencies
and other men are picking the thing up and talking about
it, and there is a growing interest. As this reporter
says, "I never heard about this thing, sounds like a good
thing to me." But there is more talk going on. If you
have the least qualms about it, say the Treasury is no
longer studying it.
MR. KUHN: The Wall Street Journal started it on
Friday. They were the people that got McCormack excited.
The effect in the field is very bad. We got & report just
yesterday saying that one of the reasons it is operating
against the bond purchase, the continuous stories--
MR. WHITE: We ought to remove every possible reason
or obstacle for the lack of success; if that in any way
Regraded Unclassified
181
- 17 -
is intimated as something which is standing in your way,
there is certainly nothing lost by saying we are not
studying it.
H.M.JR: This is what the heading says, "Rationing
of Spending by Public Urged to Bar Inflationary Buying.
That is the heading. "The rationing of the proportion of
income that could be spent for consumer goods or travel
has been proposed by Treasury economists as an alternative
to the over-all rationing of consumer goods. This proposal
has not been officially sponsored by the Treasury Depart-
ment and whether it will be submitted to Congress depends
in large extent on the chances for a favorable popular
response.
MR. WHITE: He didn't get that from the Treasury. He
got our view, and then went over to the other agencies,
probably the OPA, and they gave him that angle. As I say,
I don't think there is that much at stake. I think you
can very easily say you have killed it or we have dropped
it.
H.M.JR: Harold Graves, what would you like me to do
on this?
MR. GRAVES: As I recall that story, it says specific-
ly that amounts to be invested in bonds would not be
rationed, that is, they would be exempt from the rationing.
Isn't that said in the text of the story?
H.M.JR: It says, "Under the Treasury plan for ration-
ing of expenditures there would be no restriction on expen-
ditures for the payment of taxes, the purchase of war bonds
or other investment".
MR. BELL: That would be the purpose of it.
MR. GRAVES: I didn't get any impression as I read
that, that that would be apt to hurt our bond program, as
is true of compulsory savings.
MR. HAAS: This is a type of compulsory saving which
would aid the voluntary, an indirect compulsion.
Regraded Unclassified
182
- 18 -
H.M.JR: What would you say, Harold?
MR. GRAVES: Well, I think that it would be well to
say what Harry said a while ago, that this is something
that everybody in Washington is studying, that it is not
8. Treasury-sponsored--
H.M.JR: No, it is a question of my saying to Schwarz
to tell them I am not studying it, we have dropped it, and
kill it, or say nothing.
MR. SCHWARZ: It is a question of whether any harm
is done. There doesn't seem to be any conflict between
the two programs.
MR. ODEGARD: As Harry explained the system of ration-
ing money a moment ago, it would seem to me it would leave
a margin of money that had no place to go except War Bonds.
That would not hurt the voluntary savings plan. The public
in its general reaction to this whole thing confuses ration-
ing of money with the compulsory savings.
MR. WHITE: I am sure the public doesn't understand
it. He doesn't understand it, and he said the others didn't
understand it; and if Ferdie Kuhn is getting reports back
from the field that people are troubled about it, I don t
see anything much lost to say that it is killed, because
you don't affect its chances. If you want to resuscitate
it, you can always have another inter-departmental meeting
and get started again.
MR. KUHN: Harry, my point was that the public wasn't
troubled by the rationing of money story, but by all the
talk of compulsory savings; but if the story persists and
creates public debate, the columnists will be after it and
will again be urging compulsory savings, and the whole
debate which we are trying to choke off will be revived.
MR. WHITE: I think your information from the field
should be decisive.
Regraded Unclassified
183
- 19 -
H.M.JR: What do you want to do, boys?
MR. GRAVES: Let's kill it.
H.M.JR: Let's kill it?
MR. WHITE: Say it is killed.
MR. GRAVES: That is what I mean, let's say it is
killed.
MR. WHITE: That is, that the Treasury is not study-
ing it any more, we are through.
H.M.JR: If you want to be very accurate, you can say
it has been shelved.
MR. WHITE: Yes, and that is true. That would be
definitely true. (Laughter)
H.M.JR: That gives it & certain amount of merit.
MR. FOLEY: A little, not much. (Laughter)
MR. GASTON: There is another possible device you
haven't considered, and that was to tell them the truth,
but you are getting pretty close to it.
MR. WHITE: The shelf is pretty high.
H.M.JR: The shelf hangs high all right; it has been
shelved.
MR. SCHWARZ: I will pass it on?
H.M.JR: Yes. All right, they are two fairly impor-
tant subjects.
184
- 20 -
H.M.JR: Herbert?
MR. GASTON: I haven't anything, just this matter
you wanted to speak to me about.
MR. FOLEY: Harry and I are going to see Secretary
Jones about the silver order this afternoon. We want to
sell it to him and have him take the loss, and have his
strategic metals corporation sell it to people that need
it.
H.M.JR: Well, you can tell him this story. I have
got a new suggestion for silver. When Wickard was here
for lunch the other day - he had been home over the week
end - he said, "What do you suppose happened to me when
driving up to my farm?" I said, "I don't know." He said,
"There I drive by my beautiful new alfalfa pasture, and
there are my hogs rooting up this alfalfa pasture. I
said, "What was the matter?" He said, "I found my hired
man and said, 'Why didn't you ring those hogs? You ought
to know better than that.' 'Well', he said, 'Mr. Wickard,
you tell me where I am to get the copper. I can't get any
copper nose rings.' I said, 'That is simple, make them
out of silver.'
MR. WHITE: I have heard of silver going to the dogs
but never to the hogs. (Laughter)
MR. GASTON: I forgot something. The Defense Plant
Corporation people have been over to see the Secret Service.
They wanted them to furnish guards for transporting the
silver and probably for guarding the silver in the plants.
I told the chief - we got hold of this contract and found
that the Defense Plant Corporation is wholly responsible
for the silver from the time it is delivered from storage,
and I told him that we could give them advice and perhaps
help them to recruit forces of guards if we wanted to, but
we should not take the responsibility for guarding it.
H.M.JR: I am sure there are plenty of injured Texas
Democrats who would be very glad to.
Regraded Unclassified
185
- 21 -
MR. GASTON: We have a list of people from whom they
could employ guards, if they wish to.
H.M.JR: If not, New Hampshire could help out.
I hope you (Foley) didn't disagree with me too much
on what I did last night, telling him (Pehle) to call up
that fellow.
MR. FOLEY: That is all right. I noticed in your
telephone conversation you told him you thought I was
using bad judgment; but I didn't think so. I don't think
you will, either, when you know the whole story.
Markham called me, and he said that he understood
that we weren't far apart and could I have somebody draft
another way to do it. I said, "You mean to try to carve
out 5b in an executive order?" He said, "Yes.
I said, "Well, we have given a great deal of study
to it, and we think the only way to be sure on the legal
side is for the President to give both agencies the
complete power. I understood they all agreed to that.
That is the best way we know how to do it after studying
it for months; and if you have got a better way why don't
you draft it."
H.M.JR: This is since Leo--
MR. FOLEY: That was Friday. He said, "All right,
I will try my hand at it." I said, "You let me see it
and let me criticize it." He was trying to get us to
do something more.
H.M.JR: But if you read it - I got the distinct
impression from what he said that from the day Leo went
nobody had heard from Leo's office.
MR. FOLEY: He told you in that conversation that
Markham had talked with me, but he didn't give you the
whole conversation, and I hadn't had a chance to tell
you.
Regraded Unclassified
186
- 22 -
H.M.JR: I didn't want Leo to walk in here--
MR. FOLEY: Leo sent for John, and John is there
this morning.
H.M.JR: I didn't want him to say, "I am here, but
I can't do anything because the Treasury didn't make the
first move." Inasmuch as you had been criticized, that is
why I sent you the transcript. If it was unfair, I am
sorry.
MR. FOLEY: No. I think you didn't know the whole
story, but the time schedule was running against him and
I wasn't going to be put in the position of having to
produce something that was better than I had already pro-
duced when I couldn't do it.
H.M.JR: If I had known Markham had called you - our
office had not heard from Crowley, and I thought it was
childish to sit here for one week--
MR. FOLEY: That wasn't the situation, and Crowley
himself called John. John told me this morning, and
John was going over there at half past nine.
H.M.JR: Crowley himself?
MR. FOLEY: Yes.
H.M.JR: Wonderful. John is coming up in the world.
If he thinks John is soft, he will find out.
MR. FOLEY: John is the toughest one. John didn't
want to go as far as I was willing to go.
H.M.JR: Sullivan?
MR. SULLIVAN: Do you recall the telephone conversa-
tion you had with Budge about & tax moratorium on Hawaii?
Here is a transcript of a radio telephone conversation
he had with somebody else on the same thing. That
Regraded Unclassified
187
- 23 -
might be interesting. That should go back to Mr. Gaston.
H.M.JR: Just the first page?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes.
(Paper read by the Secretary.)
H.M.JR: I don't get the significance of that.
MR. SULLIVAN: The implication is very clear, that
the Treasury was trying to do everything but the facts
prevented us from doing it.
H.M.JR: I see.
MR. SULLIVAN: Somebody has been sold a bill of
goods there.
H.M.JR: I see.
MR. SULLIVAN: The rest of it I don't think is
particularly important.
H.M.JR: Do they send this to you? Do you get all
of these?
MR. GASTON: We get all of them.
H.M.JR: When I talk to Bob in Puerto Rico, do you
get that?
MR. GASTON: No, I don't hink we get that. We get
everything that might affect the Treasury. This was a
special from Captain Fenn because he thought it did
affect the Treasury.
MR. SULLIVAN: We have been having a very difficult
time checking Social Security taxes from laundries, and
we finally cracked down and sent one fellow to the
penitentiary. We want to sell the machinery, and we
Regraded Unclassified
188
- 24 -
run into a priority, of course, can't auction off
machinery. The Commission is very much interested in
this particular case. They got in touch with me and
wanted to know if I could talk to Donald Nelson about
it. I wanted to clear it with you.
H.M.JR: Sure.
Buffington?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Six of the twelve Federal Reserve
Banks have their committees organized. I would like to
send this letter out to the regions to thank them and
get these regional committees set up. (Paper handed to
Secretary.)
H.M.JR: Who is this going to?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Members of the committee.
H.M.JR: It goes to the individual members?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Yes.
H.M.JR: Copy to Mrs. Klotz, please.
MR. BUFFINGTON: That is all.
H.M.JR: Harold, I am going to have to stop at
ten-thirty. If I don't get to you, some time during
the morning or this afternoon I want to see you and
Bell and your partners and Buffington, and Gamble,
because Gamble told me yesterday up there that he has
made some arrangements with some banks to go out and
sell twenty-five million, or something, of F's and
G's, just to be safe. I want to be sure what it is
and be sure that everything is coordinated.
MR. GRAVES: Gamble isn't here.
MR. ODEGARD: Yes, he is here.
189
- 25 -
H.M.JR: What I was going to suggest is that Bell
and you and Buffington, whoever else is interested, get
together before you see me. See? I am tickled to death
at what he is doing. He said he wants to be sure and
have a safety margin of twenty-five million dollars of F's
and G's over our quota. He says he has done something
with the banks in New York and Chicago to assure himself
of that.
I think if you fellows got together and just checked
what he has done, and then later on during the day I would
like to see you myself to be sure, because I am worried
about the F's and G's and I want to be sure. Gamble
seemed very confident it was in the bag, but - so some
time this afternoon I would like to see you. So will you
get together?
MR. GRAVES: Of course the point there is that we are
skating on very thin ice with respect to this May quota
due to the low volume of F and G Bonds, and he is trying
to give us enough increased volume in the F and G Bonds
to see us through on this six hundred million May quota.
H.M.JR: He says it is in the bag, but I would like
to have other people who are in contact with other banks
or sales organizations go over it. We will get together
this afternoon.
MR. GRAVES: May I speak of another matter? Mr.
McPherrin, who is the editor of the druggists' trade
corporation and the chairman of the committee promoting
this drive, is in town.
H.M.JR: I have asked him (Lt. Stephens) to make an
appointment.
MR. GRAVES: He wondered if you would agree to having
his picture taken with you for use in their--
H.M.JR: I don't mind because they never publish
them. I mean, I have my picture taken all the time.
Regraded Unclassified
190
- 26 -
MR. SULLIVAN: They will publish this one.
MR. SCHWARZ: They use them in the trade press, Mr.
Secretary.
MR. GRAVES: It is very important to them to have
that. If you like, I will arrange that with Chick when
I know the time.
H.M.JR: I wish you would also make an arrangement
that I get all my drugs from now on wholesale. That would
be very nice. My bills are something. I will share with
all of you.
What else?
MR. GASTON: That is, an X card on drugs? (Laughter)
MRS. KLOTZ: I like that.
H.M.JR: I'd let sleeping dogs lie.
MR. GASTON: They do.
MRS. KLOTZ: Not this one. (Laughter)
H.M.JR: Mr. - who is the fellow, the columnist in
the Post?
MR. BELL: Jerry Kluttz.
H.M.JR: Jerry Kluttz, this morning he has got that
in the headline.
MR. ODEGARD: I would like you to see this in the
Seattle papers on the bond drive. (Papers handed to the
Secretary.)
MR. KUHN: Mr. Secretary, Callahan has got together
a large volume of newspaper pages.
H.M.JR: Which is the better?
191
- 27 -
MR. GRAVES: They are just alike. They each contain
about the same play.
MR. BELL: The back page is a good one.
MRS. KLOTZ: That is lovely.
MR. ODEGARD: You asked for evidence of increased
activity.
H.M.JR: Yes, sir. (Laughter) Yes, sir, Harry
White and I.
MR. KUHN: I would like to give you a postscript
on that. Callahan has hundreds of newspaper pages
resembling those from all parts of the country. He has
put them together in & volume. That volume is a first
of several. I suggested that he send that volume out
to your house, and when you have a few minutes thumb
through it and see.
H.M.JR: Callahan is of a trusting nature. He wrote
me a personal letter and said it was on the way over.
MR. KUHN: I thought he was sending it to your
house.
H.M.JR: I got the letter but I haven't got the
volume.
MR. GRAVES: I think I told him yesterday to put
it in the room across the hall here.
H.M.JR: In the "gold" room?
MR. KUHN: Anyway, he says that the publicity is
really astonishing in volume in all parts of the
country.
H.M.JR: Haas?
Unclassified
192
- 28 =
MR. HAAS: I have nothing.
MR. SCHWARZ: Nothing.
MR. WHITE: Phillips was in yesterday and wants to
put a question to you about their Chinese loan. It would
take me just a minute to explain it.
H.M.JR: I had better handle it some other time.
MR. WHITE: He also raised another question, and
Acheson, I think, is ready to consider the British Lend-
Lease in Reverse, the work of the program. So some time
this week you will want to call a meeting to continue
the earlier discussions on it.
We got a telegram from Handy and Harman, a long
telegram, very urgent in tone, to see what the Treasury
can do about putting more silver on the market; the
silver situation is becoming very acute. I merely in-
form you about that.
The Bolivian negotiations have been resumed by the
Stabilization Fund and are proceeding very rapidly.
H.M.JR: I will talk to you during the day. You
have so much stuff I can't get it.
Harold, how about the American Bar Association?
MR. GRAVES: I haven't had a report on that. I
gave it to Mr. Houghteling.
H.M.JR: Will you get the report?
MR. GRAVES: Yes.
H.M.JR: What else?
MR. GRAVES: Nothing.
193
- 29 -
H.M.JR: Bell?
MR. BELL: About some refunding operations next
week.
H.M.JR: Well, put yourself down for an appointment.
MR. BELL: We ought to do it the first of the week,
I should think; getting some cash again in June, and
have to date these bonds not earlier than the fifth of
June, possibly seventh or eighth.
H.M.JR: You don't give me any rest.
MR. BELL: Today you want to discuss it?
H.M.JR: Yes.
MR. BELL: That is all I have.
MR. THOMPSON: The President has indicated that
where the war effort can be furthered we should stay open
on Memorial Day. We did that on prior holidays.
H.M.JR: All right.
MR. THOMPSON: I have in mind getting out an order
restricting annual leave to two weeks this year. The
Personnel Council had it up, and it seems to be the general
feeling that it is a desirable thing to do.
H.M.JR: I would like to think about that.
MR. BELL: That is a lot.
MR. THOMPSON: Yes, some are getting less than that.
(Paper handed to the Secretary)
That formalizes Mr. Irey's duties in keeping tab on
important cases and in checking over important personnel
changes on the investigating forces.
194
- 30 -
H.M.JR: Who would this hit?
MR. THOMPSON: Stewart Berkshire. I think he has a
little more difficulty dealing with him than anybody
else.
MR. SULLIVAN: I haven't heard about this.
H.M.JR: Where will Irey be sticking his nose where
he hasn't before?
MR. GASTON: In all of the agencies.
H.M.JR: I mean, should Sullivan see it before--
MR. GASTON: I should think so, be a good idea.
H.M.JR: Anybody else?
MR. THOMPSON: I don't think anyone else should
see it.
H.M.JR: I had better O.K. it subject to Sullivan's
approval. Is that fair?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes, sir.
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to