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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 692
January 7-10, 1944
- A -
Book Page
Argentina
See Foreign Funds Control
- B -
Boettiger, Anna R.
51 citations for Victory Square participation signed -
1/7/44
692
59
Business Conditions
Haas memorandum on situation, week ending January 8, 1944 -
1/10/44
361
- C -
China
Kung's reply to New Year's message - 1/7/44
108
Clark, Lieutenant General Mark W.
Thanks HMJr for apples - 1/7/44
56
Mrs. Clark-HMJr correspondence - 1/10/44
352
Correspondence
Mrs. Forbush's mail report - 1/7/44
79
- D - -
Deferments, Military
Conference; present: HMJr, HM, III, Gaston, Thompson, Pehle,
and Wilson - 1/10/44
305
a) Deferments granted to
Donovan, Michael J. (Bureau of Engraving & Printing)
Jackson, Wilbur C. (Internal Revenue Agent)
Madill, Edwin J. (Treasurer's Office)
Russell, Timothy E., Jr. (Bureau of Mint)
Saxon. James J. (Foreign Funds Control)
(See also Book 694, page 9)
Smith, Arthur C. (Internal Revenue Agent)
Smith, Howard A. (Bureau of Engraving & Printing)
Donovan, Michael J. (Bureau of Engraving & Printing)
See Deferments, Military
- y -
Foreign Funds Control
Argentina:
Freezing of assets and proposed letter to State Department
discussed by HMJr, Bell, White, Pehle, Luxford, and
DuBois 1/8/44
200
a) Letter (proposed)
208
b) # discussed by Treasury group - 1/10/44
268
1) Hull asked for another conference
280
Gold shipments, November 4, 1943-December 31, 1943
reported - 1/10/44
389
Regraded Unclassified
- I -
Book Page
India
See Lend-Lease
Italy
LaGuardia's request concerning remittances to Sicily and
postal communications with Italy - memorandum prepared
for FDR - 1/7/44
692 92
- J -
Jackson, Wilbur C. (Internal Revenue Agent)
See Deferments, Military
- K -
Kung, H. H.
See China
- L - -
Latin America
Argentina: See Foreign Funds Control
Movement of capital to, from United States: Memorandum
to Hopkins - - 1/7/44
96
Leavitt, Moses A.
See Refugees (Jewish)
Lend-Lease
Silver to India: War Production Board sees no objection -
Crowley so informed - - 1/7/44
100
U.S.S.R.: Availability of cargo for January - 1/10/44
386
United Kingdom: Federal Reserve Bank of New York
statement showing dollar disbursements, week ending
December 29, 1943 - 1/7/44
102
Liquor
Treasury. to require future daily reports of wholesale
transactions in distilled spirits as a means of
intensifying drive against black market: Release -
1/7/44
9,13
a) New York Herald Tribune article - 1/8/44
217
- M - -
Madill, Edwin J. (Treasurer's Office)
See Deferments, Military
- P -
Book Page
Procurement Division
Surplus Property Disposition
Mack's resistance to statistical approach to entire
problem discussed by HMJr, Sullivan, and O'Connell -
1/7/44
692
42
Conference; present: HMJr, Bell, Sullivan, and
McConnell - 1/13/44: See Book 693, page 154
a) Sullivan's preparation for Hancock and Clayton
of detailed classification of each item with
indication of division or agency equipped to
handle described by McConnell
b) "Attempt to take over Procurement" predicted
by HMJr": Book 693, page 159
1) HMJr promises that he will go direct to
FDR
2) Patman's testimony on transfer to
Reconstruction Finance Corporation discussed
by 9:30 group - 1/18/44: Book 695,
pages 8,76
Mack report with accompanying memorandum from Sullivan -
1/15/44: Book 694, page 164 .
- R -
Refugees (Jewish)
France and Roumania: Winant's cable reporting talk with
Eden - 1/7/44
32
a) Riegner plan: Breckenridge Long-Sir Ronald Campbell
discussion of - 1/8/44
218
1) Conference in Hull's office discussed by
Treasury group - 1/12/44: See Book 693, page 79
a) Memorandum on: Book 693, page 98
b) Hull does not know names of his own visa
officers: Book 693, page 89
France
Moses A. Leavitt memorandum on evacuation of 5000 children -
33
Leavitt 1/7/44 letter to British Embassy, Washington - - 1/7/44
38
Russell. Timothy 1., Jr. (Bureau of Mint)
See Deferments, Military
- S -
Saxon, James J. (Foreign Funds Control)
See Deferments, Military
Silver
See Lend-Lease
Smith, Arthur C. (Internal Revenue Agent)
See Deferments, Military
Smith, Howard A. (Bureau of Engraving & Printing)
See Deferments, Military
Surplus Property Disposition
See Procurement Division
- U -
U.S.S.R.
See Lend-Lease
1
January 7, 1944
9:13 a.m.
Robert
Doughton: Hello, Henry. How are you?
HMJr:
Fine. I hadn't seen you in a long time.
D:
No.
HMJr:
I had nothing special but I just would kind of
like to have the pleasure of your company.
D:
Well, that's very sweet and kind and thoughtful.
I don't believe I can -- I appreciate it very
much your thoughtfulness, your friendship and
your hospitality, but I don't believe I can make
it today. If you've anything you want to see me
about, I'll try to run down this afternoon.
HMJr:
No, there's no hurry. I....
D:
My folks are not very well, and I've got some
appointments with the Departments this morning.
HMJr:
Well, we could -- how about Monday?
D:
Well, Monday I won't be here.
HMJr:
You won't be here?
D:
I could run down this afternoon.
HMJr:
All right. What time?
D:
Whatever time suits you this afternoon.
HMJr:
Well, let's say around...
D:
Two or three o'clock.
HMJr:
What's that?
D:
Two or three o'clock. Anywhere along there.
HMJr:
Three o'clock would be perfect for me.
D:
Be right at your office at three o'clock unless
I let you -- notify you otherwise.
HMJr:
Thank you.
D:
Thank you. Good bye.
Regraded Unclassified
2
Conference in Secretary Hull's Office
January 7, 1944
9:30 A.M.
Present: Secretary Hull, Dean Acheson, Mr. Crowley, Mr. Cox,
Mr. Currie, Secretary Morgenthau and Mr. White
The British representatives, Lord Halifax, Mr. Ben Smith and
Sir David Waley joined the meeting at 10:00 A.M.
The meeting was held in response to a request by Secretary Morgenthau
made to Secretary Hull via Mr. Acheson. The request was pursuant to the
suggestion of the President made in reply to the memorandum on the British
dollar position which had been submitted to the President by Secretary
Morgenthau and Mr. Crowley.
Before the British arrived the Secretary briefly reviewed the situa-
tion and suggested that when the British did join the meeting that there
be submitted to them the recommendations which had been agreed upon in
the memorandum submitted to the President. Mr. Currie distributed copies
of a list of the items to be submitted to the British with the explanation
that Mr. Crowley's organization had been reviewing the items being shipped
under Lend-lease aid to the United Kingdom with a view to eliminating
those items which in the light of the present situation it seemed advis-
able to discontinue or curtail. (A copy of the list is appended)
Mr. Acheson expressed the view that the British would want to know
whether the program being suggested by the American Government was for
the purpose of curtailing British gold and dollar balances or for the
purpose of eliminating those items in Lend-Lease shipments which were
deemed to be embarrassing to send for political reasons. He said it
was important for us to have clearly in mind what the objective of the
program really was and to indicate to the British candidly what we did
have in mind.
Secretary Morgenthau replied that he thought that decision had been
agreed upon on the previous day and that Acheson had given his approval
to the submission of the program to the British with the explanation as
he (Secretary Morgenthau) had just stated it. Mr. Acheson repeated that
there seemed to be some misunderstanding. He said he had given his
approval to the presentation of the program 14 it were based on the
assumption that we were not looking at it from the point of view of the
British gold and dollar position but rather from the point of view of
the political feasibility of including the indicated items in the Lend-
Lease shipments.
Regraded Unclassified
3
- 2 -
White said that he didn't understand how the two aspects of the
case could be kept distinct. He said that what might be regarded as
political feasibility when the British Treasury had only several
hundred millions in gold and dollar balances might well be politically
indefensible if the British had several billions. The question of
political feasibility, he stressed, was closely related to the size of
the British balances. He said he couldn't understand why Mr. Acheson
kept insisting upon the "either/or" interpretation. He thought it
would be clear to all concerned that the political feasibility of
including certain items in Lend-Lease to U.K. would depend in part on
the size of the British balances and on whether they were increasing or
decreasing.
Acheson replied that it seemed to him that it was important to
know now whether the list which we were submitting included everything
or whether we intended to take other measures if action on that list
failed to reduce the balances to some pre-conceived level. That, he
believed to be the essential decision to be made now. The Secretary
responded that he could only repeat what he thought he had made clear
before, namely, that for the present this program was all they were
going to undertake. What the circumstance would be later he could not
say. In any case he did not intend to tie his hands now by any state-
ment which would exclude the possibility of adopting additional measures
if we later decided such additional measures were desirable.
Secretary Hull stated that he knew very little about the financial
aspects of the case and presumed that after this meeting that the
Secretary of the Treasury would continue whatever discussions were neces-
sary that related to the financial aspects of the problem.
It was finally agreed that Mr. Crowley should submit the program
to the British explaining that those were the items which under present
circumstances it seemed wise to examine with a view to their elimination
or curtailment for reasons of political expediency.
When the British representatives arrived Mr. Crowley presented the
case as agreed upon.
Lord Halifax replied to Mr. Crowley. He said that in considering
this problem his government would like to have before it the whole
program and not isolated parts. He stated that the former Exchequer
had written a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury setting forth
the position of the British Government with respect to its international
financial position but unfortunately had not yet received a reply to it.
White remarked that there must be some misunderstanding inasmuch as he
remembered that a reply to that. letter was sent to Sir Kingsley Wood
soon after Secretary Morgenthau had received the letter. Secretary
Morgenthau said we would be glad to furnish Lord Halifax with the file
Regraded Unclassified
4
- 3 -
on the matter and instructed White to see that Lord Halifax received a
copy of our letter to Sir Kingsley Wood along with the pertinent dates
of the correspondence. Lord Halifax went on to say that he was, of
course, quite willing to accept the views expressed by this government
as to the political difficulties involved in the inclusion of any
particular category of items in the Lend-Lease aid but he hoped that
any such discussion would be against the background of the views of his
government with respect to the international financial situation
confronting the British Government. He hoped that discussion would be
based upon the whole picture so that his government would not feel that
measures were being considered which reflected a non-acceptance of the
views of the British Government as expressed in the letter of Sir
Kingsley Wood and other British Treasury representatives.
Mr. Ben Smith spoke briefly in support of Halifax's position. He
also added that difficulties were created in London for British repre-
sentatives here when London read in the newspapers a report copied
from U.S. press that the shipping of capital goods to U.K. under Lend-
Lease aid had been stopped by agreement between the British and American
Governments when in fact there had been no such agreement. Mr. Currie
pointed out that the statement which appeared in the press did not
emanate from the Lend-Lease Administration and was not to be regarded
as official. He said there had been some discussions on that matter
with the representatives of the British Supply Mission which had been
going on for some time prior to Mr. Crowley's taking over the Lend-Lease
Administration.
Mr. Crowley added that under the powers which he was operating the
decisions on what items to include or exclude were unilateral decisions
and not decisions that required any agreement between the British and
American Governments. However, he said that did not mean they were not
eager to discuss each proposed step with the British, and expected that
after such consultation there would usually be agreement on the desira-
bility of making any change that the Lend-Lease people decided to make.
Sir David Waley said that he was saddened at the trend of events
with respect to Lend-Lease arrangements. He said that when he had
discussed the reverse lend-lease of raw materials with Mr. Stettinius
early in the year that ne thought that both countries were moving
toward a real pooling of the resources of both countries in the spirit
of the Lend-Lease agreement. He thought that the British had taken an
important step in that direction when it had included provision for the
lend-leasing in reverse of raw materials from the British Empire. He
felt that the program now being suggested was a step in the opposite
direction; while his government was moving forward by adding to its
contribution to the war effort we were moving backward by considering
measures for reducing our contribution. He emphasized that he fully
appreciated the great generosity the United States had already displayed
in its aid to the British people but felt deep concern that steps were
contemplated purportedly on political grounds when the effect sought
Regraded Unclassified
5
- 4 -
for was to keep down British dollar and gold balances. He said that
if the measures proposed were designed chiefly to curtail British
dollar and gold assets that the procedure would "not be very tasty"
to his colleagues and members of Parliament.
The Secretary replied that it was for that reason that proposal
was being presented in the terms in which Mr. Crowley had presented
it. Mr. Waley asked whether it might not be possible for the Secretary
to set his views down in writing 80 that he could transmit them to his
government. The Secretary answered that he preferred not to; that he
had made clear what his views were during the discussion and that
Sir David should be able to explain to his government on his return to
London just what views were expressed at this meeting. Waley then
asked if he might not get a letter from the Secretary to the Exchequer
explaining that he (Waley) had been given the views of this government
and would transmit them to his government - or something to that
effect. The Secretary replied that he would be glad to give him a
letter of that kind and said if he (Waley) would come to his office at
4 o'clock that afternoon the letter would be ready.
The meeting adjourned with the understanding that Mr. Crowley's
organization was to begin discussions on the various items with the
appropriate British representatives.
H. D. White
6
COPY
We believe that certain questionable items such as the
following should be discontinued from Lend-Lease:
A. Shipments of capital goods such as machinery,
installations, etc.
B. Off-shore purchases such as Iceland fish, Caribbean
sugar, oil from outside the United States, etc.
C. Civilian goods for Jamaica, Southern Rhodesia, the
Middle East, etc.
D. Pulp and paper.
E. Tobacco for the armed forces.
F. Certain other controversial items.
7
COPY
CERTAIN OTHER CONTROVERSIAL ITEMS:
Under this category are included such items as those parts
of the rental or charter of vessels which are open to question,
agricultural machinery and other types of equipment which have
a relatively long life, certain raw, semi-fabricated and
fabricated materials whose end use is subject to question, items
procured from one part of the British Commonwealth for lend-
leasing to another part in the same or similar form, and items
lend-leased to the British Empire for which the United States
has to make substantial imports from third countries, etc.
8
January 7, 1944
11:16 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Fred
Smith:
Hi.
HMJr:
Fred, that release you spoke of that you want
to get out on alcohol.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
That's all right.
S:
It's all right?
HMJr:
I haven't read it very carefully. I'll have to
rely on you.
S:
It's all right. It's....
HMJr:
The only thing is you don!t, at all, mention
the Commissioner Hannegan. He's taken a great
interest in this thing.
S:
Well, this -- the reason for that was that it
was done by the men upstairs who handle the
Enforcement Agencies.
HMJr:
Yeah.
S:
And, I....
HMJr:
But I'd like to....
S:
I think we ought to -- I think that's right. We
ought to....
HMJr:
I'd like to bring Hannegan into the picture.
S:
Yeah. Okay.
HMJr:
And if you'll do that, it's okay.
S:
All right.
HMJr:
Thank you.
S:
Yep.
200 to release
tely.
being
the
"
V
to
Fred Buith th
Room agor
ID
10
Secretary Morgenthau announced today that the
Treasury henceforth will require daily reports of
wholesale transactions in distilled spirits as a
means of intensifying the Treasury's drive against
Black Market conditions in the liquor industry.
The daily reports, to be filed with District
Supervisors of the Alcohol Tax Unit of the Bureau
of Internal Revenue, will enable field officers to
make immediate investigations as to the source and
disposition of liquor moving into consumption.
Names and addresses of all parties involved in such
transactions must be reported, with amounts and
kinds of spirits transferred.
By enabling the Treasury to put tracers promptly
upon every consignment of Tiquor where circumstances
appear unusual or suspicious, the new regulations
should contribute substantially to drying up sources
of tax-paid spirits now entering the Black Market,
Mr. Morgenthau said.
Reports previously have been made to the Unit
monthly.
Stewart Berkshire, head of the Alcohol Tax Unit,
said that the forms which importers, wholesalers,
Po
11
- 2 -
bottlers and rectifyers must file daily are known
to the trade as the Records 52 series. The amend-
ments to existing regulations àre set forth in
Treasury Decisions 5314 through 5323.
District Supervisors may waive the requirements
for daily filing in specific cases.
Mr. Berkshire said that in addition to scrutin-
izing closely all transactions in the wholesale
liquor field, the Unit is taking precautions to see
that increasing quantities of inferior spirits
coming on the market are released to the public only
under labels that adequately describe them.
Certain types of imports, particularly, are
being checked. Many samples are too bad, in the
opinion of Treasury chemists, even to be given the
designation of "Imitation Whiskey." The description
"Colored Distilled Spirits" has been devised for
some such beverages whose chief claim to resemblance
to whiskey is the presence of a little burnt wood
or other flavoring.
Labelling changes also have been forced in
some instances on domestic bottlers of blended
12
- 3 -
liquors, and close supervision is being maintained
in this field.
Criminal or civil actions have been instituted
against alleged Black Market operators in a number
of major cities throughout the country in recent
weeks as the Treasury attacked the problem through
regulations governing fair trade practices and other
Internal Revenue laws, as well as under provisions
of the Emergency Price Control Act.
13
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Washington
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE,
Press Service
Friday, January 7, 1944.
No. 40-16
Secretary Morgenthau announced today that the Treasury
henceforth will require daily reports of wholesale transactions
in distilled spirits as a means of intensifying the Treasury's
drive against Black Market conditions in the liquor industry.
The daily reports, to be filed with District Supervisors
of the Alcohol Tax Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue,
will enable field officers to make immediate investigations
as to the source and disposition of liquor moving into con-
sumption. Names and addresses of all parties involved in such
transactions must be reported, with amounts and kinds of
spirits transferred.
By enabling the Treasury to put tracers promptly upon
every consignment of liquor where circumstances appear unusual
or suspicious, the new regulations should contribute sub-
stantially to drying up sources of tax-paid spirits now enter-
ing the Black Market, Mr. Morgenthau said.
Reports previously have been made to the Unit monthly.
Robert E. Hannegan, Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
said that the forms which importers, wholesalers, bottlers and
rectifyers must file daily are known to the trade as the
Records 52 series. The amendments to existing regulations are
set forth in Treasury Decisions 5314 through 5323.
District Supervisors may waive the requirements for daily
filing in specific cases.
Mr. Hannegan said that in addition to scrutinizing closely
all transactions in the wholesale liquor field, the Unit is
taking precautions to see that increasing quantities of in-
ferior spirits coming on the market are released to the public
only under labels that adequately describe them.
Certain types of imports, particularly, are being checked.
Many samples are too bad, in the opinion of Treasury chemists,
even to be given the designation of "Imitation Whiskey.' The
description "Colored Distilled Spirits" has been devised for
some such beverages whose chief claim to resemblance to
whiskey is the presence of a little burnt wood or other flavor-
ing.
Regraded Unclassified
14
- 2 -
Labelling changes also have been forced in some instances
on domestic bottlers of blended liquors, and close super-
vision is being maintained in this field.
Criminal or civil actions have been instituted against
alleged Black Market operators in 8. number of major cities
throughout the country in recent weeks as the Treasury at-
tacked the problem through regulations governing fair trade
practices and other Internal Revenue laws, as well as under
provisions of the Emergency Price Control Act.
-000-
15
January 7, 1944
12:10 p.m.
JEWISH EVACUATION
Present: Mr. Pehle
Mr. DuBois
Mr. Luxford
Mrs. Klotz
MR. PEHLE: This has to do with a conversation
Mr. Riegelman and I had yesterday.
In the first place, Riegelman mentioned that you,
Mr. Morgenthau, had Hull committed to discuss with
Lord Halifax a revision of the British white Paper.
H.M.JR: May I interject? That is wholly untrue.
MR. PEHLE: I know. I will try to explain how
I think that statement happens to be made.
H.M.JR: That is wholly untrue. I wish it was
true.
MR. LUXFORD: Maybe it is truer than you think.
MR. PEHLE: It may work out tnat way, Mr. Secretary.
This is what seems to be the fact. The thing is moving
very fast. Riegelman told me that following your call
to Lord Halifax, Palin, of the British Embassy, called
Riegelman and said that Lord Halifax was very worried,
that he was going to have to discuss this subject with
you; and Riegelman said the subject was the Reigner
plan and the British attitude on it.
Riegelman said that that had been changed now, and
Mr. Hull was handling it and would take it up with
Lord Halifax.
Regraded Unclassified
16
- 2 -
H.M.JR: How did he know?
MR. PEHLE: Pecause Mr. Long had told him.
H.M.JR: Let's get the record straight. Somebody
told you?
MR. PEHLE: Thorold. And I said to tell Thorold
that the matter was now in Mr. Hull's hands and Lord
Halifax should talk to Hull.
As I recall, when we were in Mr. Hull's office
you mentioned the fact that you had put in a call for
Halifax, and the arrangement was made that Mr. Hull
would take that thing over.
In any event, Halifax was very disturbed that he
would have to defend the British position to you, and
he was told that Mr. Hull was going to talk to him
about it.
Now, the British position is that terrible cable
that we got that said you couldn't find a place to put
these people, and therefore you couldn't get them out.
Now, if you are going to find 8. place to put them,
there are several possibilities, but one of the possi-
bilities is Switzerland. In connection with any of
those neutral countries, Switzerland says, "We will take
these people if somebody will guarantee to put them
some place else at the end of the war," which we went
into with Leavitt, and he is giving you 8. memorandum.
Now, there are two posibilities about where to put
them at the end of the war. One of them is for the
United States and the British Government to make an
agreement that they will take them. State has refused
to do that.
The other is to put them into Palestine. And so
when the Dritish say that they don't know where to put
these people, that has now come to be a discussion of
whether the Palestine policy ought to be changed, as
I get it.
Regraded Unclassified
17
- 3 -
And therefore Riegelman says that Hull is com-
mitted to raise this thing with Lord Halifax. Lord
Halifax knows that and he is getting from London all
the documentation, and the State Department is pushing
the British on the White Paper policy.
I can't be more definitive.
H.M.JR: The last time I went to see Hull - not
this time - Hull said to me--
MR. PEHLE: Volunteered--
H.M.JR: Yes. "I am studying the White Paper and
I hope to be able to do something."
To get our record straight, when Rosenman was over
here he asked me whether I was doing anything on that.
I said I wasn't. He said he was and not to get crossed
up on it.
MRS. KLOTZ: Rosenman?
H.M.JR: Yes.
MR. PEHLE: Now, Riegelman talked rather frankly
about some of the people over there. In the first
place he said - some of this he may have told you
already - some of it I don't think he has. He said
that Breckinridge Long, he is convinced, as he told you,
is not anti-Semitic.
I told him I didn't care whether Breckinridge Long
was anti-Semitic or not; the thing was, he wasn't doing
what he ought to.
He said Breckinridge Long wasn't very smart and
was scared to death of the Treasury, and you, and that
obviously your talking with him had given him a severe
shock - when you talked to Mr. Long outside of Mr. Hull's
office. Riegelman said, in his own words, that it got
Regraded Unclassified
18
- 4 -
now so every time my name, even, was mentioned, Long
stood up and saluted. So you get the feeling.
Riegelman said that Long had told him that any
time any of these matters came in, he could break into
the office to get his approval, and they are really
very much on the defensive.
H.M.JR: That just doesn't add up, that is all.
1 mean, if they are 80 scared, why do they send a
sneaky cable out, like that (snaps fingers).
MRS. KLOTZ: But it does add up.
H.M.JR: No, I mean if they are 80 afraid they
would say, "Well, we are so scared of Morgenthau we
better not send something we know the Treasury doesn't
like without first talking to the Treasury--"
MR. PEHLE: Let me go a little further.
H.M.JR: Either Riegelman is one of the smartest,
trickiest fellows I have met in a long time, or one
of the dumbest.
MR. LUXFORD: I would put it that perhaps he is
inexperienced.
MR. PEHLE: ne is smart in many respects, but we
all know that he misjudged State and their motives
completely from the beginning. But I don't have much
doubt that they are terribly worried.
Now, let me explain more fully what I think they
are worried about. They are not concerned that the
World Jewish Congress plan for France and Rumania will
get very far, and my own feeling is that it will never
get very far. They are very concerned lest the one
thing that is done to save the Jews is the J.D.C. plan.
Now, remember, the J.D.C. plan is Treasury from the
beginning, because when it started the cable came in
here that raised these conditions.
Regraded Unclassified
19
- 5 -
We sent & memorandum to you on August 26 which you
approved. In this office I asked you if I could bring
those facts to the attention of the J.D.C. They had
not been brought to their attention. So we got the
J.C.D. into the picture.
H.M.JR:
MR. PEHLE: So, this much I knew. We got the
J.D.C. into the picture. They have the money, they
are experienced, and theyare driving ahead.
Now, if the one thing that is done in this field
is the thing that the Treasury pushed, and State has
done nothing, they are very, very worried about the
situation.
MRS. KLOTZ: That makes sense. That adds up.
MR. PEHLE: At least Riegeiman, I am convinced,
thought that the second cable to Harrison was 8. good
thing. I don't doubt he thought it was a good thing.
They are so worried about the whole situation now that
they will do panicky things. I have no doubt about that.
But I know they are worried. He told me they
were worried that the only thing that will be done is
this thing that the Treasury came in - he said
Mr. Labouisse told him after they left me yesterday -
"How can we explain about the Treasury giving the State
Department orders to send out cables? we haven't any
plan of our own; we haven't accomplished anything.
How can we say the Treasury views aren't right?"
H.M.JR: What made him say that?
MR. PEHLE: To Riegelman.
MR. LUXFORD: They recognize they are vulnerable.
MR. PEHLE: Labouisse I have only seen twice, I
think. As far as I know, he is on the right side of
Regraded Unclassified
20
- 6 -
the fence. He works for Acheson, which to me is a good
sign.
Now, Riegelman says the he and Labouisse, when
they cleared with Hull - the cable containing the text
of the license - put at the end of the memorandum - I
don't know who signed the memorandum - Long was away
at the beginning of the day - "I think you ought to
authorize 8. group of us to re-canvass these problems
in the Department and to prepare some plans.
H.M.JR: Who said that?
MR. PEHLE: It was said in the memorandum to Hull
which Hull approved.
H.M.JR: Who drafted it?
MR. PEHLE: It was drafted, according to Riegelman,
by Riegelman and Labouisse. The group to work on it are
Riegelman, Labouisse, Livingston, Merchant, and Travers.
He said all those people recognize that nothing has been
done, that the Intergovernmental Committee isn't func-
tioning, that the State Department is in & terrible
hole and something should be done.
Labouisse, particularly, said he was going to get
into it. He was mad about it, and he said when he got
into it, he was going to get in up to his neck.
Now, I am very pessimistic about their accomplish-
ing much, but it is an indication of what is going on
over there.
H.M.JR: I will say this much for Riegelman,
he does tell us a lot.
MR. LUXFORD: Wonderful.
MR. PEHLE: Yes, he does. That was not told on
the record or 1 am sure he wouldn't speak as frankly.
But he did teil us B. lot. And it is useful to have
him tell us that.
Regraded Unclassified
21
- 7 -
Now, he also made this point, that State Depart-
ment doesn't think much of the World Jewish Congress.
To what extent he was expressing his own views and not
other people's, I don't know. He said that everybody
over there felt that the Joint Distribution Committee
was a fine organization and did effective work.
Now, that has B. lot of ramifications, too. It
is a more conservative organization.
MRS. KLOTZ: Well, I think he belongs to the school
that would think well of the J.D.C. and not the other.
H.M.JR: The very first time I had him at the house
he started to say that he had been in Africa and Egype,
and began to talk about the Arabs and all that, and the
World Jewish Congress in Palestine.
I said, "Look, Billy, I am not interested in whether
you are Semitic or anti-Semitic, one bit.
MR. LUXFORD: But that kind of a cross-current
is used to stop these things from going forward.
MRS. KLOTZ: Because, unlike you - I mean, you
don't give two whoops about Lionism, but at the same
time, you are interested in finding a place of refuge
for these homeless people. Ldon't feel he is a bigger
person, by any means.
H.M.JR: I agree with you.
Miv. PEHLE: He wasn't sure, he said, that we
recognized the importance of that message that went out
in a hurry to the British Government that said we viewed
their comments with astonishment. He said that this
Government has only viewed things with astonishment in
half a dozen cases in its history, and most of those
were when we were ready to declare war on somebody.
That is the strongest diplomatic language that can be
used.
Regraded Unclassified
22
- 8 -
H.M.JR: The last word on that: I got a note from
Oscar Cox yesterday that Huil had answered. We called
up Hull's office and found he didn't have an answer
and said if he didn't have an answer, would ne please
send another cable to Winant, which he said he would
do. That was yesterday.
MR. PEHLE: I got the message, and Riegelman was
asked to draft that cable.
H.M.JR: "e kept you posted. We are good up
here.
MR. PEHLE: Riegelman also admitted that Breckinridge
Long's testimony before that House Committee was
deliberately misleading. It contained false statements
and they were made deliberately to cover up the inaction
of the State Department.
MR. LUXFORD: I think we haven't any people over
here, Mr. Secretary, that talk as freely to State people.
MRS. KLOTZ: I was going to say before, I don't
think he is very clever, because he can be loyal.
H.M.JR: That worries me. If he talked that
freely - I don't say anything to him - I don't want
to say anything to Hull - but I know that there are
people around who are friendly, who report things back,
but I am always worried about - if they are going to be
friendly, they can also be unfriendly.
MR. PEHLE: I would be very careful, Mr. Secretary.
It is also known around the Foreign Funds Control that
he sees you socially. He mentions in every conversa-
tion, "Well, when I see the Secretary next week" - he
makes a point of mentioning it. I am sure he talks
loosely.
H.M.JR: Well, I don't know whether it is good or
bad.
MR. PEHLE: It is useful as long as we use him.
Regraded Unclassified
23
- 9 -
H.M.JR: You and I were both hot under the collar
yesterday, but whether we moved too quickly--
MR. PEHLE: No, I think this is very good to have
in the record, because it shows that not only is this
man over there not a spy for the Treasury, but that
we are mad at him. It is a wonderful thing.
MRS. KLOTZ: I agree with that. It worked out
that way.
H.M.JR: You think so?
MRS. KLOTZ: Oh, yes.
MR. LUXFORD: By all means, give it to him.
H.M.JR: You can't refuse not to.
MR. PEHLE: May I say one more thing?
H.M.JR: One more thing.
MR. PEHLE: Mr. Leavitt said to me that he knew
from sources outside the Treasury that you and Long
had had & very strong talk about these things, and that
Mr. Long was very affected by it. In other words, that
is known now.
H.M.JR: I didn't talk.
MR. PEHLE: I didn't mean that.
MRS. KLOTZ: That is the point, that they are doing
the talking.
MR. PEHLE: It is known outside the two Departments
and it will have a very healthy effect.
H.M.JR: You know he asked to see me. You were
there.
Regraded Unclassified
24
- 10 -
MR. PEHLE: Yes, sure. Oh, I think all that is
to the good, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: I did it very pleasantly.
MR. PEHLE: Well, you must have been reasonably
firm.
H.M.JR: I was. You know what I told him, don't
you?
MR. PEHLE: Yes, you told us.
MRS. KLOTZ: Would you repeat it again?
H.M.JR: Well, what he told me, he said, "You
know everybody thinks I am an anti-Semite."
I said, "Not only that, but they think you are
the number one in the State Department."
So he said, "Well, you help to change that
opinion.
I said, "I don't know whether I can or not."
MRS. KLOTZ: He said, "Will you help"?
H.M.JR: Yes. I said, "They consider you the
number one in the whole Department." The part that I
thought of at the time - I told him this country was
founded by religious refugees coming over from perse-
cution all over the world, and it was founded as a
refuge, and that was the concept of this country.
He said, "Well, I agree."
I said, "That is wonderful; we agree."
It is true, you know.
Regraded Unclassified
25
- 11 -
MR. LUXFORD: Someone emphasized that in a news-
paper column in the last two or three days.
H.M.JR: People forget.
MRS. KLOTZ: Yes, in another connection.
H.M.JR: They forget why people came to this
country in the first place. Every one of them were
religiously persecuted people.
Well, now when are you gentlemen going to have
your opus on the State Department?
MR. DuBOIS: Probably early next week, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.JR: What is taking you so long?
MR. DuBOIS: We have already gotten our material
together.
MRS. KLOTZ: There is a memorandum to you saying
it will be ready next week.
MR. PEHLE: It is a very vital document, Mr.
Secretary, and the more we talk to the World Jewish
Congress, and these people come in - it just adds to
the evidence that you can build.
H.M.JR: Did you get a good story from Leavitt
on the children?
MR. PEHLE: He is sending a memorandum on that.
We are also asking him to come down.
H.M.JR: You see - would you make a note to find
out how many committees there are in existence to bring
child refugees over here? I know there is a Marshall
Field Committee, but how many more are there? Let's
get that straightened out. I don't know whether they
are all coordinated. You might find out from what's
his name - the attorney for Marshall Field.
Regraded Unclassified
26
- 12 -
MR. PEHLE: You want to know the name?
H.M.JR: Don't you know it? I will tell you in
a minute.
(The Secretary calls Miss Thompson on the White
House phone.)
Heilo, Tommy. Good morning.
Tommy, on bringing refugees into this country -
I know how much interest Mrs. Rooseveit has had. Is
Marshall Field the only committee on this thing -
the Marshall Field Committee - on bringing child refugees
over here?
Yes.
Well, now who is the spark plug there? I mean,
Marshall Field doesn't do it. The man who does the
work.
Could you let Mrs. Klotz know?
Who is Marshail Field's attorney?
Lewis Weiss.
Just your own impression - does Mrs. Roosevelt
have confidence in that Committee? Have they done
much?
Yes, well, I want to get the story.
But what I want to know, who is the best person
to talk to? Is it Weiss, or this other person?
Would you let Mrs. Klotz know?
I thank you.
(End of conversation)
27
- 13 -
H.M.JR: I think you will find that Leavitt said
something about having gotten the attorney when he
wanted the money. The attorney is Lewis Weiss. Don't
you know who he is?
MR. PEHLE: He belongs to a very good law firm in
New York.
H.M.JR: Yes, he is one of the best lawyers in
New York. He is the attorney for "PM" and Marshall
Field. The story is that it was he who got Marshall
to go into these newspapers.
MR. PEHLE: Oh, oh, I have seen a write-up.
H.M.JR: Psychoanalysis, and all that - that they
needed something to express themselves.
MR. PEHLE: There is a very interesting article
on that.
H.M.JR: Well, somebody once said of him that he
said, "Through psychoanalysis I got some of my best
clients.'
MRS. KLOTZ: Oh, yes, he and Marshall Field.
H.M.JR: Then he got Marshall Field to do this to
express himself. It has done wonders for Marshall
Field.
MRS. KLOTZ: And for everybody else.
H.M.JR: What is the name of Marshall Field's
psychiatrist? It is a foreign name - anyway, I don't
know but what Weiss wouldn't be as good an approach
as any. Mrs. Roosevelt is going to town on this thing.
MR. DuBOIS: You would be surprised, Mr. Secretary,
at the amount of Congressional interest and criticism
of the State Department. We have been going through
the Congressional record on this thing. There have been
a lot of speeches by various Senators and Congressmen.
28
- 14 -
H.M JR: Good, there is nothing now; we are sitting
tight. Did the J.D.C. cable go? There are three now;
the one for the World Jewish Congress, the one for the
children of France - was there a third one?
MR. PEHLE: Yes, the one through the Vatican. I
don't know whether it has gone yet, but it is going.
We'll keep after it.
H.M.JR: All right. Now go back and take care of
I.T. and T.
MR. LUXFORD: We will.
H.M.JR: Well, I did, you know. I told them when
they were about to sell the thing for nineteen million
dollars--
MR. PEHLE: The Spanish thing--
H.M.JR: The Spanish thing was stopped?
MR. PEHIE: The Rumanian thing they got through
when nobody else did. It was before the policy was
fixed and they went to the President.
H.M.JR: Are you sorry?
MR. PEHLE: Oh, sure.
H.M.JR: But we did stop the Spanish.
MR. PEHLE: Yes.
H.M.JR: What are they trying to do now?
MR. PEHLE: They want to borrow twenty million
dollars from the Swiss, and the Swiss are interested
that they get paid back in free dollars so it will be
exempt from our control. So they are working out
a big deal that involves the U.S. Commercial Company
and pesetas and gold. But if we understand it, the crux
of the matter is that I.T. and T. are trying to get favor-
able terms from the Swiss because they can deliver it
free from the U.S. Government control.
29
- 15 -
H.M.JR: Just remember, Leo Crowley is now in a
position - at no time was he in so much of a position
to like the Treasury. Not only have we got all this
other thing, but this "Q" regulation of the Federal
Reserve Board - it is a life and death fight between
him and the Federal Reserve. Whichever way we go, it
will be settled. But don't use that unless it is
something good.
Wait a minute, didn't I send one of the three of
you something about Gillette getting safty razors out
of Germany?
MR. PEHLE: You sent it to Mr. Paul.
MR. LUXFORD: That was signed by Mr. Paul last
night.
MRS. KLOTZ: Yes.
MR. PEHLE: We figured out Mr. Riegelman must
have told you about that.
H.M.JR: That is right.
MRS. KLOTZ: They are spies, Mr. Morgenthau.
MR. PEHLE: I am going to tell him not to tell you
things and require us to do a lot of work.
H.M.JR: Are they doing things?
MR. PEHLE: Swedish subsidiary, in defiance of our
orders and the orders of the head office, got razor
blades from Germany. They sell them to Sweden.
H.M.JR: Oh, I was afraid I was using some the Nazis
made and might cut myself and bleed to death.
MR. PEHLE: Selling them in Sweden.
H.M.JR: A Gillette branch?
30
- 16 -
MR. PEHLE: They have branches all over the world.
H.M.JR: But when I get a Gillette blade made in
U.S.A., it is made in U.S.A.?
MR. PEHIE: Yes.
MR. LUXFORD: It is still contrary, though, to our
Trading with the Enemy provision.
H.M.JR: All right.
MR. LUXFORD: It is not all right, out we can't do
anything about it.
H.M.JR: Incidentally, we had Lord Halifax and Mr.
Ben Smith, who I thought might be the American specula-
tors. He is the new head of Procurement for the English,
and Sir David Waley, and according to Harry White and
Oscar Cox - about dollar balances - we just gave them
the works this morning. We had 8. very successful meet-
ing on dollar balances. Acheson was there. Waley just
left himself wide open and I picked it up and both Cox
and White were very pleased. We did a beautiful job.
MR. LUXFORD: Is this the one Preston said you had
a month on?
H.M.JR: Yes.
MR. LUXFORD: You didn't waste any time.
H.M.JR: No, no, Waley is leaving tonight. We did
a beautiful job. The thing they said was really very
funny - just to gossip 8. minute - "You are doing it for
Russia, why not for us?" Crowley said it was a good
answer.
I said that when Stalin met with these people and
they started talking, Stalin said, "How many English
divisions are fighting the Germans today?" They said,
"About three." Stalin said, "United States, how many
have you got?" "About three." So then he told them
how many the Russians have - three hundred, or whatever
it is.
31
- 17 -
So then he said, "How many casualties have you had
since the beginning of the war?" Each country told
him. Then Stalin said, "Every morning before breakfast
we Russians have that many casualties."
And today - because we didn't want to be rude -
but when they ask why we don't question the Russians,
when the English - how many years have they been in
the war? Four years? And they have got three divisions
facing Germans today - maybe four. I don't want to
exaggerate. That is all they have got fighting the
Germans.
MR. PEHLE: That is the bestanswer, too.
H.M.JR: They beat their breasts - why don't we
question the Russians.
MR. LUXFORD: You didn't get a chance to read that
memo on the Russian matter, did you?
H.M.JR: Which one?
MR. LUXFO RD: The one we were talking about the
other day.
H.M.JR: I have got to go downstairs. You fellows
approached that thing wrong.
MR. LUXFORD: We understand that fully.
H.M.JR: I want to see the economic thing first.
We will find a legal way to do it.
MR. DuBOIS: We have got it, Mr. Secretary - the
appendix. It has got the economic and political and
military all in there.
H.M.JR: All right, but I want to find out what
is the potential trade. You fellows missed that.
MR. LUXFORD: In the analysis we made of it, it didn't
make any difference. The military and political signifi-
cance is greater than the other.
32
Mr. Riegelman of State dictated over the telephone late
Saturday, January 8, 1944, the following paraphrase of a
cable from Winant:
London 139
January 7, 1944
8 P. M.
Referring to my 8826 dated December 19 I held further dis-
cussions personally with Mr. Eden relevant to the problem of
issuing licenses covering the financial transactions involved
in the evacuation from France and Rumania of certain Jews re-
ferred to in Department's 7506 of November 27 and 7969 of
December 18 and Mr. Eden has just addressed a letter to me
in this connection. The foreign office, he advises, has
contacted its Embassy in Washington regarding this topic and
Lord Halifax has received instructions which, in his conversa-
tions with Mr. Morgenthau, indicate the lines which he is to
follow.
The following is a quotation from Mr. Eden's letter which I
offer for the purposes of the record:
"Briefly stated this Government finds itself in
agreement with the United States Government insofar
as the financial aspects of the question are con-
cerned. It is our feeling nevertheless that re-
sulting from the proposed financial measures trans-
portation and accommodation problems may develop
which might be embarrassing not only to this Govern-
ment but to your own. Subject to this reservation
and to the indicated safeguards this Government is
prepared to agree with the financial proposals. It
is my presumption that no further detail in this
connection is required at this time in view of the
fact that the question will now be directly dis-
cussed by Mr. Morgenthau and our Embassy and it is
my hope that the results of such discussions will
be to our mutual satisfaction."
You are requested to inform Secretary Morgenthau.
Winant.
Regraded Unclassified
H 33
33
January 7th, 1944.
Memorandum on the Evacuation of 5,000 Children
From France
In July and August, 1942, large scale deportations of refugee Jews from France
took place. At that time parents were given the choice of either taking their
children with them or leaving them in the custody of child care organizations.
Vany parents chose the latter alternative and as a result thousands of children
became a charge upon an organization known as the OSE, a medical and child care
agency which has been subventioned by the J.D.C. for many years. Efforts were
started immediately, as a result of requests from France, that a 1,000 children
be brought out of France to the U.S. The U.S. Committee for the Care of Euro-
pean Children was approached and agreed to sponsor the admission of these
children, giving the requisite guarantees for their maintenance and care. The
State Department agreed to authorize the issuance of quota visas for the chil-
dren on the basis of a letter of guarantee sent to the Attorney General by the
U.S. Committee. The J.D.C. agreed to underwrite 4/9ths of the cost of trans-
portation and maintenance of the children.
As the deportations increased in volume there were many more children for whom
it was deemed imperative that visas be secured. The matter was again dis-
cussed with the State Department and visas for an additional 4,000 children
were promised by the State Department under the same conditions as before.
In the meantime, during the months of August, September and October, the problem
of getting the first group of one thousand children ready for emigration,
having them brought to the American Consulates for medical examination, and
securing the personal data, was being carried on by representatives of the
Quakers and JDC in France. Other organizations keenly interested in the evac-
uation of the children included the International Y.M.C.A. and the local French
refugee bodies.
Although permissionhad been secured in principle from the Vichy authorities
for exit visas for the children, this was renewed and revoked during the month
of October. Finally, as a result of the strong pressure of the American
Charge d'Affairs, Mr. Pinkney Tuck, the authorities agreed to let the first
500 children leave the country. The children were all assembled, baggage
packed, train travel arranged for, the snip chartered for their passage.
A group of 28 escorts consisting of pediatricians, child care workers and
trained social workers was assembled to be sent to Lisbon to escort the chil-
dren to this country. The boat on which the escorts left departed for Lisbon
on November 7th, 1942. The American invasion of North Africa on November 7th
closed the borders of France with the complete occupation of the so-called un-
occupied section of France. Despite the efforts of the local French committees
to secure exit visas for the children, they were not forthcoming.
Donald Lowrie, who was in charge of the International Y.M.C.A. working in France,
went to Switzerland and from there undertook to secure the entrance of the
children into Switzerland. The Swiss authorities took the position that they
would have to have the guarantee of a responsible government that the children
would be re-evacuated after the war. This request of the Swiss government was
taken up with the State Department and with the British government. The State
Department pointed out that it was impossible for it to give such a guarantee
Regraded Unclassified
34
- 2 -
to the Swies government since it meant in effect binding a subsequent admin-
istration for the issuance of visas to children who might by the end of the
war become adults. It is believed that this problem was discussed at the
Bermuda Conference on Refugees. The suggestion that arose from the Bermuda
Conference was that the Allied Nations join in a declaration to the neutral
countries pledging that they would re-admit to their respective countries
all refugees who were forced by reason of persecution to leave those countries.
It took many months to secure the consent of all the governments concerned
to subscribe to such a declaration. The text thereof has not yet been made
public.
We believe that the Swiss government was persuaded to approach the Vichy
authorities to permit the children to leave France by via of Spain. This
request of the Swiss government, which was based entirely upon humanitarian
grounds, was refused by the French. Nevertheless, Donald Lowrie and repre-
sentatives of the JDC and other agencies in Switzerland have continued to
press the Swiss government to make a second demarche to the effect that
Switzerland herself would be prepared to give asylum to the children. Swit-
zerland has continued to request the formal guarantee of re-evacuation.
On November 11th, 1943, the Colonial Secretary announced to the House of
Commons that the unused portion of the Palestine certificates authorized
under the White Paper, viz. 30,000 immigration certificates, would remain
available for use after March, 1944. The Colonial Secretary stated that
due to the war, it was not possible to fill the quota under the White Paper
and therefore the life of these certificates would be prolonged indefinitely.
On the basis of this announcement the JDC approached the State Department and
asked whether there was any objection to our going to the British Embassy
requesting that the British government set aside sufficient Palestine certi-
ficates to assure the evacuation from Switzerland of the children after the
war. In this matter a requisite guarantee could be given to Switzerland.
The State Department interposed no objection whatsoever to such a proposal
and this was made to the British Embassy on November 23rd, 1943. Mr. Hayter
of the British Embassy agreed to transmit this suggestion to the Foreign
Office in London. Subsequently, we were advised that the State Department
had associated itself with this request and had likewise communicated with
the Foreign Office to have such certificates set aside for these children.
On January 3rd, 1944 (letter dated Dec. 31, 1943) the JDC received a letter
from Mr. Hayter, copy attached hereto, pointing out that the Palestine gov-
ernment would find difficulty in reserving such certificates until after the
war and expressing the hope that the general assurance given to the neutral
states about the eventual repatriation of refugees might be sufficient
to meet the requirement of the Swiss government. The JDC replied as per copy
attached.
On December 28th, 1943, the JDC was asked by the State Department whether the
guarantee which had been given by the U.S. Committee for the maintenance of
5,000 children in this country was still valid and whether reaffirmation of this
guarantee would be given. Such a reaffirmation was agreed to by the U.S. Com-
mittee and a letter sent to the Attorney General confirming the readiness of the
Committee to provide for 5,000 children in the event they were admitted to the
U.S. The JDC agreed to underwrite approximately $2,000,000 of the estimated
cost of some 4-41/2 million dollars which the guarantee entailed. On the basis
of this reaffirmation, the State Department notified the British government that
Regraded Unclassified
35
- 3 -
it stood ready and renewed its offer to take 5,000 children under the original
plan which it had approved in October, 1942. The whole question of the
guarantee and of the children was to have been discussed at the meeting of
the Intergovernmental Committee on January 4th, 1944, but the outcome of that
meeting is not yet known to us.
We have recently been receiving urgent cables from Switzerland requesting
that the necessary guarantee be given to the Swies government. Such a
guarantee can only be given by a responsible government since no private
agency would be in a position to assure the Swiss authorities that it would
be able to move the children out of Switzerland when the war is over.
It is of interest to record that during the period when the plight of these
children was made known in the Fall of 1942 other countries came forward
to guarantee asylum to the children. For example, Canada stated it would
take 1,000; Argentina agreed to take 1,000; several other South American
countries agreed to take smaller numbers. The President of the Dominican
Republic offered to take 3,500. At one time, counting certificates
available to the Hadassah, that there were 20,000 visas available for
the children, although the top number of children who could be evacuated
was probably not more than half that number.
It should finally be recorded that about 120 children from Spain and Portugal
were brought to the U.S. under the guarantee of the U. S. Committee.
Restrictions as to the children were set up: children of enemy nationality
had to be less than 14 years of age; children of Allied nationalities had to
be less than 16 years of age. There was no minimum limit on the age of
the children.
As of the date that this memorandum is being dictated, it is unknown whether
the requisite guarantees have been or will be given to Switzerland so that
she could make the necessary approach to the French authorities to permit
the children to leave either via Spain, from which they could emigrate to the
U.S., or to enter Switzerland for the duration.
At the present time, children are being deported from France and there is a
relentless hunt being conducted by the Gestapo to locate the children hidden in
private homes in order to intern them into concentration camps in preparation
for their deportation eastward.
Moses A. Leavitt
MAL:JO
Regraded Unclassified
ABLINE
ENDED
36
British
today that
5
legally en-
but have
of the war
tions
Oliver
who
House
indicated, however,
wold
be M change in
laid down in the
May,
I
for the admission
to
of
T8,000 Jewish tmml-
period of five
years
$1, 1944, sub-
ject to the eriterion of the segnom-
to absorytive especity of the coun-
try," Partiament. "It
was
contemplated that Charo should
quots of 10,000 and
addition,
as B contribution
toward the solution of the Jewish
problem, $5,000 would be
as adequate pro-
maintenance was
the ful-
The
entered
Magally up
against &
be admitted
system.
01,078
before
with
has
I
and
empluation that it
to close the
Chose persons
- accessed
factor,"
COPY
37
BRITISH EMBASSY
WASHINGTON 8, D. C.
December 31st, 1943
(Received Jan. 3, 1944)
Ref: 608/26/43
Dear Mr. Leavitt,
We have now had a reply from London about the suggestion you
made to me for a guarantee to the Swiss Government that a cer-
tain number of Immigration Certificates into Palestine be re-
served for refugee children who escape to Switzerland.
The Foreign Office tell us that there would be difficulty in
committing the Palestine government to guarantee the reserva-
tion until after the war of a number of Immigration Certifi-
cates.
They hope, however, that the recent assurance to neutral
states about the eventual repatriation of refugees should
meet the requirement of the Swiss Government to some extent.
I believe that the whole subject is to be considered by the
Executive Committee of the Inter-governmental Committee on
refugees at its meeting on January 4th.
Yours very sincerely,
W. G. Hayter
Mr. Moses A. Leavitt,
Secretary
The American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee,
270 Madison Avenue,
New York, 16, N. Y.
81708
Regraded Unclassified
Regraded Unclassified
January 7th, 1944.
Mr. W. J. Hayter
British Embasay
Washington 8, D. C.
Ref: 608/26/43
Dear Mr. Hayter:
It was with the greatest disappointment that we received your letter of
December 31st advising us that your Foreign Office stated that there would
be great difficulty in committing the Palestinian Government to guarantee the
reservation of a number of immigration certificates until after the war. The
suggestion which we made to you was based on the assumption that if these
children who are now in dire danger of deportation and death were in a nou-
tral country there would be no question but what Palestine certificates would
be available to them for entering Palestine. In effect, we were asking for
these certificates to be issued to the children now, with the reservation
that they would be - route to Palestine only after an indefinite stay is
Switserland. The lives of the children would in that way be saved.
We have just recently received word from our correspondent in Switserland
that deportations of Jews free France are continuing, that there are now 1,500
new children whose parents have been deported and for whom there is the gre-
vest danger of being picked up and likewise deported.
To understand that our Department of State has just renewed its offer to
take 5,000 children from France under the original plan for accepting such
refugee children from that country which had been agreed to by the United
States Government before the rupture of relations with France in November,
1942.
Be would take the liberty to urge you as strongly as we can to communicate
with your Foreign Office again for a reconsideration of the position taken,
as outlined in your letter to se. To very such doubt that the general
assurance, which I as glad to note, has been given about the eventual re-
patriation of refugees, would meet the special request which has been made
by the Swiss Government that the United States and British Governments
guarantee the evacuation of the children after the war. When we discussed
3
Ir. ". s. Hayter
2.
January 7th, 1944.
this suggestion with our overseas Chairman, Dr. Schwarts, he stated that
when he was in Switserland and conferred with the Swiss authorities on
this problem, they were adamant on the condition that a responsible govern-
ment extend such a guarantee. They were not prepared to take the guar-
antee of either & private agency or of a provisional government.
Sincerely yours,
Moses A. Leavitt
Secretary
MAL:JO
Regraded Unclassified
40
January 7, 1944
2:27 p.m.
HMJr:
I have an idea which I think might interest you.
Fred
Smith:
Good.
HMJr:
As a result of this release on liquor, see?
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
And when they talk about liquor not even being
imitation whiskey, but it's just colored distilled
spirits.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Now, I know that when they started to clean up
Georgia, because I got a memorandum on it, they
found that a house in Brooklyn was sending stuff
down to Georgia, and from there it was being sold.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I wonder why we can't, in my chart room, get some
of this stuff, show what it looks like, have a
little picture, map of Brooklyn, and show how it
goes down to Georgia and then what it sold for
and the whole thing, you see? What it needs is a
good window-display man.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
You can get one from the department store here --
what's the one that's so cooperative?
S:
I know there is one. Ted will know.
HMJr:
Yeah. And put on a little exhibit.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
And if it looks all right -- Hecht's is the one,
I think.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
We could then bring in the boys and say, "This 18
the way the thing is done, and this is what we are
doing about it."
S:
Uh huh.
Regraded Unclassified
41
- 2 -
HMJr:
And show them -- they'd love to see the kind and
what it sells for -- how it goes from Brooklyn
down to Georgia and what happens to it.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
One of the things I think you'll find is that
when they put on a label "Colored Distilled
Spirits" it's most likely so small that nobody
will be able to see it.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
That's one of the things we can change because
we control the labels.
S:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
See?
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
And, supposing -- if we're going to do something
I want to do it quick. See?
S:
Okay.
HMJr:
Now, the case -- the report the stuff that
they did down in Georgia recently would be as
good as any.
S:
Yeah. Well, I'll get right on it, right now.
HMJr:
And contact somebody and let's see how it looks.
S:
Okay.
HMJr:
But this 18 straight public relations a la
Morgenthau.
S:
A la Morgenthau. (Laughs) On pie.
HMJr:
On pie.
S:
(Laughs) Okay. We'll get right at it.
HMJr:
All right.
Regraded Unclassified
42
January 7, 1944
3:30 p.m.
DISPOSITION OF SURPLUS COMMODITIES
Present: Mr. Sullivan
Mr. O'Connell
Mrs. Klotz
MR. SULLIVAN: And I fought for an hour and a
half with him. He said, "It is altogether too much
work. You have these eleven regional offices; there
will be 80 many thousands of items in each one."
I said, "Cliff, if you are going to sell a million
suits of underwear in New York, doesn't it make any
difference to you whether you have five million in
Philadelphia or not?"
He said, "It might, but it is an awful lot of
work getting the statistics together. That is the
basic thing you go ahead on, and you never can map
out with any intelligence, merchandise--"
H.M.JR: What is the matter with the man?
MR. SULLIVAN: When we got out of the hearing
this morning, he said, "I am inclined to think you
may be right about that. There is such a thing as
being too close to the Treasury."
H.M.JR: I am trying to get the man from Portland,
Oregon. Did Ted tell you?
MR. SULLIVAN: No.
H.M.JR: He has a store out there - the best
department store - the most successful on the whole
Regraded Unclassified
13
- 2 -
Pacific Coast. It may not be the biggest, but it is
the most important. He owns it. The fellow lost his
wife. I just had & feeling he might want a man about
fifty - very, very able merchant. But he has no
ties.
He must be terribly rich, because - I don't know,
a store like that, I wouldn't be surprised, would make
a half million dollars a year.
MR. SULLIVAN: We are going to need three or four
people like that.
H.M.JR: He knows where we could get merchandising
fellows, because I imagine, in his store - twenty-five
million a year, which for Portland is something--
(Mr. O'Conneil entered the conference.)
MR. SULLIVAN: The more I get into this the more
convinced I am that we need a chain-store fellow, too.
H.M.JR: This fellow has no connections, no Wall
Street connections - nothing. That is what I was
looking for.
I think the fellow is Frank, of Meier and Frank.
MR. SULLIVAN: That is what you had in mind when
you said I shouldn't go any further with calling those
people?
H.M.JR: Yes, because I don't want to get people
connected with Lehman Brothers, and all the rest.
This fellow doesn't have to be financed. You might
get hold of Meier and Frank.
Hewas married. He married the boss' daughter
and finally has the whole business himself.
Regraded Unclassified
44
- 3 -
MR. O'CONNELL: I don't have much of a gang.
Lynch went home sick and Mac left a few minutes ago.
Mac wanted us to get together with you today, and I
suggested putting it off until Monday because there
were a couple of subcommittees tomorrow.
MR. SULLIVAN: Joe is right.
H.M.JR: You want me to set a time now?
MR. O'CONNELL: Certainly Monday we will be ready.
There are several meetings tomorrow. Mac wanted it
today, I think - I know he did, in fact.
MR. SULLIVAN: They only had one they could report
on.
H.M.JR: How about three o'clock Monday?
MR. O'CONNELL: Sure.
H.M.JR: What do I call it?
MR. O'CONNELL: The Baruch Committee or contract
termination.
MR. SULLIVAN: It is your post-war group.
MR. O'CONNELL: Then I will tell McConnell.
MR. SULLIVAN: Norman Cann is coming back. Bob
rushed the news over here yesterday thinking we might
want to give a press release, because one part of the
Knutson story was that the key men had left. I told
Bob to keep the information to himself, that if it
was ever to be used for that purpose, the time to
use it was after Congress got back and not while they
were away.
H.M.JR: I just sort of mentioned in passing -
old man Doughton was down today. He walked in here
Regraded Unclassified
45
- 4 -
with what looks like a five-pound box of candy for
Mrs. Morgenthau. So that is how he feels. I simply
mentioned it. "Well," he said, "that is the kind of
thing you have got to expect. You can't get anything
out of the Bureau." He gave me case after case of
waiting three and four months.
I told him - I said, "Look, the next time that
you have got something you don't think is right, will
you call me on the phone?" He said, "Absolutely."
I got the word from somebody - - oh, you told me--
MR. SULLIVAN: Last night.
H.M.JR: I am not going to worry.
MR. O'CONNELL: Did you talk to Stanley?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes.
MR. O'CONNELL: Surrey made such checks as he
could on the staff working with the Minority, and he
was convinced it was a one-man show on Knutson's part.
H.M.JR: Surrey didn't get that?
MR. O'CONNELL: No, Surrey talked to the Minority
Clerk, and that sort of thing.
H.M.JR: Nobody reported to me.
MR. O'CONNELL: I just learned it late last night
and was going to report it to you today, and when
Randolph left he told me what Hannegan told you
(Sullivan) last night - all in the same tenor, that
Knutson was on his own, that he hadn't talked to the
other members of the Minority on the Ways and Means
Committee as far as the Clerk knew, though he didn't
write them.
(Mrs. Klotz entered the conference.)
Regraded Unclassified
46
- 5 -
MR. SULLIVAN: George was very cordial this morning,
personally.
H.M.JR: Did he call you John"?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes. (Laughter)
H.M.JR: Have we sold our horses yet?
MR. SULLIVAN: We have been doing all right on
them. This meeting this morning was a good meeting.
H.M.JR: What committee was that?
MR. SULLIVAN: It is the subcommittee on this
particular subject, and it is a part of Senator George's
post-war committee. The main issue they are going to
decide is whether or not Congress should set up an
over-all commission to decide general policy questions
in directly operational agencies.
MR. O'CONNELL: In all post-war matters.
MR. SULLIVAN: Disposition of surplus materials
and plants.
H.M.JR: Are they going along the same track as
Mr. Baruch?
MR. SULLIVAN: Fairly parallel, I think.
(The Secretary had a telephone conversation with
Mr. Doughton, as follows:)
Regraded Unclassified
cc-D. W. Bell
47
January 7, 1944
3:50 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Robert
Doughton: Hello.
HMJr:
Henry talking.
D:
Yes, Bob Doughton. There's a matter I forgot
that I aimed to mention to you, Henry, and that
is the Federal Reserve Board has recently promul-
gated an order, or is promulgating one, requiring
the State Banks to clear their checks at par.
HMJr:
Yes.
D:
Now, they don't allow -- they can't get any
interest on their deposits from their correspond-
ing banks and to go -- they're very much upset
about it down there. I've got a brother who 18
President of a chain of small State Banks and I
had a letter from Mr. W. H. Wood today sending
a copy of a letter he had sent to Mr. Spence,
Chairman of the Banking and Currency Committee
here.
HMJr:
Yeah.
D:
Mr. Wood is President of the American Trust
Company, the largest bank in our State, at
Charlotte. And they are very much upset about
it, and it's going to knock a lot of the small
banks out of business. Above all things, that
ought not to be done right now. We've got
enough trouble down there without putting any
more salt in their sores, and if that could be
headed off at least until after a certain date
later on this year -- at least.
HMJr:
I see. That date wouldn't be November, would it?
D:
How's that?
HMJr:
That date wouldn't be November, would it?
D:
That's what I had in mind. If it has to be done,
you know, it would be a most inopportune and
unfortunate time now.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
48
HMJr:
Yeah.
D:
Get all the little banks, you know, mad and
they've got a lot of influence. With all the
other trouble we've got, I don't know where
we'd be. I just thought maybe you'd be able
to get in a word somewhere about it high up.
HMJr:
Well, I've been a kind of a by-stander. This
18 something between the Federal Reserve Board
and Crowley. We've been sort of on the side-
lines, but I'll look into it, Bob.
D:
I understand that the F.D.I.C., Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, which has, you know, the
responsibility for these bank -- insuring these
bank deposits.
HMJr:
Yeah.
D:
that they are very much opposed to it.
That's what Mr. Spence told me today, the
Chairman of the
HMJr:
That's correct.
D:
....Committee on Banking and Currency.
HMJr:
That's correct.
D:
Yeah. I do hope they won't put that order
into effect right now if there's anything that
can be done. It's really serious.
HMJr:
Well, right now, I'm kind of the ham in the
sandwich -- I'm in between two pieces of bread
on that.
D:
Yes. Well, I just called it to your attention.
I don't know whether you should do or could do.
I just thought I'd familiarize you with it.
HMJr:
Well, now that you've called me, I'll look into
it much more than I have.
D:
Well, I thank you very much.
HMJr:
Righto.
D:
Good bye.
Regraded Unclassified
49
- 6 -
H.M.JR: I haven't had good reason to take sides;
now I have.
MR. O'CONNELL: That is quite a fight.
H.M.JR: Oh, boy, oh boy! When Leo gets mad he
gets red in the face. Leo pulled & fast one. He has
got about all he can swing.
MRS. KLOTZ: I am going to sit down and cry. It
breaks my heart, it is 80 sad.
H.M.JR: Crowley said, "I tell you what I have de-
cided to do. It is very embarrassing for you to have
to make up your mind and advise Preston Delano what he
should say when he testifies for Banking and Currency,
on this "Q" regulation, so," he said, "I went around
to see the Chairman and I told him I thought it was &
waste of time to call Delano."
He said, "That will sort of relieve you of trying
to make up your mind.
MR. SULLIVAN: Leo did this?
H.M.JR: So I said to Leo, just as we were going
into the State Department, on English dollar balance,
I said, "You know, Leo, I have kind of got my mind on
something else, it may slip me. Would you mind telling
Bell about this yourself?"
"Why," he said. "This confidence man, Ransom,
runs up there and they tell him to take five or ten
minutes. He has been there ten days testifying."
I can say this for Leo, that has been on the books
for ten years. Now they suddenly dig it up just as
soon as Steagall dies. Why it has been on the books
ten years--
MR. O'CONNELL: It has, too.
Regraded Unclassified
50
- 7 -
H.M.JR: I have been kind of leaning a little bit
Leo's way. I think that Preston Delano, down the hail
there - it does look to me as though it is the last
thing for the little banks.
What it is, is this: The little banks - I think
you have to pay ten cents on & check.
MR. O'CONNELL: Five, I think.
H.M.JR: So the Chase Bank says, "You send it in
to us and we will clear it for you and not charge you
anything.
MR. O'CONNELL: They will absorb the charge.
H.M.JR: "Leave the extra money you have on
deposit with us." The law says you can't pay interest
on demand deposits, but if they clear all their checks
for them and absorb that five or ten cents, it is
equivalent to paying interest.
What I am telling you, Ransom took a half hour to
explain and then I didn't understand it. It does help
the little banks, and the banks like to take it in
their stride. It is a nice convenient thing. But one
bank down in Jacksonville had seven hundred thousand
deposits and decided to do the same thing, and over
night it got seven million deposits on it.
Whichever way I go, I am in the soup. How do
you know so much about this?
MR. O'CONNELL: Norm Tietjens taiked to Cy Upham
about it. We are having our lawyers look into the thing
a little bit from the legal angle.
H.M.JR: Now it is political. Just stall it
until a certain date.
Regraded Unclassified
51
- 8 -
MR. SULLIVAN: Incidentally, when you see the
President you might remind him that it is just five
weeks from Tuesday until the slate is filed in New
Hampshire.
Dogradod
52
Treasury Department
Division of Monetary Research
D
Date Jan. 8, 1944 19
Yes
Miss Chauncey
The original of this letter was
handed to Mr. Fitzgerald yesterday
just prior to the Secretary's appoint-
ment with Sir David Waley (at 4:00).
The Secretary signed the letter and
handed it to Sir David.
L. Shanahan
MR.
Branch 2058 - Room 2141
53
January 7, 1944.
Dear Sir Johns
You have doubtlessly been informed of the
conference held in Secretary Hull's office this
morning on the subject of lend-leasing certain
categories of items to the British Empire. is
you know, in addition to Secretary Hull, there
were present among others Lord Halifax, Sir David
Walay, Mr. Crowley and myself. I an glad that
Sir David Welgy will be able to explain to you
personally and in detail the views which we
expressed at the conference.
I should like to take this opportunity to
express our admiration for the effective manner
in which Sir David has carried out his difficult
duties in Washington.
With best wishes for the New Year.
Sincerely,
Sir John Anderson,
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
London, England.
1/7/44 - Miss Ayers handed to Mr. Fitzgerald.
HDW:grs
1/7/44
FILE COPY
Regraded Unclassified
54
January 7, 1944
4:11 p.m.
Operator:
Operator.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator: Yes, sir.
HMJr:
Mr. Gray, from the State Department -- he's on
the wire -- Fitz' wire.
Operator: There you are.
David
Gray:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
Mr. Gray.
G:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
What I find is this -- we got a memorandum, at
least I did, from the President on the question
of French currency.
G:
That is -- that 18, after operations or something?
HMJr:
Well, no, the question of printing it, you see?
G:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
What should be on it.
G: :
Yes.
HMJr:
Mr. White was trying to get hold of Mr. Dunn
and has been unsuccessful, trying to explain to
Mr. Dunn what it was. You see?
G:
Uh huh.
HMJr:
As I understand, heretofore, our contact on this
has been with Mr. Dunn.
G:
Yes, sir.
HMJr:
And it's a question of our printing currency, and
for some reason, to our surprise, the President
has taken some very strong personal position.
G:
I see.
Regraded Unclassified
55
- 2 -
HMJr:
Now, what I will do is, I'll have Mr. White
send over to Mr. Hull, attention of you, right
away....
G:
All right, sir.
HMJr:
....a copy of this memorandum which came in to
me and it's based on that.
G:
I see, sir.
HMJr:
Now....
G:
Well, then I'll take it right in and then I'll
call....
HMJr:
I had thought that that had gone, but the reason
it hadn't gone was that Mr. White hadn't been able
to get Mr. Dunn.
G:
I see, sir.
HMJr:
But, I'll....
G:
I'll just wait for the memo, Mr. Secretary, and
then I'll -- we'll call you back as to who'll be
there.
HMJr:
I thank you:
G:
Thank you very much, sir.
HMJr:
Bye.
56
January 7, 1944.
My dear General Clark:
It was 8. pleasure to receive your letter of
December 27 with the news that the apples arrived
in good order.
You were more than kind to tell me that the
Drew Pearson column was not based on anything you
had written. I was entirely sure that it was not
and I regret only the annoyance it may have caused
you.
I continue to draw inspiration from my visit
to the front with you. It gave me a point of view
that enables me, I think, to keep my eye on the ball
and to work more effectively.
We are just about to enter on the Fourth War
Loan campaign with good prospects; for I think there
is a good deal more realization now than a few months
ago that we at home are an essential part of the team
with you at the front.
The tanks went to Aberdeen for a looking over.
We expect to get them soon.
I send most sincere regards coupled with most
fervent and prayerful good wishes for all that lies
ahead of you and your men.
Sincerely,
(Signed) Henry Morgenthan, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark, USA
Headquarters Fifth Army
A.P.O. #464
c/o Postmaster
New York, N. Y.
wr
Regraded Unclassified
57
January 7, 1944
My dear Mrs. Clark:
I thought you might be interested in the
letter which I received from General Clark;
also a copy of my reply to him.
With kindest regards,
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mrs. M. W. Clark,
Kennedy-Warren Apartments,
Washington, D.C.
Regraded Unclassified
58
HEADQUARTERS FIFTH ARMY
Office of the Commanding General
A. P. 0. #464
December 27, 1943
Hon. Henry W. Morgenthau
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Morgenthau:
The beautiful box of apples arrived today in fine condition,
and I want to thank you for sending them to me. They will be &
great treat for me and my immediate staff. Although some apples
are now coming into the market in Italy, they do not compare with
our American fruit, and particularly the ones which you have sent.
I hope the tanks which we sent to you finally reached their
proper destination and that you were able to make use of them in
your War Bond drives.
I was shocked yesterday to receive & clipping of an article
by Drew Pearson in which he quotes me as resenting official visi-
tore coming into the Fifth Army area in Italy. He inferentially
indicated that I was referring to your visit here. Needless to
say, I have never made such a statement, for my views are entirely
the opposite. I have always felt that it w&s advantageous for
both civilian and military officials to visit this theater in or-
der to obtain first hand information on the situation and of the
difficult terrain through which we are fighting. Besides, visi-
tors like yourself, when appearing among the troops, are & stimu-
lus to their morale for it makes them realize that the people in
official positions at home are interested in their welfare and
are here to see how they can help. As a matter of interest, I am
always consulted before visitors come and have in every case in-
dicated my desire to have them visit our area.
Our progress has been slow for, as you know, the terrain has
been difficult. However, we are advancing and will continue to
do so,
Again thanking you for the fine present, I an
Yours sincerely,
mark W. Charly
MARK W. CLARK
Lieutenant General, USA,
Commanding.
Regraded Unclassified
59
January 7, 1944
Dear Anna:
I was delighted to sign the 51 citations
which you sent me on January 4th. I hope
that the Victory Square meets with great
success.
Affectionately yours,
(Signed) Fenry
Mrs. John Boettiger,
The White House,
Washington, D.C.
Regraded Unclassified
RO
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
Jan. 4", '44
Dear Henry -
Here is some thing I
wrote you about a louf
time afo, and which
to take care of. I hate
you said you would try
to be a pest but we
(John & I) did jet this
damn victory S guare started
and it has done a food
job
If to 4.4. in the a.m,
but will be back Saturday.
Love toyou and This It
Anna
61
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
TO Secretary Morgenthau
January 7, 1944
FROM Fred Smith
Here are the Fourth War Loan speeches that we have
agreed upon:
January 17, 9:00 - 10:00 PM, will be the opening
broadcast. Dudley is working on he show, of which you
will be a major part. It will not be & speech, as such.
January 19: You are to speak in Cincinnati, in the
evening. The audience will consist of several hundred of
our bond workers from that area.
Some time between the 20th and 23rd you are making a.
five minute speech as one of the governmental leaders who
are scheduled to plug the War Loan Drives.
On January 30, we will take over "We the People."
At present that is scheduled for Springfield, Illinois,
but Levy is coming to Washington Monday and we think we
can find a better place, to develop a newer and better
story than Lincoln.
The above are the only speeches so far scheduled.
Ted wants you to speak sometime during the drive in New
England, and in New Orleans or Texas. You would like to
go into the far middle west.
Ted would also like you to do a report to the nation
in the closing of the drive.
Regraded Unclassified
WAR FINANCE COMMITER
UNITED STATES TREASURY
62
WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE FOR OHIO
Third Area Committee
Cin'ti Gas and Electric Building
Fourth and Main Sts.
eha J. Rowe, Chairman
CINCINNATI, OHIO
Roy D. Moore, Ohio State Chairman
Incinnatt. Ohio
Phill J. Trounstine, Attociate Chair
MAin 1101
January 7 1944.
will
The Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
Dear Secretary Morgenthau:
I want to express our great
pleasure that we will have the honor of having you with
us as the main speaker at our War Finance dinner for
workers on the evening of January 19th. We appreciate
your acceptance of our invitation tremendously and we
will do everything we can to have a representative at-
tendance of our workers, paying particular attention to
geographic distribution 80 that we will have representa-
tion from every suburb and every township, as well as a
few from neighboring counties.
I will much appreciate it if
you will let me know when you will arrive and what time
during the day or afternoon before the dinner you will
have available, and whom you would like to meet. I
understand that Phil Trounstine would like to arrange
a little reception before the dinner in your honor.
Yours Jhong very truly,
Chairman
Third Area Committee
JJR:es
Regraded Unclassified
63
January 7, 1944
TO THE BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES:
The Treasury Department again is counting
on your indispensable aid in a great War Loan campaign.
From the reports of State and local War
Finance Committees, I know with what fine spirit your
employees and officers have served in previous sue-
cessful Drives. Everywhere, from the smallest village
to the largest city, your people have been in the fore-
front of these efforts, accepting this task of war
financing as a special opportunity for service.
In the Fourth War Loan Drive which starts
January 18, more emphasis than ever before will be
placed on borrowing the largest possible amount from
individual investors, and thorough, systematic, personal
solicitation of your depositors and neighbors 1a essen-
tial to success.
With colossal military operations imminent in
both Europe and Asia, the oversubscription of every
Fourth War Loan quota--National, State and local--18 of
vital importance. Our fighting men are looking to us to
back them up. We must not--we dare not--fail in our
responsibility.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan, Jr
EBH:dft
Regraded Unclassified
64
From: The National Broadcasting Co.
Trans-Lux Bldg.
Washington, D.C.
Address of the Honorable Walter F. George, United States Senator from
Georgia and Chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance, delivered over the
National Broadcasting Compuny network Friday, January 7th, at 10:45PM.
During the month just ended, our Federal government spent nearly 78
billion dollars. Excluding Christmas Day and Sundays, this was an average of
about 287 million dollars each business day, or approximately 36 million dollars
for each working hour, Over 90 centa of every dollar spent in December went to
pay war costs. According to the latest official estimates, Federal expenditures
will run almost a fifth higher during the next six months than they have since
last June. During the current fiscal year, the government will spend 57 billion
dollars more than it will receive in taxes. The necessity of borrowing most of
this aum will raise the national public debt on next June 30 to around 200 b11-
lion dollars, or to practically one thousand, 500 dollars for each man, woman and
child in this country.
In view of those astronowical figures, which dwarf our experience in
any previous war, it is no smell wonder that the American people have been asked
to pay taxes which in many cases, I am sure, seem almost unbearable, and that
the Congress is devoting its attention to raising still more revenue- In these
times, we often find ourselves faced with two evils batwoen which we must choose.
We must fight the enemies of mankind or lose our freedom; likewise we must each
of us pay our share of the tremendous cost of this war or suffer the much worse
consequences of serious inflation.
The Constitution places upon the Congress the responsibility of deter-
mining the manner in which the revenue needa of the government should be met. Any
suggestion that taxation become B. political issue, or that tax policies either
within the Congress, or within the Departments, be considered as such, must
necessarily make it extremely difficult, 15 not impossible, to arrive at a con-
structive, or equitable tax program, particularly in time of war.
However, one must not lose sight of the fact that the power to tax our-
ries with it the power to destroy; therefore, those of us charged with the
responsibility of levying taxes would be derelict in our duty if we were blindly
to accept and place our stamp of approval upon each and every Departmental pro-
posal advanced.
In placing additional tax burdens upon the American people, especially
at this time, Congress must give careful consideration to the existing tax burden
on our people, the repidity with which this buden has been increased in the past
few years, and the effect additional burdens would have on our imrodiate and
post-war economies,
Congress has, without stint, appropriated practically every dollar saked
for by those charged with the responsibility of directing and prosecuting the war.
The huge expenditures can only be met by taxation and borrowing. Everyone agrees
that, without disrupting our economy, as much AS possible of these expenditures
should be paid for by taxation.
Few people, however, realize the extent of the increase in tax burden in
recent years. Since 1940, Federal tax collections have risen approximately 600
percent. For the fiscal year 1940, total Federal tax collections amounted to 5
billion, 925 million dollars, whereas for the fiscal year 1944 they will approxi-
mate 41 billion dollars.
In the period from 1936 to 1939, prior to the start of our defense end
programs, a married person with two dependents having a net income of 4 thousand
dollars paid an annual income tax of 12 dollars. Today such an individual pays
484 dollars and 97 centa on the same sise income. For the years 1944 and 1945,
assuming no change in income, the tax will amount to 532 dollars and 22 cente be-
cause of the required payment of the unforgiven tax, This represents an increase
of 520 dollars and 22 cente, or approximately 4 thousand, 335 percent.
Regraded Unclassified
65
A married person with no dependents and having a net income of 3 thous-
and dollars paid an annual tax of 8 dollars in the period 1936-1939. In 1940 his
tax WBC increased to 30 dollars and 80 cents, an increase of 285 percent; in 1941
this tax was further increased to 138 dollars, an increase of 348 percent over the
previous year; in 1942 it was further increased to 324 dollars, an increase for the
year of 135 percent; in 1943 to was again increased to 405 dollars and 28 cents, 8.
one year increase of 25 percent, making a total increase of 397 dollars and 28 cent
or 4 thousand, 966 percent since 1939. If we include the unforgiven tax payable in
1944 and 1945 and assume no change in net income, this individual will be paying a
tax of 445 dollars and 78 cents in each of these years, or an increase of 5 thous-
und, 472 percent over what he paid in each year from 1936 to 1939, inclusive.
Few persons realize that under the existing law, with the carry-over of
the 1942 or 1943 tax required to be paid in 1944 and 1945, no individual, no
natter how high his income, will have left more than $25,000, assuming his income
remains constant and that his uncanceled tex is paid out of current income. When
we give account, as we should, to Federal and State income, excise, and sales
taxes, State property taxes and taxes of political subdivisions, it 10 obvious
that the present Federal individual income tax 1s extremely burdensome. If the
individual income tax rates recomended to the Congress recently by the Treasury
Department had been adopted, no individual, no matter how high his income, would
have left after taxes in 1944 and 1945 more then approximately 12 thousand
dollars.
Within less than 3 months following the enactment of the 1942 Revenae
Act, which was estimated to raise 7 billion, 952 million dollare of additional
revenue, the Congress WELF advised by the President that we should collect not
less than 16 billion dollars of additional funds by taxation, savings, or both,
during the fiscal year 1944. This figure wsa subsequently reduced to 12 billion
dollars, and when the Secretary of the Treasury presented his recommendations to
the Committee on Ways and Meens on October 4, 1943, it had been further reduced
to 10 billion, 579 million, 300 thousand dollars; moreover, probably less than
half of this sum would actually have flowed into the Treasury during the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1944. Of the total amount the Treasury recomended that 6
billion, 528 million, 500 thousand be reised from individual income taxes, 1
billion, 138 million, 100 thousand dollars from corporate taxes, 401 million,
600 thousand dollars from estate and gift taxes, and 2 billion, 511 million, 100
thousand dollars from increased rates of tax on existing selected excise taxes
and the levying of new excise taxes on candy, chewing gun, and soft drinks.
Note that over 60 percent of the additional revenue recomended by the
Treasury Department would have come from individual income taxes. Those of us who
meke 1t our business to keep closely in touch with many people in all walks of
life realized immediately that the incomes of the great bulk of the American
people could not stand this increase in tax. While many persons receive higher
incomes as a result of the war, there are thousands of government employees,
school teachers and professional people who are not enjoying one cent more than
before the war, Most of these persons have patriotically invested in United
States War Savings Bonds. If the tax rates proposed by the Treasury ware to be
adopted, many of these purchases would cease, or be curtailed, and probably in-
surance premiums and payments on mortgages could not be met by these persons.
The repeal of certain taxes which had been imposed previously by the
Congress was suggested. These were: the tax on trensportation of property,
which brings in nearly 200 million dollars annually, end the Victory tax, which
yields 3 billion, 500 million dollars a year. Repeal of Wese taxes would of
course nocessitate bigher rates of other taxes in order to protect the revenue.
The proposal for integrating the Victory tax with the regular income tax would
have excused some 9 million persons from any income tax whatsoever. These per-
sons now contribute about 300 million dollars a year toward paying the cost of
the war,
Many of us in Congress and elswhere think that we have about reached the
bottom of the barrel with respect to reising additional revenue from present
sources of taxation. Possible now alternatives to which we might turn are com-
pulsory savings, a tax levied only on incomes which have increased as a result
of the par, or a general retail sales tax, These have been consistently opposed.
Hence the Congress has been unable to reiso more than a fifth of the additional
revenue recommended by the Treasury. There appears to be general agreement in
the Congress that raising more than this amount, without resort to new methods,
would disrupt our economy, not only for the present, but for years to come;
morsover, we might make it axtremely difficult for our returning soldiers to find
employment,
-2-
Regraded Unclassified
56
In the bill recently reported out by the Senate Finance Committee, which
will be considered in the Senate next week, changes in individual income tax pro-
visions, higher retes of tax on corporations, and increases in excise and postal
rates will bring in 2 billion, 275 million, 600 thousand dollars of additional
revenue in a full year of operation.
The Senate Finance Committee bill retains the present rates of individ-
ual income taxes', with the exception that the Victory tax has been simplified by
saking it a 3 percent tax for everyone regardless of family status. The earned
incose credit is disallowed and the previously permitted deductions for certain
Federal excíse taxes paid are discontinued, with the result that income tax com-
putations will be considerably simplified. The net effect of these changes 1a to
raise 664 million, 900 thousand dollars of additional revenue spreed throughout
the income scale.
The Financo Committee did not adopt the Treasury Department's suggestion
for raising the rate of tax which applies to the normal earnings of corporations,
because it was felt that such a step would interfere with the normal distribution
of dividends, which are alroady subject to double taxation and of which a large
proportion 1s paid to individuals in the lower income groups, The rate of the
excess profits tax levied on corporations is raised from 90 to 95 percent, and
the credit allowed to companies using the invested capital method of computing
excess profits tax is reduced at certain levels. In order to protect the smaller
corporations, the specific exemption for excess profits tax purposes is raised
from 5 thousand dollars to 10 thousand dollars. These changes, together with
less important ones affecting corporation taxes, will tring in 502 million,
700 thousand dollars,
The bill reported out by the Sanate Finance Committee will raise one
billion, 108 million dollars from increases in the rates of certain excise taxes
applying, in the main, to luxury items, and in postal rates,
The figures just cited add to 2 billion, 275 million, 600 thousand
dollars, which at least in the past was considered to be B. lot of money. It still
represents a considerable sum, although not an great as I believe should and could
be provided if opposition to new methods could be overcome.
I think I can assure you that there is little opportunity for making
inordinate profits out of war when corporate war profits are taxed at 95 percent
and individual incomes are taxed by the Federal government alone as high B.B. 90
percent, as will be the case under the Sanate Finance Committee bill, I also
want to assure you that the tax committees of the Congress, aided by their staff
of experts, and by the Treasury Department, are giving serious attention to sin-
plifying income tax computations for the more than 50 million taxpayer now on
tha rolls. Until greater steps can be taken toward simplification, 10 =.0 hoped
that you will bear with us and recognize the fact that it 16 difficult to achieve
Squity in taxation, especially under very high rates, without the introduction of
provisions which are sometimes complicated merely because they are designed to
fit special cases where hardship might otherwise result.
One further thing will interest you. The rates of certain Social
Security taxes, now at one percent each on employers and employees, were scheduled
to rise to 2 percent on January 1, 1944, but the Senate Finance Committee has
frozen these rates at the one percent level. This action was taken on the basis
of facts which indicated, in the opinion of the majority of committee members,
that the amount of the social security funds now held in t: :st by the government
is emple to meet prospective needs over several years without the increase 1:1 rates
Unlike some assures passed by the Congress, tax legislation cannot hope
to please either all the people some of the time or some of the people all the
time but I have firm faith that each one of you stands ready and willing to meet
your share of the cost of this costliest of wars, Many in Congress believe that
an additional tax burden upon the same taxpayers of 8 billion dollars would
shatter the public morale.
Regraded Unclassified
File 67
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE 1/7/44.
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
R. E. McConnell
There is transmitted herewith the final drafts,
approved December 31, 1943, by the Joint Contract Termina-
tion Board, of Statement of Principles for Determination
of Costs Upon Termination of Government Fixed Price Supply
Contracts, Uniform Termination Article for Fixed Price
Supply Contracts, and Statement of Policy as to Removal
and Disposition of Property in Connection with Contract
Termination.
R.E.M.
Regraded Unclassified
Final Draft
Approved December 31, 1943
68
UNIFORM TERMINATION ARTICLE FOR FIXED PRICE SUPPLY CONTRACTS
Article
Termination at the Option of the Government. (a) The
performance of work under this contract may be terminated by the Government in
accordance with this Article in whole, or from time to time in part, whenever
the contracting officer shall determine any such termination is for the best
interests of the Government. Termination of work hereunder shall be effected
by delivery to the contractor of a Notice of Termination specifying the extent
to which performance of work under the contract shall be terminated, and the
date upon which such termination shall become effective. If termination of work
under this contract is simultaneous with, a part of or in connection with, a
general termination (1) of all or substantially all of a group or class of con-
tracts made by the
Department for the same product or for
closely related products, or (2) of war contracts at, about the time of, or
following, the cessation of the present hostilities, or any major part thereof,
such termination shall only be made in accordance with the provisions of this
Article, unless the contracting officer finds that the contractor is then in
gross or wilful default under this contract.
(b) After receipt of a Notice of Termination and except as otherwise
directed by the contracting officer, the contractor shall (1) terminate work
under the contract on the date and to the extent specified in the Notice of
Termination; (2) place no further orders or subcontracts for materials, services
or facilities except as may be necessary for completion of such portions of the
work under the contract as may not be terminated; (3) terminate all orders and
subcontracts to the extent that they relate to the performance of any work term-
inated by the Notice of Termination; (4) assign to the Government, in the manner
and to the extent directed by the contracting officer, All of the right, title
and interest of the contractor under the orders or subcontracts BO terminated;
(5) settle all claims arising out of such termination of orders and subcontracts
with the approval OF ratification of the contracting officer to the extent that
he may require, which approval or ratification shall be final for all the purposes
of this Article; (6) transfer title and deliver to the Government in the manner,
to the extent and at the times directed by the contracting officer (i) the fabri-
cated or unfabricated parts, work in process, completed work, supplies and other
material produced as & part of, or acquired in respect of the performance of,
the work terminated in the Notice of Termination, and (ii) the plans, drawings,
information and other property which, if the contract had been completed, would
be required to be furnished to the Government; (7) use his best efforts to sell
in the manner, to the extent, at the time, and at the price or prices directed
or authorized by the contracting officer, any property of the types referred
to in subdivision (6) of this paragraph provided, however, that the contractor
(i) shall not be required to extend credit to any purchaser and (ii) may retain
any such property at & price or prices approved by the contracting officer;
(8) complete performance of such part of the work as shall not have been term-
inated by the Notice of Termination; and (9) take such action ae may be necessary
or as the contracting officer may direct for protection and preservation of the
property, which is in the possession of the contractor and in which the Govern-
ment has or may acquire an interest.
Regraded Unclassified
2.
by the contractor, plus a sum equal to
%
69
of the remainder of such amount, but the aggregate
of such sums shall not exceed 6% of the whole of
the amount determined under subdivision (1), which
for the purpose of this subdivision (iii) shall
exclude any charges for interest on borrowings;
(c) The contractor and the contracting officer say agree upon the
whole or any part of the amount or amounts to be paid to the contractor by
(3) The reasonable cost of the preservation and protection
reason of the total or partial termination of work pursuant to this Article,
of property incurred pursuant to paragraph (b)(9) hereof;
which amount or amounts may include a reasonable allowance for profit, and the
and any other reasonable cost incidental to termina-
Government shall pay the agreed amount or amounts. Nothing in paragraph (d)
tion of work under this contract, including expense
of this Article prescribing the amount to be paid to the contractor in the
incidental to the determination of the amount due to
event of failure of the contractor and the contracting officer to agree upon
the contractor as the result of the termination of
the whole amount to be paid to the contractor by reason of the termination
work under this contract.
of work pursuant to this Article shall be deemed to limit, restrict or otherwise
determine or affect the amount or amounts which may be agreed upon to be paid
The total sum to be paid to the contractor under subdivisions (1) and (2) of
to the contractor pursuant to this paragraph (0),
this paragraph (d) shall not exceed the total contract price reduced by the
amount of payments previously made for articles delivered prior to termination
(d) In the event of the failure of the contractor and contracting
and by the Contract price of work not terminated. Except to the extent that
officer to agree as provided in paragraph (c) upon the whole amount to be paid
the Government shall have otherwise expressly assumed the risk of loss, there
to the contractor by reason of the termination of work pursuant to this Article,
shall be excluded from the amounts payable to the contractor as provided in
the Government, but without duplication of any amounts agreed upon in accord-
paragraph (d) (1) and paragraph (d)(2)(1), all amounts allocable to or payable
ance with paragraph (a), shall pay to the contractor the following amounts:
in respect of property, which is destroyed. lost, stolen or damaged 80 as to
become undeliverable prior, to the transfer of title to the Government or to a
(1) For completed articles delivered to and accepted
buyer pursuant to paragraph (b) (7) or prior to the 60th day after delivery
by the Government (or sold or retained as provided
to the Government of an inventory covering such property, whichever shall
in paragraph (b) (7) above) and not theretofore paid
first occur.
for, forthwith a sus equivalent to the aggregate
price for such articles computed in accordance with
(e) The obligation of the Government to make any payments under this
the price or prices specified in the contract;
article: (1) shall be subject to deductions in respect of (1) all unliquidated
partial or progress payments, payments on account theretofore made to the con-
(2) In respect of the work under the contract terminated
tractor and unliquidated advance payments, (ii) any claim which the Government
as permitted by this Article, the total (without
may have against the contractor in connection with this contract, and (iii) the
duplication of any items) of (1) the cost of such
price agreed upon or the proceeds of sale of any materials, supplies or other
work exclusive of any cost attributable to articles
things retained by the contractor or sold, and not otherwise recovered by or
paid or to be paid for under paragraph (d) (1) hereof;
credited to the Government, and (2) in the discretion of the contracting officer
(11) the cost of settling and paying claims arising
shall be subject to deduction in respect of the amount of any claim of any
out of the termination of work under subcontracts or
subcontractor or supplier whose subcontract or order shall have been terminated
orders as provided in paragraph (b) (5) above, exclusive
as provided in paragraph (b)(3) except to the extent that such claim covers
of the amounts paid or payable on account of supplies
(i) property or materials delivered to the contractor or (11) services furnished
or materials delivered by the subcontractor prior to the
to the contractor in connection with the production of completed articles under
effective date of the notice of termination of this
this contract.
contract, which amounts shall be included in the cost
on account of which payment is made under subdivision (i)
(f) In the event that, prior to the determination of the final amount
above; and (111) a sun equal to
%1, of the part
to be paid to the contractor as in this article provided, the contractor shall
of the amount determined under subdivision (1) which
file with the contracting officer a request in writing that an equitable adjust-
represents the cost of articles or materials not processed
ment should be made in the price or prices specified in the contract for the
work not terminated by the Notice of Termination, the appropriate fair and
reasonable adjustment shall be made in such price or prices.
(g) The Government shall make partial payments and payments on account.
1. Not to exceed 2%.
from time to time, of the amounts to which the contractor shall be entitled
under this Article, whether determined by agreement or otherwise, whenever
2. To be established at a figure which is fair and reasonable under the cir-
2
cuastances.
3
70
Final, Draft
in the opinion of the contracting officer the aggregate of such payments shall
Approved December 31, 1943
be within the amount to which the contractor will be entitled hereunder.
(h) For the purposes of paragraphs (d) (2) and (d) (3) hereof, the
amounts of the payments to be made by the Government to the contractor shall
be determined in accordance with the Statement of Principles for Determination
of Costs upon Termination of Government Fixed Price Supply Contracts approved
Statement of Principles for Determination of Costs Upon Termination
by the Joint Contract Termination Board, December 31, 1943. The contractor
of Government Fixed Price Supply Contracts.
for a period of three years after final settlement under the contract shall
make available to the Government at all reasonable times at the office of the
The following is the "Statement of Principles for Determination of
contractor all of its books, records, documents, and other evidence bearing
Costs upon Termination of Government Contracts approved by the Joint Con-
on the costs and expenses of the contractor under the contract and in respect
tract Termination Board, December 31, 1943" referred to in paragraph (h)
of the termination of work thereunder.
of the Uniform Termination Article applicable to the termination of fixed
price supply contracts at the option of the Government.
1. General Principles. The costs contemplated by this Statement
of Principles are those sanctioned by recognized commercial accounting
practices and are intended to include the direct and indirect manufactur-
ing, selling and distribution, administrative and other costs incurred
which are reasonably necessary for the performance of the contract, and
are properly allocable or apportionable, under such practices, to the con-
tract (or the part thereof under consideration). The general principles
set out in this Statement are subject to the application of any special
provisions of the contract. Certain costs are specifically described
below because of their particular significance, and, as in the case of other
costs, should be included to the extent that they are allocable to or should
be apportioned to the contract or the part thereof under consideration.
(a) Common Inventory. The costs of items of inventory which are
common to the contract and to other work of the contractor.
(b) Common Claims of Subcontractors. The claims of subcontractore
which are common to the contract and to other work of the contractor.
(c) Depreciation. An allowance for depreciation at appropriate
rates on buildings, machinery and equipment and other facilities,
including such amounts for obsolescence due to progress in the arts
and other factors as are ordinarily given consideration in determining
depreciation rates. Depreciation as defined herein shall not include
loss of useful value of the type covered by subparagraph (f).
(d) Experimental and Research Expense. General experimental and
research expense to the extent consistent with an established pre-war
program, or to the extent related to war purposes.
(e) Engineering and Development and Special Tooling. Costs of
engineering and development and of special tooling; provided that the
contractor protects any interests of the Government by transfer of
title or by other means deemed appropriate by the Government.
-4-
Regraded Unclassified
71
(f) Loss on facilities - Conditions on Allowance. In the case of
any special facility acquired by the contractor solely for the performance
of the contract, or the contract and other war production contracts, If
2. Initial Costs. Costs of a non-recurring nature which arise
upon termination of the contract such facility is not reasonably capable
from unfamiliarity with the product in the initial stages of production
of use in the other business of the contractor having regard to the then
should be appropriately apportioned between the completed and the ter-
condition and location of such facility; an amount which bears the same
minated portions of the contract. In this category would be included
proportion to the loss of useful value as the deliveries not made under
high direct labor and overhead costs, including training, costs of exces-
the contract bear to the total of the deliveries which have been made
sive rejections and similar items.
and would have been made had the contract and the other contracts been
completed, provided that the amount to be allowed under this paragraph
3. Excluded Costa. Without affecting the generality of the fore-
shall not exceed the adjusted basis of the facility for Federal income
going provisions in other respects, amounts representing the following
tax purposes immediately prior to the date of the termination of the
should not be included as elements of cost:
contract, and provided further that no amount shall be allowed under
this paragraph unless upon termination of the contract title to the
(a) Losses on other contracts, or from sales or exchanges of capital
facility is transferred to the Government, except where the Government
assets: fees and other expenses in connection with reorganization or
elects to take other appropriate means to protect its interests.
recapitalization, anti-trust or federal income-tax litigation, or prose-
cution of federal income tax claims or other claims against the Govern-
(g) Special Leases. (1) Rentals under leases clearly shown to
ment (except as provided in paragraph 1(k)); losses on investments;
have been made for the performance of the contract, or the contract and
provisions for contingencies; and premiums on life insurance where the
other war production contracts, covering the period necessary for complete
contractor is the beneficiary.
performance of the contract and such further period as may have been
reasonably necessary; (2) costs of reasonable alteration of such leased
(b) The expense of conversion of the contractor's facilities to
property made for the same purpose; and (3) costs of restoring the
uses other than the performance of the contract.
premises, to the extent required by reasonable provisions of the lease;
less (4) the residual value of the lease; provided that the contractor
(c) Expenses due to the negligence or wilful failure of the con-
shall have made reasonable efforts to terminate, assign, or settle such
tractor to discontinue with reasonable promptness the incurring of expenses
leases or otherwise reduce the cost thereof.
after the effective date of the termination notice.
(h) Advertising. Advertising expense to the extent consistent with
(d) Costs incurred in respect to facilities, materials or services
a pre-war program or to the extent reasonable under the circumstances.
purchased or work done in excess of the reasonable quantitative require-
ments of the entire contract,
(1) Limitation on Costs Described in Subparagraphe (d), (e), (f),
(g), and (h), In no event shall the aggregate of the amounts allowed
(a) Costs which, as evidenced by accounting statements submitted in
under subparagraphe (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h) exceed the amount which
renegotiation under Section 403 of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense
would have been available from the contract price to cover these items,
Appropriation Act, 1942, as amended, were charged off during a period
if the contract had been completed, after considering all other costs
covered by a previous renegotiation, may not be subsequently included in
which would have been required to complete it.
the termination settlement if a refund was made for such period, or to
the extent that such charging off is shown to have avoided such refund.
(3) Interest. Interest on borrowings.
4. To the extent that they conform to recognized commercial
(k) Settlement expenses. Reasonable accounting, legal, clerical
accounting practices and the foregoing Statement of Principles, the
and other expenses necessary in connection with the termination and
established accounting practices of the contractor as indicated by his
settlement of the contract and subcontracts and purchase orders there-
books of account and financial reports will be given due consideration
under, including expenses incurred for the purpose of obtaining payment
in the preparation of statements of cost for the purposes of this article.
from the Government only to the extent reasonably necessary for the
preparation and presentation of settlement proposals and cost evidence
5. The failure specifically to mention in this statement any item
in connection therewith.
of cost is not intended to imply that it should be included or excluded.
(1) Protection and Disposition of Property, Storage, transports-
tion and other costs incurred for the protection of property acquired
or produced for the contract or in connection with the disposition of
such property.
- 3 -
2 -
Regraded Unclassified
72
Final draft approved
December 31, 1943
STATEMENT OF POLICY AS TO REMOVAL AND DISPOSITION OF
PROPERTY IN CONNECTION WITH CONTRACT TERMINATION
The speedy adjustment of cancelled contracts depends to B. large
extent on the prompt removal and disposal of completed articles, component
parts, work in process, raw materials and equipment in the possession of
the contractor at the time of cancellation. So long as the war continues
it is essential to clear the contractor's plant as soon as possible 80 that
it may return to the production of other needed war materials and to make
available for other war production any property which can be used for that
purpose. After the war the speedy disposition of such property is essential
in order to clear the contractor's plant for a return to civilian produc-
tion, To that end it is essential that broad powers of disposition be
vested in the procuring agencies, and that a central agency should be
de: ignated to which may be transferred property not disposed of by the
produring agencies and no longer required by them.
In come cases legal title to the property in the possession of the
contractor has passed to the Government; in others, it remains in the
contractor, In either case the problem is essentially the same and there
is need for policies permitting uniform administration. Therefore, the
following steps should be taken promptly upon cancellation or substantial
modification of any contract.
1. As soon as possible after receipt of notice of cancellation
or modification of any contract, the contractor should submit lists of pro-
perty no longer required for the performance of the contract to which the
Government is entitled or which are the property of the Government.
Separate lists should be prepared of (1) machine tools and other production
equipment, (2) completed articles, subassemblies and component parts, (3)
work in process (4) supplies (5) materials, and (6) scrap. Partial lists
should be presented from tie to time giving preference to those items
which, in the opinion of the contractor or the procuring agency, are
immediately needed in war production either in the contractor's plant or
elsewhere. The list should contain an adequate description of each item
and should show the ceiling and current established market prices for each
item if readily available and any readily available information as to the
cost of each item to the contractor. Where the contract or wishes to retain
or acquire an item, he should state the price at which he is willing to
accept the item. Failure to list an item should not prevent the contractor
from claiming reimbursement therefor in the final settlement and in connec-
tion with final settlement the contractor may furnish additional informa-
tion as to the cost of any item.
2. Where the contractor has an option to purchase or lease or
other contract rights in any item, he should promptly indicate whether he
desires to exercise such rights or is willing to waive them. If he indicates
the former, disposition of the property should be made in accordance with
the terms of the contract.
73
3. the lists are in course of preparation and as the necessary
information available the procuring agency and the contractor should qook
If disposition cannot be made at prices determined in accordance with the fore-
to make imediate disposition of any items witch can be readily disposed of, If,
then until such time G.5 the central agency becomes ready to undertake
in the judgment of the procuring agency, the item is one which it would be ap-
disposition going, of the property, sale may be made by the procuring agency under such
propriate for the contractor to retain or acquire the procuring agency should
other regulations as it may prescribe for the purpose of adequately testing the
endeavor to negotiate an agreement for such retention or nequisition. If the
market.
procuring agency determines that the item should be disposed of to someone other
than the contractor for purposes of wirlproduction, the pror uring agency should
5. Unless the ontract otherwise provides, the contractor may, at
endeavor to.arrange for such disposition through the contractor or direct, Prior
any time after receipt of termination notice, remove from his plant and store
to the cessation of hostilities, any item not disposed of tathe içentractor or to
at his om risk, any property, and the Government, with the coment of the con-
others for purposes of war production, which the proquring largency does not desire
tractor, say remove and dispose of any property listed in accordance herewith
to retain for its own use or that of any other governments) department, may be
prior to final sottlement. At all events, unless the contract otherwise provides,
dia osed of by the rocuring agency or by the contractor with the approval of the
any property not disposed of in the manner hereinbefore provided within sixty days
procuring agency for any purpose not inconsistent with the olicios of the Board,
from receipt of a list covering the particular item should, upon demand of the
It in expected that the power of disposition for any purpose other than for ver
contractor, be removed from the contractor's premises by the procuring agency
production dr to the contractor will be transferred in whole or in part by action
unless the procuring agency shall previously determine that the it am is not
of the Board to the central agency as it becomes ready. to undertake such activit
chargeable to the Government and does not belong to the Government. In the event
that any such property is not 50 removed upon demand, the property may be stored
4. Ench rocuring agency may exercise complete discretion aa to the
by the contractor at the expense and *risk of the procuring agency or on the
contractor's premises or, if he determines that space is not available for that
price at which any item may be disposed of subject to such pricing policies or
formulas as may be actualished by the Board or under its authority, including any
purpose, than elsewhere. In such a case the contractor should take reasonable
specific instructs referred to in paragraph 9 hereof. In the absence of specif-
precautions for the protection of the property and should notify the procuring
ic action by time Brand the recuring agency will endeavor to dispose of property
agency of the action taken. If it is later determined that the procuring agency
at Oricos vald. It my regied as representing fair values under the existing cir-
WES not obligated to take property which was removed or disposed of prior to
cunstances observise the following general policy 55 to determination of fair vali
final settlement, an adjustment should be made in the final settlement which will
allow the contractor the current disposal value of the property at the time of
removal.
L. There nice is on established market price for the item an
effort should be made :- optain that rice with due allowance. for the condition
6. Any property which comes into the hands of the procuring agency in
or the item, its location and the cost to remove it to a place of disposal, and
connection with contract termination which is not disposed of as horeinbefore
the selling cost including cost of ,reparationfor sale.
provided and which has boon determined by the procuring agency to be surplus to
its needs should be reported to the central agency for disposition. Upon receipt
b, Phone there is DD established market price, consideration
of such report the central agency shall with reasonable promptness take possession,
should be given to the foregging factors and any other available information
accountability, and full responsibility for any further maintenance or utilization
includi the e ost of the statis, and the spoed with which the it m can be re-
removal, protoction, storage, sale or other disposition of the property, The
procussed OF otherwise DATE back into uso, It in recognized that disposal prices
will in many instances bear little, if any relationship to cost,
central agency shall consult rith the procuring agency as to the disposition of an
proporty of special military significance. The procuring agency shall have the
right to removo and store for the account and at the risk of the contral agency
c, Substantial portions of Experty involved in contract
termination, particularly work in process, 1122, dans, fixtures and specially
any property no reported, pending notion by the central agency.
designed Items having 110 known commercial polication, may have no value except as
scrap. A prompt affort should be made to determine promptly what items are
7. The procuring agency shall render all ronsonable assistance to
properly classified as scrup and to effect proupt disposition of such items.
the control agency in performing its obligations under paragraph 6. The central
aguncy shell be authorized to use any existing storage or other facilities which
d. In cases where disposition is made to a contractor or suppli
the procuring agoncy finds it practicable to make available to it.
for the purpose of prforming a war producti on contract consideration may be fir
to any losser value of the item to the conta - supplier for that purpose,
8. Transfers to the contral agency shall be made without values but
if war producti will thereby be facilitated.
the contral agency shall make periodic reports to the procuring agency as to the
a7)
3
Regraded Unclassified
aggregate estimated value of items transferred, valuations to be based on disposal
values at the time of transfer to the central agency, as estimated by the central
agency.
9. Any disposition of property by the procuring agencies or the
central agency shall be made subject to such regulations as the particular agency
may prescribe but only in conformity with policies or determinations of the Board
and under applicable rulings of tho War Producti on Board, the Office of Price
Administration or any other duly authorized agency. it the request of any procur-
ing agency or the central agency or on its own initiative, the Board may establish
or approve pricing formulas under which any article or class of articles may be
sold by a procuring agency, may designate the appropriate agency to sell any
article or class of articles, and may prohibit or condition the sale of any arti
or class of articles by a procuring agency.
10. The foregoing provisions rolate solely to property in the hands of
primo contractors. In order to carry out the basic policios of speedy adjustment
of contracts and prompt clearance of plants, the same principles should be applied
to proporty in the hands of subcontractors of any lovel where the subcontractor
submits lists of such property propared in accordance with paragraph 1, with the
cortificate of the prime contractor that the itoms listed are bolieved to be propor-
ly allocable to the prime contract, or any other satisfactory ovidence of that
fact.
- 4 -
Regraded Unclassified
74
JAN 7 1944
My dear Senator:
I have just finished reading the very excellent
minority report which you and Senators Walsh,
Connally and Lucas have filed in opposition to the
recommendations of the majority of the Senate Finance
Committee for amendments to the renegotiation statute.
You are so completely in the right in this
matter that I could not let the occasion pass with-
out expressing my sentiments in the matter and the
hope that your views will prevail. If there is
anything I can do to be helpful do not hesitate to
call on me.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Mergenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Honorable Robert M. LaFellette, Jr.
United States Senate
Washington, D. C.
JJO'C.Jr/lsw
1-6-44
Regraded Unclassified
75
JAN 7 1944
My dear Senator:
I have just finished reading your minority
report on the amendments to the renegotiation
statute. The report is excellent, and I could
not let the occasion pass without expressing to you
my belief that you and your colleagues are performing
a real public service.
You are 80 completely in the right in this
matter that I am confident your views will prevail.
If there is anything 1 can do to be helpful do not
hesitate to call on me.
Sincerely,
(Rigned) H. Morgenthau, Jr
Secretary of the Treasury
H onorable David I. Walsh
United States Senate
Washington, D. C.
JJO'C.Jr/lsw
1-6-44
Regraded Unclassified
76
JAW 7 1944
My dear Senator:
I was delighted to learn that you have joined
with Senators Walsh, LaFollette and Lucas in
opposing the recommendations of the majority of
the Senate Finance Committee for amendments to the
renegotiation statute.
I have just finished reading the minority report,
which is excellent, and could not let the occasion pass
without expressing my sentiments in the matter.
You are so completely in the right in this
matter that I am confident your views will prevail.
If there is anything 1 can do to be helpful do not
hesitate to call on me.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Honorable Tom Connally
United States Senate
Washington, D. C.
JJO'C.Jr/lsw
1-6-44
Regraded Unclassified
77
JAN 7 1944
My dear Senator:
I was delighted to learn that you have joined
with Senators Walsh, LaFollette and Connally in
opposing the recommendations of the majority of
the Senate Finance Committee for amendments to the
renegotiation statute.
I have just finished reading the minority report,
which is excellent and could not let the occasion pass
without expressing my sentiments in the matter.
You are 80 completely in the right in this
matter that I am confident your views will prevail.
If there is anything I can do to be helpful do not
hesitate to call on me.
Sincerely,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Honorable Soott W. Lucas
United States Senate
Washington, D. C.
JJO'C.Jr/lsw
1-6-44
Regraded Unclassified
78
WALTER F. GEORGE. GA., CHAIRMAN
ROBERT M. LAFOLLET JR., wis.
DAVID 1. WALSIS MASS.
ALBEN W. BARKLEY, KY.
ARTHUR H. VANDENBERG, MICH.
JAMES J. DAVIS, PA.
TOM CONNALLY, TEX.
OBLAH W. BAILEY. N. c.
HENRY CABOT LODGE, JR., MASS.
JENNETT CHAMP CLARK, MO.
JOHN A. DANAMER, CONN.
ROBERT A. TAFT. OHIO
Mnited States Senate
HARRY FLOCO BYRD, VA.
PETER G. GERRY, a. L
JOHN THOMAS, IDAHO
JOSEPH F. GUFFEY, PA.
HUGH A. BUTLER, HEBR,
EDWIN c. JOHNSON, COLD.
EUGENE D. MILLIKIN, COLD.
COMMITTEE ON FINANCE
GEORGE L RADCLIFFE, MD.
SCOTT W. LUCAS, F
CHRISTIE a. KENNEDY, CLERK
January 7, 1944
The Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I have your note relative to the
minority report on amendments to the
renegotiation law which Senators Walsh of
Massachusetts, Lucas, Connally, and I sub-
mitted. I certainly appreciate your writing
me that you approve of the statements made
therein and I want to thank you for your offer
of assistance.
With kind regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
Pobernu La Leaths.
RML:McC
Regraded Unclassified
79
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY.
January 7, 1944.
Mail Report
Fan mail is fast recovering from its Christmas
slump, and increasing in interest at the same time.
This week's bond mail doubled last week's in number,
about one-half of the communications relating to the
Fourth Drive. Slogans, poems, and songs arrived by the
dozens, but ideas for posters -- frequently submitted
during the other pre-Drive periods -- were rare. From
organizations and individuals came many assurances of
support, and there were fewer letters than usual com-
plaining that Government extravagance or New Deal mis-
management had already spelled defeat for the Drive.
Though bond redemptions through this office were
a little higher than they were last week, the total of
39 is far below the peak reached in the early fall.
A total of 42 complaints about delays in processing bonds
or in paying interest included only 21 from personnel
of the War Department.
Except for 8. few barbed demands for simplified forms,
tax matters again went almost unnoticed. Miss Porter's
Reader's Digest article, along with the early distribu-
tion of a few of the new forms, opened the way for pro-
tests against their complexity. À few theater officials
wrote at length, in a last minute attempt to avert the
proposed tax increase on admissions, and there were
several run-of-the-mill ideas for increased revenue.
Difficulties with coins, currency, and checks, and
also with foreign fund regulations, accounted for most
of the week's miscellaneous communications.
Received from the White House during 1943 were 6,991
pieces of mail (organized postcard campaigns not counted).
This strikes a fair average between our low year of 1940,
Regraded Unclassified
80
- 2 -
Memorandum for the Secretary.
January 7, 1944.
when 4,910 letters were received and our alltime high
of 1942, with 12,759.
Of the approximately 7,000 pieces received this
past year, the Correspondence Division handled 3,497,
or almost exactly half. The peak month was June, with
the lowest receipts in December.
yestorbush
81
General Comments
Sydney S. Jalkut, Counselor at Law, N.Y.C. I wish to
complain with regard to the unusual and unnecessary
delay in the New York Customs Philatelic Control Unit.
Air Mail letters containing British and Colonial
postage stamps are delayed 3 weeks and longer; there
is one addressed to me which has not been released,
although held for 5 weeks. There is just no sense at
all to this and it would seem that Air Mail, for which
an additional fee is paid, should be given prompt
attention by the necessary authorities. #
Lic. Antonio Uroz, Editorial "Hemisferio", Mexico, D.F.
The magazine HEMISFERIO (Hemisphere), is glad to pre-
sent to your attention its most respetuos votes of
prosperity for the coming year. Ferverishly we wish
that in the course of same, Your Excellency could con-
tinue the brilliant work begun in pro of the welfare
of your Nation. As to our part, in the ear 1944,
wish to continue, and bettering the work that in pro
of continental fraternity we begun with the publica-
tion of the Magazine Hemisferio. We feel sure that
the sacrifices that with that purpose we are doing
will meet with the reward of valuable help and sympathy
that Your Excellency would give us.
Antonio C. Gonzalez, Former United States Minister,
Attorney and Counselor at Law, N.Y.C. # # One of
our clients, The Chicle Development Company, a sub-
sidiary of the American Chicle Company, back in 1913
and 1916, suffered damage, destruction and losses to
its property in Mexico, due to revolutionary acts,
approximating $200,000. *** By subsequent Congres-
sional action in the passage of the Bill, known as
the "Settlement of Mexican Claims Act of 1942", the
Commission was established as the American Mexican
Regraded Unclassified
82
- 2 -
Claims Commission, who notified our client that its
claims had been approved in the sum of $60,563.82,
with interest thereon from May 15, 1924, to November
19, 1941, amounting to $3,646.77. Within the pre-
scribed thirty-day period, our client signified its
intention to accept the appraisal. Due certification
of this claim was made to you under the Act, and on
Sept. 13, 1943, our client received a first payment
of 30% of the rincipal amount. # # * We are informed
that on November 22 last, the United States received
from the Mexican Government the further sum of
$2,500,000, and to date no distribution thereof has
been made, and it is our understanding that no im-
mediate steps for distribution are contemplated.
It is because of this situation and the anxiety of
our client to receive payments on account of its
claims, reduced to the amount certified, as expedi-
tiously as possible, that prompts this communication
to you. The losses suffered by our client were sus-
tained about thirty years ago and to further delay
the payment of the adjusted claim seems unjust and
inequitable, especially where no provision is made
for interest on the amounts withheld. These features
were not envisioned when our client's acceptance of
the appraisal was given. We do not believe that it
is either the intention or desire of the Government
to arbitrarily or without good cause withhold or de-
lay the payments to which our client seemingly is
entitled. Our information, if correct, warrants the
assumption that there are funds presently available
for distribution, and the hope is herein expressed
that it will be convenient 80 to do. ***
Edmond W. Thomas, President, The First National Bank,
Gettysburg, Pa. We felt it was in order to acknowledge
your letter of thanks, dated December 22, 1943, for
83
- 3 -
the cooperation of financial institutions in assist-
ing in making the survey as represented on Form TFR-
500. # * # It was our experience that people generally
responded in a splendid manner. Your acknowledgment
of the support of the financial institutions in the
United States, which includes this 86-year old insti-
tution, is somewhat of an innovation and one worthy
of acknowledgment, which we are pleased to give, and
at the same time, to assure you of our continued
cooperation.
G. L. Lewis, Happy Valley Ranch, Riverside, Calif.
Not having heard from you in reply to a previous
letter, which was sent to you some weeks ago with
a list of foreign investments I hold, and since this
matter is of some URGENCY, for me, Sir, I am again
communicating with you about the matter, to which
I hope you will give your personal and prompt atten-
tion. This war is bearing down pretty hard on elderly
people of fixed incomes, of which I am one; on top of
that, no technical knowledge that I possess seems to
interest either the Army, Navy, or private firms, 80
I can earn nothing that way! # The only way I can
finance myself is by cashing in on a Canadian Govern-
ment 3 and 1/2% Refunding Loan of 1934 amounting to
$1,000 Canadian value. Would your Treasury Department
give me the benefit of the OFFICIAL rate of exchange
on this deal, Sir? I have $500 on deposit in a
Vancouver, B.C. bank, but I can't draw on it!
I think people are being treated just as badly almost
as if Hitler were in control! It is INHUMAN: # #
84
- 4 -
Favorable Comments on Bonds
Erna Maier, N.Y.C. To the great event that I had
the honor today to be sworn in as a new citizen of
the United States of America, I take the liberty to
open the Fourth War Loan Drive with a War Bond of
$18.75. Will you please be 80 kind and send me
this bond in my name -- Miss Erna Maier, 797 Crotona
Park North, Bronx, New York. I wish everybody would
appreciate to be here in this God-blessed country,
and help as much as possible to fight the enemies
and win the war.
Mrs. Ella K. Alschuler, Hotel Windermere, Chicago,
Ill. I note that again the Treasury Notes, Series A,
for tax anticipation, are excluded from the coming
War Loan campaign. Since these are the only kind
suitable to the small taxpayer, I am wondering why
the discrimination. Surely it could do no harm to
allow those for whom the A Notes are the most prac-
tical investment, to buy them as their campaign
contribution. # # An uncomfortably large propor-
tion of my funds are tied up in War Bonds, most of
which pay no current income, and the o thers very little.
To me it would be a distinct help if I could partici-
pate in the campaign through purchase of the Tax
Saving Notes. At least from these, I could receive
some benefit, whereas if I buy the bonds now, it is
most unlikely that I shall be alive to collect the
principal when due. Cannot the A Treasury Notes be
included in campaigns in the future? #
85
- 5 -
Unfavorable Comments on Bonds
Mrs. R. C. Hagan, Uniontown, Pa. I have just re-
ceived my "certificate of achievement" for my bond
sales during the Third War Loan Drive. Now, I want
you to know that I was very glad to do the work,
and proud that I was able to do it as well as I did.
And I shall be just as happy to go and work just as
hard during the next Drive. But I am writing this to
ask why in the name of common sense, at 8. time like
this, anyone should think of giving us these certi-
ficates? Surely it must cost a great deal to print
them, and we are being told all the time about the
paper shortage. It must take quite a lot of some-
body's time to do the work of filling in names and
mailing and addressing them.
***
I
am
a
loyal
Democrat, by birth, inclination, and even marriage.
I've never criticized anything that the Administra-
tion has done. In fact, I think you're all wonder-
ful and doing a grand job in Washington, and I've
had many a battle in defense of the President and
the whole New Deal. But I do think this is one way
in which you can and should save a. lot of money and
I just had to tell you.
G. D. Krick, Kane, Pa. Suppose I should be shot at
sunrise, as I notice it is becoming increasingly more
in bad taste for one to say what he really thinks, if
it does not coincide with the views of our National
Leaders. I am a retired railroader, trying to live
economically on a small pension. Have just passed
my 66th birthday, and 80 far, have purchased a couple
thousand dollars in Defense Bonds. Am wondering if
I could reasonably be expected to buy any more in
this latest Drive, in view of the disclosures of
useless spending by my Government. To note, Senator
Hugh Butler's disclosures in regard to Latin America.
To note, the ill-advised spending of 100 million
86
- 6 -
dollars on the Canol Oil Project by an incompetent
General and his adviser. Could cite other examples
but these two make me feel it is like pouring our
tax money down a rat hole. Wishing you luck in your
new Drive.
John S. Pratt, Bristol, Pa. (Repeat complaint on
payroll savings plan at the Fleetwing Incorporated
Division of Kaiser Cargo Company, Bristol, Pa.) # * *
Insofar as Fleetwing is concerned, nothing has happened
to date. I know one employee who agreed to have them
deduct one $18.75 Bond a week -- his idea was to get
a bond each pay. They owe him 17 bonds to date, and
he has the first one to get yet. I myself filled out
& printed form they have, which serves notice on the
company to discontinue the deductions of an employee.
This is also four weeks old and nothing has happened
about that. Six thousand employees here are dissatis-
fied with the company's system of distribution.
Writing letters to them is useless. The whole setup
in this plant seems to be to discourage an employee
from buying bonds. You will also note my desire for
secrecy as to my complaint. I am 56 years old and
don't want to lose my job. This would be the result
should the company learn of this. On the other hand,
I also would like to see my bonds now and then, for
believe me, Mr. Morgenthau, this Federal tax sure hurts
8. fellow's paycheck, and the sight of a bond now and
then goes a long way in soothing the tax hurt. Thank-
ing you in advance for any relief you can get us in
this matter, and I do hope you can send a personal
investigator into the plant, just to see how rotten
their system is.
F. A. Dragonette, Assistant Cashier, Southern Arizona
Bank & Trust Co., Tucson, Ariz. (Pima County War
Finance Committee) 4b * # Our purpose in writing is to
see if something can be done about the apparent "red
tape" pertaining to lost bonds. In selling War Bonds
87
- 7 -
we have assured customers that in case of loss, pay-
ment could be stopped and new bonds secured in approxi-
mately six months' time. To date, we have not been
able to secure any such service from either your
Washington or Chicago agencies. We realize, of course,
that the volume of work to be done must make it diffi-
cult for the Treasury personnel. While it does seem
that after the original papers are filed by responsible
parties, the time element should be the only deterrent
factor. We have several cases outstanding where we
have been called upon to secure additional affidavits,
six and nine months after original affidavits support-
ing the loss has been filed. This is very difficult
to explain to the average individual who has never
owned securities before, and who after such a long
delay begins to feel his money is lost. It does not
help us to sell him more bonds. ***
Minnie Berne, Ozone Park, Long Island, N.Y. This is
to inform you of an incident that occurred on Dec. 31,
1943, at 12:50 p.m. in the Canal Street Branch of the
Corn Exchange Bank of New York. I am employed by the
American District Telegraph Company and received my
pay check and went to the above-mentioned bank with
the intention of purchasing 8. bond. I spoke to the
manager and he replied that they were too busy. I have
heard several other people remark that he told them
the same thing the: ious week. I was under the
impression a bank was never too busy to sell bonds.
There must have been a few hundred people who cashed
their checks in that particular branch of the bank to-
day, and I am wondering just how many of them would
have bought bonds if the manager had had the time and
the courtesy to give to these people.
Mrs. J. F. Roberts, Taft, Calif. My son, Raymond S.
Roberts, is an enlisted member of the armed forces
stationed in Alaska. In May, 1941, he began purchasing
bonds through the Pay Reservation Plan with the stipu-
lation they were to be sent to the above address. In
Regraded Unclassified
88
- 8 -
February 1943, he was home on furlough and found we
had received no bonds. However, he continued buy-
ing until April 1943, when he discontinued until bonds
were received. Upon his request I wrote War Bond
Division in Chicago, Ill., and received a reply on
July 29 stating his account had been established and
Bonds would be sent. In November I wrote again but
received no reply, and to date, no bonds have been re-
ceived. The postal authorities have asked me to write
directly to you. Will you please investigate? I'm sure
all of us want to cooperate in buying bonds, but the
men in service should at least receive the bonds they
purchase. ***
89
- 9 -
Unfavorable Comments on Taxation
John A. Galvin, Attorney at Law, Fillmore, California.
I suggest that your income tax experts step down and
out for awhile, and allow Joel Kupperman to work out
a simplified form of income tax report.
Mrs. Hannah F. Edison, New York City. I am
fortifying myself with some of the simple rules of
arithmetic such as two and two is four in order to
be more prepared for the new tax forms; but I feel
nothing short of Joel Kupperman can do the trick.
What I want to get across to you, if you
haven't already guessed, is that I have an idea that
will perhaps simplify the tax forms to 8. great extent.
Naturally there will be a lot of bellowing by the
Treasury experts because they haven't minds simple
enough for simple things.
***
Alan D. Whitney, Winnetka, Ill. I earnestly hope
that this comes to your attention, or at least to that
of one of your high Assistants. In furthering this
end, I shall be as brief as possible. In September
1941, the Internal Revenue Bureau disallowed a de-
duction in the 1939 income tax return of Esther
Witkowsky, 5555 Everett Ave., Chicago, since deceased
on January 3, 1942. As her agent who filed her re-
turns, I handled the penalty payment for her. However,
the 1942 Revenue Act reversed the previous ruling.
*** I filed a claim for refund of the 1941 assess-
ment on January 18, 1943, as executor of the estate
of Esther Witkowsky, then already deceased. I will
not enumerate the voluminous correspondence on this
case which has since ensued unless you so request, nor
can I do more than say that I have made several calls
at the Chicago Office of the Collector. I have been
90
- 10 -
informed in recent months that the claim is allowed
and will be paid. I have been to the expense of
furnishing two certified copies of letters testamentary
at $1.00 each, all to collect $10. Yet the refund
check has not arrived, and nearly a year has elapsed
since I filed the claim. My last two letters to T. C.
Atkeson, Division Head, Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, are both unanswered. God alone knows what
that all means. If you have not read the beginning
article in January 1944 Reader's Digest, I suggest
that you do. We may win the war, and yet perish in
a morass of our own making -- red tape. Please see
that I get this $10.04 plus 69₫ interest, as already
allowed.
Lloyd H. Wright, San Gabriel, Calif. I think it is
the duty of the Treasury Department to refer the
present income tax law back to Congress for drastic
revision, if for no other reason than on the ground
that it is practically unenforceable because of its
complexity. In strict adherence to the truth your
"Instructions" to taxpayers only adds confusion to the
already impossible complexity of the law. Many com-
petent authorities have made valuable suggestions for
the law's revision. It is your duty and opportunity
to insist on revision before attempting to administer
the law.
Regraded Unclassified
91
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON
January 7, 1944
Dear Henry:
Thank you very much for your letter of January
sixth and the memorandum regarding wheat for Italy.
Sincerely yours,
Condelltull
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
92
JAN 7 1944
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Subject: Mayor La Guardia's request concerning re-
mittances to Sicily and postal communica-
tions with Italy.
The war Department on October 12, 1945 dispatched
a cable prepared by the Treasury Department to the Allied
Commander in the Rediterranean Theatre for his review out-
lining a procedure shereby remittances could be effected
from the United States to individuals residing in Sicily
and including & progosed general license to authorise
such remittances. In reply the Theatre Commander advised
that the program as proposed appeared to be feasible and
that the necessary arrangements were being worked out to
place it into operation. The Treasury and war Departments
requested that these arrangements be expedited. On Novem-
ber 21, 1943 the Theatre Commander recommended certain
modifications in the me thod of holding the dollar proceeds
of the remittances. On November 29, 1943 the Treasury
submitted a cable to the war Department for dispatch meet-
ing these recommendations and again stressing the urgeney
of the matter, This was followed by a message to the
Theatre Commander on December 21, 1943 requesting an immed-
late reply to our outgoing cables in view of increasing
public pressure. Treasury is now sending a further cable
to Italy urging that the Theatre Commander take immediate
action.
on November 9, 1943 the Theatre Commander advised the
Treasury and war Departments that it was planned to resume
postal communications with Sicily, Sardinia and other parts
of occupied Italy on December 1, 1945. on November 26, 1943
the Theatre Commander advised that these plans had been post-
poned pending the solution of various problems that had
arisen. The Treasury Department stands prepared upon the
request of the Theatre Commander to modify its regulations
on financial and commercial communications with enemy terri-
tory.
I am attaching for your signature a letter to Mayor
LaGuardia informing him of the reasons for the delay in
placing these programs into effect and advising him again
that we expect arrangements for the initiation of these
programs to be completed in the near future.
HDW:WHT:WNT:Dr1 1/6/44
Regraded Unclassified
93
Dear Piorello:
I have your letter of December 31, 1943 in regard
to remittances to persons residing in the liberated
areas of Italy and postal communications with those
areas.
The Treasury and war Departments are aware of the
desirability of setting up arrangements for limited
support resittances to and postal communications with
the liberated areas of Italy immediately as conditions
In those areas permit. The Theatre Commander has been
advised of the urgeney with which these matters are
viewed and has been urged to expedite the necessary
arrangements.
I an in sympathy with your deep interest in these
matters. The delays have been necessitated by military
considerations in Italy. It is expected, however, that
the necessary arrangements for the initiation of these
programs will be completed in the near future.
Sincerely,
The Honorable Pierello H. Labuardia,
Mayor of the City of New York,
New York 7. New York
HDW: WHT:WMT:ff 1/6/44
Regraded Unclassified
94
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
January 4, 1944.
NEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY 07 THE TREASURY:
As this was evidently started
foor LaGuardin rith the Trensury Depart-
mont, will you We 2006 enough to zun
It down --- both matters -- and lot no
know that to tell "the Little Flower"?
F.D.R.
C WHIO
mir -
OBEICE
Regraded Unclassified
CITY OF NEW YORK
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
NEW YORK 7. N.Y.
December 31, 1943,
The Honorable
Franklin D. Roosevelt
President of the United States
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. President:
I have been "yessed" from department to department and therefore
would like to bring two matters to your attention so that we may get some
action.
First, on November 11th I received a letter from the Secretary
of the Treasury in reply to a letter I had written you, in which the Secretary
informed me that all arrangements had been made for the transmission of a
limited amount of money, each month, by residents of the United States, to
family or relatives in Italy. I followed through and received the approval
of the Secretary and of OWI to use the information in one of the weekly
broadcasts to Italy. Since that time, nothing has happened. On making
inquiry, all I can get is that the matter is approved, and finally I learn
from the Department of State that it is now up to the Army.
May I respectfully suggest that the matter be located, if it
is in the Army, BO that the transmission of money may start without further
delay. All details have been worked out and I am sure it will do a great
deal of good for morale and goodwill here as well as in Italy.
The other matter is that of the re-establishment of postal ser-
vice between the United States and liberated parts of Italy. This I hear
has been approved all around and still it has not yet started. Just why.
and who 1s holding this up I have been unable to ascertain. So a push is
needed here too. This service will be very helpful.
With kind personal regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
Shudin
Mayor
Regraded Unclassified
V
96
January 7, 1944
MEMBERANTOM TO HARRY L. HOPKINS
This is in reply to the questions asked in your nemerandum of
January 5 concerning the movement of capital from the United States
to Latin America.
The have been sware for some time of a movement of speculative
private capital from the United States into Latin American countries
on an increased scale in comparison with past years. Bowever, the
capital movement consists generally of mall amounts carried out in
a large number of transactions. 10 are not aware of any large
capital movements, large in total or in individual blocks, nor are
we mware of any organised novement that would run into large amounts.
on the whole, we actimate that the total movement of capital from
the United states into retin merien is not in excess of 575 million
per year on the part of private interests. This capital has been
invested in real estate, in mall commercial end industrial under-
takings, and in liquid form for spsculation on possible currency
appreciation.
Investments in Totin merica unquestionably yield very high
rates of return. The 7 percent you mention as a return for non-
speculative investments is not a high rate of return for latin
American countries. In DONO countries 9 percent to the current rate
of interest on short-term fully guaranteed securities and - are
aware of even higher rates of return for good investments.
cae motive for capital moving to Latin america, in addition to
obtaining a high rate of return, might very well be the evasion of
United States taxes. Our income tax law provides for termion of
income earned abroad generally, but I know that it 10 relatively
easy to evade there Lamen. 70 have been informed of 8 mumber of
eases of Americans cloaking their investments in the name of the
nationals of other countries and the pureau of Internal Revenue is
now moving on much cases. The income tax rates of [atin merican
countries where such taxes exist at all are much lower than those
of the United States and therefore 10 becomes profitable for
Americans to clear the identity of the investor. This indusement
increases as our tax rate growe higher here.
Regraded Unclassified
97
- 2 -
At the present time there exist no conventions between this
country and the nations of Intin America covering tax evasion,
but exploratory conversations have been going forward for some
time and there are good prospecte for the conclusion of such
conventions with Brasil, Peru, colombia, Venesuela, Paraguay,
Guatemala and Mexico.
In addition to the foregoing, relatively small amounts of
capital, owned chiefly by foreigners, have left the United States
for Latin American countries because of a fear of the tightening
of the restrictions imposed by Foreign Funds Control. of more
importance recently, however, has been the speculative purchase of
Iatin American currencies in response to rusers that they were
going to appreciate vis-a-vis the dollar.
These last-named influences have been most significant in
the case of Mexico where, notwithstanding the small aggregate of
the flow, the Mexican authorities have indicated that they were
seriously disturbed at its inflationary impact. This complaint
was made most sharply early last summer. In our opinion the
inflationary influence of such flows of funds was exaggerated,
first because the amounts involved were not large compared to the
increase in purchasing power arising from other sources and secondly,
because their nature was not such as to be markedly inflationary in
effect.
There are ample powers for checking thene flows of funds if
neasures are taken in cooperation with another government. TO do
not, however, think it desirable to undertake such neasures, nor
has the Mexican government indicated any desire to interfere with
the inflow.
(Signed) 1. Morgenthan, Jr.
HU:NTN:1mc,1/8/44
Regraded Unclassified
who 6
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
CONFIDENTIAL
January 5th
19
43
MEMORANDUM FOR THE HONORABLE HENRY MORGENTHAU, JR.
Someone told me the other day that
wealthy Americans, fearful of taxes and
dissatisfied with low interest rates, are
sending millions of dollars of speculative
capital to Mexico and South America. They
are getting interest rates of 7% on things
not particularly speculative.
Do you think there is anything that
should be done about this or, at any rate,
could you turn this over to someone who
could Itt ne know what the facts are?
Cordially yours,
Harry L Haphins
HARRY L. HOPKINS
Regraded Unclassified
99
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
mt
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
JAN 7 1944
FROM
Randolph Paul
For your information and further to my memorandum
of January 4:
Foreign Funds Control was advised on January 5 by
the New York Federal Reserve Bank that they had received
instructions from the Central Bank of Bolivia to trans-
fer $200,000 from its account to the account of the
Central Bank of Argentina.
Pursuant to Collado's request with regard to Bolivian
transactions, Pehle advised Collado of this operation.
There was apparently no disposition in the State Depart-
ment to interfere with the consummation of this trans-
action and it has been effected.
R.E.P.
Regraded Unclassified
100
JAN 7 1944
Dear lbr. Crowley:
I refer to my letter of December 15, 1943, regarding the
lend-leasing to the Government of India of 100 million ounces
of silver from the stocks of the United States Treasury for
the purpose of combatting inflation.
There is enclosed a letter from Mr. Donald M. Nelson in
which he states that it is the view of the War Production
Board that the lend-leasing of this silver will not inter-
fere with the domestic need for silver for use in the war
effort. Accordingly, the Treasury Department 1s prepared
to proceed with the lend-leasing of this silver to the
Government of India as soon as you arrange an appropriate
agreement for the return to the United States Treasury of
an amount of silver bullion equivalent to the total number
of ounces of silver 80 transferred.
Sincerely yours,
(Wgued) IL Mergenthau, J₁
Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. T.eo T. Crowley,
Administrator,
Foreign Economic Administration,
Washington, D. C.
Enclosure.
KMB/jm 1/3/44
Regraded Unclassified
WAR PRODUCTION BOARD
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Desember 23, 1943
IN REPLY REFER TO
Dear Mr. Gaston:
I have your letter of December 18 requesting
my views with respect to the lend-leasing to the
Government of India of 100,000,000 ounces of silver
from the stocks of the United States Treasury for
the purpose of combating inflation.
After careful consideration of all pertinent
factors, I wish to advise that it is the view of
the War Production Board that the lend-leasing of
this amount of silver from the stocks of the United
States Treasury will not interfere with the domestic
need for silver for use in the war effort.
Sincerely,
Donald M. Nelson
Chairman
Mr. Herbert E. Gaston
Acting Secretary of the Treasury
Treasury Department
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Unclassified
102
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
January 7, 1944
CONFIDENTIAL
Received this date from the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, for the confidential information of the
Secretary of the Treasury, compilation for the week
ended December 29, 1943, showing dollar disbursements
out of the British Empire and French accounts at the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the means by which
these expenditures were financed.
EmB
Regraded Unclassified
103
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
January 6, 1944.
CONFIDENTIAL
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Attention: Mr. H. D. White
I am enclosing our compilation for the week ended
December 29, 1943, showing dollar disbursements out of the
British Empire and French accounts at this bank and the means
by which these expenditures were financed.
Faithfully yours,
/s/ L. W. Knoke
L. N. Knoke,
Vice President.
The Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington 25, D.C.
Enclosure
COPY
Regraded Unclassified
ANALYSIS OF BRITISH AND FRENCH ACCOUNTS
Strictly
(In Millions of Dollars)
Week Ended December 29. 1943 Confidential
PERIOD
BANK OF ENGLAND (BRITISH GOVERNMENT)
BANK OF FRANCE
DEBITS
CREDITS
Gov't
Transfersto
Proceeds) of
Transfurs
Not Incr(+)
Net Iner. (+)
Expendi- Official
5010s of
from
Other
Total
or Docr. (-)
Total
Total
tures
Canadian
Other
Official
or Decr. (-)
Total
Securities
(Official)
Australian
Credits
in $ Funds
Debits
Credits
in $ Funds
Debits
(a)
Account
Debits
Credits
Gold
(b)
Account
(c)
(d)
(c)
(c)
(d)
First year of war (g)
1,793.2
605.6
20.9
1,166.7
1,828,2
1,356.1
52.0
3.9
416,2
War period through
. 35.0
866.3(f)
1,095.3(f)
+299.0
December, 1940
2,782.3
1,425.6
20,9
1,335.8
2,793.1
2,109,5
108.0
14.5
561,1
+ 10.8
878.3
1,098.4
+220.1
Second year of war(h)
2,203.0.
1,792.2.
3.4
407.4
2,189.8
1,193.7
274.0
16.7
705.4
- 13.2
38.9
8.8
- 30.1
Third year of war(i)
1,235.6
904.8
7.7
223,1
1,361.5
21,8
5.5
57.4
1,276.8
+ 125.9
18,5
4.4
- 14.1
Fourth year of war())
764.0
312.7
170.4
280.9
1,072.3
-
0.5
155,1
916.7
- 308.3
10,3
1.0
- 9,3
1943
Sept. 2 . Sept. 29
46.3
15.5
10,6
20,2
78.1
-
-
14.0
64.1
+ 31.8
-
-
-
Sept. 30 - Nov. 3
59.5
35.3
0.1
24.1
121.4
-
-
41.5
36.9
+ 68.9
1
-
-
Nov. 4 - Dec. 1
I
48.2
24.4
5.8
18.0
83.4
-
-
3.5
79.9
+ 35.2
-
-
-
Dec.
2 - Dec. 29
.
38.2
15.6
-
22.6
123.5
-
-
35.0
88.5
+ 85.3
-
-
-
Week Ended:
December 8
12.7
7.2
-
5.5
24.8
-
-
15.0
9.8
+ 12.1
-
-
-
December 15
11.2
3.7
-
7.5
30.9
-
-
5.0
25.9
+ 19.7
-
-
-
December 22
5.4
1.9
-
3.5
42.0
-
-
-
42.0
+ 36.6
-
-
-
December 29
5.9
2.8
-
6.1
25.8(k)
-
-
15.0
10,80
+ 16.9
-
-
E
Average Weekly Expenditures Since Outbreak of War
See attached sheet for footnotes.
(through June 19, 1940) $19.6 million
1940) $27.6 million
12, 1941) 854.9 million
$20.1
million
Regraded Unclassified
(a) Includes payments for account of British Ministry of Supply Mission, British Supply Board, Ministry of Supply Timber
Control, and Ministry of\Shipping.
(b) Estimated figures based on transfers from the New York Agency of the Bank of Montreal, which apparently represent the
proceeds of official British sales of American securities, including those effected through direct negotiation. In addition
to the official selling, substantial liquidation of securition for private British account occurred, particularly during the
early months of the war, although the receipt of the proceeds at this Bank cannot be identified with any accuracy. According
to data supplied by the British Treasury and released by Secretary Morgenthau, total official and private British liquidation
of our securities through December, 1940 amounted to 8334 million,
(e) Includes about $85 million received during October, 1939 from the accounts of British authorized banks with Here York banks,
presumibly reflecting the requisitioning of private dollar balances. Other large transfore from such accounts since Detober,
1939 apparently represent current acquisitions of proceeds of exports from the sterling area and other secruing dolla,
receipts. See (k) below.
(d) Reflects net change in all dollar holdings payable on demand or maturing in one year.
(e) For breakdown by types of debits and credits see tabulations prior to March 10, 1943.
(f) Adjusted to eliminate the effect of $20 million paid out on June 26, 1940 and returned the following day.
(g) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to April 23, 1941.
(h) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to October 8, 1941.
(1) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to October 14, 1942.
(j) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to September 29, 1943.
(k) Includes $ 6.0 million apparently representing current and accumulated dollar proceeds of sterling area services and
merchandise exports.
Regraded Unclassified
ANALYSIS OF CANADIAN AND AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTS
(In Millions of Dollars)
Strictly
Week Ended December 29, 1943 Confidential
BANK
OF
DEBITS
CANADA (and Canadian Government)
COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA (and Australian Government)
CREDITS
DEBITS
Transfers
CREDITS
Transfers from Official
Transfers
to
Proceeds
British A/C
Net Incr.
Official
to
of
Proceeds
Net Incr.
Total
British
(+) or
Official
of
PERIOD
Others
Total
Gold
For Own
(-) or
For French
Other
Detits
Decr.(-)
Total
British
Other
A/C
Total
Gold
Debits
Credits
Sales
A/C
Other Docr.(-)
A/C
Credits
InSFunds(e)
Debits
A/C
Debits Credits
Sales
First year of war (a)
323.0
Creditsin $Runds(e)
16,6
306.4
504.7
412.7
20.9
War period through
38.7
32,4
+ 181.7
31.2
3.9
27.3
36.1
30.0
6.1
+ 4.9
December, 1940
477.2
16.6
460.6
707,4
534.8
20.9
110.7
41.0
+ 230.2
57.9
14.5
43.4
Second year of war(b)
62.4
50.1
460.4
12,3
+ 4.5
-
460,4
462,0
246,2
3.4
123.9
88.5
+ 1,6
72.2
Third year of war (c)
16.7
55.5
81,2
525.8
62.9
0.3
525.5
566.3
198,6
18,3
- 9.0
7.7
-
360.0
40.5
107.2
57.4
49.8
Fourth year of war(d)
112,2
723.6
17.2
95.0
-
723.6
958.8
47.1
- 5.0
170.4
-
741.3
+ 235.2
197.0
155.1
41.9
200.4
-
200.4
1943
- 3.4
Sept. 2- Sept. 29
46.4
-
46.4
65,1
-
10.6
-
54.5
. 18.7
15.8
14.0
1.8
4.8
-
4.8
Sept. 30 - Nov. 3
31.5
. 11,0
-
11.5
83.9
-
0.1
-
Nov, 4- Dec. 1
18.4
E3.C
+ 52.:
0,1
15.3
100.4
5.8
44.9
41.5
3.4
41-7
-
-
41.7
94.6
- 24
-
+ 82.0
5.7.
3.5
2.2
18.3
-
Dec. 2-Dec. 29
40.4
18.3
+ 12.6
-
40.4
38.1
-
-
-
38,1
-
2.3
38.1
35.0
3.1
20.7
-
26.7
- 11.4
1
i
nek Ended:
December B
10.9
-
10.9
16.8
-
.
-
16.8
16.0
/
+
5,9
15,0
1.0
5.5
-
5.5
- 16.5
December 15
7.8
-
7.8
2.9
-
-
-
2.9
-
4.9
6.8
5.0
1.8
4.8
-
4.0
- 2.0
December 22
7.2
-
7.2
10,8
-
-
-
10.8
+
3.6
Ogl
-
0,1
16.1
-
16,1
- 16.0
December 29
14.5(f)
-
14.5
7.6(f)
-
-
-
7.6(g
6.9
15.2
15.0
0.2
0,3
-
0,3
. 14,9
Average Weekly Expenditures for
(a) For monthly breakdom see tabulations prior to April 23, 1941.
First year of war
6.2 million.
(b) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to October 8, 1941.
Second year of war
8.9 million,
(c) For monthly breakdown see tabulations prior to October 14, 1942.
10,1 million.
(d) For monthly breakdown see tabulations pri or to September 29, 1943.
13.9 million.
(e) Reflects changes in all dalla
on
turing in one year.
29, 1943)
8.0 million,
(f) Does not reflect
(g) Includes 33.9
and 3.5 million received from
Bank,
Regraded Unclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to