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DIARY

Book 100

December 1 - December 6, 1937

Book Page
Business Conditions

National Bureau of Economic Research (Wesley Mitchell,
Director) asked to make study on business recessions 12/1/37

C

123

HMJr feels United States may be approaching the bottom

of the present recession - 12/3/37

Conference; present: HMJr, Haas, White, Seltzer,
Daggit, and Miss Lonigan - 12/6/37
a) Proposed Mitchell study discussed

242
355

-CChina

See also Neutrality Act
Letter to Chinese Ambassador confirming agreement to

purchase from China fifty million ounces of silver,
proceeds to be used to maintain stability of Chinese

yuan - 12/2/37
Current United States trade with Japan and China during
November, 1937

HMJr discusses financial situation with Ambassador Wang;
Taylor and Lochhead also present - 12/3/37
HMJr-Feis conversation - 12/4/37

181

183
241

311,317

a) Feis states that, after yesterday's discussion,

all objections have disappeared from his mind to
extending to Chinese Central Bank, for one more
year, privilege of borrowing foreign exchange from
United States against gold on deposit here

b) Feis memorandum - 12/6/37

394

Cotton

HMJr-Jesse Jones conversation - 12/1/37

2

a) Jones told status of plans:

1) National advertising campaign
2) Working through Cotton Institute and
Commodity Credit Corporation - a plan
approved by Comptroller General

Haas memorandum giving United States Government's present

financial interest in cotton crop - 12/1/37

Letter to FDR from "two Henrys" (HMJr and Wallace)
concerning proposed conference with Jesse Jones on
Government functioning through Commodity Credit
Corporation - 12/1/37

a) In this connection, HMJr talks to Taylor

White memorandum: "Reported large shipments of cotton to

British India" - 12/1/37

Gaston memorandum: "The Government's stake in existing

cotton stocks - 12/2/37

Daggit memorandum: "Is this an opportune time for a
cotton sales promotion campaign?" - 12/2/37

99

100
106
101

140
207

- C - (Continued)
Book Page
Cotton (Continued)
Hamilton (General Counsel, Reconstruction Corporation)

advises Oliphant that, in his opinion, the cotton
undertaking is not authorized by the charter of

Commodity Credit Corporation - 12/3/37
a) Jesse Jones and HMJr discuss opinion - 12/6/37

C

Haas resume of cotton situation (charts) - 12/6/37

239
326
320

-FFinancing, Government
Open Market Committee conference; present: HMJr, Taylor,

Bell, Seltzer, Lochhead, Harris, Eccles, Burgess,
Sinclair, Williams, Goldenweiser, Piser, McKee,
Harrison, and Ransom - 12/1/37

46

12/1/37

81,237

a) Five-year note favored
Parkinson consulted by HMJr concerning market preferences -

HMJr invites Leffingwell and Stanley to confer with him 12/1/37

110

Preferences of Devine, Levy, Discount Corporation, et cetera.

HMJr consults Walter Cummings - 12/2/37
Seltzer memorandum: "Treatment of exchange subscriptions to
proposed note issue of December 15" - 12/3/37
HMJr-Burgess telephone conversation - 12/3/37

Conference; present: HMJr, Taylor, Bell, Lochhead, Harris,
Seltzer, and Murphy - 12/4/37
a) Memorandum: "Costliness to Treasury of an 8-year

167

172,176,214
220

223,232,382
256

308

22% bond"

HMJr consults Bailie - 12/4/37

FDR approves arrangements - 12/5/37

257
313

12/15/37 - Announcement of offering of $250 million, or thereabouts, of 8-year 23% Treasury bonds of 1945, and $200 million,
or thereabouts, of 5-year 12% Treasury notes of Series C-1942 12/6/37

403

12/6/37

353

After announcement, Burgess tells HMJr "they all like it" a) Burgess reports issue is all sold - 12/6/37

HMJr tells Burgess bonds are fifteen times over-subscribed
and the notes eleven - 12/6/37
France

See Stabilization

-GGold

See Stabilization: Netherlands

-HHolland

See Stabilization: Netherlands

384
389

-I- Book Page
Income Tax: Deficiencies
See Louisiana: Maestri income tax case

-JJapan

See also Neutrality Act
Current United States trade with Japan and China during
November, 1937

C

183

LLouisiana

Maestri (Mayor, New Orleans) income tax case:

Conference; present: HMJr, Magill, Oliphant, Helvering,
Wenchel, Russell, and Carter - 12/1/37

6

a) Magill memorandum

28

b) Oliphant
c) Russell
d) HMJr conversation with Irey

30,32,33

e) HMJr tells Ellender he will hear from Helvering

34
39

109

Memorandum to Graves from Magill asking that procedure

concerning determination of deficiencies be completely
overhauled - 12/1/37

45

M-

,

Maestri, Mayor (New Orleans, Louisiana)
See Louisiana

McAdoo, William Gibbs (Senator, California)

Asks HMJr for copy of regulations requiring a list of
investments in connection with income tax returns 12/4/37

254,309

Mexico

Hull asks HMJr to do nothing until next month concerning

silver since negotiations are in process - 12/1/37
a) HMJr talks to Feis - 12/1/37

Mitchell, Wesley (Director, National Bureau of Economic Research)
See Business Conditions

1

75

-NBook

Page

National Bureau of Economic Research
See Business Conditions
Netherlands

See Stabilization
Neutrality Act

See also Book LXXXVII, pages 235 and 274
HMJr consults Hull concerning message (see page 145)

sent to FDR in connection with dinner with Chinese
Ambassador; asks for advice concerning (1) further

purchase of silver in view of possibilities of Japan

declaring war, and (2) United States agreement with
China permitting them to borrow foreign exchange
against gold on deposit - HMJr wishes to extend for
one year agreement which expires December 31st 12/2/37

C

141

a) FDR
b)

United
can
from
Japan 146,

c) Feis of view 151,

1) - no comment

12/2/37 2) suggests As As 164) transmits and States to for silver purchase extension consulting State Oliphant from continue of Department's China of silver Hull has agreement to (see ruled buy pages point gold that with

154

China,

Hull's informal advice would be that
Treasury should keep itself free of any

commitment involving future
Conference; present: Taylor, Oliphant, Lochhead, White,
and Opper; Feis and Hackworth (State Department)
-

12/2/37
Letter to Chinese Ambassador confirming agreement to

189

yuan - 12/2/37
HMJr-Feis conversation - 12/4/37

181

purchase from China fifty million ounces of silver,
proceeds to be used to maintain stability of Chinese

311,317

a) Feis states that, after yesterday's discussion,

all objections have disappeared from his mind
to extending to Chinese Central Bank, for one
more year, privilege of borrowing foreign exchange
from United States against gold on deposit here
a) Feis memorandum - 12/6/37

394

-0Open Market Committee

See Financing, Government

-RRevenue Revision

Garner tells HMJr his understanding with FDR is "no tax bill
until January 15th" - 12/6/37

334

-SBook Page
Silver
See Mexico

Neutrality Act

"

Speeches by HMJr

"Improving Federal Administration" delivered before
a meeting of some of the members of House of
Representatives on 12/1/37

Stabilization

C

85

France:

Exchange market movements resume - 12/1/37
Netherlands:
De Nederlandsche Bank asks Federal Reserve Bank of

134,138,
248,400

New York to apply to New York Treasury, in behalf
of Dutch Equalization Fund, for special license

to convert into gold $50 million held by

De Nederlandsche Bank for account of said Fund 12/1/37
a) Knoke memorandum
b) Lochhead

127
128

"

c) Knoke-De Nederlandsche Bank conversation

130
131

Knoke reports conversation with de Jong, in which Knoke
assured him name of foreign central bank is never
mentioned in announcements giving increase or reduction

in total of gold held by United States under earmark
for foreign accounts - 12/3/37

243

T-

Tax Evasion and Avoidance

HMJr reads to Magill Gaston memorandum for publicity purposes

concerning investigation of income tax returns of prominent
persons - 12/4/37

251

Taxation

See Revenue Revision

See Speeches by HMJr: "Improving Federal Administration"

-UUnemployment Relief

Conference; present: HMJr, Haas, White, Seltzer, Daggit,
and Miss Lonigan - 12/6/37
a) Proposed Mitchell study discussed

355

1

December 1, 1937

Secretary Hull called HM,Jr today and asked him

to do nothing on Mexico on silver all of this month
because they are having negotiations with Mexico. The
Secretary said that he would sit tight and do nothing
for this week.

2

December 1, 1937.
9:04 a.m.
H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Jones.

H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Jesse
Jones:

Hello.

H.M.Jr:

Good morning, Jesse.

J:

Good morning.

H.M.Jr:

Are you at home?

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Jesse, I want to take a minute or two to explain
what I've been working on very quietly, for the
President, see.

J:

H.M.Jr:

All right.
And I asked him - we talked about it, whether
somebody couldn't work on cotton with the idea
that eighteen million bales of cotton 18 a good
thing, and let's see whether we can't do something

to get rid of it.

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Rather than just sit around and tell tales of

woe, see?

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Well, I've been working on this thing quietly
for a couple of weeks, and we finally evolved
an idea of a national advertising campaign in conjunction with the industry, and we work through
the textile industry, and they're tremendously
enthusiastic about it and ready to put up some
money, see.

J:

Who?

H.M.Jr:

The textile industry.

J:

Yes.

-2H.M.Jr:

Through the cotton institute.

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

You know. Well, we've got the thing and I first
thought we could do the Section 32 money, but
Wallace doesn't like it that way, so we looked
up and we - Oliphant's given us the opinion we
can do it through Commodity Credit.

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And yesterday afternoon we put it up before
the Comptroller General and he said he'd O.K. it.
Now I just walked down with Wallace and he's far
enough long that he said he'd like to meet with
you and me, and talk this thing over, see.

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Now would lunch tomorrow be convenient? And if

J:

Well, suppose - suppose he do that today, and
what time - how early could we have lunch?

H.M.Jr:

Well, we'll fix it - are you going to leave town?
I was going to leave town. I am - I am going to

J:

you'd like - I'd like you to get more details 80
you can have a chance to think about it. I'd
like Wayne Taylor to come over and talk to you
at your convenience, he's all full of it.

leave town tomorrow afternoon.

H.M.Jr:

Well -

J:

I was going today, but Wagner wants me to come
up there and get before his committee on the
Housing thing in the morning.

H.M.Jr:

Well, do you want to make it quarter of one?

J:

Yes, well - well that'11 be all right, and if
we get through - I might take a two o'clock train
or at least a three.

H.M.Jr:

Oh, yes. Now, supposing I have Wayne contact

you, see.

3

4

-3J:

H.M.Jr:
J:

H.M.Jr:
J:

H.M.Jr:
J:

H.M.Jr:

All right.
And give you the thing - 80 as you won't get
this thing cold.

All right.
And - I mean - I'm quite enthusiastic about it.
Well, I hope - I hope that I agree with you.
Well, I don't know, but I say I hope I do, and I I want to give you twenty four hours to think
about it.

J:

Well, I've got to go to the Hill at ten-thirty

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

J:

And 80 suppose I leave word, and maybe I can get

to testify on the House side
for the Housing bill.

it - I'll call Wayne and maybe I can get a lunch
engagement with him today.

H.M.Jr:

Yes, well shall I leave it that you'll call Wayne.
Yes. I'll call him right now.
You'll call him right now.

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Wayne doesn't know I called you, because I just

J:

Well, if you'll tell him -

H.M.Jr:

Well, supposing I tell Wayne to call you right

H.M.Jr:
J:

got into the office.

away.
J:

H.M.Jr:
J:

Tell him to call me, and And I'11 tell him what's it about.
Tell him to call me through the office.

5

-

4

-

H.M.Jr:

Through the office?

J:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Through the office.

J:

My office, yes.

H.M.Jr:

I'll do that.

J:

Thank you.

H.M.Jr:

He'll call you in two minutes.

J:

All right. Fine.

6

December 1, 1937

9:15 a. m.
Present:

Mr. Magill
Mr. Oliphant
Mr. Helvering
Mr. Wenchel
Mr. Russell
Mr. Carter
HM,Jr: Who slipped this memorandum to me?

Mr. Magill: That's mine.
HM,Jr: Supposing I read this out loud.
(Read Magill's memorandum in full. It is attached,
marked Exhibit I.)
Now, have you (Oliphant) got one?

Mr. Oliphant: Yes.
HM,Jr: (Reading Oliphant's memorandum.) (Exhibit II)
"I have discussed this matter today with Mr. Wenchel
and we have examined our calendars. This is what happened:
"Wenchel began work in the Bureau September 22.

Eight days later, on September 30 at 10 a.m., he sat in
a conference on the Maestri case in Helvering's office
with Helvering, Russell, Carter, Regis, May, Pierce and
Norman, one of his lawyers. Wenchel did not then know
that the Louisiana cases were the subject of special instructions because it had not been possible for me to tell
him about all the special situations and unusual problems
pending in his office and the Bureau."
May I check? September 30th. Those instructions
had not been issued yet.

Mr. Oliphant: Oh, yes! Issued at the time Justice

settled the criminal cases.

7

-2-

HM,Jr: Were they? Because the first they

were brought to. me was October 7th.

Mr. Wenchel: That was the conference in Secre-

tary Magill's office.

HM,Jr: (Resumed reading)

"At this conference in Helvering's office, Wenchel,
remembering and mentioning newspaper discussions of the
Louisiana cases, asked if there was anything unusual
about this Maestri case and was told that what he had
in mind was the criminal cases, but that this was a case
of settling civil liability. He then agreed that, the
evidence on the various issues being what it was, the
following proposal to settle was a good one:
Accept the taxpayer's claim as to the
$80,000 from the sale of stock. Cut the
alleged gift of $150,000 in half. Assess
$57,658.14 instead of $100,000 "neat-egg"
since $42,341.86 had been assessed and

taxes paid thereon in the year 1930.

"However, Wenchel did not get the impression that
this conference was to conclude the matter because Hel-

vering was insistent that no plan of settlement would be
acceptable unless it involved the payment of at least
the full tax. Wenchel says he did not know until this
morning that the taxpayer's lawyer had been informed that
the settlement was satisfactory.
HM,Jr: Same day of what?

Mr. Oliphant: Day of the conference.
Mr. Wenchel: September 30th.

(HM,Jr:) (Completed reading aloud Mr. Oliphant's

memorandum of November 30th.)

HM,Jr: This is Oliphant's memorandum to Shafroth.

(HM,Jr read aloud this memorandum dated September 1,

attached marked Exhibit III.)

Now you have got your time table.

8

-3-

Mr. Helvering: Do I understand that Mr. Oliphant
says that no case shall be settled unless the taxpayer
waives the issue? If he does, we might just as well
close up shop.

HM,Jr: Here is a copy of Oliphant's memorandum

(to Shafroth.)

(Mr. Helvering read the memorandum.)

Mr. Oliphant: (to Mr. Helvering) Refer to the
bottom of the memorandum -- where there is a conflict
of evidence, the thing is to go to the Board.
Mr. Helvering: You confine it to the Louisiana

cases?

Mr. Oliphant: Yes; that's all.
Mr. Magill: The idea as it developed in the October 7th conference was this: what was meant by horsetrading was whether or not you could arrive at a disposition of the issues either by the taxpayer agreeing he was
wrong or the Bureau agreeing that it was wrong, but we
were not to trade issues off against each other.
Mr. Helvering: Uh-huh.
signed.

HM,Jr: This (Mr. Russell's memorandum) 18 not

Mr. Russell: Oh! Glad to sign it. HM.Jr:Do you
mind dating it? Mr. R: Let's see, today if December 1.
HM,Jr: (Began reading Russell's memorandum of
December 1, 1937. Attached, marked Exhibit IV)
"A thirty-day letter was issued in the above-mentioned case under date of September 16, 1936 covering
the years 1925 to 1929, inclusive, disclosing deficiencies
in tax of $144,334.65 and penalties of $72,167.33, a total
of tax and penalty of $216,501.98. In response to this
letter, under date of January 18, 1937 the taxpayer called
in person accompanied by Senator Allen J. Ellender and a
discussion was had on that date with the following representatives of the Bureau :

9

-4-

"J. W. Carter, Head Special Adjustment Division
George H. Reges, Jr., Conferee, Special Adjustment Division
Paul May, Auditor, Special Adjustment Division
C. O. Pierce, Auditor, Special Adjustment D1-

vision.

HM,Jr: Now, this is the first I knew that Maestri

and Ellender called on Mr. Russell.

Mr. Helvering: He came to see me and I sent him

up to see them.

HM,Jr: Up to September 9th nothing happened as
far as you two gentlemen-were concerned (Mr. Magill and
Mr. Oliphant)?

Mr. Magill: The first I heard of the case was

September 11th.

Mr. Russell: Except we advised Mr. Oliphant we

were having a conference and he said that Mr. Wenchel

should sit in on it.
Mr. Oliphant: I called Shafroth and told him of

the conference and he said he hoped Irey would be present.
HM,Jr: (Resumed reading)"At the conclusion of
this conference there was additional information or
evidence which Mr. Wentworth desired to submit for consideration of the Bureau representatives. This information was received under date of September 25th. Under
date of September 30, 1937 a conference was held in the
Commissioner's office attended by Mr. Guy T. Helvering,
Commissioner, Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel for the Bureau
of Internal Revenue, C. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner,
Mr. Harold Norman, Special Attorney, Penal Division,
Chief Counsel's Office, Mr. J. W. Carter, Head, Special
Adjustment Division, Mr. George H. Reges, Jr., Conferee,
Special Adjustment Division, Paul May, Auditor, Special
Adjustment Division. At the above conference the fol-

lowing items were discussed:

10

-5-

"1) The taxpayer's contention as to the
$100,000.000 on hand in 1910,
(2) The taxpayer's contention as to the
$150,000.00 gift in 1916,
(3) The taxpayer's contention as to the
$80,000.00, proceeds from the sale of
stock in 1923,
(4) The taxpayer's contention as to the
$103,413.57, proceeds fromypartition sale
in 1927,
(5) The taxpayer's contention as to the
$1000.00 and $12,000.00 mortgage notes,
(6) the taxpayer's contention as to the
$10,000.00 living expenses,
(7) The taxpayer's contention as the fraud
penalties."
HM,Jr: This took place September 25th?

Mr. Russell: September 30th.
reading.)

HM,Jr: Now, this is September 30th. (Resumed

"At this conference it was concluded that
the taxpayer's contention on the $100,000.00
on hand in 1910 should be denied: that the
taxpayer's contention as to the $80,000 proceeds received from the sale of stock in 1923
should be conceded; that the taxpayer's contention as to the $103,413.57 proceeds from
partition sale in 1927 should be conceded;
that the taxpayer's contention as to the

$1000.00 and $12,000.00 mortgage notes should

be conceded; that the taxpayer's contention
as to the fraud penalty should be denied and
the taxpayer's contention as to the $10,000.
living expenses should be denied. This left
only one item still in dispute; that is, the
taxpayer's contention as to the $150,000.00

gift in 1916. On this item it was the opinion
of the Commissioner and Mr. Wenchel, Chief
Counsel, that the full amount of this gift

should not be conceded but it was their conclusion, based on the evidence in the case,
that if the taxpayer would concede one-half
of $75,000.00 of this item that that would

be a fair settlement."

11

-6-

HM,Jr: Is that right?
Mr. Wenchel: Right.
HM,Jr: (Resumed reading)

"Under date of October 4, 1937 a hearing was held in the Internal Revenue Building,
the taxpayer being represented by Mr. Harold

G. Wentworth, attorney New York, New York, and
the Bureau was represented by:
Chas. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner

J. W. Carter, Head, Special
Adjustment Division
Paul May, auditor, Special Adjustment Division
George H. Reges, Jr., conferee,
Special Adjustment Div.
"At this conference Mr. Wentworth was ad-

vised as to the Bureau's position on the several
items involved in this case and at 2:30 on the
same date Mr. Wentworth returned to the office
and proposed that his client's case be closed
by the disallowance of only one-fourth of the
$150,000.00 gift and by adding $5000.00 as living expenses for the years 1925 to 1928, inclusive and $10,000.00 for the year 1929. Mr.
Wentworth was advised that his proposal relative
to the reduction in living expenses would be
recommended but that his proposal to tax only
25% of the $150,000.00 item would not be recommended.

HM,Jr: Now, this 18 October 4th?
'Mr. Wentworth was advised that his pro-

posal relative to the reduction in living expenses would be recommended but that his pro-

posal to tax only 25% of the $150,000.00 item
would not be recommended.

Mr. Cliphant: Was that before or after the long

distance telephone call?

12

-7-

Mr. Russell: This was before.
Mr. Carter: This was before.

Mr. Helvering: This is just a report on their

conference with Mr. Wentworth.

Mr. Oliphant: Was that before he telephoned from

New York and he had then been told the Government had accepted

Mr. Russell: This was before. He had not been
told anything.
HM,Jr:

(Resumed reading. )

"He finally agreed that he would recommend to his client a settlement of his case
by the disallowance of 50% of the $150,000.00
item or $75,000.00. Mr. Wentworth was informed that the aforementioned basis of settlement would be presented to the Commissioner for

his approval or disapproval, and that he should
call Mr. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division, the next day to ascertain the Commissioner's
decision.
"On October 5, 1937, Mr. Russell donferred
with the Commissioner and Mr. Wenchel, Chief
Counsel, Bureau of Internal Revenue. Mr. Russell
advised Mr. J.W. Carter on the evening of October 5 that the Commissioner had approved the
settlement and that Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel,
had also approved the settlement. On October 6,
1937 Mr. Wentworth called Mr. J.W.Carter on long
distance telephone from New York to ascertain
the Commissioner's decision and he was advised

by Mr. Carter that the proposed basis of settlement had been approved by the Commissioner.

"A letter was prepared addressed to Mr.
Wentworth covering the years 1925 to 1929 inclusive, enclosing an agreement Form 870 for
these years and stipulation covering the case
for the years 1931, 1932 and 1933, which were

before the Board pending an appeal. This letter

13

-8-

"had reached the Acting Commissioner's office for signature when a telephone message
was received in the Acting Commissioner's

office from Mr. Wenchel calling from the
Treasury saying 'Not to take any action on
the Maestri case until he sees you'.
HM,Jr: What day was that?

Mr. Magill: The 6th or 7th.
Mr. Russell: That was on the 6th.
HM,Jr: October 5th they telephoned -- October 5th

Carter telephoned that the settlement, that it's O. K. October 6th they get ready to prepare a letter to be signed
and Wenchel calls up 'not to take any action on the Maestri
case until he sees you'.
"On October 7th a conference was held in the

office of the Under Secretary of the Treasury,
Mr. Magill. The following individuals were
present at the conference:

Mr. Roswell Magill, Under Secretary of

the Treasury
Mr. Herman Oliphant, General Counsel,
Treasury Department

Mr. John P. Wenchel, Chief Counsel Internal Revenue Bu

Mr. Elmer L. Irey, Chief, Intelligence Unit

Mr. Chas. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner

Mr. A. D. Burford, Special Agent in Charge
Mr. J. W. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment
Division
Mr. George H. Reges, Jr., conferee, Special
Adjustment Division
When did you leave town?

Mr. Helvering: The 5th.
5th?

HM,Jr: The last time they spoke to you was the

Mr. Helvering: Yes, the 5th.

14

-9-

HM,Jr: Who were there?

Mr. Helvering: The three of us, Wenchel, Russell

and myself.

Mr. Russell: I think this conference was about
two o'clock in the afternoon.

Mr. Helvering: I left on the 4:45 train for Chi-

cago on October 5th.

HM,Jr: (Resumed reading)
"On October 7th a conference was held in

the office of the Under Secretary of the
Treasury, Mr. Magill. The following
individuals were present: *
#

"The aforementioned basis of settlement was

rejected and a 90-day letter covering the
years 1925 to 1929, inclusive, was issued
under date of October 8, 1937."
Well, that's clear, what has happened up to that.
That gets down to the conference which took place in your
office.
Mr. Magill: The only question I have on this memorandum, most of it I know nothing about, this last sentence

is a little ambiguous. I don't know whether your recollection differs from mine or not. As I have said in my memo,
I not only don't recall, but I am quite clear that this Maestri
settlement of $134,000 tax and penalty was not discussed at
all on October 7th. I am sure nothing was said to me that
the Commissioner had accepted it and taxpayer had been notified because as far as I am concerned it would have put an

entirely different cast on the whole thing. Does your memo-

randum coincide with mine that those things were not actually
brought out before me?

Mr. Russell: To this extent: remember I told
Mr. Oliphant, who was sitting in conference, that settlement
was for $134,000 which included tax, penalty -- penalty for
fraud, and that I thought we had won a moral victory to have
the taxpayer agree to afraud and Mr. Oliphant said we were

HM,Jr: I can't hear you.

15

-10-

Mr. Russell: I say, in this conference I told

Mr. Oliphant that we had an agreement from the taxpayer
to the tax and fraud penalty and interest and you remember
Mr. Oliphant saying we had no concern with moral victories?

Mr. Magill: I don't remember that at all.
Mr. Russell: Do you, Mr. Carter?

Mr. Carter: I do, very distinctly.
Mr. Magill: Do you have any recollection that statesioner had approved it and the Attorney notified? Because
my recollection is very clear that nothing of that sort had
ment was made that settlement had been reached, the Commisbeen said.

Mr. Russell: I don't remember your being told those

exact words.

Mr. Magill: No. I don't think it came up at all

and one reason I am sure it did not come up is because Mr.
Carter discussed various aspects in the case and I remember,
for instance, my own pointing out that this $100,000 and
$150,000 story looked awfully fishy to me and if the facts
were put before the Board I thought there was a fair chance
we might get away with those issues even though we had his

mother testifying that this was a gift, etc., but I am quite

sure Mr. Helvering had not agreed.
Mr. Russell: I assumed that was understood because
Mr. Wenchel had sat in on the conference.

Mr. Magill: I am only getting my own story straight
because that, as I say, would have made all the difference
in the world as far as I am concerned if I had known that
this case had really been disposed of.
Mrs Cliphant: Disposed of by notifying the taxpayer.
Mr. Magill: I am sure I did not have that information.
Mr. Oliphant: Maybe not exact words were used. My
memory was perfect that nobody said or intimated that the
taxpayer's lawyer had been notified that this was acceptable
because that becomes an entirely different case, because then

16

-11-

you are dealing with a commitment that has been made and
would raise the question if the committment had been made

prior to Magill or myself or anybody else over here being
consulted.

HM,Jr: I am just -- Wenchel knew about it?
Mr. Wenchel: No.

HM,Jr: Now, just a minute. Let me bring you in
this picture. "On October 5, 1937 Mr. Russell conferred
with the Commissioner and Mr. Wenchel. Mr. Russell advised Mr. J. W. Carter on the evening of October 5 that the

Commissioner had approved the settlement basis and that Mr.
Wenchel, Chief Counsel, had also approved the settlement." If

Mr. Russell: That was the afternoon in your (Hel-

vering) office shortly before you left the office.

Mr. Wenchel: I remember that. I was down to see
Mr. Russell on something else and the Commissioner happened
to come in and there was some further statement with reference to this conference that we had had, but I did not get
the impression that any commitment had been made at that
time.

Mr. Russell: I remember distinctly at that time
Mr. Wenchel: Pardon me. My calendar does not show

anything at all on that and yet it shows all the other Maestri
conferences.

Mr. Russell: I remember distinctly asking if it was
all right to advise the taxpayer's counsel that it was acceptable.

Mr. Wenchel: The Commissioner came in with his hat
and coat on and you said something to him about the Maestri

case and I did not pay any attention because I did not think
not until it was brought up this morning
Mr. Russell: And in the first conference in the
Commissioner's office it was agreed around the table
therefore, when we went into the
Mr. Wenchel:
conference in the Under-Secretary's office, nothing was said

I was in on that. I was there on something else. It was

17

-12-

certainly not by me nor by anyone else, that the taxpayer
had been contacted and what Under-Secretary Magill says is
absolutely correct and I did not know it until yesterday
morning when Mr. Oliphant told me.

HM,Jr: I don't care whether this is Maestri, or
Smith, or Jones. I think that's unimportant compared to
the fact that there is something that does not fit together
here. It's much more important to me to get this picture
fitted together. I don't care whether it's Maestri, Smith
or Jones, except that it is an important case, but I don't -let's all be perfectly -- I mean, I wish everybody would
hit, and hit hard, because I don't see -- for Heaven's sake,
Russell, talk up for yourself.
Mr. Russell: That's what I am doing.
HM,Jr: You are not doing it very well.
Mr. Russell: I am doing my best. Let's see. Put
it this way: we did not take a move until we advised the
Commissioner and General Counsel what we were doing and,
second, at first conference in the Commissioner's office
there were approximately eight or ten people there. Everybody agreed that if the taxpayer would submit an offer of
one-half of the $150,000, we would accept it and on the 5th
Mr. Wenchel and Mr. Helvering was there. I told them the
taxpayer was willing to accept it and it was all right to
advise them.

HM,Jr: Where did this meeting take place?

Mr. Russell: In the Commissioner's office.
Mr. Wenchel: That is explained. He was on leave.
Russell was Acting Commissioner and he called me up about
another matter and we started to discuss it on the telephone
and I went downstairs. While we were discussing the matter,
the Commissioner came in with his overcoat and hat on and he
did not even sit down and Mr. Russell was talking to him and
all that I remember was something was said about the Maestri

case. I was not consulted. It looked to me like it was
carrying on this conversation

Mr. Helvering: Here is all that was said. Russell

said to me there that 'while you are here, I am going to

18

-13-

tell you that Maestri's attorney has agreed to accept the
proposition of $75,000 inclusion in taxes. That is, the
income of $75,000 is taxable.' I said, I That's what we
agreed to the other day. Go ahead and finish it.'
walked out that morning. That morning I asked Mr. Russell
to take care of the office because I was leaving.
Mr. Russell: I remember distinctly saying, 'Well,
here's the Commissioner out here now. Better talk about
the Maestri case before he leaves.
I

Mr. Wenchel: No, I don't remember that.

Mr. Russell: We were sitting there talking about

something.

Mr. Wenchel: We were sitting there talking. We

had some papers in front of us and the Commissioner walked
through that door and he was there before I knew he was

there. I got up and shook hands. You two talked.

I

know you were talking about the Maestri case, but what you
were saying I don't remember.

Mr.Helvering: I suppose after our previous conference when we had said distinctly if this 18 conceded and
this 18 conceded then we insist on this and this. Now if
that is done and the fraud penalty is added, I will agree
to it. But we have to add fraud penalty because the thing
is outlawed if we don't.

HM,Jr: Let me ask you this: Here is a case, certainly an important one, which if you had settled on this
basis would attract a lot of attention. Going back to
Russell, why would you take the responsibility of doing
this on verbal assurances. Why wouldn't you get somebody
to sigh something or write a memorandum, or if you were

Acting, why wouldn't something be written saying that this
was finally approved by Mr. Helvering and Mr. Wenchel?

Mr. Russell: I did not think it was necessary to

have a written memorandum.

HM,Jr: How do you settle other cases?

Mr. Russell: This is the only case with 80 many
people sitting in on 80 many conferences. We did have
to safeguard the Government's interests.

19

-14-

HM,Jr: You had so many people sitting in on it

and no written memorandum?

Mr. Russell: I did not think it was necessary to

have a written memorandum of what these gentlemen agreed
to.

HM,Jr: The result is it puts you in a very un-

usual position.

Mr. Russell: It does that. I am willing to take

that unusual position if nobody else will go along with it.
HM,Jr: As far as Mr. Helvering is concerned, he's
out of the picture. When he stopped out October 5th he
said, They have done everything? and you said yes. So he
said, All right. So he takes a train and that let's him
out. But what I can't get, because I don't know how Wenchel works, but if somebody started talking to me about the
Maestri case, I would say, if this is going to be the case
let's sit down; I can't give a yes or no.
Mr. Helvering: I am not saying this to be contentious at all, but if you take the conferences just of
Bureau officials, in which we were all present, and the
agreement was made that certain items would be excluded
and certain items be included -- now, that was all formal
hearings.

HM,Jr: Right.
Mr. Helvering: Now, the only thing that occurred
on October 5 was that Russell stated that Maestri's attorney
had agreed to that.
HM,Jr: Right.
Mr. Helvering: So go ahead and settle up.

HM,Jr: If I were in your position -- you go in,or
say I go into Magill or Oliphant's office. We have been
working on the thing a week. We say if we get this that
I will go along. I go in. He says I have got everything

we asked for. I say, O. K.; settle.

Mr. Helvering: You wouldn't write a memorandum.

20

-15-

HM,Jr: On a case like this? Yes, I would. Yes,
I do. The answer is that I very definitely do. I not
only do, but I have a secretary here taking it. I can't
trust my memory. There are too many important things.

No, on a thing like this I very definitely do. I still

don't see why this thing having been settled, if you don't
mind my saying so, if I were in either of you gentlemen's
shoes -- I go over to Mr. Magill's office. I say, Mr.
Magill, before we even start this thing we think it is our
duty to say to Magill and Oliphant that the taxpayer's
attorney has been notified that we would settle. Now
I can't see how you would walk in Magill's office and discuss this thing for two hours and not tell him that Mr.
Wentworth had been advised that this thing would be acceptable.

Mr. Russell: I was under the impression that was
why I was up in Magill's office.
Mr. Wenchel: I did not know that he had.

HM,Jr: It all goes back to Russell.

Mr. Russell: All right. I will be the goat. Mr.

Secretary, we did not take one step without keeping everybody advised of what we were doing.

Mr. Oliphant; Now, when you notified the taxpayer
on October 4th, I was not advised.
Mr. Russell: I remember in the Commissioner's office on the 5th saying that Maestri's lawyer had agreed to
accept it and saying I am going to notify him.
HM,Jr: It would be just the same thing if we were
sitting here and a month later I find you had accepted
Maestri's check. You say, I thought we were discussing
the principle and you say, Well, you know, Mr. Morgenthau
we accepted his check. We already had his check.
When did you tell him to stop action?
Mr. Wenchel: I don't remember the date of that,

but I did call him and told him not to take any action. I
remember when it was

Mr. Russell: On the 6th.
Mr. Wenchel: It was. That was the day before this

21

-16-

conference in Under-secretary Magill's office.
Mr. Oliphant: I was in Indiana.
Mr. Wenchel: I called you up, Russell, and asked you
if you had been notified of the conference and then said you
had better not take any action.
Mr. Russell: This is the memorandum that I got. (See
exhibitV
Subsequently I was advised about the confer-

ence to be held in Mr. Magil1's office, but this is the first

information I got
HM,Jr: What I am going to do as to what has taken
place in this room and as to your action, I am going to let
Mr. Helvering study it. After all, you are responsible to
him. I want you to decide whether Mr. Russell has done anything that is improper and after you have had time I would
like to talk to you further, but, after all, he is your man
and after you have talked it over I would like to talk to
That takes care of whether Mr. Russell did or didn't.
you.
Now, as to the situation about the Maestri case.

After all, we have a lot of things to do. We will start

with you, Mr. Helvering. Have you changed your position
any since you said that we would take this $134,000?

Mr. Helvering: No. I am very strongly of the

opinion that that is a good settlement.
HM,Jr: You still feel that way?
Mr. Helvering: Yes.
HM,Jr: I am not going to call on these men if that's
the way you feel, because they are your subordinates.
Mr. Helvering: May I say a word in that connection?
Before we reached any conclusion on this, I called Mr. Burford in and had a talk with him about this case. Burford
stated to me, 'Now, Mr. Commissioner, I don't know whether
we have a case with Maestri or not. He says, 'If we can't
set up fraud, we haven't, and he gave me all this detail
about the Statute of Limitations. But, he said 'I think
he's the biggest crook in the bunch, or something to that
effect. Well, we are confronted

22

-17HM,Jr:

take this?

Pardon.

Did Burford recommend that we

Mr. Helvering: Oh, yes!
HM,Jr: He's on record?
Mr. Carter: He has not signed any report, but he
is in accord with this proposed settlement.
Mr. Helvering: He told me in an off-hand conversation in my office that he thought it was a good settlement.
HM,Jr: Will he sign this report?
Mr. Carter: He will. He has not been asked.
HM,Jr: Will Irey and Burford both?
Mr. Helvering: I haven't talked to Irey because

Burford was the man working on the case.

I just want to explain the difficulties we have. On
this $150, 000 item there are five affidavits on file from
Maestri, his two sisters, from his mother and from one outside party, telling they knew about this agreement. I told
the boys it taxed my credulity that anybody was handing
around $150,000 cash and I would not concede that that was

done, but in face of these affidavits and without any definite evidence on our part to refute them, I thought we
would have a hard time to prove that in the Court.
Mr. Oliphant: But we do have a chance of getting
Maestri's brother who has an adverse interest and he's fighting his brother over who gets this money from his father and
he's coming in and spilling the beans and that would very
well wipe out the five affidavits.
HM,Jr: I want to save time. I am going to ask
Irey right now. (Telephoned Mr. Irey and transcript of
the conversation 1s attached, marked exhibit VI.)
Mr. Helvering: I want to show you one further step.
As a result of this conference in which it was set out what
we would do and Mr. Russell's statement to us of that day

23

-18-

that that had been agreed upon, of course here's the letter
prepared to go to the attorney. This was on Mr. Russell's
desk when this letter came to me. (See Exhibit VII.)
Mr. Russell: I was just getting ready to sign it.
Mr. Helvering: This is the letter to Wentworth in
the Maestri case. Of course that letter never was sent.
Mr. Oliphant and I had a conference in his office
one day and we agreed, and Herman and I talked it over,
that we ought to have one of his men and one of ours sit
in on all the Louisiana cases and I told him I would send
him a memorandum on just what the situation was about these
cases. September 11th I transmitted this letter to him
and he acknowledged it on the 14th and I detailed all of
the so-called Louisiana case, those that had been settled
and those that had not and those that had been indicted
and those who had not and 90-day letters and all that. Later
Mr. Magill called me some time later -- I don't remember but
I think I have it here though -- and asked me -- here it is,
October 25 -- and I sent you, 1f you remember

Mr. Magill: You sent me another memorandum.

Mr. Helvering: Yes. On just the situation on all
the cases. I honestly thought -- I know nothing about
the conference over here, of course, but I thought we were
handling it just the way we outlined it in your office.
Mr. Oliphant: Well, if this were a case arising
in Des Moines, Iowa, involving any individual, I think you
would have to say on available evidence this is a fairly
good settlement, but if it were a Des Moines case and we
did settle, we would be sitting here settling it by deciding
disputed questions of fact.
Now, following the settlement of the criminal cases

we went into the question pretty carefully. It seemed to
us then that regardless of whether we lost or won a little
money, it was too serious a matter for us to take the responsibility of resolving these doubtful questions of fact and
we ought to put it up to the Board and let the Board decide
it in open meeting. The newspapers are not in here. To
my mind, it is easier to do it if the newspaper men are here.
If it is put up to the Board, everybody hears it.
HM,Jr: We make a perfect Jackass out of ourselves

24

-19-

because I consider that letter they sent out -- I don't
have to be even a third-rate lawyer to know that letter
would make a perfect Jackass out of the Bureau. After
they have agreed to this whole business, then they stick
that stuff back into a 90-day letter.
Mr. Russell: We agreed to $75,000 and we had to

stick that back.
do.

Mr. Oliphant: Now, that is the desirable thing to
Have the thing tired by an impartial tribunal in an

open court room.

Here's the unfortunate thing. The taxpayer's
lawyers have been notified that this thing is agreeable
over in the Bureau, so that takes the whole thing over to
the Secretary to take the responsibility of saying that,
regardless of what my Bureau says, I am going to insist
on public trial.
HM,Jr: I had not thought of it in that way. What
I was thinking of, if this fellow Wentworth is a good lawyer
I would attack the Internal Revenue Bureau and I would attack
this whole method and I would just break down this whole bus1ness, that they agreed to this thing and who is responsible?
The Commissioner? Is he responsible? What is the Secretary's office? Where do they come in when all these people -is he trying to prosecute this man?
Mr. Oliphant: Is the Secretary personally trying to
prosecute this man.

HM,Jr; In view of that, what I was going to, I was
going to ask you and Magill, because I would like to settle
thing thing now, in view of what has happened -- a lot has
been most educational to me in view of this thing -- should
we take Mr. Helvering's recommendation in this matter and
let him proceed?

Mr. Magill: Well, my reaction is that you should.
I think this: you have got an extremely difficult problem.
I feel as Mr. Oliphant has expressed himself, particularly
in this group of cases, which have had public notoriety,
a public trial 1s highly desirable from our point of view
unless the issues can be settled by agreement. On the
other hand, the Commissioner having determined that the

25
-20-

settlement is proper and the taxpayer having been notified,

I don't believe either you or I want to be in the position
of telling the taxpayer and his attorney that we want to
throw the Commissioner down and I am further moved to that

by a technical aspect that might not occur to you and that
is that this particular type of letter in this particular
type of case is exclusively in the Commissioner's jurisdiction. In the ordinary type of case, it does not come over
here at all, so if Wentworth is at all shrewd he could bring
it out and say to the Senator that this case has been given
very unusual attention and that obviously you did this.
HM,Jr: Do you mind giving me a yes or no.

Mr. Magill: I say yes. I think you had better go
ahead with the settlement. I don't like it.
Mr. Oliphant: Nothing can be done that I would like
less, but I think you had better go ahead with the settlement.
One of those unfortunate things.

Mr. Wenchel: I think it is a good settlement, if
it were not for what is underneath it.
HM,Jr: Because I feel that the fact that Senator
Ellender did not mention that the Bureau had offered settlement was very significant and he's just going to hold that
back until he finds out whether the Secretary's office is
going to push this and if we were going to push it these
people would open up the whole question of how this thing
is administered.
In view of what has happened, I say you go ahead
from where you were the afternoon of October 5th and the
matter is in your hands and everybody here is agreeable
that you go ahead.

Mr. Helvering: All right.
Mr. Oliphant: Should this special policy continue
in the Louisiana cases, or should we not have special handling.

HM,Jr: Before we take that up, I want Helvering to
sit down with his own people and go into this thing first
and after he has gone into this whole business -- there is

another case pending now.

26

-21-

Mr. Oliphant: The Shushon.

HM Jr: Well, I have got the Federal Reserve all
waiting outside. But let's do it this way: I would like
you, Guy, to sit down with your own people. This question
of policy, I will answer that. This question of policy
between the Bureau -- I frankly haven't got the time. I
have got Oliphant and Magill here. They are both ably
trained lawyers and if Senator Ellender had not asked to
see me and I said I would see any taxpayer and I have to
see a Senator, do I have to sit down with you two people
and get into -- should I have to sit on a thing like this?
Mr. Magill: I don't think you should.

HM,Jr: I don't either. If you said to me right

now, if you pushed me, I would say a matter like this I
would give Helvering all the discretionary power that he
wants and let Helvering go ahead. If it comes that Helvering closes some case like this and you gentlemen don't like
it, there is always time to sit down and say in the future
I wouldn't do it, but my feeling is I would give Helvering
all the leeway he wants, but before we do that I would like
to sit down with you, Helvering and Magill and Wenchel and
Oliphant. I think the five of us should sit down next
week, when this financing is over, and let's talk this
thing out as to -- not only New Orleans; other things.
Again using this as an example, and I tell you now,
Helvering, I would very much like you to settle this question of 90-day letters because I don't think that we should
put anything into a 90-day letter which we don't believe.
Mr. Helvering: How are you going to do it?
Mr. Russell: How about Associated Gas cases then?

HM,Jr: All right. I will give you or anybody in

this room -- but there is something wrong when the United
States Government, 1f they think a fellow, adds $100,000 and
another $50,000 for trading purposes in the hope that we collect $100,000 knowing damn well that we won't collect $150,000
You make up the 90-day letter, but you don't have to defend
it before the Board of Tax Appeals?

Mr. Russell: No, sir.
HM,Jr: You do, don't you?

27

-22-

Mr. Wenchel: Yes, sir.
HM,Jr: Then there is something wrong. But he
(Russell) makes up the bill of particulars and this fellow
(Wenchel) has to try to prove it. Now I say the United
States Government -- we criticise the business man for being phony and I say we stuck this thing in -- it's phony.
Mr. Helvering: Mr. Secretary, if you don't get
everything in and make every assessment on every year and
every situation that you can, the Board will say it's not
in this year; it's in another year. If you don't put the
assessment in both years, you are out. This is a very complicated case. You-have great confidence in Harold Graves
and he has done a great job. I would like to have a study
made by him or his men under his supervision, of just exactly the procedure on 90-day letters.
HM,Jr: Anything better than that?

Mr. Magill: It's O. K. I don't know that he's the

man to do that particular job, but maybe he's the best man
available.

MM,Jr: I will tell you what we will do. Let's do

it this way. will you people move just as fast as you can
on this thing and any time you are ready I will set anthis
hour
an day until we clean this thing up. I can't do it
week, but I can next.
We know where we are on the Maestri case. I am
finished.
00o-o0o

Exhert I 28
November 30, 1937

TO:

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM:

Mr. Magill
Re: Maestri Case

My files contain the following information with respect to

this, case and the other Louisiana cases:

On September 11, 1937, Commissioner Helvering forwarded to

Mr. Oliphant a list of the so-called Louisiana cases and a statement
of the action taken thereon in the Bureau, the Board of Tax Appeals,
and the Courts. In the case of Mr. Robert S. Maestri it appears
that the years 1925-1929, inclusive , are "open"; a sixty day letter
had been issued for the years 1930 and 1931 and a ninety day letter

issued for the years 1932 and 1933. My memorandum to you of the day's
activities dated October 7, 1937, contains a paragraph summarizing

a conference held on the Louisiana group of cases. The last two
sentences of my memorandum to you are as follows:

Mr. Oliphant has already directed that in

the settlement of cases there should be no

horse trading' that is, if there is evidence on both sides of a particular issue
the issue is to be submitted to the Board.

Compromises are only to be made where the

taxpayer concedes the point or where it
clearly appears that the Treasury determination was wrong."

On October 27, 1937, Commissioner Helvering sent me another
memorandum on the Louisiana cases, from which it appears that a

ninety day letter issued on October 8, 1937, to Mr. Robert S. Maestri
for the years 1925-1929, inclusive, for each of which years a fraud
penalty was asserted. You will note that this deficiency letter was
sent out the day after the October 7th conference in my office.

Finally, my memorandum to you of the day's activities dated November 6,
1937, summarizes a conference I had with the Commissioner on these

cases. Specific reference is made to a telegram from Mr. Robert S.
Maestri to the Commissioner asking for a conference regarding settlement of his case; and my recommendation that the Commissioner should

tell Mr. Maestri to take up his case for settlement with the Technical
Staff in the usual way, with instructions from the Commissioner to the

Technical Staff that no settlement should be made except with the
approval of the Commissioner and Mr. Oliphant.

29

-2I am positive that no mention was made at the October 7th
conference of any definite proposition made by Maestri and approved
by the Commissioner to settle the Maestri case; nor that Maestri's
attorney had been notified that the Commissioner had agreed to accept

an offer in settlement made by Maestri. It is my understanding that
both Mr. Oliphant and Mr. Wenchel fully agree with my recollection

on this point. If any such specific proposal to settle had been

mentioned I would certainly have reported it to you on October 7th
as I did report the offer of settlement reported to me by the

Commissioner on November 6th. Further I would have instructed the
Commissioner or Mr. Russell on October 7th in the sameway that I had
instructed the Commissioner on November 6th, namely, to make no

settlement or agreement to settle without the approval of Mr. Oliphant.

Rm

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

Effieient II 30

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE

TO

FROM

NOV 30 1937

Secretary Morgenthau
Herman Oliphant

The Maestri Settlement

I have discussed this matter today with Mr. Wenchel and we have
examined our calendars. This is what happened:
Wenchel began work in the Bureau September 22. Eight days later,

on September 30 at 10 a.m., he sat in a conference on the Maestri case

in Helvering's office with Helvering, Russell, Carter, Regis, May, Pierce
and Norman, one of his lawyers. Wenchel did not then know that the

Louisiana cases were the subject of special instructions because it had not

been possible for me to tell him about all the special situations and
unusual problems pending in his office and the Bureau.
At this conference in Helvering's office, Wenchel, remembering and
mentioning newspaper discussions of the Louisiana cases, asked if there was

anything unusual about this Maestri case and was told that what he had in

mind was the criminal cases, but that this was a case of settling civil
liability. He then agreed that, the evidence on the various issues being
what it was, the following proposal to settle was a good one:
Accept the taxpayer's claim as to the $80,000 from

the sale of stock. Cut the alleged gift of $150,000

in half. Assess $57,658.14 instead of $100,000 "nest-egg"

since $42,341.86 had been assessed and taxes paid thereon
in the year 1930.

However, Wenchel did not get the impression that this conference
was to conclude the matter because Helvering was insistent that no plan

31

-2of settlement would be acceptable unless it involved the payment of at

least the full tax. Wenchel says he did not know until this morning
that the taxpayer's lawyer had been informed that the settlement was

satisfactory.
At noon the same day, Wenchel came over on other matters and

told me that settlement of the Maestri case was under discussion in the
Bureau, and he gave me the substance of the conference he had attended.

I then told him of the special circumstances surrounding, and the special
instructions covering the Louisiana cases.
As soon as Wenchel told me that settlement of the Maestri case

was under discussion, and while he was still sitting with me, I called
Magill on the telephone and told him. Magill and I agreed that everybody
concerned in the Louisiana cases should be got together and the Department's
policy with reference to them made clear.

This conference was held in Magill's office on October 7, I
in the meantime having had to go to Indiana because of family illness.
Mr. Wenchel says the offer of compromise was `mentioned at this conference,
but my memory and Wenchel's memory are perfectly clear that no one in this

conference said or intimated that settlement of the Maestri case had been
agreed upon and his attorney notified.
I attach photostatic copy of a memorandum I dictated for my files
on September 7, 1937, and a copy of my memorandum of September 1 to

Morrison Shafroth.

Hannase Oliphants

Memorandum

Helvering called me today at ten minutes of four,
saying that there WLS to be & conference tomorrow in

Russell's office on the Maestri Case.
I recalled the decision of policy made when Justice

dismissed the criminal cases. I called Irey to be sure
he would be there, and I called Shafroth, asking him to
attend, and mentioned to Shafroth also the decision of
policy.

September 7, 1937

33

Exhibit III
(3rd)
September 1, 1957

MR. SHAFROTH:

In re: Abraham L. Shushan,
New Orleans, Louisiana,
and related cases.
Docket No. 85517.

I have approved your memorandum dated July 30, 1937,

outlining the procedure to be followed by the Appeals Divi-

sion of your office in the disposition of the cases listed

in your memorandum. . This approval is with the distinct under-

standing that all cases involved in this group will be disposed of solely on the basis of the merits of each issue in
controversy and that there will be no so-called "horse-trading"
of issues for the purpose of arriving at a settlement of any
of the cases. Any cases that cannot be settled on the terms

dictated by the attorneys having charge of the cases should
be submitted to the Board of Tax Appeals for decision.
(Signed) Herman Oliphant
Herman OlipHant
General Counsel

RHT-afh 8-51-37

Exthunt IV

34

MEMORANDUM

the 1,1937

In re: Robert S. Maestri,

New Orleans, Louisiana.

A thirty-day letter was issued in the above-mentioned case under
date of September 16, 1936 covering the years 1925 to 1929, inclusive,
disclosing deficiencies in tax of $144,334.65 and penalties of $72,167.33,

a total of tax and penalty of $216,501.98. In response to this letter,

under date of January 18, 1937 the taxpayer called in person accompanied
by Senator Allen J. Ellender and a discussion was had on that date with
the following representatives of the Bureau of Internal Revenue:

J. W. Carter, Head Special Adjustment Division
George H. Reges, Jr., Conferee, Special Adjustment Division
Paul May, Auditor, Special Adjustment Division
C. O. Pierce, Auditor, Special Adjustment Division

No protest had been filed at the date of this hearing and no evidence
was presented. It was agreed, however, at this coference that the taxpayer would be furnished with a net worth statement prepared by the Internal Revenue Agents which formed the basis for the deficiencies and penalties proposed in the thirty-day letter dated September 16, 1936.
A number of extensions of time for filing the protest were requested

by the taxpayer and on May 29, 1937 the taxpayer made a further request

in writing stating that due to illness a further request for an extension

was made in order to give him an opportunity to protest against the proposed assessment. On June 24, 1937 the taxpayer was advised that a final
extension of 15 days from the date of that letter was granted for the pur-

pose of filing a protest. Under date of July 16, 1937 the first protest
in writing was received in the Bureau. A conference was arranged for
August 19, 1937 to be held in the Internal Revenue building which was

later postponed to September 9, 1937. Under date of September 8, 1937
the taxpayer supplemented his protest and a conference was held on September
9, 1937. The taxpayer at this conference was represented by Mr. Harold G.
Wentworth, an attorney of New York, New York. The Bureau was represented

at this conference by the following:

Mr. Morrison Shafroth,, Chief Counsel, Bureau Internal Revenue
Mr. Chas. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner
A. D. Burford, Special Agent in Charge,
Mr. Harold Norman, Special Attorney, Penal Division, Chief Counsel's
office
Mr. J. W. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division

C. O. Pierce, Auditor, Special Adjustment Division
Paul May, Auditor, Special Adjustment Division

George H. Reges, Jr., Conferee, Special Adjustment Division

In re: Robert S. Maestri,

-2-

35

At the conclusion of this conference there was additional information
or evidence which Mr. Wentworth desired to submit for consideration of the
Bureau representatives. This information was received under date of September 25, 1937. Under date of September 30, 1937 a conference was held
in the Commissioner's office attended by Mr. Guy T. Helvering, Commissioner,
Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel for the Bureau of Internal Revenue, C. T. Russell,
Deputy Commissioner, Mr. Harold Norman, Special Attorney, Penal Division,
Chief Counsel's office, Mr. J. W. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division,
Mr. George H. Reges, Jr., Conferee, Special Adjustment Division, Paul May,
Auditor, Special Adjustment Division. At the above conference the following
items were discussed:

(1) The taxpayer's contention as to the $100,000.00 on hand in
1910,

(2) The taxpayer's contention as to the $150,000.00 gift in 1916,
(3) The taxpayer's contention as to the $80,000.00, proceeds from
the sale of stock in 1923,

(4) The taxpayer's contention as to the $103,413.57, proceeds

from partition sale in 1927,

(5) The taxpayer's contention as to the $1000.00 and $12,000.00
mortgage notes,

(6) The taxpayer's contention as to the $10,000.00 living expenses,
(7) The taxpayer's contention as the fraud penalties.
At this conference it was concluded that the taxpayer's contention on
the $100,000.00 on hand in 1910 should be denied; that the taxpayer's contention as to the $80,000.00 proceeds received from the sale of stock in
1923 should be conceded; that the taxpayer's contention as to the $103,413.57
proceeds from partition sale in 1927 should be conceded; that the taxpayer's

contention as to the $1000.00 and $12,000.00 mortgage notes should be conceded;

that the taxpayer's contention as to the fraud penalty should be denied and
the taxpayer's contention as to the $10,000.00 living expenses should be

denied. This left only one item still in dispute; that is, the taxpayer's

contention as to the $150,000.00 gift in 1916. On this item it was the opinion

of the Commissioner and Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel, that the full amount of
this gift should not be conceded but it was their conclusion, based on the
evidence in the case, that if the taxpayer would concede one-half of

$75,000.00 of this item that that would be a fair settlement.

Under date of October 4, 1937 a hearing was held in the Internal Revenue
Building, the taxpayer being represented by Mr. Harold G. Wentworth, attorney

New York, New York, and the Bureau was represented by:
Chas. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner,

J. W. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division
Paul May, auditor, Special Adjustment Division
George H. Reges, Jr., conferee, Special Adjustment Division.
At this conference Mr. Wentworth was advised as to the Bureau's position
on the several items involved in this case and at 2:30 P.M. on the same date
Mr. Wentworth returned to the office and proposed that his client's case be
closed by the disallowance of only one-fourth of the $150,000.00 gift and by
adding $5000.00 as living expenses for the years 1925 to 1928, inclusive and
$10,000.00 for the year 1929. Mr. Wentworth was advised that his proposel
relative to the reduction in living expenses would be recommended but that his
proposal to tax only 25% of the $150,000.00 item would not be recommended.

3S

In re: Robert S. Maestri.

He finally agreed that he would recommend to his client a settlement of his
case by the disallowance of 50% of the $150,000.00 item or $75,000.00. Mr.
Wentworth was informed that the aforementioned basis of settlement would be
presented to the Commissioner for his approval or disapproval, and that he

should call Mr. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division, the next day to

ascertain the Commissioner's decision.

On October 5, 1937 Mr. Russell conferred with the Commissioner and

Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel, Bureau of Internal Revenue. Mr. Russell advised Mr. J. W. Carter on the evening of October 5 that the Commissioner had
approved the settlement basis and that Mr. Wenchel, Chief Counsel, had also
approved the settlement. On October 6, 1937 Mr. Wentworth called Mr. J. W.

Carter on long distance telephone from New York to ascertain the Commissioner's

decision and he was advised by Mr. Carter that the proposed basis of settle-

ment had been approved by the Commissioner.

out wash. Oct 5th 4. 4S. P.M.

Helveing A letter was prepared addressed to Mr. Wentworth covering the years
1925 to 1929 inclusive, enclosing an agreement Form 870 for these years

and stipulation covering the case for the years 1931 , 1932 and 1933,
which were before the Board pending on appeal. This letter had reached
the Acting Commissioner's office for signature when a telephone message was
received in the Acting Commissioner's office from Mr. Wenchel calling from
the Treasury seying "Not to take any action on the Maestri case until he
sees you."

On October 7, 1937 a conference was held in the office of the Under

Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Magill. The following individuals were

present at that conference:

Mr. Roswell Magill, Under Secretary of the Treasury,

Mr. Herman Oliphant, General Counsel, Treasury Department
Mr. John P. Wenchel, Chief Counsel Bureau Internal Revenue

Mr. Elmer L. Irey, Chief, Intelligence Unit

Mr. Chas. T. Russell, Deputy Commissioner

Mr. A. D. Burford, Special Agent in Charge
Mr. J. W. Carter, Head, Special Adjustment Division
Mr. George H. Reges, Jr., conferee, Special Adjustment Division
The aforementioned basis of settlement was rejected and a 90-day letter
covering the years 1925 to 1929, inclusive, was issued under date of
October 8, 1937.

Chas. I. Research

37

In re: Robert S. Maestri.

The returns for the years 1925 to 1929, inclusive, have been
destroyed except for the year 1929. The statute of limitations has

expired for all years and all of the tax will be lost unless the

Government is successful in establishing fraud. The income is computed on the basis of net worth and the agents have been unable to
trace any of the sources of unreported income.

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue

Mr. Ruenell: :

Mr. Wenchel called you from

the Treasury just after you left

for lunch.

He says not take any action
on the Kaestri case until he sees
you.
JMG

ExhibitVV
December 1, 1937.
10:03 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Elmer L.

39

I just want to tell you, on the loud speaker, see.
This
conference
is going on. Mr. Helvering and
the others
are here.

Irey:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

The question has come up, whether you or Burford,
Burford having sat in on this conference when
they considered this Maester case. I mean would

you or Burford sign this report recommending that
we accept the hundred and thirty four thousand?
I:

You say, would we sign such a report?

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

I:

Why, I haven't gone into the figures enough to
know about that, Mr. Secretary. I mean it's been
so long since I went through the case I don't
remember
the tax setup, nor what the explanation
18.

H.M.Jr:

Well, what about Burford?

I:

Well, Burford, of course, 18 down in Dallas, Texas.
I can't say for him, but I can communicate with him,
today, and find out. And I also can go into the
case myself today and find out how I feel about it.

H.M.Jr:

Well, why wasn't it ever brought to your attention
before they recommended it to be accepted?

I:

I:

Well, I am sure I don't know that, Mr. Secretary,
but, when we - the usual procedure in these tax
cases is when the criminal phase is out, it's not
then referred to us for any further attention.
It's handled by the tax branches of the Bureau.
Well, Burford sat in on it.
Yes, Burford sat in over at Mr. Magill's office

H.M.Jr:

No, he sat in on it on September 9th, when they

I:

Yes. Well, I didn't know about that - I didn't

H.M.Jr:

on it, and I also sat in at that time, on it.

had the hearings.

remember about it.

-2 -

40

H.M.Jr:

Well, now just a minute, let me ask Mr. Helvering.
(aside)
Mr. Helvering states that Mr. Burford
told him that this was a good settlement, and based
on that Mr. Helvering recommended the thing be
settled.

I:

Well, of course, that's perfectly all right, then.
I didn't have any discussion with Burford as to
the tax liability 80 I don't -

H.M.Jr:

Well, I'm not - I'm not going to check up on
Mr. Helvering's way. I'11 take Mr. Helvering Surely. There isn't any doubt but what Burford
told him that.

I:

H.M.Jr:

Yes, well I'm not going to check up on Mr. Helvering.

I:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

But it's not customary that you sign these things.

I:

No, sir. It's not.

H.M.Jr:

Well, I'm not going to check up on Mr. Helvering.

I:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Thanks.

I:

All right, sir.

H.M.Jr:

I may - all right, thank you very much.

I:

All right.

41

Exhibit VII
ITIAJ
GHR-21235

Mr. Harold G. Wentworth,
39 Broadway,

New York, New York,

In re: Robert S. Maestri,

New Orleans, Louisiana.

(1925 to 1933, inclusive)
Sir:

Reference is made to the conference hold in the aforementioned

case before this office under date of October 4, 1937.
In accordance with agreement reached with you on behalf of the

taxpayer as a result of that hearing, there is enclosed a qualified

agreement form 870M covering the years 1925 to 1929, inclusive. There
are also enclosed stipulations covering the agreed to deficiency for
the years 1931, 1952 and 1933.

In order that the case of your client for the years covered by
said agreement and stipulations may be closed promptly, it is

requested that said agreement form and stipulations be promptly signed
and returned to the Special Adjustment Division within fifteen days from

the date of this letter.

It appears that you have not filed your notice of appearance with
the United States Board of Tax Appeals. If you have not already done
so, it is suggested that you comply with the Board's rule in this
respect in order that the stipulations, if signed by you, may be
filed promptly.
Respectfully,

Acting Commissioner.
Enclosures:
Form 87GM

Stipulations.

GHR/EMO

42
December 1, 1937
To:

The Secretary

From:

Mr. Magill

Congressman Vinson called me last night at home and asked to
come and see me about policy questions that were troubling him. He

and Mr. Doughton arrived together about eight o'clock and stayed until
ten. They told me that Congressman Beiter of Buffalo filed a petition

in the House yesterday afternoon to discharge the Ways and Means

Committee from further consideration of a bill to repeal the undistributed profits tax. Messrs. Doughton and Vinson expect that
Republicans will all sign such a petition; that 50 or 60 Democrats
opposed to the President will do so; and, in addition, some other
Democrats who think they will gain prestige in their own district
in advocating repeal of this tax. Mr. Vinson does not think that
the petition will be signed by the necessary half of the membership
but he also feels that it is an important symptom of dangerous unrest
on this subject in the House. He would like to make a speech to the
House outlining the plans of the subcommittee on the undistributed
profits tax but he cannot do so until (1) the subcommittee agrees
finally upon a program, the present plan having been adopted tenta-

tively; and (2) the President indicates his approval of the program.
Mr. Doughton reported that the President had told him that the rates
of the Vinson plan were too low and suggested an alternative plan
which involves keeping the present undistributed profits tax for corporations which do not distribute as much as 75 percent of their
incomes.

Mr. Doughton expressed his judgment that the present undistributed
profits tax would be repealed by the House if it had a chance to vote
on it and he thought further that the House would not accept the
present form of tax, even if the rates were changed. He said the
President's plan outlined to him on Saturday was to impose a 20 percent

flat tax on corporations with an exemption of 25 percent of their
earnings from any undistributed profits tax. Thus, if a company distributed 75 percent or more of its earnings, it would pay a 20 percent
tax on its net income. Corporations would also be given credits for

amounts used for debt retirement or improvements and for reserves ear-

marked as such. If after all these credits the corporation still had
undistributed net income, it would be subjected to tax at the rates

now in the law. Mr. Vinson said he thought the President's plan was
impractical and Mr. Doughton said that in his opinion the House would
not accept it. Mr. Vinson further believes that Senator Harrison's
speech is an indication that the Senate will repeal the undistributed
profits tax or any substitute therefor, such as the present Vinson plan.
We all agreed that the next step was for the draftsmen to prepare
legislation embodying the Vinson plan, plus a broadening of the provisions applicable to corporations which unreasonably withhold earnings
from their stockholders. As soon as the draftsmen and the committee can

43

-2-

put

iron out the various questions which will arise in the course of reducing the general plans to specific form Messrs. Vinson and Doughton
would like to have the President advised, secure his approval, and
then proceed to announce what has been decided to the House, in order

to forestall hasty action looking toward repeal of the undistributed

profits tax entirely.

Both men felt that Mr. Vinson's proposed speech to the House
should be made before the end of the week. In my opinion it will be
extremely hard for the draftsmen to complete their work and for the

President's approval to be secured in any such time. I think what

Messrs. Doughton and Vinson really want, although they did not say so

directly, is for you and me to advise the President that the Vinson
plan is the best that he can hope for and that insistence upon higher
rates is apt to bring about the repeal of the undistributed profits
tax entirely without any substitute embodying the principle.

Subject to your further suggestions, I am going to tell Messrs.
Doughton and Vinson that so far as I can see the essential next step
is for the draftemen to work out the details of the Vinson plan, plus
a satisfactory enlargement of the present provisions for taxing cor-

porations which accumulate unreasonable surpluses. Until their work
is pretty well completed I do not see what we could convey to the
President beyond what he apparently knows already.
Run

44

December 1, 1937
To:

The Secretary

From:

Mr. Magill

AI

Following my conversation with you this noon I called Congressman Doughton and told him that it would be impossible for you to see
Mr. Vinson and himself this afternoon since your time was completely

occupied with your December financing. I said further that I understood from the draftsmen that they had run into a good many snags

in working out the Vinson plan for taxing corporate income. Hence,
I thought Mesers. Doughton and Vinson ought to talk to the draftsmen
and settle some of the policy questions involved before making up their
own minds as to the dourse of action the committee should follow.
Mr. Doughton said he would call Mr. Vinson at once and would try to
talk to the draftsmen, Messrs Beaman and Parker, later this afternoon.
Mr. Doughton asked me to see him before the committee meeting tomorrow
morning.

Mr. Doughton said he would like to talk to you tomorrow afternoon but I will do my best to take care of his doubts and fears
tomorrow morning.

I am perfectly clear that you and I should send no message to

the President at this time on the subject of the undistributed profits

tax.

Rm

45

Copy for the Secretary
December 1, 1937

To:

Mr. Graves

From:

Mr. Magill
The Commissioner and I have often discussed the various steps

which might be taken in order to insure greater accuracy in the deficiency letters sent out by his office. Taxpayers frequently complain that after they have failed to reach an agreement with the
Bureau upon the amount of income tax, the Bureau determines a de-

ficiency largely in excess of the amount which is due, even under

the Bureau's own theories. Moreover, you have doubtless observed
that the percentage of deficiencies as determined by the Commissioner
which is finally approved by the Board runs comparatively low. We

would all like to see the machinery for the determination of deficiencies perfected to the point that the deficiency letter sent to

the taxpayer would represent an accurate statement of what the Bureau
honestly believes the taxpayer to owe.
There may be some instances in which duplicate determinations
are necessary to protect the Government as, for example, in cases

in which the deficiency is asserted against a transferee of the taxpayer as well as against the taxpayer himself. It would seem,
however, that these situations should be exceptional.

In the course of the discussion of the case of Robert S. Maestri
this morning the Secretary and the Commissioner both requested me to

ask you to assign one of your staff to investigate this entire question and recommend any changes in procedure or personnel which may

be necessary to insure increased accuracy in the determination of
deficiencies. In the Maestri case A contested item of $100,000 was,
as I understand it, asserted to be income for the period 1925-29 and
also for the year 1931, although a tax had already been paid on about

$42,000 of this amount as income for 1930. The procedure which was
pursued as to this item tended to cast a serious doubt upon the
accuracy of the whole determination and thus to prejudice the effective
presentation of our case before the Board. There may have been some
extenuating circumstances about which I am not informed but in any
event it is certainly essential that we should do everything we can
to increase the accuracy of our determinations. The prima facie presumption of accuracy which the Commissioner's determinations enjoy
before the Board becomes useless in practice when the Board realizes
that we do not believe in the accuracy of our determinations ourselves.

4S

MEETING WITH EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF
FEDERAL RESERVE OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE

Present:

December 1, 1937
11:00 a.m.

Mr. Taylor
Mr. Bell
Mr. Seltzer

Mr. Lochhead

Mr. Harris

Mr. Eccles
Mr. Burgess

Mr. Sinclair
Mr. Williams

Mr. Goldenweiser

Mr. Piser

Mr. McKee

Mr. Harrison
Mr. Ransom

H.M.Jr:

All right, Bell, let's have the picture.

Bell:

This program contemplates the continuation of the

present bill program of 50 million dollars a week
for December 8 and December 15, maturing in March,
just refunding the usual weekly maturities; and
then, beginning the 22d, in all probability issuing
90-day bills; and on December 15 having a note issue
of 450 million dollars, just the amount of the
maturity of the special Treasury bills at that time.
That would give us balances going into December of
about 605 million, going out of December of 914
million. And then in January we'd probably issue a
hundred million dollars of new bills for cash and
two hundred million dollars in February for cash,

Burgess:

Of June.

Bell:

Both maturing in June.

leaving us a balance going

out of January of 925 million and going out of February
of 995 million. Then in March there wouldn't be, so
far as we can see, any financing other than the
refunding of the maturing notes of 455 million and
paying off out of the tax receipts of the 400 million
special Treasury bills maturing at that time.

The December note issue also contemplates picking up
the 277 million Treasury notes maturing on February 1.

47
-2-

Don't see much use of extending it beyond March.
H.M.Jr:

Harrison:

Anybody want to ask Mr. Bell any questions?
450 of Treasury notes?

Bell:

450 million dollars of Treasury notes.

Eccles:

And the 270.

Bell:

Bell:

And that would be used to pay off the 450 million
dollars of Treasury bills maturing, and at that
time we would pick up the 277 million Treasury
notes maturing on February 1, offering an exchange
privilege for the new notes issued on December 15.
Well, what that would amount to, if the exchange
was fully exercised - would mean seven hundred and
some odd million of notes, wouldn't it?
727 million in a sense refunded.

Eccles:

Yes, be no new money taken out of the market.

Bell:

That's right.

Eccles:

Eccles:

And you'd start issuing June bills in January - a
hundred million for January and two for February.
Yes, about the middle of January, I should say.
That would be six issues from the 15th of January
to the end of February.
And then on the 9-month bills you'd ....

Taylor:

90-day.

Eccles:

90-day, commencing on the
22d of December.

Eccles:

Bell:

Bell:
Eccles:

22d of December. That would start doubling up

the 90-days

Bell:

March 23.

48

-3-

Eccles:

Bell:

Start doubling up, wouldn't it - I mean 300
million then for a period - no - no, you'd be
through issuing the June bills
That's right.

Eccles:

before that time, so it would be just 200
million

Bell:

No, just a hundred million a

Burgess:

Is 300 million enough for the June tax date?

Bell:
Burgess:

I think so, yes.
You think that will take care of the money market.

Bell:

That's right.

Burgess:

You've got that much leeway.

Eccles:

Does this contemplate any payment for gold or any

Bell:

You could of course put out another hundred million
there if you need the money.

receipts from gold exports? Is it taken account
of in the-Treasury figures?
It contemplates an expenditure of 50 million dollars
beginning in February for gold, 60 million dollars in

March.

Eccles:

Anything in January?

Bell:

Nothing. Prior to that it's a wash.

Eccles:

Just washes out.

H.M.Jr:

Anybody want to ask Mr. Bell anything else? Before
I call on Mr. Burgess - I haven't had a chance to

read that letter of yours this morning; I was going
to ask you if you'd read it, if you don't mind, out
loud.

Burgess:

Which one is that?

H.M.Jr:

Well, the one you gave me, or else a summary.

49

-4-

Before I get on that - I mean as to how the market

feels and how you feel - I'd like to ask if

between now and the 15th of March the Federal
Reserve System has anything in mind which will
affect the Treasury financing one way or the
other.
Pecles:

Between now and what, did you say?

H.M.Jr:

15th of March. I mean whether the Federal Reserve
System proposes anything one way or the other which
would affect the Treasury bond market - I mean
Treasury - when I say bonds I mean Treasury market
for Treasury issues.

Eccles:

Well, of course, that's quite a long way off. All

you
want to know is, is there anything at the moment
that we can

H.M.Jr:

Eccles:

Well, I mean we're taking - we're being very frank
with you people. I mean we've got to make commitments from now until the 15th of March and I'd like
to know whether the System or the Board - anything
that they're contemplating which will affect the
Treasury issues. That's a fair question.
Well, it was my - I know of nothing that would that would certainly affect them adversely in any
way.

H.M.Jr:

Well, is the System - what are they contemplating
doing after this issue is out of the way? I mean
are you going to sell Governments, are you going
to buy Governments, are you going to do anything
about reserve requirements, are you going to do
anything about the stock exchange?

Eccles:
McKee:

I w ish 1 knew, but when you've got 12 men to deal

with I can't predict what they'11 do.

Mr. Secretary, do you have in mind some ma jor
operation?

H.M.Jr:

Nothing - I'm not trying to spar, not trying to be
smart. You people come over at our invitation and
we tell you everything that we've got in mind that

50

-5-

will affect you; then we work together. And I
think it is only fair that I ask the same thing.
Have you people got anything in mind which will
affect us? I mean I'm not
McKee:

H.M.Jr:

I understand. But what I meant in my question to
you was whether or not you're speaking of a buying
program that may be necessary to ease the situation
or whether you're thinking of some ma jor operation.
I don't know; I'm just asking, is there anything that
you people are thinking about which we ought to know
to help us in making up our mind? I mean because,
after all, while we could sell this issue, it is my
responsibility to see that the thing stays sold. See
what I mean? I just don't want to put out something
and have it go sour. You people might have something
in mind - you've been meeting for a couple days - which
would affect our - the United States Government issues
one way or the other, and I'm just asking if you people
have got anything that you are considering.

Harrison:

I think that's a fair question.

H.M.Jr:

I think it's a perfectly fair question. I think it's

Eccles:

a perfectly fair question.

Well, we've been discussing every aspect of the
problem, but there's been no decision made whatever,
except that we are everyone agreed that nothing should
be done that would in any way diminish the ease of
the money market, either now or an indefinite time

in the future.

Now, whether we should continue to operate in the
market, increasing reserves through open market
operations, is a matter that we haven't been able
to make a decision on yet.
What may be done with reference to reserves is
another matter that has been discussed, and that

is a matter that it is up to the Board to act on
definitely. But we've been discussing the whole

thing with members of the Committee, and there has
been no decision made on that.

But I think I express the feeling of the whole Committee

51

-6-

and the Board when I say that there is certainly
nothing that I am sure would be done that would
be adverse to the Treasury's financial program,
because we appreciate the need of cooperation and
the fact that we have some responsibility in connection with this, especially where we advise with
you regarding it. And nothing would be done, certainly, without consultation with you.
I don't know - does that
H.M.Jr:

Well, partly - I mean partly.

Eccles:

If somebody else here can answer it more fully,

McKee:

In adding to what Marriner said, when you speak
of something adverse to the Treasury position, I
think that could be taken in two ways. I don't think
you want to see and I don't think we want to see this

I'll be glad to have them do it.

Government bond market go too high again, for then

H.M.Jr:

McKee:

it's going to come back to haunt us at a later date.
Would you consider that adverse to your interests?
Well, I'd say this. If you're going to contemplate
doing something to put the Government bond market
down, I'd certainly want a chance to
Oh, I grant you that would be adverse. But do you
still think on the other side it might not be
considered such also?

H.M.Jr:

Well, I'd like to know how you're going to - what
you're going to do. What I'm trying to find out -

I haven't got it yet; if you don't want to tell me,
it's all right with me.

Eccles:

I wish I could.

H.M.Jr:

It puts me in the position - I'm going to ask

questions; I don't like to do it. I'll be specific.
What are you going to do about buying or selling
Governments after this financing? That's a direct
question.

Eccles:

We don't know. We haven't decided. We discussed the
thing all yesterday afternoon and we're going back

52

-7-

again today. There's been no decision made. We

can let you know, I think, by the end of this

afternoon.
H.M.Jr:

Can you let me know in time enough so we can talk

about it if we don't think that - if we don't agree

with you?
McKee:

Well, it's only fair to tell the Secretary that the
Open Market Committee has recessed, it hasn't
adjourned.

H.M.Jr:

But I still say, can the Treasury have a chance to
talk about it? It won't be decided in the afternoon
and then we're told in the afternoon you're going to
do it that afternoon?

Harrison:

I think the Chairman has covered it as fairly as he
can in view of the situation as it stands now.

I think I can speak for myself personally without
violating any confidences at all. I had thought the

position of excess reserves and the whole banking
situation had reached a point where there was no
longer any need for the Federal Reserve System to
add to excess reserves by continued open market

purchases. I think that most of the things that

need to be done by way of recovery are probably in
the non-monetary field rather than the monetary, and
that the less we do by way of picayune efforts here

and there in the monetary field, the more we will
do to restore confidence and make it possible for a
recovery to take place.

On the other hand, I think it is fair to say that

some of the others with whom I have talked in our
group feel that perhaps, having bought Governments
for three weeks, we should continue to buy some more
before Christmas. I don't see how that would do any

good except psychologically. And I feel a little
what I think was implied in John McKee's question that so far as it has any effect at all, it may be
further to stimulate the rise in Government secur-

ities and widen that spread between corporate and
Government bonds, which is growing now. And that's
what I'm fearful of, as much as anything.

E3

-8-

Eccles:

I have felt that we should continue - tell you what
my feeling is - to operate in the open market at
least in a modest way, to be active in the shortterm market; that it would not materially affect
the long-term bonds; that they are still slightly
lower than they were in August; that the discon-

tinuance might have an adverse psychological effect.

There is in the case of an open market operation it gives reserves to the money market banks; it does
not give reserves to the country banks. The country
banks are selling, and the excess reserves in the
money market banks, of course, create a ready
market for the sale of the longer bonds that the
country banks are selling because of two reasons:

First, the much lower price of agricultural products
means less money going into them. And the Government
reduction in relief and other expenditures will mean
less money going in from that source in the country
areas, which means that their deposits and hence their
reserves are likely to fall. Certainly they are not
rising; they are falling some now. That might make it
necessary to consider a reduction of reserve requirements in country banks only, so as to create a
uniform situation of excess reserves throughout the
country. An open market operation readily gives
excess reserves to the money market, but with the
situation that I have just outlined it does not give
the excess reserves to particularly the country banks.
And it has seemed to me necessary to have an adequate

amount - in fact, we are much safer to have too much

than too little of excess reserves at a deflationary

stage such as you have now.

Now, as to the decision that the Committee may make,
H.M. Jr:

Eccles:

as to the decision that the Board may make, it is
entirely a question that
Well, when will they make this decision?
Well, so far as the Committee is concerned, on the
one question of open market policy, certainly I think
we've got to make it this afternoon, and I think it
will - I think the matter will be decided one way or
the other as to open market, whether we will continue
after the 15th or not continue.

54

-9-

Whether - with reference to the other matter,
that is a matter that I don't think there is any
immediate hurry about. It is a matter that the
Board itself is responsible for and will give
consideration to and study to in the immediate
future.
H.M.Jr:

You mean on the reserves?

Eccles:

Yes, in reference to that one aspect of it.
But on the open market - I mean we can't decide what's the use of Burgess telling me to sell this
or that or the other thing? The after-market is
the most important thing, because we're in business
here to stay and we're much more interested - I am in the after-market and if the thing stays sold.
Until we know here what you fellows are going to do,

H.M.Jr:

there isn't much use my deciding whether I'm going
to sell a bill, a note, or a bond. I mean that's
why I'm pressing so.

Eccles:

Yes. Well, we can tell you this afternoon.

H.M.Jr:

Fair enough. I mean the reason - I've got a very
practical reason. I mean we offer some kind of
merchandise on Monday. Well, we'll sell it. But

what's going to happen two weeks from Monday and
three weeks from Monday and four weeks from Monday?

And Burgess is down there and it's his job to keep
the market sweet for both of us.
Harrison:

Is there any point, Mr. Secretary, from the point
of view of the Treasury - put it this way: is there
anything in the situation that would make it advan-

tageous to you to have us buy some Government securities

beginning December 15?
H.M.Jr:

From the Treasury standpoint?

Harrison:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

No, absolutely no.

Golden.:

Mr. Secretary, you don't think that it will have
an adverse influence, it will be in any way out of
line with Treasury policy, if the System should buy,

55
-10-

say, ten millions a week for two or three more

weeks?

H.M.Jr:

As far as the Treasury is concerned, it wouldn't
affect us one way or the other.

Harrison:

Drive bonds higher.

H.M.Jr:

Pardon me?

Harrison:

It would tend to drive your bonds higher.
That's what I'd just like to know - whether your
advisers and yourself, Mr. Secretary, have come to
a place in this Government bond market - whether
our absorbing more of the offerings is now not going
to be more pronounced in the market price; our continuous buying - whether we haven't absorbed the
slack in the market, so that any action from now on
is going to be very quickly felt in the market price.
You mean it will or will not?

McKee:

H.M.Jr:
McKee:

H.M.Jr:

Eccles:

It will. I just wondered what you gentlemen feel

about it marketwise.

Well, I'm not - after I've seen some of these people
that Burgess has arranged for me, I'd know more
about it. But I've only seen one crowd this morning
and I'll know more about it Friday night. But I'm
not - that's on an hourly basis - I'm not close
enough to that; I don't know. I mean unless a fellow
sits there with a half dozen telephones and
I take it from what you said, then, it would make
no difference whether we - so far as the Treasury
is concerned, whether we continue an open market

operation in the short-term bonds, notes, and bills,
or whether we don't.
H.M.Jr:
Eccles:

H.M.Jr:

No, I didn't - no, I - because
I think that's the impression that
No, it makes a difference in this way. If we know
you're going to buy, it would make a difference
certainly that Burgess and the rest of us - how we

56

-11-

Burgess:

Sinclair:

price the thing, huh?
That's right.

Sure, affects the price right away - present state

of the market.

H.M.Jr:

What?

Sinclair:

It affects the price right away in the present state

H.M.Jr:

Eccles:

Surely. I mean if you people say, "Well here, in
confidence, we're going to buy...." - did I hear
you say bills, notes, and bonds?
Well, short bonds; bonds with less than five-year

H.M.Jr:

Well, anyway, you people say you're going to buy.

Burgess:

Eccles:
H.M.Jr:

Harrison:
H.M.Jr:
Eccles:

of the market.

maturities, see?

I mean I think that Burgess and the rest of us would
sit here and price it differently than if you said
you weren't going to do any, or said "Well, we want
to sell some." That's the thing. Wouldn't it make
a difference in your (Burgess) mind?
Might very well make a difference.
You mean if we were going to sell.
No matter what you do. You've got a choice of three
things: do nothing, buy some, or sell some.
Another thing: buy and sell.
What you're going to do - it makes a difference how
we're going to price this thing.
Do I get it that so far as you're concerned all you
want is to know so that you can price it - as to
whether we do one thing or the other? You have no
suggestions to make or no

H.M.Jr:

Well, I don't - I don't know the situation. I don't

know how your reserves look. I don't know. I mean
if I knew what reserves were, sure, I'd have an

57

-12-

Taylor:

Eccles:

Taylor:
Eccles:

opinion. But I don't know what facts your
technical staff has laid before you, so I don't
know how you're going to arrive at a decision.
We certainly have the impression that you are
not contemplating selling any of your total
portfolio; you may do some switching and you may
stop buying, but if you - I mean I just don't get
any conversation at all that indicates any
No, there is no thought of selling.
You can almost eliminate the third possibility.
That's right.

Harrison:

Of course, we told the country in September we
probably would sell in January.

Eccles:

Permit bills to run off.

Taylor:

Well, you have some changed conditions.

Eccles:

That's right. We have recognized that, and we feel
that there is nobody contemplating, so far as I
know in fact, any idea of selling.
Switching, sure, but not
The whole question is whether to continue to buy a
modest amount so as to be in the market, because of,
first, psychological influences as much as actual, psychological even more. The fact that we did buy
38, 40 million for a period of three weeks - and then
to discontinue altogether doesn't seem to me to be
warranted at this time. And another 50, 75 million
over the period of the next month would certainly
not - true, it would give the money market - might
say it's got 400 million of excess reserves now in
New York; might give it 500 million excess reserves.
Well, after all, 500 million - it doesn't make much
difference whether it's five or four, and they're
both large excess eserves and they both make for
easy money. You have easy money with 400 million
and you'd possibly not have much easier with five.
But the psychology of doing this, it seems to me,

Taylor:
Eccles:

58

-13-

might be - it's open to argument, I'll admit,
but it seems to me it might be favorable, desirable.
Harrison:

Wouldn't contemplate it after Christmas, would you,
when the money comes back?

Eccles:

I'd want to wait until the end of the year.

Harrison:

Between Christmas and New Years you get the biggest
return
flow.

Eccles:

Well, the question is - naturally, if it begins to

Burgess:

build up from that source, then that answers it.
Certainly up until that time, immediately after - a
couple weeks up until Christmas, there would seem
to me to be every reason for it, and justification

for it.

Harrison:

Well, the fact that the Secretary is interested
in whether we're going to buy or not because it
would influence his pricing of his issue shows
that he feels it would certainly have some effect

upon the prices of Government securities. Even
our last purchases beginning in November - early
in November, had a fairly appreciable effect, I
think, upon the price of Government securities.
It was more than a coincidence that they went up
as they did in those middle weeks of November.
And you've got to recognize that the Treasury is
not increasing its debt, not putting out more bonds
that we can absorb. What we are doing - we are

acting, as somebody said a moment ago, on a more
sensitive market than when you were increasing

H.M.Jr:

your debt, and I am fearful that continued operations of the System might concern you not in
adversely depressing your bonds, but in artificially
stimulating them to a point where you would have a
problem of control. That's my case.
Well, another thing. If the Federal Reserve Board
contemplated within a reasonable time - that is,
some time between now and the end of the year - to
change reserve requirements on the country banks,

that would have an effect on the price, and it also

59

-14-

would influence me as to whether we should sell a

note or a bond, because - I think I'm right, am I
not, Burgess, that - let's say they lowered reserve
requirements for the country banks; they might buy
more bonds.
Burgess:

They would undoubtedly.

Eccles:

It doesn't amount to much. The country banks would
not buy bonds. They might hold some of the bonds

H.M.Jr:

they have been selling. I think it would be bad for
them to buy more bonds. They've got now too large a
proportion of long bonds, and if there should be a
substantial depreciation at some time, it could affect
them very adversely. They have practically no bills
or notes; their holdings are largely bonds now, and
they are rather large. It would tend to stop a sale
of bonds that they hold in order to maintain an
excess reserve picture. The amount involved in that
case would not be great. If the entire increase of
last March and May was reversed, it would only amount
to 150 million.
Well, it only takes about a million dollars in a
day

Burgess:

They could buy a billion dollars worth of bonds

on that, though, if they used it fully, couldn't
they?

Eccles:

No, the excess reserves don't pyramid just within
country banks.

Burgess:

No, but throughout the System.

H.M.Jr:

Is this something you might do between now and the
end of the year?

Eccles:

Well, I - it is my personal opinion that it is a
matter that we should possibly delay until after
the first of the year. But we'll get a little more
information on the development of the picture. The
excess reserves of the country banks have not
diminished; they have stayed about 300 million.
+hey are - by percentage they are still large.

60

-15-

Viner:

Are they well-distributed?

Eccles:

Pretty well, yes. The difficulty is that their

desire to maintain large reserves tends to cause them
to sell bonds in order to maintain a very excessive
reserve picture. That has been a good thing for the
market, in a way, because, with the high excess
reserves in the cities I imagine bonds would have
gone up very much higher and faster, which might
have been bad, if there hadn't been that amount of
some selling by them to the market. That has tended,
I t h n k , to stabilize the bond market, because one
group was buying and another was selling.

Harrison:

Mr. Secretary, may I ask a question which I hope you
will frankly say you don't want to answer; - but are
there any funds in the Treasury which are apt to
influence the market in any way between now and the

Bell:

first of the year?
I don't think so.

H.M.Jr:

What? Do you know of any?

Bell:

Investment funds, you mean?

Harrison:

Yes.

Bell:

No.

Burgess:

Or disinvestment. We're all through this sale of

Bell:

There is a 25 million dollar sale of Home Loan Bank
debentures which comes in today, probably less than

bonds, are we?

12 million of which will be invested, but not until
after this financing is over.

Burgess:

But you're not going to sell any more bonds from

Bell:

There isn't anything else in there.
The F.D.I.C. And these funds have got the cash.
Well, they can get cash from special obligations
of one kind or another. I don't think that there

Eccles:

Taylor:

your accounts probably.

61

-16-

is really much possibility of anything that you

would consider a movement one way or the other
in any amount.

Bell:

That isn't big.

Taylor:

Pardon?

Bell:

That isn't big.
No. I mean our available balances in Postal and
F.D.I.C. they want to keep uninvested at the present
time, and they are not very large.
There is no need for them to sell to get further

Taylor:

balances, is what I'm asking.

Bell:

As a matter of fact, the F.D.I.C. will have
assessments coming in in January.

H.M.Jr:

Does that answer your question?

Taylor:

But all those funds recently have been invested
right along, as they have gone along. We haven't

held back any.
McKee:

Mr. Secretary, maybe I'm too conscious of this

market situation because I feel that if the market
goes much higher, you're going to bring out a
lot of selling; if we can keep it from going too
high, that these bonds are going to remain where
they are now located. Now, I may be entirely wet
on that, but I think that we all should be interested
to see that we don't disturb the Government bond
market too much. And I think we're running a risk
by letting the prices go too high. Now, maybe I'm
alone in that thought, but I think there is a risk
there that you are running, and we are all assuming
a responsibility if and when the thing gets out of
hand. And by continuing buying - while I am in
sympathy with easing credit at a time like this, it
is a question of whether you can do much of it
through a bond-buying program, whether you can do

enough to get the effect you need. I'm speaking
out in the open, and anybody else who has any other

idea - it's all right.

62

-17-

H.M.Jr:

McKee:

H.M.Jr:

Eccles:
H.M.Jr:

Eccles:

I don't think there's any question that when you
fellows keep increasing your portfolio it has an
effect right straight through the whole series of
Governments. You may be buying bills, and if you
buy ten million dollars, increase your portfolio
by ten million dollars, it has an effect on the
long-term Governments as well as the intermediate
market and everything else. I think all you've got
to do is just look at the prices.
The one question Mr. Harrison asked is, if and when I know you've been investing right along - your trust
funds - and if and when you had some liquidation in
the somewhat reasonable future, that you could probably
offset a rise in bond prices.
Now, we're not worried - I'm not personally worried
about the cheapness of the short-term paper, but I
am worried about the bond prices, because that's
the thing that is going to affect the majority.
Well - I mean I'm not sure - I mean the last week
that you people did that I thought it would have
an effect - was too close to our financing, and if
the decision had been mine, I wouldn't have done
it, but you people did it and that's that.
It didn't have any appreciable effect, though.
The only thing that you people - I don't know whether
you know about it or not - is that during the - oh,
I don't know the exact period, but sometime during
the last 30 days we have sold ten million dollars
worth of 2-7/8s out of the Stabilization Fund, and
we have held them a long time and I wanted to get
that fund in such shape that if there was another
sharp break we'd be in a position to buy, because
our Postal Savings and F.D.I.C. are not in a position
to buy. So we have sold ten million of that, so
we are in a position - and if there is another sharp
break and they should go below par again, why, we
are in a position to buy them back.
Speaking to what Mr. McKee expressed, whether we

buy bills in the market to give reserves to the
market, whether reserves are given to the market in
most any way, it will tend to have the effect of

63

-18-

increasing bond prices. And we think of Government

bonds, but look at all other high-grade paper.
And the easy - the recession in business, with the
absence of investment demand, has tended to put
up prices on all of your prime - not only Government
bonds, but on other - on your Triple A securities
and your prime paper generally.
Harrison:

They haven't gone up with Governments, have they?

Eccles:

Well, they've gone up, George. They have - now, not
like the Government - not like Government bills and
Government notes, but they have gone up. Now, it's

just a question of - true, you could sell securities

and put them down.
Harrison:

That isn't the point. I don't think any of us want
to sell in January as we see the situation today. The

only question in my mind is whether there is any
economic or monetary reason which would justify
our adding 50 or a hundred million to excess reserves
in the month of December right after a Treasury

financing, that would offset the possible risks; and
by risks I mean artificial stimulation of the Government bond market, which goes up for two reasons:
First, if we increase excess reserves, as you point
out; and second, because we are buying a particular
commodity.

Eccles:

Well, that was the same argument last April when we
went into the open market. Same argument used in

February - that the money market did not call for
it. And yet we did act, and we certainly didn't
act too soon; if anything, it was too late.

Lochhead:

When we had a falling bond market some time ago,

the Board sold some of their shorts and bought
long-term Government bonds. I wonder if any consideration would be given, if your bond market

was going up too high, to selling out your long
and going back to short. Outside of your excess
reserves, that is one way you have of controlling

your long-term Government bond prices.
Burgess:

I think we ought to cover that in our authorization.

64

-19McKee:

H.M.Jr:
McKee:

Burgess:

Eccles:

I have had that in mind. Just wondered what the

Treasury could add to that, in assisting to do that.
We don't
want to be ex-officio members of your Open
Market
Committee.

Still thinking of your future as a borrower - the
largest borrower in the world, or in the United
States.

Make it the world, John, it's all right.
But you did sell ten million during this period,
which was a good thing at a time when the market
was strong; so that, after all, it had the effect
of being an ex-officio member anyway.

Harrison:

Opposition member.

Eccles:

No, I think it was very helpful.

Harrison:

Offset what we were doing.

Eccles:

That was all right. They were operating in the long-

term market and we were operating in the short-term
market.
Lochhead:

Two things: one, the long-term Government bond market;

the other, the supply of credit.

Taylor:
H.M.Jr:

An unconscious switching operation.

Well, as a matter of fact, it in no way offset what

you people were trying to do.
Eccles:

Harrison:

No, it didn't. It was a good thing. Helped to

stabilize the long market. And it seems to me that
that might even be done to a greater extent, because
it certainly is a good thing to get cash at a time
when the market is unusually strong in the long bonds.
All I meant, Marriner, was, whether it's offsetting
it or not, it does, to the extent that they sell,
offset the amount of excess reserves we put in, and
if it is for the Stabilization Fund account, those
excess reserves are not put back by Treasury expenditures, as you argue.

65

-20-

Eccles:

Harrison:

Well, even that's all right.
Therefore, I just raise a question: if the Treasury
is going to do that, and it's a good thing, and
I'm not objecting to doing it; I would have done it

too had I been in the Secretary's place - the question
raises itself in my mind, then, why are we buying,
because we are buying short-time stuff that's already
been driven down to ten and which certainly needs no
support; we are not buying to put in excess reserves,
because the Treasury takes them out to the extent
they sell; and I don't see why we're buying except
to give an impression. As far as an impression at
this time, the impression isn't necessary so far
as the bond market is concerned. Now, I agree with
the Secretary that that is more of an argument for
the Open Market Committee than this meeting.

Taylor:

And also it's academic, because the further possi-

Eccles:

You mean - what lines?

H.M.Jr:

Well, we've only got five million more.
What we could do further. The only thing we could

Taylor:
H.M.Jr:

bilities along those lines aren't in the picture.

do would be to make some switches in our investments,
which is something we very seldom do.

I want to say now - there's no mystery - if there is
two or three points a day, we're going to sell the
other five million we've got. I want to get down
to a basis of ten million. Then when those things

again a boiling market and the 2-7/8s are jumping

go bad - and knowing how you people feel about long-

term Governments, I think you'd be tickled to death
to know there's 15, 20 million dollars purchasing
power for long-term Governments. Save you a lot of
weeping. So - I mean that's the whole object+ it's
just so if and when things should turn for bad, why,
we've got 15 or 20 million dollars purchasing power
to buy long-term Governments. And as I say, now,
if the 2-7/8s jump two or three 32ds a day - they
jumped one day 9-32ds - why, we'11 sell those five

million 2-7/8s. But the ten million 2-1/2s - we'll
hold those until at least they cross par. Now, you
can tell me when they'11 do that.

66

-21-

Taylor:

That's our maximum possibility.

H.M.Jr:

The maximum possibility is that we can sell, O':
will sell, and - I mean at any time there is
another boiling market for the 2-7/8s. We own

Harrison:

five million and we'11 sell those on a stiff
rising market. And outside of that we've got
nothing. And that would follow out McKee's thing:
at least to keep the thing from going up too fast.
But that isn't why we're doing it; we're doing it
because we feel that some time, as sure as the
sun rises, there will be another period where
nobody wants long-term Governments, and we're
there with 15 or 20 million dollars of purchasing
power. And - I mean that's what we're doing It,
for. May be three months, six months, or a year,
but we'll sit there and wait until there is a
bad crack in the long-term Governments, and we're
there to relieve you of that embarrassing situation.
I wouldn't want you to think that anything I said
was critical of anything, because I would have done I think you're quite right. My position is more one
of envy that we can't be doing the same thing you

are.
H.M.Jr:

This is getting too subtle for me.
(Hearty laughter)

This conversation is getting beyond me. Now, if
everybody is feeling all right - now, Mr. Burgess,
if you'll give these people a survey of what our
customers would like as of today.
Burgess:

Well, first a word about the changes in the market.
Since the middle of September, when we did the last
financing, there's been quite a change in the market.
Not so much in price; the prices are still up somewhat, both notes and bonds. But there's been a

shift, I think, in willingness to buy.

Both in June and September we offered a choice

between two different kinds of notes, a short and
a longer note. We felt that was necessary to meet
the market. I think that the gap between short and

67

-22-

long notes has been bridged; that is, people who
before would limit their purchases to two or three
year notes, or four year, now think of a five-year
note as something they can take in their stride
without the same hesitation.
Similarly, there has been a shift of interest into
bonds. We talked about bonds last time - this is
not the Burgess plan, Mr. Secretary - we talked
about bonds, perhaps in a rather academic way. You
can think about it somewhat more seriously now,
because there has been a shift of interest.
I would say that, as far as our purchases had an

effect, that's the most noticeable one, that it did
lead to more interest in the bonds. The savings

banks came in again after being out for a long time
and made some purchases, and banks and others have
showed some interest in long bonds - the first time
those long bonds have moved at all; and there's been
more general interest in the shorter bonds; some of
the banks in New York have been buying them. Now,

H.M.Jr:

of course, you've got to discount that slightly
because of our operations; the psychology of that
made them willing to buy bonds more than they had,
and you have to discount that a little; it's one
of those temporary waves, but I don't think very
much. The market hasn't changed a great deal in
actual point since we did our buying.
But I think the Treasury can feel free to sell
anything up to eight years, can run that scale,
and determine the thing on the basis of its own
requirements and on the basis of the price and
of the effect on the capital market, which I think
is very important at the present time. Now, there
are two distinct views, you'll find - you probably
have found already - on the part of
No, I haven't really got into this thing yet. No,
I haven't got - and I'm sorry that we had - we had
a tax case this morning.

Burgess:

That's quite all right.

H.M.Jr:

Which I had to take care of. And no one could do

68

-23-

it but myself. And that's what tied me up. This

was one case where the taxpayer got a dirty deal;
so it took the Undersecretary, the General Counsel,
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and the head
of the Income Tax Bureau - we were at it for an
hour and a quarter this morning. That's what tied
me up.

Burgess:

Well, that probably paid.

well, you'll find there's a distinct divergence

of view in the market. There are a certain number
of people that say that the Treasury has a very
large short-dated debt, that it would be sound
financing whenever you get a chance to borrow at
somewhat longer terms and push the thing ahead,
leaving your borrowing capacity at short term larger
for anything that may occur. They also say that
psychologically there would be a favorable effect
on the capital market. They say if the Treasury is
afraid to go out beyond five years, why should anybody else take the risk? Of course, the capital
market has been practically closed for six weeks
and we are all anxious to see it opened up.
Now, on the other hand, you will find a number
of equally vigorous exponents of the theory that
the best thing to do for the capital market is
for the Treasury to keep out of it and starve it
and leave the thing free for corporate issues.
I think you can toss that up in the air and call
heads or tails and one is probably about as good a
guess as the other.

In view of the necessity for discounting a little
bit the present market in view of our operations,
the safest, most conservative thing to do would be
to put out a five-year note. You could sell it
at 1-3/4, I think, on the present market. Might
change in the next few days. But I am equally
confident that you, if you wanted to, could sell
an 8-year bond.

Now, that is without going into details of what
different people think, and so on. We can go into
that later. I think in our discussion this morning
the Governor and others favored the note, felt that
was wiser.

69

-24-

H.M.Jr:

Well, inasmuch as this really was the purpose
the meeting was called for, I think we ought to
go around. I do think what's happened the last
55 minutes was illuminating and helpful to me,
and I think some of you people got some stuff
out of your chest, which didn't really affect
the Treasury, but - well, you all look much
happier.

Eccles:

Iitnever
off. have anything on my chest. I have to get

Harrison:

That's the trouble with both of us.

Eccles:

Yes, we

H.M.Jr:

Well, as I say, so let's go around, and I'd be

more than pleased to hear what you people have
to recommend. Who wants to start?

Sinclair:

Well, I'm next to the Stenotypist on this side.
Shall I start?

H.M.dr:

Please.

Sinclair:

I think in Philadelphia it is awfully hard to get
it clearly analyzed. There is considerable sen-

timent in some of the banks, some of the insurance
companies and savings funds, for an 8-year bond.

I think we reflect there probably the two points

of view.
H.M.Jr:

You say there is?

Sinclair:

There is some sentiment. I think we reflect
probably pretty well the two points of view that
Dr. Burgess has outlined. I think at some stage
of the game that the bond ought to be given serious
consideration. Personally, I am not too affirmative

in that at this time. I think that the five-year

note would be probably the most conservative thing

to do, but I don't think we ought to overlook the
possibility at some stage, whether it is now or
later on, next year - the bond possibility, in
accordance with conservatism and the problems that
the Treasury is going to have in refunding this
shorter debt. I talked last night when I was in
Philadelphia to one of our younger bankers who is

70

-25-

pretty close to the money market, watches things

very carefully. He was very affirmative on the
8-year bond. I think one of our large insurance
companies would be in favor of that, and one of
the other large insurance companies would be in
favor of the five-year note, - much more. So I
think as far as we are concerned, you can count on
the two types of demand.

H.M.Jr:

Insurance companies, five-year note?

Sinclair:

Yes, one of the large insurance companies. Last

year, last spring, it was absolutely - take nothing
over a year or year and a half. But I think they
have spread out a bit, would spread out into the
five-year note.

One thing we have in Philadelphia in large bulk

is a lot of trust funds. Their problems of
investment in the longer market are difficult
from their point of view, and I think the 8-year

bond would be a real attraction to them.

Whether or not the increased cost to the Treasury
would make it worth while to spread the difference
from five to eight years is a problem you'd have to

decide. That's all I have to say.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

Professor Williams.
Williams:

I favor the note. I don't know much about what the
market would take just now, but I think that is
secondary to the questions that might arise later
on. I think we have a very unstable interest rate
structure now, and our chief question, it seems to
me, is to do what we can to prevent its becoming
more unstable than it is.
Now, one of the elements in that is the banks'
holdings of bonds. The more bonds they hold, the

more possibility there is of a reversal of price

movement, which I think can have a very bad effect
not only in the Government bond market, but very
generally in investment markets related to refunding

71

-26-

and new capital issues and everything else.

And I think it is imprudent - really bad policy
at this stage to issue longer-term securities.
I don't know just how to weigh the difference
between five years and eight years, but in
general I am in favor of the shorter maturity,
for that reason.

And my attitude toward the other question which
is out is very much the same - that it would mean

danger now. We have easy money. The main danger
is of making this unstable interest rate structure
more unstable.

H.M.Jr:

How do you mean?

Williams:

Well, under conditions like these, there are elements
of risk and so on affecting the private securities,
opening up a gap between the interest rates on public
securities and the interest rates on private
securities. And the more that gap spreads, the
more danger there is of a setback and some internal
confusion, disorder. People ask themselves which
rate is out of line with which, and as your Government
security prices go up, that is increasingly a question,
and the possibility of setback increases.
Now, those are two topics - different - but they
are related to each other.

H.M.Jr:

But they both point towards the five-year note.

Williams:

I think so. That's all I have.

Golden.:

I don't think - I don't feel very strongly between
five and eight years. I do lean somewhat towards
the note too, because I think that if there is money
for bonds, it would be desirable to have it go into
corporate bonds; if there is investment money, that
there ought to be an encouragement for the use of
it in that capital market, which does need some

Lochhead:

support. That's all I have to say, Mr. Secretary.
I think the present market favors a five-year note;
think it would be much the more natural financing

right now.

72

-27Ransom:

The arguments in favor of the note seem to me to
be much stronger than those advanced for the bond,
Mr. Secretary. Weighing the two of them as I have
heard them over the past two - past week, I have a
very definite feeling that a strong argument could
be made in favor of the note.

H.M.Jr:

Jake?

Viner:

(No comment)

Seltzer:

We have a pretty heavy concentration of maturities
in that medium-term bond, and I think too that we
pay too much interest for - the spread between the
rate on a five-year note and the rate on an 8-year
bond would be too great. And I'd rather reserve a
bond issue for a time when we can float a longer term
bond issue, get away from that heavy concentration

H.M.Jr:

of maturities between '45 and '49. So I don't think
we'd gain enough between a five-year note and an
8-year bond to go into the bond at this time.
Is that all, Larry?

Seltzer:

Yes.

Taylor:

Note.

H.M.Jr:

Note.

Sinclair:

To the point.
I have talked to a number of banks and other investors

Piser:

over the past month, and the demand seems to concen-

trate pretty much on the five-year period. There
a longer issue, a 7- or 8-year bond, but a number
of those that I talked with said frankly that they
are some of them who would be willing to purchase

would purchase them solely for the premium, that

they would plan to sell and take their point profit
soon after the issue. And practically all of them

agreed that ten years was the maximum, that they wouldn't
even want to speculate in an issue of more than ten-

year maturity. So with that background it seems to
me the five-year note would be desirable.
H.M.Jr:

McKee?

73

-28McKee:

I favor the note, because I think the short-term
market needs a supply more than the long-term
market. I'd like to approach it from that angle.

H.M.Jr:

Is that all?

So snappy around here.

Dan?

Bell:

I favor the note for reasons expressed by Larry

Seltzer, I think, from the standpoint of the

Treasury.
H.M.Jr:

Is that all?

Harrison:

I never like to say anything here except that I
preface it with my usual S tatement that from the
point of view of the Treasury I think it is
ultimately desirable that you convert as much of
your short-time debt into long-time debt as is
possible. But I also agree that you do not accomplish that by an intermediate shift from five to
eight years. I don't think that is enough to
conform to the principle that I had in mind.
I think that Burgess is right; from the point of
view of the capital market, whether it would be
better to have the note or the bond is pretty
nearly a toss-up. On the whole, I think I would
favor the note, as I see things today. If, however,
the Federal Reserve System does undertake an open

market program of purchases, I would seriously

consider the bond as one of the offsetting factors
to the continued rise of long-time bond prices.

H.M.Jr:

Harrison:
Eccles:

Is that all?
That's all.
I favor the note very strongly, for the reason
that the note will be - much larger proportion
would be taken by the banks, and in so doing it

would create new money through credit or it would

stop at least the diminishing of deposits through
the paying off of obligations. In other words, the
banks own bills and if the bills were paid and they
didn't take the new issue, it means that the total
deposits diminish. That is undesirable. Therefore,

74

-29-

I think we should give - make an issue that the
banks are likely to take. They would be much
more likely to take the note issue. That leaves,
then, the private funds seeking investment, and it
would therefore help the capital market because
you wouldn't be supplying them with a bond. And
I feel pretty strongly about the matter.
H.M.Jr:

Harris?

Harris:

The note.

H.M.Jr:

What?

Harris:

+he note.

H.M.Jr:

You (Burgess) going to say something now?

Burgess:

No, I'm all through.

H.M.Jr:

H.M.Jr:

Note? Is that what you said?
I would incline to a note, yes.
What you and I have got to do for the next three
days is find out why we shouldn't sell a bond,
then.
Otherwise,
is
there?
What? there's no excuse to see anybody,

Burgess:

Oh well, you'll g et something from it.

H.M.Jr:

I hope so.

Burgess:

Well, thanks very much. And then, if and when the
Open Market Committee makes up its mind, I'll be
amongst the first to know it?
Eccles:

Not amongst the first. The first.

75
December 1, 1937.
3:47 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Herbert
Feis:

Yes, Henry.

H.M.Jr:

Herbert?

F:

Yes, Hello.

H.M.Jr:

Henry.

F:

Yes sir. I hope I don't disturb you.

H.M.Jr:

No.

F:

Look here. Mr. Hull had to rush off,right after

Hello.

lunch, to a meeting of the Board of the Pan American
Union, and seemed to think that you wanted an answer
from him pretty speedily on that question you asked
him in regard to Mexico.
H.M.Jr:

He called me.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Himself, this afternoon. About half an hour ago.
Well, then he got in ahead -

F:

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Ahead of me.

H.M.Jr:

And I told him we'd do nothing on Mexico this

week, but I'd take it up with you the first of next

week.
F:

Yes, he told me that, but he seemed to have the

impression, I don't know - it had been posed to
him or maybe he posed this question in his own
mind, he gave me the impression that you asked him that suppose these fellows said they'd actually
put up that gold and silver H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

As collateral.

H.M.Jr:

That's right.

-2F:

Well, I said then, since he put it to me in the
form of a question, that if they did that, I thought
that - that merely showed to him advance on - on
specie, and that brought it much more closer to
things, I understood that you had done before.

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

H.M.Jr:

7S

Exactly.

And would be a much simpler operation for you.

That's right.
And for our part I didn't think we should say
anything, and leave it up to you.
Well, but in order to help you out, I thought
I'd
just stall even on that this week. I didn't
think I'd answer them at all.

All right.
And unless there's any pressure from the State
Department, we won't say peep this week on
Mexico.
Right.

See
what
said he
- I mean. I don't think he got that - I
He didn't seem to have it clear at all.
Well, what he said to me was this. He said, "Now
I understand the technical reasons and so forth
why you can't do it this way. If
Yes.

"The way they put it up to you. # He most likely

explained it to them, and I said, "Yes, but they'11 come back and say how can you do it, and
I'll pay the way, we did it before, and that is
that you put up the gold and silver on deposit."
F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

As security.

F:

Yes.

-3H.M.Jr:
F:

II

Then I say if they do that we've got to say yes.
Well, that's what he was testing me out on and I
luckily gave him the same answer.

H.M.Jr:

But I said, "Rather than put it up to them, and
have to say 'yes', in order to help you out, I
said, "I won't do anything before Monday, and

the excuse I give is my Government financing, 80
you
people have got to square me with Josephus
Daniels."
F:

Well, now -

H.M.Jr:

You and I are together.

F:

All right, I'll -

H.M.Jr:

You and I are together. Mr. Hull, I don't think

quite had it. There's no reason why he shouldn't.

F:

Well, now you want us to get some word down to
Daniels.

H.M.Jr:

Simply tell him that I think, as a matter of

courtesy, he should send a cable to Mr. Daniels,
simply saying that the Secretary of the Treasury
is 80 occupied this week getting ready for his
financing on Monday, that he can't take on any

outside matters before next Tuesday.
F:

Right.

H.M.Jr:

That stalls the thing over a week, you see.

F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

I'll do it.
But I think Daniels is entitled to an answer.
Right sir.

H.M.Jr:

Now, did that
places the statement

F:

Completely,- and on the other hand I think if
and as it comes up next week, and they actually
offer you that specie collateral -

H.M.Jr:

We got to go ahead.

-4F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

You've got to go ahead with it.
But we're absolutely together.
Right.

But I won't see the MexicanAmbassador before next

Tuesday, and when I do, I'll have you - see you

first,
do
seeand
him.then
F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

I'd like to have you here when I

Right. May I ask you one other question, again,
the Secretary keeps asking this to me in a rather
vague way. You haven't decided on the renewal of
those agreements, the silver purchase agreements,
on that you've reached no decision, yet?
I - I haven't even mentioned it to the President
of the United States and won't until he gets back.
Right, sir.
Now,
we won't take it up until the President gets
back.

F:

All right. Now on Far East.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Two
first we have had no further confirmation
at
allthings,
-

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

From the Far East regarding the idea that they were
going to - they might declare war.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Nothing at all. On the other hand in response to
Mr. Hull's cable, wired to the President, asking him
how promptly we ought to act. The President wired
back saying 'Get all the proclamations in readiness
for me, and I'll sign them and send them back. -

H.M.Jr:

I see.

F:

That doesn't mean that they necessarily go out at

once.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

78

79

-5F:

But I read it to mean that he wouldn't delay any
longer than might be necessary to make sure of the
situation, you see?

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Which indicates to me that his disposition would be
to move fairly promptly.

H.M.Jr:

I

see. Well, now, but nothing's happened.

F:

Nothing
to - no confirmation that they are going to
declare war.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

F:

But an indication that if they do, the President's
inclination would not be delayed very long before
announcing the Neutrality Act in effect.

H.M.Jr:

Well, what I've got to do is to make up my mind
what I want to do about China.

F:

That's what - I thought that might And I think maybe we ought to tell China we've
taken fifty million ounces of silver from/over the
last four or five weeks, and I might tell them
informally now, we may take another fifty million

H.M.Jr:

from them you see.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And 80 I could say well we did that before in
cases
like that.

F:

H.M.Jr:

Well, that was in my mind, too.
And I may do that tomorrow or Friday.

F:

Yes. Well - well, that's what was in my mind.
I'm going to talk I think that's what was in the Secretary's mind.

H.M.Jr:

Well, I'm going to talk to Taylor and Lochhead

F:

H.M.Jr:

tonight about it.

80

-6F:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

See?

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And the other thing, while I've got you, may interest
you, we haven't got the details yet, but
on the telephone, but France has negotiated a loan
from Holland, and as I understand it, I haven't
got all the details yet, but it looks as though
Holland wants to buy fifty million dollars worth of
gold from us, see? - In order to take the place of
the gold which they're shipping to France, which is
a very nice piece of business for us.

F:

That's - I was going to say, it 18, isn't it?

H.M.Jr:

When I have the details, I'll ask Lochhead tomorrow

to give you a ring and explain it to you. The facts,
on account of it being on the telephone was a little

buzzy.
F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

But I - I thought that was a nice piece of business.

F:

I think - I think it's very nice.

H.M.Jr:

Well, I'm going to move on China - try to move this
week, I think, maybe tomorrow, we'll see.

F:

Uh-huh.

H.M.Jr:

All right.

F:

Thank you.

81

December 1, 1937.
4:30 p.m.
H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Parkinson.

H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Mr.

Parkinson:

Hello.

H.M.Jr:

Mr. Parkinson?

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Morgenthau.

P:

Oh, hello, Mr. Secretary.

H.M.Jr:

How are you?

P:

Very well, thanks.

H.M.Jr:

I'm sorry you're going to be tied up Thursday

P;

But it - it's just this week that we have both

and Friday.

the President's - the Vice-President's meeting,

the Insurance Commissioners meeting, and I also
have the Rockefeller Foundation annual meeting.
H.M.Jr:

Un-huh.

P:

But notwithstanding all of that if it's really be of any service to you I can come down Friday
morning.

H.M.Jr:
P:

H.M.Jr:

Well, that's very nice but I think maybe you can
do some work for me up there.

All right.
This 18 what I'd like. If you, in circulating

around, would ask your other Presidents - other
companies, what kind of a Government securities

they're in the market for.

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

See?

P:

Yes.

-2H.M.Jr:

I mean -

P:

Right now, you mean.

H.M.Jr:

Right now, we would offer it Monday for payment

82

on December 15th, see?

P:

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

And we haven't got your December 1st figure, how
much cash all these insurance companies have on

hand. I think the last figure we had was
September, which was around six hundred and eighty
million.

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I'd - I'd kinda like to know whether there were
thirty eight or forty companies, the life insurance
companies, what their cash position was December 1st.
And then as I say, what would they buy - I mean I
can't
get out a penny or two and three quarters, you
see?

P:

No. Well, I tell you, I'll have a fairly good

chance to do that tomorrow and - and Friday, because

they'11 practically all be here.
P:

That's what I thought.
At this meeting.

H.M.Jr:

And then could you call me Friday afternoon?

H.M.Jr:

P:

H.M.Jr:
P:

H.M.Jr:
P:

Not later than Friday afternoon.
Yes. And would you just sorta sound them out?
Yes I will.

And then if you'll also let I think - I think I could find more about the first
question you asked thanthe cash position.

H.M.Jr:

Uh-huh.

P:

That might be a bit hard.

-3H.M.Jr:

Well -

P:

To get - to get a really accurate idea.
Well, that -

H.M.Jr:
P:

83

But I might get something that would indicate
whether it had changed much since - since
September.

H.M.Jr:

Well, that - that would be just as useful if it's
gone up since then, or down.

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And also the - how hungry are they.

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

See?

P:

Yes. We're all kind of hungry.

H.M.Jr:

Pardon me?

P:

We're all kind of hungry.

H.M.Jr:

Uh-huh.

P:

For securities, I mean.

H.M.Jr:

Well, one - one - I needn't tell you, but right

now, an eight year two and a half would be about
- have a one point premium, I mean, that's what -

P:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Suggested,

P:

And that's something to shoot at, and see what

they think of it?

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

P:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

And the other thing is, would they all be interested
in a five year one and three quarters.

P:

Five, one and -

-4H.M.Jr:

Yes.

P:

All right. I'll use those to shoot at.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you very much.

P:

Not a bit.

H.M.Jr:

And I'll hear from you Friday afternoon.

P:

Yes, surely.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

P:

All right.

84

as

IMPROVING FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION

Speech delivered before
a meeting of some members

of the House of Representatives on December 1, 1937.

86
December 1, 1937

I have just been rereading the life of Andrew Jackson which
was written within two years of his death, which my grandfather bought
from some book agent at the time and which to me, as a small boy, was

the most attractive book in the limited supply of reading material we
had there in the woods of north-central Indiana. The picture of what
the Federal Government was like when Jackson was President is admirably

portrayed in this old book from a mere reading of what his messages to
Congress said and what Congress did about his recommendations. When

he told Congress of the final payment about to be made which would

wipe out the entire national debt, with evident pride, he said there
would be over $40,000 left in the Treasury. Less than 30 years before,

Jefferson wrote, "We are a rural farming people. We have little business and few manufacturers among us, and I pray God it will be a long
time before we have much of either."
Our early Federal Government in actual operation comprised

little more than the Congress to enact laws and the Courts to interpret
and enforce them. The Executive branch of the Government was small and

the amount of public business it had to handle was relatively slight.
Contrasting that picture with the picture of the Federal Government
today, the outstanding difference is not so much the expansion of

the field of Federal legislation or the enlargement of the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts, as it is the enormous development of the
Executive branch of the Government. This three-fold enlargement of
the sphere of Federal rule has come about for reasons so often stated

-2-

87

that they are trite; and, while all thoughtful men would avoid the
unnecessary enlargement of Federal functions, the man who hopes for

a return of the former simplicity of Federal Government is wholly

out of touch with contemporary realities in the fields of modern
communication, commerce, finance and industry.

Reverting to the stupendous growth of the Executive Branch

of the Federal Government, it now touches and affects the intricate
complexity of modern life in such a multitude of ways that one of
the major problems of our time is the improvement of our administrative processes and techniques, not by a spurious simplification, the
complexity of our problems precludes simple answers, but by devising
new and improved administrative methods and procedures. In the mat-

ter of administration, we still follow old forms for the most part.
In few fields of human endeavor has there been less inventive think-

ing. If Federal administration is not markedly improved, it will become a serious retarding factor in the business and life of the na-

tion and important parts of it will collapse of their own weight.
My experience in the administrative end of the Government
during the war and again since March 1933, has suggested numerous points

at which important improvements in Federal administration might be made,

but there are two basic aspects of this many sided problem to which I

should like to direct your attention. One is the problem of preventing an overgrowth of the bureaucracy required for Federal administra-

tion and to keep at a minimum the extent to which Federal officials
must interfere in the operation and management of private affairs, The

-3-

other is the problem of letting the citizen know what the Government
expects of him at the time when he needs to know it in order to plan
his affairs and go on about his business with reasonable assurance.
Simplefied Administration
Granted a certain quantum of Federal law which has to be

administered, then, I believe, the one consideration which will do
most to minimize the Federal bureaucracy necessary for such adminis-

tration and the interference in private affairs involved in that administration is the choice between two broad types of administrative

implementation of legislation. If Congress says a citizen shall do

so-and-so, it may, to effectuate its will, set up what I would call
the traditional administrative mechanism. This would provide the
personnel and procedures for watching how citizens act and detecting

their infractions of the rule laid down. It would provide penalties
for such infractions and, finally, administrative and judicial machinery for enforcing such penalties. This traditional type of implementation necessarily involves large personnel, complicated administration

and wide-spread interference in private affairs.
The other type of implementation puts the initiative on the
citizen. This minimizes bureaucracy and governmental intervention in
private affairs. One or two simple examples will make clear the
enormous practical difference between these two types of legislative
implementation. Suppose a given legislative body wants all banks to

close at a given time, say 3 p.m. It might, adopting the traditional
method, secure a certain degree of compliance by making it an offense,

with penalties, to remain open after that hour,

88

-4. -

89

but this would involve personnel and governmental machinery necessary for

inspection, detection and enforcement of such penalties. If, on the other
hand, that legislative body provided that banks might not debit their de-

positors' accounts with defective checks if cashed after 3 p.m., little,
if any, policing would be required to secure uniform closing. Again, assume a policy to discourage marriage below a certain age without parental

consent. Legislation might provide, with an appropriate penalty, that it
would be an offense for a county clerk to issue a marriage license to those

under the stated age without parental consent. If, on the other hand, it
gave the parent of a child under age the right to collect $100 from a county
clerk improperly issuing a marriage license to youngsters, the legislation
would be largely self enforcing.
You will, of course, find a great many sporadic examples of Federal

legislation implemented in this more ingenious way, but the study of this

possibility in connection with all legislation needs to be systematized
and thorough-going. A striking example of our use of this more or less
automatic process is the way our present capital stock and excess profits

taxes were set up. Taxpayers were given the liberty of fixing the amount

of their capitalization. But this tax legislation is so framed that, if
they fix it too high, their capital stock tax will be unattractively high,
while if they fix it too low, the tax on their excess profits will become
too burdensome.

At the very root of the tax on undistributed corporate earnings

is this fundamental policy of simplicity of administration. Whatever the

imperfections of that tax, I doubt if its critics have fully weighed its
alternative, which may be outlined briefly as follows:
With tax rates on large personal incomes higher than those on
corporate income, we have had for a long time, and will continue to have,

-5-

90

the problem of preventing the avoidance of the higher rates on personal

income by the retention of earnings in corporations. Congress first tackled
this problem in what I have called the traditional manner, i.e., it imposed
a penalty tax on corporations whose earnings were retained "for the purpose

of preventing the imposition of surtaxes on shareholders". This method has

proven ineffective because of the practical impossibility of proving this

purpose which is a state of mind. A subjective fact, difficult of proof in
any case and especially so here, is by this legislation made the test for
the imposition of the penalty tax.
As the rates on personal incomes mounted, the problem of preventing avoidance became more acute, and Congress next tried the other or more

automatic type of implementing the tax law, which I have already described,

i.e., in the Revenue Act of 1936, it left the initiative as to the distribution of corporate profits and the reasons therefor with those managing the

business, stipulating only that the loss of revenue from individuals due to
excessive retention should be made up at least in part by added taxes to be
paid by the corporations.

Eliminating this aid to administration would not eliminate the
problem of surtax avoidance. We shall ultimately have to face it. The only
alternative to the present automatic method would seem to be to revert to,

and perfect, the traditional method by adopting an objective test of what constitutes undue retention, and by setting up the increased personnel and ad-

ministrative machinery necessary to go into the affairs of all the corporations
involved in order to apply that object in test and thereby ascertain whether
there has been undue retention and to enforce the penalties therefor. As
in other cases of the use of the traditional method, this would maximize governmental interference in business and greatly increase the bureaucracy necessary
to enforce our tax laws.

-6-

91

Telling People What the Government Expects

The second possible angle of attack on the problems generated

by the marked growth in the administrative function relates to the citizen's
timely knowledge of his rights and duties under Federal statutes and
regulations.

Early in my experience in these problems of administration in the
Treasury, a man presented this problem to me: He had in mind the purchase

of a large building in the financial district in New York. The feasibility
of the transaction depended on what the tax liability of each of the parties
to this proposed deal would be, that depending on how certain future events

might turn out, and it not being feasible to provide for these contingencies
in the contract. I had to say to this man that he could not be advised as
to what his rights would be, that he would have to go ahead and make the

deal, and, not until the whole transaction was closed and the tax had accrued
could the question of tax liability be determined under our system of tax
administration by the Bureau, the Board of Tax Appeals and the Courts, and

that, if he did not want to take the risk, there was nothing for him to do
but forego the deal.

For further example, other men have sought to learn the tax status
of proposed corporate reorganizations necessitated by the widespread difficulties
created by the depression. They had to be told that, under our method of ad-

ministration - the only one permitted under existing legislation - they
would have to go it blind or forego their undertakings. Frequently this
meant that the reorganizations failed and thus businesses were destroyed
with the resultant unemployment and other consequences of liquidation.
Take a case where the Commissioner of Internal Revenue became bold

and tried to be helpful in one of these situations, and note the consequences.

-7-

At the request of an agent, acting on behalf of Henry Ford
in the purchase of the minority interest in the Ford Motor Company,

including that of the late Senator Couzens, and after an extensive
investigation, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue ruled that the
Bureau was "disposed to regard $9,489.34 as a fair market value of
the stock as of March 1, 1933, and one which should be used in com-

puting any profit made on the sale." The deal was closed on this
basis, and the taxpayer made his income tax return in conformity with
this pronouncement. Later the taxpayer was assessed on the basis,
not of $9,489.34, but of $3,547.84 per share, and the Board of Tax
Appeals held that the earlier finding of the Commissioner was not

binding upon his successor in office, nor upon it. It reexamined
this whole question of value and fixed $10,000 per share as the
proper valuation.

Under our present system of tax administration, and what I

say here applies to much of the balance of Federal administration, the

taxpayer is confronted with a two-fold difficulty. He cannot ascertain,
in advance of the time when he must act, what his legal rights and

liabilities consequent upon such action will be; and, when they are

finally determined, the law is applied retroactively, and retroactively

not only as to him, but as to all others similarly situated. If Federal
administration is not to become unconcionably burdensome on the life

and business of the country, we must, in view of its present and growing magnitude find some way to administer Federal law otherwise than

in the retroactive fashion involved in the present process. A partial,

but only a partial, solution of this difficulty is to be found in our

92

-8- -

93

legislation providing for declaratory judgments, but such judgments cannot
be obtained in that great mass of cases where people have not yet acted and

need to know their rights and liabilities before they act. It is true, if a
contract has been made, if a deed has been executed or a status, such as marriage
entered into, or divorce obtained, the declaratory judgment can be used in many
situations to define rights incident to such a consummated arrangement or
status, but a declaratory judgment would afford no help to a man who wants to
embark upon a business undertaking and needs to know his rights and liabilities

before he dare do so. That field is not covered, and a long stride forward
in solving the growing problem of administration will be made if we can find

a device for advising people what their rights and liabilities are at a time
when they need to know.

Developing that new device was a general problem which I put before

the Legal Division of the Treasury more than two years ago as a chore for us

all to work on as the press of immediate tasks permitted. Later this was
made the sole problem of an assistant with special training, who has garnered
the collective thinking on the problem and sought outside suggestions and

guidance. All of this work has now culminated in what we think is a feasible
device, which, for want of a better name, I have called "Declaratory Admin-

istrative Ruling" a "Declaratory Ruling". We hope soon to lay the plan of
this new device before Congress, with the idea of trying it out in one branch

of the Treasury Department, viz., in the administration of our tax laws.
Perhaps the plan can best be presented in terms of a typical

case in which it arises. John Smith owns valuable mining property which

he desires to sell. The important factor in the transaction is what will
be fixed as the value of this property for tax purposes. Before he makes the
sale John Smith naturally desires to know what value the Commissioner

-9of Internal Revenue will place upon this property. If today he eaks
the Commissioner for a ruling on this question prior to the sale,
the Commissioner will probably not give him a ruling. Moreover,
even if the Commissioner fixed the value, the taxpayer would have no
assurance that, after he had completed the sale in reliance upon such

a ruling, the Commissioner or his successor in later determining his

tax liability in the due course of tax administration would abide by
such previous valuation.

Briefly, the proposal is this: The taxpayer would file with
the Commissioner an application for a Declaratory Ruling. In this ap-

plication he would state in detail the facts pertinent to the proposed
transaction. The Commissioner would examine the application to determine

whether it merited his consideration. If he found that it did, he would
ascertain if there were sufficient information provided to enable him

to reach an intelligent conclusion. If not, he could either request
more information from the taxpayer or make any other investigation that
he deemed necessary to the same extent that investigation of closed
cases coming before him are now made. The taxpayer would have an op-

portunity to appear in person and present any additional information or
considerations that he thought relevant. The Commissioner would then
issue a Declaratory Ruling in which, in the example supposed, he would

fix the value of the property or make such other ruling as was requested
or was appropriate in the case before him. He could make the effectiveness of the ruling depend upon compliance either by the taxpayer or by
other persons with certain terms and conditions such as the consummation

94

95
- 10 -

of the contemplated sale within a definite period of time, the substantial accuracy of certain representations, the existence of certain
facts which he might deem to be crucial, etc.
The taxpayer, having received the Declaratory Ruling, might

decide that it was inadvisable to complete his transaction. If so, the
Declaratory Ruling would become ineffective. If the taxpayer decided
to proceed with the sale and pay a tax upon the value fixed in the De-

claratory Ruling, the transaction would be ended. If, however, the taxpayer did not believe that the Commissioner's determination of the value
was the correct determination, he could not appeal from the Commissioner's

ruling (the Commissioner is given an absolute discretion with regard to

his ruling), but he could proceed to complete the sale and test out his
tax liability before the Board of Tax Appeals or in the courts as he may
do today. In that event the Commissioner would not be bound by the Declaratory Ruling which he made, since the taxpayer himself had chosen

not to be bound by it and the matter would be litigated in the courts as
if no Declaratory Ruling had been issued.
However, if the taxpayer acquiesced in the ruling and completed

the transaction in accordance with the terms of the Declaratory Ruling,
neither the Commissioner who issued it nor any later Commissioner could

alter or repudiate it. The Commissioner, however, would be free to change

the Ruling, or to make a different Ruling, with regard to transactions
not expressly included in the Ruling and persons not parties to it.

- 11 -

96

After the sale had been consummated, the taxpayer if he de-

sired might request the Commissioner to issue a certificate of compliance
stating that the taxpayer had complied with the terms and conditions set

forth in the Declaratory Ruling. The issuance of this certificate would
make its binding effect a matter of record.
Another example of an administrative mechanism calculated to

advise people in advance as to what their rights and liabilities are,
so that they can act with assurance and reliance upon such advice, is

a provision which you will find in an amendment to the Securities Act.
There was much complaint in 1934 that bankers, underwriters and others

interested could not go forward with capital issues because of the un-

certainty as to their liabilities under the various provisions of the
Securities Act as originally enacted.
It seemed to me that this problem was not to be solved by a

multitude of new provisions further particularizing the various provisions of the Securities Act. What seemed to be required was an administrative mechanism that would be prospective in operation, and this
suggestion was embodied in Section 209(b) of the Securities Exchange

Act of 1934, which reads as follows:

"No provision of this title imposing any
liability shell apply to any act done or omitted
in good faith in conformity with any rule or
regulation of the Commission, notwithstanding
that such rule or regulation may, after such
act or omission, be amended or rescinded or be

determined by judicial or other authority to
be invalid for any reason."

But there is nothing new under the sun. I later found this
same device tucked away in Section 1108(b) of the Revenue Act of 1926,

- 12 -

which provides that in cases where a sale or lease is made in reliance

upon a ruling, regulation or Treasury Decision existing at the time,
and holding that the sale or lease was not taxable, no tax under the
act should be imposed.

The device embodied in the amendment to the Securities Act

and the similar but more elaborate device here described as a Declaratory

Ruling both should have, in addition to the virtue of being prospective
in operation, the advantage of enabling administrative officers using
them to exercise greater freedom to clarify legislation by the process

of administrative interpretation.
To sum up, I have suggested ways to do two things: To place

the initiative of law administration on the parties concerned and to
tell them what the law will require when they need to know. I venture
to believe that these two are among the things which cut to the heart
of the growing incubus of government.

97

Prepared by Mr. Daggit

DIVISION of Research and Statistics
Date
To:

Dec. 1

1937

Miss Chauncey

From: Miss Kailey

EK

I read the attached memorandum

to Mr. Haas over the telephone, and

he asked that it be given to the
cretary directly, without waiting
or his signature.
98

Reid I actock

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

99

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATEDECEMBER 1, 1937

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

FROM

Mr. Haas

In response to your request, we are giving herewith a
statement as to the present financial interest of the Govern-

ment in the cotton crop. The total figure to date, including
Government-guaranteed loans on cotton by Southern banks, is

approximately
$447,000,000. This is made up of the following
items:
1. Cotton loans. The Commodity Credit Corporation reports outstanding loans on cotton 8.8 of November 27, 1937,

of $139,551,404.30. This is divided as follows:

Balance loaned on previous crops $116,012,019.3
Loaned on 1937 crop to date
23,539,384.96
Total

$139,551 404.30

In addition to this sum, a total of $107,177,408.72 has been
loaned by banks in the South on this year's crop under the

terms of the Government loan, but these loans have not yet
been turned over to the Commodity Credit Corporation.

2. Price adjustment payments. A total of $130,000,000
has been set aside for price adjustment payments on cotton,

and AAA opinion is that this definitely will all be spent.
3. Conservation and benefit payments. It is not possible
to estimate accurately how much will be spent for soil con-

servation and benefit payments on cotton this season, since
they are tied up with other crops, and payments will be made

mostly next spring. The best opinion of the AAA is that the
total applicable to cotton will be about $70,000,000, a decline from the $82,300,000 paid last season.

100

December 1, 1937

My dear Mr. President:
Your two Henrys were walking down town

this morning and reached the conclusion that

if there 18 to be Government participation in
advertising to enlarge the demand for cotton,
it had best come by way of the Commodity Credit
rather than by way of Section 32.
Herman Oliphant has satisfied himself as
to the legality of this approach and has checked
the matter with the Acting Comptroller General.
Tomorrow, Thursday, your two Henrys are
eating lunch with Jesse Jones and we hope to

have something more specific to report by tomorrow.

You can get up a "hat pool as to whether
the two Henrys will take in Jesse or Jesse will
take in the two Henrys.
Sincerely yours,
(Sgd) Henry Morgenthau, Jr
(Sgd) Henry A. Wallace

The President,

Hiami, Florida.

Prepared by Mr. White

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

101

DATE December 1, 1937.
TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Haas

Subject: Reported large shipments of cotton to British India.
Reported United States exports of cotton to British
India during the past few weeks (about 20,000 bales) are
in excess of her previous annual takings.
United States Domestic Exports of Cotton
to British India
(In bales)
Crop year 1936 ( June to July)
Crop year 1937 (June to July)

August and September 1936
August and September 1937

6,800
13,045
265
356

Mr. Alfred Boedker of Volkart Brothers (head office
in Bombay) stated on the telephone that India has bought
100,000 bales of American cotton which will be used in

Indian mills. Most of this cotton was bought during July

and August and practically no cotton has been bought in
past six weeks and no more is expected to be bought. The

cotton is largely high grade cotton of 1-3/32 to 1-1/8
inch staple. He said ordinarily they would use Indian or
African cotton, but they were very bullish on the market
and American cotton was only cotton they could buy ahead.
Bought in July and August; just now being shipped.

A possible explanation for these purchases by India
in July and August was an expectation on the part of the
Indian mills that the Sino-Japanese war would increase
their sales at the expense of Japanese and Chinese mills,
but we have no information as yet on that score.

December 1, 1937.
9:04 a.m.
HMJr:

Hello.

Operator: Mr. Jones.
HMJr:

Hello.

Jesse
Jones:

Hello,

HMJr:

Good morning, Jesse.

J:

Good morning.

HMJr:

Are you at home?

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

Jesse, I want to take a minute or two to explain
what I've been working on very quietly, for the
President, see.

J:

All right.

HMJr:

And I asked him - we talked about it, whether
somebody couldn't work on cotton with the idea
that eighteen million bales of cotton 16 a good
thing, and let's see whether we can't do something

to get rid of it.

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

Rather than just sit around and tell tales
of woe, see?

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

Well, I've been working on this thing quietly
for a couple of weeks, and we finally evolved
an idea of a national advertising campaign in conjunction with the industry, and we work through
the textile industry, and they're tremendously
enthusiastic about it and ready to put up some
money, see.

J:

Who?

HMJr:

The textile industry.

J:

Yes.

102

103

-2HMJr:

Through the cotton institute.

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

You know. Well, we've got the thing and I first
thought we could do the Section 32 money, but
Wallace doesn't like it that way, 80 we looked

up and we - Oliphant's given us the opinion we
can do it through Commodity Credit.
J:

Yes.

HMJr:

And yesterday afternoon we put it up before
the Comptroller General and he said he'd O.K. it.
Now I just walked down with Wallace and he's far
enough long that he said he'd like to meet with
you and me, and talk this thing over, see.

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

Now would lunch tomorrow be convenient? And if

J:

Well, suppose - suppose he do that today, and
what time - how early could we have lunch?

HMJr:
J:

Well, we'll fix it - are you going to leave town?
I was going to leave town. I am - I am going to

HMJr:

Well -

J:

I was going today, but Wagner wants me to come

you'd like - I'd like you to get more details so
you can have a chance to think about it. I'd
like Wayne Taylor to come over and talk to you
at your convenience, he's all full of it.

leave town tomorrow afternoon.

up there and get before his committee on the
Housing thing in the morning.
HMJr:

Well, do you want to make it quarter of one?

J:

Yes, well - well that'11 be all right, and if
we get through - I might take a two o'clock train
or at least a three.

HMJr:

Oh, yes. Now, supposing I have Wayne contact
you, see.

104
3J:

HMJr:
J:

HMJr:
J:

HMJr:
J:

HMJr:

J:

All right.
And give you the thing - 80 as you won't get
this thing cold.

All right.
And - I mean - I'm quite enthusiastic about it.
Well, I hope - I hope that I agree with you.
Well, I don't know, but I say I hope I do, and I I want to give you twenty four hours to think
about it.

Well, I've got to go to the Hill at ten-thirty
to testify on the House side
for the Housing bill.

HMJr:

Yes.

J:

And 80 suppose I leave word, and maybe I can get

it - I'11 call Wayne and maybe I can get a lunch
engagement with him today.

HMJr:

Yes, well shall I leave it that you'll call Wayne.
Yes. I'11 call him right now.
You'll call him right now.

J:

Yes.

HMJr:

Wayne doesn't know I called you, because I just

J:

Well, if you'll tell him -

HMJr:

Well, supposing I tell Wayne to call you right

HMJr:
J:

got into the office.

away.
J:

Tell him to call me, and -

HMJr:

And I'll tell him what's it about.

J:

Tell him to call me through the office.

105

-4HMJr:

Through the office?

J:

Yes.

HMJr:
J:

Through the office.
My office, yes.

HMJr:

I'll do that.

J:

Thank you.

HMJr:

He'll call you in two minutes.

J:

All right. Fine.

December 1, 1937.
9:08 a.m.
H.M.Jr:

106

Wayne.

Wayne

Taylor:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Wayne, I just got through walking with Wallace

and he and I have written a joint letter to the
President. Wallace is pretty well sold on this
Commodity Credit thing, see.

T:

Attaboy.

H.M.Jr:

Now, we're going to have lunch tomorrow at 12:45.

T:

I just - to which you're invited.

Fine.

H.M.Jr:

I just called
up Jesse, 80 he could be thinking
about
it.

T:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And he'd sorta like to have lunch with you today,
BO that you could kind of fill him up with it.

T:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

So he said if you'll call him right away, now.

T:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Through his office, he'11 make a date with you,
but I thought - give Jesse twenty four hours to
think about it.

T:

All right. Fine.

H.M.Jr:

See. But Wallace, I'd say, is two-thirds sold.

T:

Good boy.

H.M.Jr:

All right.

T:

I'll get hold of Jesse right away.

H.M.Jr:

And the lunch tomorrow at 12:45.

T:

Right.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

107
December 1, 1937.
10:03 a.m.
HMJr:

Elmer L.

I just want to tell you, on the loud speaker, see.
This conference is going on. Mr. Helvering and
the others are here.

Irey:

Yes.

HMJr:

The question has come up, whether you or Burford,
Burford having sat in on this conference when
they considered this Maester case. I mean would

you or Burford sign this report recommending that
we accept the hundred and thirty four thousand?
I:

You say, would we sign such a report?

HMJr:

Yes.

I:

Why, I haven't gone into the figures enough to
know about that, Mr. Secretary. I mean it's been
80 long since I went through the case I don't
remember the tax setup, nor what the explanation
is.

HMJr:

Well, what about Burford?

I:

Well, Burford, of course, is down in Dallas, Texas.
I can't say for him, but I can communicate with him,
today, and find out. And I also can go into the
case myself today and find out how I feel about it.
Well, why wasn't it ever brought to your attention

HMJr:

before they recommended it to be accepted?

I:

HMJr:

I:

Well, I am sure I don't know that, Mr. Secretary,
but, when we - the usual procedure in these tax
cases is when the criminal phase 18 out, it's not
then referred to us for any further attention.
It's handled by the tax branches of the Bureau.
Well, Burford sat in on it.
Yes, Burford sat in over at Mr Magill's office

on it, and I also sat in at that time, on it.

HMJr:

No, he sat in on it on September 9th, when they
had the hearings.

I:

Yes. Well, I didn't know about that - I didn't
remember about it.

108

-2HMJr:

Well, now just a minute, let me ask Mr. Helvering.
(aside)
Mr. Helvering states that Mr. Burford
told him that this was a good settlement, and based
on
that Mr. Helvering recommended the thing be
settled.

I:

Well, of course, that's perfectly all right, then.
I didn't have any discussion with Burford as to
the tax liability 80 I don't -

HMJr:

Well, I'm not - I'm not going to check up on
Mr. Helvering's way. I'll take Mr. Helvering Surely. There isn't any doubt but what Burford
told him that.

I:
HMJr:

Yes, well I'm not going to check up on Mr. Helvering.

I:

Yes.

HMJr:

But it's not customary that you sign these things.

I:

No, sir. It's not.

HMJr:

Well, I'm not going to check up on Mr. Helvering.

I:

Yes.

HMJr:

Thanks.

I:

All right, sir.

HMJr:

I may - all right, thank you very much.

I:

All right.

109
December 1, 1937.
10:23 a.m.
H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Operator:

Ellender.

H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Sen.

Ellender:

Hello.

H.M.Jr:

Senator Ellender.

E:

Yes, Mr. Morgenthau, how are sir?

H.M.Jr:

We just concluded another conference. We made
a decision and Commissioner Helvering is going

back to his office and he'll communicate it with

you.
E:

Yes, sir.

H.M.Jr:

See.

E:

Yes, sir.

H.M.Jr:
E:

H.M.Jr:

And - well, he'11 let you know, and I think you'll
be entirely satisfied.
Well, I'm certainly obliged to you Mr. Secretary.
And I dropped everything and - we've just finished,
but I'd like him to let you know officially.

E:

All right, sir. That's very kind of you, sir.

H.M.Jr:

Goodbye.

E:

Thank you very much.

December 1, 1937.
12:23 p.m.

110

Leffingwell: Mr. Stanley?
H.M.Jr:

Yes.

L:

Oh, intimately.
Intimately.

H.M.Jr:
L:

He used to be my partner, you know.

H.M.Jr:

Well that's what I thought.

L:

And I - I - I'm a devoted friend of his.

H.M.Jr:

Well, do you suppose that you and he'd like to
come down here Friday and have lunch with me?

L:

I'd love it. I'll try and get him.

H.M.Jr:

Good. Well, what I had in mind was, we've got a
Government financing next Monday, you see.

L:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And various people tell me that to do this , it will
or won't help the private offerings, you see.

L:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And after all I don't suppose anybody could tell
me better than yourself and - it's Harold Stanley,

isn't it?

L:

Yes, Harold Stanley.

H.M.Jr:

Yes. So that's what I have in mind, so if the two
of you would care to come down Friday and have
lunch in the Treasury with me at one o'clock, I'd

be delighted.
L:

Well, I'll - I'll telephone Harold. I don't even

H.M.Jr:

Uh-huh.

L:

But I'll - I'll - I haven't - I haven't seen him

know whether he's in town or not.

for some time, but I'll telephone Harold and call

you back.

-2H.M.Jr:

Yes, and if I'm not available would you let
Mrs. Klotz know . K-L-O-T-Z.

L:

Yes, I'll tell her.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

L:

You - you - you want me anyway?

H.M.Jr:

Sure.

L:

If I can get Harold or not.

H.M.Jr:

Sure. Always.

L:

All right, I'll come anyway.

H.M.Jr:

Right.

L:

I - I'll have to break an engagement with our

friends up at Harvard. They had asked me to come
up there and discuss foreign policy.

H.M.Jr:

Oh.

L:

But I know a lot more of - I think I know a lot

more about domestic finance and an invitation from

you is both a pleasure and a command.
H.M.Jr:

Well, I don't want you to - if Colonel Stanley

isn't there would there be anybody else who knows

the - what do you call it - I call it the private
corporate market, you know.

L:

There isn't anybody that - there isn't anybody as
nearly as good as Harold anywhere.

H.M.Jr:

Right. Well -

L:

I'll try to get him.

H.M.Jr:

Good.

L:

I'll try to get him if he's accessible. He might

be off shooting somewhere, that's the only thing.
He hasn't been very well, and H.M.Jr:

I see.

111

112

-3L:

His partners were trying to get him off.

H.M.Jr:
L:

All right.
But I'11 try to get him. I'11 call back.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

L:

Thank you ever 80 much, Mr. Secretary.

113

December 1, 1937.
3:47 p.m.
HMJr:

Herbert
Feis:

Hello.
Yes, Henry.

HMJr:

Herbert?

F:

Yes, Hello.

HMJr:

Henry.

F:

Yes sir. I hope I don't disturb you.

HMJr:

No.

F:

Look here. Mr. Hull had to rush off, right after

lunch, to a meeting of the Board of the Pan American
Union, and seemed to think that you wanted an answer
from him pretty speedily on that question you asked
him in regard to Mexico.
HMJr:

He called me.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:
F:

Himself, this afternoon. About half an hour ago.
Well, then he got in ahead -

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

Ahead of me.

HMJr:

And I told him we'd do nothing on Mexico this

week, but I'd take it up with you the first of next
week.

F:

Yes, he told me that, but he seemed to have the
impression, I don't know - it had been posed to
him or maybe he posed this question in his own
mind, he gave me the impression that you asked him -

that suppose these fellows said they'd actually
put up that gold and silver -

HMJr:

Yes

F:

As collateral.

HMJr:

That's right.

114

-2F:

Well, I said then, since he put it to me in the
form of a question, that if they did that, I thought
that - that merely showed to him advance on - on
specie, and that brought it much more closer to
things, I understood that you had done before.

HMJr:

Exactly.

F:

And would be a much simpler operation for you.

HMJr:
F:

HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

That's right.
And for our part I didn't think we should say
anything, and leave it up to you.
Well, but in order to help you out, I thought
I'd just stall even on that this week. I didn't
think I'd answer them at all.

All right.
And unless there's any pressure from the State
Department, we won't say peep this week on
Mexico.

F:

Right.

HMJr:

See what I mean. I don't think he got that - I
said he -

HMJr:

He didn't seem to have it clear at all.
Well, what he said to me was this. He said, "Now

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

"The way they put it up to you. " He most likely
explained it to them, and I said, "Yes, but -

F:

I understand the technical reasons and 80 forth
why you can't do it this way.' If

they'11 come back and say how can you do it, and

I'll pay the way, we did it before, and that is

that you put up the gold and silver on deposit."
F:

Yes.

HMJr:

As security.

F:

Yes.

115
-3HMJr:
F:

HMJr:

Then I say if they do that we've got to say yes.
Well, that's what he was testing me out on and I
luckily gave him the same answer.

But I said, "Rather than put it up to them, and
have to say 'yes', in order to help you out,'
I

said, "I won't do anything before Monday, and
the exouse I give 18 my Government financing, 80
you people have got to square me with Josephus

Daniels."

HMJr:

Well, no You and I are together.

F:

All right, I'll -

F:

HMJr:

You and I are together. Mr. Hull, I don't think
quite had it. There's no reason why he shouldn't.

F:

Well, now you want us to get some word down to

HMJr:

Simply tell him that I think, as a matter of

Daniels.

courtesy, he should send a cable to Mr. Daniels,
simply saying that the Secretary of the Treasury
is 80 occupied this week getting ready for his
financing on Monday, that he can't take on any
outside matters before next Tuesday.

F:

Right.

HMJr:

That stalls the thing over a week, you see.

F:

I'll do it.

HMJr:

But I think Daniels is entitled to an answer.

F:

Right sir.

HMJr:

F:

Now, did that
places the statement

Completely,- - and on the other hand I think if
and as it comes up next week, and they actually

offer you that specie collateral HMJr:

We got to go ahead.

4-

HMJr:

You've got to go ahead with it.
But we're absolutely together.

F:

Right.

HMJr:

But I won't see the Mexican Ambassador before next

F:

116

Tuesday, and when I do, I'll have you - see you

first, and then I'd like to have you here when I
do see him.

F:

Right. May I ask you one other question, again,
the Secretary keeps asking this to me in a rather
vague way. You haven't decide& on the renewal of
those agreements, the silver purchase agreements,

on that you've reached no decision, yet?
HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

I - I haven't even mentioned it to the President
of the United States and won't until he gets back.
Right, sir.
Now, we won't take it up until the Presidents gets
back.

F:

All right. Now on Far East.

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

Two things, first we have had no further confirmation

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

From the Far East regarding the idea that they were
going to - they might declare war.

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

HMJr:
F:

at all -

Nothing at all. On the other hand in response to
Mr. Hull's cable, wired to the President, asking him
how promptly we ought to act. The President wired
back saying 'Get all the proclamations in readiness
for me, and I'11 sign them and send them back. I
I see.

That doesn't mean that they necessarily go out at

once.
HMJr:

Yes.

117

-5F:

HMJr:
F:

But I read it to mean that he wouldn't delay any
longer than might be necessary to make sure of the
situation, you see?
Yes.

Which indicates to me that his disposition would be
to move fairly promptly.

F:

I see. Well, now, but nothing's happened.
Nothing to - no confirmation that they are doing to

HMJr:

1 600

HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

declare war.

But an indication that if they do, the President's
inclination would not be delayed very long before
announcing the Neutrality Act in effect.
Well, what I've got to do is to make up my mind
what I want to do about China.

That's what - I thought that might And I think maybe we ought to tell China we've
taken fifty million ounces of silver from her over the
last four or five weeks, and I might tell them
informally now, we may take another fifty million
from them you see.

F:

HMJr:

Yes.

And 80 I could say well we did that before in
cases like that.

F:

Well, that was in my mind, too.
And I may do that tomorrow or Friday.
Yes. Well - well, that's what was in my mind.

HMJr:

I'm going to talk -

F:

I think that's what was in the Secretary's mind.

HMJr:

Well, I'm going to talk to Taylor and Lochhead

F:

HMJr:

tonight about it.

-6-

118

F:

All right.

HMJr:

See?

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

And the other thing, while I've got you, may interest
you, we haven't got the details yet, but
on the telephone, but France has negotiated a loan
from Holland, and as I understand it, I haven't
got all the details yet, but it looks as though
Holland wants to buy fifty million dollars worth of
gold from us, see? - In order to take the place of
the gold which they're shipping to France, which is
a very nice piece of business for us.

F:

That's - I was going to say, it 18, isn't it?

HMJr:

When I have the details, I'll ask Lochhead tomorrow

to give you a ring and explain it to you. The facts,
on account of it being on the telephone was a little

buzzy.
F:

Yes.

HMJr:

But I - I thought that was a nice piece of business.

F:

I think - I think it's very nice.

HMJr:

Well, I'm going to move on China - try to move this
week, I think, maybe tomorrow, we'll see.

F:

Uh-huh.

HMJr:

All right.

F:

Thank you.

119
December 1, 1937
4:30 p.m.
HMJr:

Hello.

Operator: Mr. Parkinson.
HMJr:
Mr.

Hello.

HMJr:

Mr. Parkinson?

P:

Yes.

HMJr:

Morgenthau.

P:

Oh, hello, Mr. Secretary.

HMJr:

How are you?

P:

Very well, thanks.

HMJr:

I'm sorry you're going to be tied up Thursday

Parkinson: Hello.

and Friday.
P:

But it - it's just this week that we have both

the President's - the Vice-President's meeting,

the Insurance Commissioners meeting, and I also
have the Rockefeller Foundation annual meeting.
HMJr:

Uh-huh.

P:

But notwithstanding all of that if it's really -

be of any service to you I can come down Friday
morning.

HMJr:

P:

HMJr:

Well, that's very nice but I think maybe you can
do some work for me up there.

All right.
This is what I'd like. If you, in circulating

around, would ask your other Presidents - other
companies, what kind of a Government securities

they 're in the market for.

P:

Yes.

HMJr:

See.

P:

Yes.

2HMJr:

I mean -

P:

Right now, you mean.

HMJr:

P:

HMJr:

Right
now, we
would
on
December
15th,
see?offer it Monday for payment
Yes.

And we haven't got your December 1st figure, how
much cash all these insurance companies have on

hand. I think the last figure we had was
September, which was around six hundred and eighty
million.
P:

HMJr:

P:

Yes.

And I'd - I'd kinda like to know whether there were
thirty eight or forty companies, the life insurance
companies, what their cash position was December 1st.
And then as I say, what would they buy - I mean I
can't
get out a penny or two and three quarters, you
see?

No. Well, I tell you, I'll have a fairly good

chance to do that tomorrow and - and Friday, because

HMJr:
P:

they'11 practically all be here.
That's what I thought.
At this meeting.

HMJr:

And then could you call me Friday afternoon?

P:

Not later than Friday afternoon.

HMJr:

Yes. And would you just sorta sound them out?

P:

HMJr:
P:

Yes I will.

And then if you'll also let I think - I think I could find more about the first

question you asked than the cash position.
HMJr:

Uh-huh.

P:

That might be a bit hard.

120

-3HMJr:
P:

HMJr:
P:

12/

Well -

To get - to get a really accurate idea.
Well, that But I might get something that would indicate
whether it had changed much since - since
September.

HMJr:

Well, that - that would be just as useful if it's

P:

Yes.

HMJr:

And also the - how hungry are they.

P:

Yes.

HMJr:

See?

P:

Yes. We're all kind of hungry.

HMJr:

Pardon me?

P:

We're all kind of hungry.

HMJr:

Uh-huh.

P:

For securities, I mean.

HMJr:

Well, one - one - I needn't tell you, but right

P:

Yes.

HMJr:

Suggested,

P:

And that's something to shoot at, and see what

HMJr:

Yes.

P:

All right.

HMJr:

P:

gone up since then, or down.

now, an eight year two and a half would be about
- have a one point premium, I mean, that's what -

they think of it.

And the other thing is, would they all be interested
in a five year one and three quarters.
Five, one and -

122

-4HMJr:

Yes.

P:

All right. I'11 use those to shoot at.

HMJr:

Thank you very much.

HMJr:

Not a bit.
And I'll hear from you Friday afternoon.

P:

Yes, surely.

HMJr:

Thank you.

P:

All right.

P:

December 1, 1937.
4:39 p.m.
123
H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Mitchell.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

O:

Go ahead.

H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Mr.

Mitchell:

Good evening, Mr. Secretary.

H.M.Jr:

How are you?

M:

Well, thanks.

H.M.Jr:

I want a little help.

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I think the National Bureau of Economic

M:

Research might do it for me. I am talking to you
as I understand you're director of that?
Yes, I'm Director of Research. Do anything we

H.M.Jr:

Well, this is what I'd like, and I'd like to have

can for you.

from your Bureau - looking back over as many years
as you deem advisable, what are the signs that one
can look for and count on when one is reaching the
bottom of a recession, and then what are the signs

that one can look for that would be turning the
corner? Now what I have in mind 18 this - Government
bonds, high grade bonds, second grade bonds -

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Commodities, etc., etc., you see?

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I'd like to have an independent agency of the

first class, like yours, do that sort of thing, so

that we won't be doing just what you said Mr. Hoover

was doing M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Some wishful thinking.

M;

Yes.

124

2H.M.Jr:

Now if this requires extra expenditure, why we
have the money to pay for it.
Well, how - how soon do you want a letter on that

M:

head.

H.M.Jr:
M:

H.M.Jr:

Well, I think the first time, I think we'd better
have a little face to face talk about it.
All right.
And just to go over the sort of thing that you
would
do, and then what I'd like is something once
a week.
Once a week?

M:

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

Well, oh I see - I see what you mean, you'd like
us not only to make up a statement of what to look
for but also be on the lookout for it.

M:

H.M.Jr:
M:

Yes. To follow it every Now, the first thing 18 very much more in our line
than the second. I really think that if we - if
we could provide you on the basis of materials that
we had are in pretty good shape now.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

M:

A statement of what to look for and then your people
could do the looking.

H.M.Jr:

Well, that's - that would be all right.

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

But then you could also check their looking,

M:

Yes. I suppose so. Yes, probably.

H.M.Jr:

Well, let's - when - when could you come down and

M:

Well, I should like to do that rather carefully,

couldn't you?

tell me with a statement what we should look for.

you know.

120

-3H.M.Jr:

Yes.

Well.

Now, next week end I might be able to -

M:

H.M.Jr:

Next week end.

I think I can probably get something in order
by that time.

M:

H.M.Jr:

That would be the 11th and the 12th?

M:

Yes. Yes, I suppose 80.

H.M.Jr:

Say Saturday the 11th.

M:

Yes, or Friday perhaps.

H.M.Jr:

Or Friday - it will have to be in the forenoon,

M:

I see. Yes.

H.M.Jr:

So it'd be Friday morning, the 10th?

because we'd have a Cabinet meeting that afternoon.

Well, - well, I'm not perfectly sure that I could
get it ready by that time. It'd probably be safer
to say Saturday, if I can catch you.

M:

H.M.Jr:

Well, Saturday morning?

M:

Saturday morning. I'11 try to have something at

H.M.Jr:

or would you rather come down Monday?

M:

No, it - it's better for me to do it Saturday.

H.M.Jr:

Well supposing we say - what time Saturday morning.

M:

Any time you set. I can come down on a night train,

H.M.Jr:

Un-huh. Well, let's say ten o'clock Saturday

M:

Ten o'clock Saturday morning in your office?

least in shape by Saturday morning the 11th.

H.M.Jr:
M:

you know.
morning?

At the Treasury.
Good.

-4-

126

H.M.Jr:

And you bring anybody with you, that you want to.

M:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

And - and - I don't know how the Bureau does those

things, but all I can say is we have funds to pay

for either Well - this will entail some expense, not - not a
great deal, and I'll - I'll tell my people to -

M:

H.M.Jr:
M:

H.M.Jr:

Well, whatever -

To take count of the current expense - we'll tell
you what it is.
Well, whatever it is, you let us know, and traveling
expenses to Washington or anything like that, or
per diem expenses, - anything like that we - we'll
pay for it.

M:

All right, it won't be a thing that will interfere

H.M.Jr:

Well, that's - I'm glad of that.

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

But I'll leave it to your good judgment.

M:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

I just want to let you know we have the funds.

M:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I'11 for - you bring whoever you want, with you.

M:

All right. I think I may bring one of my assistants

H.M.Jr:

That'11 be fine. Thank you.

M:

You're welcome.

with balancing the Budget.

down with me.

127

CABLE
From: Netherlands Bank
Amsterdam, Holland

To: Federal Reserve Bank of N.Y.
Date: December 1, 1937

#176. CONFIDENTIAL FOR KNOKE.

with reference to our telephone conversation we cable to ask you
to apply to United States Treasury and ask on behalf of Dutch Exchange

Equalization Fund special license for converting into gold $50,000,000
held at present by De Nederlandsche Bank for account of said Fund. This
license is asked in connection with monetary policy of Dutch Equalization
Fund which is directed to maintain reasonable relation between Dutch

guilders and gold. License is asked with a view to the fact that for
the time being it does not seem likely that Dutch Equalization Fund will

have to sell dollars in order to combat high dollar rates here. Intention
would be to ask you to take gold in question in safe custody earmarked
for our Special Account "A".
(Signed) De Nederlandsche Bank

C:ek

128
December 1, 1937

From:

To:

Mr. L. W. Knoke
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Mr. Lochhead

Subject: Telephone Conversation with Netherlands Bank

Mr. de Jong called at 9:42 today and referred to our telephone conversation
of November 8, when I had explained to him that conversion into gold of dollars

acquired outside the Tripartite Agreement was possiblemonly with license to be
issued by the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the President. He
stated that they would like to convert into gold $50,000,000 now held in their
regular account and place the gold under earmark with us, and inquired as to the
procedure to be followed by him. I suggested that he make this request by cable

to us, advising us at the same time as to the purpose for which the gold was required and as to its ownership. de Jong explained that the gold would be the
property of the Exchange Equalization Account which, in connection with the re-

cent Dutch loan to the French, was temporarily out of gold; this was the reason
for the Netherlands Bank planning to make the transfer. I assured de Jong that,
immediately upon receipt of his cable, I would take the matter up with the Secretary
of the Treasury; he asked whether I thought it would take very long to get a reply

and I told him I did not expect so.
In view of the interest which de Jong had previously shown in our Government
Bond market, I mentioned that 3-Mo. Treasury Bills could now probably be bought at

a price to yield about .10% per annum, which he had previously, in his cable of
November 9, stated was the lowest yield that would interest them. I inquired
whether they intended to renew their selling order for guilders in this market

129
-2-

Subject: Telephone Conversation with Netherlands Bank.

but de Jong explained that the market had been so remarkably stable recently
that dollar operations had become entirely unnecessary for them and even in

sterling they had done very little in recent weeks. I made reference to their
statement published yesterday and asked whether it was correct to assume that

the 43,000,000 guilder loss of gold shown therein had to do with the Dutch

loan to the French. His reply was, "Absolutely, yes".

C: ek

12.1.37

130
December 1, 1937
Wednesday

The Netherlands Bank, Amsterdam, telephoned to the Federal Reserve

Bank of New York today and on behalf of the Dutch Exchange Equalization

Fund made application for $50,000,000 of gold. Confirmation of their
telephone conversation was made by a cable message. Memorandum covering

the telephone conversation, and copy of the cable, are attached hereto.
After consulting Secretary Morgenthau, he authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, who informed the Netherlands Bank, that we would

sell them the gold requested.

It was finally decided by the Secretary that this gold should be
supplied out of gold holdings of the Exchange Stabilization Fund at this
time rather than from the Sterilized Gold Account. His reason for doing
80 was to avoid any change in the December 15th financing, the amount of
which had already been decided upon, and to prevent an increase in excess

reserves which might possibly occur. If the gold was taken from the
Sterilized Account, in order to keep our cash position even it would be
necessary to cut down the financing by $50,000,000. On the other hand,

if the total amount of the financing was left unchanged and the gold taken
from the Sterilized Account, it would increase the Treasury balance, and
in time the excess reserves, by the same amount. On the other hand, if

the gold was taken from the Stabilization Account, it would leave the
Stabilization Account with funds to absorb any new additions to the gold

stock of the country up to this amount without increasing the Sterilized
Gold Account.

Mr. Morgenthau, after discussing this with A. Lochhead, checked with
Mr. Taylor, who was in accord with the decision made.

aL

Milochhead
131

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK

FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
ROM

L. W. Knoke

DATE December 1, 1937.
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
NETHERLANDS BANK.

Mr. de Jong called at 9:42 today and referred to our telephone conversation of November 8, when I had explained to him that

conversion into gold of dollars acquired outside the Tripartite
Agreement was possible only with a license to be issued by the

Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the President. He
stated that they would like to convert into gold $50,000,000 (:) now
held in their regular account and place the gold under earmark with
us, and inquired as to the procedure to be followed by him. I suggested that he make this request by cable to us, advising us at the
same time as to the purpose for which the gold was required and as

to its ownership. de Jong explained that the gold would be the
property of the Exchange Equalisation Account which, in connection

with the recent Dutch loan to the French, was temporarily out of gold;
this was the reason for the Netherlands Bank's planning to make the

transfer. I assured de Jong that, immediately upon receipt of his
cable, I would take the matter up with the Secretary of the Treasury;
he asked whether I thought it would take very long to get a reply and
I told him I did not expect so.
In view of the interest which de Jong had previously shown
in our government bond market, I mentioned that three-months Treasury

bills could now probably be bought at a price to yield about .10% per
annum, which he had previously, in his cable of November 9, stated was

the lowest yield that would interest them. I inquired whether they
intended to renew their selling order for guilders in this market but
de Jeng explained that the market had been so remarkably stable recently

C 3.2 60M 6-37

132

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK

DATE December 1, 1937.

FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
SUBJECT:

CONFIDENTIAL FILES

TELEPHONE CONVERSATION

WITH NETHERLANDS BANK.

L. W. KNOKE

2-

that dollar operations had become entirely unnecessary for them and

even in sterling they had done very little in recent weeks. I made
reference to their statement published yesterday and asked whether

it was correct to assume that the 43,000,000 guilder loss of gold
shown therein had to do with the Dutch loan to the French. His
reply was, "Absolutely, yes."

LWK:KMC

8230
Tool

133
C 3.2 60M 6.37

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK

DATE December 1, 1957.

FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
CONFIDENTIAL FILES

L. w. Knoke

OM

SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSETION WITH
BANK OF FRANCE.

Mr. Cariguel called at 11:05 today and requested that
ship to him on the Lafayette on December 4 another $5,000,000 worth we
of tention. gold. I assured him that his request would have our prompt at-

Things continued to go very antiofactorily, Cariguel said.
Today, he had not been able to buy any dollars for which there had
been considerable demand from England as well as from France. He

had managed to get in a little sterling.

LWK:KMC

&

134
GRAY

LMS

Paris
Dated DECEMBER 1, 1937

Rec'd 4:15 p. m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

1684, December 1, 8 p. m. (SECTION ONE)
FOR TREASURY.

Transactions on the Exchange and security markets
here have been on a reduced scale. WE understand that

the fund has been able to secure a fair amount of sterling
at 147.09 around which the rate has moved during the day.

The dollar strengthened to 29.49, without intervention of
the fund, it SEEMS.

Rentes and the other French securities were unsettled
and showed a weaker tendency.
Tomorrow the Chamber is EXPECTED to COMMENCE its

Examination of the 1938 budget. As it leaves the Finance
Committee revenue is estimated at 55,781,000,000 franos
and Expenditures 52,179,000,000. However, the paper
balance of 1,600,000,000 francs of the more than wiped

out when Parliament finally votes the Government's bill

providing for increases totaling 1,700,000,000 francs in
the pay and allowances of civil servants. It will be re-

called that in addition to the ordinary budget the special
armament

135

LMS 2-No. 1684, December 1, 8 p. m., SEC. 1, from Paris.

armament and public works budget for next year totals

about 14 and a half billion francs which'is to be covered
by loan issues (SEE Embassy's despatch 1145 of October 15

last).
(END FIRST SECTION)
BULLITT
CSB

13S
GRAY

LMS

Paris

Dated December 1, 1937

Rec'd 5:40 p. m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

1684, December 1, 8 p. m. (SECTION TWO)

The financial press continues to publish rumors of
an Early loan by the Government. The impression appears

to be that the Minister of Finance intends to issue the
unused balance (2,500,000,000 francs) of the 10,500,000,000
franc Exchange guaranty and option loan authorized by

Parliament on March 10 last and that a further loan of
from 5 to 6,000,000,000 francs will be issued in January.
This prospect is not welcomed in financial circles which
point out that under these circumstances the relief that
might have been afforded to starved private Enterprise
through repatriated funds will be absorbed ONCE more by
Government borrowing. JOURNEE INDUSTRIALE remarks that

repatriated funds have not yet found their way back to
circulation to any appreciable degree.
AGEICE ECONOMIQUE today carries an apparently inspired

statement to the Effect that information circulated relating to an early loan issue by the Treasury "is premature".

137

LMS 2-No. 1684, December 1, 8 p. m., SEC. 2, from Paris.

ture". This paper COES on to comment that although the

situation of the Treasury is now less strained the Minister
of Finance will probably not wait until the last moment to
assure himself of cover for maturing obligations. The
statement invites attention to the high cost of recent
loan issues of certain public bodies carrying the guaranty
of the state and the difficulties thus raised for the
Minister in obtaining funds.
END OF MESSAGE

BULLITT
SMS:NPL

138

GRAY

sms

Paris

Dated December 2, 1937

Rec'd 6:45 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

1688, December 2, 4 p.m.
FOR TREASURY

Business on the Exchange market here today was

almost at a standstill. There was a certain pressure
on the franc and WE understand that the fund paid out
a fair amount of sterling at 147.15 to maintain the
rate which has now fallen to 147.10. The dollar continued to show strength. It is now around 29.48
after 29.50.
The security market was depressed. There were

average losses in rentes of about 50 centimes. Weak-

ness in the latter appeared to DE due in part to sales
by holders desiring to subscribe to the new Treasury
loan.

The Bank of France statement dated November 25

and published today shows no important changes. The
gold reserves are unchanged, and no new advances have
been

139

sms 2 - No. 1688, DECEMBER 2, 4 p.m. from Paris.
been made to the Treasury. Commercial advances up

507,000,000 francs. Note circulation up 141,000,000.
Deposits down 90,000,000. Percentage of gold COVER
53.23 percent compared with 53.26.

A certain amount of notice has been given in
the financial press to news cabled from the United
States that the Senate Agriculture Committee in its
report on the new farm bill recommends a further re-

duction
in the value of the dollar. It would SEEM
(from?)
for comment noted that no one believes that such advice

will be given serious attention at Washington. In
fact referring to the recent strength of the dollar,
the financial press of today contends that this firmness is due notably to EVIDENCE that no menace of

devaluation Exists at this time, indication that
President Roosevelt is turning towards a more orthodox policy, and improvement in the American commercial
balance.
BULLITT
sms

Emb

140

December 2, 1937.

MEMORANDUM

TO:

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM: Mr. Gaston

The Government's Stake in Existing Cotton Stooks.
(1) Cotton Loans

Amount outstanding on pre-1937 crops
Estimate of loans on 1937 crop
July 1, 1938

$116,012,019.34
260,000,000.00

Of above amount loans already made as follows:
By C.C.C.

$23,539,384.96

By banks in South . 107,177,408.72
(2) Price Adjustment Payments

It is estimated by A.A.A. that the full amount

set aside for this purpose will be expended $130,000,000.00

(3) Soil Conservation and Benefit Payments
Total

$ 70,000,000.00
$576,012,019.34

While the Government's investment in the 1937 cotton crop and
existing stocks of cotton may be regarded as embracing all of the above

items, certainly the fate of loans amounting to an estimated $376

millions will be directly affected by any method which proves effective
on the market situation. Government expenditures are also likely to

be affected in another way; namely the amount of Works Progress and other

relief which will be needed in the South during the winter. It was the
opinion of Mr. Stevens that practically every additional dollar of payroll expenditure in the textile industry would be reflected in a reduction of relief expenditures. The amount which it is proposed the
Government expend for promotion purposes - one million dollars - would
probably be equivalent to about 500,000 worker days. The employment

of 50,000 additional people in the textile mills Porten days would offset this expenditure if there is the direct relation indicated between
textile employment and relief payments.

14$

December 2, 1937

HM,Jr called Secretary Hull at 10:30 this morning and read him the following message to the President
which HM,Jr had sent the evening before:
"For the President:

Am dining with the Chinese Ambassador

Thursday night and would like to have your advice
before seeing him on the following two propositions stop

First comma in view of the possibilities of Japan declaring war am inclined to tell
the Chinese that we will buy another fifty million ounces of silver from them over a period of
the next ten weeks stop

Second comma our agreement with the

Chinese permitting them to borrow foreign exchange
against gold on deposit with us expires December

thirty first stop I would like to extend this for
another year stop

Would appreciate your sending me an

answer by radio Kindest regards (Signed)Morgenthau

HM,Jr then read to Secretary Hull the following reply
received from the President:
"From the President.
To The Secretary of the Treasury

0001 in regard to your suggestions
please see the Secretary of State I have informed
him by wire that I was inclined to go along with
them but that both of them might be affected by

any later declaration of Neutrality. In the absence of any such declaration of neutrality we
should continue our friendly policy just as if
there existed no conflict. 2345."

HM, Jr asked Secretary Hull to call him on the tele-

phone and discuss the messages after he had had an oppor-

tunity to go over them. He also told Mr. Hull that

Oliphant has ruled that even though they put on the involunart neutrality against China and Japan (see carbon

142

December 1, 1937

CONFIDENTIAL SECRET
FOR THE PRESIDENT:

Am dining with the Chinese Ambassador Thursday

le your advice
night and would like to have
before seeing him on the following two propositions
stop

First comma in view of the possibilities of
Japan declaring war am inclined to tell the Chinese

that we will buy another fifty million ounces of silver
from them over a period of the next ten weeks stop
Second comma our agreement with the Chinese

permitting then to borrow foreign exchange against

gold on deposit with us expires December thirty first
stop I would like to extend this for another year
stop

Would appreciate your sending me an answer

by radio Kindest regards
Henry Morgenthau Jr

143
-2-

of Oliphant's memo of July 15, 1937 and his memo of
September 3rd, 1937, attached hereto) that we could
continue to buy gold from Japan and silver from China.

HM,Jr said that while he had the benefit of Oliphant's
ruling, he, HM, Jr, was just being doubly cautious and
that was the reason he had sent his message to the

President.

144
December 2, 1937

My dear Mr. Secretary:

In accordance with our telephone

conversation, I am inclosing herewith
a copy of the message I sent to the
President yesterday and a copy of his
reply.

After you have had an opportunity
be good enough to call me on the teleto go over these messages, would you

phone.

Sincerely,

The Honorable

The Secretary of State.

145

TELEGRAM

The White House
Via Naval Communications.

Copy of Confidential Message
Washington
From The President:

(CONFIDENTIAL)

To: The Secretary of The Treasury:
0001 in regard to your suggestions please see the Secretary of

State I have informed him by wire that I was inclined to go along
with them but that both of them might be affected by any later

declaration of Neutrality. In the absence of any such declaration
of neutrality we should continue our friendly policy just as if
there existed no conflict. 2345.

146

JUL 15 1937

Secretary Morgenthau
Herman Oliphant

Res Neutrality Act of 1987.

A question has arisen concerning the applicability of section $
of the Neutrality Act of 1937 (Pub. Res. No. 27, 75th Congress) to
the Government of the United States. More specifically, does the

phrase #it shall thereafter be unlawful for any person within the
United States to purchase, sell, or exchange bonds, securities, or
other obligations of the government of any belligerent state or of

any state wherein civil strife exists, ### or to make any loan or extend any credit to any such government, #### apply to this Government
whenever the President shall have issued a proclamation under the

authority of section 1 of the Act? It is believed that such prohibition
does not apply to the Government of the United States.

It may be stated at the utset that the definitive interpretation
of the Neutrality Act, being a question of law which would necessarily
involve several Departments, is & matter which would be appropriate for
the determination of the Attorney General. Sections 554, 556 and 361

of Revised Statutes of 1878, (U.S.C., title 5, sections 505, 804 and 806).
The following discussion is intended for the use of the Treasury
Department, pending such definitive interpretation.

147

The prohibition in section $ of the Neutrality 10t relating to the
purchase, sale or exchange of securities of belligerent governments and

the making of loans to such belligerents, is a prohibition upon "any person within the United States." The term "person" is defined is section
13 to include "n partnership, company, association, or corporation, as

well as a natural person." There is nothing in the Act to indicate that
Congress intended to include the Government of the United States within

that definition. Indedd, the fact that Congress also specifically set
forth in section 13 of the Act & definition of the term "state" as including "nation, government, and country", is a rather clear indication that
there was no intention to include & government within the definition of
the word "person."

There is good authority for the principle of statutory construction
that the sovereign is not bound by statutes that may tend to diminish any

of its rights and interests unless the sovereign is named in the statute

by special and particular words. The rule was all stated in Dollar Savings
Bank V. United States, (1875) 86 U.S. 227, 259, as follows:

* is a familiar principle that the King is not bound by any

act of Parliament unless he be named therein by special and
particular words. The most general words that can be devised
(for exemple, ANY person or persons, bodies politic or corporate)

affect not him in the least, if they may tend to restrict OF
diminish any of his rights and interest. He may even take the
benefit of any particular act, though not assed. The rule thus
settled respecting the British Crown is equally applicable to
this government, and it has been applied frequently in the difforent States, and practically in the Federal courts." (Underscoring supplied.)

In United States V. Herron, (1873) 87 U.S. 251, 263, it was stateds

" * # when a statute is general and any prorogative, right, title,

148

-3or interest would be divested OF taken from the king, in such
a case he shall not be bound unless the statute is made by ex-

press words to extend to him, ...

"Senctioned as that principle is by two express decisions

of this court, it would seen that further discussion of it is
unnecessary, as it has never been questioned by any well-considered case, State or Federal, and is founded in the presumption that

the legislature, if they intended to divest the sovereign power

of any right, privilage, title, or interest, would any so in oz-

press words, and where the act contains no words to express such

an intent, that it will be presumed that the intent does not ex-

ist."

See also Davis V. Princle, (c.c.a. 4th, 1924) 1 F. (2d) 860, 863,
affirmed, (1925) 268 U.S. 515.

To adopt a construction of the general terms of the Neutrality Act
which would divest the sovereign power of a right or privilege which it
otherwise possess, would be contrary to the rule of statutory construction above mentioned.

Not only is the Government not specifically mentioned in section 3

of the Neutrality Act, but, as above pointed out, the word "person", as
contrasted with "state", has been so defined as to preclude the possibility
that the prohibition was moant to apply to the Government of the United
States.

Section 5 of the Neutrality Act as finally enacted is couched in
language somewhat different from that in the House bill (R.J. Res. 242, 75th
Congress), but means the same thing, and covers all of the House bill.
(Conference Report No. 723, 75th Congress, page 12.)

Section 5 (that pertaining to financial transactions) of H.J. Res. 242
is practically a restatement of section 2 of Public Resolution No. 74, 74th

.4.

149

Congress (49 Stat. 1152), which extended and amended the Joint Resolution,

approved August 51, 1935 (49 Stat. 1081). The prohibition against financial

transactions with belligerents first appeared in Public Resolution No. 74.
When that legislation was under consideration the Committee stated:

"We feel that this will safeguard and prohibit any credite
or transactions undertaken to be carried on in this country by
& belligerent country during any warfare. # * ** (House Report
No. 2001, 74th Congress, underscoring supplied.)

However, it should be pointed out that the phraseology now under consideration is clear and unambiguous and resort may not be had to committee

reports and congressional debates in an effort to import a different meaning to the words. Duplex Printing Press Co. V. Deering (1920) 254 U.S. 443,
474, Penn R. R. Co. v. International Coal Co. (1912) 250 U.S. 184, 199. Such

aids are only admissible to solve doubt and not to create it. Railroad Commission v. Chicago B.A.G.R.C. (1922) 257 U.S. 565, 589. The phrase "any
person within the United States" presumably was used deliberately by the

Congress in the statute, and also the word *person" was defined in section 15
thereof. Nevertheless, the foregoing statement by the Committee on Foreign

Affairs, while not admissible under strict rules of evidence in a court of

law, is indicative of the spirit of the legislation, and it might possibly
be contended that, when Congress enacted the legislation, it had in mind an

absolute prohibition of financial transactions of every character in the
United States (except ordinary commercial and relief transactions) including those of the Government.

The Johnson Act (48 Stat. 574) by its terms specifically exempte a
public corporation created by or pursuant to special authorisation of Congress,
or a corporation in which the Government of the United States has or exercises

150

a controlling interest through stock ownership or otherwise. The
neutrality legislation contains no such specific exemption and, accordingly, the contention night be made that a government created or con-

trolled corporation would be subject to the prohibition contained in
section 3. Such question, however, is not herein considered and no
opinion is rendered thereon.
(Signed) Herman Oliphant

JDE-ee 7-25-37

Retyped as revised
HOebe 7-15-57

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

confidential 15
DATE

TO

FROM

SEP 3 1937

Secretary Morgenthau
Herman Oliphant

You asked in your telegram of August 31, for a clear-cut
positive statement from me as to what duties would fall on the
Treasury in case the President should invoke the Neutrality Act

against China and Japan or any other country. Particularly, you
wish to know whether we would be permitted to continue to pur-

chase gold, silver and foreign exchange from these countries.

The following would be the legal situation:

A. The Neutrality Act would not affect the legal situa-

tion of the Treasury at all. Its prohibition of financial transactions with belligerents does not apply to the United States
Government because it was not mentioned in the Neutrality Act

and the sovereign is not bound by legislation unless specifically
named therein.

B. Besides the Neutrality Act, we have to consider the

general rules of international law as to unneutral acts. The
effect of those rules on the Treasury would be as follows:

1. It would not be an unneutral act for the
Treasury to continue, in the ordinary course, to deal
in foreign exchange with a belligerent, the purpose

being not to extend a line of credit, but to protect
the dollar in foreign exchange.

-22. It would be an unneutral act for the Treasury

to advance a line of credit to a belligerent. Our outstanding arrangement with China is an arrangement to

advance credit. The fact that this arrangement was'made

before a state of war existed would not prevent the advancing of credit under it being an unneutral act.
3. Since it would be just as convenient for China
to liquidate her gold now under earmark here as to get a

line of credit under our arrangement with her, the next

question is as to the law governing her disposition of this
gold. This involves four questions: Could the Treasury
buy her gold? Could an American bank buy her gold? Could

she take the gold to London and sell it? Could she transfer her earmark to Britain, the gold remaining here?
(a) There are no precedents one way or the other
on the question whether it would be an unneutral

act for the Treasury to buy gold or silver from a
belligerent government, the purpose of that government being known to be to acquire dollar credits with

which to pay for war materials. Accordingly, the
Treasury could buy gold or silver from a belligerent
government or decline to do so, depending on how the

broad questions of policy involved were determined.

152

153

-3.
I believe, however, that the sounder position from the

point of view of international law would be for this
government to refrain from buying gold or silver from
a belligerent. Obviously, such broad questions of policy
should be considered by the Administration as a whole.

(b) It would not violate the Neutrality Act and would
not be an unneutral act for an American bank to buy the
gold China has on earmark here, but, for the Treasury immediately to buy this gold from the American bank would

come close to raising the unsettled question mentioned in
(a) above.

(c) The Treasury would have to give the American bank a

license to buy this gold, but it would not have to do anything if China withdrew the gold from earmark and sent it

to London for sale, and that would be all right, both
under the Neutrality Act and under international law.

(d) Finally, China could leave the gold here, transferring
the earmark to Britain. The Treasury would have to author-

ize this, but there would be no violation of the Neutrality
Act or of international law.
It is not believed that an opinion of the Attorney General would be
helpful at this time. However, there has been prepared for possible use a

request for his opinion on all the points covered by the foregoing, together
with the usual opinion of the General Counsel to accompany such request.

human Oliphant

see

abs

December 2, 1937. 154

9/7/37

Herbert
Feis:

At
a Departmental session,or those two points you
raised.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

And this is about the upshot, which I was asked
to
pass on to you, first as to the purchase of
silver.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

As far as we can see, no comment.

H.M.Jr:

Uh-huh.

F:

Go ahead if you want.

H.M.Jr:

Uh-huh.

F:

No comment to make. On the second -

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

The Secretary says he thinks his informal advice

would be -

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

To keep yourself free of any commitment that you'd

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

have to follow through should there be either a
declaration of war or an application of the
neutrality proclamation, or both.
Uh-huh.

You see. We'd rather not even have to talk it out
with you, as a matter of general international law.
That is, we'd like to not make a precedent and not
in any way limit our possible future freedom of
action, and that's why he asked me to put it to you
as a matter of informal advice.
Well now, I - you see - just let me take a minute Sure.

Oliphant holds and so advised me that if the

Neutrality Act is invoked, that that particular

-2-

155

arrangement with China would not be affected, see?
F:

That's right, under the Neutrality Act.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

The
question of the customary rules of international
law.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Under the customary rules of international law, loans

H.M.Jr:

trary to the ordinary rules of neutrality.
Well, this isn't a loan.

F:

Well, it's an advance.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Backed on specie.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

by a Government to a belligerent Government are con-

F:

And our legal advisor holds that it would go against
the customary rules of neutrality.

H.M.Jr:

Nice spot.

F:

That's only if there's a declaration of war.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

F:

If and what you get 16 an application of the

neutrality act.

H.M.Jr:

I get what.

F:

Just an application of our neutrality act. That's
a local action on our part.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

F:

And what the Hell, the rules of international law

H.M.Jr:

I see.

would be.

-3 -

156

Is more difficult. But above all else the Department thinks from its point of view and from yours,
it's best to avoid making anything that could be

F:

considered a formal precedent, you see. But to you
to retain complete liberty to avoid any committment
to them as to making advances should there be either
a declaration of war or should we apply our

H.M.Jr:

neutrality legislation.
Uh-huh. Well, well - here's the point. This

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

We - I think under our arrangement, have to let them

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Whether we're going to renew it.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

So that part, I would like Oliphant to have a
discussion with your counsel, how's that?

F:

Yes. -

H.M.Jr:

As to what we should do between now and the 15th

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

In regard to the extension of that

F:

Sure.

H.M.Jr:

You see they've got fifty million dollars worth

thing expires December 31st.

know by the 15th of December.

in regard to the extension -hello.

which let's call it.

of gold here now, against which they have
borrowed.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Thirty million dollars worth of yuan.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And which they put up thirty million dollars
worth of yuan on their books, in China, to our
credit.

-4-

157

Yes.

F:

H.M.Jr:

And we also have the gold against that as

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Now, I think the best thing to do 18 to let -

collateral, you see.

I think that you and your counsel and Oliphant and

Lochhead and White had better sit down and have a

little meeting on that.

Whenever you want, but - and now I was thinking

F:

H.M.Jr:

from your point of view, as well as from ours Yes, well I -

F:

I

can see pretty strongly the way the minds of our
legal advisor offices are operating, and if you can
get into a formal legal discussion of them - with
them, we're going to get, I'm afraid, something
restrictive.

H.M.Jr:

F:

Yes, but now, wait a minute. Between - I've got to
give these fellows - what am I going to do, let
this thing expire?
Well couldn't you -

H.M.Jr:

I mean -

F:

Couldn't you carry it along without an agreement?

H.M.Jr:

No.

F:

Well all right then, certainly yes whenever you
want to send Oliphant and the rest over, fine or

wheneveryou'd want Ackworth and his group to come
over.

H.M.Jr:

Fine.

F:

You have Oliphant - do you want Oliphant -

H.M.Jr:

Well, I mean we've got to do one of two things

F:

All right.

between now and the 15th.

-5H.M.Jr:

1558

We've got to either extend it or let it drop.
I see.

F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

H.M.Jr:

Now the normal thing, not knowing anything about

anything would be - would be to extend it - not
necessarily for a year, let's say three months.
That's right.

I mean the normal thing would be - would be just
the one existing today with Mexico, I wouldn't

even say - let's take Canada. If we had one with
Canada that expired on the first of January, the
chances are I wouldn't even ask you fellows, I'd
just extend it.
Yes, but suppose you did extend it and then you

F:

H.M.Jr:

got a declaration of war. Would you act under it?
Well, I - I would continue until you people advised

F:

me to stop.
I see.

H.M.Jr:

See?

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

I would continue until you people said no.

F:

I see. Well I think your suggestion is the best
suggestion.

H.M.Jr:

I mean I - don't misunderstand me I'm not trying
to put the State Department on the spot.

F:

Oh, no, I don't - you're not.

H.M.Jr:

And on the other hand -

F:

We were - really were trying to avoid putting you

H.M.Jr:

in one.

Yes. But what I am trying to do is - the terms of
the Administration - reason I raised it was that I
was trying to avoid an embarrassing situation.

F:

Exactly.

-6H.M.Jr:

159

But
don't be
seediscussed
why without- any memorandum why
thisI can't

I agree.

F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

See?

All right, and Oliphant As to the silver, buying fifty million ounces,
you people have no comment.

F:

No comment, no objection either in law or
policy.

H.M.Jr:

Now, all right, well this is what we'll do. We'll
tell them to make a committment along those lines

for the silver you see.
Uh-huh.

F:

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

What?

Yes.

Because, well I'd frankly like to help them
out, because I think it's good for United
States Government.

F:

Exactly.

H.M.Jr:

You check on that, don't you?

F:

Exactly.

H.M.Jr:

Your Embassy in Tokio told us not so long ago, that
somebody in a Government bank there said no more

gold the rest of this year.
F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Without by your leave or anything else they put

another six million - they put twenty five million
yen on the boat, just - just came over this
minute from - from the State Department.

F:

H.M.Jr:

It's arrived here.
No, they - here's the thing, December 2nd, 11 a.m.
Referring to Department's
so forth
nowtelegram
find thatand
- well
-

160

-7practically thirty two thousand certified bars
F:

of Japanese gold have been shipped on Did you say this was from us?

H.M.Jr:

Yes, it just came this second.

H.M.Jr:

No - I probably haven't yet seen it.
It just came this second, signed by Scott.

F:

I-I-

F:

H.M.Jr:

What's the use of these people telling your
representative over there they're through and
then they ship another twenty five million yen -

I mean to arrive in San Francisco, December 15th.

F:

Uh-huh.

H.M.Jr:

I mean it, kinda makes me sore, but I don't want -

F:

I can say that to you without saying it to the
Japs. Think about it, will you?
And taken in conjunction with that information
that you've got.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

That they're building up their balances here.

H.M.Jr:

Yes, you know what they are don't you?

F:

Forty five million dollars.
Forty five million.

H.M.Jr:

And here comes another twenty five million yen.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

I don't like it. I mean -

F:

Well, if you want us -

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M Jr:

Well, I - I've got to take gold, You've got to take it, and furthermore if - in
-

one sense the quicker they use it up, I mean
But I'm not going to say anything, except to you,
but -

-8-

16$

All right.

F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

I mean what's the use of sending an official
of the American Embassy in Japan over to their
national bank and they tell him one thing, and
then - just don't mean anything.
I know it. That's what happens to us the world
over.

H.M.Jr:

Right.

F:

Exactly.

H.M Jr:

All right, now Herbert.

F:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

I'll tell our Chinese friends just about
this. What kind of a cable did the President
send Mr. Hull on this.

F:

I've got it here. Wait a minute. Oh, to us?

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

F:

Nothing.

H.M.Jr:

On, didn't he?

F:

No.

H.M.Jr:

Well you notice in my cable he said I'm sending

F:

Well, let me ask Hamilton, the head of our Far

Mr. Hull a message.

East who's sitting here. (aside) Did we get
anything from the President on this.
Oh, all it did was to ask Mr. Hull to confer with
you.

H.M Jr:

I get you.

H.M.Jr:

That's all it said.
Well, then this thing is closed, and I will tell

F:

At his convenience.

F:

Taylor, to arrange for a meeting with you and
the people over there.

-9H.M.Jr:

Right.

F:

Right.

H.M.Jr:
F:

H.M.Jr:

Well, just let me take a minute.
Did I tell you about the Holland thing?
You did. Has that gone through?
Yes. And be - come through next week thoughl

F:

Good.

H.M.Jr:

But -

F:

I suppose the heads of the newspapers will

H.M.Jr:

162

interpret as a send out -

No, because we're handling it through the Stabilization
Fund and it won't show up at all.

F:

On, good.

H.M.Jr:

It won't show up at all.

F:

Good.

H.M.Jr:

And incidentally, in the last fifteen minutes,
today, the stock market went up three points.

F:

H.M.Jr:

F:

H.M.Jr:

I wonder why.

I don't know. Randolph Burgess was in here
and he says it's because Marriner Eccles is on
the Hill. (laughs) He's not in here now, but
I mean he was in here when the market closed.

Well if he can do it we'll give him roller skates.
No, he isn't in here now, but I meant when he was
in here before.

F:

Yes:

H.M.Jr:

All right. Thank you very much.

F:

Thank you.

163
3/5'88

Mrs. Small

Will you substitute this
memo for the one you have of

the same date, and let me have
the one you how have?
McGuire

From: MR. OLIPHANT

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

163

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE

TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau

September 3, 1937

Herman Oliphant

You asked in your telegram of August 31, for a clear-cut
positive statement from me as to what duties would fall on the
Treasury in case the President should invoke the Neutrality Act
against China and Japan or any other country. Particularly, you
wish to know whether we would be permitted to continue to purchase gold, silver and foreign exchange from these countries.

The following would be the legal situation:

A. The Neutrality Act would not affect the legal situa-

tion of the Treasury at all. Its prohibition of financial transactions with belligerents does not apply to the United States
Government because it was not mentioned in the Neutrality Act

and the sovereign is not bound by legislation unless specifically
named therein.

B. Besides the Neutrality Act, we have to consider the

general rules of international law as to unneutral acts. The
effect of those rules on the Treasury would be as follows:

1. It would not be an unneutral act for the
Treasury to continue, in the ordinary course, to deal
in foreign exchange with a belligerent, the purpose

being not to extend a line of credit, but to protect
the dollar in foreign exchange.

-2- -

165

2. It would be an unneutral act for the Treasury

voluntarily to extend a line of credit to a belligerent.
It is not clear that such an extension of credit would con-

stitute a violation of international law if it were granted
pursuant to an agreement with the belligerent government

entered into prior to the outbreak of war, for a normal
peacetime purpose and without relationship to the existence

of a state of war. However, it is not necessary to resolve
this question because the agreement with China does not

constitute the making of a loan or an extension of credit but
is an exchange transaction constituting a part of the United
States Government's legitimate program to stabilize the value

of the dollar in terms of foreign currencies.
3. Since it would be just as convenient for China to
liquidate her gold now under earmark here as to get a line
of credit under our arrangement with her, the next question is

as to the law governing her disposition of this gold. This
involves four questions: Could the Treasury buy her gold?
Could an American bank buy her gold? Could she take the gold

to Lordon and sell it? Could she transfer her earmark to
Britain, the gold remaining here?
(a) There are no precedents one way or the other on the
question whether it would be an unneutral act for the

Treasury to buy gold or silver from a belligerent government, the purpose of that government being known to be

to acquire dollar credits with which to pay for war

--

166

materials. Accordingly, the Treasury could buy gold
or silver from a belligerent government or decline
to do so, depending on how the broad questions of
policy involved were determined.

(b) It would not violate the Neutrality Act and would
not be an unneutral act for an American bank to buy
the gold China has on earmark here, but, for the
Treasury immediately to buy this gold from the American
bank would come close to raising the unsettled question
mentioned in (a) above.

(c) The Treasury would have to give the American bank

a license to buy this gold, but it would not have to
do anything if China withdrew the gold from earmark

and sent it to London for sale, and that would be all

right, both under the Neutrality Act and under international law.

(d) Finally, China could leave the gold here, transferring the earmark to Britain. The Treasury would
have to authorize this, but there would be no violation

of the Neutrality Act or of international law.
It is not believed that an opinion of the Attorney General would
be helpful at this time. However, there has been prepared for possible
use a request for his opinion on all the points covered by the foregoing,
together with the usual opinion of the General Counsel to accompany
such request.

human Oliginal

167

Ecker

10yr
23/4%
w

8y

2-2%

would take

01/1

50 mil $ of
10yeand good amount

of 8yr.
H Lose 1, 1937

Mr. Garner line President Guaranty Trust

Mr. Rouse 2ndf.P. in charge of
tra ding in Gort securities tank
1/2

2-1%
8
yr.
Bind
he worth 3/4 +

Devine

Dec 2,193

suggests stat hutting

out a 8yr fond

and he would bet
in that exclusely

169

Levi - 5yr 171

are 21/1337

190

Discrumt Coh

8yr Bond

I

the 2,1937

17t

Bankers Thest Temptring

5yr
1314%
8 yr 2 1/2
Thinks that to do it

all in a 8yr Band

would he too risky
7n themselves would

take Eye Bond

the 2, ,193,

prefer

December 2, 1937. 172
3:28 p.m.

H.M.Jr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Cummings.

H.M.Jr:
Walter

Hello.

Cummings:

Hello.

H.M.Jr:

Walter Cummings?

C:

Yes, hello Henry, how are you?

H.M.Jr:

I'm fine.

C:

That's good.

H.M.Jr:

Walter, I'd like to have you sort of check with

your Government bond people.

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And let me know how they feel about our financing

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

We put out this morning what we're going to do.

C:

Yes, I got that.

H.M.Jr:

next Monday, see?

And the argument lies between a five year one and
three quarters and eight year two and a half.

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I'd like to know how you people feel and what -

C:

Yes. On the - on the one and three quarters, would

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:

what you're advice would be.

that be on the two seventy five exchange?

Well, we could work it this way, that whatever we
did, we'd give the February the right to convert.
I see.
See?

-2-

173

Well - you know I can tell you right off because
I've been giving a good deal of thought to this,
and
to tell the truth, I was hoping you might
call me.

C:

H.M.Jr:

Well, shoot.

C:

All right. I think your note issue is fine, one

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

and three quarters.

C:

H.M.Jr:

You can make it a little shorter time, if you
want to. The second one is absolutely right,
eight years, two and a half.
Well, some people think we should do a note,
some think we should do both, some think we should
-

only do a bond.

C:

No, I'd do both, Henry.

H.M.Jr:

Do both?

C:

Yes, you bet.

H.M.Jr:

Well now, if we did both, and had to divide the four
hundred and fifty, how would you divide it as between a note and a bond?

C:

I'd put out - I'd put out the four hundred and
fifty of bonds.

H.M.Jr:

Four hundred and fifty of bonds?

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Well, where would the note come in?

C:

You've got a good chance. Well you're going to
issue two seventy seven, the report came - two

seventy five and four fifty.

H.M.Jr:

No.

C:

Oh, well, the reports came to me wrong.

H.M.Jr:
C:

No. What - what - the thing is this They - they quoted you wrong then, Henry, over the
ticker.

174

-3H.M.Jr:

No the Dow-Jones had it all right.

C:

Did they?

H.M.Jr:

What we're offering 18 - we're offering four
hundred and fifty million dollars cash.

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And then the February -

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Notes Yes.

C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

The right to convert it into whatever piece of
paper we offer for the four hundred and fifty.

All right, then you're going to have four fifty
plus two seventy five then, aren't you or - let
me get this straight now, because I'm confused
Don't you need the four hundred and fifty new
money?

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

We need four hundred and fifty new money, and

that's all.

And that's all, the rest will be just an exchange.
That's right.
Uh-huh. All right you get four fifty and two
seventy five.

That's right.
Let me - I'll call you back.
What?

I'll look over my slip to be sure I'm right on

this.

H.M.Jr:

Now let me say it again. We're offering four
hundred and fifty million.

C:

Yes.

-4H.M.Jr:

For cash.

C:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:

175

Now we've got to decide what that's going to be.
Yes.

And whatever that's going to be, then the February

note will have a right to convert into that.

C:

Yes, I see.

H.M.Jr:

Do you get it?

C:

Yes, I get it.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

All right, I'll call you back.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

C:

Thank you.

December 2, 1937.
3:57 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Walter

Hello.

Cummings:

Hello, Henry this is Walter.

H.M.Jr:

Yes. I don't hear you awfully well.

C:

Oh, hello, Henry, this is Walter Cummings.

H.M.Jr:

17S

Yes.

Hear me now?

C:

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

Henry, our first choice on that would be, of course,
to issue all bonds.

H.M.Jr:

What?

C:

Our first choice would be to have you issue all

H.M.Jr:

All bonds.

C:

Yes, I'll tell you why. You've got four hundred
and fifty five million due in March.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

Like to have you clear there to be in a position to

bonds.

issue notes there because we know that they will
take, next March and that wouldn't compete with any
demands for capital.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

C:

That would be my first choice.

H.M.Jr:
C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

First choice, all bonds.
All bonds, eight year bonds at two and a half.
Uh-huh.

Now if - if you decide that that isn't the wisest
thing to do Henry, then I would offer for cash
in exchange the new issue, the five year one and
three quarter note eight year two and a half per

cent bonds and let it fall wherever it would.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

-2C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

177

You see then you'd be - you'd be dead sure, you
know that the entire offer would be accepted.
Yes.

And to show you how I feel about those bonds, as
far as our bank is concerned, we would subscribe

the limit and be glad to get them, and I think the
bond issue would go over very good right at this
time and I'd rather have the - placed in bonds
now when we're pretty sure they'11 take it rather
than take a chance next March.

H.M.Jr:
C:

I see. But your bank would take the limit on the

bonds.

Yes. We'd take the limit on the bonds. Happy to
get them.

H.M.Jr:

How many - under your limit how many could you
subscribe to?

C:

Forty five million.

H.M.Jr:

How much?

C:

Forty five or fifty million. Forty five million

H.M.Jr:
C:

we can take.
Un-huh.

I'm sure that our here in this country that that
offer would be - that their bond issue would go
over good.

H.M.Jr:
C:

Have you talked to any of your correspondent banks?

Yes, we're in touch with them all the time.
Practically every day. Had one of them - well we
have them every day, we've been talking this thing
for two weeks, Henry.

H.M.Jr:

Yes. And that's the concensus of opinion?

C:

Yes, that is out here.

H.M.Jr:

Well would other banks do the same thing out

C:

I - I can't - I can't answer for them. I don't

there?

know. But I'm sure that this would go - the bond
issue would go over very good. You see, you have

178

-3no maturities then, you know, in 1945.
H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

Looking ahead you've only got one maturity -

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

H.M.Jr:
C:

Due at that date of a million four hundred thousand.
Yes.

What I'm concerned particularly Henry, is looking

ahead to March.

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

C:

You know the notes will go fine.

H.M.Jr:

You mean -

C:

Put those out any time and you'd have no trouble

next March on that four hundred and fifty five
million and nobody could say that the Government
was competing with industry or anybody else for
money.

H.M.Jr:

Well -

C:

That's my real reason.

H.M.Jr:

Could you talk to some of your friends and call me

C:

Yes, I'11 sound out a few more Henry, and call you

back tomorrow afternoon and let me know whether they
feel the same way?
tomorrow.

H.M.Jr:

will you do that?

C:

Yes, I'll do that.

H.M.Jr:

Thank you.

C:

All right. Goodbye.

179

MEMORANDUM OF THE DAY'S ACTIVITIES

December 2, 1937

To:

Secretary Morgenthau

From:

Mr. Magill

1. Tax Revision
The meeting of the Ways and Means Subcommittee was

called off today on account of the absence of Congressman Vinson.
Vinson called me in the afternoon and said that he was completely
exhausted yesterday evening and stayed in bed this morning. He
expects to go on with the meeting scheduled for tomorrow.

You may be interested in the following items bearing
upon the general situation:
(1) Mr. Kent informed me this morning that he
has had several offers to go into practice
and is considering accepting one during the next
few months. He does not feel that a government

career is as attractive as the position he might
secure in practice. I told him that I greatly appreciated his good work and that I knew, of course, that
he would not wish to resign prior to the completion
of our work on this revenue bill. He agreed and

said he would let me know whenever any further develop-

ments occurred.

(2) Mr. Doughton asked me to listen to a short

speech which is to be read for him next Tuesday at a meeting of the National Association of Tax

Administrators in Atlantic City. Although the speech

is supposed to be on overlapping of Federal and State
taxes, Mr. Doughton devotes it all to general remarks

on the subject of the undistributed profits tax and

the tax on capital gains. He also spends a good deal
of space in attacking some of Senator Harrison' S remarks in his recent radio speech. I suggested to Mr.
Doughton that he ought to mention at least that the
Committee is considering other topics than these two
and asked him whether he wanted to make as pointed

criticisms of Senator Harrison as he had done. He

feels very critical of the Senator since it is his view

that the Senator's speech is intended to cast aspersions

180

-2-

upon the Ways and Means Committee on account of its

adoption of the undistributed profits tax in 1936.

(3) Mr. Oliphant spoke to me, as I believe he
did to you, regarding his meeting with fifty

congressmen under the chairmanship of Congressman

Maverick. As I understand it these congressmen will
put up to us the question of providing them with

information on questions now pending before the Ways
and Means Committee, in order to enable the congressmen to make speeches on the floor. In the telephone

call from Mr. Vinson this afternoon I may have had an
echo from this meeting. Vinson said he was informed
that several Senators were saying that they understood
that the proposed undistributed profits tax rates were
too low and that they would not yield sufficient
revenue. Vinson felt that these Senators had obtained
information of the President's position which he thought
no one ought to know except the Treasury and Messrs.

Doughton, Vinson and Cooper. I said that he must realize
that the Senators' information did not come from me and
he assured me that he had no such idea.

Rm

181

COPY

December 2, 1937
My dear Mr. Ambassador:

This will confirm our conversation of even date
in which it was agreed that the United States Treasury
purchase from the Republic of China an amount of 50,000,000

ounces of silver .999 fine, the proceeds to be used for the
purpose of maintaining the stability of the Chinese yuan.
I will instruct the Federal Reserve Bank of New

York, as fiscal agent of the United States, to cable bids
through the Central Bank of China for the amount of 10,000,000
ounces each on December 15, December 31, 1937, January 15,

January 31 and Februry 15, 1938, based on the market price

for silver on the date the bids are made.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
His Excellency
Chenting T. Wang,
Ambassador of China,

Chinese Embassy,
Washington, D.C.

Note: Ribbon
copies
this report
were sent
to theoffollowing
by

182

the Secretary on December 4, 1937:
The President

The Secy. of State
The Secy. of War - (Attention
Colonel Strong (G-2))
mas

Letters of transmittal were dated 12/4/37
nd were signed by the Secretary.)

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

183

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE December 2, 1937
TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Haas

Subject: Current United States trade with Japan and China
(Preliminary data)

United States trade with Japan during the first four
weeks of November 1937

(1) United States exports to Japan during the first
the first four weeks of October of this year.

four weeks of November were considerably lower than during
United States exports to Japan

First four weeks of

1st week

November 1937

October 1937

$ 1,180,000

$ 1,727,000

4,813,000
4,745,000
3,730,000

5,746,000
4,492,000
6,763,000

Total 4 weeks $14,468,000

$18,728,000

2nd week
3rd week

4th week

Month of

November 1936
For

whole month

$24,100,000

(2) United States imports from Japan during the
first four weeks of November were slightly higher than
the imports during the first four weeks of October.
United States imports from Japan

First four weeks of

November 1937

October 1937

$ 3,245,000
3,654,000
4,356,000
4,027,000

$ 3,328,000
3,984,000
3,419,000
4,060,000

Total 4 weeks $15,282,000

$14,791,000

1st week
2nd week

3rd week
4th week

Month of
November 1936
For

whole month

$15,340,000

184

Secretary Morgenthau - 2

(3) United States export of cotton to Japan remains

negligible.

November 1937:

1st week

2nd week
3rd week

4th week

Total

$ 97,000

149,000
266,000
161,000

$673,000

November 1936, whole month $14,701,000

(4) The major items in our exports to Japan during
the first four weeks of November 1937 are given below, with
a comparison of the exports during the first four weeks of

October 1937:

United States exports to Japan
First four weeks of
November 1937

October 1937

$ 4,451,000
1,570,000
1,383,000
1,171,000

Paper base stocks

940,000

$ 4,216,000
1,441,000
1,345,000
3,580,000
1,106,000

Vehicles, parts & accessories

840,000
673,000
564,000
550,000
372,000

634,000
941,000
994,000
418,000
833,000

356,000
234,000
216,000
201,000
181,000

279,000
208,000
133,000
887,000
255,000

94,000
41,000
13,000
618,000

192,000
167,000
131,000
968,000

$14,468,000

$18,728,000

Petroleum products
Copper

Industrial machinery
Iron and steel semi-mfrs.
Cotton, unmanufactured

Scrap iron and steel

Brass

Hides and skins

Ferro-alloys

Fertilizer

Industrial chemicals

Pig iron
Coal tar products
Wood

Pig lead

Photographic & projection goods
Other

Total

185

Secretary Morgenthau - 3

(5) The major items in our imports from Japan during
the first four weeks of November 1937 are given below, with
a comparison of the imports during the first four weeks of

October 1937:

United States imports from Japan

First four weeks of

Silk
Cotton manufactures

November 1937

October 1937

$ 8,094,000

$ 8,021,000

979,000
500,000
455,000
443,000

1,119,000

433,000
373,000
357,000
308,000
260,000

457,000
260,000
307,000
374,000
237,000

Food products - vegetable

Glass and manufactures
Wool and manufactures

220,000
205,000
193,000
189,000
183,000

197,000
356,000
153,000
136,000
272,000

Inedible animal products

163,000
94,000
69,000

331,000
135,000
156,000
189,000
183,000

1,484,000

956,000

$15,283,000

$14,791,000

Fish

Silk manufactures

Wood and manufactures
Tea

Pyrethrum flowers

Perilla oil

Porcelain and chinaware
Paper and manufactures
Earthenware

Rayon and manufactures

Flax, hemp and ramie manufactures 142,000
139,000
Metals and manufactures
Chemicals

Lily bulbs
Other

Total

333,000
456,000
163,000

18S

Secretary Morgenthau - 4

United States trade with China during the first four weeks
of November

(1) The value of our exports to China during the first

four weeks of November 1937 is already much higher than our
exports during the whole of November 1936.
United States exports to
North China
and Manchuria
November 1937

1st 2 weeks

3rd week
4th week

Total 1st 4 weeks
of November

Shanghai, South
China and Hong Kong

$ 854,000

$ 770,000

573,000

1,229,000

$2,656,000

Total

1,616,000

616,000

$1,624,000
2,845,000
1,189,000

$3,002,000

$5,658,000

For whole of China, Manchuria
and Hong Kong

$3,769,000

Whole month of November 1936

(2) The value of United States imports from China and
Manchuria during the first four weeks of November is considerably higher than during the whole of the same month last
year.

United States imports from
North China
and Manchuria

Shanghai, South
China and Hong Kong

Total

November 1937

1st 2 weeks

3rd week
4th week

Total 1st 4 weeks
of November

$ 797,000

396,000
652,000

$1,498,000
1,121,000
1,279,000

$2,295,000
1,517,000
1,931,000

$1,845,000

$3,898,000

$5,743,000

For whole of China, Manchuria
and Hong Kong

Whole month of November 1936

$4,659,000

187

Secretary Morgenthau - 5

(3) Leading export items to China
(a) North China and Manchuria, first four

weeks of November:

Iron and steel semi-manufactures $1,510,000
312,000
Vehicles, parts and accessories
Petroleum products

267,000
197,000

Cotton, unmanufectured

168,000
61,000
141,000

Tobacco

Wood, unmanufactured
Other

Total

$2,656,000

(b) Shanghai, South China ports and Hong Kong
$ 808,000
Petroleum products
524,000
Iron and steel semi-manufactures
Tobacco

333,000
231,000

Edible vegetable products
Printed matter
Industrial machinery

201,000
133,000
130,000
642,000

Vehicles, parts and accessories

Other

Total

$3,002,000

(4) Leading imports from China during the first four

weeks of November 1937

(a) From North China and Manchuria
$ 787,000
Bristles
Wool and manufactures
Leather

Perilla oil
Other

Total

494,000
98,000
63,000
403,000

$1,845,000

188

Secretary Morgenthau - 6

(b) From Shanghai, South China ports and Hong Kong
$ 624,000
Wood oil
Tin

Flax, hemp and ramie manufactures
Raw silk

Inedible vegetable products
(other than wood oil)

Bristles

Food products - vegetable

Wool and manufactures
Tea

Other

Total

622,000
423,000
412,000

255,000
194,000
142,000
139,000
132,000
955,000

$3,898,000

189

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE

TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau

Assistant Secretary Taylor

On December 3 a conference was held in my office, at which the question
of extending the Chinese foreign exchange agreement was discussed. There
were present Messrs. Feis and Hackworth, representing the State Department,
and Messrs. Oliphant, Lochhead, White, Opper and myself, representing the
Treasury. The question was attacked from the standpoint of the Neutrality

Act, on the one hand, and the general rules of international law, on the
other. Mr. Hackworth was of the opinion that, if this were a loan and war
were actually declared between China and Japan, it would be a violation of
international law for the United States to enter into the transaction. He
was not prepared to say, however, that the same thing would be true if
there were a previously existing commitment to make such a loan. I gathered
that Mr. Feis did not place so great an emphasis on the international law
prohibition as Mr. Hackworth.

On the question of the operation of the Neutrality Act, the representatives of the State Department agreed that the Neutrality Act would not, by

its terms, forbid the transaction, but felt that it would be a seriously
debatable policy for the United States to enter into a loan or credit transaction which the policy of the Neutrality Act forbade as regards private
individuals.

Some time was then consumed in explaining the real purpose and effect

of the arrangement from the standpoint of the interests of the United
States in the stabilizing of the dollar. It was pointed out, among other
things, that the transaction was not entered into for the benefit of China,
but for the purpose of stabilizing the dollar, which was a function of the
Treasury and a subject in which the United States was vitally interested;
that China could obtain dollar exchange by selling its gold and the fact
that it had not sold the gold to us was to our advantage; that the transaction had been entered into originally at a time when there was no
thought of war, and that if it were extended it would merely be a continuation of an arrangement which had no relation to the existence of a state of
war; and, finally, that it could not be compared to a private transaction
since its purpose and intent was not to extend credit but to regulate foreign exchange - a matter with which private interests are not authorized
to deal.

At the conclusion of the discussion, it appeared clear that Mr. Hackworth had no doubts as to the legal questions involved, and that, even in

so far as it might be necessary for the action to be justified if it were

attached, the foregoing and other aspects discussed would furnish considerations upon which the action could be justified. He said, however, that
he thought the policy question was generally one which his Department
might want to consider further.

vert.

I

0

December 2, 1937

My dear Mr. Ambassador:

This will confirm our conversation of even date in which it was
agreed that the United States Treasury purchase from the Republic of
China as amount of 50,000,000 ounces of silver .999 fine, the proceeds

to be used for the purpose of maintaining the stability of the Chinese
yean.

I will instruct the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as fiscal
agent of the United States, to eable bids through the Central Bank of
China for amounts of $0,000,000 ources each on December 15, December 31,

1937, January 15, January 31, and February 15, 1938, based on the market

price for silver on the date the bide are made.
Sincerely years,

Secretary of the Treasury

His Excellency
Cheating T. Vang,
Ambassador of China,
Chinese Embassy,

Washington, D. C.

AL:OK

12.9.37

191

December 2, 1937.
Herbert
Feis:

At a Departmental session, on those two points you

HMJr:

Yes.

raised.

And this is about the upshot, which I was asked
to pass on to you, first as to the purchase of
silver.

F:

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

As far as we can see, no comment.

HMJr:

Uh-huh.

F:

Go ahead if you want.

HMJr:

Uh-huh.

F:

No comment to make. On the second -

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

HMJr:
F:

The Secretary says he thinks his informal advice

would be Yes.

To keep yourself free of any commitment that you'd
have to follow through should there be either a

declaration of war or an application of the
neutrality proclamation, or both.
HMJr:
F:

Uh-huh.

You see. We'd rather not even have to talk it out
with you, as a matter of general international law.
That is, we'd like to not make a precedent and not
in any way limit our possible future freedom of
action, and that's why he asked me to put it to you
as a matter of informal advice.

HMJr:

Well now, I - you see - just let me take a minute -

F:

Sure.

HMJr:

Oliphant holds and 80 advised me that if the

Neutrality Act 18 invoked, that that particular

-2arrangement with China would not be affected, see?
F:

That's right, under the Neutrality Act.

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

The question of the customary rules of international

law.
HMJr:

Yes.

F:

Under the customary rules of international law, loans

by a Government to a belligerent Government are conHMJr:

trary to the ordinary rules of neutrality.
Well, this isn't a loan.

F:

Well, it's an advance.

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

Backed on specie.

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

And our legal advisor holds that it would go against
the customary rules of neutrality.

HMJr:

Nice spot.

F:

That's only if there's a declaration of war.

HMJr:

I see.

F:

If and what you get is an application of the
neutrality act.

HMJr:

I get what.

F:

Just an application of our neutrality act. That's
a local action on our part.

HMJr:

I see.

F:

And what the Hell, the rules of international law

would be.
HMJr:

I see.

192

193

3F:

Is more difficult. But above all else the Department thinks from its point of view and from yours,
it's best to avoid making anything that could be

considered a formal precedent, you see. But to you
to retain complete liberty to avoid any commitment
to them as to making advances should there be either
a declaration of war or should we apply our

HMJr:

neutrality legislation.
Uh-huh. Well, well - here's the point. This

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

We - I think under our arrangement, have to let them

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

Whether we're going to renew it.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

So that part, I would like Oliphant to have a

thing expires December 31st.

know by the 15th of December.

discussion with your counsel, how's that?

F:

Yes. -

HMJr:

As to what we should do between now and the 15th

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

in regard to the extension - hello.
In regard to the extension of that

which let's call it.

F:

Sure.

HMJr:

You see they've got fifty million dollars worth

of gold here now, against which they have
borrowed.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

Thirty million dollars worth of yuan.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

And which they put up thirty million dollars
worth of yuan on their books, in China, to our
credit.

-4F:

Yes.

HMJr:

And we also have the gold against that as

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

Now, I think the best thing to do is to let -

collateral, you see.

I think that you and your counsel and Oliphant and

Lochhead and White had better sit down and have a

little meeting on that.

F:

HMJr:
F:

Whenever you want, but - and now I was thinking

from your point of view, as well as from ours Yes, well I I can see pretty strongly the way the minds of our
legal advisor offices are operating, and if you can
get into a formal legal discussion of them - with
them, we're going to get, I'm afraid, something

restrictive.

F:

Yes, but now, wait a minute. Between - I've got to
give these fellows - what am I going to do, let
this thing expire?
Well couldn't you -

HMJr:

I mean -

F:

Couldn't you carry it along without an agreement?

HMJr:

No.

HMJr:

F:

Well all right then, certainly yes whenever you
want to send Oliphant and the rest over, fine or

whenever you'd want Ackworth and his group to come
over.

HMJr:

Fine.

F:

You have Oliphant - do you want Oliphant -

HMJr:

Well, I mean we've got to do one of two things

F:

All right.

between now and the 15th.

194

-5HMJr:

We've got to either extend it or let it drop.

F:

I see.

HMJr:

Now the normal thing, not knowing anything about

F:

HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

anything would be - would be to extend it - not
necessarily for a year, let's say three months.
That's right.
I mean the normal thing would be - would be just
the one existing today with Mexico, I wouldn't
even say - let's take Canada. If we had one with
Canada that expired on the first of January, the
chances are I wouldn't even ask you fellows, I'd
just extend it.
Yes, but suppose you did extend it and then you
got a declaration of war. Would you act under it?
Well, I - I would continue until you people advised
me to stop.

F:

I see.

HMJr:

See?

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

I would continue until you people said no.

F:

I see. Well I think your suggestion is the best
suggestion.

HMJr:

I mean I - don't misunderstand me I'm not trying
to put the State Department on the spot.

F:

Oh, no, I don't - you're not.

HMJr:

And on the other hand -

F:

We were - really were trying to avoid putting you
in one.

HMJr:

F:

Yes. But what I am trying to do is - the terms of
the Administration - reason I raised it was that I
was trying to avoid an embarrassing situation.
Exactly.

195

-6HMJr:

But I don't see why without any memorandum why

F:

I agree.

HMJr:

See?

F:

HMJr:

196

this can't be discussed -

All right, and Oliphant As to the silver, buying fifty million ounces,
you people have no comment.

F:

No comment, no objection either in law or
policy.

HMJr:

Now, all right, well this is what we'll do. We'll
tell them to make a commitment along those lines

for the silver you see.

F:

Uh-huh.

HMJr:

What?

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

Because, well I'd frankly like to help them
out, because I think it's good for United
States Government.

F:

Exactly.

HMJr:

You check on that, don't you?

F:

Exactly.

HMJr:

Your Embassy in Tokio told us not 80 long ago, that
somebody in a Government bank there said no more

gold the rest of this year.
F:

HMJr:

Yes.

without by your leave or anything else they put
another six million - they put twenty five million
yen on the boat, just - just came over this
minute from - from the State Department.

F:

HMJr:

It's arrived here.
No, they - here's the thing, December 2nd, 11 a.m.
Referring to Department's
80 forth
nowtelegram
find thatand
- well
-

-7 practically thirty two thousand certified bars
of Japanese gold have been shipped on -

Did you say this was from us?

F:

HMJr:
F:

HMJr:
F:

HMJr:

Yes, it just came this second.
No - I probably haven't yet seen it.
It just came this second, signed by Scott.

II-

What's the use of these people telling your
representative over there they're through and
then they ship another twenty five million yen I mean to arrive in San Francisco, December-15th

F:

Uh-huh.

HMJr:

I mean it kinda makes me sore, but I don't want -

F:

I can say that to you without saying it to the
Japs. Think about it, will you?
And taken in conjunction with that information

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

That they're building up their balances here.

HMJr:

Yes, you know what they are don't you?

F:

that you've got.

Forty five million dollars.
Forty five million.

HMJr:

And here comes another twenty five million yen.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

I don't like it. I mean -

F:

Well, if you want us -

HMJr:
F:

Well, I - I've got to take gold, You've got to take it, and furthermore if - in
one sense the quicker they use it up, I mean -

HMJr:

But I'm not going to say anything, except to you,
but -

197

-8-

All right.

F:

F:

I mean what's the use of sending an official
of the American Embassy in Japan over to their
national bank and they tell him one thing, and
then - just don't mean anything.
I know it. That's what happens to us the world

HMJr:

Right.

F:

Exactly.

HMJr:

All right, now Herbert.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

over.

HMJr:

I'11 tell our Chinese friends just about
this. What kind of a cable did the President
send Mr. Hull on this.

F:

I've got it here. Wait a minute. Oh, to us?

HMJr:

Yes.

F:

Nothing.

HMJr:

Oh, didn't he?

F:

No.

HMJr:

Well you notice in my cable he said I'm sending

F:

Mr. Hull a message.

Well, let me ask Hamilton, the head of our Far
East who's sitting here. (aside) Did we get
anything from the President on this. -

Oh, all it did was to ask Mr. Hull to confer with
you.

HMJr:
F:

HMJr:

F:

I get you.

That's all it said.
Well, then this thing is closed, and I will tell
Taylor, t.o arrange for a meeting with you and
the people over there.
At his convenience.

198

199

-9 HMJr:

Right.

F:

Right.

F:

Well, just let me take a minute.
Did I tell you about the Holland thing?
You did. Has that gone through?

HMJr:

Yes. And be - come through next week though.

F:

Good.

HMJr:

But -

F:

I suppose the heads of the newspapers will

HMJr:

HMJr:

interpret as a send out No, because we're handling it through the Stabilization
Fund and it won't show up at all.

F:

Oh, good.

HMJr:

It won't show up at all.

F:

Good.

HMJr:

And incidentally, in the last fifteen minutes,

F:

I wonder why.

HMJr:

F:

HMJr:

today, the stock market went up three points.

I don't know. Randolph Burgess was in here
and he sayd it's because Marriner Eccles is on
the Hill. (Laughs) He's not in here now, but
I mean he was in here when the market closed.

Well if he can do it we '11 give him roller skates.
No, he isn't in here now, but I mean when he was
in here before.

F:

Yes.

HMJr:

All right. Thank you very much.

F:

Thank you.

December 2, 1937.
3:28 p.m.
HMJr:

Hello.

Operator: Mr. Cummings.
HMJr:

Walter

Hello.

Cummings: Hello.
HMJr:

Walter Cummings?

C:

Yes, hello Henry, how are you?

HMJr:

I'm fine.

C:

That's good.

HMJr:

Walter, I'd like to have you sort of check with

your Government bond people.
C:

Yes.

HMJr:

And let me know how they feel about our financing
next Monday, see?

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

We put out this morning what we're going to do.

C:

Yes, I got that.

HMJr:

And the argument lies between a five year one and
three quarters and eight year two and a half.

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

And I'd like to know how you people feel and what what you're advice would be.

C:

Yes. On the - on the one and three quarters, would
that be on the two seventy five exchange?

HMJr:

Well, we could work it this way, that whatever we
did, we'd give the February the right to convert

C:

I see.

HMJr:

See?

200

-2 C:

HMJr:
C:

HMJr:
C:

HMJr:

201

Well - you know I can tell you right off because
I've been giving a good deal of thought to this,
and
to tell the truth, I was hoping you might
call me.
Well, shoot.

All
right. I think your note issue 18 fine, one
and three quarters.
Yes.

You can make it a little shorter time, if you
want to. The second one is absolutely right,
eight years, two and a half.
Well, some people think we should do a note,
some think we should do both, some think we should
only do a bond.

C:

No, I'd do both, Henry.

HMJr:

Do both?

C:

Yes, you bet.

HMJr:

Well now, if we did both, and had to divide the four
hundred and fifty, how would you divide it as between a note and a bond?

C:

I'd put out - I'd put out the four hundred and
fifty of bonds.

HMJr:

Four hundred and fifty of bonds?

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

Well, where would the note come in?

C:

You' ve got a good chance. Well you're going to
issue two seventy seven, the report came - two

seventy five and four fifty.

HMJr:

No.

C:

Oh, well, the reports came to me wrong.

HMJr:

No. What - what - the thing is this -

C:

They - they quoted you wrong then, Henry, over the

ticker.

-3HMJr:

No the Dow-Jones had it all right.

C:

Did they?

HMJr:

What we're offering is - we're offering four
hundred and fifty million dollars cash.

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

And then the February -

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

Notes -

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

C:

The right to convert it into whatever piece of
paper we offer for the four hundred and fifty.
All right, then you're going to have four fifty
plus two seventy five then, aren't you or - let
me get this straight now, because I'm confused.
Don't you need the four hundred and fifty new
money?

HMJr:

C:

HMJr:
C:

We need four hundred and fifty new money, and

that's all.

And that's all, the rest will be just an exchange.
That's right.
Uh-huh. All right you get four fifty and two
seventy five.

C:

That's right.
Let me - I'll call you back.

HMJr:

What?

0:

I'll look over my slip to be sure I'm right on

HMJr:

HMJr:

C:

this.

Now let me say it again. We're offering four
hundred and fifty million.
Yes.

202

203

-4HMJr:

For cash.

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

Now we've got to decide what that's going to be.

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

And whatever that's going to be, then the February

C:

Yes, I see.

HMJr:

Do you get it?

C:

Yes, I get it.

HMJr:

Yes.

C:

All right, I'll call you back.

HMJr:

Thank you.

C:

Thank you.

note will have a right to convert into that,