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DIARY

Book 239

February 1 -6, - 1940

-AAmerican Securities Owned Abroad
See War Conditions
Appointments and Resignations

Book Page

Kitchin, Mills:

United States Court of Customs, New York:
Doughton and HMJr again discuss appointment 2/1/40

239

Myers, Walter (Indiana):

66

Assistant to the Secretary: FDR's memorandum "Speak

to me about" - 2/1/40

69

Associated Gas and Electric Company
Hanes, John W.: Appointment as receiver discussed by
HMJr and Gaston; HMJr explains his early statement

of approval to Hanes - 2/5/40
Myers (William) discusses trusteeship with HMJr - 2/6/40..

a) Decides to refuse offer - 2/7/40:

212
365

See Book 240, page 76

Atlas Powder Company

See War Conditions: Purchasing Mission (British-French)
- -B -

Bank Credit
Copy of memorandum given HMJr by White House - 2/6/40

a) Copy of Howard S. Collman letter to Jones
Brazil

253
263

See Latin America
Business Conditions

Retail Food Prices: Bureau of Labor Statistics will
release monthly in future - 2/1/40
Noble (Commerce Department) provides report Haas memorandum on situation for week ending 2/2/40

48

165

217

-CChina

See War Conditions
Closing Agreements
See War Conditions
Coast Guard

Delay in delivery of HMJr's plane discussed by HMJr
and Chalker - 2/6/40
a) Discussed at 9:30 meeting - 2/6/40
b) Discussed by HMJr and Edison - 2/7/40:
Colombia

See Book 240, page 45

See Latin America
Copper

See War Conditions: Italy; U.S.S.R.

365
393

-DBook Page
Diamonds (Industrial)

See War Conditions

-FFinland

See War Conditions
France

See War Conditions: France; Purchasing Mission
(British-French)
Fulton Sylphon Company (Knoxville, Tennessee)
See War Conditions: Closing Agreements
-GGermany

See War Conditions

Gesner, Edward Carl William
See War Conditions: Germany
Gold

Round Table for Treasury discussion planned at
9:30 meeting - 2/6/40
a) Cochran memorandum - 2/6/40

239

398
422

Great Britain
See War Conditions: Great Britain; Purchasing Mission
(British-French)
Greece

See War Conditions

-HHanes, John W.

See also Associated Gas and Electric Company
Saturday Evening Post article: Correspondence between
editor and HMJr concerning rumors of loans from
Hanes to Newman - 2/5/40

-IIndiana
See Tax Evasion

Irish Republic

See War Conditions: Finland

Italy

See War Conditions

233

-DBook Page
Diamonds (Industrial)
See War Conditions

-FFinland
See War Conditions
France

See War Conditions: France; Purchasing Mission
(British-French)
Fulton Sylphon Company (Knoxville, Tennessee)
See War Conditions: Closing Agreements

-GGermany

See War Conditions

Gesner, Edward Carl William
See War Conditions: Germany
Gold

Round Table for Treasury discussion planned at
9:30 meeting - 2/6/40
a) Cochran memorandum - 2/6/40

239

398
422

Great Britain
See War Conditions: Great Britain; Purchasing Mission
(British-French)
Greece

See War Conditions

-HHanes, John W.

See also Associated Gas and Electric Company
Saturday Evening Post article: Correspondence between
editor and HMJr concerning rumors of loans from
Hanes to Newman - 2/5/40

-IIndiana
See Tax Evasion

Irish Republic

See War Conditions: Finland

Italy

See War Conditions

233

-J -

Book

Page

239

162

Jackson, Gardner

Letter concerning Dies Committee matter - 2/2/40

-K-

Kitchin, Mills
See Appointments and Resignations

-LLatin America

Brazil:

State Department memorandum to American Embassy,

Rio de Janeiro, containing "observations on the
British creditors' memorandum" - 2/2/40

State Department acknowledgment of Treasury withdrawal

from debt negotiations - 2/6/40

186
288

Colombia:

Conference; present: HMJr, Turbay, Jaramillo, Laylin,
Welles, White, Cotton, Gaston, and Traphagen 2/1/40
a) Memorandum from Government of Colombia
considered

73,91
86

1) Welles officially informs Treasury of
acceptance of temporary arrangement -

2/5/40

a) Welles-HMJr telephone conversation 2/6/40

b) Traphagen-HMJr telephone conversation 2/6/40

294
403
408

-M-

Monetary Research, Division of
Resume of reports, 1/39--1/31/40
Movies (Treasury)
"Know Your Money" and same sort for Narcotics discussed

at 9:30 meeting - 2/6/40
Myers, Walter (Indiana)

29

417

See Appointments and Resignations

Myers, William I.

See Associated Gas and Electric Company

-NNegro Employees

McReynolds asks HMJr to talk to him concerning problem 2/6/40

-0Oelsner, Edward Carl William
See War Conditions: Germany

363

-PBook Page
Portland Cement Company

See Tax Evasion: Indiana
Procurement Division

Reduction of Force: Committee reports to HMJr 239

2/6/40

375

-R-

Research and Statistics, Division of
Resume of reports, 12/28/39-1/31/40

114

Roper, Daniel C.

See War Conditions: Purchasing Mission (British-French)

Rose Gardens (Treasury)

Discussed at 9:30 meeting - 2/6/40

391

-SStabilization Fund
Annual report for FDR - 2/6/40

312

Surplus Commodities

Wheat Export Sales, et cetera: Haas memorandum 2/1/40

50

Sweden

See War Conditions

-T- Tax Evasion

Indiana:

HMJr and Helvering discuss advantages of having
investigatory work done by attorneys of General

Counsel's office or investigators from Irey's office 2/1/40

26

a) Conference; present: HMJr, Gaston, Foley,

Helvering, Graves, Irey, Sullivan, and Leming 269

2/6/40

1) Portland Cement prices by states January, 1939

279

-UU.S.S.R.

See War Conditions

-VVinson-Trammell Act
Treasury hears an amendment has been tentatively approved
by Committee; opposes amendment - 2/1/40

a) Copy sent to Edison (Secretary of Navy)
b) Schwarz memorandum on information received from
newspapermen

136,137
138
139

W-

Book Page

War Conditions
Airplanes:

Employment in the aviation manufacturing industry:
Haas memorandum - 2/1/40

239

71

Emergency Supplemental Appropriation Act:

Analysis of airplanes estimated for and

included in - 2/1/40

72

$1 billion Allied Purchases: Effect on American
economy (White memorandum) - 2/5/40

207

Wright Aeronautical Corporation (Paterson, New Jersey):

Plans for new building to occupy eight city blocks -

2/5/40

American Securities Owned Abroad:

229

Conference concerning vesting of securities of sixty
American corporations in British Purchasing Mission;
present: HMJr, Gifford, Pinsent, Bell, and Cochran 2/6/40

295

China:

Tin: Chen reports to HMJr on first step in plan for
monthly shipments of 800 tons - 2/6/40

389

Helvering report - 2/2/40

172

Closing Agreements:
Fulton Sylphon Company (Knoxville, Tennessee) :

For report of 2/23/40, see Book 242, page 172

Copper:

Exports of to Italy - 2/1/40

Diamonds (Industrial):
Re-exports of - White memorandum - 2/5/40

Economic Conditions Abroad:

White memorandum - 2/1/40

Exchange market resume - 2/1/40, et cetera

135
242

55,103

1,190,198,
215,424

Finland:

If loan fails, HMJr considers suggesting that Procope
"make an offer direct to the people in United States,
France, and Finland" - 2/1/40
a) Manner in which Irish bonds were sold in
1919-1920

France:

5

159

Commercial agreement concluded between France and

Greece - 2/5/40
Rueff discussion of economic and financial problems

of total war - 2/6/40

Germany:

248

353,428

Shipping of goods to Germany via other countries:
Oelsner (Edward Carl William) arranging - 2/1/40
Great Britain:
Dollar Requirements:
Memorandum received from Pinsent - 2/1/40

a) Copy transmitted to FDR - 2/6/40
Personal message from Chancellor of Exchequer 2/6/40

3

63

308
373

a) Copy sent to FDR
Revised text of paragraph 2: See Book 242, page 156
a) Copy to Hull: See Book 242, page 178
b)
White: See Book 242, page 183
"

305

"

W - (Continued)
Book

Page

239

248

War Conditions (Continued)
Greece:

Commercial agreement concluded between France and
Greece - 2/5/40

Italy:
Exports of copper to - 2/1/40
Exchange Adjustment: Confidential circular issued by
Italian Foreign Exchange Institute - 2/1/40
Purchasing Mission (British-French)

135

146,241

Atlas Powder Company: Proposed agreement between
111

company and British Purchasing Commission - 2/1/40

France: Estimate of expenses in United States - 2/1/40.

52

Roper, Daniel C.: Purvis memorandum concerning numerous

letters addressed to Commission - 2/3/40
Great Britain: Conference concerning vesting of

201

securities of sixty American corporations in British

Purchasing Mission; present: HMJr, Gifford, Pinsent,
Bell, and Cochran - 2/6/40
Securities Markets (High-Grade)

295

380

Current Developments: Haas memorandum - 2/6/40
Shipping:

Situation reviewed in Harris memorandum - 2/5/40
Strategic Materials:
Quartz Crystals: Re-exports of - (White memorandum)

227
-

2/5/40

238

Rubber and Tin: Treasury answer to letters from
Noble (Commerce Department) concerning re-exports 2/6/40

a) Discussed at 9:30 meeting - 2/6/40

264

396

Tin: Chen reports to HMJr on first step in plan for
monthly shipments of 800 tons - 2/6/40

389

Sweden:

Export credit for financing purchases in United States:
Swedish Legation sends Treasury a copy of letter
given to Jones - 2/2/40

174

U.S.S.R.:

Shipments to - 2/1/40
Glasser memorandum on trip concerning exports - 2/1/40.
Russian Gold, Mint Receipts of: White memorandum - 2/1/40.
a) Letter to Vandenberg - 2/8/40: See Book 240, page 166

130,131
132
134

American Embassy, Mexico City: Memorandum concerning trans-

shipment of cargo at Manzanillo for Vladivostok -

2/1/40

Commander Thompson's memorandum in regard to investigation
made at New York discussed by Cochran, Puleston,

et cetera - 2/3/40
Copper: Reloading at Mexico City for Vladivostok; then to
proceed over trans-Siberian railroad to Germany 2/5/40

Molybdenum Concentrates, Copper, Brass, et cetera:

Exports of - White memorandum - 2/5/40

158,188

194

226

239,240

- W - (Continued)
Book

Page

239

310

War Conditions (Continued)
U.S.S.R. (Continued) :

Treasury asks White House to resume copies of reports
of Amtorg purchases in United States - 2/6/40

a) White reports "no record" - 2/12/40:
See Book 240, page 387

b) Gaston tells HMJr he has ascertained
reports came from Naval Intelligence

and Irey is arranging for them to be

continued - 2/14/40: See Book 241, page 23
Gaston memorandum concerning shipment of five

Wright cyclone airplane motors - 2/6/40

311

a) Embargo angle discussed at 9:30 meeting 2/6/40

419

1

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Cochran

CONFIDENTIAL

A decline of more than two cents in the sterling rate was today's feature
in the foreign exchange market. After opening at 3.99-1/4, sterling was under
pressure all day and reached a low of 3.97-1/8 at the close.
Sales of spot sterling by the four reporting banks totaled 4466,000, from

the following sources:

By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Europe and South America)
Total

L 157,000
L 259,000
L 416,000

Purchases of spot sterling amounted to $317,000. as indicated below:
L 212,000
L 105,000

By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Europe and Far East)
Total

L 317,000

The National City Bank reported that it had sold cotton bills totaling
111,000 to the British Control on the basis of the official rate of 4.02-1/2.
The other important currencies closed as follows:
French france
Guilders
Swiss france

.0225
.5309

Belgas

.1697

Canadian dollars

.2242-1/2

12-5/8% discount

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York bought 10,000 guilders for account

of the Bank of Latvia.

We purchased $1,012,000 in gold from the earmarked account of the
National Bank of Rumania.

We sold $285,000 in gold to the National Bank of Belgium to be added to
its earmarked account.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported the following shipments
of gold:

2

-2$328,000 from India, shipped by the Comptoir National d'Escompte de Paris,
Bombay, to the Chase National Bank, New York.

77,000 from Canada, shipped by the Bank of Montreal, Ottawa, to its
New York agency for account of the Credit Suisse, Zurich.
14,000 from Canada, shipped by the Bank of Montreal, Montreal, to the Chase
National Bank, New York.

$419,000 Total

These shipments will be sold to the U. S. Assay Office at New York.
The State Department forwarded to us a cable stating that Samuel Montagu
and Company, London, was shipping $112,000 in gold to the Bankers Trust Company,

New York, for sale to the U. S. Assay Office.

On further local speculative buying, the London fixing prices for silver
continued to recover. The spot quotation was 21-3/4a, up 3/8d, and the
forward price was 21-11/16d, up 5/16d. The U. S. equivalents were 39.08$
and 38.72$ respectively.

The Bombay silver quotation was unchanged at an equivalent of 40.16
Handy and Harman's and the Treasury's prices for foreign silver were
also unchanged at 34-3/4g and 35$ respectively.
We made eight purchases of silver totaling 800,000 ounces under the
Silver Purchase Act. Of this amount 450,000 ounces represented sales
from inventory by two refining companies, and the remaining 350,000 ounces
consisted of new production from foreign countries, for forward delivery.
We also purchased 300,000 ounces of silver from the Bank of Canada under
our regular monthly agreement.

CONF DENTAL

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
TREASURY DEPARTMENT

3

All

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM Mr. Cochran

Fletcher Warren, of Mr. Messersmith's office, called me by telephone
this forenoon to give me the correct name of the individual who is suspected of directing certain European shipping operations from New York

and possibly giving instructions to German vessels, as well as routing

goods to Germany via other countries. In an earlier memorandum I gave
this name as "Gesner." The correct name is now found to be Edward Carl
William Oelsner. This man is an American citizen, born in Wycocki,

Poland. He applied in Paris for a renewal of his passport on April1,

1939. He is said to have been connected with the Hamburg-American Line
in New York, and later with the United States Navigation Company. Oelsner
is believed to have been in touch with the German liner Columbus when
this vessel was at Vera Cruz.

Mr. Warren told me further that the State Department planned to keep
Vice Consul Noel on duty at Manzanillo as long as the German freighter
Haviland is there. In this connection, the State Department is keeping
track of the movements of several German vessels along the West Coast of

Mexico.

I let Mr. Warren know that our investigators had been busy in New
York, but that no report had yet been submitted. He seemed anxious to
arrange for any necessary cooperation on the part of the State Department
insofar as an investigation in Mexico is required.

A.M.R.

4

February 1, 1940.

GROUP MEETING

Present:

9:30 a.m.

Mr. Bell

Mr. Graves
Mr. Haas

Mr. Foley
Mr. Cotton
Mr. Thompson

Mr. Harris

Mr. Cochran
Mr. White
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Schwarz

Mr. Sullivan
Mrs Klotz

H.M.Jr:

Norman?

Thompson:

I have nothing.

H.M.Jr:

Dan?

Bell:

We are still holding the Finnish payment. I am
wondering if we shouldn't take some action on
that, covering it at the Treasury.

H.M.Jr:

Oh, I think I would wait until this legislation

Bell:

Apparently the legislation isn't going to affect

H.M.Jr:

I think I would wait.

Bell:

You asked us to make arrangements so that we

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

Bell:

The answer is, we appointed a committee of
Mr. Thompson, Harry White, Chick Schwarz, to

goes through one way or the other.
that payment anyway.

could study both the Congressional matters and
press matters.

meet right after this meeting every morning and
go over those things. It is still a matter of
judgment as to just what you should do at the
time the statements or speeches are made. It
may be that after we decide that we should do
nothing at the time, subsequent developments
may require us to do something, so that our first
judgment may not be correct on that.

5

-2H.M.Jr:

Well now, there is just one thing. You have got
this big legislative section of lawyers looking
through the Record every morning.

Bell:

We get their --

Thompson:

Larry Bernard has been.

Bell:

He hasn't been, but we thought we would have

him, but we do have his slips.

H.M.Jr:

I think he ought to be there.
He will be, after this. He hasn't been, up to
this time. We do have his slips and Chick Schwarz
gets out the same kind of information on the
press that Larry gets out on the Record.
But you will have Larry Bernard on it?

Bell:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Good. And then you are going to look up for me
how Mr. deValera, of the Irish Free State, sold

H.M.Jr:

Bell:

his bonds.

Bell:

I have already looked into that.

H.M.Jr:

I feel that if we are unsuccessful on the Hill in
getting any legislation, I am thinking of recom-

mending to the Finnish Minister he do what
deValera did and make an offer to the people in
the United States and in France and Finland to
Sullivan:

subscribe. I think you have got a good organization, I think he could sell $25,000.
I think he has already started that.

H.M.Jr:

Has he?

Bell:

It is Pat Harrison's idea that they would have

a Congressional resolution suggesting that and

saying that if they did it that it would not
be in conflict with the Neutrality Act.

H.M.Jr:

Well, they don't need any Congressional Act.

6

-3Bell:

I don't know, would that be considered un-

neutral?

H.M.Jr:

Well, let the lawyers take a look at it.

Cotton:

Wouldn't the banks be apprehensive of buying
them without something like that?

Bell:
H.M.Jr:

I should think so, and that was Pat's idea,
that the national institutions wouldn't buy
them because of the Neutrality Act.
I wasn't thinking of the banks.

Bell:

They would get them eventually.

H.M.Jr:

I wasn't thinking of the banks, but somebody
take a look at it. I personally think that
the sooner he makes up his mind to go that

route, the better, for him. I think he would
sell a lot if he handled it well. I think he
could sell 25 million.

Bell:

The organization is --

H.M.Jr:

deValera sold ten.

White:

No, he would never sell 25 million, Mr. Secretary.
If he had some kind of a lottery arrangement

H.M.Jr:
White:

attached to it, he might -If deValera could sell ten -But the Irish Government is a lot sounder investment.

H.M.Jr:

Oh, the Irish Sweepstakes? I am talking about
devalera. When he sold 10 million dollars, there
was no Irish Government. He just went out and
sold these things to finance a revolution. Am
I right, Dan?

Bell:

As I recall, that was the offering. I think he

H.M.Jr:

Do you remember it?

sold close to that figure and they have all been
paid off.

7

-4Harris:

I just faintly remember that it was something
along the lines that you described.

H.M.Jr:

There was no Government.

Sullivan:

I thought there was more than that.

Harris:

I should think Ed Foley would know about it.

H.M.Jr:

He paid them all off.
Yes, that is right. About four years ago.
I am talking about the issue he sold to finance

Sullivan:
H.M.Jr:

his revolution. Bell is looking up the history.
Anything else, Dan?

Bell:

The bankers will be here Friday, that is tomorrow
morning, and I take it the lawyers, at least
some of them, will be here at the same time.
I don't know whether you want a general con-

H.M.Jr:

ference or just - you said to have them drop in.
Bring them up to date and tell them what you

are doing and get their advice. I won't be

here.

Bell:

Oh, you won't be here?

H.M.Jr:

No, I am going up tonight with the President.
I see. Well, in connection with that conference,

Bell:

if we have one with the Federal Reserve people,
Leo suggested a small conference, not one of

these big room full of people conferences. Get
them around the table for the first conference

on this program. Ed knows that Crowley agreed
with the program that we have drawn.
Foley:

I think if we are going to have a meeting at
which we will set forth our program, we should
do it before Cushing gets here on Monday.

H.M.Jr:

Sure.

Foley:

If we are not going to have the meeting, that
is something else again and I think we just

better sit tight until Cushing gets here, but

8

-5I think the advantage of having a meeting - the

point in favor of having it before he gets

here -Bell:

Cushing will be here on Monday, but he has
asked for a postponement of the appointment
with Delano until Tuesday. He has some other
business on Monday.

H.M.Jr:

Well, those people who are in favor of our
showing the Federal Reserve our minimum requirements feel that we ought to do it this week,
see. Do you have any doubts about that?

Foley:

No, I think it is just a matter of strategy.

H.M.Jr:

Well, Ed, sit down and talk it over with Dan
and get up to date on it, will you?
I have gotten up to date. I spent yesterday
afternoon on it. I think that Whitney Seymour
would like to have the meeting before the time

Foley:

4 when Cushing gets here.
H.M.Jr:

Foley:

Well, I have got an almost impossible day, but
if you fellows want to see me today, you had
better talk quick. I don't know when I will
do it.
Jim Landis can't get here until Saturday morning

at 11:00 o'clock. I don't see any reason for

him to come down. if you are not going to be
here.

H.M.Jr:

No.

Foley:

And Eddie Greenbaum --

H.M.Jr:

He will be here tomorrow?

Foley:

He will be here tomorrow. Lloyd Garrison is

M.Jr:

coming down for the House investigation of
the Labor Relations Board.

Well look, stay behind a few minutes after this
meeting and let's get down to brass tacks on
this.

Harold?

9

-6Graves:

I have had some preliminary reports from the
man I sent to Indianapolis to look into this
State Procurement Office situation. This
man says that he has found nothing that indicates
any dishonesty on the part of our people.

H.M.Jr:

Good.

Graves:

It apparently is a question of our having been
asked to buy a particular product according
to specifications provided by the Works Progress
Administrator. That angle we are exploring.
There may be some improper restriction of
specifications there for which we were not
responsible. Before you go away, I think I
should have a few minutes to discuss the Procurement Division situation with you, generally.
We are going to have to drop between now and

the end of June somewhere between 350 and 500

people over there on account of the appropriation
situation.
H.M.Jr:

Well, next week.

Graves:

I would like to have your approval of our program.

H.M.Jr:

I would like to see it.

Graves:

At your convenience.

H.M.Jr:

Anything else?

Graves:

No.

H.M.Jr:

Harry?

White:

There are several things in connection with
strategic materials and shipments to Russia,
and if you have time either today or tomorrow -

I will wait.

H.M.Jr:
White:

H.M.Jr:

I have got a committee set up on this boat business, stopping at Manzanilla.
That is taken care off
Yes. I mean, anything that has to do with
Manzanilla, there is a committee with Harris.
Right?

10

-7Harris:
H.M.Jr:

Well, Herbert Gaston and I have been working

pretty closely on it.
Yes. So if there is anything on that thing as I understand, this thing they have been
doing down in Manzanilla - this is what I

got from the English, Herbert. This is what
they think it is, that the Russians were
afraid that we would put on an embargo on
copper. Therefore, they shipped a lot of

copper down to Manzanilla. These boats pick
this copper up down there and then go on their

way. That is what the English think.
White:

Mr. Glasser was up at the docks --

H.M.Jr:

That is what the English think.

Harris:

Yes. They knew immediately what it was.

White:

I think they are probably right if we extend
it. Glasser was up to the docks and he saw
that the material that is --

H.M.Jr:

Louder, Harry, will you?

White:

The material that is going to that port is so
large and it is very - it would be very unlikely
that they have facilities for handling it and
he thinks that what they are doing is just
getting it out of the country, not only copper

but everything they possibly can, because the
docks are loaded up. There is apparently a
scarcity of ships going to Russia and they don't
want to leave it in this country because they
are probably afraid they may not be able to
get it out if they delay too long, so they are
shipping everything they possibly can to the
Mexican port.

Harris:

In fairness, though, Herbert, to the Russians,

you must remember that the mines that ran
across the North Atlantic to Russia have had

to disband, can't go through that zone, so
that now they go around by Vladivostok and
you ought to weigh one against the other. I
don't know that there is any more going now
than went formerly, except it is going through

a different route and it might be a little

11

-8more copper or some other material that is
going forward.

Gaston:

Yes, they are pushing the shipment from this
country. They are using American lines to
get them down to Manzanilla and then moving
them when they can from Manzanilla.

White:

They are working day and night on it.

Harris:

They have got a boat every 15 days.

H.M.Jr:

They have sent Vice Consul Noel down there now,

Gaston:

At Manzanilla?

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

White:

And it is possible in numerous ways to - probably you already know - to delay those shipments interminably if you want to, but there
are some other matters that Purvis raised.

so he is going to be on the spot.

Whenever you are ready.

H.M.Jr:

I doubt if I can do anything today. I have

White:

There is no hurry. I will just wait until I

H.M.Jr:

got this Colombian thing.

hear from you.

Unless it is something you want a decision on
today.

White:

No. There was a note in the Journal of Commerce
(January 31) on the Russian gold sales. You

may have seen it. If you haven't, it is very
good.

White:

No, I haven't seen it. I never worked so hard
to dig the gold out of you fellows. My heavens,
what I had to go through was a gold-digging
process to get those statistics.
What statistics?

H.M.Jr:

The gold statistics to Russia. It took me

H.M.Jr:

three days to get them.

12

-9White:

I don't know who you asked or where. We

could get them to you in five minutes. Im-

ports
of gold from Russia? They are always
available.
H.M.Jr:

It is a secret from Mr. Bell.

White:

I kept them secret from Mr. Bell?

H.M.Jr:

Somebody did.

White:

Well, the wires got crossed somewhere. You are
talking about Russian gold or gold from Russia?
They are two different things.

Bell:
H.M.Jr:

on the messenger's desk.
I see.

White:

Yours or mine, Danny?

H.M.Jr:

All right, Harry.

White:

There is one of the matters that came up at this
10:00 o'clock meeting that Danny Bell speaks of
on Canadian currency that Americans seemed to
be paying more than 11 cents for them in certain
retail stores, et cetera. The thought was that
you might be asked about it, in which case you
might want to know that --

H.M.Jr:

Well, Chick Schwarz is full of it.

White:

He was the one who raised the question.

There is also the question that if they come

down again you might want to take that up with
them, because we are always getting quite a
few complaints from people who claim they are
being cheated.

Bell:

It is a pretty hard thing to control, to tell

thecents.
storekeeper to charge 15 cents instead of
11
White:

Here is this memo. You might be interested in
knowing there was a seminar at the Brookings

13

- 10 Institute, at which there were some very competent persons, including two men who helped
write that book, "The Golden Avalanche," which
came out about two months ago and which the
thesis was very severe criticism against our

Gaston:

gold policy and that all the men present, with
the possible exception of Walter Gardner, said
that the book was definitely wrong in its
reasoning. I thought you might want to know
that, because there was a good deal of favorable comment on the book in quarters that
don't really understand the problem.
One of these days you are going to give me -Yes, I will concentrate on that.
I think we need a book, Harry.

H.M.Jr:

I think we need something.

H.M.Jr:
White:

White:

We will get something out on that. This book

might be mentioned to you and I thought you
might know that --

H.M.Jr:

What else?

White:

That is all.

H.M.Jr:

You will be interested to know that my talk in
New York was very well received. Thank you for
your assistance.
Basil?

Harris:

There was a bill introduced by one of the Congressmen from Florida, the erection of a new
Customhouse in Miami, with a proposed cost of

$750,000. I spoke with him and he said he
didn't know anything about it. He had been
asked to introduce it by the junior Senator
from Florida. I talked with him and pointed

out that we had a new Customhouse at Miami and

he expressed great surprise, so that is where
that ended.

Haas:

Like a holding company.

14

- 11 H.M.Jr:

They want two Customhouses to grow where only
one grew before.

Harris:

I only tell that as a matter of interest.

White:

I am sorry, there was another thing that I

have to take up this morning. There were
two points of difference which developed

between the Federal Reserve Board and us.
We had two long meetings and it has come to

the point, I think, where we will have to
ask your opinion on the matter. I can raise
it here or you can indicate a time for it,
whichever you like.

H.M.Jr:

Well, we will see. We will see how we get

Gaston:

They had a seminar yesterday.

H.M.Jr:

Basil, is that Spitfire on its way now?

Harris:

That English chap came to see me yesterday and
he was to go back and call me and give me in-

along today.

structions. They haven't come yet, but it
is all ready to go. Did you have a chance to
read that memo on shipping that I gave you?

H.M.Jr:

No.

Harris:

One of the interesting features in that memo
is that the French today have commandeered
50 percent of all space on ships moving to

France, no matter whose they are, Norweigans,

or what. If you want to ship to France, the

French Government reserves 50 percent of the
space for their own account.
H.M.Jr:

Harris:

From their own standpoint, that is sensible.
Yes, and I think it will probably end up

a hundred percent. But it will only end up,
as I pointed out to you originally, that these
warring nations will direct exactly what purchases they want in this country and will
only move the commodities that they need the
most. The others, they will leave behind.

15

- 12 H.M.Jr:

George? I want you to know that George is a

machine tool expert now.

Haas:

There is the aviation thing.

H.M.Jr:

Thanks.

George, what happened after I left?
Haas:

They went down to the conference room and

didn't take very long. The three engine manufacturers gave the machine tool people the
orders which were really producing the log
jam, the bottleneck, and then they are going the machine tool people are going back and

going to get in touch on the phone in Cleveland with the particular machine tool manufacturers and they are going to ask these
people to come to New York Monday. In New
York they are going to work out this program
and come back and see you Wednesday. It
went along very smoothly.

H.M.Jr:

What we are doing here for them is, we are
getting the airplane engine people for the
first time in touch with the machine tool
people and all we are doing is on existing
orders they now have on their books. The
orders that you have seen so much about in
the newspapers, the billion dollar order from
the English and the French, there is no such
order, and it may come through but it - take
a concern like Pratt & Whitney who have on
order seven hundred different tools to take
care of the existing business. They have
only been able to get delivery of a hundred
and fifty. They are going to those tool people
themselves and take a look at their books and
see where the tools are going and then they
are going to set up, on their own accord,
priority. I think in a week or ten days that
we will have done a job which will be very
helpful to the engine manufacturers.

It is interesting - the figures which we have
been able to get and which I don't think
anybody had before. George has gotten them

16

- 13 together. Last December there were 24,000
people working in the airplane factories in
the United States and this December there

are 52,000. In the airplane motors, there
It was fairly constant before that, so in

were 6,600 and this December there are 12,000.

both the airplane and engine companies, there
has been just double the employment. I am
surprised how few there are in the motor

industry. There are only 12,000 people in
the whole airplane motor industry in the

United States.
Haas:

The Pratt-Whitney man said down in this other
meeting that half of their motors are made

outside their factories, so you have got that

much employment there.
H.M.Jr:

Cotton:

The interesting thing was that there was a
committee report made in the Labor Department
in June last year and the report just went
with the wind. Nothing ever happened. I
think in a very quick time we can do something.
I don't know if it would be any help, but
Mr. Noble has an assistant who used to be
president of one of the best small tool machine
companies.

H.M.Jr:

Cotton:

H.M.Jr:

We definitely don't want anybody, please. I
have got a good example of working with the
other departments on the debt. I am going to
do it entirely by myself and in ten days I am
going to deliver the goods. I don't want any
other department messing in on it. Excuse me.
I just thought, personally - this fellow used
to -There is a chairman in the tool industry on
the committee to work with the Government.
Then there is an institute, a very fine institute, and they will give me by next Wednesday,
of their own accord, 80 percent voluntary compliance and these people - I mean, the thing
has been around. The Department of Commerce
should have done this job. It isn't my job

17

- 14 -

at all. They and Labor should have done it
with the War Department. They muffed it and

I am not going to work any more with anybody
else. When the President asks me to do some-

thing, I am going to deliver it to him finished

next Wednesday or Thursday. But I have got to
do it, because Commerce and Labor and War and
Navy have completely muffed it. They have just

Schwarz:

absolutely muffed it. And they won't work with
those people. That is the answer, they just won't.
Both Lubin and Lauch Currie tried their darndest
to get something done and just couldn't.
In the light of what you are discussing, it
might be of interest that the tool people
have been telling some of the trade press and
the financial press that what you are trying to
do is to divert some of their foreign business
for the time being in order to bolster the
domestic supply of tools.

H.M.Jr:

Well, that is all right, isn't it?

Schwarz:

That is fine. In the light of the recent back-

H.M.Jr:

ground, it is especially good.
Well, if I was in either War or Navy or Commerce
or Labor, I would be so ashamed of myself to let
this situation develop that I would do one of
two things. It is so easy to work with these
people if you would just play fair with them
and the man who is the head of this committee
is one of the most violent anti-New Dealers in
the country and now we have made out of him in

two days a friend of the Administration, just

because the man has been badly handled.
Haas:

H.M.Jr:

He really went to town. You would have enjoyed
the meeting in the other room.
He is one of these fellows who prides himself as
being an individual tough guy.

Sullivan:

Stilwell? He is a corker.

H.M.Jr:

Isn't he? You know, we two fellows, we are all
individualists, we are tough.

18

- 15 -

Sullivan: I thought he was swell.
He is a nice fellow, but he has been badly
H.M.Jr:
handled. Is that right, John?
Sullivan:
Well, I don't know about the past. He couldn't
White:

have been nicer in any way yesterday in the
things where I had to contact him.
You were helping him to increase his production?

Haas:

He has got so much, that doesn't bother him.
He is loaded.

White:

Excuse me, I wanted to know if you were helping
increase his production.

Sullivan:

No.

H.M.Jr:

Chick?

Schwarz:

That is all, thank you.
Traphagen is going to be here at 10:00. I didn't

Cotton:

H.M.Jr:

know whether you wanted to see him before 11:00.

Here is the situation. I have been calling up
Mr. Welles. I said that it had been indicated
to me that we should put pressure on the Colombians
to get in line and Mr. Welles got quite excited
and said that is the last thing he wanted anybody to do and I said I agreed with him, so if
you don't mind, I think I am just going to take
this thing cold and when they come in, I am
simply going to say to these gentlemen, "Now,

I am here. I am available once more, but this
is the last time, gentlemen, and if you want

to - it is too bad. You are so close together
that you can't get together. Well, we will go

along with you today and tomorrow and just as
long as you want to sit here in Washington, but
Cotton:

this session is the last one, as far as I am
concerned. I will just sit here and listen.
Mr. Jones called me last night and said that

although he had planned to come to the meeting

at 11:00, he thought he ought to be up on the

19

- 16 -

Hill again on this bill and he wouldn't be
able to come. He said to tell you that yesterday the State Department brought Jaramillo
to see him to talk about credits. They asked
for 25 million dollars and he told them - he
said he was forced to talk turkey to them and
told them that was an outrageous sum and he
would possibly consider ten, but he didn't
even know about that. He said to tell you
that by way of background for the meeting
this morning.

I also take it there was some indication that

Turbay will come forward with some proposition
today on his own.

H.M.Jr:

Well, I sincerely hope we get them together

Bell:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Harry? Gaston? Have you been here (to Foley)8

Foley:

No.

H.M.Jr:

I don't see any need for it. Anything else,

today. Who all is going to be here? Bell?

Joe?

Cotton:

No. I will bring Mr. Traphagen here at 11:00.

H.M.Jr:

If you please.

Cochran:

There was a story on the ticker yesterday that
Dr. Schacht was in India working for the Bank
of England. But he is at the Suvretta House
in St. Moritz, Switzerland, now. A friend of
mine in New York heard the story on it last
week.

H.M.Jr:

Anything else?

Cochran:

Donald Heath came back this morning and is just

going to be here today. You could tell him
goodbye.

H.M.Jr:

Right after the press conference, I will tell

him goodbye. Sometime before 11:00 o' clock.

20

- 17 Cochran:

All right, sir.

H.M.Jr:

John?

Sullivan:

That ruling --

H.M.Jr:

Is that window too much for anybody there?

You can close it, if it is.

Sullivan:

That ruling was all ready yesterday and Mr. Purvis
came down and we got in touch with --

H.M.Jr:

Did you locate him?

Sullivan:

Finally. Just as soon as I got back from leaving
you, I called and his office said he was in
New York and they didn't know when he was returning, and later on in the afternoon I decided to call New York. I called up to see
where we could reach him in New York and they
said hewas right there and then he came down

and I told him that is the sort of thing that
is causing trouble and I think we got things
fairly well worked out. But we got hold of
the counsel for the Atlas Powder Company and

told them we would want a waiver on publicity

on this ruling and he talked with his clients
and then called back and I think his clients

came down and I suspect that contract was signed

last night, but they are somewhat afraid of

sabotage. This plant is right next to a plant
that is making powder for our Government and

they don't want the amounts or the location

disclosed. This particular location has nothing
to do with the type of - or with the source of
supply for the type of powder they are making,
which you inquired about yesterday. But I
have inquired about the possibility of getting
this ruling published in the bulletin that is
to be issued next Monday morning and that
paraphrases the situation, "X" Company is being

lent "Y" dollars from such a source, and so on,
and I think we had better - they are holding
that up, pending your decision this morning,
if you want that in.

H.M.Jr:

Want what in?

21

- 18 Sullivan: The ruling published Monday morning.
Definitely.
H.M.Jr:
That would be published anyway, eventually,
Sullivan:
and I think we had better suspend our decision
as to whether you want to give them any more

H.M.Jr:

Sullivan:
H.M.Jr:

Sullivan:

publicity until after we see whether that
Monday morning bulletin attracts any attention.
What bulletin is it?
Internal Revenue bulletin. That gets wider
circulation than some others.
Since the story has been going, I think it is
very important to have it publicized. What
is the raw material that goes into that?
T.N.T. There isn't anything that comes from
that particular section - they have a plant
there for mining purposes.

H.M.Jr:

For what?

Sullivan:

To supply mines in that general area. There
isn't any significance about its being located

in that particular spot.

H.M.Jr:

I see.

Sullivan:

There has been a good deal of complaint upon

the publication of the salary list, people
writing in and saying, "Well, I know that this
company pays more than $70,000 to Mr. Jones
and his name isn't on the list." Every year
there is a supplementary list. Mr. Bell and
Mr. Schwarz and I have been discussing the
advisability of issuing a list on the basis of
a fiscal year and not having an earlier one and
a supplementary one. We think it would save a
lot of trouble.

H.M.Jr:

Do it any way you want to.

Bell:

Either that, or say there is a supplementary,
because this list looked as though it was final.

22

- 19 H.M.Jr:

Whatever you decide.

Bell:

All right.

Sullivan:

As near as we can find out on the Hill, there
is to be no change in the Vinson-Trammell Act
and that was found out indirectly and they
don't even know for sure.

H.M.Jr:

Fine. Well, how many turkeys?

Foley:

One.

Bell:

The report I got said "some". One is not some.

Foley:

Some of the party got none, Dan.
What are those blindfolded ones?

H.M.Jr:
Foley:

That was on my desk when I got back. Legs
tied and blindfolded.

H.M.Jr:

Is it hard to creep up on a sleeping turkey?

Foley:

You sit in a blind.

H.M.Jr:

You or the turkey?

Foley:

The shooter. You get out there very early in
the morning before the sun comes up and it is
very dark. The blind is made out of palmetto
leaves. One fellow slept in his and a cow came
along and ate all the leaves. When he woke up
he was right out there in a chair.
That is a good story.
It is wonderful. How long before we read about
that in the columns, or is it already out?

Klotz:
H.M.Jr:
Foley:

I don't know.

H.M.Jr:

What else?

Foley:

Back in '35, the President asked the Treasury
and the Attorney General to make a study of
the Customs port up in New York. We employed

23

- 20 the New York Law Society to do our part of
it and we have done about as much -H.M.Jr:

I love to see this pressure come out.

Foley:

We have done about as much as we can. Herbert

and I thought it would be a good idea if we

went over and talked to Bob Jackson about good
candidates for those two vacancies.
H.M.Jr:

I have been telling Magill and Eddie Greenbaum
to put the pressure on you two boys and I see

it has taken effect finally.
Gaston:

H.M.Jr:
Foley:

We don't expect to win a hundred percent, but
we thought perhaps we could get Jackson to
stand with us on the demand there would be

no political appointments on that court.
It has taken months to get you fellows stirred

up. Anything you do is all right with me.

I talked to Murphy while you were in Europe
and asked him if he would give us a chance to
look at the candidates he was going to submit
to the President and he promised me he would,

but I never heard anything more about it. I

think we ought to take a shot at Bob Jackson.

H.M.Jr:

Yes. After all, if you want to have any standing

with the New York Law Society, you had better get

busy.

Anything else?
Foley:

Nothing.

H.M.Jr:

It is wonderful to see how they come here and
go right down the hall to see these two men.

Foley:

They do.

Gaston:

Thompson was in New York yesterday on this

Russian ship thing. I think he has pretty
well cleared up all the information available

there. I don't suppose we could send him to
Mexico unless we - well, we would certainly

24

- 21 -

have to talk to the State Department. It looks
to me as though the President, through the State
Department, is getting what is available.
H.M.Jr:
Gaston:

H.M.Jr:

Yes, they have sent a Vice Consul down there.
If we should need more information, we could
talk to them about sending somebody down there.
We might get some help from the Mexican side,
because if there is any funny work going on
there it may be against the Mexican Government.
Those who are interested in the Bank of America,
stay a few minutes.

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL

25

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM Mr. Cochran

Mr. Pinsent, Financial Counselor of the British Embassy, telephoned
me at 11:15 this morning. He stated that the British and French Embassies
had now received replies from their Governments in answer to the inquiries
which had been made at the instance of the Secretary of the Treasury. The

French reply is still of a preliminary nature, a fuller answer to be brought

from Minister Reynaud by Leroy-Beaulieu when the latter arrives here about
February 15. Pinsent stated that the British Ambassador and the French
Counselor of Embassy would like to call on the Secretary Friday to present

the replies now in hand. I explained to Mr. Pinsent that the Secretary would

not be in town on Friday, and that his schedule today was crowded, especially
considering the Cabinet meeting. The British Ambassador also has a full day.

When I told Pinsent that the Secretary would be glad to have the
answers for possible reading over the week-end, Pinsent and the French
Counselor, who was with him, agreed to come down to the Treasury this afternoon and hand me the two memoranda. If, after the Secretary sees the memo-

randa, it may be found desirable to have a talk with the British Ambassador
and the French Ambassador or Counselor, these two officials could meet with
the Secretary some time early next week.

I shall, therefore, endeavor to deliver the two memoranda to the
Secretary before he leaves Washington this afternoon.

Pinsent stated further that he expected Mr. Gifford to report upon his
inquiries in New York at the end of this week. I told Pinsent it would be

most desirable for us to have any information which Mr. Gifford may be able
to provide us by the middle of next week.

26

February 1, 1940
10:58 a.m.

HMJr:

Guy

Guy

Helvering: Hello.
HMJr:

Guy

H:

Yes.

HMJr:

I've got one of these terrible days.

H:

Yes.

HMJr:

This isn't something you could do on the phone?

H:

HMJr:
H:

Well, it's a matter concerning this investigation
in -- in Indiana.
Yeah.

Now, we sent some attorneys out there with the idea
of having a hearing.

HMJr:

Yeah.

H:

Well, it developed that Mr. Foley didn't think it
was a wise thing to do.

HMJr:
H:

Yes.

Now there are three attorneys from the office out
there and they are conducting an investigation.

HMJr:

Yeah.

H:

It isn't any hearing.

HMJr:

Yeah.

H:

I don't think it's within their province to do that

and what I wanted to get authority for is to have
the General Counsel, when they -- I don't want to
cut them right off right this minute, but they're
down in Louisville and the only work they're doing
is investigating work.

27

-2HMJr:

I see.

H:

And that 18 a province of Irey's outfit.

HMJr:

Yeah.

H:

HMJr:

HMJr:

And -- and I think can be done better than they are
doing it.
Well, now I tell you
I wanted to have authority to -- have you advise
the Chief Counsel when they finish up that investigation on the thing they're right on now at Louisville that they turn whatever information they have
over to Sullivan, the investigator, and let him go
ahead with the investigation.
Well, would it be agreeable to you if I asked John
Sullivan to call a meeting with you and Foley and
Gaston and thrashed it out?

H:

Well, if -- well, we could do that. I would like
to have Irey and Graves there, of course.

HMJr:

All right. Supposing I ask Sullivan to call a

H:

Yes.

HMJr:

Is that right?

H:

Yes.

HMJr:

And thrash it out.

H:

of course we have to have some direct order.

HMJr:

Well, supposing I get a recommendation from the

meeting with you, Foley, Gaston, Irey and Graves.

group.

H:

Um-hm.

HMJr:

You want me there, 18 that it?

H:

Well, I'm sure that you'd look straight through the
point to see what I'm getting at.

-3HMJr:

All right. Well then I'll -- would anything
happen if I let it go until Tuesday.

H:

No, if you'd set down a time Tuesday.

HMJr:

Ten-fifteen Tuesday morning.

H:

What?

HMJr:

Ten-fifteen Tuesday morning.

HMJr:

All right. Fine.
I'll tell them what it's about. I'll tell everybody I want to -- I want to cut -- official cut
hay on that day.

H:

Yes. All right.

HMJr:

O.K.?

H:

You bet.

HMJr:

Thank you.

H:

Thank you.

H:

28

29

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940.
TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. White

Attached is a list of memoranda and reports which
have been prepared in the Division of Monetary Research
from July 1, 1939 to January 31, 1940.

30

Studies and Projects in the Division of Monetary Research
July 1 to January 31, 1940
The work of the Division of Monetary Research includes,
among other things, the preparation of economic analyses of

problems, and reports and surveys in the following fields:
Gold

Silver
Foreign Exchange and Stabilization Fund operations
Foreign Trade

Administration of the Anti-Dumping Act
Administration of the Countervailing Duty Law
Trade Agreements program

Economic aspects of Customs problems
Monetary problems

Some aspects of fiscal problems

Economic conditions in foreign countries

Financial and monetary developments abroad

Commercial policy of the U. S. and foreign countries
Miscellaneous activities of the Treasury with respect to

Latin American debt settlements and proposed loans by
the Export-Import Bank
Participation in the Government's program of cooperation
with Latin America
Some aspects of the strategic war materials problem
Correspondence of the Treasury on monetary and foreign
matters

Special assignments not included in the above list
The specific memoranda and reports on the above topics
which have been prepared are for convenience listed in the
following categories:

1. Prepared and submitted to the Secretary from July 1, 1939
to January 31, 1940.

2. To be submitted to the Secretary but still in preparation.
3. Prepared for use in the Division and for other officials
in the Treasury (not to be submitted to the Secretary).
4. Memoranda prepared in the Division that may or may not
be submitted to the Secretary.

Division of Monetary
Research

1. Memoranda and reports prepared and submitted to the
Secretary from July 1, 1939 to January 31. 1940.
Sunshine Mining Company

Relating to profits in silver production.

Japanese Currency War in China and the Tientsin Incident.
Treasury Position with Respect to Continued Purchases of
Foreign Silver.
Statement of Secretary Morgenthau before the Senate Committee

on Banking and Currency on S. 2759 (Self-Liquidating Projects
Act of 1939).
Foreign Exchange and Trade Status of "Gold" V8. "Non-Gold"
Countries.

Colombia

(Attaching longer memo on Colombia)

Comment on Plan Submitted to You by Mr. Bullitt, Entitled
"A New Defensive and Offensive Method for Liberal Nations".
Special report on "Scandinavia".

A narrative description of the economic, political and

social conditions in Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland.

The Recent Report on the Economic Situation in Japan by the

Department of Commerce.

British Economic Picture.

A survey of the general British economic situation during
the Summer of 1939.

U. S. Action with respect to Foreign Exchange Problems During
the Period of our Neutrality during the Great War.

A study of the action taken by this country to protect
itself against the economic forces emanating from the
Great War in Europe, 1914-17. Submitted to Mr. Hanes.

The Canadian Situation.

An analysis of the economic situation in Canada with
particular reference to the Canadian exchange rate as
preparation for the meeting with the Canadian Finance
Minister.

31

Section 1 - 2

Division of Monetary
Research

The New British Economic Trade Policy.

An analysis of the British economic policy inaugurated
with the outbreak of war as it will affect the United
States economic interests. (Prepared in connection with
letter from the Secretary of State dated Sept. 23, 1939.)

The German 011 Situation.

A report embodying all sources of information that could
be reached in the government and in private oil circles as
to the status of all supplies and sources of supply that
might be available to Germany, with an interpretation of
this information in the light of Germany's oil needs in
the prosecution of the war.

A Possible Needy Case.

Regarding the effects of "cash and carry" provision of

Neutrality Law.

Liberian Proposal to Purchase U.S. Currency.
How Fast Will England and France use up Their Foreign Exchange
Resources during the Next Twelve Months of War?

For use at meeting in Mr. Hanes' office.

Colombia.

Memorandum (no title) Regarding Senator Wagner's request for
information on the Treasury's position on Senator Taft's amend-

ment to Neutrality Bill to limit stabilization fund's holdings.
(Sent to Senator Wagner).

Inter-American Financial and Economic Advisory Committee
(Inter-departmental committee set upby Executive Committee
on Commercial Policy.)

Has National Socialism weakened or strengthened the Position
of Capitalism in Germany?

The Present Situation re Quicksilver.
A short survey of the world stock, supplies and demand for
quicksilver.
Gold and Capital Movements in the First Ten Weeks of War.

Utilization of our Gold Holdings (Attaching "The Gold Investment Act of 1940")
A plan to increase the world's use of gold and to initiate
an outflow of gold from the United States.

32

Section 1 - 3

Division of Monetary
Research

Loan to Colombia.

Foreign Exchange Resources of England and France.

A survey of the foreign exchange resources of the allied
powers with an analysis of the degree of liquidity of
those resources.

Latin American Background Studies.

Economic studies of all Latin American countries as
preparation for participation in Guatemalan Conference
of American Treasuries.

Memo for Mr. Silver on the Anglo-Palestine Bank, Ltd.
"Tin Loan" to China.

Investigation of the possibilities of extending additional
credits to China on the basis of the tung oil loan of

December, 1938.

Information we would like to have about Colombia.
The Fiscal-Social Program for 1940 (Speech for Secretary).

A draft of a possible speech which would set forth a
social and fiscal philosophy and program.

Proposed Inter-American Bank.

The Finnish Situation.
An economic survey of Finland with an interpretation of

the effects of the possible loss of Finnish independence

upon United States economic interests.
Tungsten.

United States Exports to U.S.S.R.

A day to day compilation of U. S. exports to the U.S.S.R.
(First report in response to request for this study.
Current reports being submitted.)

Exchange Depreciation Article in Proposed Argentine Trade
Agreement.

Possible Control of Certain Strategic Metals.
Draft of letter to the President with respect to statement
showing actions which might be taken to make funds available
to the Treasury to finance a deficit over the next 18 months.
Revision of draft prepared by D. W. Bell.

33

Section 1 - 4

Division of Monetary
Research

Argentine Trade Agreement.

Memoranda on this subject prepared for the Secretary
and also for the President.

Foreign Economic Developments.

First report in response to the Secretary's request for a

semi-monthly report showing business conditions in foreign

countries.

Preliminary Report on Columbium and Tantalum.

Exports of Molybdenum to Italy since the outbreak of War.
Mentioned at meeting January 8.

Highlights of Plan for Pan American Bank.
Preliminary Report on Vanadium.
Mentioned at meeting January 9.

Preliminary Report on Cobalt.
Mentioned at meeting January 9.
Preliminary Report on Chromium.
Mentioned at meeting January 10.

Preliminary Report on Industrial Diamonds.
Mentioned at meeting January 10.
Lord Beaverbrook's Article on Gold and War Debts.
In reply to Lord Beaverbrook's comments on gold.
French Economic Report.

A comprehensive report on the French economic situation
since the outbreak of war.

Chrome deposits in Alaska.
Mentioned at meeting January 15.

Treasury participation in the drafting of the Supplementary
Cuban Trade Agreement.

Domestic Exports to Italy.

(First report in response to request for this study.

Current reports being submitted.)
Brown Bill for Loan to Finland.

Senator Pittman on Treasury Purchases of silver from Japan.

Re-exports and stocks of Tin and Rubber in the United States.

34

Section 1 -5

Division of Monetary
Research

Memorandum for Mrs. Roosevelt with respect to letter from
Dr. Sterne Morse.

Current reports in addition to the above:
Daily report on transactions in domestic stocks (compiled from
S.E.C. figures).
Weekly memorandum on "Recent Developments in Gold and Capital

Movements".

Weekly table: "Balances and Earmarked Gold Held for Faeign

Account".

Weekly table: "Net Capital and Gold Movements".

Weekly reports on U. S. exports to Russia.

Weekly reports on U. S. exports to Italy.
Material for monthly Treasury Bulletin.
Correspondence

357 letters replied to, July 1939 through January 1940.

35

Division of Monetary
Research

2. To be submitted to the Secretary but still in preparation,
The Future of Gold.

Methods of reducing gold imports.
The economic situation in Germany.

The economic situation in Italy.
The economic situation in England.

Is there danger of inflation in the United States?
The current world coffee situation and probable effect of the
war.

Economic program to be adopted in the event war ceases.
How long can unbalanced budgets continue?
Program for permanent recovery.

How Fast will England and France use up their foreign exchange
resources during the next twelve months of war?
What has happened to world trade during the first 6 months of

war and what are the prospects for world trade in the light of
that experience?

Preparation of material on New Deal.
What is the greatest economic gain that we can obtain from our
new Latin American program?

Changes in gold and foreign exchange holdings of Latin American
countries since the war.

Studies and analyses relating to the capital absorbing possi-

bilities of Peru, Chile and Brazil.

Comprehensive report regarding methods employed by Germany

in carrying on foreign trade.

Memorandum on monetary powers of the Government (to be checked

with the Legal Staff).
Evaluation of the Trade Agreements Program in the light of
the changed international situation.

36

37

Section 2 - 2

Division of Monetary
Research

Feasibility of including in Annual Report of the Secretary an
inventory of value of Federal property in the United States.
Statement of recoverable assets of Federal Government to
include once a month in Daily Statement.

38

3. Prepared for use in the Division of Monetary Research and

for officials in the Treasury other than the Secretary.

Colombia's Capacity to Pay Dollar Obligations.
The Mexican Situation.

The reported discontinuance of Italian exchange fluctuation
"insurance" on clearing transactions with Germany and Portugal.
Depreciation of Cuban Peso.

Department of State's Outline of Tentative Program for the
Division of Cultural Relations.
The Semi-Annual Report of the Reichskredit Gesellschaft.
The arguments used on the floors of the House and Senate

against the continued purchasing of foreign silver.
Errors involved in the sending of a mission to Venezuela.
German Barter and the Anti-Dumping Act.

Questions pertaining to Venezuela's Economic Policy.

Rumors of Argentine Peso Depreciation. The Argentine Situation.
Reclamation (In connection with Self-Liquidating Projects Act).
Proposal to Train in the Treasury Young Men from the Latin
American Ministries of Finance.
Failure of the Good Neighbor Policy.

Department of Agriculture Expert Report on Brazil's Potential

Production of Non-competitive Products.

Brazil: The Token Debt Payment of $1,000,000 on July 1, 1939.
General Notes and Observations regarding Brazil.
Current developments in capital movements, gold and foreign
exchange.

The Northwestern Mutual Life; Testimony of Michael J. Cleary
before the T.N.E.C.

The Life Insurance Business: National Problems of Regulation,
Investment and Social Security.

Section 3 - 2

Division of Monetary
Research

Frank Fetter's report on Ecuador.

Proposals for closer relations with Latin American Treasuries
that might be profitably pursued at the Guatemala Conference.
Argentine Interest in a Trade Agreement.

The Proposed Lard Barter Transaction and the Anti-Dumping Act.

Economic Implementation of the Good-Neighbor Policy. A review
of the policy to date with reference to forthcoming Guatemala
Conference.
Four-Power Conference of Finance Ministers held in Montevideo
from January 27 to February 3, 1939.

Countervailing duties on Polish Portland cement.
American Position at the Guatemala Conference, as it might be
presented by theAmerican spokesman.

Brazil's Capital Requirements.
The proposal by the Metallurgical and Chemical Corporation to
use "dividend marks" in payment for imports from Germany.
Recent Trends in Foreign Trade.
The Outbreak of War and the Work of this Division.

Possible Effect of the War on Latin American Exports.
U. S. Commercial Policy and the World War.

Does the use of originally owned "blocked" Reichsmark funds in
payment for imports from Germany require the application of
countervailing duties?
Results of First Pan American Financial Conference.

War time cancellation of the Standstill Agreement.
Comments on "Gold: An American Dilemma", by Howard Trueblood,

Report of Foreign Policy Association, Sept. 1, 1939.
Brazil's proposal to buy gold.

The Japanese attitude towards depreciation of sterling and yen.

39

Section 3 - 3

Division of Monetary
Research

Mr. Jacobsson's Statement about relationship between American
Exports to and Imports from South American countries.
Should American banks be encouraged to expand their operations

in Latin America during the current trade drive?

An Inter-American Bank

Feasibility of an Inter-American Bank
Restrictions on remission of earnings by American companies
operating in various named Latin American countries during the
1930 S.

Capitalist Institutions in National Socialist Germany.
The current silver situation in British India.
Tables on Trade of Scandinavian Countries and Netherlands with
U.K. and Germany in Foodstuffs, 1938; Sweden - Exports of Iron
Ore and Steel Products to U.K. and Germany, 1938.
War-time Rations.

Review of "German Financial Policies, 1932-1939", by Kenyon
E. Poole.

Effects
of an embargo upon the import of silver into British
India.
Securities Transactions for Far Eastern Account.
Senate Investigation of money and banking.
Our export trade for September.

Review of "The Structure of the American Economy, Part I."
New Functions Assumed by the Venezuelan Mission, as reported

in Spiegel's letter of Sept. 18, 1939.
Mexican Proposal for the United States to buy Silver.

Translation of a memorandum on the Monetary and Economic

Situation in Switzerland.
Meat for the Allies.

Feeding of British Army. Meat Rations in World War.

40

Section 3 - 4

Division of Monetary
Research

Germany - War-Time Rations for the Civilian Population.
Mr. Alexander Sachs' paper on interest rates.
Peru.

The Economic Position of Germany at War.

Argentina's sale of meats to England and France.
The general provisions in the proposed Turkish Trade agreement.

Significance of the Yen's being pegged to the dollar.

Mr. Galbraith's paper on agricultural credit policy.
U.S.S.R. Gold Production, Gold Exports and Trade Balance.
Ecuador

Table "United Kingdom Trade with Canada and U. S. 1938"
Peru's Economic Potential.

Consular report relative to our sale of Siamese silver coins
and purchase of gold with the proceeds.

Foreign Bondholders Protective Council, Inc.
The proposed change to Panamanian registry of 11 ships of the
U. S. Lines.
U. S. Exports in October.

The Art of Estimating Silver Production.
Tientsin Silver.

Treasury acquisitions of silver and net imports.
Germany's stock of silver.
Canada's Foreign Exchange Rate Position.

The position of the Treasury with respect to recent exchange
control provisions in Trade Agreements.
Comments on "The Full Use of Resources" by Gardner Means.
Comments on pamphlet on "European Order and World Order".

41

Section 3 - 5

Division of Monetary
Research

Sir William Beveridge on German Food Supplies.
Comments on the November 20 Business Situation Report.

Present Accounting Procedure with Regard to Seigniorage on
Silver.
A "Spending" Program.

Current Developments in Germany (Numerous studies)

Comments on recent "Business Situation" reports.

Britain's Export Drive.
Siam's profit on Silver.
The Current Volume of Investment.

Recent Trends in United States Imports.
Conversation with the Dominican Delegate to the Guatemalan
Conference.

Export-Import Bank credits presented by Costa Rican Finance
Minister to Mr. Gaston at Guatemala City, Nov. 18.

Questionnaire Relating to Internal Money Markets of Each

Latin American Country.

Chart of foreign banks operating in Latin America.
Notes on Preliminary Draft of "The Future of Gold".
The Conference of Treasury Representatives of American
Republics, Guatemala City, Nov. 14/21. With some recommenda-

tions for the next conference at Quito.

British Unemployment Figures for November.
More on the Czech National Bank Gold and the B.I.S.

Business Situation Report of December 4, 1939.
Argentine, Chilean, Bolivian Exchange

Material for Secretary's Annual Report on Customs.

42

Section 3 - 6

Division of Monetary
Research

43

Estimate of Gold and Foreign Exchange Availability of Peru.
Regarding Announcement in Trade Agreements Committee weekly

report re Turkey.

Reprint from Manchester Guardian "Printers' Export Rebate"

British Plan to sell Australian Wool to U. S.
German-Italian Economic Relations.

Peru's Request for Export-Import Bank Credits.
Comments on "The Future of Gold Reconsidered" by J. N. Reedman;
and "The European War and the Gold Problem".

Further Information on Income Distribution Under the Nazi Regime.
The December 10 New York Times article on oil and the war.
Ecuador's Request for Export-Import Bank Credits.

United States Foreign Trade in October.
Comment on the questions regarding Inter-American Bank.

The country allocation of the Venezuelan 011 Agreement

Petroleum Quota.

A Statement of Latin America's Position.

Dollars liquidated by Allies since outbreak of war.
Canadian business activity.
Memorandum of December 12 concerning Representative Oliver's
request on German fiber board.

Recent Changes in Prices of mild coffee and resultant loss to

Colombia.

Suggested provisions relating to payment of interest and
amortization on the Colombian foreign debt.
A memorandum from the State Department concerning the exchange

control provision.

Confirmation of my estimate of French Government expenditures
next year.

Section 3 - 7

Division of Monetary
Research

An Economic Program for American Democracy (a la Leonard Crum)

What will the Supplementary Cuban Trade Agreement cost in Terms
of Customs Revenue?

Organization of the Inter-American Bank
Meeting on Inter-American Bank, Jan. 3, 1940.
U. S. Foreign Trade in November.

Organizational details of the Inter-American Bank.
Comments on Mr. Gass' and Mr. Wheeler's conclusions on France.
Wool Exports from Uruguay.

British war trade agreements.
German-Italian exchange fluctuation insurance.
Some suggestions for improvement of capital movement statistics
in the balance of payments.

U. S. Exports during first 22 days of December.
Inter-American Bank. Suggestions on paper eligible for bank
operations prepared by Latin American members of committee.

Summary of Answers to Questions on Inter-American Bank submitted by Nicaragua, Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Haiti.

Comments on State Department release on status of trade agree-

ments program.

Weekly Report on Latin America.

Meeting of the Treasury informal committee on the InterAmerican Bank.

Canda's funded debt.

Points of interest concerning Brazilian debt negotiations
contained in State Department reports.

The Trade Agreements Act, January 1940.

Replies to the questionnaire on the Inter-American Bank.

44

Section 3 - 8

Division of Monetary
Research

Monetary Policy.

Bases for capital contributions to the Inter-American Bank.
Proposal to restore private gold holdings.
Japan's stock of gold.
Table "Stocks of Tin and Rubber in the U. S."
Leaven's annual review of silver in the Annalist of Jan. 4.
Comments on Annual Report of Aldrich to stockholders of the

Chase National Bank.

Meeting with the State Department to consider the Brazilian
iron situation.
Brookings Seminar on "Golden Avalanche".

"Our gold elephant" - an article by Congressman Luce reprinted
in the Congressional Record of Jan. 23.
Comments on Mr. Randolph Burgess' recent speech.
Soviet and Japanese Gold.

Statement for Senator Barkley's possible use in answering
statement by Senator Townsend on the gold and silver problem.
Bureau of Mint operations.

Second meeting for consideration of the Brazilian iron project.
Dumping cases concluded:

Wood Pulp from Germany and other countries.
Ribbon Fly Catchers from Japan, Germany, England and Belgium.

Photographic Dry Plates and Sheet Film from England.
Phonograph Needles from Switzerland.
Phosphate Rock from Morroco.

Fourdrinier Wires from France.

45

46

Section 3 - 9

Division of Monetary
Research

Motion-Picture Cameras from France.

Sodium Hydrosulphite from Switzerland.
Various Asbestos Products and Engine Packings from England.
Cream Separators from Finland.

Strike-on-box matches from Finland.
Perbunan (synthetic rubber) from Germany.
Haarlem 011 from the Netherlands.
Printed Music from Germany and England.

Wood Pulp since the outbreak of war.
Linen shoe thread from Switzerland.
Glass Tubes from England.

Animal Charcoal from Belgium.
Wheat Bran from Mexico.

Metal Foil Bottle Caps from Belgium and the Netherlands.
Dumping cases begun but not yet completed:

Matches (revocation) from Norway, Finland, Austria and Latvia.
Onion Powder from Hungary.

Arc Screen Glass from England.
Decorated Earthenware from England, Denmark, Finland, U.S.S.R.,
and Japan.

Paper-Beryta Coated from Germany.
Photographic enlargers from Germany.
Photographic lenses from Germany.
Wooden tripods from Germany.
Exposure meters from Germany.
Dumping Cases pending:

In addition to the above, there are 87 cases still pending.

Division of Monetary
Research

4. Memoranda prepared in the Division that may or may not
be submitted to the Secretary.

A Plan for Reviving the Construction Industry without Direct

Government Subsidy.

Effect of the Subsidy to Domestic Silver Producers upon

Employment.

The Anglo-American cotton-rubber barter deal.

The Life Insurance Business; National Problems of Regulation,
Investment and Social Security.
The Italian-German Clearing Account Balance.

Testimony before the T.N.E.C. on Construction and Housing
(Mortgages and Interest Rates, Building and Loan Associa-

tions, Large Housing Projects, etc.)
Federal Activity in Housing, 1933-1939.
Yield Insurance Plan (Submitted to T.N.E.C. Hearings on

Housing).

The function of Loans in National Finance.
A new method of marketing Treasury securities.

Should the Treasury's buying price for foreign silver be

lowered?

Should we continue to purchase Japanese silver?

What has happened to U. S. exports during the first four

months of war?

Japan's foreign exchange.

47

48

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Haas

Subject:

Retail bread prices

The Retail Price Division of the Bureau of Labor Statistics
reports that weekly releases on retail food prices are being
discontinued with the current issue. Hereafter data will be
available on this basis only once a month.
Preliminary data on average retail bread prices in 13
selected cities, reported as of Tuesday, January 30 by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, are given below. The only change
reported, as compared with January 23, was an increase in New
York City.
Actual average

prices of bread

at retail, Jan. 30
(cents per pound)

Boston

Buffalo
New York

Pittsburgh
Chicago

Cleveland

Detroit
St. Louis
Savannah

Washington, D. C.

Houston
Denver

Los Angeles

8.3
8.1
9.5

7.9
6.6

8.0
7.9
7.5

8.8
8.6
7.2
7.0
6.7

Change between Jan. 23

and Jan. 30 in actual

average price of bread

at retail (cents per pound)
0

0

/0.1
0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

o

0

49

Secretary Morgenthau - 2

Changes reported in the 13 selected cities since the first
of the year are as follows:
January 23 - 30

New York

/0.1 cent per pound

January 16 - 23

Detroit

10.3 cent per pound
-0.3 cent per pound

January 9 - 16

Washington, D. C.
Boston

Buffalo

New York
Savannah

January 3 - 9

No change

/0.8 cent per pound
70.4 cent per pound
70.6 cent per pound
-0.1 cent per pound

50

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Haas

Subject:

Jan. 22:

JOA

Wheat export sales and other market data from the
Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation.
Foreign demand was slow and demand for flour was

not very encouraging. It was reported that around
120,000 bushels of United States and Canadian wheat
in store at Antwerp had been sold.

The United Kingdom bought approximately 3,700,000

to 4,000,000 bushels of Rumanian wheat for shipment beginning in March.

Jan. 23: Sales of flour this week for export on a subsidy
basis are approximately 15,000 barrels, with the
possibility that some good-sized lots may be worked
to North China soon. The big difficulty seems to
be booking of boat space.

Export interest in North American wheat was light
but about 100,000 to 150,000 bushels of Manitobas
were confirmed as sold to Norway. Purchases of
about 500,000 bushels of Number 1 hard Manitoba
wheat by exporters was believed to have been
against recent sales to England.

The break of $2.00 to $3.00 a bale in cotton this
week is attributed to foreign selling, brought
about by the statement that England is planning to
restrict imports of all raw materials to conserve

foreign exchange for the purchase of airplanes and

munitions.

Jan. 24: Sales of Canadian cash wheat were estimated at
750,000 bushels to the United Kingdom. The Canadian
government has prohibited the export of wheat to
countries adjoining or accessible to Germany. Under

51

Secretary Morgenthau - 2

this ruling the recent sale of 1,250,000 bushels

of wheat from the Pacific Coast to Russia may not
be filled. About 100,000 bushels of Manitoba and
United States wheat in store at Antwerp were sold.
It was reported that about 1,800,000 bushels of
corn had been sold to the United Kingdom. This
makes about 8,000,000 bushels of corn that have

been sold to various countries in Europe this

month.

Jan. 25: Export business in wheat 18 almost nothing. A
50,000 bushel lot of American wheat in store at
Antwerp was reported sold.

Finland purchased 200,000 bushels of American rye

and it 18 understood they were in the market for a
total of about 800,000 bushels.
Revised estimates on sales of corn for export the
past few days are placed at around 2,500,000 to
3,000,000 bushels.

Jan. 26: Export business was slow but it was reported that
around 350,000 to 500,000 bushels of Manitoba wheat
in store at Buffalo had been sold.
There were rumors today that Russia might try to
American wheat from the North Pacific coast as a
buy between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000 bushels of

result of the refusal of Canada to permit the
clearance of Canadian grain for Vladivostok.

Finland is reported to have bought 400,000 bushels
of American rye the past two days and is in the
market for that much more.
Jan. 29: The Australian wheat crop was revised upward
18,000,000 bushels today and 18 now placed at
204,000,000 bushels, the largest since 1933, compared with 154,000,000 the preceding year.
The Turkish wheat crop is estimated at 170,000,000
bushels, 14,000,000 over last year and a new record.

2-1-40

52

Washington, le ler fevrier 1940.

1) A l'heure actuelle il est tres difficile au
Gouvernement français de donner une évaluation définitive
de ses dépenses aux Etats-Unis. Les programmes d'achats

ne sont pas encore définitivement établis et il y a lieu
de tenir compte des possibilités de transport et du rythme
de la production américaine.
2) Ces reserves faites, on peut estimer que le
montant des achats du Gouvernement français, pendant la

première année de la guerre, sera d'environ 35 milliards
de france, dont 6 milliards pour les matières premières,

13 pour l'aviation et 9 pour les machines. Si l'on déduit
de ce chiffre environ 4 à 5 milliards, qui constituent le
montant des éléments favorables à la balance des comptes,

le solde débiteur de la France est d'un ordre de grandeur

de 30 milliards. Ce chiffre n'est pas modifié si l'on
tient compte des colonies françaises, car leur balance des
comptes avec les Etats-Unis est sensiblement équilibrée

3) Encore une fois, il 'agit d'une évaluation
sujette à des modifications substantielles, et ne tenant
notamment pas compte des mouvements possibles de cap itaux.

4) Le financement de ces dépenses a été assuré

jusqu'à present à la fois par des cessions d'or, par des
recettes normales en dollars et par des rentrées de capi-

taux. On ne peut préciser ces derniers, mais il y a eu,
pour des chiffres relativement importants, des cessions

53

de balances françaises en dollars au fond de stabilisation et des ventes à New York de titres appartenant à

des Français. Quant au ventes d'or, elles ont atteint,
entre le ler septembre 1939 et le ler janvier 1940, un
total de 222 millions de dollars.
5) Le problème du financement des dépenses

françaises aux Etats-Unis a été examiné avec le plus
grand soin avec M. Paul Reynaud, qui est désireux de

coopérer aussi étroitement que dans le passé avec la
Trésorerie américaine.
6) Au cours des conversations qui ont eu

lieu à ce sujet entre les Trésoreries britannique et
française, il a été reconnu que le problème se posait
pour la France dans des conditions qui ne sont pas les
memes que pour la Grande-Bretagne, ce qui explique que

la ligne de conduite adoptée par les deux pays ne soit
pas identique.

M. Leroy-Beaulieu est chargé d'apporter
à M. Morgenthau un message personnel de M. le Ministre

des Finances sur l'ensemble de la question. Il le remettra des son retour aux Etats-Unis, c'est-à-dire vers
le 15 fevrier.

2

54

Washington

February 1, 1940

(1) At the present time it is very difficult for the French Government
to give a definite estimate of its expenses in the United States. The programs

of purchases are not yet definitely established and one has to take into account

the possibilities of transportation and of the rhythm of American production.

(2) With these reservations, one can estimate that the amount of purchases
of the French Government, during the first year of the war, will be around
35,000,000,000 francs, of which 6,000,000,000 will be for raw materials, 13 for
aviation and 9 for machines. If one deducts from this figure around 4 to 5
billion, which constitute the favorable items in the balance of account, the

debtor balance of France is of the magnitude of 30 billions. This figure is not

modified if one takes into account the French colonies, since their balance of
account with the United States is about in equilibrium.

(3) Still again, it is a question of an evaluation subject to substantial

modification, and not taking into account notably the possible movements of capital.

(4) The financing of these expenditures has been assured up to the present
both by yielding gold, by normal receipts in dollars and by repatriation of

capital. One cannot figure exactly the latter, but there are, for relatively

important figures sessions of French balances in dollars to the Stabilization Fund,

and sales at New York of securities belonging to French citizens. As to sales
of gold, they have attained, between September 1, 1939 and January 1, 1940 a
total of $222,000,000.

(5) The problem of financing French expenditures in the United States has

been examined, with the greatest care by M. Paul Reynaud, who is desirous of COW

operating as closely as he has in the past with the American Treasury.

(6) In the course of the conversations which have taken place on this
subject between the British and French Treasuries, it has been recognized that
the problem involved for France in conditions which are not the same as those
for Great Britain explains that the line of conduct adopted by the two countries
is not identical.
M. Leroy-Beaulieu is charged with carryingto M. Morgenthau a personal mes-

sage from the Minister of Finance upon the general question. He will deliver
this upon his return to the United States, that is to say, around February 15.

55

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

AM

INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
CONFIDENTIAL

DATE February 1, 1940

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

FROM

Mr. White

Subject: FOREIGN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS

(Prepared by the Division of Monetary Research)

The Failure of Economic Mobilization in Britain
Notwithstanding the withdrawal from the labor market

by mobilization of over a million men, there has actually

been an increase in British unemployment since the outbreak
of war. At the middle of December the registered unemployed
was 1,360, 000, compared with 1,275,000 on August 14. This
does not include unregistered unemployed -- e.g. domestic

servants, professional, agricultural labor, etc. - doubtless

a substantial number.

These figures reveal that the British Government has
not yet succeeded in mobilizing all available resources for

the prosecution of the war. In this respect the British

Government lags for behind the German government. The

persistence of a substantial volume of unemployment in the
face of the withdrawal of a million men for the army suggests

that the British national income will fall substantially
this year.

There seems to be no immediate justification for

Mr. Churchill's proposal to recruit a million women for
Britain's labor force.
Self-sufficiency in the British Empire
The British Empire is much more self-sufficient than
it was in the last war with respect to essential war materials.
Empire production of essential war materials
(000 tons)
Copper

Lead ore
Nickel
Aluminum

Asbestos

1914

Current annual production

85

130

600
630

20

95

13.9

88

98

344

56

2tons

The steel capacity of the Empire is now 18 1/2 tone as
compared with 9 million, in 1914. Finally the degree of COM
ordination in the production sale and utilization of these
supplies is already much more advanced than it was in the
last war.

The Strain of War on British Shipping

As a result of the strain imposed by the war on British

shipping, the Government is taking over all ocean tonnage
on the United Kingdom and Colonial Registers, excepting the
Dominions and India, as from February 1st. The objective

18 to secure greater efficiency in the operation of ships.
England has already lost over half a million tons of shipping
in merchant vessels sunk at a time when shipping requirements
are much greater than in peace time. The recent purchase of
six American ships indicates that England is willing to part
with valuable foreign exchange to increase her shipping
facilities.
The shipbuilding industry of Britain is now operating
near its capacity of 2 million tons; the backbone of shipbuilding activity is the Government's decision to order a
larger tonnage of standardized tramp ships. This standardization permits increased efficiency and speed in production.
Italy and Germany

As the result of the sale of the property of German
nationals in Northern Italy, Germany has acquired a claim
against the Italian Government of about 6 billion lire --

enough to pay for two and a half years of German imports
from Italy and to liquidate the whole of the German clearing

debt to Italy. The sale of the property of the 185,000 German
speaking inhabitants of Northern Italy who will take part
in the mass emigration to the Reich has left the Italian
Government indebted to Germany to the extent of about 6 billion
lire ($300 million).
The struggle for Rumania

Germany has improved its already strategically dominant

position,
vis-a-vis the Allies, in the struggle for effective
control of Rumanian resources.
In March, 1939, Rumania signed an agreement with
Germany providing that the natural resources of Rumania are
to be developed, under German direction, to meet Germany's

57

-3import needs. On December 21, a further German-Rumanian
agreement was concluded increasing the exchange value of the
mark against the Rumanian le1 by about 20 percent and obligating Rumania to furnish Germany with 1,820,000 metric tons

of oil in 1940. (Germany received about 1,200,000 tons from
Rumania in 1939.)

About four-fifths of Rumanian petroleum output comes

from the properties of foreign companies -- British, Dutch,
French, American and Belgian. It was believed that these
companies might refuse to sell oil to Germany. But on

January 17, the Rumanian Government announced that a commission

would be appointed to administer the petroleum industry, to
insure provision for domestic needs and to guarantee the
fulfillment of foreign obligations. The press reports that
Great Britain and France have retaliated against the policy
implied in the establishment of this commission by threatening to break off all trade relations with Rumania.

The Rumanian Government is in a difficult predicament.
Rumania must collaborate with Germany. The Allied position

in the Balkans is not strong enough to justify the hope of
creating a "second front" against Germany there now. So far
German steel has proved to be more potent than Allied gold.
German-Allied Trade Warfare

Britain and France completed a trade agreement with

Greece involving important supplies of chrome for the Allies.
Germany seems to be making more strenuous efforts to

outbid the Allies in several countries. A trade expert

arrived in Rome on January 25 to begin commercial negotiations;
Turkey was reported the day before to have resumed trade

relations with Germany (after a lapse of nearly five months)

under a new agreement in which Germany was reported to have
purchased goods valued at about $6 million. The Germans
also obtained a new trade schedule with Hungary on the eve
of the commencement of Allied-Hungarian trade talks. Germany
likewise was reported to have begun discussions with Belgium

and the Netherlands for new trade agreements. In the case
of the Netherlands, a newspaper report held that Germany

had reversed its $21 million debt to the Netherlands on
September 1, to a substantial balance in Germany's favor and
that talks had begun concerning the possibility of shipping
Dutch East Indian raw materials to Germany via Siberia.

58
-

The Germanization of Czech economic life
The German Government and the Nazi party have pushed

forward with a ruthless policy ofconfiscation in occupied

Czechoslovakia. Representatives of German firms have
visited Czech concerns in the company of Gestapo agents,
and the Czech or Jewish directors have been thrown cut or

arrested. Their places have been taken by the Nazi party

or by German businessmen. Landed property has been similarly
confiscated.

The German Government intende by this means to destroy
the economic basis for Czech resistance to German authority,
end to provide wealth for the use of the German Government
and the Nazi party.

The Czech economy will be brought into line with the

requirements of the German Government, and jobs and other

spoils made available for distribution to faithful servants

of the German regime.

The United States and Latin American Trade

In the first three months of the war (September, October,

November) United States exports to Latin America increased
by 46 percent, compared with the same period of 1938, while

our imports increased by 30 percent. Brazil, our ninth
best customer, increased her purchases in the United States
by 64 percent in the first three months of the war as com-

pared with 1938. During the same period Venezuela increased
her purchases by 50.8 percent, Chile 43.5 percent, while
Argentina increased her purchases by only 15.9 percent.

However, some of this gain represents stocking up in
and dislocation while the British and French were getting
their purchase-sale arrangements under way. The ratio of

anticipation of price rises and transport difficulties,
gain may not have been maintained in December-January.

The higher cost of American goods as compared with
replaced German goods 18 being felt in Latin American
countries.
Brazil and the War Markets

Brazil rides a wave of unanticipated wartime prosperity.

Coffee exports were 2 percent greater in July-December 1939
than in the same period of 1938. Thanks to heavy French

-559

demand and a general European shift to lower-grade coffees,

the price decline has been much smaller than that of mild
coffee. As of January 15, the decline in Brazilians compared
with 1939 was 3 to 7 percent compared with 25 to 30 percent
for Colombians. Demand is strong for Brazilian meat, vegetable oils, hides, manganese, chromium. Brazil is optimistic

for her cotton, perhaps over-optimistic. Larger markets for
her textile manufactures are expected. Diversification of

her
economy since the World War is proving of great value
now.

Gold and foreign exchange resources have been increased

to $70 million. Favorable trade balance was $60 million for
1939 (of which $30 million was in last four months), compared
with $0.2 million for the whole of 1938. Her budget for
1940 anticipates 5 percent deficit. Vargas in New Year's Eve
speech predicted Brazil would be producing her own steel
rails by end of 1940. Meanwhile Brazil attempts to find a
basis for resumption of debt service in April 1940 on partial
Aranha
plan, probably in hope of attracting new capital
from the United States.
Remission of profits and dividends totalled $10 million
allocated $3.2 million for January and plans to wipe out
the arrears of $20 million on this item by July 1940.
The Stalling of the Brazilian Steel Project
Brazil has been hoping for decades for a steel industry
to utilize her ore resources. The Brazilian Government 18
anxious to see domestic production pushed but so far it has not
been possible to find the necessary capital. For the past six
from April to December 1939. The Brazilian Government has

months the U. S. Steel Corporation has been considering the

construction of a $35 million steel plant in Brazil. U. S.
Steel experts carefully investigated the project on the spot
and wrote a report which characterized the project as being
technically sound. Nevertheless the Corporation has finally

informed the Brazilian Government that it would not participate
in the project.
The refusal to participate at this time 18 probably based
upon the lack of confidence on the part of the U. S. Steel
Finance Committee in the Brazilian Government's willingness or
ability to fulfill certain conditions which are deemed necessary
to the success of the venture and the safety of the American

capital invested. It 18 believed that the U. S. Steel
Corporation 18 still interested in the plan but hopes that the

United States Government may be persuaded to assume some of the
risks by putting up or guaranteeing a major part of the capital
involved.

60

-6The plan recommended by the U. S. Steel Committee

called for the construction of a steel plant capable of
producing 285,000 tons of finished steel products at the
outset. In 1938 Brazil produced only 65,000 tons of iron
and steel products and imported 274,000 tons, principally
from Germany, United Kingdom and United States.

The technical committee which investigated the prospects
for U. S. Steel estimated that the plant could be expected

to make profits of 15 percent. The stalling of the plan in
spite of the prospect of such attractive profits 18 a
demonstration of the reluctance of private business in
these troubled times to make direct investments abroad,
especially in countries with a history of exchange difficulties.

The exhaustion of Japan's foreign exchange reserves

With the sale to the United States of $38 million of
gold in January, Japan has less than $80 million of gold
remaining. Other liquid foreign exchange assets will hardly
bring the total of foreign exchange resources available to
Japan above $200 million. The Japanese Empire will produce
during 1940 from $50 million to $60 million of new gold.
Therefore, the total foreign exchange assets which will be

available to the Japanese Government during 1940 will not
be more than $260 million.
The seriousness of Japan's foreign exchange position
is indicated by the fact that Japan has been forced to
liquidate $225 million of foreign exchange assets in each
of the past three years. If Japan's foreign exchange
position of the past three years 18 not radically adjusted
her foreign exchange resources will be exhausted at the
end of this year and she will be forced to make an adjustment in her international position.
China loses her southern railways

The loss of the two southern railway routes from
Indo-China is a heavy blow to China's power of resistance.

The Japanese capture of Nanning in November deprived China

of the use of the Dong Dang-Nanning railway. The use of
the second railroad, running from Haiphong to Yunnanfu,
was lost on January 5th when a vital bridge was destroyed

by bombing.

61

-7The Japanese have demanded, with threats of repeated
bombardments, that the French Government cease shipping

war supplies to China over this route. Reliable informa-

tion suggests that the French Government is not anxious
to resist these Japanese demands. At the end of November
there were 190 thousand tons of cargo at Haiphong awaiting
shipment including an enormous number of motor vehicles.
If the Yunnan railway remains unavailable all of these war
supplies will have to be reshipped from Haiphong to Rangoon.
There now remain only two routes over which supplies
from the outside world can reach China -- the new Burma road
and the caravan route from Russia. The amount of tonnage
carried on the Russian route is not known. During the

months of November and December $8 million of war supplies
were reexported from Burma to China over the new Burma road.

Of this total 65 percent were Russian supplies which would
indicate that the caravan route from Russia to China is

either more expensive or is at present being utilized to

its full capacity.

Deterioration in Soandinavian Currency Situation
The war has brought about a sharp reduction in the gold
and foreign exchange holdings of the Scandinavian countries.
At the same time they are confronted with a domestic inflationary movement, indicated by the persistent rise in their
note circulations.
December 15, August December 15,

Bank of Sweden

1938

1939

1, 484
994

1,390
1,126

1,341

399
448

364
505

303
564

236
414

206
505

125
564

1939

(Millions of kronor)

Gold and foreign assets
Note circulation

994

Bank of Norway

(Millions of kroner)

Gold and foreign assets
Note circulation
National Bank of Denmark 1

(Millions of kroner)

Gold and foreign exchange

Note circulation

1 Figures for November 1938 and November 1939.

The Bank of Sweden now maintains 50 percent of her foreign exchange assets in the United States, the Bank of Norway almost
60 percent and the National Bank of Denmark 40 percent.

-8India and the Silver Market

There 18 little prospect that India will import any

considerable amount of silver in the near future. The
price of silver in Bombay fell considerably during the
past week and the Reserve Bank of India bought 6 million
ounces to support the market, in contrast to its action
last month when it sold substantial amounts of silver to

curb the speculative rise in silver at that time. Silver

stocks of bullion dealers in Bombay amount to about
50 million ounces which is abnormally high, and the
minimum price (43.2 cents per ounce) at which dealers are

permitted to sell imported silver is appreciably above
the current market price in Bombay (40.12 cents).

62

2-1-40

2
R 156

63

B

Note for the Secretary of the Treasury
regarding British dollar requirements.

1.

Subject to the difficulty of giving figures

which are in any way final, the best estimate which the
United Kingdom Government can make at the present

stage of the balance of payments between the sterlingusing parts of the British Empire on the one hand and
the United States and its dependencies on the other

hand in the first year of war is as follows:
2.

It is estimated that United Kingdom purchases

in the United States (including its dependencies and Cuba)

during the first year of war will be a little under £200
million. The rough analysis of this figure is as follows:
Raw materials:-

(million £)

Cotton

26

Other

22

48

Foodstuffs

13

oil

30

General manufactures

25

Purchases by Fighting Ser-

vices:-

Aircraft 23
Machine tools 43
Munitions
other

12

81

3

197

Against this the United Kingdom exports are

estimated at about £30 million, and the nett balance of

invisible exports at £5 million. The United Kingdom
adverse balance thus amounts to about £165 million.
As/

64

-2-

As regards the rest of the sterling area,
imports are estimated at £55 million and exports at
£85 million, while the nett balance of invisible

imports is estimated at £2 million. The result is a
favourable balance of about £28 million.

Thus for the sterling area as a whole the
nett adverse balance is estimated at about £137 million
or (say) $500 million.
3. These figures are of course no more than
estimates. The armament programme is in practice

constantly subject to alterations and delays. Further
the figure for aircraft takes into account only the
orders already notified, and does not allow for the much
larger programme of aircraft purchases discussed with
M. Pleven, on which no decision has yet been reached.

4. Our actual requirements of dollars cannot
however be simply deduced from the figures given above

The reasons for this were set out in paragraphs 4 and 5
of the notes prepared for the Secretary by Mr. Pinsent
on January 9th, 1940.

As regards the financing of dollar expenditure
incurred up to the present date, the sales of gold
since the outbreak of war amount to $125 million, while
sales of dollar securities amount to $112 million.
5.

There is further the additional factor of the dollar
balances surrendered to the British control, the amount

of which cannot be estimated as it is part of our day-today turn-over. It is thus impossible to give any
figure of the amount which remains to be found. The

above figure for sales of gold is nett after allowing
for the short dollar position of $107 million existing
at/

65

-3-

at the outbreak of war, which was immediately closed

by a sale of gold; the total gold sales amount thus
to $228 million gross.
6.

As regards the future position, His Majesty's

Government have in no way changed their intention of

financing their needs by sales of gold, but to what
extent and when this can advantageously be done depends

on the course of the market. It is thus impossible to
suggest any figures of expected sales of gold and

securities respectively. The position may become
clearer after Mr. Gifford has had time to explore and
report on the question of the disposal of securities,
and His Majesty's Government will of course continue to
keep Mr. Morgenthau informed of their plans.
This message has been sent after full consultation with the French Government.
7.

66

Thursday

February 1, 1940

12:35 pm
HMJr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Doughton.

HMJr:

Hello.

Congressman
Doughton:

Hello, Mr. Secretary.

HMJr:

Yes.

D:

This 18 Bob Doughton.

HMJr:

How are you?

D:

All right, thank you. How are you getting along?

HMJr:

Oh, pretty good for an old man. HOW about you?

D:

Well, you and I can both qualify as young men yet.

HMJr:
D:

That's right.
Yes. I called you some time ago and I think you
said you'd look into - anyway - about a position a better position for Mills Kitchen. Now he's got
an application in down there for an appointment to
fill one of the vacancies in the United States Court
of Customs in New York.

HMJr:

I see.

HMJr:

Yes. I believe you said maybe you'd look into it.
Yes, I did. I asked the boys to look into it.

D:

Yes.

HMJr:

And I'll find out what they've done about it.
You will find out?

D:

D:

HMJr:

Oh, I asked them the same day I spoke to you.

D:

I've - I understand confidentially that Senator

Reynolds is pushing a man by the name of Hill, from

Willimington, North Carolina, for that job, who I

don't think is qualified for it in any sense.

67

-2HMJr:

I think he's withdrawn that recommendation.

D:

You think he has?

HMJr:

Yes.

D:

Uh huh.

HMJr:

Yes.

D:

HMJr:
D:

Well, has he in any way endorsed Kitchen or not?
Not as far as I know.
Josephus Daniels and Governor Gardner and Senator

Bailey and pretty much every- - Lindsay W
and pretty much everybody that knows the situation
in the State I think, have endorsed Kitchen whole-

heartedly.
HMJr:

D:

HMJr:
D:

Well, I wasn't aware of that, Bob, and I'll ask
again. But I did ask once before. I'll ask again.
How's that - you'll ask again?
Yes I will.

And I - I spoke to the Attorney General about it -

he didn't know anything about it.
HMJr:

Yes.

D:

But I really have a very deep personal interest in
it. Of course I wouldn't ask any man's appointment
unless he was well qualified.

HMJr:

Yes.

D:

I understand there are two vacancies there.

HMJr:

I think that's right.

D:

Yes. When you check on it will you call me back?

HMJr:

I surely will.

D:

I thank you. Come up and see us.

HMJr:

Thank you so much.

D:

Thank you. Goodbye.

HMJr:

Goodbye.

68

February 1, 1940

12:38 p.m.

Operator:

Mr. Frank had gone to lunch and I have Mr. Jones.

HMJr:

Thank you.

O:

Right. Go ahead.

HMJr:

Hello.

Jesse

Jones:

Hello, Henry.

HMJr:

How's my Chinese friend?

J:

Well, on the ropes.

HMJr:

(Laughs)

J:

On the ropes.

HMJr:

How are you getting along?

J:

Fair. Are you -- did you have your meeting?

HMJr:-

Yes, and they gave us a proposal and I told them
to go somewhere in a room and lock themselves in
and come back at four-thirty, which they are going

to do, and if you are free at four-thirty I'd love
to see you.

J:

O.K., I'll try to come over.

HMJr:

will you do that?

J:

I will.

HMJr:
J:

All right, Jesse.
I've got another date but I'll ask the office to
change that one.

HMJr:

Thank you.

J:

O. K.

HMJr:

Goodbye.

THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON

February 1, 1940

H.M. Jr.
To speak to me about.
F.D.R.

71

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

CONFIDENTIAL

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Haas

90A

Subject: Employment in the Aviation Manufacturing Industry
1. Employment in the aviation manufacturing industry
aggregated more than 64,000 in December. Of the total, approximately 52,000 were employed in the manufacture of aircraft and 12,000 in the manufacture of motors.
2. Employment in the industry has more than doubled in

the last year. The increase has been greater relatively in

the case of persons engaged in the manufacture of aircraft
than of airplane motors.
3. The Glenn L. Martin Company has the greatest number
of employees, 11,200, while Douglas Aircraft is second with
10,400. Martin's employment more than quadrupled during
1939. The employment of the Bell Aircraft Corporation, on
the other hand, was far lower in December than it was in June.

4. Employment in the production of airplane engines is
concentrated mainly in two companies, Wright Aeronautical
Corporation, a subsidiary of Curtiss-Wright Corporation, and
the Pratt and Whitney Aircraft Division of United Aircraft
Corporation. Employment in these companies has increased

sharply in the last three years. Employment in the Lycoming
Division of Aviation Manufacturing Corporation, on the other

hand, is lower now than in 1937.

5. The attached chart shows total employment in the
aviation manufacturing industry and the employment of selected
companies since January 1937. The attached tables give the

figures plotted in the chart. The figures used for total employment cover almost all of the industry, but do not include
the employment of some of the smaller companies for which no
data were available.

Attachments

72

MR. BELL:

The following is an analysis of AIRPLANES estimated for and included in the Emergency Supplemental Appropriation Act, covering funds

for neutrality:

WAR DEPARTMENT

-

No planes requested in Budget

COAST GUARD

-

No planes requested in Budget

NAVY DEPARTMENT:

Budget Estimates, which were approved by House
Appropriations Committee and House:
Unit Cost
No.

For neutrality patrol:

Observation-scouting

Patrol-bombing
Scout-bombing

For training:

Training (primary)
Fighting
Observation-scouting
Scout-bombing

100
37
81

150
50
50

50

518

Total

$50,000
150,000
75,000

$5,000,000
5,550,000
6,075,000

16,100
75,000
50,000
66,120

2,415,000
3,750,000
2,500,000
3,306,000
28,596,000

The Senate Appropriations Committee deleted from the Bill $6,075,000

covering 81 scout-bombing planes, leaving in the bill $22,521,000 for

Navy planes.

The Emergency Supplemental Appropriation Act is still in conference

between the two Houses.

February 1, 1941

Evy

73

RE COLOMBIAN FINANCE

Present:

February 1, 1940.
11:00 a.m.

Ambassador Turbay

Dr. Jaramillo
Mr. Laylin
Mr. Welles
Mr. White
Mr. Cotton

Mr. Gaston
Mr. Traphagen

H.M.Jr:

Mr. Jones is very sorry he can't be here,
but he is testifying before the Foreign
Relations Committee. He will join us later
if he can. Mr. Welles and I and Mr. Jones,

as you know, have been offering our services
to the Republic of Colombia and the Protective
Bondholders' Committee to try to be sort of

umpires in the settlement of the debt. We
are all very hopeful that the Republic of

Colombia and the Bondholders' Protective Committee may reach an agreement today.

The thought that we have is this, that if
you gentlemen would care to discuss your
problem before us and see if at this session
this morning, this afternoon or tomorrow,
if you can't get together on a basis which
is acceptable to your country and to Mr:
Traphagen, who represents the bondholders.
Mr. Welles and I will sit back and be glad
to listen.
Could you add something to it, Mr. Welles?
Welles:

If you will permit me, I would like to make
just one suggestion in the nature of an addition to what the Secretary has said. It seems
to me from my understanding of the situation
that there are certain points, at least in
principle, in a rough way, that the Republic
of Colombia and the representative of the
bondholders might be said to be in agreement
upon. There are other points, of course, on
which they are not in agreement. It occurred
to me that it might simplify matters for the
purposes of discussion if the points upon
which there is at least an agreement in principle could be set to one side for the purpose
of elimination, leaving the points upon which

74

-2there is not agreement. If that procedure
were adopted, perhaps it would facilitate
the course of the conversations this morning
and I feel sure that the Ambassador and
Dr. Jaramillo and Mr. Traphagen, after the
conferences they have had, know very well
what the points are upon which there is
agreement in principle. I thought possibly
those might be mentioned and then the points
that are still in disagreement might be
brought up in the discussion.
H.M.Jr:

I think it is an excellent suggestion. I think

if the Ambassador would state the position of
his Government at this time, it might be helpful.

Turbay:

All right.

H.M.Jr:

Please.

Turbay:

Very well. I have here a memorandum which will
the Government of Colombia in an effort to meet
the position of the bondholders on what might

help me to explain accurately the position of

be called our points of difference.

H.M.Jr:

Would you read it?

Turbay:

Mr. Cotton?

H.M.Jr:

I will be glad to read it
"The Government of Colombia wishes to invite

attention to the fact that, since these negotiations were begun, world conditions have
changed such that we are now in a period of
great international disturbance, the repercussions of which are bearing each day more

heavily upon the economy of Colombia.

"The economic problems of Colombia have been

growing more and more serious due principally

to the decline in the price of coffee, to such
an extreme that the value of this principal
product is today barely one fourth of what it
was in 1929. Concretely, the exportation of

75

-32.800.000 bags of coffee returned to the
country in that year $84.400.000,
while an exportation of 4.200.000 bags in
1938, at an average price of 11-1/24 per
pound, brought only $49.000.000. The
present decline to 8-1/20 per pound threatens
to bring about an economic crisis similar to
that which in 1932 obliged the country to
suspend payments on its external debt.

"Notwithstanding these difficulties, the
seek a settlement of its dollar debt. The
Government therefore hopes that the strong
determination which animates it and the
sacrifices involved in assuming the obligations contemplated, which will aggravate the

Government has held to its determination to

present difficulties, will be fully appreciated and understood.

"With the desire of going as far as possible
to reach an agreement, the Government has
studied with the greatest care the proposal
made in the letter of January 12th by Mr.
Traphagen and has confirmed the terms to

which I said I would agree in the conference
held on January 13th, under the auspices of
the Secretary of the Treasury.

"In the light of this same desire and in order
goes as far as is possible in the direction
of meeting the Council's position, I am preto arrive promptly at an understanding which

pared to recommend to my Government the follow-

ing bases of agreement in the event they are
found to be acceptable:

"1) Current interest- Beginning with the year
1940 the Government will pay 3% interest on
the principal amount of bonds calculated at
$45,000,000 and will deliver to the Fiscal

Agents in each year the amount necessary for
this purpose.
"2) Interest in arrears- The Government under-

takes to deliver to the Fiscal Agents each

76

-4year, for ten years, $225,000 to be applied
to the interest in arrears, so that the
Fiscal Agents will be in a position to pay
each year against the surrender of the coupons, for a half yearly period, one-sixth
of the face amount of such coupons.

"3) Amortization- The Republic undertakes to
amortize throughout the entire period of the
service of the loan an annual amount in bonds
of a face value equal to 1% of the $45,000,000
principal amount. That is to say: the Government will deliver annually to the Fiscal Agents
bonds, for amortization, in the face amount of
$450,000. The bonds that the Government now
owns and which amount to about $5,900,000 will

not be used for this purpose, but will be
cancelled at the time of entering into the
settlement."

That means six from forty-five leaves 39 million?
Laylin:

No, it was fifty-one, Mr. Secretary.

H.M.Jr:

"4) Total service moneys- The Government agrees

that, beginning with the year 1941, it will
apply to the service of the loan not less than
$1,800,000; and $2,000,000 beginning with 1950
or so soon thereafter as the value of the ex-

portations from Colombia (exclusive of petroleum and 60% of the gold, platinum and banana)
equals by at least 120% the value of such exportations for the year 1938.
"5) Additional amortization.- In the event and
to the extent that the requirements for current

interest and interest in arrears and the cost

to the Government of the purchase of the $450,000
face amount of bonds do not exhaust the total
service moneys of $1,800,000, or $2,000,000 as
the case may be, the Government undertakes to

apply the difference to the purchase of bonds

for delivery to the Fiscal Agents for amortization, or to deliver said difference in cash to
the Fiscal Agents for the purchase of bonds for
amortization. It is understood that the Govern-

ment may and hopes to amortize bonds more rapidly

than here contemplated if conditions permit;

77

-5and may redeem the bonds at par on any

interest payment date, in whole or in part.
"6) The Government will agree that, if a
better settlement is made with the foreign
holders of any other external bonds of the
national Government now outstanding, like
better treatment will be extended to the
holders of the bonds covered by this settlement.

"7) So soon as an agreement in principle is
reached, on the direct dollar debt, the
Banco Agricola Hipotecario will send a
representative to the United States with instructions to negotiate an immediate settlement of the dollar debt of that Bank guaranteed by the Government of Colombia.

Well, at least that is a concrete statement,
anyway. Do you care to comment on it, Mr.

Traphagen?

Traphagen: Well, I will be very glad to give my impressions of it.
H.M.Jr:

Would you, please?

Traphagen: You understand, I haven't consulted with my
H.M.Jr:

associates in the Council and it is only my
individual opinion.
But could I interrupt?

Traphagen: Yes.
H.M.Jr:

What I hope will happen is this, that at this
meeting today, it will be figuratively that
you and the Colombians will be behind locked
doors and that if there is something that

comes up this morning or this afternoon or
tomorrow that you would be able to consult
with your committee by telephone and that they,

if there is some point, would call up the
President of Colombia and do the same, so
that this thing would now really move and
that we would come to a happy conclusion.

78

-6Traphagen: You would like to lock us up together and

not let us out until we agree, is that it?

H.M.Jr:

Yes. There is a very nice room downstairs
and we will serve lunch to you and bring
you clean towels and a sponge bath, if
necessary, but we would like to lock you up
so that this idea - if they say they have
to present it to the President of Colombia,
we will even pay for the telephone call to
the President of Colombia and we will pay
for your telephone calls.

Traphagen:

If the meals are very good, we may not want
to get out.

H.M.Jr:

Then we will put you on bread and water.
But that was the idea that Mr. Welles and

I had, that if, you gentlemen being willing,
that you just would stay at this thing now
until you came to a conclusion.

Turbay:

We have no objection. We would be delighted.

Traphagen: Well, I - my reaction to this plan is this,
Mr. Secretary, that it provides for a 3 percent interest which, frankly, is less than
we had contemplated, by quite a little. It
provides, as I see it, for the payment of
one-sixth of the back interest. The back
interest amounts to approximately 13 million
dollars and it would contemplate paying 21
million dollars or 2 million dollars of that
13 million dollars over a period of ten years.
That would be 21 million if they pay us
$225,000 a year over a ten-year period, which
I am afraid would - I am quite certain wouldn't
be acceptable. And then it provides for the
purchase of $450,000 face amount of bonds a
year, which, if figured at 50 cents on the
dollar, I think you get far less than that
under any such plan as this. I think you get
them for about 35 cents on the dollar, but
figuring it at 50 cents on the dollar, would
amount to a total of a million eight a year
and you agree to a minimum of a million eight.

79

-7Now, frankly, I had had the feeling all along
that the Colombian Government was willing to
make a payment of two million dollars a year
with the exception of the first year, in which
they had put in the budget 1,750,000, and I
was in hopes that if we could get up to a sum
& little above the two million dollars which
I have been discussing with the Ambassador and
Dr. Jaramillo, that we weren't so very far
apart, but I am frankly a little bit disturbed
in my hopefulness at the thought of this reduced figure of a million eight. The memorandum
speaks of two million dollars in 1950 if the
exports at that time are 120% of what they
were in 1938. I am a little afraid, Mr. Secretary, that this offer brings us further away
from each other than I had hoped we were before,
and as much as I am willing to go into that
room that you speak of and stay there, I am
afraid it is going to keep us an awfully long
time.

H.M.Jr:

Well, Mr. Traphagen, here is the memorandum and

I make this suggestion, that you go and talk

it over with whoever your associates are and
then whatever time you need, then we will meet
right after lunch with these gentlemen again.

Would that be all right?

Traphagen: Yes, I can telephone my people in New York
H.M.Jr:
Traphagen:

H.M.Jr:

if that is what you had in mind.
That is what I had in mind, and then say, "Now,
we have got this --"
I know pretty well what they will say, but I
will talk to them.
If you could come back with a statement and
then the Colombians could, in turn, telephone
that down to Colombia and that would keep
the thing going. That was the way I was
going to suggest that it move and keep doing

that until we get together. Would that be
all right?
Traphagen: It is all right with me.

80

-8H.M.Jr:

Is that all right with you gentlemen?

Turbay:

Perfectly.

Traphagen:

The only qualification I make is that I

H.M.Jr:

do have to be in New York tomorrow morning.

Then you can settle it today. That makes
it easier for everybody.

Jaramillo: A good solution.
H.M.Jr:
How would this be, if we give you a place,
an office where you could be by yourself

and phone, and that when you are ready, you
let these gentlemen know. Where would you

like to be?

H.M.Jr:

We can wait right here in the Treasury.
Fine. We will give you each a room. There is
lots of room.

Turbay:

We could meet later.

H.M.Jr:

How long do you think it will take you?

Traphagen:

I don't think it will take me a very long

Laylin:

H.M.Jr:
Traphagen:

H.M.Jr:
Turbay :

time to get my people on the phone.
Could you be ready by 12:00 o'clock?

Oh, I think so.
Well, we will be ready by 12:00, so why not

just wait. Would that be all right?
It would be all right, yes.

Traphagen: I would like very much if the Ambassador and
Jaramillo would have lunch with me, and Mr.
Laylin, and Mr. Cotton, or anybody else, and
maybe we can talk it over at lunch, and then

would you like us to report to you later in
the day?

H.M.Jr:

Well, Mr. Welles and I were holding ourselves
at Cabinet until 4:30, so you could all come

81

-9back then and tell us you were all together,

or maybe we could meet here again at 4:30,
but in the meantime you people could be

meeting with each other. Is that what you
had in mind?

Welles:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

Will that be all right?
I will do anything that you say.

Traphagen:

H.M.Jr:

Jaramillo:
Traphagen:

Then you people are going to meet at 1:00 o'clock

for lunch, is that it?
That 1s all right.

Suppose I endeavor to get my principals on the
phone and talk with them and maybe you gentlemen would come to the hotel and have lunch
with me, at the Mayflower, would you, at 1:00
o'clock?

Turbay:

We would be delighted.

H.M.Jr:

And then we will all see you again at 4:30. If,

Welles:

during the day, you want to meet here in the
Treasury, I mean if there is any question you
would like to put up, Mr. Bell is available all
day on this. And you (Mr. Welles) are available.
I will have to be at the White House immediately
after Cabinet.

H.M.Jr:

Could you be back at 4:30?

Welles:

It depends on how long I have to stay.

H.M.Jr:

If anything comes up during the day, will you
speak to Mr. Bell?

Traphagen:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

And I will hold myself in readiness at 4:30.

Traphagen:

All right.

82
COPY

EMBAJADA DE COLONBIA

Memmandrom

WASHINGTON

The Government of Colombia wishes to invite attention to the fact
that, since these negotiations were begun, world conditions have changed

such that we are now in a period of great international disturbance,
the repercussions of which are bearing each day more heavily upon the
economy of Colombia.

The economic problems of Colombia have been growing more and more

serious due principally to the decline in the price of coffee, to such
an extress that the value of this principal product is today barely one
fourth of what it was in 1929. Concretely, the exportation of 2.800.000

bags of coffee returned to the country in that year ..... $74,400.000,
while an exportation of 4,200,000 bags in 1938, at an average price of
11-1/2# per pound, brought only $49.000.000. The present decline to
8-1/2# per pound threatens to bring about an economic crisis similar
to that which in 1932 obliged the country to suspend payments on its
external debt.

Notwithstanding these difficulties, the Government has held to its
determination to seek a settlement of its dollar debt. The Government
therefore hopes that the strong determination which animates it and the

sacrifices involved in assuming the obligations contemplated, which will

aggravate the present difficulties, will be fully appreciated and understood.

with the desire of going as far as possible to reach an agreement,
the Government has studied with the greatest care the proposal made in

83

-2the letter of January 12th by Mr. Traphagen and has confirmed the terms

to which I said I would agree in the conference held on January 13th, under
the suspices of the Secretary of the Treasury.

In the light of this same desire and in order to arrive promptly at
an understanding which goes as far as is possible in the direction of too
meeting the Council's position, I an prepared to recommend to my Govern-

ment the following bases of agreement in the event they are found to be
acceptables

1) Current interest- Beginning with the year 1940 the Government will
pay 3% interest on the principal amount of bonds calculated at $45,000,000

and will deliver to the Fiscal Agents in each year the amount necessary for
this purpose.

2) Interest in arrears- The Government undertakes to deliver to the
Fiscal Agents each year, for ten years, $225.000 to be applied to the

interest in arrears, so that the Fiscal Agents will be in a position to
pay each year against the surrender of the coupons, for a half yearly
period, one-sixth of the face amount of such coupons.

3) Amortisation The Republic undertakes to amortise throughout the
entire period of the service of the loan an annual amount in bonds of a

face value equal to 18 of the $45,000,000 principal amount. That is to
anythe Government will deliver annually to the Fiscal Agents bonds, for
amortisation, is the face amount of $450.000. The bonds that the Govern-

84

-3neut now owas and which amount to about $5.900.000 will not be used for

this purpose, but will be cancelled at the time of entering into the
settlement.

4) Total service moneys- The Government agrees that, beginning with

the year 1941, 10 will apply to the service of the loan not less then
$1,800,000; and $2,000,000 beginning with 1950 or se soon thereafter

as the value of the exportations from Colombia (exclusive of petroleum
and 60% of the gold, platious and banana) equals by at least 120% the

value of such exportations for the year 1938.

5) Additional amortination.- In the event and to the extent that the
requirements for current interest and interest in arrears and the cost
to the Government of the purchase of the $450.000 face amount of bonds

do not exhaust the total service moneys of $1.800.000, or $8.000.000
as the case may be, the Government undertakes to apply the difference to

the purchase of bonds for delivery to the Fiscal Agents for emortisation,

or to deliver said difference in cash to the Fiscal Agents for the purchase of bonds for amortisation. It is understood that the Government
may and hopes to emortise bonds more rapidly than here contemplated if

conditions permits and may redeem the bonds at par on any interest pay->

most date, in whole or in part.

6) The Government will agree that, if a better settlement is made with
the foreign holders of any other external bonds of the national Government

now outstanding, like better treatment will be extended to the holders of
the bonds covered by this settlement.

85

-47) so soon as an agreement in principle is reached, on the direct
dollar debt, the Banco Agricola Hipotecario will send a representative

to the United States with instructions to negotiate an immediate cottle
sent of the dollar debt of that Bank guaranteed by the Government of
Colombia.

I

86

EMBAJADA DE COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON

-MEMORANDUM-

The Government of Colombia wishes to invite atten-

tion to the fact that, since these negotiations were begun, world conditions have changed such that we are now

in a period of great international disturbance, the repercussions of which are bearing each day more heavily
upon the economy of Colombia.
The economic problems of Colombia have been growing

more and more serious due principally to the decline in
the price of coffee, to such an extreme that the value of
this principal product is today barely one fourth of what
it was in 1929. Concretely, the exportation of 2,800.000
bags of coffee returned to the country in that year
$74,400.000, while an exportation of 4.200.000 bags in

1938, at an average price of 11-1/2d per pound, brought
only $49,000.000. The present decline to 8-1/20 per pound

threatens to bring about an economic crisis similar to
that which in 1932 obliged the country to suspend payments

on its external debt.
Notwithstanding these difficulties, the Government

87

EMBAJADA DE COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON

-2-

has held to its determination to seek a settlement of
its dollar debt. The Government therefore hopes that
the strong determination which'animates it and the sacrifices involved in assuming the obligations contemplated,

which will aggravate the present difficulties, will be
fully appreciated and understood.

With the desire of going as far as possible to reach
an agreement, the Government has studied with the greatest

care the proposal made in the letter of January 12th by
Mr. Traphagen and has confirmed the terms to which I said
I would agree in the conference held on January 13th, under

the auspices of the Secretary of the Treasury.
rive promptly at an understanding which goes as far as is

possible in the direction of meeting the Council's position, I am prepared to recommend to my Government the fol- -

lowing bases of agreement in the event they are found to
be acceptable:

1) Current interest Beginning with the year 1940 the

.

In the light of this same desire and in order to ar-

88

EMBAJADA DE COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON

-3-

Government will pay 3% interest on the principal amount

of bonds calculated at $45,000,000 and will deliver to
the Fiscal Agents in each year the amount necessary for
this purpose.

2) Interest in arrears- The Government undertakes to
deliver to the Fiscal Agents each year, for ten years,
$225.000 to be applied to the interest in arrears, so
that the Fiscal Agents will be in a position to pay each
year against the surrender of the coupons, for a half
yearly period, one-sixth of the face amount of such coupons.

3) Amortization- The Republic undertakes to amortize
throughout the entire period of the service of the loan
an annual amount in bonds of a face value equal to 1%

of the $45,000,000 principal amount. That is to say:the
Government will deliver annually to the Fiscal Agents
bonds, for amortization, in the face amount of $450.000.
The bonds that the Government now owns and which amount

89

EMBAJADA DE COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON

-4-

to about $5.900.000 will not be used for this purpose,

but will be cancelled at the time of entering into the
settlement.

4) Total service moneys- The Government agrees that,

beginning with the year 1941, it will apply to the service of the loan not less than $1.800,000; and $2.000.000
beginning with 1950 or so soon thereafter as the value
of the exportations from Colombia (exclusive of petroleum
and 60% of the gold, platinum and banana) equals by at

least 120% the value of such exportations for the year
1938.

5) Additional amortization.- - In the event and to the
extent that the requirements for current interest and
interest in arrears and the cost to the Government of the
purchase of the $450.000 face amount of bonds do not ex-

haust the total service moneys of $1,800,000, or $2,000.000
as the case may be, the Government undertakes to apply

90

EMBAJADA DE COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON

-5-

the difference to the purchase of bonds for delivery to
the Fiscal Agents for amortization, or to deliver said
difference in cash to the Fiscal Agents for the purchase

of bonds for amortization. It is understood that the
Government may and hopes to amortize bonds more rapidly

than here contemplated if conditions permit; and may redeem the bonds at par on any interest payment date, in
whole or in part.

6) The Government will agree that, if a better settlement is made with the foreign holders of any other external bonds of the national Government now outstanding,

like better treatment will be extended to the holders of
the bonds covered by this settlement.

7) So soon as an agreement in principle is reached, on
the direct dollar debt, the Banco Agrícola Hipotecario
will send a representative to the United States with instructions to negotiate an immediate settlement of the
dollar debt of that Bank guaranteed by the Government of
Colombia.

91

RE COLOMBIAN FINANCE

Present:

Mr. Welles

February 1, 1940.
4:30 p.m.

Mr. Bell

Mr. Cotton

Ambassador Turbay

Dr. Jaramillo
Mr. Laylin

Mr. Traphagen

H.M.Jr:

Well, Mr. Ambassador, where are we this after-

Turbay:

We had lunch and spent a very pleasant hour.

noon?

Jaramillo: The lunch was good but the conversation was
H.M.Jr:

not so good.
I see.

Traphagen:

We agree on food, Mr. Secretary, but on very

H.M.Jr:

I see.

Traphagen:

little else.

I am sorry to say. I was able to get in touch

with the Executive Committee of the Council
on the telephone but I wasn't able to persuade
them to make any better offer than what they
felt was their minimum offer, which I communicated to the Ambassador on January 12th, and
that offer contemplated the annual payment of

$2,300,000 a year and after the first five

years it contemplated a 4 percent coupon. The
Executive Committee were quite unanimous that

H.M.Jr:

they feel they couldn't go below that.
How do you people feel after lunch? How is
the price of coffee today, any improvement?

Jaramillo:

No, it hasn't improved yet. We have now st
per pound from 30 four months ago.

H.M.Jr:

What do you want to do, just let the thing
drop?

Turbay:

(The Ambassador stated in heavily accented

English that he was extremely anxious, personally, to reach a satisfactory agreement

92

-2with the Bondholders' Protective Committee and
that the Colombian delegation had expected
Traphagen:

Mr. Traphagen to be in a position to put forward
a new proposition at this meeting).
I am very sorry, Mr. Secretary, that we haven't
been more successful. I realize that you and
Mr. Welles and everyone else who has had anything to do with this has done everything they

could to help us and I am still hopeful that
somehow, some way, we can get together with a
little more time.

I suppose the price of coffee has something to
do with it.

Jaramillo: (Unintelligible).

-

Laylin:

Yes, 31 percent represents - with the depreciation, the 31 percent paid, Mr. Secretary,
it would cost in pesos what 6 percent would
usually cost.

Cotton:

That is right, too.
Could I just talk a minute here with Mr. Welles

H.M.Jr:

and Mr. Bell?

(Discussion off the record)
Am I correct that in the budget they now have how much money allocated for debt retirement or

for debt interest, rather, interest on the debt?

Laylin:

As I understand it - yes, 3,250,000 pesos.

Turbay:

About.

Laylin:

For the American and English debt for the year

H.M.Jr:

Three million how much?

Laylin:

Two hundred fifty thousand pesos. Now, the peso

Bell:

1940.

is 57c. How many dollars is that?
It ought to be around three million seven or eight.

93

-3Turbay:

It amounts to about $3,900,000.

H.M.Jr:

Is that all available for the United States?

Turbay:

No.

Cotton:

Is a million nine available?
45 million for settling of the debt.
It would be about one million seven, wouldn't

Laylin:

That is for the 45 million of dollar debt,

Bell:

There is some more in there, though.

Laylin:

But that they allocate to the English debt.

Bell:

I see.

H.M.Jr:

In order that Mr. Welles and Mr. Jones can earn
their salary and not have nothing come out of

H.M.Jr:
Turbay:

it?

only.

this conference, as a sort of last suggestion in fact, a last suggestion - we offer this to

you people, that you consider a temporary
arrangement for one year; that you take $1,350,000,
which would be 3 percent on the 45 million, and

pay half of that immediately and the other half
in six months; that you agree to take $400,000
and as rapidly as possible retire $400,000
worth of bonds. I mean, you spend $400,000 to
retire - buy as many bonds as you can for
$400,000, and that as soon as that is announced
you continue your negotiations for a permanent

Laylin:

settlement, but do this for one year.
Would you mind repeating? In the first six

H.M.Jr:

fifty?
Well, I take it you pay semi-annually.

Laylin:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

You would take a million three fifty, which

months you spend half of the million seven

94

-4would be $675,000 - I mean that you take half
of it and pay immediately 13% interest on
45 million debt and in six months you pay
another 18% and that the Colombian Government
agree to spend $400,000 cash and buy as many

of the bonds as they can for that money, doing
that as rapidly as possible.

Welles:

During the twelve months' period.

H.M.Jr:

During the twelve months' period. But after
that is announced, that you continue with the
Council to work toward a permanent settlement.
The reason we suggest that, that is what you
have got in your budget and before your next
budget is made up you put in something which
would be agreeable and it gives you ample

time, but I am not making this suggestion for
trading purposes, you see.

Jones:

Would that be acceptable to the Committee, do
you think?

H.M.Jr:

Which committee?

Jones:

The Traphagen Committee.

H.M.Jr:

Well, there it is.

Traphagen:

Mr. Jones, I did discuss with my Committee today
this whole question.

Jones:

First I want to apologize. I didn't even recognize you.

Traphagen: Didn't you? I said, "Hello, Mr. Jones," and I
thought you did.

Jones:

I thought you were another man here. I couldn't
recall your name.

Traphagen: Your apology is certainly accepted.

The Council said this to me, that if it were
impossible to agree on a permanent settlement,
that they would be willing to consider a
temporary settlement that would envisage the

95

-5payment of interest at 31%, which would take
$1,575,000 and that over and above that, they
would expect the Colombians to pay $225,000
toward the sinking fund, which would mean
annual payments of $1,800,000 during the life
of this temporary settlement. They would be
very loath to go under 32% coupon in the temporary settlement, but they would agree to a
temporary settlement over one year or two
years or three years.

I think that we recognize that Colombia is

having a hard time at the moment with the

price of coffee where it is.

H.M.Jr:

Well now, have you got the authority to say yes

Turbay:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

You can say yes - have you the authority?

Turbay:

I would have to speak to my Government because --

or no to the suggestion that we made?

Jaramillo: They have not contemplated that solution.
Turbay:

Jones:

H.M.Jr:

In order to avoid any difficulty with the Council,

the Council - I would wish to speak to my Government in regard to your suggestion, Mr. Secretary.

I didn't hear it. Will somebody interpret that?
The Ambassador is going to take the suggestion

of the three of us and I take it either tele-

phone or telegraph it down and get the yes or
no for his Government on that.
Jones:

That is our suggestion?

H.M.Jr:

Our suggestion.

Jones:

And then that would be submitted to Mr. Traphagen?

H.M.Jr:

And I am going to ask Mr. Traphagen if he would
take this suggestion which we have made here

and submit it to the Council.

96

-6Laylin:

Mr. Traphagen, I should say that Francis White
suggested to Ambassador Lopez and me a three-

year temporary settlement on a 3% basis, way
last August.
H.M.Jr:

Laylin:

I didn't even know that. What was his suggestion?
He wasn't specific on the amount of the sinking
fund, but it was for three years and 3 percent
interest.

Traphagen: Well, of course, these suggestions that have

been made in the past, they have been made on
your side and they have been made on our side

and you made the so-called Laylin suggestion

and Francis White may have made some other

suggestions. The suggestions that were made in
the past have been put in the discard. We are

Laylin:

willing to agree to the Laylin settlement.
I mentioned this so that you could use it in
your discussion when it comes.

Traphagen: Yes.
Welles:

I would like to repeat what the Ambassador has

just added to that in Spanish. He prefers the
idea of a one-year settlement along the lines
that you have proposed, with the clear understanding that it is only for one year, but
that during that year the Council and the
Colombian representatives maintain a close contact with a view to negotiating a permanent
settlement.

H.M.Jr:

Well, that is what you and I and Mr. Jones were
talking about, a one-year settlement, but immediately continue these discussions, looking
toward a permanent one.

Jones:

And not wait until the end of the year to start.

H.M.Jr:

No, continue right now.

Welles:

That was the Ambassador's suggestion.

Traphagen:

I didn't hear the first part of Mr. Welles' interpretation. The Ambassador preferred a one-

year settlement?

97

-7Welles:

A one-year settlement, Mr. Traphagen, yes.

Traphagen: I will be very glad to submit that to the
Council and I will try to get an answer
for you just as soon as possible.
H.M.Jr:

Will you?

Traphagen: I will.
Jones:

Welles:

Can we ask both of these gentlemen to agree to

recommend it?

The Ambassador said that he will be willing to
avoiding a breakdown of negotiations, although
he would prefer to have the negotiations continue with a view to reaching an agreement for
a permanent settlement, but if that proves
impossible, or if that proves impossible for
the present time, he would be disposed to
recommend it to his Government as a means of

recommend this suggestion to his Government
as a means of avoiding a breakdown and as a

means of continuing negotiations with a view
to a permanent settlement.
The Ambassador repeats what I have already said,

that is, that on three or four occasions, the

Colombian Government has objected to a temporary
arrangement, preferring a permanent arrangement.
Jones:

Welles:

Then they would prefer to continue the negotiations

now in an effort to make a permanent arrangement,
rather than to make the temporary arrangement,

is that correct?
That is the Ambassador's desire, but in order
to avoid a breakdown of negotiations or to
avoid indefinite continuation and inability
to get together, he would be disposed to
recommend this as a solution for one year.

H.M.Jr:

Mr. Jones would like to go in a corner with
us again.

(Discussion off the record)

98

-8H.M.Jr:

One thing that Mr. Cotton drew to my attention

was this, that in the continuation of a per-

manent settlement, the Colombian Government,

as part of that, would immediately send up
somebody representing the agricultural bank
to negotiate that.

Laylin:

Along with the negotiation for the permanent

H.M.Jr:

Yes.

Welles:

The Ambassador says, in reply to your request,
that he would, of course, agree that a representative of the mortgage bank come immediately
and take a hand in negotiations for the settlement of that debt, but that he does not conceive

settlement?

of a settlement of that debt being possible until
a permanent arrangement for the 45 million has
been found, but that he is willing to have the

representative come immediately nevertheless
to undertake those negotiations.
H.M.Jr:

Wouldn't he be willing to say this, that in

Welles:

That is exactly what he says.

H.M.Jr:

That is the point. Do I understand, gentlemen,

Turbay:

Yes.

H.M.Jr:

How about you, Mr. Traphagen?

Traphagen:

I am afraid I will have to.
That is something. Could I possibly hear from

H.M.Jr:

consideration of the permanent settlement,
the one on the mortgage bank, that the two
would be along together simultaneously?

that you will now recommend this suggestion to
your Government, is that the idea?

you Monday or Tuesday?

Traphagen: I think so. I think I can let you know by
Monday.

H.M.Jr:

By Monday?

99

-9Traphagen: Yes.
H.M.Jr:

Do you think you gentlemen could let us know

Turbay:

Yes.

by Monday?

Traphagen: It might be late Monday, but sometime before
midnight.

H.M.Jr:

Then we just will hope for the best.

Traphagen: All right. I will do the best I can with it.
H.M.Jr:

Have you anything to say?

Welles:

I merely want to clear up one point so there
won't be any misunderstanding. It is my
understanding that if this temporary agreement is reached as a result of the recommendations that have been made by both sides, that
negotiations for the permanent settlement will
be resumed immediately thereafter. Am I right
in that understanding?

Turbay:

Yes. And I go a little farther, that if, be-

tween now and Monday or Tuesday, Mr. Traphagen's
Committee can propose another suggestion, we

will consider the new suggestion, because my

hope is for a permanent settlement at all
times.

H.M.Jr:

Do you get what he suggested? He said if between now and Monday and Tuesday the Council

has a suggestion for a permanent settlement,

he would be very glad to entertain it.

Turbay:

Exactly.

Traphagen:

Yes. I am a little doubtful if I could work

that out before Monday or Tuesday, but if we
should - if the Ambassador and myself should
see some hope of working out a permanent

settlement, would it be agreeable to you gentle-

men in that event to postpone the announcement
of a temporary settlement for a few weeks?

100

- 10 H.M.Jr:

Sure.

Traphagen: If we see some real hope of doing it.
It would be our desire.
Jones:
Traphagen: I suggested to the Ambassador while you gentlemen were discussing those things between your-

selves - Dr. Turbay said to me that he was a

H.M.Jr:

little loath to think about one-year settlements. I am a little loath to think about it,
because I visualize I am going to be spending
quite a little time down here over the next
year if that is the case.
It is a lovely climate.

Traphagen: And I would like to get it through as soon as
possible and I suggested that perhaps if we
could have a period of two weeks to see if
we can't possibly work out a permanent settlement, that that might be a very wise thing to
do.

H.M.Jr:

Well, the matter is up to you gentlemen. I
got the feeling after you came back that the
thing was hopeless, so therefore as a final
gesture I suggested one year, but if you
people think that in one or two weeks' time
you can come to a permanent thing, I am sure
everybody here would be delighted.

Traphagen:

I think, Mr. Secretary, if we keep it down to
a fairly short time and have it understood
that if we can't do this in the way of a
permanent settlement within two weeks --

H.M.Jr:

That would be the 15th of February.

Traphagen: That then the alternative is to agree to this
temporary settlement for one year, that then
we will go to it very hard and see what can
be done.

Welles:

The Ambassador says he would like this arrange-

ment, that the two sides would obtain the
agreement of their principals as to the

temporary arrangements suggested by you for

101

- 11 one year with the understanding, however, that
no announcement to that effect will be made
within the period of two weeks beginning today,
with the hope that a permanent arrangement, as
Mr. Traphagen has suggested, may be found

within those two weeks, but if at the end of
those two weeks, no permanent arrangement

has been found possible, that then the temporary
arrangement for one year would go into effect
and negotiations would continue for a permanent
arrangement.

H.M.Jr:

What do you think?

Traphagen:

I think that is very good.

H.M.Jr:

Between now and the 15th of February.

Turbay:

Between now and the 15th of February.

Traphagen:

That is all right.

Turbay:

Meet each day.

Traphagen:

I didn't quite understand you.

Laylin:

He is giving you two weeks because he needs only

a day for a settlement.

Traphagen: Well, he has only one principal to bother with
and I have seven or eight.
H.M.Jr:

Then, as I understand it, sometime Monday Mr. Welles
will hear from the Colombian Government as to the
one-year settlement, whether that is agreeable,

and I will hear from you.

Traphagen: Very good.
H.M.Jr:

And then if you can come to a one-year agree-

ment, that is put into your side pocket and
you people - no announcement, but continue
until the 15th of February trying to come to
a permanent settlement.

Traphagen:

I think that is excellent. It will be announced
on the 15th of February if we have come to a

permanent settlement.

102

- 12 H.M.Jr:

And if it is a one-year settlement, then the

Turbay:

Yes.

1% will be paid immediately on the announcement of the settlement.

Traphagen:seven.
And half of the sinking fund would be a million
Cotton:

No, 1% would be paid immediately on -Six hundred twenty-five thousand dollars.

Welles:

On the 15th of February, the Ambassador says.

H.M.Jr:

Would be paid on the 15th of February.
Then there was the sum of $400,000 --

H.M.Jr:

Traphagen:

H.M.Jr:

Which they would go into the market and buy as
rapidly as possible outstanding bonds.

Traphagen:

Within a year?
Within 12 months.

H.M.Jr:

103

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. White
CONFIDENTIAL

Subject: FOREIGN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS

(Prepared by the Division of Monetary Research)
Britain

Notwithstanding the withdrawal from the labor market

by mobilization of over a million men, there has actually
been an increase in British unemployment since the outbreak of war. At the middle of December the registered

unemployed numbered 1,360,000, compared with 1,275,000 on

August 14. This does not include unregistered unemployed
-- e.g., domestic servants, professional, agricultural
labor, etc.
The persistence of a substantial volume of unemploy-

ment, in the face of the withdrawal of one million ablebodied men, indicates that the British real national income
fell substantially during the last quarter of 1939 and
suggests that the real national income may be smaller in
1940 than in 1939. The part of the national income avail-

able for consumption and productive investment will be
much smaller than in 1939 because a higher proportion of

total output will consist of armaments. In terms of
sterling, the national income will be higher because of
rising prices. Wholesale prices are already about one-

fourth higher than last January.

Estimated budgetary expenditures indicate that roughly
be paid out by the British Exchequer.

half of the British national income in the year 1940 will

104

-2The British Empire is much more self-sufficient than
it WEB in the last war with respect to essential war materials.
Empire production of essential war materials:
1914
Current annual production
130,000 .

Aluminum

Asbestos

20,000 N

14,000
98,000

If

Lead ore

Nickel

85,000 tons
#

Copper

600,000 tons
630,000 If

95,000 If
88,000 II

344,000 N

Steel pro.
duction

(capacity) 9,000,000 tons

18,000,000 tons

The strain of war on British shipping has led to extreme
control measures. The British Government has just taken over
all ocean tonnage on the United Kingdom and Colonial registera (except the Dominions in India) as from February 1.
They have also taken over the British shipbuilding industry
and are making plans for the development of the shipbuilding
industry in Canada. The objective is to secure greater
efficiency in the operation of ships and an increase in the
rate of new construction.

Over half a million tons of British merchant shipping
has been sunk in the past five months. New British construction has not quite offset the lost tonnage. However, shipping
requirements are now greater than during peace time and
the efficiency of existing tonnage has been reduced through
the operation of the convoy system and contraband control.

The merchant shipbuilding industry of Britain is operating near its capacity of 2 million tons per year. The Government
has decided to order a larger tonnage of standardized tramp
ships which will permit increased efficiency and speed in
production.

Italy and Germany

As the result of the sale of the property of 185,000

German nationals in Northern Italy who have agreed to migrate
to Germany, Germany has acquired a claim against the Italian

Government of about 6 billion lire. This 6 billion lire

would suffice to liquidate the whole of the German clearing
debt to Italy and to pay for over two years of German imports
from Italy. However, it is not yet certain how this debt
will be applied to the current balance of payments between
the two countries.

105

-3Reports indicate that the property left by the German

emigrants is supposed to be paid for by December 31, 1942.

But Italy will be very reluctant to export to Germany
without receiving imports currently in exchange, particularly German coal which 18 essential to Italian industry.
Germany will wish to decrease her exporte to Italy, while
increasing her imports, but it 1s doubtful whether Italy
will agree to a change of the trade balances of the magnitude of 6 billion lire ($300 million) during the next three
years. Negotiations on these matters are taking place in
Rome at the present time.

The struggle for Rumania

Germany has improved its already strategically dominant

position, vis-a-vis the Allies, in the struggle for effective
control of Rumanian resources.

In March, 1939, Rumania signed an agreement with
Germany providing that the natural resources of Rumania are
to be developed, under German direction, to meet Germany's
import needs. On December 21, a further German-Rumanian
agreement was concluded increasing the exchange value of the

mark against the Rumanian lei by about 20 percent and obligating Rumania to furnish Germany with 1,820,000 metric tons
of oil in 1940. (Germany received about 1,200,000 tons from

Rumania in 1939.)

About four-fifths of Rumanian petroleum output comes

from the properties of foreign companies -- British, Dutch,
French, American and Belgian. It was believed that these
companies might refuse to sell oil to Germany. But on

Jenuary 17, the Rumanian Government announced that a commission

would be appointed to administer the petroleum industry, to
insure provision for domestic needs and to guarantee the
fulfillment of foreign obligations. The press reports that
Great Britain and France have retaliated against the policy
implied in the establishment of this commission by threaten-

ing to break off all trade relations with Rumania.

The Rumanian Government is in a difficult predicament.
Rumanie must collaborate with Germany. The Allied position

in the Balkans 18 not strong enough to justify the hope of
creating a "second front" against Germany there in the near
future. So far German steel in the shadow of the Russian
Bear appears to be more potent than Allied gold in keeping
Rumania a source of supply for Germany.

106

-4German-Allied Trade Warfare

Britain and France completed a trade agreement with

Greece involving important supplies of chrome for the Allies.
Germany seems to be making more strenuous efforts to

outbid the Allies in several countries. A trade expert

arrived in Rome on January 25 to begin commercial negotiations;
Turkey was reported the day before to have resumed trade

relations with Germany (after a lapse of nearly five months)

under a new agreement in which Germany was reported to have

purchased goods valued at about $6 million. The Germans
also obtained a new trade schedule with Hungary on the eve
of the commencement of Allied-Hungarian trade talks. Germany
likewise was reported to have begun discussions with Belgium
and the Netherlands for new trade agreements. In the case
of the Netherlands, a newspaper report held that Germany
had liquidated its $21 million debt to the Netherlands of
September 1, and acquired a substantial balance in her favor.
The report elso indicated that talks have begun concerning

the possibility of shipping Dutch East Indian raw materials
to Germany via Siberia.

The Germanization of Czech economic life
The German Government and the Nazi party have pushed

forward with a ruthless policy of confiecation in occupied

Czechoslovakia. Representatives of German firms have in
many cases visited Czech concerns in the company of Gestapo
agents, and the Czech or Jewish directors have been thrown

out or arrested. Their places have been taken by the Nazi
party or by German businessmen. Landed property has been
similarly confiscated.

The German Government intends by this means to destroy
the economic basis for Czech resistance to German authority,
and to provide wealth for the use of the German Government

and the Nazi party. The Czech economy will be brought into
line with the requirements of the German Government, and

jobs and other spoils will be distributed to faithful servants

of the German regime.

The United States and Latin American Trade

In the first three months cf the war (September, October,

November) United States exports to Latin America increased
by 46 percent, compared with the same period of 1938, while

107

-5our imports increased by 30 percent. Brazil, our ninth
best customer, increased her purchases in the United States
by 64 percent in the first three months of the war as com-

pared with 1938. During the same period Venezuela increased
her purchases by 50.8 percent, Chile 43.5 percent, while
Argentina increased her purchases by only 15.9 percent.
Brazil and the War Markets

Brazil rides a wave of unanticipated wartime prosperity.
Coffee exports were 2 percent greater in July-December 1939
than in the same period of 1938. (January 1940 exports are
down somewhat however.) Thanks to heavy French demand and
a general European shift to lower-grade coffees, the price
decline has been much smaller than that of mild coffee. As
of January 15, the decline in Brazilians compared with 1939
was 3 to 7 percent compared with 25 to 30 percent for
Colombians. Demand is strong for Brazilian meat, vegetable
oils, hides, manganese, chromium and cotton.

Gold and foreign exchange resources have been increased

to 870 million. Favorable trade balance was $60 million for
1939 (of which $30 million was in last four months), compared
with $0.2 million for the whole of 1938. Her budget for Eve
1940 anticipates 5 percent deficit. Vargas in New Year's
speech predicted Brazil would be producing her own steel
rails by end of 1940.

Meanwhile Brazil attempts to find a basis for resumption
of debt service in April 1940 on partial Aranha plan, probably
in hope of attracting new capital from the United States.
The Brazilian Government has allocated $3.2 million for the
remission of profits and dividends in January and plans to
wipe out the arrears of $20 million on this item by July 1940.
The Stalling of the Brazilian Steel Project
Brazil has been hoping for decades for a domestic steel
indus try to utilize her ore resources but 80 far the necessary
capital has not been forthcoming. For the past six months
the U. S. Steel Corporation has been considering the construction of a $35 million steel plant in Brazil. U. S. Steel
experts carefully investigated the project on the spot and
wrote a report which characterized the project as being
technically sound. Nevertheless the Corporation has finally
informed the Brazilian Government that it would not participate in the project.

108

-6The refusal to participate at this time is probably based
upon the lack of confidence on the part of the U. S. Steel
Finance Committee in the Brazilian Government's willingness or
ability to fulfill certain conditions which are deemed necessary
to the success of the venture and the safety of the American

capital invested. It is believed that the U. S. Steel
Corporation 18 still interested in the plan but hopes that the
United States Government may be persuaded to assume some of the
risks by putting up or guaranteeing a major part of the capital
involved.
The plan recommended by the U. S. Steel Committee

called for the construction of a steel plant capable of
producing 285,000 tons of finished steel products at the
outset. In 1938 Brazil produced only 65,000 tons of iron
and steel products and imported 274,000 tons, principally
from Germany, United Kingdom and the United States.

The technical committee which investigated the prospects
for U. S. Steel estimated that the plant could be expected

to make profits of 15 percent. The stalling of the plan in
spite of the prospect of such attractive profits is a
demonstration of the reluctance of private business in
these troubled times to make direct investments abroad,
especially in countries with a history of exchange difficulties.

The exhaustion of Japan's foreign exchange reserves

With the sale to the United States of $38 million of
gold in January, Japan has less than $80 million of gold
remaining. Other liquid foreign exchange assets will hardly
bring the total of foreign exchange resources available to
Japan above $200 million. The Japanese Empire will produce
during 1940 from $50 million to $60 million of new gold.
Therefore, the total foreign exchange assets which will be
available to the Japanese Government during 1940 will not
be more than $260 million.
The seriousness of Japan's foreign exchange position

is indicated by the fact that Japan has been forced to
liquidate $225 million of foreign exchange assets in each
of the past three years. If Japan's balance of payments
is not radically adjusted, her foreign exchange resources
will be exhausted at the end of this year.

109

-7She has already cut her imports to the bone and any
further reduction will seriously hamper her export capacity
and war effectiveness. She may be able to increase her
exports because of the European War. Unfortunately for her,
the position of raw silk in the United States market is
being jeopardized by substitutes, and the price has begun

to fall.

China loses her southern railways

The loss of the two southern. routes from Indo-China
is a heavy blow to China's power of resistance. The

Japanese capture of Naming in November deprived China of

the use of the Dong Dang-Naming road. The use of the
second route, the railroad running from Haiphong to
Yunnanfu, was lost temporarily at least on January 5th when
a vital bridge was destroyed by bombing.
The Japanese have demanded, with threats of repeated
bombardments, that the French Government cease shipping

war supplies to China over this route. Reliable informa-

tion suggests that the French Government is not anxious
to resist these Japanese demands. At the end of November
there were 190 thousand tons of cargo at Haiphong awaiting
shipment including an enormous number of motor vehicles.

If the Yunnan railway remains unavailable all of these war

supplies will have to be reshipped from Haiphong to Rangoon.
There now remain only two routes over which supplies
from the outside world can reach China -- the new Burma road
and the caravan route from Russia. The amount of tonnage
carried on the Russian route is not known. During the
months of November and December $8 million of war supplies
were reexported from Burma to China over the new Burma road.
Of this total 65 percent were Russian supplies which may

indicate that the caravan route from Russia to China is

at present being utilized to its full capacity.

Deterioration in Scandinavian Currency Situation
The war has brought about a sharp reduction in the gold
and foreign exchange holdings of the Scandinavian countries.
At the same time they are confronted with a domestic

110

-8inflationary movement, indicated by the persistent rise in
their note circulations.
December 15,

August

1938

1939

December 15,
1939

Bank of Sweden

(Millions of kronor)

Gold and foreign assets
Note circulation

1,484
994

1,390
1,126

1,341

399
448

364
505

303
564

236
414

206
505

125
564

994

Bank of Norway

(Millions of kroner)

Gold and foreign assets
Note circulation
National Bank of Denmark 1

(Millions of kroner)

Gold and foreign exchange

Note circulation

(1/ Figures for November 1938 and November 1939.)

The Bank of Sweden now maintains 50 percent of her foreign
exchange assets in the United States, the Bank of Nerwey almost
60 percent and the National Bank of Denmark 40 percent.
India and the Silver Market

There is little prospect that India will import any

considerable amount of silver in the near future. The
price of silver in Bombay fell considerably during the
past week and the Reserve Bank of India bought 6 million
ounces to support the market, in contrast to its action
last month when it sold substantial amounts of silver to

curb the speculative rise in silver at that time. Silver

stocks of bullion dealers in Bombay amount to about
50 million ounces which is abnormally high, and the
minimum price (43.2 cents per ounce) at which dealers are

permitted to sell imported silver is appreciably above
the current market price in Bombay (40.12 cents).

111

2-1/10

File

The proposed agreement between the Atlas Powder Company,

called the seller, and the British Purchasing Commission as
agent for the United Kingdom of Great Britain, called the
purchaser, provides as follows:

A.1. Seller agrees forthwith to commence erection of plant
at Atlas, Missouri, for the manufacture of T.N.T. to have an

approximate monthly capacity of 750,000 pounds and an estimated
cost of $959,000.

A.2. The plant is to be completed and in production on or

before the 180th day.

A.3. To assist the seller in financing the erection of the

new plant, the purchaser has lent the seller the sum of 3667,000,
evidenced by seller's non-negotiable promissory note to purchaser
of even date herewith payable in 10 years or upon the termination
of this agreement (by cancellation or otherwise), whichever shall
first occur.
A.4. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed to create

in favor of the purchaser any present or future right, title, claim
or interest, legal, equitable or otherwise, to, in or upon said plant.
B.l. The seller agrees to sell and deliver to the purchaser
quantities and at the price set forth:
B.2.(a) Quantity. 12,500,000 pounds beginning at smaller
installments and reaching, in the fourth month, to 750,000 pounds
per month until the 12,500,000 pounds shall have been delivered.
B.2.(b) gives to the purchaser an option to purchase the entire
output of the plant for a period commencing immediately after completion of sale and delivery of the first 12,500,000 pounds.
However, the obligation of the seller to deliver to the purchaser
shall not extend beyond ten years from the date of the agreement.

B.S. This contains specifications for packing the product
with provision for an adjustment of the purchase price.
B.4. The price packed for export. F.A.S. United States
port of shipment 16 per pound plus freight, plus handling and/or
other charges arising after the goods have been placed on board

care at plant. Then follows in this same section provisions for
adjustment of the price based upon cost of materials and of labor.
B.5. Terms of payment. Cash against seller's pro forma
invoice after loading.

112

-2-

B.6. Title of goods to pass to purchaser on payment therefor.

However, risk of loss and damage to goods shall be borne by
purchaser from the time placed on oars at plant.

B.7. Inspection. Purchaser to have the right to inspect
prior to delivery on cars.
c.l. Purchaser to have the right to cancel this agreement

at any time upon thirty days advance notice.

C.2. If such cancellation is prior to completion of plant,

construction work shall stop, commitments for material or equipment
to be adjusted so far as possible and then seller shall determine
and advise purchaser of the total amount of expenses incurred.
On date of cancellation purchaser shall pay to seller $100,000
for engineering expense and contingencies plus an amount equal to
the expenses referred to above after deducting a reasonable
salvage value.

C.3. If cancellation by purchaser is after completion of

plant, production shall cease and purchaser shall reimburse

seller for its cost of cancellation of material commitments

plus $10,000, and shall pay to seller an amount equal to the
difference between $667,000 and an amount arrived at by
multiplying the total number of pounds of T.N.T. sold and paid
for by purchaser by 1c.

C.4. Seller shall have the right, upon thirty days notice,

to cancel this agreement if, in five consecutive months, purchaser
shall have failed to purchase and pay for 1,000,000 pounds or

more of T.N.T.

C.5. In event of cancellation of this agreement by seller,
purchaser shall pay to seller an amount equal to the difference
between $667,000 and an amount arrived at by multiplying the
total number of pounds of T.N.T. sold and delivered hereunder
by 1c.

C.6. Any amount payable by purchaser to seller under the

provisions of this section may be used by seller as an offset
and counterclaim to reduce the principal amount payable by
seller to purchaser on said promissery note for $667,000.

Section D.1. to D.4., inclusive, provide for various
operational considerations and reservations of failures or
delays caused by Act of God, public enemy, strikes, etc.

113
-3-

D.5. provides that any tax or other governmental charge
levied directly upon the production, sale, and/or shipment of
the goods imposed by Federal, State, or Municipal authority
shall be added to the price provided and shall be paid by the
purchaser.

D.6. provides for reference to a firm of C.P.A.'s for

determination of the total amount of seller's expenses.

E. provides that the purchaser shall have the right at any
time to assign to the French Government all or any part of its
rights under this agreement.

114

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

FROM

Mr. Thompson
Mr. Haad

QA

In response to your request of December 26, 1939, there

is submitted herewith for the Division of Research and Statistics a memorandum listing, with brief descriptions, the studies

or projects completed or under way, and the names of persons
working on each, for the period December 28, 1939, to the end
of January 1940.

115

DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS

Report of Studies or Projects Completed or Under
Way, and the Names of Persons Working on Each,
for the Period December 28, 1939, to
the End of January 1940

For convenience of reference, the studies listed are
grouped under general subject heads.
The names shown for persons working on each project

include only those who participated fairly directly, as exclained in the introductory note to the corresponding report
submitted on December 28, 1939. No attempt has been made
to cover also persons whose responsibility in each particular case was mainly in planning, supervising, or consulting.
Financial Analysis

I. Projects or studies completed
1. Reviews of current developments in the high-grade securities markets were prepared, and memoranda were trans-

mitted to the Secretary on the following dates: January 5,
10, 17, 23, 30. - Mr. Haas, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Lindow,
Mr. Tickton, Mr. Turner, Miss Eyre
These reviews contained, in addition to analysis of the
current situation, special studies, as follows:
(a)

Statements of condition as of December 31, 1939, of
nine New York City banks (Review of January 5, page 4). -

Mr. Lindow

(b) Recent shifts in holdings of Treasury bills (Review
of January 10, page 3). - Mr. Lindow

(c) Composition of the public debt by maturity classes,

1930 to date (Review of January 10, page 4). - Mr. Tickton,
Mr. Conrad

(a) Increase in average maturity of the direct and guaranteed public debt during recent years (Review of
January 17, page 3). - Mr. Lindow
(e) Canadian Government finance (Review of January 17,
page 3). - Mr. Lindow

116

-2(f) Composition by maturity classes of holdings of
United States securities by nine New York City

banks as of December 31, 1939 (Review of January 23,

page 3). - Mr. Tickton, Mr. Turner

(E) Analysis of cash subscriptions to the 2 percent
Treasury bonds of 1948-50 and the 1 percent RFC

note of July 1, 1942 (Review of January 23, page 4)

-

Mr. Turner

(h) Principal assets of the ten largest banks outside
New York City (Review of January 30, page 3) -

Mr. Tickton

(1) Absorution of the increase in the public debt since
1931 by classes of holders (Review of January 30, page
4). - Mr. Tickton
Yield rates on United States securities, direct and guaranteed, on the basis of over-the-counter closing quotations
were celculated daily. These were summarized each day in
table showing for each issue the closing price and yield
that day, the change in price and yield from the preceding
day, and the price range since date of issue and also for
the years 1939 and 1940 to date. A chart for each issue
was kept up to date showing recent daily price and yield
figures together with comparative monthly data since 1933
or since date of issue. - Mr. Brown, Mr. Moody, Miss McCoy

3.

Prepared memorandum to the Secretary on provosed TVA

financing January 23. - Mr. Haes, Mr. Murchy, Mr. Lindow
Examined four proposals of the RFC that the Secretary of
the Treasury request that corporation to purchase the
preferred stock of banks and one proposal that it be requested
to lend on the preferred stock of a life insurance company. Mr. Murphy, Mr. Lindow, Mr. Tickton, Mr. Turner
5. Tables and charts showing estimated cash income and outgo
of the Federal Government were revised on basis of data

available in January. - Mr. Tickton

6.

A table showing the amount of food-order stamps issued by
the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation was brought up
to date as of December 31. - Mr. Tickton

7. Prepared memorandum requested by Under Secretary Bell "Should
the Terms of Issuance of United States Savings Bonds be
Changed? - A Discussion of the Considerations Involved end

of Alternative Proposals," January 16. - Mr. Heas, Mr. Murphy,
Mr. Tickton, Miss Eyre

117

-3S. Prepared memorandum to the Secretary on the intercorporate

relationships of the Aviation and Transportation Corporation, the Aviation Corporation, the Aviation Manufacturing

Corporation, and the Lycoming Manufacturing Company,
January 18. - Mr. Haas, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Tickton, Mr. Conrad

9. Prepared memorandum to the Secretary on principal business

interests of Victor Emanuel, January 20. - Mr. Haas,
Mr. Murphy, Mr. Lindow, Mr. Tickton, Mr. Conrad

10. Prepared memorandum to the Secretary on the business and

financial position of Continental Motors Corporation,

January 29. - Mr. Hass, Mr. Lindow, Mr. Conrad

11. Analyzed data with respect to employment by aircraft concerns, January 30. - Mr. Haas, Mr. Lindow

II. Projects or studies under way
1. Preparation of summary data and charts on United States

securities and on the relation of the market for United
States securities to that for other high-grade securities,
to preface the charts on prices and yields of individual
issues of United States securities. - Miss Eyre

2. Statistical (graphic correlation analysis of factors

affecting high-grade interest rates. - Mr. Turner
3. Study of the relationship between the yields and maturities of high-grade securities immediately preceding prior
major bear markets in such securities. - Mr. Lindow,
Mr. Conred

4. Comparison of relative amolitude of price fluctuations of
long-term and short-term securities. - Mr. Lindow, Mr. Conrad
5.
Study of the effect of the size of the issue on the prices
and yields of U. S. securities. - Mr. Conrad
6. Chart and annotations with respect to the factors influencing
the movement of interest rates during the last World War. Mr. Turner

7. Discussion of various problems encountered and solutions
devised in connection with war borrowing. - Mrs. Wadleigh
S. Memorandum comparing and contrasting war and depression

deficit-financing. - Mrs. Wadleigh

118
9.

Preparation of composite chart on unemployment for the
Secretary's chart book. - Mr. Lindow

10. Preparation of a memorandum to Undersecretary Bell

regarding the reason for the increase in money in circulation during the past 12 years. - Mrs. Wadleigh
Revenue Estimates

I. Projects or studies completed
1. There was prepared an analysis and comparison of the actual

receipts, on a daily Treasury statement basis, with the

estimates of revenues for the month of December 1939, and
a similar comparison for the fiscal year through December
1939. - Mrs. Stanley

2. Detailed collections of various taxes in the month of

December 1939 were compared with the monthly breakdown

of the Budget estimates. A new form of presenting these
data has been developed. - Mrs. Stanley

3. Budget estimates for each of the detailed taxes contained
in the 1941 Budget of the United States were broken down

into estimates of monthly collections for use in making
the financing plans of the Government. - Mr. 'Donnell,
Mr. Driver, Mr. Leahey, Mrs. Stanley, Mr. Wilson
4. During the month of January a detailed write-up of the

methods of making the estimates for each of the taxes
included in the 1941 Budget of the United States was
completed with the exception of the write-up of the customs
estimate. - Mr. O'Donnell, Mr. Driver, Mr. Leahey, Mrs.
Stanley, Mr. Wilson

5. In connection with customs receipts, an analysis was made
of quotas and of the customs receipts by districts to
determine the causes of the heavy receipts in the early
part of January 1940. - Mr. Wilson

6. The Tariff Commission study entitled, "The influence of
reductions in rates of duty made by reciprocal trade

agreements up to November 1939, on the average ad valorem

equivalents, computed on the basis of imports in 1937"
was studied in connection with the broader problem of

ascertaining whether or not it would be possible to
estimate
the revenue effects of the trade agreements. Mr. Wilson

119

5-

7. A memorandum was prepared at the request of Under Secretary

Bell containing answers to questions regarding the revenue
effects of the Revenue Acts of 1938 and 1939. - Mr. Donnell
S. A report was completed and forwarded to the General Committee on Statistics of Income on the concept of income

which should be used for size classification in order to
make the statistics most beneficial for revenue estimating
purposes. - Mr. Driver, Mr. Leahey, Mr. 01 Donnell

9.

In connection with the proposed revision of tax laws, an
estimate was made showing the revenue effect of defining

short-term capital gains and losses as those resulting
from the sale or transfer of assets held 12 months or
less. Work requested by and completed for the Division
of Tax Research. - Mr. Leahey

10. In considering alternative ways of raising one-half billion
dollars, estimates were prepared of the yield from estate and
gift taxes in a hypothetical fiscal year 1941, assuming the
full effect of certain proposed changes in the exemptions
and rate schedules for the estate and gift taxes. Work

requested by and completed for the Division of Tax Research. -

Mrs. Stanley

11. In connection with tax revisions and based upon the level
of incomes used in the 1941 Budget, estimates were made
of the effect on the individual income tax revenues under
each of two surtax schedules. Work requested by and

completed for the Division of Tax Research. - Mr. Driver

II. Projects or studies under way
1. Request from Division of Tax Research, October 30, 1939.
Revenue effect of:

(1) With respect to individuals.
(a)
Redefine short-term capital gains and losses to

include only gains and losses realized upon sale
or exchange of capital assets held twelve months
or less instead of gains and losses from assets
held eighteen months or less as at present; and
correspondingly redefine long-term gains and

losses to include in the first statutory period

those taken into account upon assets held more
than twelve months but not more than twenty-four
months instead of those upon assets held more than
eighteen months but not more than twenty-four
months as at present; assuming all other provisions

with respect to the treatment of capital gains and

losses remain unchanged. - Mr. Driver

120

-6(b) Redefine short-term capital gains and losses
to include only gains and losses realized upon
sale or exchange of capital assets held twelve
months or less instead of gains and losses
from assets held eighteen months or less as
at present; correspondingly redefine longterm capital gains and losses to include those
taken into account upon assets held more than
twelve months instead of more than eighteen
months 8.8 at present; and provide for the

same treatment of all long-term capital gains
and losses as at present accorded capital gains
and losses from assets held more than twentyfour months. - Mr. Driver

Request from Division of Tax Research, January 17, 1940.
Revenue effect of:

(1) Each of the four attached individual income surtax

rate schedules, giving effect to the suggested changes
in the personal exemptions noted on the respective
schedules. - Mr. Driver

(2) An additional 1 percent individual income normal

tax rate. - Mr. Driver

(3) An additional 1s percent corporation income tax
rate. - Mr. Leshey
An increase in the tax on beer from $5.00 to $7.00
(4)
per barrel. - Mrs. Stanley

(5) An increase in the tax on distilled spirits from

$2.25 to $2.50 per gallon. - Mrs. Stanley
(6) A one-half cent increase in the gasoline tax.- - Mrs.
Stanley

3. Recuest from Division of Tax Research, January 19, 1940.
On basis of calendar year 1940 business levels, revenue
effect of:

(1) A flat rate tax of 35 percent of the present combined
individual normal and surtex with a limitation that
the added tax should not exceed 35 percent of the
net income remaining after present Federal income

taxes. - Mr. Driver
(2) What rate and corresponding limitation for the suggestion in (1) above would yield $300 million? Mr. Driver

121
7(3)

A graduated normel tax on present base (additional

to the present 4 percent rate) as follows: 2 per-

cent on the first $2,000 of taxable base; 4 percent
on the next $2,000; and 6 percent on the balance,
with the limitation that in no case should the
additional tax exceed 10 percent of the net income
remaining
Mr.
Driver after present Federal income taxes. (4) What bracket rates for the suggestion in (3) above
would yield $300 million? - Mr. Driver

(5) What would the yield in (3) above be if the rates
were made applicable to surtax net income instead
of income subject to normal tax? - Mr. Driver
(6) What
bracket
for (5) above would yield $300
million?
- Mr.rates
Driver

(7) Apresent
flat tax law.
of 1 -percent
on surtax net income under
Mr. Driver
(8) A flat 10 percent tax on unearned net income defined
as
all income
not at present defined as
earned
income.which
- Mr. is
Driver

(9) What
for the
suggestion
$300rate
million?
- Mr.
Driver in (8) above would yield
Economic Conditions Related to Fiscal
and Revenue Matters

I. Projects or studies completed
1. Memoranda on the business and price situation were prepared
and transmitted to the Secretary on the following dates:
January
8, 15,
22, and 29. - Mr. Haas, Mr. Daggit,
Mrs. May,2,Miss
Restall
2. A table and a chart showing employment under the Works

Projects Administration were brought up to date and transmitted
to the
the following dates: January 2,
9,
15, 22,
andSecretary
29. - MissonRastall

3. Memoranda summarizing reports from Federal Surplus Com-

modities Corporation on wheat export sales and market data
were prepared and were submitted to the Secretary on

the following dates: January 2, 10, 18, and 26. - Mrs. May

-8-

122

4. Memorande on retail bread prices were prepared and were

submitted to the Secretary on the following dates:

January 18 and 25. - Mrs. May

5. A memorandum to the Secretary on the wheat situation,
January 5.

This involved an analysis of the current wheat situation
with reference to the short domestic crop and the influence
on the crop insurance program. - Mr. Haas, Mr. Daggit

A memorandum to the Secretary with comments on the "Milk Marketing Plan Proposed by Frederic C. Howe," January 3.
Mr. Hass, Mr. Daggit

6.

7. Memorandum to the Secretary regarding extent to which

shortage of shipping facilities was a hindrance to exports
of agriculturel products, January 5. - Mr. Heas

II. Projects or studies under way

1. Index of unfilled orders.
An attempt is being made to improve our information on the
volume of unfilled orders by working out a composite index
based on date from individual industries.
As part of this study, there has been almost completed during
January a study for estimating unfilled orders and inventories
of finished goods for the U. S. Steel Corporation, designed
to reveal information about a large and representative

segment of the steel industry. - Mr. Daggit, Miss Restall
2. Indications of business maladjustment.
Various indications of business maladjustments, shown in
graphic form, are being brought together for convenient
reference. - Mr. Daggit
3.

Export trends.

Since the trend of exports is likely to be an important

business factor during the coming year, a project has been
started which is designed to interpret export movements in

terms of their business significance. Some results of this

study were mentioned in the business memorandum of January 29.

A new study is under way this month to determine the number

of points in the FRB index represented by exports of Steel. Mrs. May, Mr. Chevraux

Forces determining trends of basic commodity prices.

This project involves individual price studies for various

basic commodities, a number of which have been completed,

123

-9which are intended eventually to be combined into a

general index representing the basic price trend, after
allowance for the effect of supplies, industrial demand,
and other separable factors. - Mr. Daggit, Mrs. May,
Miss Restall

5. Trends of individual commodity prices and price factors
during the World War period.

This project is patterned after the general study of prices
and price factors, 1913 to 1922, made in October, but deals
with six individual basic commodities - wheat, cotton, hogs,
steel, copper, and zinc. The project is designed to
determine the principal price factors associated with the
wartime rise and subsequent collapse of prices of these
commodities. - Mr. Daggit, Mrs. May

6. Index of commodity stocks.
This project is designed to develop a composite index
of basic commodity stocks as a measure of one important

factor in the general price level. Stocks of 16 important
industrial materials, expressed in terms of their net effect
on prices, are being compiled for this index. - Mrs. May
7. Index of goods inventories.
A better index of inventories of finished goods is needed
as an indication of business maladjustments, with a breakdown as between inventories of finished goods held by
manufacturers and those held by others. An attempt to
develop such an index is under way. - Mr. Daggit, Miss
Restall

S. Index of buying on deferred payments.
A study of the volume of installment buying and consumer
credit has nearly been completed. This study is designed
eventually to provide a monthly index of the volume of
buying on deferred payments, which at times is an important
business factor. - Mrs. May
Actuarial Problems

I. Projects or studies completed
1. Comments on plan proposed by Representative Bloom to extend

the widows' benefits under the Foreign Service Retirement

Act to widows of officers who died prior to July 1, 1939.

124

- 10 Comments incorporated in a letter to Mr. Hosmer of the
State Department, January 6. - Mr. Reagh
2. A memorandum, in response to a request from Under Secretary

Bell, transmitting tables showing (1) annuity provided
by $1,000, with interest at 3 percent, under specified
conditions, and (2) purchase price of an annuity in
specified amounts and for specified periods, assuming
interest accrued at 3 percent, January 19. - Mr. Reagh

3. Amortization tables on Colombian bonds.

At the request of Mr. Cotton, Special Assistant to the
Secretary, tables were prepared showing the effect of
different proposals in connection with the amortization
of Colombian bonds, January 17 and 26. - Mr. Brown

II. Projects or studies under way
1. Calculation of joint and survivorship annuity tables.
A recent amendment to the Civil Service retirement law permits

retired employees to elect a joint and survivorship annuity

in lieu of a single life annuity. The Board of Actuaries

has submitted a new mortality table for use in computing
the amount of the joint and survivorship annuities payable
under the amended law. A major portion of the extensive
tables required for this purpose has been computed. The

work is still in process. - Mr. Reagh, Mr. Brown
2. Preparation of interest tables for use by the State Department under the Foreign Service retirement law.

The Foreign Service retirement law requires that records

of contributions with interest be maintained in respect

to each individual coming under the retirement law.
Interest tables are being prepared to facilitate the
mintenance of these records and to record the data in a

form suitable for use in actuarial valuations of the fund.

(Under the recent amendment to the Foreign Service Retirement Act actuarial valuations are made by the Treasury
Department.) - Mr. Reagh, Mr. Brown
3. Request from Mr. Hosmer, State Department, for an estimate
of the cost of lowering the optional retirement age of
Foreign Service Officers from 60 to 55 years. - Mr. Reagh,
Mr. Brown

125

- 11 4. Retirement Committee of the President's Committee on Civil
Service Improvement.

This Committee is making a comprehensive study of the Civil

Service retirement law. Its report will recommend several
changes designed to improve the present service. In connection with this study a number of tables have been
prepared and the major portion of the report has been
drafted. During January, various revisions of the text
were made and additional tables were prepared. - Mr. Reagh

5. Study of horse race results.
This study was undertaken at the request of the Legal Divi-

sion, for use in connection with the Annenberg case.
The results of some thirteen thousand horse races have been
recorded on punch cards, which will be tabulated to show the

financial results of betting under various systems and of
following the selections of different expert handicappers.
The results are expected to prove that it is impossible to
exercise skill to any important extent in betting on horse
races - that is, that such betting is primarily a matter of
chance rather than of skill.

By the end of January approximately one helf of the tabulating work has been completed. This portion of the project
has proceeded slowly due to the fact that the tabulating
equipment of the Bureau of Customs, Section of Statistics,
is available to us only after regular office hours or during
such times as their own work permits. - Mr. Reagh, Mr. Brown

6. Preparation of the draft of a chapter regarding financing of
the plan, for incorporation in a report on the Retirement

of Governmental Emoloyees being prepared by the Civil Service
Assembly of the United States and Canada. - Mr. Reagh

Other Projects or Studies

1. Annual Report of the Secretary.
The final work of editing and review was completed, ready for
presentation of the report to Congress on January 8. Miss Michener, Miss Westerman, Mr. Tickton

2. Treasury Bulletin.
Data were prepared or reviewed for the January issue of the

126

- 12 -

Bulletin, as follows:
Prepared -

Average yields of long-term Treasury bonds and highgrade corporate bonds. - Mr. Lindow

Reviewed -

Amount of interest-bearing debt outstanding, the
computed annual interest charge and the computed
rate of interest - Mr. Lindow

Estimated customs duties and taxes, and value of

dutiable and taxable imports, by tariff schedules -

Mr. Lindow, Mr. Wilson
Estimated receipts from taxes imposed by various
revenue acts on imports - Mr. Lindow, Mr. Wilson
Computed duties collected, by countries. - Mr. Lindow,
Mr. Wilson

Treasury criminal cases. - Miss Michener, Mr. Lindow

3. Other material for publication.
(1) The Annual Report of the Central Statistical Board
was reviewed, at the Board's request, January oz -

Mr. Hass, Mr. Reagh

(2) An article for the Americana Annual was prepared
at the earlier request of Mr. Duffield reviewing,
on the basis of the Annual Report, the operations
of the Treasury Department in 1939. Article
transmitted January 13. - Mr. Tickton
Correspondence.

Replies were prepared to letters of inquiry on subjects
relating to the work of the Division, and letters drafted
elsewhere and submitted to the Division for that purpose
were reviewed. - Miss Michener, Miss Ziegler, and other
members of the staff in appropriate fields of work.
During January, 276 letters were received in the Division
and 282 were handled as required.

5. Charts.

Charts are prepared and continually brought up to date for
use in memoranda and in chart books on special subjects,

and corresponding photographic, photostatic, and multilith
work is carried on. This is done in the Graphic Section
under the supervision of Mr. Banyas. A statistical report

on
the work of the Graphic Section for the month of January
is attached.

127
Work completed in the Graphic Section, Division of
Research and Statistics, during January 1940.

$
$

of R & 8

For

$

For Division

Others

Total

$

$

Type of work

1

Graphic:

Charts brought up to date
Bond book charts completed
Bond books brought up to date

Miscellaneous jobs completed

38

41

3

745

773

28

57

57

-

-

New charts completed

29

20

49

51

18

69

102

77

179

92

100

192

260

344

604

110

27

137

534

1,827

2,361

725

56

781

Photographic:
Photographs:

Total jobs

Number ofNegatives

Contact prints
Enlargements

Photostats:

Total jobs

Number of-

Lettersize copies
All other copies

Multilith:
Total jobs

2
-

2

Number of-

Zinc plates

-

65

65

Miscellaneous:

Total jobs

LBawlt

2/1/40

6

4
2

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIA
TREASURY DEPARTMENT

128

All"

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM Mr. Cochran

By appointment, Mr. Pinsent, Financial Counselor of the British Embassy,
and Mr. Truelle, Counselor of the French Embassy, in charge during the illness of his Ambassador, called and handed to me the two attached memoranda.
The French memorandum is of a preliminary character, to be supplemented

by a message which Mr. Leroy-Beaulieu will bring directly to the Secretary
from Minister Reynaud about February 15, I have dictated and attached a
hurried translation of the French text.) I told the French Counselor that
while the memorandum gives some information of interest, which we appreciated,
the answer to the Secretary's inquiry as to what portion of the needs for
1940 would be covered by sales of gold and what portion by sales of securities, still remains to be received. He expected that Leroy-Beaulieu would
bring the desired information.
In my first reading of the British memorandum I was struck by paragraph
6 on page 3 from which it would appear that it has been and is the intention
of the British Government to finance its needs by sales of gold. When I
pointed this out to Pinsent, he immediately admitted unofficially and personally
that this sentence had surprised him so forcibly that he had immediately
requested a confirmation from London. When the phraseology was confirmed he

was also asked by London to state why he had, in the first place, questioned
the correctness of the phraseology. He has now submitted to his Ambassador
the draft of a cablegram explaining this. Pinsent agreed with me that it has
been our understanding all along that both securities and gold were to be
sold and that the fact that the British Government had been approving of sales

of dollar securities since the outbreak of the war should confirm that it has

never been the intention of the British Government to depend upon gold sales

alone. Pinsent volunteered that it was his recollection that a message had
been communicated to us through Ambassador Kennedy along in October that the

British Treasury preferred to sell securities rather than gold. I am checking
up our messages on this point and Pinsent will also check his memoranda.

When I told Pinsent that I knew the Secretary would question paragraph 6,
he said that he would nevertheless go ahead and endeavor to have his Ambassador
send the further cablegram mentioned above. Pinsent will let me know as soon

as a reply may be received. If there is still a question next week when the
Secretary is returned, it may be desirable for the Ambassador to come along
with Pinsent to discuss the matter.

When the French visitor asked if he should leave a copy of his memorandum
with the State Department when he informed them that he had called here, I told

him that, considering the circumstances, it might be preferable to leave these

129

-2very confidential documents only with us and simply, if he felt it necessary,
let the State Department know that he had called to give us a message anticipating a direct communication from Minister Reynaud to the Secretary of
the Treasury to be delivered by Leroy-Beaulien, Pinsent immediately concurred
in this idea, agreeing that the information involved in these documents is
extremely confidential, and that the fewer people see the documents the less
chance for leaks.

130

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

FROM

Mr. White

Subject:

Shipments to U.S.S.R.

Additional cargo for shipment to Russia is now loading:
Ship:

Sailing:
Destination:
Cargo:

S. S. Silvaplana (Norwegian)
Due to sail February 3
Vladivostock

To date, as follows:
Domestic Exports:

Industrial machinery

$429,175

Refined copper

344,730

Electrical machinery and
apparatus
Nichrome electric resis-

30,710

tance wire

All other domestic exports
Total domestic exports
Re-exports:
Copper wire bars

Bolivian tin ore
Tin
All other re-exports
Total re-exports

Total cargo to date

16,357
21,086
$842,058

322,344
52,825
26,593
96

401,858

$1,243,916

131

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940

M

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

Mr. White

FROM

Subject:

Shipments to U.S.S.R.

Additional cargo loaded on the S.S. Silvaplana for shipment
to Russia is reported as follows:
$1,243,916

Loaded prior to February 1st
Loaded February 1st:

Industrial machinery
Wool rags

Electrical Machinery and
apparatus

Wheels of artificial abrasives
Aircraft engine parts and
accessories

All other commodities

Total, loaded February 1st
Total, loaded to date

$ 327,362

117,809
33,405
31,697
3,632
3,974
517,879

$1,761,795

132

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
Mr. White

Mr. Glasser

FROM

M

Subject: Report on Trip Concerning Exports to the U.S.S.R.

The shipping agency which has complete charge of the
export operations for Amtorg is the Moore-McCormack Company which
is one of the largest and most responsible companies engaged in
1.

the business (they are also handling the United States exports to
Finland). This company has placed one of its most competent
stevedore in charge of the loading operations for the exports to
Russia.
Exports are handled at the Lehigh Valley Railroad Terminal
along the New Jersey shore. This terminal is more than one mile

from any habitation or business. However, the facilities for

handling cargo are very good, including modern derricks and cranes

capable of handling large items and loading rapidly and efficiently
There is a large amount of commodities at the terminal awaiting export -- probably enough for two or three shiploads. Huge
crates containing machinery are stored in the terminal, in an
open lot alongside the pier, and in about thirty freight cars along
the siding. In addition, there are large stocks of copper scrap,
copper sheets, copper ingots, brass, and about 100 tons of tin.
A lighter with a cargo of aluminum oxide was alongside the

pier ready to load. (This will be the first time in recent months

that aluminum oxide has been shipped from the Lehigh Valley Terminal.)

2. The Norwegian ship Silvaplana was being loaded. The longshoremen are working day and night in an attempt to finish the job
by February 3 when the ship is scheduled to sail. The method of
loading is, of course, very efficient and the customs inspector
thought that at the rate they were going they would probably finish
loading the 9,000 ton boat according to schedule. The boat is

scheduled
to
Norwegian
crew.

sail directly to Vladivostock. It has a completely

3. Customs inspectors watch the cargo very carefully. However, it is impossible to examine the large crates unless the cargo
is tocrates.
be delayed and the shipper put to great expense in closing
the

133

Division of Monetary

-2-

Research

4. It is quite apparent that the Russians are having difficulty in obtaining ships. They are loading in the greatest
haste and although the terminal facilities are adequate for five

ships and although there is adequate cargo for two or three ships,
there is only one loading now.

5. Judging from the type of cargo, consisting of large
machinery items, it is doubtful if the boats going to Manzanillo
will be able to unload and reload within a period of weeks unless
the harbor has modern machinery to work with. Some of the items
are too large for manipulation by other than cranes and derricks.

134

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

All

INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940
Secretary Morgenthau

TO

FROM

Mr. White

Subject:

Mint Receipts of Russian Gold

The Mint reports that it has received the following amounts

of gold bullion which contain a Russian stamp, and Russian gold
coin.

Calendar
year
$

1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939

Refined

Coin

Bullion
$

$

-

-

3,839,360
110,674,690
48,941,270

Total monetary
value

Total fine
ounces

$

1,672
140

1,707 1

49

140

42,396,060 6,090

3,839,360
110,674,725
48,941,340
42,402,150

3,162,135
1,398,324
1,211,490

1934-39 205,851,380 8,007

205,859,422

5,881,698

-

35
70

109,696

Total

1/ Includes crude bullion in the amount of $35.

135

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 1, 1940

m

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

Mr. White

FROM

Exports of Copper to Italy

Subject:

Domestic exports of refined copper to Italy during the first

half of January have practically doubled compared to previous
months.

Our reports show domestic exports of copper to Italy to be

$1,178 thousand, which is twice our monthly average exports to
Italy during the previous 16 months.

Following is a table showing totals and monthly averages for

the previous 16 months.

Domestic Exports of Copper and Copper Products

(Values in thousands of dollars)
Total
12 months

Sept.1938-

Monthly Average

4 months

Sept.-Dec.

Aug, 1939

1939

$5,505

$2,381

12 months
Sept.1938Aug. 1939

$ 459

4 months

Two weeks

Sept.-Dec

January 1940

$ 595

$1,178

1939

136

MEMORANDUM

February 1, 1940.
TO:

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM: Mr. Sullivan

I am attaching hereto a copy of a memorandum to me from

Mr. Tarleau, regarding his conversation with Mr. Vinson on

January 31. Mr. Vinson indicated clearly to Mr. Tarleau that
no revision of the Vinson-Trammell Act was under consideration.
This afternoon I have received, through a newspaper man,
a copy of an amendment which Mr. Vinson this morning told another
newspaper man "had been tentatively approved by the Committee.

This is substantially the same amendment which I was asked first
by a representative of the Navy Department to give an opinion
upon and then to disregard it.
In the event that you wish to oppose this amendment, the

attached letter to Mr. Vinson should be mailed this afternoon.

JLS

137

FEB 1 1940

Dear Mr. Chairman

I have been given to understand that your Committee in its
consideration of H. R. 6026 has tentatively adopted an amendment

to that bill to the effect that "the decision of the Secretary of

the Navy as to the necessity and the cost, including the prepertion thereof to be charged against the particular contract, of
special additional equipment and the facilities acquired to familitate the completion of any naval vessel or aircraft, OF parts thereof
in private plants shall be final, subject to review only by the

President or by the Federal courts."

If my information is correct, I would appreciate it if your

Committee would allow this Department an opportunity to express its
views
similarbefore
tenor. final action is Saken on this amendment OF one of a
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan, Jr.

Secretary of the Treasury
Honorable Carl Vinson.
Chairman. Naval Affairs Commisses,
House of Representatives,
Washington, D. C.

(Sent by special messenger at 3:45 p.m. 2/1/40 from
John E. Sullivan's office per Manue.)
File to Mr. Thompson
2/1/40

138

February 1, 1940.

My dear Mr. Secretary:
I am sending you herewith a
copy of my letter to Chairman Vinson.

Assistant Secretary Sullivan
will present the Treasury's viewpoint
when he is called before the Committee.
Mr. Sullivan will be glad to confer
with you, if you so desire, before
appearing on the Hill.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan,Jr.

Honorable Charles Edison,

Secretary of the Savy,

Washington, D. C.

By Messenger 415 fan 2/1/40

LEB S- 1000

139

2-1-40
MEMORANDUM

To: Secretary Morgenthau
From: Mr. Schwarz Cs

AM

Nat Keith of the Wall Street Journal reports
that his paper's Hill men were told by Representative
Vinson that the clause giving the Navy Department full
control over determination of depreciation allowances, etc.,

on special facilities is still in his authorization bill,
that it has been tentatively approved by the Naval Affairs
Committee and that Vinson asserts it will stay in.
The clause, as copied from the Committee's

print of the bill, says that "the decision of the Secretary
of the Navy as to the necessity and the cost, including
the proportion thereof to be charged against the particular
contract, of special additional equipment and the facilities
acquired to facilitate the completion of any naval vessel

or aircraft, or parts thereof, in private plants shall be
final, subject to review only by the President and the
Federal Courts."

Keith says that Vinson added gratuitously that
the Navy frequently had made promises to shipyards as to

the propriety of writing off cost of new ways within the
first year of a contract, only to have the Treasury
ignore such a promise later.

140

PLAIN

H3M

London

Dated February 1, 1940

Rec'd 9:50 a. m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

288, February 1.
FOR TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH.

With reference to my 209, January 23, regarding the

attitude of the British monetary authorities to their
Exchange control, it may be of interest that 3ir John
Simon was asked in the House of Commons "whether he is

aware that, owing to refusal of the British Exchange

Control to allow foreign owners to transfer their sterling
balances through official channels, transfers are made

through an unofficial market without restraint; and what
steps he is taking to maintain London as the principal
financial center and to r a ble His Majesty's Government
Effectively to prevent losses of SOME of their gold
resources and resulting damage to British OVERSEAS trade

caused by an unofficial exchange market?"

HE replied: "The Exchange Control permits foreign
owners of sterling balances to make payments for goods. and

services in the sterling area, and to transfer them to the
accounts

141

hsm -2- No. 288, February 1, from London.

accounts of other non-residents, and this bring advantages,

both to British overseas trade and to the position of
London as a financial center. I do not think therefore
that under present conditions the injurious results
suggested ought to occur."
JOHNSON
RR

142

PLAIN

HSM

London

Dated February 1, 1940
REC'D 1:12 D. M.

Secretary or State,
Washington.

290, February 1.
FOR TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH.

1. Today's DAILY TELEGRAPH is the only London

newspaper to carry this morning a Reuter report from
Washington that:

"Treasury Department officials flatly denied today
that the Treasury had requested Britain to settle payments by liquidating investments, instead of shipping
gold, as had been suggested in SOME quarters in London.'

Bewley of the British Treasury states that Einzi3's
assertion in the FINANCIAL NEWS of yesterday that "accord-

ing to Washington reports the United States Treasury
has requested the British authorities to settle payments
due to the United States as far as possible through a

liquidation of British dollar investments rather than
through further gold shipments" was made without the
Treasury's knowledge or consent and was no doubt an

attempt to obtain further information on this general
question

143

hsm -2- No. 290, February 1, from London

question following its failure to smoke out the British
authorities as reported in my 178, January 19, 1 p. m.
2. The Chancellor of the Exchequer announced in
the HOUSE of Commons that since the beginning of December

the Ministry of Food has been losing at the rate of bl

million per WEEK by refraining from raising its selling
prices for food--chisfly bread, flour, meat and milk.
Simon stated that this subsidization policy represented
"the Government's contribution" to the avoidance of

inflation and reiterated his previous view t'at VEGES
must not be tied automatically to the cost of living.
ZE added:

"Our policy therefore is to continue for a time
at least to make public.money available within such limits
as D' OVE possible, to hold retail prices of staple foods
or at any rate to impose delay and check the abruptness
of any rise. The HOUSE of Commons will observe that

this policy benefits not merely wage-earners but also
all those with small fixed incomes and allowances." If

Simon went on to indicate that 60 percent of the

official cost of living index is made up of food, the
index of which, due to the subsidization policy, had
remained stable during the month of DECEMBER; that

another important part of it is rent which is already
controlled and that of the other items the most important
is

144

hsm -8- No. 290, February 1, from London

is clothing, and the problem of how it can be dealt
wi th is now being considered by a special committee.
By these and other more circuitous means such as
the meeting between Keynes and the Trade Union leaders

the British Government is attempting to curb the wage
raise movement and in particular to unhook the level of

wages from the cost of living index. In this connection
reference is made to my 81, January 10, 6 p. m., and
2698, December 21, 7 P. m.
JOHNSON
HPD

COPY FOR Area SECRETARY il

145

OFFICIAL

THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON D.C.

DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON

February 2, 1940

The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
one copy of a paraphrase of telegram no. 78 of February 1,
1940 from the American Embassy, Rome.

bill

3

25

146

PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED

FROM: American Embassy, Rome.

DATE: February 1, 1940, 5 p.m.

NO.: 78
CONFIDENTIAL.

A confidential circular has just been issued by the
Italian Foreign Exchange Institute, effective today,
providing for the payment of an exchange adjustment
in connection with:

(1) the importation and exportation of certain

merchandise which involves transactions in
free exchange; and

(2) certain other operations in which receipts or
payments in free exchange would be involved.

A premium fixed currently at twenty percent is the
substance of the adjustment. Its most notable application, apparently, 18 that for valuta ceded by exporters

of specified articles the equivalent in lire will be
paid at the rate of exchange of the day of cession, plus
a twenty percent premium. A copy of the list of specified articles, which is eight printed pages in length,

will be sent by air mail; incidentally, this list includes, under statistical number of the tariff 728 to 797,

textiles of silk and mixed with silk. This point is mentioned because it might possibly bear on the examination

of the question of the U.S. countervailing duties on

silk products of Italy.
Regarding exchange transactions other than those

which are connected with exports, it is not clear yet
what

-2-

147

what classes of operations will be affected. However,

Exchange Institute officials declare that it will not
involve devaluation of the lira.
To stimulate the tourist trade, we are informed,

the exchange rate of the tourist lira is changed to
23.695 to the dollar, involving a discount of approximately 16.4 percent from the official exchange rate,

which is 19.8. In the exchange rate of tourist
lira purchased with sterling, francs, etc., similar
changes are made. In the present rate for emigrants'
remittances no change is made.
PHILLIPS

EA:MBG
25

148
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED

FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France

DATE: February 1, 1940, 7 p.m.

NO.: 159
FOR TREASURY FROM MATTHEWS.

Today I had lunch with the Managing Director of the
Societe General, Ardant, with Couve de Murville, and with

the General Secretary of the Finance Ministry, Bautillier.
Ardant said that his New York agency had done little business
as yet, but he seemed to be pleased that it had begun

operations. For the present, he thinks that investment
transactions of the French clientele of the agency will
naturally be of less importance than the assistance he
hopes to be able to give to French exporters. Ardant thinks
that through its many branches in France, the Societe

General can perform a useful - and it is presumed profitable function in helping those who would export from France to
the United States and who do not have connections in the

United States, and do not know our formalities and business
methods. He expressed the hope that such exporters could

do their business through the agency of the Societe
Generale with a minimum of misunderstanding and difficulty.
You probably know that Ardant has sent Chadenet to

Buenos Aires from New York for the purpose of setting up
an agency of the Societe Generale in Argentina along the

same lines. Incidentally, he said the present trend of
exports

149

-2exports from France 18 encouraging to him. Unfortunately,
he said, France could not supply the requirements of overseas

markets hitherto supplied by Germany, as they called for
metallurgical products of various types which France could

not export in substantial quantities in view of the domestic
war demands in the French iron and steel industry.

As for financial affairs in France, Ardant said he
was quite pleased with them and with the smooth and rapid

functioning of the closed capital circuit. He thus echoed
what other French officials and private American bankers
have said to me at various times.

In strict confidence I have learned that the French
short term floating debt has risen since the outbreak of
the war to 53 billion francs - most of this going into
armament bonds.

Ardant said he is worried about the price rise which
is now developing in the country, especially the prices
of agricultural products. He remarked that it was impossible
to reason with the farmers in France, and that a firmer
stand with them would have to be taken by the Government.

Boutillier said that he 18 among those who believe
that Germany will not launch an offensive in the West this

year. In such case, Ardant said, in France there might be
difficulties from the point of view of morale, and the
Allies might be compelled to follow a more aggressive
policy.

150

-3policy.

All of those at lunch spoke enthusiastically of
the much-needed warning contained in the radio address

which Daladier made three days ago, stating that the

civil population of France would have to be prepared for
greater sacrifices in the face of an enemy which is
determined and has made powerful preparations. I am told
by Leroy-Beaulieu, who was also present, that on February
12 he is sailing on the MANHATTAN, leaving from Genoa.

Responsible people in the oil industry tell me that
in France today the consumption of gasoline and other
petroleum products is almost 35 percent under consumption

in normal peacetime, in view of the present relatively
inactive war, the mobilization of so many men, the requisition
of private automobiles, the high gasoline prices, and
other things.

If the foregoing is true in France, in Germany underconsumption of gasoline and other petroleum products must

also be well under figures for peacetime, despite the
much lower proportion of pleasure vehicles.
END SECTIONS ONE TO SIX INCLUSIVE.
BULLITT.

151

GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 1, 1940
I

REC d 6:35 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

159, February 1, 7 p.m. (SECTION SEVEN)

The JOURNAL OFFICIEL of February 1 publishes an in-

struction to approved intermediaries of the Foreign Exchange

Office defining the nature of "proof" to be furnished and the
procedure to be followed in operations involving payments

to the credit of foreign accounts in francs (Article 14 of
the arrete of November 30, 1939 relating to approved intermediaries -my telegram No. 2882, December 1, 6 p.m.) Proof

to be submitted to establish the legality of such operations
varies according to the origin and reason for the payments.

Proof in the nature of an import license certificate is required for payments to foreign accounts in francs originating
with "persons considered as French" and Employed in the

settlement of imports into France payable in francs.
BULEITT
NPL

152
REB

GRAY

Paris

Dated February 1, 1940

Rec'd 6:40 p. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.

159, February 1, 7 p. M. (SECTION EIGHT)

No proof is required for payments in the form of French
Government checks, drafts, and bills. Payments to the
credit of foreign accounts in francs by "persons considered
as French" for all debts owing abroad require a special

authorization of the foreign Exchange office as to all
other monetary transfers originating with persons
considered as foreign (i.E. non-resident) can make a
payment from his foreign account in francs to the

credit of another foreign account in francs upon the
submission of EVIDENCE by the transmitting bank that the

holder of the debited account is a person considered as
foreign.
BULLITT
NPL

153

GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 1, 1940
REC d 6:45 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

159, February 1, 7 p.m. (SECTION NINE)

Similarly a person considered as foreign may have his franc
account credited with the sum obtained from the surrender to
the foreign Exchange office of foreign Exchange upon presen-

tation of a receipt for such foreign Exchange. The income
or yield from the sale of French negotiable securities
held with an intermediary in the name of a person considered
as foreign may be credited to his franc account without the

submission of any proof whatsoever. All other operations
originating with a person considered as foreign require a
special authorization of the Foreign Exchange Office before
they may be credited to a foreign account in francs.
Further provisions specify the respective responsi

bilities of the intermediary receiving a payment to be creditEd to a foreign account in francs, that of the transmitting
entity, and that of the person making the payment insofar as

the submission of "proof" of the legality of the transactions
is concerned.
BULLITT
NPL

154

REB

GRAY

Paris

Dated February 1, 1940

Rec'd 6:55 p. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.

159, February 1, 7 p. m. (SECTION TEN)

In general the person making the payment is ultimately
responsible for the submission of "proof". HOWEVER
in the case of a check drawn by a person considered as
French which passes through several hands, and is

Eventually presented for the crediting of a foreign
account in francs, the last "French" EndorsEE is
responsible for the "proof". The funds involved in an
operation which is not accompanied by the required

"proof" are placed in a suspense account for ten working

days. If no "proof" is furnished during that period the
funds are returned and placed in a special blocked account,
distinct from that mentioned above, where they are held

pending decision of the Foreign Exchange Office. If a
bank abroad remits to its correspondent backed by a franc
check to be credited to its foreign account in francs and
no proof can be submitted as to the legality of the
operation for which the check was used, the foreign bank
must apply to the Foreign Exchange Office for permission
for

155

REB -2-#159, Feb. 1, 7 p. m. (SEC. TEN)

for the funds to be removed from the special blocked

account and placed to its credit. (There is no indication
whether such permission will be granted.)
BULLITT
NPL

156

GRAY
JT

PARIS

Dated February 1, 1940
Rec'd 7 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

159, February 1, 7 p.m. (SECTION ELEVEN)

The downward trend continued on the securities market

although the tone was more resistant in narrow trading. With
the EXCEPTION of the 1925 Exchange quarantee issue which

gained one point rentes were almost unchanged. Internationals WERE more cheerful, Suez gaining 115 points.
The Bank of France statement dated January 25 revealed

an increase of 450,000,000 francs to a total of 15,200,000,000
in advances to the state.
Official Exchange rates remained at the same . level.
(END CF ME3SAGE)

BULLITT
NPL

COPY FOR SECRETARY

157

OFFICIAL

THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON .c.

DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON

n

February 2, 1940.

reply refer to

711.00111 Articles or

aterials/210

The Secretary of State presents his compliments

to the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses one copy
of telegram no. 35, dated February 1, 1940, from the
American Embassy at Mexico City, with reference to
transshipment of cargo at Manzanillo for Vladivostok.

Enclosure:

From Mexico City,

no. 35, February 1,
1940.

10

by

3

31

RECEIVED

of

158
:

GRAY

JT

MEXICO CITY

Dated February 1, 1940
Rec'd 9 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

35, February 1, 7 p.m.
REfErEncE Department's telegram No. 23, January 26,
this year.
Russian steamship MAYAKOV3KY reported as coming direct

from Vladivostok took cargo of copper sheets, bars and ingots
in Manzanillo direct from American steamship GUAYAQUIL

and will do the same with similar cargo of American steamship BUENAVEITURA.

VESSELS and cargoes consigned to German agency Heynen

Everbusch and consignment of cargo understood to be for the

purpose of transshipment only. Representative of consignee

was in Kanzanillo with J. Frinstein, Amtorg representative
in NEW York City during part of transshipment.
Three other Russian ships are Expected to arrive in
Manzanillo: steamship BOB, steamship KIM, and steamship
MINSK.

BOL If further information is secured it will be transmitted.
DANIELS
NPL

Transmitted to Navy and Coast Guard at 9:55 p.m.

159

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON

February 1, 1940.

MEMORANDUM TO MR. BELL

Mr. Gerardi has made a review of the New York Times for 1919

and 1920 for data on the sale of Irish bonds.
On February 13, 1919 a convention of delegates from Irish
organizations throughout the country met in Philadelphia and pledged

$1,250,000 to be raised in support of the movement for Irish freedom.
Following this action the various organizations put on campaigns in

their home cities to raise the funds by voluntary donations.
In August, 1919, DeValera, Provisional President of the Irish
Republic, who was in the United States, was authorised by the Government

he represented to raise a loan of not to exceed $25,000,000. The Irish
Republic Mission then in the United States announced the opening of

headquarters to carry on the flotation of $10,000,000 in Irish Republic
bonds. The campaign was started on January 17, 1920 when DeValera

participated in a giant march of Irish sympathizers to the New York
City Hallwhere he was greeted by Mayor Hylan. A few days later, on
January 20, 1920 the New York State Assembly passed a resolution

endorsing the sale of Liberty Loan Certificates of the Irish Republic.
The sale of the bonds was carried on by solicitation. One report
indicated that nearly 40,000 people were engaged in New York in

obtaining subscriptions to the bonds and that the national organization

160

-2included nearly a million persons. DeValera made a number of speeches

in various parts of the country and prominent persons in American

life also endorsed or participated actively in the campaign to sell
such bonds.

There was an article in the New York Times of January 28, 1920,

quoting from an article which had previously appeared in "The Street"

to the effect that the Irish bonds were only a speculation and were
not sound investments and that no application had been made to list
such bonds on the New York Stock Exchange.

It is assumed that any bonds sold in 1921 were handled in the
same manner.

It appears that sums aggregating over $6,000,000 were subscribed

by citizens or inhabitants of the United States to two loans of the
organization which was seeking to set up by force in Ireland a
Republic of Ireland, which would be free and independent of any

allegiance whatsoever to the Government of Great Britain and Ireland.
Each subscriber to the loans subsequently received a printed form of
bond certificate in the amount subscribed which read as follows:
. To
"Republic of Ireland. Bond Certificate and
: I, Eamonn De Valera, president of the elected government of the republic of Ireland, acting in the name of and by
the authority of the elected representatives of the Irish
nation, issue this certificate in acknowledgment of your subscription of $ to the first national loan of the republic

of Ireland. This certificate is not negotiable but is ex-

changeable if presented at the treasury of the republic of
Ireland one month after the international recognition of the

said republic for one $ gold bond of the republic of

Ireland. Said bond to bear interest at 5 per cent. per annum
from the first day of the seventh month after the freeing of

the territory of the republic of Ireland from Britain's mili-

tary control, and said bond to be redeemable at par within one
year thereafter.
Eamonn De Valera, President."

161

-3About $2,500,000 of such funds remained in this country after

the Irish Free State was established and as a result of a suit decided in 1927 in New York, it was determined that the Irish Free State
was not entitled to these moneys but that they were payable pro rata to
the subscribers.

The Irish Free State Government passed a bill known as the Dail
Eireann Loans and Funds (amendments) Act, 1933, authorizing the re-

payment (on the basis of $1.25 for each $1.00 subscribed) of the

Republic of Ireland loans. The bill stipulated that August 31, 1934
was to be the final date for the filing of claims by bondholders.
The Irish Free State established an office in New York City known as
the "Repayment Office for Dail Eireann External Loans" and more than

160,000 persons filed claims on or before August 31, 1934. The time

for filing claims was extended to June 30, 1936. On April 7, 1936,
we were informed by the officer-in-charge of the repayment office
that refunds of $1,666,767 had been made to the subscribers and that
when such amount was added to the amount paid by the Irish bond receivers in 1930, namely $2,187,164, a total of $3,853,931 had been

refunded to the Republic of Ireland bondholders up to that date.

pars

162

1037 Earle Building

Washington, D. C.
February 2, 1940
Personal

Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.

Secretary of the Treasury

Treasury Department
Washington, D. C.

Dear Mr. Secretary:

It seems to me important, in this unfortunate trap in
which I let myself fall by not paying close enough atten-

tion to the material my friend, Harold Weisberg, was assembling on the Dies Committee matter, that I should let you know

of one fact which is likely to come out very soon.
That fact is that this David Mayne testified before the

secret session of the Dies Committee that I have been acting
on the Dies Committee matter at the direction of the Presi-

dent. I am told that he testified that the dinner at the

White House which Dode and I attended with you was the occasion on which I was supposed to have been given orders by
the President to get Dies.

It is known that Mayne, two or three days after we were

at the White House, told Weisberg that he knew about my being

at the White House dinner, and that it was for the purpose

he is supposed later to have testified about. At that time

he intimated rather clearly that the Republican National under Com-

mittee was interested in the matter and was keeping me time

surveillance. The inference from his remarks at that
was
that heatmight
collaborate
with the Republican National
Committee
a later
date.
This information was borne out within the last few days
his statements to John Henshaw, indicating the he sources is get-

by ting money or is about to get money from Republican Southern

through
Building.

Charles Curtis, Jr., whose office is in the

I believe this information, even though coming from Mayne, the

mouth of so disreputable and unreliable a person as it should

appears to be well worth checking into, and I think to the
be done immediately. I think you should pass this on in this

people, including one whom I have mentioned the job im-

proper letter. If secret service could be put on an extra-

mediately, I your believe they would be able to uncover

ordinary and unbelievable combination of circumstances.

263
Secretary Morgenthan

-20

February 2, 1940

The evidence now looks definitely as if Mr. Weisberg and

I have been entrapped by a scheme planned within the Dies

Committee itself, at the instigation or with the participa-

tion of Rhea Whitley, the counsel of the Dies Committee, a
former FBI agent, who has suddenly resigned from the Committee
and is now out of the city.
I talked this over with Senator Sehwellenbach last night
and he agrees that the probabilities are as I have stated.
He wished to talk with you about this and another matter but
was not desirous of intruding upon you because he know you

were so busy, and suggested that I let you know he would like
to talk with you if you would call him when you have a moment
to spare.

Yours sincerely,
Gardner Jackson

P. S. Mayne has referred in conversations with Henshaw and
Weisberg to a conference he was to have had with John Hamilton, chairman of the Republican National Committee, in the

last week of December, 1939. His files, which are in the

possession of Congressman Hook and which obviously are au-

thentic, include material showing at least two conferences

with Franklyn Waltman of the Republican National Committee
and one with J. Parnell Thomas, Republican congressman from
New Jersey who is a member of the Dies Committee.
OJ:CD

164
BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE

OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR

2/2/40
From

10

DIRECTOR

Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.

Secretary of the Treasury
For

The attached notes on Economic Developments,

dated February 1, 1940, are sent to you
at the request of Mr. Noble, Under
Secretary of Commerce.

James
James W.m.
Youngyomay
Director

E

February 1, 1940
DOMESTIC ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS

BUSINESS data currently available reveal developments which had been

anticipated as a sequel to the rapid advance in activity which

characterised the final third of 1939. Industrial output is do-

clining in those primary industries which shot output upward from

last September to November to meet the demand which arose when

expectations about prospects were changed at the outbreak of war.
Now that inventories have been adjusted upward to a level well
above that of last summer, and prices are tending to decline rather
than to strengthen, the immediate incentive to aggressive purchasing
policies has been removed.

JANUARY will show a recession in manufacturing output of substantial
proportions, & more marked decline in new business, and some fur-

ther increase in inventories.

INVENTORY data reported by manufacturing concerns as of the and of
December reveal a rather uniform advance from the November figures

-total holdings probably rose between 3 and 4 percent that month,
following an increase of about 3 percent in November. Year-end
inventories of 432 concerns, which hold only a little less than a

fifth of the total inventories of all manufacturers, show an in-

crease over the 1938 year-end position of 5 percent.

Total Inventories - 432 manufacturing companies
Percent increase
December from
December 1939
November 1939
December 1938

$1,922 million
1,860
1,829

3.3
5.1

SIGNIFICANCE: While inventories of these manufacturing concerns

are only 5 percent larger than a year ago (compared with an increase in sales of about one-fifth), they are advancing at a high
annual rate-more than one-third on a base in excess of $10 billion. Since June, which marked the approximate low point of the
liquidation which started in 1937, manufacturers' inventories are
up about 8 percent. Wholesalers' inventories-which are about a
fourth as large as those of manufacturers-moved up at about the
same, or a slightly lower, rate from June to December.
THE CRUX OF THE PRESENT SITUATION IS THIS: Industrial production was

pushed up rapidly after September because business expected a war

boom-larger exports and higher prices. The buying was at first
for inventory purposes-part protective and part speculative; also
some previously contemplated capital outlays were driven in an offort to avoid higher prices. As capacity in some industries became

165

166

-2 strained, additional capital goods orders developed, though there
eas considerable caution about making long-term commitments. The
increase in production caused a rise of income payments to individuals and a consequent rise in consumption. But the increase
in production was such larger than the increases in consumption
and permanent investment as inventories were increased. This situation cannot continue-inventories cannot be accumulated indefinitely. As soon as the rate of such accumulation alons down,
production must start to decline. This point has now been reached
- production has begun to decline.
BUSINESS PROSPECTS: Thus, the pattern of industrial activity for the

first quarter is fairly well set. Production will decline to a

point where it equals consumption plue permanent investment. Aver-

age for the first quarter on the Reserve Board's index indicated
at 115; fourth quarter 1939 average, 124, first quarter 1939, 99.
This analysis is confirmed by the extent to which the flow of new
orders has fallen off.
Uncertainty about the second quarter of 1940 arises from possibilities concerning:

(1) Exports - Prospects here have been improved by the high returns for December and the results indicated by partial returns
for January. Up to the end of November, however, no net stimulus
had developed from abroad. The trend in the spring really depends

on how the war goes.

(2) Capital expenditures - Exact figures are not available but

we know there FIEL a substantial increase in the rate of this type
of spending during the final quarter of 1939. Some of this represented merely advancement of outlays contemplated for early 1940,
but there was no doubt & real increase in equipment purchasing
which would not have occurred under less favorable circumstances.

Expenditures in this sphere will be lover for the first quarter of
1940 though production will reflect the equipment ordered in the
previous quarter.

(3) Inventories - The stimulus from inventory accumulation will
probably cease by the end of February. As pointed out in previous

reports, inventory liquidation then becomes a distinct possibility
if further stimulus is not forthcoming from factors (1) and (2).

167
FOREIGN TRADE NOTES

Germany The original mobilisation plans, which were based evidently on a
such more intensive warfare, had to be modified under the new conditions,
particularly as regards the concentration of army orders within rela-

tively few privileged industrial plants. Under the new conditions any
orders have been shifted from the policy of great concentration to that

of widespreading of such orders among a larger number of industrial concorns.

Serious difficulties in providing the civilian population with certain

commodities, particularly potatoes and coal. have resulted from the cold
weather during December. A very large number of the apartment houses in
Berlin have been compelled to reduce heating or eliminate it entirely,

the shortage of coal being due primarily to the difficulties of transpertation. particularly the freesing over of the inland waterways. Public
institutions and business firms in Berlin have been ordered to sell a
part of their coal to private buyers. Passenger rail traffic has been
reduced to a minimum. The potato shortage has been attributed to the

fact that they cannot be shipped without freezing. This shortage is

felt most in Western Germany, which depends upon Central Germany for its

potato supplies. The potato shortage is particularly serious in view
of the fact that under present conditions potatoes form such an important
part of the foodstuff supply, and is the only commddity of importance
which is not rationed.

Trade negotiations between Germany and Hungary were recently concluded

after serious difficulties connected with the delivery of German exports,
chiefly coal and coke. Germany is said to owe Hungary, under the clear-

ing agreement. approximately 44 million marks, and deliveries of German
goods to Hungrey have been delayed on account of transportation diffs-

culties resulting from the freesing of the Danube and the scarcity of

railroad care.

Australia: It appears that the long discussed plan for manufacturing automobiles in Australia under a government subsidy is about to be put into
effect. Under the bill recently introduced bounties are to be paid on
engine units of 15 horsepover or over at the following rates: 630 a unit
for the first 20,000 engine units: 125 for the second 20,000 engine units:
and L20 for the third 20,000 engine units. The bounty is to be paid only
to companies at least two-thirds Australian owned and controlled. According to more detailed plans recently announced. the Australian Consolidated
Industries, Ltd., is to form a subsidiary company to be known as Australian
Motor Manufacturers Proprietary Limited, with a capital of 12,000,000 to
manufacture engines and chassis and such other parts as are not otherwise
obtainable. The Company plans to start production in July 1941 at the
rate of 8,000 care annually. The Managing Director of Australian Con-

solidated Industries, Ltd., was supposed to arrive in the United States on

January 22, 1940 for the purpose of purchasing machinery and engaging
certain American experts for the factory. Recent newspaper announcements of

indicate that negotiations are now being carried on for the purchase
equipment of certain defunet American automobile concerns. The ear to be

produced is of an American type.
It will be recalled that the government has been making efforts for some is
years to induce American concerns to establish an automobile industry

Australia, but without success.

Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce,
February 1, 1940.

168

WEEKLY WHOLEBALE PRICE INDEXES

(1926 = 100)

Percent increase
1940

1939
Group

All commodities
Farm products

Jan.

Sept.

Jen.

28

16

20

from
Apg,26,

Jam.
1939

1939

76.7
67.3
72.2

74.8
61.1
66.7

79.3
69.7
75.5

79.3
69.5
71.4

79.1
69.2
71.4

3.1
2.8
0.3

5.7
13.3
7.0

80.4
93.3
65.6
73.4
94.5
89.4
76.1
87.2
73.0

80.4
92.6
67.4
73.2
93.5
89.7
74.2
87.0
73.1

82.4
98.3
71.4
74.1

84.1

4.5
11.4
16.9

4.5
12.2
13.8

94.9
90.7
77.1
87.1
76.1

77.0
73.4
96.0
93.1
77.7
90.2
77.5

84.0
103.9
76.7
73.4
95.7
93.7
77.6
90.2
77.4

73.0
82.0
82.3

73.9
81.9
81.9

73.3
81.2
81.9

Foods

Semimonufactured articles
Finished products

.

Raw materials

70.7
74.7
80.2

66.2
74.4
79.3

,

Miscellaneous

,

House-furnishing goods.

.

Chemicals and drugs

,

Building materials.

,

Metals and notal products

.

.

Fuel and lighting materials'

,

Textile products.

,

Hides and leather products.

,

All commodities other than
farm products and foods

103.7

U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.

.0

.3

1.3
4.8
2.0
3.4
6.0

2.4
4.5
4.6
3.7
5.9

3.7
8.7
2.1

10.7
9.1
3.3

169

SELECTED COMMODITY PRICE SERIES

Commodity

Feb. 1

electrolytic, N.Y.
c,

per 1b.

prompt shipment, N.Y

do

N.Y.

do

straits, N.Y.

ber, plantation, N.Y.
es, light native cows, Chicago.
x, 13-15 donier, 78% seriplane,

15

do

10

10, Santos, No. 4, N.Y

do
do

4.65

c, cash, Chicago.

do

tonseed oil, Mar.1940 futures, NY
at, May 1940 futures, Chicago

do

.

ers, beef, medium, 750-1,100
Chicago

per bu.

'$ per cwt.
do

3/81.5

7/8/3/65

5.65
5.61

1/4'3/

5.50
5.89

5.25
5.89
45
3/4

22 1/2'

13 3/4" 13

45

3/8

1/111.9

5/8

12

15

5

2.92
4.38

Jan.31

1/4
18 3/4" 18 7/8

75

3.21
9.01

5/8

Jon.26
12

5.50
6.64

2.72
8.53

6.75
6.87

5

12

11

8

66

Sept.13

49 3/4'1/
16 7/8

41/4

do

'$

1/2

22/81.6
2.78

per

ne, Accra, N.Y

1b.

3/8'
3/4'

2.03
8.52

per yd.

1

3, good and choice, 220-240 lbs.

5.05
5.14

46

per lb.

ton, middling, av. 10 markets
nt cloth, 60x64, 38g inches
tops, Mar. 1940 futures, N.Y.
ar, raw, 960, duty free, N.Y

10 1/2

4.85
4.84

do

1940

Aug.30

11 1/4

do

per 1b.

York

hicago

1939

Unit

3.70
6.45

3/4

7.75
7.30
.85

3/8

3.62
10.38

3.15
10.26

102.5
2.85
5.55

99.0
" 2.85
5.45

3/8

5

7 1/2

1/4

7 1/2

6.07
5.90
6.77
6.84
1.00 1/8'.96 3/8

7.68

6.88

8.13

5.28

5.40

8.63

8.38

8.88

8.63

8.88

Jominal.

March 1939 futures.
December 1939 futures.
lay 1939 futures.
dogs weighing 220-250 pounds.

Cess All commodities, with the exception of wool tops, cottonseed oil, hogs, and
are taken from the Journal of Commerce; wool tops and cottonseed oil are taken
theBureau
Wall Street
Journal; and
hogs and steers are from the U. S. Department of Agriure,
of Agricultural
Economics.

170

COMPOSITE PRICES OF PIG IRON, STEEL SCRAP, AND FINISHED STEEL

Pig Iron V

Finished Steel

Steel Scrap

Date

(Dollars per gross ton)
1939

January 31
August 29
September 19
October 3
November 28

(Cente per pound)

20.61
20.61
22.61
22.61
22.61

14.875
15.62
19.25
22.50
18.58

2,286
2.236
2.236
2.236
2.261

22.61
22.61

17.54
17.33

2,261
2.261

1940s

January 23
January 30

,

V Based on average for basic iron at Valley furnace and foundry
iron at Chicago, Philadelphia, Buffalo, Valley and Southern iron
at Cincinnati.

2 Based on No. 1 heavy selting steel quotations at Pittsburgh,
Philadelphia, and Chicago.

3 Based on steel bars, beans, tank plates, wire, rails, black pipe,
sheets and hot-rolled strip. These products represent 85 percent of the United States output.

Sources The Iron Age.

171

PRICES OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS - IN BULK AT GULF COAST PORTS

Meter gasoline, Light fuel oil, Diesel oil, Bunker oil, grade
65 octans , number 2
ships' bunkers, "C", eargoes

Date

(Cents per gellon)
1939:

(Dollars per barrel)

1

3.375 - 3.625
3.375 - 3.75

,

6.25 - 6.875 , 3.875 - 4.00

0.78 - 0.80

,
1

5.50 - 6.00
5.50 - 6.00

Sources Platt's Oilgram.

INVOLED 5 MW 11 so
Of

OLLICE

.

January 24
January 31

0.825 - 1.00

.

1940:

0.675 - 0.70

1.55
1.45
1.45

.

,

September 13

4.50 - 4.75
4.75 - 5.00

,

February 1
August 30

4.00

- 4.125
4.125

1.70
1.70

,

0.97 - 1.05
1.00 - 1.05

172

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF
OMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
ADDRESS REPLY TO
OF INTERNAL REVENUE
AND REFER TO

IT:P:CA

February 2, 1940.

CAA

REPORT FOR SECRETARY MORGENTHAU

In reference to closing agreements under the Vinson-Tranmell
Act, the developments during the week were as follows:
Fulton Sylphon Company, Knoxville, Tennessee:

A request was received by mail from this concern for a
closing agreement in regard to special equipment estimated to
aggregate in cost slightly in excess of $32,000, required for
the performance of a prospective contract from the Navy Department for the manufacture of 484,000 projectiles. The request
has been acknowledged with the explanation that it will be
necessary for the contractor to contact the Navy Department

and secure the necessary certifications. As this is a
relatively small case, it is possible that the Navy Department
will succeed in discouraging the contractor in desiring to
enter into a formal closing agreement. However, at this
writing it is not known exactly what are the reasons for
requesting the closing agreement, except that the contractor

states in an exhibit accompanying its letter that the facilities
will be of no use to it following the completion of the contract.

Commi ssioner.

173

IT:P:CA
CAA

February 2, 1940.

REPORT FOR SECRETARY MORGENTRAD

In reference to closing agreements under the Vinson-Treemell
Act, the developments during the week were as follows:
Fulton Sylphon Company, Knowville, Tennessee:

A request was received by mail from this concern for a
closing agreement in regard to special equipment estimated to
aggregate in cost slightly in excess of $82,000, required for
the performance of a prospective contract from the Navy Department for the manufacture of 464,000 projectiles. The request
has been acknowledged with the explanation that it will be
necessary for the contractor to contact the Navy Department

and secure the necessary certifications. As this is a
relatively small case, it is possible that the Navy Department
will succeed in discouraging the contractor in desiring to
enter into a formal closing agreement. However, at this
writing it is not known exactly what are the reasons for
requesting the closing agreement, except that the contractor

states in an exhibit accompanying its letter that the facilities
will be of no use to it following the completion of the contract.

((Simpl) CryT.

Commissioner.

CAA/NEA

174
COPY

LEGATION OF SWEDEN

Washington, D.C.

February 2, 1940

My dear Mr. Cochran:

To keep you posted on the progress of our

discussions regarding a possible export credit for
the financing of Swedish purchases in the United

States, I beg to enclose for your personal information,
a copy of a letter which was handed to Mr. Jesse Jones

yesterday. If you think that the subject will be of
any interest to the Secretary, I have no objection
if you show the letter to him.
Yours sincerely,

/8/ W. Bostrom

Mr. H. Merle Cochran,
Treasury Department,

Washington, D. C.

Act'd. 6t

XMX.

175
COPY

AVSKRIFT
February 1, 1940
Confidential

LEGATION OF SWEDEN

Washington, D.C.

Dear Mr. Jones:

Some time ago I had the pleasure of discussing informally
with you the prospects of a credit from the Reconstruction F1nance Corporation or the Export-Import Bank to facilitate the
Financing of Swedish purchases in the United States. I have now
been instructed by my Government to present a formal application

for such credit and, with the assistance of the Swedish Government Trade Delegation which is now in Washington, to enter into

discussions looking towards the conclusion of a credit agreement.
Before I proceed to discuss the form and the amount of the
credit which we have in mind, I propose to outline some recent
developments which affect Swedish American trade relations. The

total value of the trade passing between our two countries during
recent years has been as follows:

1935

1936
1937

1938

1939 (Jan.-Nov.)

Exp. to Sweden

Imp. from Sweden

38,216,000
43,074,122
64,452,444
64,230,813
87,056,684

41,247,000
48,158,017
58,577,551
45,103,656
37,760,707

It is to be noted that beginning with 1937 there has been a
steady increase in United States exports to Sweden. No corresponding increase in American purchases in Sweden has occurred, due

partly to the economic recession in the United States which ourtailed the demand for some of our principal export products. The

-2-

176

consequent unbalancing of Swedish American trade was further

accelerated during last year by the effects of the European crisis.
Apart from increased purchases of certain essential materials, as
a safe-guard against an emergency, Sweden has been looking to the

United States as a source of supply for a number of products which,
owing to the dislocation caused by war, could not be obtained through

normal trade channels. It may be anticipated that if not checked for

financial reasons, this trend will continue.
Even if we discount the extraordinary purchases arising out of
disturbed world conditions, Sweden represents no mean market for
American exports. Sweden has constantly bought more goods from the

United States than the other three Scandinavian nations, Finland, Norway,

and Denmark, combined. In the first eleven months of last year, the
United States shipped more goods to Sweden than to any other country in
Europe, bar the United Kingdom and France, It must be borne in mind,

however, that the result of last year's trading showed a balance of some

fifty million dollars in favor of the United States. In the period preceeding the European conflict this balance would have been, as a matter

of course, covered by the proceeds of sales to other countries with which
Sweden has a favorable trade balance.

Under present conditions this form of triangular trade is carried on

under obvious difficulties. As a result of the war a number of countries
have adopted arbitrary transfer plans. Belligerent blockade measures

constitute a constant hindrance to trade with some of our principal export markets. Another, and to us very serious, consequence of the present

crisis is that we have to pay cash for most of our imports while our staple

exports are still largely sold on credit. To tide over the time-lag which

177
-3-

occurs, before payments come in or currency can be transferred, a considerable currency reserve must be kept in our principal buying markets, such
as the United States.

For reasons which I have now stated, it has become necessary to plan

a purchasing policy on a national scale, and the financial consequences

must obviously be of great importance in determining such a policy. In
order to safe-guard our currency reserves it may become necessary to our-

tail imports of certain classes of goods or, alternatively, to transfer
certain purchases to markets where we have currency or credits available.

A preliminary investigation has established that, in order to safeguard a sufficient dollar reserve for such contingencies as I have out-

lined above, additional credits of some thirty million dollars would be required during the current year, if our purchases in the United States are
to be kept up at the present rate. It would not, of course, be necessary
to have the whole of this credit made available at once, and I understood
from our previous conversation that it would be convenient to deal

separately with such part of the credit as should be mainly used to finance
purchases of agricultural and kindred products. Agricultural products are,
however, of minor importance in our total imports from the United States,
and I hope that the Swedish Trade Delegation, while still in Washington,

will have an opportunity to discuss with you also, credits for purchases
of non-agricultural products, which of course to us, are of primary inportance.

That we now envisage the possibility of taking advantage of the

export credits facilities provided by the United States Government, is
caused by the complete breakdown of inter-national credit machinery.

As to our general financial and economic standing, I need only say that

178

Sweden should be a good credit risk. We have no foreign debt. The State's
internal indebtedness is amply covered by revenue earning assets. We still
have considerable gold reserves.

Judging by our financial record, there should be no doubt of our

possibility to ride out a crisis of an even more serious import than the
one we are immediately facing. The determination with which the difficulties of the post-war crises were overcome, and the speedy recovery from
the depression of 1932 and 1933. bear testimony to the essential soundness

and the recuperative power of our economic and financial structure.
An approximated estimate shows that Sweden could, during 1940,

contemplate buying in the United States some twenty-five thousand tons

of cotton, equivalent in value to about six million dollars. Our tobacco

purchases will total about two million dollars this year. In addition, we
have need of certain quantities of animal tallow and cotton seed cake.
From the Philippines we buy some seven thousand dollars worth of cocoa not
cake.

Yours sincerely,

W. BOSTROM

Minister of Sweden

Hon. Jesse H. Jones,

Administrator, Federal Loan Agency,
Washington, D. C.
(Copy)

179

GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 2, 1940
REC'd 4:35 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

164, February 2, 6 p.m.
FOR THE TREASURY FROM MATTHEWS.

The JOURNAL OFFICIEL of February 2 contains two further

minor measures clarifying and tightening up existing Exchange

control measures. The first is an instruction to approved
intermediaries of the Foreign Exchange Office regarding

overdrafts on foreign accounts in francs. Generally speaking
such overdrafts cannot be granted without prior authorization of the Foreign Exchange Office. In certain EXCEPTIONAL

instances, however, in order to avoid delays, intermediariEs
may grant overdrafts without previous authorization. In
such CESES the owner of the foreign account in francs must

advise the intermediary as to the way in which the overdraft will be covered.
(END SECTION ONE)
BULLITT
HPL

180

GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 2, 1940
REC' d 4:10 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

164, February 2, 6 p.m. (SECTION TWO)

Authorized methods of Effecting cover include bank transfers

in francs arising from the surrender of foreign Exchange,
surrender of checks or commercial paper drawn on France or

delivery of commercial paper drawn on France for discount

by the intermediary. No overdraft on a foreign account in
francs which showed a debit position on DECEMBER 1 may be

EXTENDED without authorization of the foreign Exchange

office. The same applies to overdrafts on corresponding
accounts of branches or affiliates abroad of intermediaries
for the financing of trade with France or French possessions.
BULLITT
CSB

181
GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 2, 1940
REC d 4:43 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

164, February 2, 6 p.m. (SECTION THREE)

The second item is a notice of the Foreign Exchange
Office to banks in regard to the transmission abroad by cable

or letter of instructions ordering the disposal abroad in
favor of third parties of holdings expressed in francs or
foreign currencies. It points out that such an action if
carried out without the permission of the office constitutes
an export of capital. Furthermore the transmission abroad of
silver articles requires an authorization of the Foreign
Exchange Office.

the French financial press (which like other French
journals confronted by an active censor is often hard put
to fill up space) has recently Engaged in SOME comment and

speculation on such current questions as allied means of
payment to us for war purchases and as the value of the pound.
BULLITT
NPL:EMB

182

GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 2, 1940

REC 4:30 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.

164, February 2, 6 p.m. (SECTION FOUR)
This morning's AGENCE ECONOMIQUE carries an American despatch

that "the rumors which have circulated at Washington accordto which the United States Treasury asked Great Britain to
make as much of its payments due to the United States as

possible through the sale of British dollar investments
rather than through new shipments of gold have not been

confirmed". The article then makes brief reference to the
recent Federal RESERVE bulletin by the United States

government on gold. Commenting Editorially that
paper says "the cables of our AmErican correspondent clearly
show that if the United States is not considering, as rumor

had it, refusing to accept foreign payments in gold, the
influx of the yellow metal neverthElEss is worrying the
American administration.
BULLITT
NPL

EMB

183
GRAY

JT

PARIS

Dated February 2, 1940
REC'd 4:50 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

164, February 2, 6 p.m. (3ECTION FIVE)

There Exist for it almost the same problems as for us in the reverse SENSE, so to speak - the CONSEquEncES of which

may in the End be of the same nature if one cannot find an
appropriate remedy. That journal likewise comments on
London press comment to the Effect that the pound is under-

valued with respect to the dollar. "It is only of course a
question of rumors which WE have mentioned from curiosity

but there is no doubt that the question of relationship of
the franc-pound-dollar is up at this moment and not unfavorably for London and Paris.
Activity was again reduced on the securities market
today and the trend continued (rentes?). REntES lost
about 50 centimes, and moderate losses WERE registered in

most other securities.
(END OF MESSAGE)

BULLITT
NPL:EMB

184

PLAIN

JR

London

Dated February 2, 1940

Rec'd 2:25 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

304, February 2.
FOR TREASURY FROM BUTTERVORTH.

1. The British Treasury states that the Bank of
England and the Argentine Central Bank have agreed to the

continuation for a further period of three months subject
to certain modifications of the Anglo-Argentine payments
arrangement. I gathered that in fact this arrangement
is almost wholly in the hands of Baring's representative
in Buenos Aires who has temporarily become an official

of the Bank of England, that he enjoys an unusual position
in the Argentine and correspondingly C. rather free hand

is accorded him here. The British Treasury states that
aside from settling the details of loan servicing with
Turkey it has concluded no other payments agreements

since that reported in my 34, January 5, 7 p.m., and the
negotictions with the other countries mentioned in my 111,
January 12, 7 p.m., have not yet been terminated. The
Governor of the Bank of GREECE has been here and as reported

in the press has reached an arrangement with the British
Council of Foreign Bondholders to pay 43 per cent of the
contractual

185

-2- #304, February 2, from London.

contractual interest on the Greek debt for the period
from April 1, 1940 until the End of the war. Aside
from tobacco purchases over C three year period the

British Treasury has agreed to the chartering of C.
considerable amount of Greek shipping.

2. The agitation for the appointment of a Minister
of Economics, referred to in my 2698, DECEMBER 21, 7 p.m.,

to sit in the War Cabinet found expression in C. debate in
the House of Commons in which the Prime Linister flatly
turnel down the suggestion and merely offered in its
stend the appointment of C. committee made up of government

officials and representatives of industry and labor to
:dvise the president of the Board of Trade on the Export
problem. The Chancellor of the Exchequer also made C.

speech which, since the proposal for a Minister of
Economics would drastically cut ccross the Treasury's
existing powers and functions, WOO in realty an oblique
defence of himself.
JOHNSON
CSB

186

PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM SENT

TO: American Embassy, Rio de Janeiro
DATE: February 2, 1940, 3 p.m.

NO.: 24
The Department transmits the following observations
on the British creditors' memorandum for such use as you
may find for them:
The Department knows of no basis for the assertion

about ignoring "contractual rules". In January 1934
Reuben Clark more or less assented to the Aranha plan
schedules when he found it impossible to get any more

satisfactory recognition for the grades of securities
which were primarily in the hands of Americans. However,
he was careful to leave the Aranha plan in the status of a

unilateral act. It is hard for us to perceive how an
arrangement of relative percentages of payment contained

in this plan should achieve a higher degree of sanctity
than the contracts which were contained in the original
bonds.

In the face of a general transfer moratorium, the
"superior security" of Grade II (the Coffee Realization
Loan) is irrelevant. Compared with various other loans,

which engage the full credit and responsibility of public

authorities of Brazil, it may or may not be true. In fine,
it

187

-2-

it British is apparent that the whole argument 18 a

of

rights. taking the form of an assertion defense of
legal interests,
HULL
(SW)

EA:FL:EB

COPY FOR SECRETARY

188
OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO

THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON a.c.

DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON

February 5, 1940.

reply refer to

711.00111 Articles or
terials/218

The Secretary of State presents his compliments

to the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and
encloses one copy of telegram no. 41, dated February
2, 1940, from the American Embassy at Mexico City,

regarding transshipment of cargo at Manzanillo for
Vladivostok.

Enclosure:

From Mexico City,

no. 41, February 2,
1940.

189
GRAY
HSM

Mexico City
Dated February 2, 1940
Rec'd 11 p. m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

41, February 2, 8 p. M.
REfERENCE Embassy's telegram 35, February 1, 7 n. m.
Vice Consul Noel reports steamship MAYAKOVSKY's last

voyage COMMENCED in July 31 last year, taking her to

Novorossiisk, Madras, Calcutta, Sabang, Tolog-Botung,
Batavia, Samarang, Surabaya and Vladivostok, from which

port she sailed in ballast shortly after the 26th for
Manzanillo, arriving there January 20. All cargo of
steamship GUAYAQUIL was taken on board but about 1,600 (#)
of steamship BUENAVENTUZAS cargo was put ashore to be
picked up by another Russian VESSEL. The MAYAKOVSKY

sailed from Manzanillo February 1 for Los Angeles. Rumor

unconfirmed is she will take on airplane parts there.
Reason for transhipment at Manzanillo is explained
n
as due to the lower freight charges and handling abarges.
Aside from 75 tons of diesel oil and water MAYAKOVSKY

took on no local cargo.

Feinstein, Amtorg representative, left by plane from
000

Guadala jara January 31 for Los Angeles.
DANIEL3
CFW-YWC

(#) apparent omission

Transmitted to Navy at 3:47 a. m., 3rd

190

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 2, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Cochran

The foreign exchange market was not very active today, although the

sterling quotation moved in an erratic fashion. After opening at 3.97.
sterling declined to 3.96-1/4 just before noon, then strengthened on commercial demand to a high of 3.98-3/8 in the mid-afternoon. It moved off
again just before the close, and the final quotation was 3.98.
Sales of spot sterling by the four reporting banks totaled 1226,000,

from the following sources:

By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Europe and South America)
Total

L 114,000
L 112,000
L 226,000

Purchases of spot sterling amounted to 1328,000, as indicated below:
L 273,000

By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Far East and South America)
Total

L 55,000
L 328,000

The following reporting banks sold cotton bills totaling 117,000, to
the British Control on the basis of the official rate of 4.02-1/2:
L 7,000 by the National City Bank
5,000 by the Guaranty Trust Co.
5,000 by the Chase National Bank
117,000 Total

The other important currencies closed as follows:
French france
Guilders

Swiss france
Belgas

Canadian dollars

.0225-5/8
.5309

.2242-1/2
.1694

12-7/8 % discount

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York bought 886,250 Swiss francs, 30,000

guilders and 30,000 belgas for account of the Bank of Latvia.

CONFIDENTIAL

191
-2- - -

We sold gold valued at $2,000,000 to the Central Bank of Argentina and
$115,000 to the National Bank of Belgium, to be added to their respective
earmarked accounts.

The State Department forwarded to us a cable stating that the Bank of

Sweden was making two shipments of gold totaling $6,760,000 to the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York for account of the Bank of Sweden. While the

disposition of these shipments is unknown at the present time, in all
probability they will be earmarked for account of the Swedish bank upon arrival.
The U. S. Assay Office at New York received today a shipment of gold
valued at $139,000 which had been consigned to the National City Bank, New York,
by the Banque Federale, Bern, Switzerland. We have been advised by the Bureau
of the Mint that approximately $81,700 of this shipment consisted of gold bars
bearing a Russian stamp.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York received cables from the B.I.S. and

the Bank of Sweden requesting it to apply for a license to transfer approxi-

mately 16,000 ounces of gold (about $560,000) from B.I.S. Account #2 to the
account of the Bank of Sweden at the Federal Reserve Bank. B.I.S. Account #2

is gold owned by that institution. The Treasury granted permission to the

Federal to make this transfer.

Although there was no legal holiday in Bombay today and although the
commodity markets in that center were open, the Bombay silver market was re-

ported as closed. We were unable to ascertain the reason for this situation.
The London fixing prices for spot and forward silver, at 21-13/16d and
21-3/4d respectively, showed a gain of 1/16d. The U. S. equivalents were
38.97 and 38.61
Handy and Harman's and the Treasury's prices for foreign silver were
unchanged at 34-3/4₫ and 35$ respectively.
We made eight purchases of silver totaling 775,000 ounces under the
Silver Purchase Act. Of this amount, 450,000 ounces represented sales from
inventory by two refining companies and the remaining 325,000 ounces consisted
of new production from foreign countries, for forward delivery.

BMR.
CONFIDENTIAL

192
GRAY
JR

Berlin
Dated February 3. 1940
Rec'd 9 p.m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

292, February 3, 3 p.m.

In an address delivered yesterday in the first
plenary meeting of the Beirat or Advisory Council of the
Reichsbank formed in accordance with the Reichsbank law

of June 15, 1939. Funk dealt with the financing of the war
and with foreign trade as the main problems with which
the Reichabank is now confronted. The morning press

publishes what is apparently only a summary of Funk's
speech in which he said previously in his Vienna and
Salsburg addresses reported in my telegrams 1721,

October 15. 1 p.m.; 12, January 2, 4 p.m.; and 38,
January 6, 9 a.m.

Yar financing is not so much a monetary problem Funk

stated as a problem of adequate supplies of goods. The

essential task is to effect a shift in production from
civilian to military requirements by rationing consumer
goods and raw materials by redistribution of labor credits

and capital and by directly prohibiting the production
of certain goods. The purchasing power set free by these
restrictions must be methodically absorbed for the
financing

193

2- #292, February 3. 3 p.m., from Berlin.
financing of the war Funk asserted but the problem cannot
be solved merely by applying methods of financial

technique. "We refuse to finance war by overt depreciation
of currency consisting in price and wage increasing or by
concealed currency depreciation in the form of credit
expansion not followed by parallel increase in national
productivity".
In Germany the freed purchasing power is being

utilized in the interest of war financing by means of
taxes and of saving Funk asserted but the art of war

financing consists in preserving the ability of people to
save in spite of the sharp increase in taxation.
In regard to the foreign trade position Funk pointed
out that at present everywhere in Europe preference is

given to raw materials before gold and devisen. The best
"devise" Funk stated is now the high quality workmanship of
German industry. He insisted that this supreme weapon

must be used at least for the time being to defeat the
enemy but after a victorious war Funk prophesied Germanyle

high quality products will assure the position of German
industry in the world and safeguard the welfare of the
German people.
KIRK
RR

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIA

194

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 3, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM Mr. Cochran

At 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon Commander Thompson gave me a copy of
the memorandum dated February 2 which he was submitting to Assistant Secretary Gaston in regard to the investigation which he had made at New York of
shipments to Vladivostok via Manzanillo. Captain Puleston was with us when
Commander Thompson and I discussed the report.

In agreement with them I telephoned Mr. Warren in the Department of
State and summarized the first page of the memorandum, to the effect that
Treasury agents had investigated and found no violation of our regulations
at New York; but that a third inspector had been assigned to the task
already entrusted to two inspectors of keeping a watch on and even opening
packages constituting the shipments in question. I told Mr. Warren we
would let him know if we learned anything further, and hoped that the State
Department would continue to advise us of information received from Mexico.
Commander Thompson visited me again this morning and discussed with
me Mr. Oelsner, who was the subject of my memorandum of February 1. I then
telephoned Mr. Warren stating it was our opinion that Mr. Oelsner might

properly be investigated in connection with the Federal Bureau of Investigation inquiry which was instituted some time ago as a result of the
activities of the German Ambassador in this city. At Commander Thompson's
suggestion, I made the point that Oelsner apparently was an "unregistered
agent" and consequently be looked into by the Department of State and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation on this ground. I told Mr. Warren that the
Treasury Department was not investigating Oelsner. Mr. Warren appreciated
our calling him, and said that he would take up with his friends in the
Department of State and the Federal Bureau of Investigation the question as
to what should be done in the premises.

At 11:30 this morning my friend, Hamish Mitchell, who is on the staff

of Mr. Purvis, came in to present Mr. C. T. Ballantyne, who has been chosen
to succeed Mr. G. Miller Hyde as Secretary General of the Anglo-French
Purchasing Board in Washington, Mr. Hyde having become ill. Mr. Ballantyne
apologized in behalf of Mr. Purvis for not having gotten a message to us

before this time in regard to the availability of a Britisher to look into

the transshipment question at Manzanillo. Ballantyne understands that a
reply will probably be given next week to the effect that there is someone to
in the British Consulate at Guadalajara who could be used. I suggested
Ballantyne that no instructions be given such an officer to proceed to
Manzanillo without checking first with us, since we now have a Vice Consul
of our own temporarily at Manganillo to cover shipping investigations.

K.M.R.

STRICTLY
CONFIDENTIAL
TREASURY DEPARTMENT

195

INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 3, 1940
TO

Secretary Morgenthan

FROM Mr. Cochran

When the Secretary called my office at 5:45 yesterday evening, I told
him that Mr. Pinsent had phoned earlier in the day to state that Mr. Gifford
was ready to make a report to the Secretary and would be glad to call the
first of the week if this might be convenient for the Secretary. In accordance with the Secretary's instructions I have informed Mr. Pinsent that the
Secretary will receive Mr. Gifford at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, February 6.

In talking with the Secretary by telephone I mentioned the report in
the press in regard to our alleged request of the British to pay for their
purchases in this country.with the proceeds of sales of dollar securities
rather than gold. The Secretary may recall that Mr. Schwars brought this
rumor to the Secretary earlier in the week and that I told Mr. Schwars, when
he came to my office after seeing the Secretary, that this was not a correct
statement. We have had two or three references to reports of this character
from London, and one has come in this morning, in Matthews cablegram #164,
from which I quote the following paragraphs:
"This morning's AGENCE ECONOMIQUE carries an American des-

patch that 'the rumors which have circulated at Washington
according to which the United States Treasury asked Great Britain
to make as much of its payments due to the United States as pos-

sible through the sale of British dollar investments rather than

through new shipments of gold have not been confirmed.' The
article then makes brief reference to the recent Federal Reserve
bulletin by the United States government on gold. Commenting
editorially that paper says 'the cables of our American correspondent clearly show that if the United States is not considering,
as rumor had it, refusing to accept foreign payments in gold, the
influx of the yellow metal nevertheless is worrying the American
administration.

There exist for it almost the same problems as for us - in
the reverse sense, so to speak - the consequences of which may in
the end be of the same nature if one cannot find an appropriate
remedy. That journal likewise comments on London press comment

to the effect that the pound is undervalued with respect to the
dollar. 'It is only of course a question of rumors which we have
mentioned from curiosity but there is no doubt that the question
of relationship of the frano-pound-dollar is up at this moment
and not unfavorably for London and Paris.

196

-2At 12 noon today Mr. Pinsent let me know that Mr. Gifford will
arrive in Washington on Monday afternoon. If we desire to advance
the 3:30 appointment scheduled for Tuesday, we should let Mr. Pinsent
know.

197

GRAY

HSM

Paris

Dated February 3, 1940
REC'D 10:25 a. m.

Secretary of State,
Washington.

167, February 3, noon.
FOR TREASURY DEPARTMENT FROM MATTHEWS.

The Paris Municipal Council last night voted to
recommend that the Government institute ration cards

for sugar, coffee, macaroni, Et cetera, Edible oils
and soap in the departments of Seine, Seine Et Cise

and Seine Et Marne, as a measure to "Equalize sacrifices"

and to offset the hoarding of such products which is
developing.

The texts of the loan and credit agreements concluded on October 19, 1939, and January 8, 1940, bEtwEEn
the French, British and Turkish Governments WERE pub-

lished in today's Journal Official, (I presume you have
these texts or their principal provisions from London).
The press reports that American war veterana who

served in France or on the high seas in the World War
may obtain EXEMPTION from the special 15% tax on salaries

of men of military age who are not mobilized ( tels gram
No. 49, January 10, 6 P. m.).
e
BULLITT
KLP

198

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 3. 1940
Secretary Morgenthan

TO

CONFIDENTIAL

Mr. Cochran

FROM

The foreign exchange market was extremely small. Sterling opened at
3.97-1/2 and closed at 3.98-1/2.

Sales of spot sterling by the four reporting banks totaled 114,000,

from the following sources:

By commercial concerns

54,000
60,000

By foreign banks (South America)

Total.. 114,000

Purchases of spot sterling amounted to 121,000, as indicated below:
L 21,000

By commercial concerns

-0-

By foreign banks

Total..L 21,000

The following reporting banks sold cotton bills totaling 187,000 to the
British Control on the basis of the official rate of 4.02-1/2.
L 62,000 by the National City Bank
15,000 by the Bank of Manhattan
10,000 by the Guaranty Trust Co.

L 87,000 Total

The other important currencies closed as follows:
French france
Guilders

.0225-3/4
.5309

Swiss france

.2242-1/2

Belgas

.1691

Canadian dollars

12-13/16% discount

We sold gold valued at $2,000,000 to the Central Bank of Uruguay to be

added to its earmarked account.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York informed us of the following shipments

of gold:

$ 4,026,000 from Norway, shipped by the Bank of Norway to the Federal Reserve

Bank of New York, to be earmarked for the account of the National
Bank of Denmark.

199
- -2 -

1,680,000 from Switzerland, shipped by the B.I.S. to the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York to be earmarked for account of the B.I.S.
823,000 from India shipped by the National City Bank, Bombay, to the American
Trust Company, San Francisco, for sale to the U. S. Mint.
6,529,000 Total

The State Department forwarded to us a cable stating that the following
shipments of gold would be made from Australia:

4,131,000 shipped by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia to the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York.

154,000 shipped by the Bank of New South Wales to the American Trust Company,

San Francisco.
$ 4,285,000 Total

Both of these shipments will be sold to the U. S. Mint at San Francisco.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York received cables from the B.I.S. and

the Netherlands Bank requesting it to apply for license to transfer approximately
16,000 ounces of gold (about $560,000) from B.I.S. Account #2 to the account of
the Netherlands Bank at the Federal Reserve Bank. B.I.S. Account *2 is gold
owned by that institution. The Treasury granted permission to the Federal to
make this transfer.

In a report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showing deposits
for account of Asia as reported by the New York agencies of Japanese banks on
January 31, such deposits totaled $37,560,000, an increase of $425,000 since
the last report on January 24. Of this amount, $27,520,000 represented deposits
with the Yokohama Specie Bank by their branches in China. The overdraft on the
books of the Yokohama Specie Bank in New York for account of its head office in
Japan was $78,153,000, an increase of $5,634,000 since January 24.

CONFIDENTIAL

200

From :- Mr Purvis
by messenger

201

February 3, 1940

Mr. Daniel C. Roper has addressed twelve
letters and one telegram to the French Purchasing
Commission or to Mr. Bloch-Laine, and ten letters

to Mr. Arthur B. Purvis, of which the enclosed copy

marked "A" is a typical example, recommending suppliers
or manufacturers of materials which might be desired
for purchase by the French or British Purchasing
Commissions. Such correspondence extended over a
period from December 9, 1939 to January 29, 1940.
Non-commital replies were made to Mr. Roper's first
letters, and no replies were sent after December 16,
1939.

Letters of similar character were also sent

by Mr. Roper to Sir Owen Chalkley, and to Mr. Garreau-

Dombasle, French Commercial Attache, during November
and December 1939.

The total recommended manufacturers or

suppliers amounted to twenty-two, according to a list
thereof enclosed with Mr. Roper's letter of January 29,
1940, to Mr. Arthur B. Purvis and copy of which is

attached hereto, marked "B". Neither the British

nor the French Purchasing Commission has had dealings
with any manufacturer or supplier so recommended,

except in the case of one transaction which was negotiated by the French Commission before the above
mentioned correspondence began.

On January 6, 1940, Mr. Roper wrote to Mr. BlochLaine, introducing a Mr. Herbert Houston who in turn
advised Mr. Bloch-Laine by letter dated January 9, 1940,
that he and Mr. Roper had developed a plan which they
believed would be of far reaching service to the French
and English, relating to placing the Commission in touch

with important manufacturers in this country.
In a letter from Mr. Herbert Houston dated

November 8, 1939, he states, "I have become associated

with the Hon. Daniel Roper etc. etc. and with Mr. Melvin
Hildreth, an able member of the Washington Bar. We are
representing some important manufacturers who are in a

position to go into production immediately etc. etc."

202

-2-

In his letter to Mr. Arthur B. Purvis of January

29, 1940, Mr. . Roper indicates that he is acting as
"advisory Counsel" for the twenty-two firms he has recom-

mended. In the same letter he says, "I am still being

approached by reputable concerns who seek my advice in

making submissions to you", and adds, that he will not
make any further recommendation unless advised that
"further submissions of carefully investigated sources

will be of service to you (Mr. Purvis)".

"A"

203

DANIEL C. ROPER

Tower Building
Washington

December 9, 1939

Honourable Arthur B. Purvis
Director General of Purchases
British Purchasing Commission
25 Broadway

New York City
Dear Sir:

I am attaching a request from Frederick Stearns
& Company, manufacturing pharmacists of Detroit, Michigan,
U.S.A., for consideration as a source of supply of pharmaceutical
preparations.

This is one of the best known and most reputable
pharmaceutical companies in the United States. The company has

a large export business in all parts of the world and is equipp-

ed to supply any of the articles listed in its catalog in any
quantity required. Its financial responsibility is of the

highest and it has an established reputation with respect to
the performance of its contracts.

I commend this company to your consideration when
the question of purchasing pharmaceuticals comes before you.

Very truly yours,
(Signed)

Daniel C. Roper

der/v
Inc.

"B"
204
DANIEL C. ROPER

Tower Building
Washington

January 29, 1940

Honourable Arthur B. Purvis, Chairman
British Purchasing Commission

15 Broad Street
New York City

Dear Mr. Purvis:

During the past three months, doubtless because
of my former position as Secretary of Commerce, there have

come to me a number of outstanding American manufacturers and

producers, on behalf of a carefully selected group of whom I
have forwarded submissions to you in which these firms asked

that they be listed as sources of supply in their respective

fields. Your courteous acknowledgments of their tenders have
been appreciated.

In each case, as advisory counsel for these firms,
I have satisfied myself by careful investigation of their
reputation and standing and their ability to carry out any
contract into which they may enter.

I am forwarding herewith similar letters from the

following companies :

Wilton Woolen Company, Wilton, Maine - blankets
The Frederick City Packing Company, Frederick, Maryland canned foods

Skinner and Eddy Corporation, Seattle, Washington - canned
salmon

Badger Milk Products Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin evaporated milk
The Axton-Fisher Tobacco Company, Louisville, Kentucky cigarettes

Williams Drilling Syndicate, Boston, Massachusetts crude oil
J. Sklar Manufacturing Company, Brooklyn, New York - surgical
instruments

Filice and Perrelle Canning Company, Inc., Richmond, California
canned fruits

The E. L. Patch Company, Boston, Massachusetts - ointment

205

Honourable Arthur B. Purvis

January 29, 1940
Page Two

I have impressed upon each of the firms whose
tenders I have forwarded to you that they must be prepared
to meet open competition with respect to price and quality

of goods. In the case of those companies who regularly sell
to the United States Government, it is distinctly understood

that prices quoted your commission must not exceed the lowest
price currently made to their own government.

In the submission of these tenders it has been
my earnest endeavor to facilitate in some measure your very
difficult task. A list of all companies whose letters I have
forwarded to you is attached.

I am still being approached by reputable concerns
who seek my advice in making submissions to you, but as I feel

that I have rather broadly covered the field of essential non-

military items, I shall make no further recommendations unless
you
advise
myservice
furthertosubmissions
of carefully investigated
sources
willthat
be of
you.
Very sincerely yours,
(Signed)

Daniel C. Roper

206

COP

January 29, 1940

The Axton-Fisher Tobacco Company, Louisville, Kentucky
cigarettes
Badger Milk Products Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin evaporated milk
Davis & Geck, Brooklyn, New York - Sterile Sutures & Ligatures
-

Davol Rubber Company, Providence, Rhode Island - rubber

specialties

Filice & Perrelle Canning Company, Inc., Richmond, California canned fruits
The Frederick City Packing Company, Frederick, Maryland canned foods

Great Western Shoe Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin - shoes
Hodgman Rubber Company, Framingham, Massachusetts - rubber

specialties
The Hug Company, Highland, Illinois - trucks
H. Kramer & Company, Chicago, Illinois - ingots

The Lederle Laboratories, New York City - biologicals
Metropolitan Business Service, Brooklyn, New York - blankets
Wilton Woolen Company, Wilton, Maine - blankets
The E. L. Patch Company, Boston, Massachusetts - ointment
The Ohio Chemical and Manufacturing Company, Cleveland, Ohio anesthetic gases and equipment

Rose Packing Company, Chicago, Illinois - frozen beef, lard
& packing house products

Schwarzenbach Huber Company, New York City - parachute silk

Skinner and Eddy Corporation, Seattle, Washington - canned salmon

J. Sklar Manufacturing Company, Brooklyn, New York -instruments
surgical
Frederick Stearns & Company, Detroit, Michigan - pharmaceuticals
Weil Brothers, New York City - cotton

Williams Drilling Syndicate, Boston, Massachusetts - crude oil

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

207

INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE February 5, 1940

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

Mr. White

FROM

Subject: on
Effect
of Allied Purchases of $1 billion of Airplanes
the American Economy
I. How will England and France pay for the planes?

If England and France buy $1 billion of airplanes in the

United States during 1940, they will have an unfavorable balance
of payments with all countries requiring foreign exchange

settlements of 1 to 2 billion dollars.

To meet this outpayment they will have $800 million of
newly mined gold and they will be forced to dip into their
foreign exchange reserves to the extent of $700 to $1,200 million

during 1940.
(

(See appendix for basis of our estimate of their balance

of payments for 1940.)

II. The Allies have liquid foreign exchange reserves greatly
in excess of sums needed for 1940.

In our memorandum of November 12, 1939, we indicated that

they had $14 to $15 billion of foreign exchange assets, of
which almost half could be liquidated within a year with ease.
The remaining half could be liquidated in the ensuing few years,
if the situation were desperate enough to require such sacrifice. However, it must be emphasized that although England and
France could raise the above sum in foreign exchange during the

next few years, to do so would constitute a terrific blow to
the economic status of the Empires.

They now have roughly: (a) $61 billion of gold; (b) $1 billion of dollar balances; (c) $1 billion of United States securities;

(d) $1 billion of

in neutral could net at least $2 billion;

vestments direct countries, investments which in the
United States;
(e) incountries
that the

would
be
in
These
estimated at their liquidation value and not at their current

United and, (f) States $2 billion of investments interested in purchasing. Empire are

value.

208
2-

Division
of Monetary
Research

It would be most desirable from our viewpoint that the
British and French raise the sums needed to pay for their
unfavorable balance of payments with the United States by the
sale of American securities. Their unfavorable balance of
payments with us will be the bulk of their unfavorable balance
with all countries, and thus may amount to more than $1 billion.

However, the Securities and Exchange Commission has informed

us that it is their opinion that only $300 million to $500

million of foreign held securities can be safely absorbed by
our markets in 1940.

III. What effects will the expenditures have on the American
economy?

(a) The purchase of $1 billion of planes and accessories

in the United States in the year 1940 will result in at least
industries which will raise the level of business activity

a doubling of the capacity of the airplane and auxiliary
throughout the United States.

The effectiveness of these expenditures on the absorption
of the nation's unemployed is not likely to be as great as an
expenditure of equivalent sums on products of other industries.
The business is concentrated in a relatively small group of
business concerns and the proportion of the total expenditures
which will go to cover depreciation and profits is much higher
than is the case in expenditures for other commodities. In
addition, the number of workers employed in the construction of
airplanes is small per dollar of expenditure because the
workers are highly paid and because each worker is putting in
long hours of work due to a shortage of skilled workers.
(b) The program of war purchases in the United States will
have adverse effects on this country, principally through the
disturbing effects on agriculture. England and France will
reduce their purchases of tobacco (which amounted to $110 million in 1938), fruits (which amounted to $35 million in 1938),
and meat products (which amounted to $40 million in 1938). The
loss of this outlet for our agricultural products is to be
added to the loss of the German market and it is unlikely that
new foreign outlets will be found during the year 1940 to remove the surpluses and prevent sharp reductions in domestic
prices of important agricultural products.

(c) The continued inflow of gold into the United States
will increase public criticism of our gold policy and intensify
the public fears as to the future of gold.

209

-3.

Division of Monetary
Research

The British and French will be called upon to sell their
newly mined gold of $800 million and perhaps as much as $800
million of their gold stocks. In addition, some neutral countries of Europe will be forced to sell us gold to meet an un-

favorable balance of payments arising out of the war. Since we
will buy our domestic production of $175 million and the current

production of South America and Asia, we may get as much as

$2 billion of gold next year.
(d) Excess reserves will be increased by our gold purchases. Excess reserves are now $5 billion and will probably
amount to some $7 billion by the end of 1940. This will increase the need for additional powers of control over reserves
in the event a boom gets started. It will assuredly arouse cries
of the danger of inflation even though the actual influence of
the additional reserves in bringing about inflation will be
negligible.

(e) The disadvantages of the expenditure of a billion dollars on airplanes in the year 1940 will come in later years when
the purchases are discontinued. At that time we will have an
over-expanded industry which will necessitate the disemployment
of a large number of highly skilled workers. There will also
be a curtailment of construction expenditures when the industry
18 built up to its maximum size, with consequent adverse effects
on the level of business activity unless a source for new
construction activity appears when the airplane industry ceases
to expand.

IV. Recommendations:

Such adverse effects as the purchase of a billion dollars
of airplanes by the Allies in the year 1940 will have, may be
met in part by the following suggestions:
(a) A special government program to absorb agricultural
surpluses of tobacco, fruits and hog products which would have
been sold to the belligerent countries in peace time.
(b) Investigate the possibilities of adding some form of

facilitate
the for
workers when
and
tothe
contract
in

dismissal wage to the system of unemployment compensation to

years. The now accumulating reserves for

later the airplane process auxiliary of disemployment industries begin

of reserves for the workers might
on the same principle. (A separate memorandum

depreciation be accumulated equipment, companies and are

1s being prepared which will elaborate this proposal.)

210

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Division of Monetary
Research

APPENDIX

We estimated that the British and French Empires will have
an unfavorable balance of payments with foreign countries of
$500 to $1,000 million in 1940 -- exclusive of their purchases
of airplanes in the United States.
Our estimate of the balance of payments of the British and
French Empires is based upon the following factors which are
already apparent in the foreign exchange accounts of the

Empires: (a) there will be a sharp reduction of non-military
imports from foreign countries; (b) their exports to foreign

countries will not be reduced below the 1938 levels, but
actually may be higher; (c) their net income on service account
will not be reduced by more than $200 million from the 1938
income.

The United Kingdom reduced its imports of non-military commodities from the United States by 20 percent during the
months of November and December, 1939, compared with the same

period of 1938. If this same percentage is applied to the imports of the British and French Empires from all foreign countries it would amount to a reduction of imports by more than
$1 billion. This will be offset in part by an increase in military purchases other than airplanes but there is no indication
at present that the amounts of such purchases will be as large
as the decline in non-military purchases.
The course of exports cannot yet be approximated since the
British program for the expansion of exports has not yet been
elaborated. However, our imports from United Kingdom were 8
percent higher in the first three months of war compared with

the same period of 1938, indicating that British exports to

foreign exchange areas were at least being maintained during
the recent months. United States imports from France, however,
were 20 percent less than a year ago during the first three
months
of war, but November imports were higher than a year
ago.

Their unfavorable balance of trade, it is estimated, will

be from $1,500 to $2,000 million (compared with $2,000 million
in 1938), offset by net income on service account of $1,000
million (compared with $1,200 in 1938). To this net amount of
$500 to $1,000 million must be added their expenditures on airplanes, now contemplated at $1 billion for 1940.

The unfavorable balance of payments in 1940 will be further
reduced by the British efforts to convert their unfavorable
balance of trade with neutral countries into blocked sterling

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Division
of Monetary
Research

which will not require the expenditure of free foreign exchange
but will be paid for either by increased British exports or by
forced loans from the neutral countries. Arrangements to block
sterling payments for the excess of purchases have already been

made with Argentina and Sweden.

There is a possible source of expenditure which cannot be
estimated in advance, and yet may be a significant item in the
balance of payments of England and France -- e.g., political
loans of the type made to Turkey. The Allies loaned Turkey
b15 million of gold, in addition to large amounts of blocked
sterling. Similar political loans to Italy and other neutrals
would be a drain on the foreign exchange resources of the

Allies. It is the uncertainty of these non-economic aspects
of the balance of payments of the British and French Empires
which necessitates the range of $500 million in our estimate.

212
February 5, 1940
5:50 p.m.

WMJr:

Hello.

Operator:

The Attorney General. Go ahead.

MrJr:

Hello.

Robert
Jackson:

Hello.

Myr:

I'm sorry you're not well, Bob.

J:

Well, just under the weather a little bit. I
think in two or three days I'll be out all right.
Well, cut out the liquor.

(Laughs) I think that's the trouble. I haven't

had enough.

All right. Good for you.
I had a message from Ed Foley to call you.
Well, he -- we had some talk the other day about
that Associated matter.
Yeah.

And I talked with the President about what they

proposed to do over there and he expressed himself

as very much dissatisfied with it.

Yeah.

And from what I understand they are making some

claim of having clearance for it.

Who 18 they?

The Hanes people.

I see. Clearance with the President?
No, with you.
HMJr:

Well, they -- everybody knows that Hanes asked me
when he was first -- week he was here whether it

was all right with me and I told him yes because

213

-2nobody can -- nobody was interested in it at that

time and there was no reason that I should say
otherwise.
J:

HMJr:
J:

HMJr:
J:

HMJr:

Yeah. Well

That was -- must be a month or six weeks ago.

That's the -- the situation.
I think the first day or two after he left here.
Well, that's the -- that's the situation about it.

I see. Well, I think it's -- it's the S.E.C.'s

baby and they better carry it. I've been carrying
the torch here for seven years for the Treasury,

publicly.
J:

Well, all I know about it is that that's what the

situation 18 and I don't know what they'11 do, I'm

sure.
HMJr:

Well, I -- I don't either -- I mean, they asked --

Foley asked me Thursday night whether Tom Corcoran
would be agreeable to me and my answer was yes.
J:

Well, this other thing was apparently arranged in
advance of that 80 that that couldn't be done now.

HMJr:

I see.

J:

That is, I judge it can't.

HMJr:

Well

J:

They've got a bad slate there. It's -- I think the
President is justified in feeling annoyed about it.

HMJr:

I see.

J:

But maybe there can't be anything done about it now.

HMJr:

Well I don't know -- I mean, it's -- I don't know
what --- I think it's entirely up to the S.E.C.
when they appear before the Judge.

214

-3 -

HMJr:

Well, the difficulty is that he has more or less
committed himself on the belief that what he was
doing was satisfactory to the Administration and
I don't know whether he'11 back up on it or not.
I see. O.K.

J:

All right.

HMJr:

Thank you.

J:

Goodbye.

J:

215

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE

TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM

Mr. Coohran

February 5, 1940

CONFIDENTIAL

The foreign exchange market was quiet today with a fair volume of

sterling transactions. Sterling opened at 3.98-1/4. During the morning,
the rate strengthened under the impetus of moderate buying by metal and

other commercial firms. At noontime, the quotation was 3.99-1/8. It

closed at 3.98-7/8.

Sales of spot sterling by the four reporting banks and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York totaled 1311,000, from the following sources:
By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Europe)
By Federal Reserve Bank of New York (for Yugoslavia)
Total

L 121,000
L 165,000

L 25,000

L 311,000

Purchases of spot sterling amounted to 1236,000. as indicated below:
L 161,000

By commercial concerns

By foreign banks (Europe)

Total

L 75,000
L 236,000

The following reporting banks sold cotton bills totaling 116,000 to the
British Control on the basis of the official rate of 4.02-1/2:
L 8,000 by the National City Bank

5,000 by the Guaranty Trust Co.
3,000 by the Chase National Bank
116,000 Total

The other important currencies closed as follows:
French francs
Guilders
Swiss france

.0226-1/8
.5308-1/2
.2242-1/2

Belgas

.1690

Canadian dollars

12-3/4% discount

In the last few days. the quotation for the Cuban peso has improved and
today it was quoted at 8-1/2% discount.
Ye purchased $10,000,000 in gold from the earmarked account of the Bank

of France.

216
-2- The Federal Reserve Bank of New York informed us that the Chase National

Bank reported the receipt of a cable from the State Bank of the U.S.S.R., Moscow,
advising of a shipment of approximately $5,000,000 in gold consigned to the Chase
Bank, San Francisco, on the S. S. Kim. The S. S. Kim is due to arrive in San
Francisco tomorrow, February 6. The Chase stated that this shipment was made
from Vladivostok, Asiatic Russia, and that it is under the impression that the
shipment was made by the State Bank of the U.S.S.R. The Federal also stated
that the Chase National Bank was instructed to sell the gold to the U. S. Mint
at San Francisco and to credit the dollar proceeds to the account of the State
Bank of the U.S.S.R.

In view of the fact that (a) this shipment was made from Russian territory,
(b) the Chase Bank stated that it had no interest in the gold, and (c) the proceeds of the shipment will be credited to the account of the State Bank of the
U.S.S.R. with the Chase National Bank, there is no doubt that when this gold
is purchased it will be a direct purchase of gold by the United States from
Russia.

The Federal Reserve Bank also reported that the Yokohama Specie Bank, Kobe,
was shipping $5,000,000 in gold to the Yokohama Specie Bank, San Francisco, for

sale to the U. S. Mint in that city. This is the first shipment of gold reported

to us from Japan since December 26.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York received cables from the B.I.S. and the
Netherlands Bank requesting it to apply for a license to transfer approximately
16,000 ounces of gold (about $560,000) from B.I.S. Account #2 to the account of
the Netherlands Bank at the Federal Reserve Bank. B.I.S. Account #2 is gold
owned by that institution. (An identical transfer was made on Saturday, February
3.) The Treasury granted permission to the Federal to make this transfer.

In Bombay, the quotation for silver worked out to an equivalent of 39.86

off 5/16 A Reuters despatch from Bombay, appearing on today's Dow Jones ticker,
reported that all markets in Bombay would be closed tomorrow in protest against

the introduction of India's excess profits tax bill, a retroactive measure which

seeks to impose a levy of 50% on excess profits made in any accounting period
after April 1, 1939.

The London fixing prices for spot and forward silver were 21-3/4d (off 1/16d)
and 21-5/8d (off 1/8d) respectively. The U. S. equivalents were 38.97$ and
38.50
Handy and Harman's and the Treasury's prices for foreign silver were unchanged at 34-3/4$ and 35 respectively.
We made ten purchases of silver totaling 860,000 ounces under the Silver
Purchase Act. Of this amount, 200,000 ounces represented a sale from inventory
by one of the refining companies and 135,000 ounces was trading silver which an
American refining company purchased some time ago in New York. Both of these
sales were for delivery on February 6. The remaining 525,000 ounces consisted
of new production from foreign countries, for forward delivery.

KMR
CONFIDENTIAL