FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY Social Security Board Employment Service (from Labor Dept.) Office of Education (from Interior Dept.) Public Health Service (from Treas. Dept.) National Youth Administration {from W.P. A} Civilian Conservation Corps FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY Bureau of Public Roads (from Agr.Dept.) Public Bulidings Procurement (from Treomry Dept.) Bulldings M {from National Park Service) U.S. Housing Authority Public Works Administration (to become Works Projects Adminktration) Works Progress Administration FEDERAL LOAN AGENCY Reconstruction Finanez Corporation Electric Home ard Farm Authority Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Federal Home Lozn Bank Board Federal Housing Administration Export-Import Bank (Farm Credit Administration, Federal Form Mortgage Corporation ond Come modity Credit Corporation to be trons. ferred to Agricuitural Department) TO THE PRESIDENCY Budget Bureau [from Trecsury Dept.) Central Statistical Board {to be combined with Budget Bureou) National Resources Committee (10 be President's planning ogency) Federal Employment Stabilization Office (from Commerce Dept. to be consol dated withNot'| Resources Committee) EUROPE: Prelude, Song, Postlude Democracy was adamant one week before Der Fuehrer gave Reichstag and the world his an- swer to President Roosevelt's peace appeal. By four days before speech time Hitler had beceme adamant, Britain and the U. S. cautiously shifting their stand to show simul- taneously that democracies (1) will not, and (2) can be persuaded to, participate in another Munich con- ference. Britain showed appeasement in- clinations by rushing her previous- ly recalled ambassador, pro-Nazi Sir Nevile Henderson, back to Berlin. Next day, as Nazi Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop delighted- ly kept Sir Nevile waiting outside his door, Britain indignantly inaug- urated her first peacetime conscrip- tion and presented parliament with a $6,213,000,000 budget (of which 47 U. conquests in favor of ““peace before war’’ via negotiation. Meanwhile the treasury wooed Hitler's good will by modifying its 25 per cent penalty against German imports. Poland prepared to defend her borders at all cost. Rumania de- cided to avoid an anti-Nazi pact. Japan fidgeted excitedly and com- plained she did not want war with democracies despite her anti-Com- SIR NEVILE HENDERSON Herr von Ribbentrop had fun. mitern pact with Italy and Germa- ny. The Balkans were apparently a solid Nazi front. With Rome and Paris waiting in strange silence, the world finished its quavering prelude to the most vital speech Adolf Hit- ler will ever make: Song. Never a brief speaker, Der Fuehrer took more than an hour to lay foundation for a point-by-point rejection of Mr. Roosevelt's peace plea, a rebuttal he interlarded with fine sarcasm. Biggest pre-sarcasm revelations: ~ (1) Germany considers the Anglo- French-Polish non-aggression pact unfriendly, therefore denounces its 10-year friendship pact with Poland. But Poland can still have the treaty Germany sécretly proposed several months ago, a 25-year friendship pact contingent upon return of Dan- zig to the Reich and designation of a pathway from Germany to East Prussia through the Polish corridor. In return, Hitler guarantees the Pol- ish corridor and recognizes Polish commercial rights in Danzig. (2) Treaty or no, Danzig must be returned to Germany. (3) Hitler denounces the Anglo- German naval limitations treaty, but will gladly discuss the problem to prevent a naval race, Highlight of the rebuttal was that Germany will give non-aggression promises to each of the nations al- legedly ‘‘threatened,” but that each guarantee will be made individually upon petition and on a basis of ab- solute reciprocity. Greatest rebut- tal sarcasm concerned such “threat. " ened’’ nations as Ireland and Pal- estine, which—according to Hitler— have more to fear from English sup- pression than German aggression, Point-by-point rebuttal: (1) Mr. Roosevelt pointed to three European and one African nation whose independence has been ter- minated since 1936. Answer: What is “independence,” anyway? Alba- nia, Austria and Czecho-Slovakia really had their “independence” ter- minated after the World war. As for Africa, Mussolini's Ethiopian conquest merely followed a prece- dence of aggression established by France and Britain. 2) sive? Answer: kept peace since 10918, compared with repeated U. S. intervention in the world's wars. (3) Has any nation the right to wage war except in self defense? Answer: No, and certainly the U. 8S. did not enter the World war in self (4) Can world problems be solved via conference? Answer: Yes, the- oretically; no, practically. Exam- ple is the League of Nations which shunned, thereby admit- ting the failure of peace by confer- ence. Hence Germany followed U. was the U. 8S. civil war. of the speech was (1) a promise that Germany intended no invasion, (2) a supplication that President Roose- velt take the lead in world peace efforts. For British, biggest news was a very obvious bid for good will despite denunciation of the naval pact. Postlude. Best opinion held the two-hour harangue a conciliatory re- fusal of Mr. Roosevelt's appeal. Said Kansas’ Sen. Arthur Capper: “After listening to Hitler, I still hope Eu- rope’s troubles can be settled by peaceful methods.” Informed ob- servers left their loud speakers ex- pecting both the U. S. and Britain to make new overtures, confident that war had been averted for the nonce, but certain above all else that Adolf Hitler positively holds the European whip hand, WHITE HOUSE: Reorganization “Dictator” criticism notwithstand- ing, U. S. governmental reorganiza- tion is substantially a sound idea if it promotes economy and efficiency by lumping miscellaneous, isolated and similarly functioning offices un- der a single administrator. Last year’s reorganization bill stumbled partly because it might have given an unscrupulous future President too much power. Modified and passed this session, it allows the President six administrative assist. ants and permits him to draft re- organization plans which congress must accept entirely or reject with- in 60 days. Already submitted is the major portion of Mr. Roosevelt's plan (see chart above) designed ‘to make de- mocracy work—to strengthen the arms of democracy in peace or war and ensure the solid blessings of free government . . .” Three new agencies (public works, social se- curity, loans) will be managed by three of the six new $12,000-a-year administrative assistants, each of which will have a $9,000-a-year as- sistant administrator. Lacking cab- inet portfolio (the original plan con- templated new cabinet posts for se- curity and work agencies), the new administrative assistants will never- theless be virtually of that rank. Two more reorganization plans to come will (1) shift bureaus from one department to another, thus secur- ing more logical classifications, and (2) reorganize intra-departmental machinery. Biggest contemplated objective jn the latter plan, since dropped, was consolidation of all six of the treas.ury’s investigative units, a step the Fresident finally decided might lead to a U. 8. copy of Gér- many’s Gestapo or Russia's Ogpu. PHILIPPINES: Problem Child Less than a decade has passed since the U. 8. fought Philippine independence demands, but tables have a way of turning. Given con- gressional assurance of early free- dom, Philippine President Manuel Quezon hardly had time to exult be- fore Japan turned imperialistic, swaggered into China and began grabbing off every piece of unpro- tected real estate within Asiatic waters. Since Japs already hold a strong commercial position in Ma- nil, moreover since even a doublg- strength U. 8. Pacific fleet might not be able to hold the islands against sudden attack, many Amer- icans believe their nation should leave the Philippines before getting involved in war. Added impetus sentment over concessions to Fili- pino sugar. Sensing that the U. S. was anxious to pull stakes, Manuel Quezon last year appealed to President Roose- velt and won an administration- sponsored proposal calling for polit- ical independence in 1946, the 25 per cent tariff being increased by 5 per cent a year until wholly ef- fective in 1961. Since President Quezon will not be able to attend hearings this year, the bill is being tabled until next session. When he does arrive, Mr. Quezon will be of- fered an even stronger deal which members of the Senate committee on territories and insular posses- mously, albeit secretly, The deal: If Filipinos will cut political ties with the U. S. in 1942, current 25 per cent tariff rates will continue until 1946 as under the administration bill. annually until the U. S. washes its hands of the whole affair in 1953. Still officially unannounced, the substitute bill (suggested by Mary- land's Sen. Millard E. Tydings) has been hushed for fear Japan may sail into Manila immediately, con- fident the U. S. does not care to defend the harbor Admiral Dewey stormed so heroically in 1898, BOLIVIA: Democratic Dictator Forbears of Bolivia's 35-year-old President German Busch came from the country which supplied his bap- tismal name, but for two genera- tions Busches have been loyal Bo- livians. In 1935 German Busch emerged from the Gran Chaco war BOLIVIA AND BUSCH His plan may work, with Paraguay to find his country's government in horrible shape. Friendly to labor and business, boasting strong Catholic support, Youngster Busch became provision al president in July, 1937, when Col. David Toro's “socialistic’’ state was toppled. Last May he was constitu- tionally re-elected, beginning a task from which lesser men might have turned away. Plagued by Naziism and Fascism, bankrupt and facing possible revolu- tion if Bolivia's three Chaco war parties (Liberal, Republican, Social- ist Republican) won the May legis- lative election, President Busch sur- prised the world by announcing a new type political animal, dictator- ship to prepare for “a real democ- racy.” Observers give German Busch a good chance of succeeding. Having canceled the election, dissolved his congress and abolished constitution- al guarantees on the plausible as- sumption that restive Bolivia does not deserve democracy at this mo- ment, Colonel Busch is the world's first dictator to (1) invite “patriotic” criticism of his regime; (2) reject his cabinet's resignation; (3) view Fascism and Naziism “with pain,” and (4) promise an election five to eight months hence to let Bolivia decide its own destiny. PEOPLE: Shortstop to Cardinal? Named archbishop of New York Hayes, Most Reverend Francis J. Spellman, 49-year-old auxiliary bish- op of Boston whose boyhood friends at Whitman, Mass., remember him as the town’s best baseball short. stop and a better-than-average box- er. Forecast: That Archbishop Speil- man will also be named cardinal st the June consistory in Rome. @ Appointed to the securities and exchange commission, liberal Leon Henderson, 44-year-old former NIRA board man and WPA economist, € Silenced by Scotland Yard, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, from telling reporters about White House living quarters planned for King George and Queen Elizabeth during their June visit. @ Ousted from Rome, Richard Mowrer, correspondent for the Chi- cago Daily News, for his “unfriend. ly” dispatches. Last November 20 another Daily News man, Frank Euless, was also invited to leave WASHINGTON,—*1 am supreme- ly confident of one thing—we are making a dent in the job of getting back some of our foreign trade that was lost to other nations in the | last few years. Nobody can be sure | that we ever will get all of it back, | but I am hopeful because this little institution of ours here is showing that it can function safely and sat- isfactorily."” That statement, perhaps, is the best summary I can give of the philosophy of Warren Lee Pierson, the president—and pretty largely the heart and soul—of the export- import bank. Likewise, it rather de- lineates the program of that little- known federal agency; because Mr. Pierson is determined to see-Amer- ican products, farm or factory, mov- ing as of old into the hands of users and consumers in foreign lands. Moreover, to analyze the outlook of that he believes the way to restore people to jobs in this country is to It is curiously true that some of | the federal agencies which are doing important work and doing it ef- ficiently are least known to the gen- eral public. They have no staff of press agents; they seldom “break into print,” yet they serving all of the people well. have been showing how our exports have declined through many months. The records give one the impression that the lines are in a race to see which one can dive faster or deeper. nation of producers. Secretary Hull's reciprocal trade treaties have been getting exactly nowhere; and Secretary Wallace's ideas for sell ing our farm products have proved to be nothing but dreams and, like { dreams, they vanished the next | morning, except that perhaps the next day Mr. Wallace's publicity staff announced another plan. Solution of Unemployment Is to Encourage Industry “What,” I asked Mr. Pierson, “is the answer?” His reply was quoted as the intro- ductory paragraph. He seemed { fully to recognize all of the difficul- | ties confronting the United States at the moment. Further, there was every evidence that Mr. Pierson is one of the few officials of govern- ment who are aware that the solu- tion to our unemployment problem {is to assist industry so that it can | re-employ workers. Unless indus- try can be encouraged, it appears { that the nation is going to continue | with 10,000,000 unemployed as it has | for the last few years. 1 found it | refreshing, therefore, to hear Mr. | Pierson talk about how a few dozen large factories have been kept open | and with relatively full payrolls be- | cause the export-import bank was {able to help foreign buyers who {wanted American products but i could not pay cash for them. For reasons that I will mention subsequently, however, 1 had some misgivings about the operations of the export-import bank. 1 doubted that there would be repayment of money advanced by the bank. “Well, the default is a thing that happens to a greater or less extent wherever credit is extended,” Mr. { Pierson explained. “If there were {never any defaults, there ‘would be ino risk attached to banking busi- ness. But, unfortunately, that ele- { ment must be taken into considera- tion. The fact that there is credit risk is why this export-import bank was organized. Of course, there | were other reasons, but the instabil- {ity of some foreign governments, | the lack of exchange and such con- {ditions made it necessary for our {government to step in and help those who are trying to export American-made goods. Collateral Behind Notes Is Guarantee of Payment “It is to be remembered that | goods for export go in larger quan- {tities and that necessarily larger sums of money are needed to han- dle the transactions. In addition, we have found that, in many in- stances, the buyers were what can be termed as good credit risks, but they were unable to make payments of such large sums at one time. Nor were the American manufac- turers able to wait for three or four or five years. To do so would ex- haust their resources. That is where we come into the picture, “Take a case like this: A South American railroad company wanted to buy some locomotives. Those things cost money. They wanted American engines. But they wanted to pay the bill on an installment basis. We agreed to take about 60 per cent of the notes. Com- mercial banks with which the man- ufacturer was dealing agreed to take over the remainder on a short term basis.” I had some misgivings. treasury during the World war. In rather had been impressed upon me. I told Mr. Pierson of my feelings. “That cannot be so in our case,” he explained. ‘““We have collateral, We have ways of collecting. There are guarantees behind the notes we have received, for example, in the locomotives. We have no fears at all.” The guarantees, the collateral, about which Mr. Pierson spoke, I learned, were in the shape of a bank endorsement. That is to say, one New York and other large cities in the United States, has added its promise to pay to, the promissory notes given by the pur- chaser. Mr. Pierson did not say to me that, should the South Amer- happened before, the export-impert this Mr. Pierson gave no inti- South American deposits in country. tered his thoughts. Concentrate on Financing Exports to South America At the moment, there seems to be quite a concentration of effort to aid in financing exports to South Amer- Of course, there have been credits arranged for several places in Europe, too, and also in China. Mr. Pierson is very optimistic about future trade with China. But the bulk of the loans have been in con- nection with South American propo- And the fact that the export import bank is paying so much at- tention to South America is impor- tant in another way. The fascist dictators, Mussolini and Hitler, are in South America. Having the type of government Germany and Italy any kind of arrangements desired by using whatever government re- sources are necessary. It strikes me, therefore, that if the export- the opening sentence; if it is gaining a toehold in South America against the high-pressure methods employed by the dictators, then it is perform- able, indeed, that extension of cred- its in the manner described might possibly be the means by which North and South America can be as well as in peace. There is another thing about the export-import bank that impressed me. lapse. But thus far in its life, the export-import losses. the interest charged its borrowers. Export-Import Bank Stands To Make Large Profit foreseen developments, the export- import bank stands to make a profit of something like $5,000,000. That ought to be good news to taxpayers during an era when spending money is the first thing to which attention is given. I believe that fact will im- press you as much as it impressed me. Mr. Pierson told me that the bank has made commitments, now out. standing, of slightly more than $229 - 000,000. That is to say, the bank has agreed to help finance ex- ports to that extent, provided the terms are met, and it must not be overlooked that the bank is rather hard boiled. Mr. Pierson pointed out that the export-import bank had to be really as careful as any com- mercial bank, but it can do scme- thing the commercial banks cannot do—make longer-term loans. Those are the loans represented in the $229,. 000,000. The figures showed that $67,000,000 actually has been paid out to bor- rowers in financing foreign trade and, of this amount, repayments under the terms of the loans have amounted to $38,000,000. Which is to say that of the loans outstand- ing, well over half have been liqui- dated in orderly fashion. Mr. Piers)n repeated that a dent has hash Hinge With a comparative- ly We nT ey: Union, New Play Dress and a Bolero Ensemble fashion this one design (1857) gives you. The backless, slim- waisted play suit is perfect for with it, daytime too, and tie suit, and you have a smart dress. Add the bolero, you have a charming lit- Make this of linen, broad- Bolero Ensemble With Bows. The bolero dress with princess ply must have, It's so useful for 1731 street and afternoon wear both, and extremely becoming, with its slim-waisted silhouette, wide re- vers and bow trims. Flat crepe, silk print, georgette and street cot- tons are good choices for this. The Patterns. 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