Defense Aid Supplemental Appropriation Bill, 1941: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Seventy-seventh Congress, First Session, on the Defense Aid Supplemental Appropriation Bill, 1941, Making Appropriations to Carry Out an Act to Promote the Defense of the United States (H.R. 1776-Public Law No. 11), Approved March 11, 1941 |
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Page 2
... transferred by the President to any other such appropriation , but no appropriation shall be increased more than 30 ... transfer from the foregoing appropriations to appropriate current appropriations of any department or agency amounts ...
... transferred by the President to any other such appropriation , but no appropriation shall be increased more than 30 ... transfer from the foregoing appropriations to appropriate current appropriations of any department or agency amounts ...
Page 6
... transferred and the amount of such transfers . And , what is more , it postpones the transfer , leaving the entire matter in our hands of the decision of which shall go to which place until the weapons are completed and the knowledge is ...
... transferred and the amount of such transfers . And , what is more , it postpones the transfer , leaving the entire matter in our hands of the decision of which shall go to which place until the weapons are completed and the knowledge is ...
Page 7
... transferred so as to manufacture the .30 caliber rifle which we use , I am informed , in about 2 months . And , in the same way , the facilities for the ammuni- tion could be transformed . And that is true largely of other British items ...
... transferred so as to manufacture the .30 caliber rifle which we use , I am informed , in about 2 months . And , in the same way , the facilities for the ammuni- tion could be transformed . And that is true largely of other British items ...
Page 8
... transfer be- tween categories . The articles to be procured are suitable for transfer to a foreign . country and , with minor exceptions , are also suitable for our own use should circumstances , when they are completed , dictate that ...
... transfer be- tween categories . The articles to be procured are suitable for transfer to a foreign . country and , with minor exceptions , are also suitable for our own use should circumstances , when they are completed , dictate that ...
Page 10
... transferred to another govern- ment . For example , it would permit the President to transfer to the Army's current ordnance appropriation an amount equal to the value of Army ordnance matériel which might be disposed of to a foreign ...
... transferred to another govern- ment . For example , it would permit the President to transfer to the Army's current ordnance appropriation an amount equal to the value of Army ordnance matériel which might be disposed of to a foreign ...
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Common terms and phrases
additional administrative expenses agreement agricultural products allocation ammunition amount answer Army borax Britain British Government Budget BUELL SNYDER Bureau BURNS cancelation clause CANNON cash Chairman Colonel AURAND Commander TAWRESEY committee commodities Congress contemplated contracts cost is going country whose defense course defense articles deliveries department or agency DITTER EMMET O'NEAL England estimate existing expenditure facilities fiscal year 1942 foreign funds guns investments JOHN TABER JOHNSON of West KNUDSEN lend-lease bill LOUIS LUDLOW LUDLOW manufacture March 12 MARSHALL matériel ment munitions nations O'NEAL orders ordnance payments percent President deems private plants procured question RABAUT record request SCRUGHAM Secretary HULL Secretary KNOX Secretary of War Secretary STIMSON securities services and expenses situation SMITH SNYDER statement TABER tanks things tion transfer understand United United Kingdom War Department weapons West Virginia WIGGLESWORTH WILLIAM DITTER WOODRUM
Popular passages
Page 2 - Congress, or both, any defense article for the government of any country whose defense the President deems vital to the defense of the United States.
Page 30 - Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, the President may, from time to time, when he deems it in the interest of national defense, authorize the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, or the head of any other department or agency of the Government...
Page 3 - ... those whom, in our own self-defense, we are determined thus to aid. The great problem of democracy is to organize and to use its strength with sufficient speed and completeness. The proposed legislation is an essential measure for that purpose. This bill will make it possible for us to allocate our resources in ways best calculated to provide for the security of this Nation and of this continent in the complex and many-sided conditions of danger with which we are and are likely to be confronted....
Page 29 - I think that certainly would be the wish of the committee. Mr. JOHNSON of West Virginia. If you have this central organization created, how large will it be? Do you have any idea how large it will be? Mr. SMITH. I do not at this time. Mr. JOHNSON of West Virginia. Would it be composed of two, three, four, five, or six people? Mr. SMITH. Are you speaking" now with respect to the organization in the Bureau of the Budget? Mr. JOHNSON of West Virginia. Yes. Mr. SMITH. I think that, so far as we are concerned,...
Page 2 - ... whose defense the President deems vital to the defense of the United States, including services and expenses in connection therewith, $175,000,000.
Page 58 - ... (1) Ordnance and ordnance stores, supplies, spare parts, and materials, including armor and ammunition and components thereof, $1,190,000,000.
Page 2 - States, including services and expenses in connection therewith, $200,000,000. (c) Not to exceed 20 per centum of any of the foregoing eight appropriations may be transferred by the President to any other such appropriation, but no appropriation shall be increased by more than 30 per centum. (d) For necessary services and expenses for carrying out the purposes of such Act not specified or included In the foregoing, $40,000,000. (e) For administrative expenses, $10,000,000.
Page 5 - Our safety and the success of the course upon which we have set ourselves demand the courage and the wisdom to go full out in furnishing adequate material aid to the nations whose defense is necessary to our defense. When we do this, we take the most effective step possible in the circumstances to keep war away from our hemisphere, from our own Nation. Doing this, we act in defense of our homes, our institutions, our liberties, our way of life. In this task, half measures will not suffice. There...
Page 3 - The present bill sets up machinery which will enable us to make the most effective use of our resources for our own needs and for the needs of those whom, in our own self-defense, we are determined thus to aid. The great problem of democracy is to organize and to use its strength with sufficient speed and completeness.
Page 2 - HULL, SECRETARY OF STATE Mr. Secretary Hull, the committee is very happy to have you here today, sir, and we will be very glad to have you make such statement as you feel appropriate to be made upon this occasion. GENERAL STATEMENT Secretary HULL.