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Russian Spy Ship in Cuba (2/27/2014)

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Ah yes, the impressive counter-offensive which left approximately a million Soviet soldiers dead.
There are only 2 soviet tactics I guess.
The good 'ol meatshield or the shoot 'n' scatter.

The entire battle had Stalingrad had 478,741 killed and that includes a lot of civilians who could not leave the war zone ..Btw... around 8,00,000 German soldiers were gone as well.... Learn some history

Seriously....Zhukov was one of the greatest Soviet Generals of all time... Even Stalin was shit scared of him and did not kill him during the purge even after knowing Zhukov's dislike for Stalin..
 
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I was just pointing out the Russians were receiving US aid the whole duration of the war and making merry of it. In their offensive, they were greatly lacking food supplies thanks to shortages. There would have been a shortage in ammo, weaponry and other important utilities. The US kept on supplying that. How would the Russians be able to push forward without such things?

Provide proof. Anyone can make outrageous claims.
 
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Did Russia Really Go It Alone? How Lend-Lease Helped the Soviets Defeat the Germans
By Alexander Hill
Originally published by World War II magazine. Published Online: July 12, 2008
31 commentsFONT + FONT -


ww2-july2008-lendlease.jpg

Soviet general A. A. Kuznetsov climbs from a British Hurricane cloaked in Soviet colors. (National Archives)


The Soviets have long insisted that Lend-Lease aid made little difference. Newly discovered files tell another story

After a series of dramatic Nazi successes during the opening stages of Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, foreign observers predicted that Soviet resistance would soon collapse. By October, German troops were poised outside both Leningrad and Moscow. But the Germans were doggedly held off in front of Moscow in late November and early December, and then rolled back by a reinvigorated Red Army in a staggeringly brutal winter counteroffensive.

That the Soviet victories of late 1941 were won with Soviet blood and largely with Soviet weapons is beyond dispute. But for decades the official Soviet line went much further. Soviet authorities recognized that the "Great Patriotic War" gave the Communist Party a claim to legitimacy that went far beyond Marxism-Leninism or the 1917 Revolution, and took pains to portray their nation's victories in World War II as single-handed. Any mention of the role that Western assistance played in the Soviet war effort was strictly off-limits.

During Nikita Khrushchev's rule in the late 1950s and early 1960s, there was a window of greater frankness and openness about the extent of aid supplied from the West under the Lend-Lease Act—but it was still clearly forbidden for Soviet authors to suggest that such aid ever made any real difference on the battlefield. Mentions of Lend-Lease in memoirs were always accompanied by disparagement of the quality of the weapons supplied, with American and British tanks and planes invariably portrayed as vastly inferior to comparable Soviet models.

An oft-quoted statement by First Vice-Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars Nikolai Voznesensky summed up the standard line that Allied aid represented "only 4 percent" of Soviet production for the entire war. Lacking any detailed information to the contrary, Western authors generally agreed that even if Lend-Lease was important from 1943 on, as quantities of aid dramatically increased, the aid was far too little and late to make a difference in the decisive battles of 1941–1942.

But since the collapse of the Soviet Union, a trickle of information has emerged from archives in Moscow, shedding new light on the subject. While much of the documentary evidence remains classified "secret" in the Central Archives of the Ministry of Defense and the Russian State Archive of the Economy, Western and Russian researchers have been able to gain access to important, previously unavailable firsthand documents. I was recently able to examine Russian-language materials of the State Defense Committee—the Soviet equivalent of the British War Cabinet—held in the former Central Party Archive. Together with other recently published sources, including the wartime diaries of N. I. Biriukov, a Red Army officer responsible from August 1941 on for the distribution of recently acquired tanks to the front lines, this newly available evidence paints a very different picture from the received wisdom. In particular, it shows that British Lend-Lease assistance to the Soviet Union in late 1941 and early 1942 played a far more significant part in the defense of Moscow and the revival of Soviet fortunes in late 1941 than has been acknowledged.

Particularly important for the Soviets in late 1941 were British-supplied tanks and aircraft. American contributions of the time were far fewer. In fact, for a brief period during December 1941, the relative importance of British aid increased well beyond levels planned by the Allies as a result of American reaction to the outbreak of war with Japan; some American equipment destined for the Soviet Union was actually unloaded from merchant vessels and provided to American forces instead.

Even aid that might seem like a drop in the bucket in the larger context of Soviet production for the war played a crucial role in filling gaps at important moments during this period. At a time when Soviet industry was in disarray—many of their industrial plants were destroyed or captured by the advancing Nazi troops or in the process of evacuation east—battlefield losses of specific equipment approached or even exceeded the rate at which Soviet domestic production could replace them during this crucial period. Under these circumstances even small quantities of aid took on far greater significance.

According to research by a team of Soviet historians, the Soviet Union lost a staggering 20,500 tanks from June 22 to December 31, 1941. At the end of November 1941, only 670 Soviet tanks were available to defend Moscow—that is, in the recently formed Kalinin, Western, and Southwestern Fronts. Only 205 of these tanks were heavy or medium types, and most of their strength was concentrated in the Western Front, with the Kalinin Front having only two tank battalions (67 tanks) and the Southwestern Front two tank brigades (30 tanks).

Given the disruption to Soviet production and Red Army losses, the Soviet Union was understandably eager to put British armor into action as soon as possible. According to Biriukov's service diary, the first 20 British tanks arrived at the Soviet tank training school in Kazan on October 28, 1941, at which point a further 120 tanks were unloaded at the port of Archangel in northern Russia. Courses on the British tanks for Soviet crews started during November as the first tanks, with British assistance, were being assembled from their in-transit states and undergoing testing by Soviet specialists.

The tanks reached the front lines with extraordinary speed. Extrapolating from available statistics, researchers estimate that British-supplied tanks made up 30 to 40 percent of the entire heavy and medium tank strength of Soviet forces before Moscow at the beginning of December 1941, and certainly made up a significant proportion of tanks available as reinforcements at this critical point in the fighting. By the end of 1941 Britain had delivered 466 tanks out of the 750 promised.

The British Military Mission to Moscow noted that by December 9, about ninety British tanks had already been in action with Soviet forces. The first of these units to have seen action seems to have been the 138th Independent Tank Battalion (with twenty-one British tanks), which was involved in stemming the advance of German units in the region of the Volga Reservoir to the north of Moscow in late November. In fact the British intercepted German communications indicating that German forces had first come in contact with British tanks on the Eastern front on November 26, 1941.

The exploits of the British-equipped 136th Independent Tank Battalion are perhaps the most widely noted in the archives. It was part of a scratch operational group of the Western Front consisting of the 18th Rifle Brigade, two ski battalions, the 5th and 20th Tank Brigades, and the 140th Independent Tank Battalion. The 136th Independent Tank Battalion was combined with the latter to produce a tank group of only twenty-one tanks, which was to operate with the two ski battalions against German forces advancing to the west of Moscow in early December. Other largely British-equipped tank units in action with the Western Front from early December were the 131st Independent Tank Brigade, which fought to the east of Tula, south of Moscow, and 146th Tank Brigade, in the region of Kriukovo to the immediate west of the Soviet capital.

While the Matilda Mk II and Valentine tanks supplied by the British were certainly inferior to the Soviets' homegrown T-34 and KV-1, it is important to note that Soviet production of the T-34 (and to a lesser extent the KV series), was only just getting seriously underway in 1942, and Soviet production was well below plan targets. And though rapid increases in tank firepower would soon render the 40mm two-pounder main gun of the Matilda and Valentine suitable for use on light tanks only, the armor protection of these British models put them firmly in the heavy and medium categories, respectively. Both were superior to all but the Soviet KV-1 and T-34 in armor, and indeed even their much maligned winter cross-country performance was comparable to most Soviet tanks excluding the KV-1 and T-34.

A steady stream of British-made tanks continued to flow into the Red Army through the spring and summer of 1942. Canada would eventually produce 1,420 Valentines, almost exclusively for delivery to the Soviet Union. By July 1942 the Red Army had 13,500 tanks in service, with more than 16 percent of those imported, and more than half of those British.

Lend-Lease aircraft deliveries were also of significance during the Battle of Moscow. While Soviet pilots praised the maneuverability of the homegrown I-153 Chaika and I-16 Ishak fighters—still in use in significant numbers in late 1941—both types were certainly obsolete and inferior in almost all regards to the British-supplied Hurricane. The Hurricane was rugged and tried and tested, and as useful at that point as many potentially superior Soviet designs such as the LaGG-3 and MiG-3. There were apparently only 263 LaGG-3s in the Soviet inventory by the time of the Moscow counteroffensive, and it was an aircraft with numerous defects. At the end of 1941 there were greater numbers of the MiG-3, but the plane was considered difficult to fly. The Yak-1, arguably the best of the batch, and superior in most regards to the Hurricane, suffered from airframe and engine defects in early war production aircraft.

A total of 699 Lend-Lease aircraft had been delivered to Archangel by the time the Arctic convoys switched to Murmansk in December 1941. Of these, 99 Hurricanes and 39 Tomahawks were in service with the Soviet air defense forces on January 1, 1942, out of a total of 1,470 fighters. About 15 percent of the aircraft of the 6th Fighter Air Corps defending Moscow were Tomahawks or Hurricanes.

The Soviet Northern Fleet was also a major and early recipient of British Hurricanes, receiving those flown by No. 151 Wing of the RAF, which operated briefly from Soviet airfields near Murmansk. As early as October 12, 1941, the Soviet 126th Fighter Air Regiment was operating with Tomahawks bought from the United States by Britain. Tomahawks also served in defense of the Doroga Zhizni or "Road of Life" across the ice of Lake Ladoga, which provided the only supply line to the besieged city of Leningrad during the winter of 1941–42. By spring and summer of 1942 the Hurricane had clearly become the principal fighter aircraft of the Northern Fleet's air regiments; in all, 83 out of its 109 fighters were of foreign origin.

British and Commonwealth deliveries to the Soviet Union in late 1941 and early 1942 would not only assist in the Soviet defense of Moscow and subsequent counteroffensive, but also in increasing Soviet production for the next period of the war. Substantial quantities of machine tools and raw materials, such as aluminum and rubber, were supplied to help Soviet industry back on its feet: 312 metal-cutting machine tools were delivered by convoy PQ-12 alone, arriving in March 1942, along with a range of other items for Soviet factories such as machine presses and compressors.

Once again, raw figures do not tell the whole story. Although British shipments amounted to only a few percent of Soviet domestic production of machine tools, the Soviet Union could request specific items which it may not have been able to produce for itself. Additionally, many of the British tools arrived in early 1942, when Soviet tool production was still very low, resulting in a disproportionate impact. The handing over of forty imported machine tools to Aviation Factory No. 150 in July 1942, for example, was the critical factor in enabling the factory to reach projected capacity within two months.

Lend-Lease aid did not "save" the Soviet Union from defeat during the Battle of Moscow. But the speed at which Britain in particular was willing and able to provide aid to the Soviet Union, and at which the Soviet Union was able to put foreign equipment into frontline use, is still an underappreciated part of this story. During the bitter fighting of the winter of 1941–1942, British aid made a crucial difference.
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BY THE WAY By Max V. Soliven
The Philippine Star 05/08/2005


WASHINGTON, DC – War makes strange bedfellows, the old maxim went. Peace makes strange bedfellows, too. Otherwise, how can we explain the fact that America’s George W. Bush is in Moscow, making chika-chika with Russia’s evangelist of a new Soviet Empire, without Communism – but neither is he a Democrat (much less a Republican) – the post-Stalin "man of steel" and Yukos-basher – Vladimir Putin?

Next-door neighbors Estonia and Lithuania have refused Moscow’s invitation to join the celebration – still bitter over Russia’s refusal to apologize (it’s not just the Chinese who resent no apologies) for the old Soviet Union’s atrocities and iron-clad rule over them.

But Bush is merrily in the heart of what his fellow Republican Ronald Reagan once dubbed The Evil Empire, sunnily holding hands with Mr. Putin and preparing to sing the chorus tomorrow (May 9, the 60th anniversary of the Fall of Nazi Germany and Victory in Europe): "All hail to Josef Stalin and the Great Patriotic War – for having crushed Adolf Hitler and liberated Europe!"

For that’s what tomorrow’s fanfare and military goosestepping (yep, the Kremlin Guards have their own high-kickin’ style, balancing their rifles like ballet dancers on the palm of one hand) are all about.

We’re all for Mr. Bush cozying up somewhat to Mr. Putin, the former KGB in natty suits and with a killer smile. For Russia’s a good card to play – though it’s the other way around – with Pyongyang’s nuclear rockets (the current buzz) ready to test their "new" delivery systems in the direction of Tokyo and Washington DC. Believe me, that’s what they’re biting their nails about here in the corridors of frustration and power. North Korea’s Kim Il Sung may look crazy, but to risk a bromide, crazy like a fox.

Putin, of course, has his own agenda. He’s already selling weaponry, aircraft, technology and systems to the Chinese, but his nostalgia for past Soviet Power is what’s worrisome, not his mercantile instincts. David Satter, a Russian expert from the Hoover Institution and my alma mater, SAIS Johns Hopkins University, ran two timely quotations from Putin in The Wall Street Journal Friday. Putin, in his speech last year at the Victory Day celebrations had declared: "We were victorious in the most just war of the twentieth century. May 9 is the pinnacle of our glory." In his recent state of the nation address last April 25, Putin had even called the break-up of the Soviet Union "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century."

Longing for the old USSR? You betcha. Putin doesn’t hide his yearning under a bushel. Nobody was ever punished in Russia for the atrocities of Stalin and the Soviet gulags, no Communist commissar ever called to book, no former KGB torturer unmasked and made to pay for crimes. The victims continue to be victimized by loss of memory – and are forgotten. It was the bullies and murderers who were rehabilitated. * * *
Tomorrow it will be emphasized how Russia demolished Hitler, pounded Berlin to rubble, overran the Hitler Bunker, in effect, ended the war by bringing Germany down to the ashes of defeat. Indeed, the Russians did score a magnificent victory, by overwhelming then crushing Nazi Germany in a final offensive, tearing the Swastika from its pinnacle in the Reichstag, planting the Red flag on Potsdam Square. Russia did so at the horrible cost of 27 million dead. We salute the courage and valor of the Russian people and their fighters from the Soviet Republics.

Yet, this might be a propitious moment for Bush to hand oil-rich Putin, Moscow and Petersburg, the unpaid bill.


It’s already forgotten – deliberately I’d say – that America supplied its Allies with more than $50 billion in war material through Lend-Lease, with most of the weaponry, warplanes, tanks, locomotives, the sinews of war, being rushed to embattled Russia.

Stalinist propaganda, throughout the Cold War, and that of his Soviet successors, claimed that United States military equipment (a scant four percent! they alleged) delivered was not substantial.

This was nonsense. I remember one of my professors at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Johns Hopkins, here in DC was Dr. Moses Harvey – unknown despite his heroic contribution to winning the war. He had been one of the ranking supervisors of the Lend-Lease equipment and weaponry rushed to the Soviet eastern front to help Stalin stem the advance of Hitler’s Operation Barbarossa. He kept on complaining to us in class that the Russians had never paid back a cent.

"When we presented them our first bill of US$7 billion Stalin and his Kremlin gang scoffed. They offered to give everything back! Everything was, by then, mainly junk." But the Cold War was on and nobody, even in Washington, listened to Harvey’s rantings. He became almost a pathetic figure of fun.

Since the fall of the USSR and the demolition of the Iron Curtain, Soviet archives were finally opened and the real impact of Lend-Lease has just been revealed. Russian scholars A.S. Orlov and V.P. Kozhanov, citing data from the suddenly available archives reported in a Russian historical journal some long-suppressed details of more than 17 million tons of US Lend-Lease war material delivered to Russia under the agreement’s four protocols, from 1941-1945.

This is only a partial list of what helped Russia defeat Hitler:

Airplanes, 22,195! [*******red]<<<[/color] one of this birds is the Bell P-39 Cobra

Armored vehicles, 12,980, including 7,000 tanks.

Chemical products, 842,000 tons.

Food, 4.3 million tons.

Locomotives, 1,981.

Medical supplies, 2.6 million tons.

Petroleum products, 345,000 tons.

Railroad cars, 11,156.

Ships, 560.

Trucks and other vehicles, 427,000.


Could Russia have won without US Lend-Lease help? Many American captains, their crews and ships went to the bottom of the Baltic, destroyed by German attack or Baltic winter storms, as well as British and other Allied ships and crews, to rush this stuff to Joe Stalin’s "brave" warriors. Will they be remembered, too – tomorrow, May 9th? Not likely.

As for our professor, Moses Harvey, we thought he was exaggerating, but he was right! Finally vindicated by history. Small consolation. They still haven’t paid and never will – not even in terms of gratitude or a salute.
................................................



Lend Lease
to Russia

From Major Jordan' Diaries
(NY: Harcourt, Brace, 1952)
Chapter Nine


ITEM Quantity Cost in Dollars

ATOMIC MATERIALS
Beryllium metals 9,681 lbs. $ 10,874.
Cadmium alloys 72,535 lbs. 70,029.
Cadmium metals 834,989 lbs. 781,466.
Cobalt ore & concentrate 33,600 lbs. 49,782.
Cobalt metal & Cobalt bearing scrap 806,941 lbs. 1,190,774.
Uranium metal 2.2 lbs. ---
Aluminun tubes (for reactors) 13,766,472 lbs. 13,041,152.
Graphite, nat., flake, lump or chip 7,384,282 lbs. 812,437.
Beryllium salts & compounds 228 lbs. 775.
Cadmium oxide 2,100 lbs. 3,080.
Cadmium salts & compounds, n.e.s. * 2 lbs. 19.
Cadmium sulfate 2,170 lbs. 1,374.
Cadmium sulfide 16,823 lbs. 17,380.
Cobalt nitrate 51 lbs. 48.
Cobalt oxide 17,800 lbs. 34,832.
Cobalt salts & compounds, n.e.s. 11,475 lbs. 7,112.
Cobaltic and cobaltous sulfate 22 lbs. 25.
Deuterium oxide (heavy water) 1,100 grs. ---

* n.e.s. stands for "not especially specified".


Page one


ITEM Quantity Cost in Dollars


Thorium salts and compounds 25,352 $ 32,570 Brass & bronze blanks 32,760,542 lbs. $ 6,270,740.
Uranium nitrate 500 lbs. --- Brass & bronze plates & sheets 536,632,390 lbs. 99,376,514.
Uranium nitrate (U02) 220 lbs. --- Brass & bronze pipes & tubes l6,642,267 lbs. 5,126,324.
Uranium oxide 500 lbs. --- Copper alloys 660 lbs. 396.
Uranium, urano-uranic oxide (U308) 200 lbs. --- Insulated copper wire, n.e.s. 399,556,720 lbs. 97,637,534.
Copper maaufactures, n.e.s. --- 278,336.
METALS & METAL MANUFACTURES Copper rods 2,875,916 lbs. 553,042.
Aluminum & alloys, ingots, slabs, etc. 366,73S,204 lbs. 53,884,473. Copper wire, bare 28,235,738 lbs. 5,261,483.
Aluminum rods & bars 13,744,709 lbs. 3,285,014. Copper wire, rubber-covered 16,521,612 lbs. 3,965,050.
Aluminum plates, sheets, strips 124,052,618 lbs. 45,408,111. Copper wire, weather-proof 4,848,312 lbs. 1,261,789.
Aluminum foil 409,556 lbs. 205,231. Copper munitions, excl. rotat. bands 1,598,723 lbs. 2,102,024.
Aluminum kitchen, hospital utensils 310 lbs. 1,428. Copper refined ingots, bars, etc. 75,663,895 lbs. 9,041,122.
Aluminum powders & paste 219,736 lbs. 91,915. Copper pipes & tubes 38,913,403 lbs. 22,728,592.
Aluminum contr. valves 980 lbs. 10,122. Copper plates & sheets 26,432,417 lbs. 5,642,774.
Aluminum manufactures, n.e.s. --- 308,542. Nickel-chrome electric resistance wire 1,603,104 lbs. 2,121,121.
Brass &c bronze ingots 10,214,064 lbs. 1,283,755. Nickel ore, conc. & matts l55,604 lbs. 116,571.
Brass & bronze bars, rods, etc. 66,329,462 lbs. 12,502,080. Nickel alloys & scrap 1,944,796 lbs. 812,3ll.
Brass & bronze pipe fittings 14,097 lbs. 30,931. Nickel ingots, bars, rods, etc. 15,669,441 lbs. 6,560,7l9.
Brass & bronze valves, 4-in. & over 204,288 lbs. 189,623. Nickel manufactures, n.e.s. --- 2,216,294.
Brass goods, plumbers 8,598 lbs. 5,828. Tin & tin mfrs, tin foil 82,583 lbs. 44,353.
Brass or bronze wire l6,139,702 lbs. 3,734,169. Tin ingots, pigs, bars, etc. 30,620 lbs. 16,079.
Brass wood scrcws l,2l8 gross 453. Tin manufactures, n.e.s. --- 2.
Brass or bronze hardware --- 13,465. Lead foil and tin foil 26,880 lbs. 15,546.
Brass & bronze die stocks, etc. 8,739 lbs. 9,180. Lead, pigs & bars 801,234 lbs. l,913,769.
Brass & bronze munitions 21,824,376 lbs. 4,253,987. Lead sheets & pipes ?4,555 lbs, 6,720.
Brass & bronze window strips 65,924 lbs. 28,567. Lead, solder 378 Ibs. 76.
Brass & bronze, forgings 218 lbs. 249. Lead, cable 1,681,081 lbs. 314,308.
Brass & bronze circles 933,110 lbs. 194,447. Lead, plate or battery plate 1,122 lbs. 475.
Brass & bronze manufactures, n.e.s. --- 233,843. Lead, shot l8l,506 lbs. 17,646.

Page two
Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
METALS & METAL MANUFACTURES, continued METALS & METAL MANUFACTURES, continued

Vises 4,398 $ 68,521.
Lead, castings, circles, etc. 124,645 lbs. $ 40,569.
Lead manufactures, n.e.s. --- 105,421. Automotive wrenches & parts --- 25,736.
Carbonyl iron powder 27,050 lbs. 42,436. Wrenches & parts, excl. automotive --- 163,179.
Ferrochrome 7,820,3l3 lbs. 1,285,175. Drills, etc., metal cutting, power-driven 7,822,2l6 8,863,820.
Ferromolybdenum 5,357,500 lbs. 3,210,590. Drills, etc., excl. power-driven --- 9,062,215.
Ferrovanadium 1,074,190 lbs. 2,034,830. Hand-operated taps, etc., metal-working
Ferrophosphorus l9,229 lbs. 710. machines 593,278 1,091,423.
Ferrosilicon 16,187,318 lbs. 941,985. Hand-operated taps, etc., excL metal-
working machines --- 4,224,303.
Ferrotungsten 3,027,188 lbs. 4,715,335. Hand-operattd dies, etc., metal-work-
Ferro alloys, n.e.s. 88,900 lbs. 137,695.
Babbitt metal 604,569 lbs. 265,179. ing machines 35,538 32,346.
Quicksilver or mercury 10,590 lbs. 28,736. Hand-operated dies, etc., excl. metal-
Tungsten metal, etc. & alloy 279,449 lbs. 4,268,890. working machines --- 258,766.
Cerite or cerium ore 2,651 lbs. 8,978. Hand-operated metalcutting tools, n.e.s. --- 786,914.
Zirconium ore & concentrate 220 lbs. 2,420. Pliers, pincers, nippers, etc. 3,463 doz. 33,700.
Cesium metals & alloys 30,299 lbs. 78,61l. Drill pries, bit braces, etc. --- 217,288.
Chromium metal alloy scrap 23,924 lbs. 6,992. Planes, chisels & other cutting tools --- 121,833.
Manganese metal & alloys 359,006 lbs. ?9,259. Gauges for precision measure 38,348 1,562,938.
Molybdenum ore & concentrates 20,145,302 lbs. 10,841,501. Mechanic' hand tools, n.e.s. --- 5,272,573.
Magnesium metal primary form 17,798,206 lbs. 3,640,716. Tools with industrial diamonds 15 11l.
Molybdenum metal alloys, acrap 913,480 lbs. 466,602. Tool grinders, emery wheel dressers 15,650 lbs. 85,106.
Tantalum metal & alloys 6,513 lbs. 136,665. Hand tools & parts, n.e.a, --- 4,211,507.
Zirconium metal and alloy 193,450 lbs. 94,654. Padlock' of iron, steel, brass & bronze 146 521.
Magnesium powder 66 lbs. 75. Door locke of iron, steel, brass
Magnesium metal, n.e.s. 983,467 lbs. 208,475. bronze 5 doz. 55.
Molybdenum wire 396,527 lbs. 1,030,833. Wire bale ties 2,196,796 lbs. 103,900.
Ferromanganese 6,600 lbs. 1,272. Welding rods & wire, excl. electric 8,088,498 lbs. 1,487,802.
Vanadium ore & concentrate 5,395 lbs. 33,835. Wire on spools or coils, not cards 2,710,624 lbs. 270,830.
Metals & metal manufactures, n.e.s. --- 2,727,754. Wire, twisted 1,585 lbs. 536.

Page three

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
Wire & manufactures, n.e.s. 23,236,266 lbs. $ 5,226,916. Zinc slabs, plates, blocs, n.e.s. 40,966,658 lbs. $ 3,750,736.
Wire nails 32,789,488 lbs. 1,214,356. Zinc wire 155,177 lbs. 38,767.
Tacks 900,422 Ibs. 133,604. Zinc manufactures, n.e.s. 202,324 lbs. 18,855.
Nails & staples, n.e.s. 8,105,218 lbs. 369,640. Bauxite concentrate, incl. alumina 11 tons 657.
Bolts, machine screws, nuts, etc. 13,370,637 lbs. 1,373,695. Plate, n.e.s. no alloy, excl. fabricated 17,951,792 lbs. 475,944.
Metal containers, filled, value 20% 68,650 lbs. 87,928. Armor plate, no alloy, not fabricated 39,283,679 lbs. 1,585,548.
Metal containers, unfilled 2,095,541 lbs. 352,525. Tin cans, finished or unfinished 667,603 lbs. 106,855.
Metal containers, unfilled, n.e.s. --- 616,795. Metal file cases, not insulated 3,547 165,004.
Pipestocks, etc., hand operated & parts --- 233,275. Metal File cases, insulated 13 2,860.
Screw plates, etc., hand-operated Metal furniture a parts, n.e.s. --- 49,360.
parts --- 639,746. Stoves, ranges, heaters, gas 84 9,296.
Machine knives, except metal cut 1,95l 41,218. Cooking, heating equipment, domestic
Safety razors 237 doz. 2,383. n.e.s. --- ?32,893.
Safety razor blades 857 c. 1,290. Parts, gas, kerosene, etc., stoves --- 16,617.
Cutlery, butchers & kitchens 34 doz. 500. Radiators house heating 1,426 1,315.
Cutlery, knives, shears 3,648 39,343. Oil burners & boilers industrial 126 59,605.
Cutlery & parts, n.e.s. --- 68,295. Parts oil burners & boilers, domestic --- 406,107.
Power transmission chains 92,675 lbs. 76,989. Cooking stoves, kerosene, excl. electric 27 1,332.
Chains, exc,. power transmission 13,971,287 lbs. 230,010. Room & water heaters, kerosene 1,088 13,059.
Enamelware, table, household, hospi- Stoves, room water heaters, gasoline 1,6ll 17,366.
tal, etc. 209,365 lbs. 43,492. Axes, broad & hand 12,608 doz. 22,769.
Boat propellers, blades 143,890 lbs. 8,042. Hacksaw blades, power machines 16,063 gross 346,272.
Metals & alloys, n.e.s. 791,073 lbs. 141,894. Hacksaw blades, excl. power machinery 32,172 gross 406,067.
Bauxite and other aluminum ores 56 tons 12,197. Circular saws, excl. diamond 36,175 1,079,630.
Zinc photo engraving sheets 220 lbs. 57. Circular saws, diamond 5,840 14,933.
Zinc sheets, n.e.s. & strips 2,000 lbs. 400. Saws, steel band, pit, drag & mill 7,l33 35,910.
Zinc slabs etc., special high grade 4,159,512 lbs. 397,266. Saws & parts, n.e.s. --- 1,551,889.
Zinc slabs, etc., high grade 26,757,974 lbs. 2,461,815. Augers, bits, gimlets, etc. 1,723 doz. 20,004.
Zinc slabs, etc, intermediate grade 4,253,496 lbs. 368,244. Files & rasps, under 7-in. 98,514 doz. 251,836.

Page four

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
METALS & METAL MANUFACTURES, continued IRON, STEEL & ALLIED PRODUCTS
Files & rasps, 7-in. & over 95,811 doz. $ 330,827. Pig iron 7,644 tons $ 207,017.
Hammers & hatcbeta 24,757 doz. 92,890. Iron & sad scrap, n.e.s. 55 tons 35,989.
Shovels, spades, scoops, etc. 8,305 doz. 85,799. Tin plate cirles, strips, etc. 668 tons 84,490.
Scales & balances, n.e.s. 959 336,850. Iron & steel billets, no alloy 39,195 tons 8,522,389.
Scales, automatic, excl. bathroom 79,554 226,000. Iron & steel blooms, no alloy 1,064 tons 195,517.
Scales, precision 6,079 89,124. Iron & steel alloy billets 58,807 tons 16,327,932.
Hardware, car & Marine --- 249,162. Iron & steel alloy blooms 1,918 tons 356,652.
Hardware, n.e.s. --- 93,684. Iron & steel alloy slabs l ton 200.
Railway car wheels, excl. locomotive 44,532,719 lbs. 2,351,678. Steel alloy & tin plated bars 290 tons 32,51l.
Railway car tire & locomotive wheels 46,138,050 lbs. 3,169,777. Steel bars, cold finished 425,331,742 tons 39,360,892.
Railway car axles, without wheels 69,818,310 lbs. 2,520,778. Iron bars 994,557 lbs. 242,3l6.
Railway car axles, with wheels 45,900,258 lbs. 2,392,165. Concrete reinforcement steel bars 8,456,863 lbs. 441,350.
Railway locomotive car axles with- Iron & steel & tin plate bars, no
out wheels 1,632,615 lbs. 90,453. alloy 461 tons 27,136.
Railway locomotive car axles with Steel bars, no alloy, n.e.s. 209,312,002 lbs. 14,668,525.
wheels 2,190,959 lbs. 120,937. Stainless steel bars, n.e.s. 1,848,673 lbs. 632,12l.
Rail joints, splice bars, etc. 314,535,452 lbs. 9,427,137. Steel bars, alloy, n.e.s 368,427,121 lbs. 56,374,249.
R.R. switches, frogs, crossings l68,566,652 lbs. 10,946,307. Wire rods 3,648,579 lbs. 383,541.
Railroad spikes 56,999,319 lbs. 1,888,997. Roller plate, armor type 779,677 lbs. 17,891.
Railroad bolts, nuts, nut locks etc. 9,159,460 lbs. 630,947. Steel armor plate, alloy 5,801,465 lbs. 280,706.
Tie stock unfabricated whether or Steel plate, excl. armor alloy 20,820,647 lbs. 1,034,729.
not sheared to length 63,375 lbs. 3,840. Sciler plate, excl. armor type 37,614,885 lbs. 1,084,043.
Rails, 60 lbs. & over per yd. 170,025 lbs. 3,198,998. Plate alloy not fab. excl. armor 1l7,391,826 lbs. 6,497,713.
Rails, lese than 60 lbs. per yd, 2,144 tons 103,961. Stainless steel plate, not fab. 1,016,496 lbs. 339,468.
Rails, 60 lbs. & over per yd. 232,499 lbs. 10,009,983. Iron & steel structural shapes, not
Rails, under 60 lbs. 1,9l9 lbs. 81,965. fabricated 29,870 tons 1,871,436.
Sewing-machine needles 57,133 (M) 318,530. Iron & steel plates, fabricated,
Needles, excl. sewing-machine l4,447 (M) 183,503. punched, etc. l93,593,054 lbs. 12,623,581.
Iron & steel strip, cold-rolled,stainless 3,757,605 lbs. 803,546.

Page five

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars

Iron & steel hot-rolled, stainless 2,543,563 lbs. $ 476.262. Water, oil, gas, etc.., storage tanks 11,399,056 lbs. $ 832,539.
Iron & steel strip, cold-rolled, Seamless black pipe, n.e.s. 38,530,836 lbs. 2,932,023.
no alloy 192,816,458 lbs. 16,4ll,022. Iron or steel wood screws 5,496,440 gross 1,066,615.
Iron & Steel strip, hot-rolled Iron or steel tool bit blanks 4,403 lbs. 58,077.
no alloy 45,843,85l lbs. 1,903,017. Steel tank lines 2,386,98l lbs. 622,568.
Iron & steel & scroll, alloy, excl. Iron & steel manufacturers, n.e.s. --- 754,527.
stainless 1,196 lbs. 347. Iron & steel coated wire, n.e.s 17,803,17l lbs. 4,365,942.
Iron & steel band scroll, cold-rolled, Malleable iron castings 88,380 lbs. 40,828.
no alloy 2,281,415 lbs. 115,778. Gray iron castings 272,822 lbs. 32,235.
Iron & steel band scroll, hot-rolled, Steel casings, alloy, incl. stainless 63,289 lbs. 11,836.
no alloy 54,925 lbs. 2,054. Iron & steel grinding balls, no alloy, 3,948,946 lbs. 380,908.
Iron & steel skelp, excl. semi-fin. 22,400 lbs. 638. Iron & steel forgings, n.e.s. no alloy, 9,597,970 lbs. 1,676,349.
Iron sheets, galvanized 1,366,305 lbs. 50,761. Iron & steel grinding balls, alloy 3,978,051 lbs. 212,943.
Iron sheets, black 238,165 lbs. 6,665. Iron & Steel forgings, n.e.s., alloy 3,246,658 lbs. 615,391.
Steel sheets, galvanized 86,045,044 lbs. 3,363,966. Iron & steel forginga, n.e.s., alloy
Steel sheets, black, ungalvanized 432,663,290 lbs. 15,083,824. incl., stainless 13,429,686 lbs. 1,189,298.
Steel sheets, black, ungalvanized, Iron & steel hoop band, etc., cold-
stainless 8,452,653 lbs. 3,621,230. rolled, atainless l91,690 lbs. 5,544.
Steel sheets, ungalvanized, alloy 20,614,468 lbs. 2,244,755.
Steel hoop, cold-rolled, no alloy 1,727,369 lbs. 52,443. lron & steel hoop band, etc., cold-
Steel strip, cold-rolled, alloy 28,487,139 lbs. 5,508,009. rolled, alloy 1,169 lbs. 1,405.
Steel strip, hot-rolled, alloy 49,836,331 lbs. 7,982,848. Iron & steel hoop band, etc., hot-
Steel hoop, hot-rolled, alloy 497,701 lbs. 59,956. rolled. no alloy 1,460,590 lbs. 45,466.
Steel hoop, hot-rolled, no alloy 5,251,874 lbs. 162,656. Iron & steel hoop band, etc., hot-
Steel hoop, cold-rolled, alloy 107,504 lbs. 3,062. rolled, stainless 53,600 lbs. 1,402.
Tin plate & taggers' tin 339,131,813 lbs. 18,812,407. Steel casings, no alloy 675,033 lbs. 84,835.
Terneplate, incl. long ternes 21,928,318 lbs. 950,325. Boiler tubes, seemless 157,231,260 lbs. 17,,322,754.
Structural iron & steel shapes, fabri- 5,488 lbs. 1,063,865. Boiler tubes, welded 5,573,133 lbs. 613,956.
cated Pipe casing & oil-line, seamless 232,440,545 lbs. 11,164,969.
Pipe casing & oil-line, welded 50,165.68l lbs. 2,608,178.

Page six

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
IRON, STEEL & ALLIED PRODUCTS, continued MACHINES, MACHINE TOOLS & PARTS, continued
Malleable iron screwed pipefittings 999,d94 lbs. $ l80,756. Engine, incL tool-room lathes 3,340 $23,371,672.
Cast iron pressure pipe 7,439,539 lbs. 231,256. Balancing machines 3l 155,484.
Cast iron pressure pipe-fittings 325,288 lbs. 31,891. Shapers, metal power-driven 624 3,231,785.
Cast iron soil pipe 3,458,599 lbs. 114,717. Planers, metal power-driven 487 15,238,453.
Cast iron soil pipe-fittings 659,248 lbs. 40,79l. Grinding-surface, internal, external 6,608 54,759,178.
Welded black pipe, steel 13,618,029 lbs. 887,868. Precision boring machines, n.e.s. 880 14,804,678.
Welded black pipe, wrought iron 80,646,845 lbs. 3,644,605. Tapping & threading machines 456 1,704,241.
Welded galvanized pipe steel 1,835,969 lbs. l02,5l4. Auto screw bar type 1,926 23,440,971.
Iron & steel pipe, n.e.s. 67,763,737 lbs. 13,768,322. Knee & column milling 1,651 11,789,505.
Welded galvanized pipe, wrought Milling machines, n.e.s. 3,507 28,021,650.
iron 13,575,094 lbs. 691,250. Gear cutting 978 7,408,674.
Iron & steel pipe-fittings, n.e.s. 7,900,447 lbs. 2,900,1l7. Machine drilling sensitive, excl. bench 3l2 1,1l5,999.
Iron & steel wire, uncoated 86,937,329 lbs. 12,119,586. Radial drilling 759 6,181,009.
Iron & steel sash & frames 17,400 lbs. 1,583. Drilling machines, n.e.s. 1,352 5,301,663.
Iron & steel sheet piling 35,388,919 lbs. 952,275. All type breaching machines 281 2,678,790.
Galvanized wire 107,105,217 lbs. 7,246,6l4. Horizontal boring drill, etc. 845 19,552,825.
Barbed wire 81,459,023 lbs. 4,099,632. Gear honing finishing, n.e.s. 95 617,100.
Woven wire fencing 2,269,999 lbs. 186,761. Blower, ventilate machines & parts -- 4,682,945.
Cast-iron screwed pipe-fittings 7,383,537 lbs. 220;590. Canning machinery -- 210,083.
Woven wire screen cloth, insect 48,068 lbs. 18,890. Dairy equipment, commercial, n.e.s. 1,313 644,900.
Woven wire screen cloth, excl.insect 2,532,725 lbs. 2,179,358. Dyeing & finishing machinces & parts -- 68,?17.
Wire rope & cable, not insulated 101,891,796 lbs. 25,089,532. Flour grist mill machinery & parts -- 11,827.
Wire strand 36,474 lbs. 2,182. Forging machinery & parts -- 53,856,07l.
Electric welding rods & wire 24,264,316 lbs. 2,411,053. lce-making equipment & parts -- 261,547.
Refrigerating equipment & parts -- 439,904.
MACHINES, MACHINE TOOLS & PARTS Knitting machine parts, n.e.s. -- 67,804.
Lathes 2,644 28,373,506. Sewing machines & parts 362 127,085.
Turret lathes 3,073 25,574,695. Paper converting machinery & parts -- 1l0,793.
Engine lathes & bench type 999 5,770,713. Sawmill machinery & parts -- 166,221.

Page seven

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
Item Quantity Cost In Dollars
MACHINES, MACHINE TOOLS & PARTS, continued ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT, continued
Water wheels, turbines & parts -- S 522,845. Electric railway motors 8 $ 16,250.
Textile machinery & parts, n.e.s. -- 93,838. Electric locamotives railway mining 87 750,154.
Wood planers, matchers, etc. 1,571 344,854. Electric station warehouse & factory
Wire drawing machines & parts -- 2,508,079. trucks 1,229 4,587,780.
Blast cleaning, tumbling machines 6 37,224. Electric industrial trucks & tractors,
Chucks for machine tools 128,551 3,068,7ll. n.e.s. 424 1,204,401.
Foundry equipment parts, n.e.s. -- 3,896,873. Starting, etc. equipment for indus-
Die-casting equipment -- 918,455. trial motors -- 4,389,290.
Power metal working machine tools, n.e.s. 5,773 6,461,539. Starting, etc. equipment for electrlc
Rolling mill machinery & parts, n.e.s. -- 19,316,915. motors -- 730,015.
Power machines, tools & parts, n.e.s. -- 60,313,833. Accessories & parts for motors, n.e.s. -- 947,366.
Portable electric tools, power-driven 1,297 123,433.
Portable electric tools, n.e.s.
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT Electric fans 3 33.
Switchboard panels & parts, excl. tele- Electric incandescent lamps 930,860 135,515.
phone -- 6,407.509. Searchlights & airpot beacons 953 4,189,708.
Oil circuit breakers & switches 7,318 1,593,675. Floodlights 457 13,593.
Power switches, circuit breakers, over Electric domestic vacuum cleaners 204 6,752.
10 amp. -- 2,281,137. Domestic heating or cooking devices,
Fuse plugs cont. mica 24,908 6,414. -- 50,203.
Fuses, n.e.s. 151,051 39,720.
Watt hour & other measuring meters 21,901 473,285.
Electric indicating instruments, n.e.s. 7,779 315,962. Electric melting furnaces & parts -- 10,466,162.
Electric recording instruments 1,610 157,717. Heat treating furances & parts -- 17,949,385.
Electric testing apparatus & parts, Industrial heatiag devices & parts -- 1,088,925.
n.e.s. -- 2,696,617. X-ray tubes 1,260 188,594.
Electric testing machines 4,367 334,064. X-ray apparatus & parts n.e.s. -- 2,628,349.
Lighting arresters, etc. -- 547,579. Therapeutic apparatus, n.e.s. -- 1,088,925.
Motors 13,463 6,102,370. Electric refrigerators, household 20 3,258.
Armatures for motors -- 35,408. Electric refrigerators, commercial un-
der one ton 30 9,674.

Page eight

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT, continued CANVAS ARTICLES, WOOLEN GOODS, CLOTHING, ETC.
Electric refrigerator parts -- $ l5l,438. continued
Radio receiving set components, n.e.s. -- 7,051,328. Canvas articles -- $ 7,239,229.
Loud speakers 133 1,833. Numbered biscuit & naught duct 1,009,120 sq. yd. 934,150.
Radio receiving set accessories, n.e.s. -- 2,082,247. Kapok life saving appliances -- 21,975.
Telegraph apparatus & parts -- 3,603,037. Fabric coated or impreg., n.e.s. 652,366 sq. yd. 446,797.
Telephone instruments 386,530 16,558,894. Textile manufactures, n.e.s. -- 141,l34.
Telephone equipment & parts, n.e.s. -- 15,739,286. Other cordage 2,500 lbs. 2,264.
Bells, buyers, enunciators & alarms -- 492,174. Istle or tampico manufanured 6 tons 2,640.
Starting, lighting, etc., equipment -- 264,9l8. Twine, binder, excl. cotton or jute 16,613,012 lbs. 1,903,578.
Electric insulating material l,586,378 lbs. 698,310. Flax, hemp, ramie manufactures,
Electric conduit iron or steel 1,548,868 lbs. 116,783. n.e.s. -- 7,456.
Electric conduit rigid metal, n.e.s, 221 948 lbs. 23,896. Hemp, ramie twine & cordage 319,649 lbs. 32,839.
Electric conduit metal, n.e.s., etc. -- 260,082. Pyroxlin coated impreg. fabric 17,693 sq. yd. 38,084.
Sockets, outlets, etc., & parts -- 391,867. Elastic webbing, not over 1 1/2 in. 1,009,500 yds. 57,226.
Electric interior lighting fixtures, Cotton moss & hair matresses 30 368.
fluorescent -- 10,442. Synthetic cut fibers & waste, n.e.s. 87,8l5 lbs. 32,249.
Electric interior lighting fixtures, Synthetic knit fabric in the pc. 3,000 lbs. 3,737.
n.e.s. -- 109,774. Woven synthetic yarn fabric, n.e.s. 22,663 lbs. 23,219.
Electric exterior lighting fixtures -- 226,878. Rayon waste & staple fiber 500,069 lbs. 141,668.
Electric curl. irons -- 8. Woven yarn fabric print cv. synth. 1,248 lbs. 1,785.
Flashlight cases 104,630 93,254. Synthetic hosiery, excl. nylons
Wmn's & childrea 1 doz. pr. 12.
CANVAS ARTICLES, WOOLEN GOODS, CLOTHlNG, ETC. Synthetic textile manufactures -- 1,617.
Clothing, aviation -- 1,017559. Oakum 5,130 lbs. 969.
Clothing, military & air, n.e.s. -- 283,367. Kapok cushions upholstery pads 12 30.
Clothing, military, personal & or- Cordage, n.e.s. 32,466 lbs. 5,468.
ganizational -- 21,701,189. Veg. fibre straw grass manufac-
Clothing navel 26,788. tures, n.e.s. -- 2,175.
Clothing military, cold weather -- 5,220,572. Mohair cloth 1,572,382 lbs. 2,670,321. . l5QIQIa ..comm.

Page nine

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
CANVAS ARTICLES, WOOLEN GOODS, CLOTHING, ETC, RUBBER COMMODITIES
continued Erasers & bands 61,539 lbs. $ 21,802.
Wool noile & waste 100 lbs. $ 29. Piecegoods & hospital sheeting,
Wool felts woven for machine l46 lbs. 315. n.e.s. l,745,3l3 sq. yd, 1,523,472.
Wool carpets & rugs 364 sq. yd. 348. Boots, shoes & heels 1,046,667 pr. 1,794,735.
Book cloth pyroxlin coated 5,328 sq. yd. 4,819. Clothing, gloves & mittens 179,163 doz. 1,437,294.
Synthetic braids, fringe, etc. -- 6,816. Druggist rubber sundries 1,188,146 513,434.
Viscose & cupr. cent. fil. yarn, etc. 40,126 lbs 22,577. Rubber manufactures: friction
Acetate rayon yarn 292,272 lbs. 184,283. tape, fan belts, auto & balata
Spun rayon yarn 84,07l lbs. 52,168. belting, hose & tubing, pack-
Nylon yarn 4 lbs. 33. ing, mats, flooring, etc. 65,472,339 lbs. 28,887,600.
Wool cloth & dress goods 95,384,022 lbs. 192,642,856. Rubber manufactures, n.e.s. -- 1,672,246.
Wool blankets 5,242,637 lbs. 7,472,329. Synthetic rubber 362,839 lbs. 125,943.
Wool knit apparel, n.e.s. 203 lbs. 450,304. Latex & other forms of rubber
Hair & felt manufactures, n.e.s. 18,432 lbs. 2,750. compounded for mfr. l,117,278 lbs. 366,413.
Wool or mohair manufactures, Hard rubber electrical goods,
n.e.s -- 208,013. n.e.s. 680,653 lbs. 803,345.
Wool men'a overcoats, suits & Truck & bus casings 3,502,736 92,466,132.
pants 188,611 3,169,329. Solid tires for automobiles &
Fur felt hats, men's & boys' 50 3l4. trucks l3,574 lbs. 378,643.
Wool fabrics, n.e.s. 408,827 lbs. 679,076. Tire sundries & repair materials,
Linoleum 121,019 sq. yd. 64,152. excl. camelback 2,020,571 lbs. 1,635,739.
Clothing, nurses -- ll,78l. Casings & tubes excl. automobile 749,056 7,595,759.
Clothing, gas protective -- 4,102. automobile casings, excl. truck &
Felt base floor coverings 114,797 sq. yd. 58,45l. bus 2,701,081 lbs. 6,659,880.
Oilcloth, shelf, table & wall 1,015,886 sq. yd. 352,319. automobile inner tubes 2,693,162 6,485,611.
Waterproof outer garments 176,962 7l0,l29. Camelback 206,472 lbs. 52,290.
Cements 7l8,894 lbs. l,016,937.

Page ten

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
COTTONS COTTONS, continued
Cotton gauze & sterile bandage Cotton heavy filter, hose, belting
absorbent cotton 428,391 lbs. $ 330,025. duck 70,229 sq. yd. $ 52,072.
Blankets 23l,905 723,463. Cotton ounce duck l5,944,996 sq. yd. 9,634,702.
Cotton fabric napped, excl. flannel 277,218 sq. yd. l30,803. Cotton sewing thread 3,282,633 lbs. 4,304,611.
Cotton denims 8,536,926 sq. yd. 2,240,504. Cotton carded yarn, gray 165,389 lbs. 91,041.
Cotton drill, twill, etc. 70,290,453 sq. yd. 35,769,818. Cotton aheets & pillow cases 154,072 doz. 1,796,315.
Cotton sheeting 11,748,l89 sq. yd. 2,299,442. Cotton rags, excl. paper stock 3,506 lbs. 192.
Cotton fabric apparel women Cotton chscl. & gauze blch. dyed 156,637 sq. yd. 22,036.
children, n.e.s. 73,l85 lbs. 74,091. Curtain draperies & cotton house
Cotton goods, combed, carded, furnishings, n.e.s. -- 210,853.
n.e.s. 52,362 sq. yd. 6,137. Huck damask plain twils. twling. -- 176,893.
Bags of jute 5,538 lbs. 1,416. Cotton msnufactures, n.e.s. -- 2,891,764.
Sisal, sunn, etc., twine & cordage l0,879,108 lbs. 1,887,935. Cotton printcloth, bleached 1,67,468 sq. yd. 295,757.
Manila cordage 15,454 lbs. 5,364. Cotton soft wastes, n.e.s. 4,410 lbs. 336.
Cotton underwear, men's 101,302 doz. 844,092. Cut card yarn blch. col. nov. 77,288 lbs. 45,985.
Cotton flannels, blch. or col. 4,504,083 sq. yd. 765,934. Cotton hard waste yarn thread 32,407 lbs. 3,877.
Cotton work gloves, mittens, Cotton table damask, in the pc. 111,470 sq. yd. 5,089.
gauntlets & hosiery 34,526 doz. pr. l28,589. Cotton sweatera, pullovers, etc.,
Cotton men'a jackets & wind- men's 1,500 2,520.
breakers 18,0l7 96,244. Cotton print cl. yarn fab. over
Cotton cloth, gray 289,688 sq. yd. 45,068. 36x32 ct. 737,219 sq. yd. 100,370.
Cotton twine, rope & cordage, Cotton remnants, n.e.s. 17,550 lbs. 9,803.
excl. tire 1,355,256 lbs. 706,488. Cotton pile fabrics, n.e.s. 500 sq. yd. 425.
Cotton fabrics, col. yarn, n.e.s. 3,759,396 sq. yd. 858,647. Cotton knit fabrics, in the pc. 573,757 lbs. 616,04l.
Cotton duck & awning materials 3,837,445 sq. yd. 3,810,789. Cotton narrow fabrics, n.e.s. -- 231,525.
Cotton men's work clothing, n.e.s. 61,247 doz. 967,457. Cotton woven belting for machines 396,038 lbs. l87,474.
Cotton men's clothing of woven Cotton braids, bindings,etc. -- 7,006,954.
fabrics, n.e.s. 8,887 doz. 255,660. Cotton bags, new 365,359 lbs. 182,892.

Page eleven

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
WOOD & WOOD PRODUCTS WOOD & WOOD PRODUCTS, continued
Boards, doug. fir, dress, scantlings 39 M bd.ft. $20,625. Filing folders, cards & other office
Furniture, chief value wood, n.e.s. -- 8,486. forms 37,500 lbs. $ 10,619.
Handles for striking tools 4,762 doz. 9,457. Writing paper 18,603,029 lbs. 3,128,385.
Millwork house fixtures, n.e.s. -- 1,139. Vulcanized fiber sheets, etc. 10,044,901 lbs. 2,454,153.
Oars & paddles, boat 20,934 32,75l. Papeteries 2,675 lbs. 296.
Wood manufactures, n.e.s. -- 248,609. Paper & paper products, n.e.s. -- 385,871.
Wood lath 39 M 4,220. Paper bags, excl. heavy shipping 210 lbs. l9.
Art cork, block, gaskets, etc. 869 lbs. l,964. Paper cash-register, adding machine 227,145 lbs. 61,657.
Cork balls, bobbers, buoys, etc. 1,129 lbs. 602. Paper boxes & cartons, n.e.s. 1,236 lbs. 373.
Natural cork manufactures, n.e.s. 4,726 lbs. 7,870.
Cork, wood or bark, unmfrd. 38,544 lbs. 6,225. CHEMICALS
Paper, newsprint 27,439 lbs. 907. Acetic acid 132,934 lbs. 27,505.
Furniture, wood, n.e.s, cov. upholstery -- 82. acetone 26,834,746 lbs. 2,275,677.
Paper, book, not coated 1,093,888 lbs. l70,581. Acetophenetindine 26,815 21,074.
Paper, wrapping, excl. Kraft 793,154 lbs. l19,873. Acetylsadicylic acid (aspirin)
Paper, cover 72,242 lbs. 7,458. tablet -- 475.
Paper, greaseproof, waterproof 8,373,322 lbs. l,333,992. Acetylsalicylic acid in bulks 44,578 lbs. l49,358.
Paper, surface coated, n.e.s. 250,060 lbs. 109,101. Acrylonitrile 2,345 lbs. 1,055.
Cigarette paper, cigarette books, Alchohols, n.e.s. 701,408,317 lbs. 94,941,346.
cover 2,043,178 lbs. 1,070,771. Alcohol, denatured, solidified 1,822,55l lbs. 188,032.
Tissue paper & crepe, n.e.s. 571,796 lbs. 421,841. Aluminum compounds, n.e.s. 1,082 lbs. 62l.
Bristols & bristol board 68,864 lbs. 7,939. Aluminum chloride, anhydrous 158,661 lbs. 14,845.
Paper, Kraft wrapping 343,982 lbs. 39,383. Ammonium compounds, n.e.s. -- 105,775.
Paper, toilet 92 lbs. 1l. Amonia, anhydrous 459,811 lbs. 95,911.
Paper, board, n.e.s. l80,9l4 lbs. 18,695. Ammonia, aqua 3,998 lbs. 3l8.
Fiber insulation board 248,891 sq. ft. 53,666, Ammonium bicarbonate 100 lbs. 13.
Paper sheathing & building 327,000 lbs. 7,909. Ammonium carbonate 2,58l lbs. 1,250.
Box board, n.e.s. 147,157 lbs. 6,094. Ammonium chloride 302,100 lbs. 15,507.
Blotting paper 10,868 lbs. 6,835. Ammonium nitrate 4,113,567 lbs. 492,096.

Page twelve A

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars

CHEMICALS, continued
Amyl acetate 56,890 lbs. $ 8,543.
aniline oil 7,009,316 lbs. 962,718.
Antimony salts & compounds,
n.e.s. 122 lbs. 530.
Acetic anhydride 438,720 lbs. 40,749.
Acids & anhydrides, n.e.s. 1,026,661 lbs. 123,126.
acids & anhydrides, inorganic,
n.e.s. 659,134 lbs. 126,406.
Arsenious oxide 50,824 lbs. 50,814.
Baking powder 54 lbs. 12.
Benzocaine, benzoate, etc. 25,453 lbs. 129,038.
Benzoic acid tech. & med. gr. 9,803 lbs. 4,284.
Benzol or benzene 1,634 gal. 878.
Bleaching powder 30,730 lbs. 2,131.
Boric acid 1,838,257 lbs. 94,953.
Bromine, bromide, bromates, nes 169,101 lbs. 76,784.
Buna, S 17,967,832 lbs. 6,426,372.
Butanol 14,384,133 lbs. 3,039,314.
Butyl acetate 11,193,203 lbs. 2,147,276.
Calcium nitrate 4,940 lbs. 1,745.
Caesium salts & compounds 22 lbs. 2,300.
Caffein 82,422 lbs. 212,018.
Caffein salts & compounds 52,225 lbs. 194,129.
Calcium carbide 1,696,791 lbs. 93,114.
Calcium chloride 1,747,249 lbs. 21,981.
Campher, natural, synthetic 3,224,821 lbs. 1,373,382.
Carbon, black or gas black 5,065,003 lbs. 312,866.
Carbon tetrachloride 109,788 lbs. 8,445.
Carbons, animal charcoal, n.e.s. 27,234 lbs. 3,312.


Part B

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars

CHEMICALS, continued
Casein 148,364 lbs. 54,230.
Castor oil 240 gals. 458.
Cellulose-acetate flake, etc, 5,117 lbs. 2,123.
Cellulose acetate sheets, etc. 285,270 lbs. 245,676.
Cellulose plastic mold comp, 1,359 lbs. 812.
Cellulose plastic film support 225,992 lbs. 249,480.
Cementing preparations, n.e.s. 312,081 lbs. 22,750.
Chemical specialty compouads, n.e.s. -- 2,315,756.
Chemical pigments, n.e.s 92,583 lbs. 34,817.
Cements for sealing cans 224,775 lbs. 40,807.
Chlorine 2,000 lbs. 400.
Chrome pigments 51,426 lbs. 11,746.
Chromic acid 50,989 lbs. 8,759.
Chromium salts & compounds
n.e.s. 150,000 lbs. 34,805.
Citric acid 2,138,555 lbs. 715,641.
Cleaning & washing compounds
specialty 39,729 lbs. 6,495.
Coaltar acids, n.e.s. 101,428 lbs. 31,211.
Coaltar colors, dyes, stains & color
lakes 2,627,410 lbs. 1,108,534.
Coaltar dyes, n.e.s. 407,184 lbs. 489,258.
Coaltar, crude 17,203,267 lbs. 694,768.
Coaltar intermediates, n.e.s. 6,703,480 lbs. 1,938,035.
Coaltar products, finished, 1,790,573 lbs. 1,498,912.
Color lakes and toners 23,147 lbs. 17,719.
Copper salts & compounds, n.e.s. 42,875 lbs. 32,659.
Copper sulphate 230,140 lbs. 12,557.
Creslyc acid & creols 340,677 lbs. 53,108.

Page thirteen A

Item Quantity

CHEMICALS, continued
Cupric oxide 4,194 lbs. $ 1,105.
Dental creams 78 lbs. 68.
Dextrine or British gum 18,100 lbs. 989.
Dibutyl & diethylphtalate, etc. 12,497,577 lbs. 2,755,992.
Dimethylaniline 4,350,417 lbs. 957,918.
Diphenylamine 3,130,720 lbs. 690,908.
Disinfectants, household & Indus-
trial, etc. 603,451 lbs. 132,895.
Dyeing, tanning extracts, n.e.s. 9,672 lbs. 7,648.
Elixirs, liquid solutions, n.e.s. ---- 6,758.
Ester gums 60,000 lbs. 14,127.
Ethyl acetate 12,419,432 lbs. 1,632,875.
Ethyl ether 2,288 lbs. 502.
Ethyl fluid 558,766 gals. 2,055,864.
Ethylene chlorhydrene 301,860 gals. 63,465.
Ethylene dibromide 3,734,900 gals. 720,128.
Ethylene glycol 43,319,367 gals 5,124,760.
Ethylene glycol 3,174,020 gals. 343,554.
Fish oils & concentrates 744,200 gals. 3,372,847.
Flavoring extracts, natural 1,162 gals. 17,127.
Flavoring extracts, synthetic 4,865 gals. 29,075.
Flavor & perfume mat., synthetic,
n.e.s. 280,750 lbs. 290,587.
Floor wax & polishes for wood
furn. 151 gals. 48.
Formaldehyde, 40% solution 192 gals. 27.
Frierfsyl phosphate 26,248 gals. 6,693.
Gaseous refrigerants, n.e.s. 20,849 gals. 5,802.
Gases, liquefied & solid. n.e.s. 412,381 gals. 297,233.


Part B Quantity Cost in dollars
Item

CHEMICALS, continued
Gases, lung irritant, n.e.s 5,190 lbs. 8,261.
Gases, screening smoke 110,215 lbs. 7,930.
Glandular products, etc. --- 944,747.
Glycerin 4,794,752 lbs. 1,001,189.
Glycerin, 100% glyerol basis 25,976,878 lbs. 4,639,518.
Helius gas 56,640 cu.ft. 948.
Hexamethylene tetramine 25,447,742 lbs. 5,364,296.
Hydrochloric acid 192,505 lbs. 12,499.
lndustrial chemicals, n.e.s. --- 2,810,455.
Insecticides, etc., household & in-
dustrial 12 lbs. 2.
Iodine, n.e.s. 15 lbs. 32.
Iridium salts & compounds 1 lbs. 124.
Indigo, synthetic 4,489 lbs. 3,453.
Kalsomine o.c.w. paints, dry 34,236 lbs. 11,786.
Lacquers, nitrocell clear 13,598 lbs. 27,050.
Lacquers, nitrocell pigmented 2,276 lbs. 3,335.
Lampblack 89,753 lbs. 8,434.
Licorice extract & mass ---- lbs. 12.
Litharge 9,704 lbs. 1,567.
Liquid gum inhibitors --- 87,002.
Logwood extract 42,620 lbs. 9,211.
Manganese chloride 11 lbs. 8.
Manganese salts & compounds, 10 lbs. 13.
n.e.s.
Medical chemicals, bousehbold, ln
small pkgs., liquids 449.
Medicinal chemicals, household,
in small pkgs, solids ---- 7,008.

Page fourteen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars

CHEMICALS, continued CHEMICALS, continued
Medicinal chemicals for Prescrip- Ocher, umber & iron oxide, n.e.s. l22,557 lbs. $ 5,366.
tion use n.e.s. -- $ 7,763,950. Organic chemicals, n.e.s. 8,100,468 lbs. 4,197,742.
Mercuric chloride 465 lbs. l,l62. Oxalic acid 23,450 2,726.
Mercury salts & compounds, n.e.s. 570 lbs. 1,308. Paints, bitimious liquid plastic -- 188,2?4.
Metal working compounds l,357,724 lbs. 189,152. Paints, colors, paste, oil, n.e.s. 2,341,892 lbs. 279,679.
Methanol 4,830,148 gal. 1,526,629. Paints, etc., ready mixed, n.e.s. 176,211 gal. 298,321.
Methanol l,256,097 lbs. 59l,856. Phenol, carbolic acid 17,906,825 lbs. 9,755,822.
Methyl ethyl ketone 70 lbs. 27. Phenolformaldehyde fab. mold 26,635 lbs. 24,369.
Methylmethacrylt forms, not laminated749,503 lbs. 709,899. Phenolformaldehyde forms, lam. 1,690 lbs. 7,162.
Methyl methacrylate molded 24,858 lbs. 23,930. Phenolformaldehyde resins 999,930 lbs. 151,800.
Methyl methacrylatc not molded 71,3l0 lbs. 59,682. Phosphoric acid 248,655 lbs. 63,446.
Methyl methacrylate, unfabricated 107,823 lbs. l01,825. Phosphorous, elemental 1,174,524 lbs. 180,796.
Mineral oil, white 15,050 gal. 5,289. Phthalic anhydride 134,400 lbs. 18,145.
Molybdenum trioxide 300 lbs. 529. Petroleum oil sprays, agricultural 832 ga1s. 986.
Nanillin, all types 2,300 lbs. 4,986. Picric acid 3,309,490 lbs. 715,942.
Naphthalene 22 lbs. 6. Pigments, mineral earth, n.e.s. 2,160 lbs. 39.
Napthol & flakes, beta 275,840 lbs. 64,246. Plasters n.e.s. -- 90,325.
Nickel salts & compounds, n.e.s. 100,100 lbs. 35,036. Polyisobutylene 118,600 lbs. 48,386.
Nickel chloride 660 lbs. 660. Polymers, etc, fabricated & un-
Nickel oxide 1,100 lbs. 386. fabricated 3,046,893 948,982.
Nickel sulfate 22,000 lbs. 2,970. Polymers of styrene, etc. 135,949 lbs. 95,996.
Nicotine sulfate l68 bls. 140. Polishes, automobile 480 lbs. 75.
Nitric acid 52,117 lbs. 7,433. metal and stove 4,650 lbs. 500.
Nitrocell solution not over 12% nit. 51,215 lbs. 37,143. Potassium compounds, n.e.s. 696,938 lbs. 183,666.
Nitrocell solution, over 12% nit. 93,791 lbs. 24,189. Potassium bicarbonate & mix. 81,817 lbs. 8,182.
Nitro derivatives of benzene, etc. 760,330 lbs. 109,083. Potassiun bichromate chromate 2,084,471 lbs. 257,7l7.
Nitrogen, chemical materials, nes. 1,191,757 lbs. 38,887. Potassium bitartrate & mix. 4 lbs. 3.
Nylon 250 lbs. 138. Potassium bromine 85,583 lbs. 22,515.
Potassium bromide 369,702 lbs. 80,817.
Page fifteen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
CHEMlCALS, continued
Potassium carbonate & mix. 1,568,116 lbs. $ 104,550. CHEMICALS, continued
Potassium chlorate & mix. 2,013,317 lbs. 213,665. Resins, urea 50,001 lbs. $ 21,525.
Potassium chromium sulfate 150,000 lbs. 19,454.
Potassium cyanide & mix. 18,640 1bs. 11,001. Rhodium salts & compounds l lbs. 165.
Potassium hydroxide 471,082 1bs. 67,985. Rochelle salts 400 lbs. 290.
Potassium nitrate pp May 1, 1937 1,302,462 lbs. 88,369. Rubber compound agents, n.e.s. 845,885 lbs. 371,990.
Potassium nitrate, n.e.s. 3,778,284 lbs. 254,842. Rubber compounding agents 998,237 lbs. 437,886.
Potassium permanganate & mix. 228,864 lbs. 43,907. Salicylic acid tech. & med. 215,800 lbs. 57,395.
Potassium sulfate 290,125 lbs. 40,496. Salves, ointments, burns, etc. -- 44,463.
Proprietary medicinal prepara- Serums, antitoxins, human use -- 2,109,323.
tions, n.e.s. -- 802,922. Scouring bricks, paste, etc. 74,060 lbs. 13,605.
Pyroxylin plastic film support 383,628 lbs. 300,881. Soda lime 7 lbs. 3.
Pyroxylin sheets, rods, etc. 439,095 lbs. 321,928. Sodium benzoate tech & med. 4,523 lbs. 2,095.
Photographic chem. coaltar 5,235 lbs. 7,448. Sodium bicarbonate 31,008 lbs. 2,151.
Phenolphthalein 326 lbs. 347. Sodium bichromate & chromate 3,173,204 lbs. 233,509.
Quinine salts, n.e.s. 17,750 oz. 15,946. Sodium bromide 1,050,l12 lbs. 281,530.
Quinine salts, compounds, n.e.s. 185 oz. 817. Sodium carbonate calcined 4,380,285 lbs. 87,292.
Reagent chemicals for laboratory use -- 143,513. Sodium chlorate 600 lbs. 450.
Reagents, synthetic collecting 6,870,336 lbs. 1,370,859.
Remedies, malaria, etc., n.e.s. -- 117,276. Sodium compounds, n.e.s. 2,754,447 lbs. 272,651.
Red lead, dry 253,000 lbs. 23,813. Sodium cyanide 1,960,250 lbs. 198,119.
Red lead, in oil 440,682 lbs. 46,430. Sodium hydrosulphite & compounds 391,650 lbs. 9,401.
Resins, alkyd 1,458 lbs. 427. Sodium hydroxide 195,405,715 lbs. 4,024,739.
Resins, gums, synthetics, n.e.s. 335,903 lbs. 89,056. Sodium nitrate ll May l, l937 52,700 lbs. 3,531.
Resins, synthetic, n.e.s, forms Sodium phosphate 50,125 lbs. 3,294.
laminated 68,367 lbs. 59,602. Sodium silicate 35,104 lbs. l,3l3.
Resins, synthetic, n.e.s., forms, Sodium tetraborate 52,393 lbs. 4,182.
non-laminated 185,968 lbs. 180,555. Starch 48 lbs. 4.
Resins, tar-acid, n.e.s. 580,014 lbs. 156,086. Strontium nitrate 23,275 lbs. 6,793.
Strontium oxylate 14,000 lbs. 9,892.
Strychnine & salts thereof 950 oz. 953.
Sulfanilamide 27,195 lbs. 28,303.
Page sixteen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
CHEMICALS, contined CHEMlCALS, continued
Sulfathiazole & derivatives 4,300 lbs. $ 30,272. Whiterite l1,200 lbs. $ 336.
Sulfadiazine & derivatives 7,971 lbs. 92,065. Xylene, xylol 5,737 lbs. 1,600.
Sulfonamide drugs, n.e.s. l19 lbs. 510. Zinc oxide 32,629 lbs. 3,305.
Sulphuric acid, fuming 2l8,488 lbs. 19,392. Zinc salts & compunds, n.e.s. 7,705 lbs. 6,683.
Sulphuric acids, n.e.s. 900,908 lbs. 62,197. Zinc sulfate 28 lbs. 8.
Tablets, powders, ointments, n.e.s. -- l,777,286.
Tantalum salts & compounds 550 lbs. 901. LEATHER GOODS
Tartaric acid 246 lbs. 201. Wearing apparel 1,333 3,235,486.
Textile specialty compounds, n.e.s. 11,343 lbs. 5,632. Boots & shoes, men's 5,396,651 pr. 22,773,758.
Theobromine & salts & compounds 59,122 lbs. 132,317. Shoes, infants, children 45,373 pr. 50,781.
Theophylline salts thereof 64 oz. 28. Boots & shoes, youths & boys,
Thickol 2,022 lbs. 1.001. women & misses 150,297 pr. 499,020.
Thinners for nitrocell lacquer 7,042 gal. 7,466. Footwear, leather sole & upper 1,356,395 pr. 5,687,539.
Tin chloride 77 lbs. 95. Leather, calf & Kid skin 5,381,631 sq.ft.1,645,944.
Tin oxide 1,000 lbs. 520. Leacher, upper, n.e.s. 21,272,175 sq.ft.6,6l3,801.
Titanium dioxide & pigments 20 lbs. 2. Leather, for soles 51,918,361 lbs. 23,507,190.
Toluene, toluol l9,986,672 lbs. 12,116,708. Sole leather, beads,back&sides l6,848,339 lbs. 7,841,336.
Tungsten acid 2,250 lbs. 6,886. Leather, for soles, outer 5,736,567 dozpr23,003,594.
Urea 21,000 lbs. 916. Leather, cut stock, excl. outer sole -- 5,705,334.
Vaccines, human use 13,035 lbs. 800,497. Discontinued models old styles &
Vanadium oxide -- 21,197. second-hand shoes -- l28,472.
Vanadium salts & compounds, n.e.s 4,944 lbs. 24,743. Leader case bag & strap 345,147 sq. ft. 152,767.
Vanadium sulfide 1 lb. 10. Leacher belting, new 361,902 lbs. 438,042
Vanillin 28,352 lbs. 64,331. Belting leather, n.e.s. l18,562 lbs. 66,135.
Varnishes 52,327 gal. 82,314. Belts to be worn, leather -- 1,595,893.
Vitamins & vitasterols, n.e.s. 2,285,641 lbs. 22,454,053. Sole & belting leather offal, shldr.
Water softeners, etc. 2,630,l5l lbs. 277,264. neck, belly 2,802,385 lbs. 1,080,089.
White lead dry 34,823 lbs. 3,527. Leather, cattle side 10,096,372sq.ft 3,021,723.
White lead, in oil 1,568,542 lbs. 135,947. Coat & kid, excl. bl. 428,870 sq.ft. 132,942.

Page seventeen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
Item
Quantity Cost in Dollars
LEATHER GOODS. continued FOODSTUFFS, continued
Leather lining, ex. sh. & lamb 125 $ 94. Milk & cream condensed 60,019,643 lbs. $ 9,027,160.
Leather & tanned skins, n.e. s. -- 491,068. Milk & cream evaporated 8,942,706 lbs. 4,905,667.
Leather manufactures, n.e.s. -- 14,866. Milk, dried whole skimmed 159,921,528 lbs. 30,804,571.
Luggage 82 858. Butter 217,660,666 lbs. 103,673,250.
Fur manufactures, n.e.s. -- 4,75O. Butter oil, & butter spreads 7,1ll,737 lbs. 4,168,845.
Oleo oil, edible, oleo stock, edible
POODSTUFFS tallow, edible, lard, incl. neutral,
Meat, canned, n.e.s. 72,000 lbs. 25,762. oleomargarine 791,822,417 lbs. 124,387,146.
Poultry, live 6,300 lbs. 7,384.
Beef & veal, fresh or frozen 89,238 lbs. 13,786. Cheese, processed blended spreads,
Beef & veal, pickled or cured 32,400 lbs. 6,383. cheese, n.e.s. 79,926,896 lbs. 2,904,957.
Pork, pickled, salted, fresh, Gelatin, edible 18,690 lbs. 16,653.
frozen 529,814,747 lbs. 77,010,566. Meat extract & bouillon cubes 685 lbs. 1,185.
Ham & shoulders, cured 27,355,903 lbs. 8,794,783. Other edible animal products, n.e.s. -- 222,593.
Bacon 70,531,571 lbs. 11,790,369. infants' foods, malted milk, etc. 115,663 lbs. 21,022.
Cumber1and & Willshlre sides 40,000 lbs. 10,400. Barley 477,30l bu. 707,672.
Sausage, bologna, etc., not canned 1,301,439 lbs. 477,075. buckwheat 5,744 bu. 17,446.
Sausage ingredients, cured 573,031 lbs. 82,876. Corn 30,429 bu. 194,230.
Meats, n.e.s. includ. snoked Hominy & corn grits 1,645,02l bu. 45,600.
poultry 33,610,181 lbs. 16,130,915. Kafir & milo 142 bu. 870.
Beef, canned 16,710,448 lbs. 4,735,745. Oats 120,830 bu. 91,231.
Pork, canned 297,186,838 lbs. 123,784,465. Oatmeal groats & rolled oats in
Sausage, bologna, etc., canned 583,479,422 lbs. 204,150,308. bulk, in packages 50,539,897 lbs. 2,220,748.
Chicken, canned 109,793 lbs. 46,879. Cornstarch & corn flour 478,692 lbs. 36,663.
Other canned meats, excl. chicken 2,405,696,825 lbs. 180,764,722. Paddy or rough rice 9,089,681 lbs. 478,984.
Tushenka, canned 166,650,966 lbs. 70,335,231. Milled rice, incl. browa rice,
Fish, canned 291,227 lbs. 41,882. broken, etc. 126,387,202 1bs. 7,893,998.
Eggs dried 242,459,249 lbs. 280,800,963. Rye 10,268 bu. 36,300.
Eggs in the shell 1,883 doz. 4,038. Wheat 1,512,973 bu. 2,119,872.
Wheat floar, n.e.s. 26,929 bar. l47,509.

Page eightteen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
FOODSTUFFS, continued FOODSTUFFS, continued
Wheat flour, wholly of U.S. wheat 7,806,589 bar. $34,527,968. Oranges, tangerines, & grapefruit 810 boxes $ 4,884.
Marcaroni, spaghetti, etc. 353,224 lbs. 53,103. Pears, fresh or frozen 750 boxes 75.
Wheat cereal foods, ready to eat 171,734 lbs. 19,088. Sugar 1,019,602,323 boxes 59,128,817.
Wheat cereal foods, to be cooked 1,496,043 lbs. 100,795. Honey 29,693 lbs. 10,770.
Wheat semolina 57,869,814 lbs. 2,514,115. Molasses 18 gals. 14.
Cereal foods, n.e.s. 15,613,037 lbs. 1,462,l45. Glucose, dry 35,1l0 lbs. 3,686.
Grains & preparations, n.e.s. -- 4,199,246. Coffee, roasted 1,055,552 lbs. 354,612.
Feeds, n.e.s. 11,053 tons 7l4,120. Coffee extracts & substitutes 15,782 lbs. 4,9l9.
Beans, dry, ripe 492,521,079 lbs. 30,353,423. Cbocolate candy, candy excl. choco-
Beans, seed 11,974,704 lbs. 2,353,676. late, confections, n.e.s. 946,464 lbs. l96,927.
Peas, dry, ripe 59,116,953 lbs. 3,423,782. Chocolate & cocoa 62,696 lbs. 16,121.
Peas, seed 16,324,197 lbs. 1,863,607. Cinnamon, clovca, uaground spices,
Chickpeas 80,000 lbs. 6,557. pepper 596,861 lbs. l30,824.
Onions, fresh 661,932 lbs. 43,157. Fruit juices 724,234 gals. 1,537,036.
Tomatoes, fresh 126 lbs. 12. Canned fruits 92,454 lbs. 10,839.
Potatoes, fresh white 4,919,062 lbs. 227,601. Fruit preparations, n.e.s. l2,060,382 lbs. 342,861.
Vegetables, fresh, n.e.s. 169,212. Preserved fruits, jelles & jams 6,858,277 lbs. 392,757.
Canned vegetables & juices 33,339,138 lbs. 3,491,283. Dried & evaporated fruits 4,372,578 lbs. 780,880.
Pickles, cucumber 136,021 lbs. 27,174. Vegetables, dehydrated-other
Tomato table sauces 636 lbs. 133. preparations 43,590,879 lbs. 28,79l,213.
Mayonnaise & salad-dressings, Nuts & preparations, n.e.s. 6,056,758 lbs. l,0l5,846.
sauces 52,261 lbs. 10,333. Biscuits & crackers 89 lbs. 30.
Olives 71 lbs. 33. Corn cereal food, ready to eat 83 lbs. 22.
Vinegar 128,890 gals. 112,459. Farinaceous substances 30 lbs. 8.
Yeast l,590,587 lbs. 504,036. Edible oils & cooking fats 235,115,716 lbs. 37,996,411.
Pineapples 26 boxes 2l1. Soya flour, edible 103,772,226 lbs. 1,718,512.
Vanilla beans 730 boxes 7,102. Wheat flour, wholly of U.S. wheat 2,050,6l3 cwt. 8,276,256.
Apples 3,653 boxes 15,423. Beverages, syrup & flavors 286 gals. 433.
Lemmons & limes 595 boxes 4,969. Banana, fresh 40,136 lbs. 2,571.

Page nineteen

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
FOODSTUFFS, continued OILS, RESINS, ETC., continued
Sunflower seed, oil, edible 11,685,500 lbs. $ 1,909,663. Oil of citronella 1,000 lbs. $ 3,750.
Tea 311,913 lbs. 229,716. Oils, natural, essential & distilled, n.e.s 7,268 lbs. 46,767.
Coffee, green 6,598,709 lbs. 94l,969. Oils, blended, etc. perfume flav. 9,600 lbs. 52,500.
Qusbracbo extract 32,033 lbs. 2,979.
SEEDS Crude drugs, herbs, etc, n.e.s. 153,198 lbs. 90,369.
Grass & field, n.e.s. 12,154,637 lbs. 2,085,546. Fish oils, inedible 446,021 lbs. 95,594.
Timothy 4,l27,285 lbs. 396,567. Oleic acid or red oil 1,400 lbs. 136.
Alfalfa 459,851 lbs. 190,945. Hog grease & wool grease l45,387 lbs. 40,679.
Red clover 1,298,906 lbs. 372,281. Animal greases, fats, inedible, n.e.s. 718,474 lbs. 93,968.
Clover, excl. red 1,094,148 lbs. 269,287. Glue, animal, excl. casein 18,069 lbs. 1,650.
Red top 277,0l3 lbs. 123,282. Cascien glue & inedible 2,905,592 lbs. 611,693.
Kentucky blue grass 475,438 lbs. 197,765. Pine, oil pine, oil prod., etc. 92,080 lbs. 101,082.
Carrot 1,985,485 lbs. 2,030,066. Tar & pitch of wood 500 lbs. 3l.
Vegetable, n.e.s. l1,651,470 lbs. 11,665,584. Expressed oils & fats, inedible, n.e.s. 82,036,224 lbs. l1,173,362.
Sugar beet 90,506 lbs. 53,322. Wood rosin bbl. 500 lbs. gr. wht. 18 lbs. 1.
Digitalis 22,135 lbs. 14,164. Rosin, n.e.s. 200 lbs. 18.
Soy Beans 669,841 lbs. 65,823. Gums & resons, n.e.s. 44,132 lbs. 14,430.
Reeds, hemp, perilla, poppy,etc l,094,976 lbs. 319,004. Resins, natural, refined or modified 35,342 lbs. 19,768.
Nursery greenhouse stock, n.e.s. 7,867. Shellac bleached & unbleached 4,998 lbs. 3,037.
Animal products, indible, n.e.s. -- 810,978.

OILS, RESINS, ETC,
linseed oil, crude 530,771,576 lbs. 78,2l3,761. GENERATlNG EQUIPMENT
Cottonseed oil, crude 2,524,536 lbs. 413,457. Batteries 1,755,640 4,278,997.
Tung oil 75 lbs. 7l. Batteries, storage, flashlight, dry mul-
Soybean oil, crude 8,260,581 lbs. 1,084,986. tiple cell 3,7l1,893 cel. 4,957,434.
Caster oil, commercial 1,483 lbs. 257. Battery chargers, complete non-rotating 2,748 335,296.
Vegetable oil, excl. olive 1,346,195 lbs. 175,057. Capacitors 1/2 kva & over 2,269 185,216.
Coconut oil, crude 75 lbs. l5. Condensers, heaters, acc. & parts -- l2,924,077.
Citrus oils 93,200 lbs. 139,485. Electric generateing sets, Diesel engines 6,285 62,538,679.

Page twenty

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
GENERATING EQUIPMENT, continued PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES, continued
Generators 6,214 $ 222,020,760. Parts for printing, etc. -- S 5,279.
Generator accessories & parts, n.e.s. -- l1,728,204. Film, sensitized, 35 mm pos. -- 178,001.
Self-contained lighting outfits, n.e.s. l,862 1,192,713. Film, sensitized, 35 mm neg. 2,811,545 lin.ft. 59,007.
Power transformers, over 500 kva 696 6,161,470. Film, sensitized, 16 mm pos. l,103,000 lin.ft. l0,755.
Distribution tranaformers, not over Film, sensitized, 16 mm neg. 335,464 lin.ft. 4,715.
500 kva 1,297 l,094,50l. Film, sensitized, 8 mm neg. 6,500 lin.ft. 260.
Instrument transformers 753 70.965. Motion picture sound reproduction
Transformers, n.e.s. 24,248 1,182,489. equipment -- 24,156.
Mercury power rectifiers 484 438,774. Motion picture rolls, sensitized 67,560 927,370.
Rotating converters 13,784 l8,178,498. Motion picture sound track, ex-
Steam turbine generator sets 991 63,860,334. posed neg. 8,000 lin.ft. 80.
Welding sets 4,689 7,309,158. Motion picture sound track, ex-
posed pos. 8,274 lin.ft. 165.
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES Dry plates 1,462 doz. 6,273.
Cameras, motion picture, 35 mm 4 7,656. Motion picture features, 34 mm. ex
Cameras, aerial, excl. aircraft 28 38,366. posed 84,566 lin.ft. 40,010.
Cameras, aerial, aircraft 20 6,931. Motion picture features, 16 mm 20,836 lin.ft. 20,836.
Cameras, prof. scientific, etc. 55 35,527. positive
Cameras, gun 3 1,700. Notion picture sbort subjects,
Cameras, excl. motion picture, n.e.s. 178 4,651. 35 mm 336,000 lin.ft. $ 2,5O0.
Parts of cameras, excl. lenses -- l49,476. Motion picture sbort subjects
Motion picture sound recording 16 mm 27,328 lin.ft. 3,028.
equipment -- 112,443. Motion picture short subjects
Projectors, motion picture, 33 mm. 15 5,058. 35 mm 429,300 lin.ft. 5,466.
Projectors, motion picture, 16 mm Motion picture trailers 256 lin.ft. 29.
silent 8 2,400. Film X-ray, sensitized 30,874 l82,988.
Projectors, motion picture, l6 mm Film X-ray, packs of sheets 370
sound 8 4,973. Photographic paper 752,752 lbs. 557,936.
Screens, motion picture -- 24,762. Photographic supplies -- 3,735,191.

Page twenty-one

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES, continued MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS, continued
Carbon brushes & stock 150,144 lbs. $ 451,777. Neon tubes electrode sections -- $ 1,547.
Carbon electrodes, n.e.s. -- 69,879. Diamonds for industrial use
Cement, white, nonstain & other 576 bbl. 5,298. (carat) 168 1,284.
Diamond grinding wheels 285 lbs. 55,780.
Electric apparatus & parts, n.e.s. -- 5,981.840.
ITEMS LISTED AS "MISCELLANEOUS" BY RUSSIANS, WITH Electric measuring machines 220 64,107.
AND WITHOUT QUANTITlES Parts of elec. p.d portable tools -- 141,391.
Radio sets & equipment -- 52,072,805. Testing machines, tension, etc. 414 309,786.
Pottery and glass, n.e.s. 1,268,530. Parts of elec. welding sets -- 88,009.
Salt 4,413,836 lbs. 149,104. Coal, bituminous & anthracite 25,574 tons 344,686.
Fire brick, silica, n.e.s. 791,905. Typewriters & parts 273 41,133.
Binoculara, microscopes, & ac- Vehicles & parte, n.e.s. -- 127,445.
cessories 1,531,652. Winders & parts 8,470.
asbestos products 642,970. Wheelbarrows, push carts &
Carbon or graphite products 4,968,423. trucks 19,746.
Graphite, ceylon amorphous 50,108 lbs. 10,831. Roofing materials 31,349.
Graphite electrodes for furnace asphalt & bitumen manufac-
or electrolytic 21,131,124 lbs. 2,980,89l. tutes, n.e.s.
Graphite electrodes, n.e.s. 138,676. Emery powder 328,350 lbs. 32,818. 94.
Lavatory sinks, fixtures, n.e.s. 6,352. Quartz piezo el freq cont. units 210.
Marine engines, detachable 1,191 294,524. Nonmetallic mineral products,
Marine engines, n.e.s. 2,234 11,420,239. excl. precious -- 377,441.
Cars, railway, freight, over 10 Cryolite natural 23,500 lbs. 3,148.
ton 9,029 31,429,043. Magnesite brick & shapes 107,966 lbs. 4,223.
Lighting devices, battery, elec. 110,398. Mineral wax excl. paraffin 4,156,631 lbs. 545,104.
Fire-fighting equipment excl. Mica manufactures or manufac-
automotive 534,490. tures of, n.e.s. -- 93,027.
Battery, electrical 5,383. Magnesia & manufactures 177,410 lbs. 18,743.
Electric wiring supplies, etc. Mineral insulating materials -- 118,879.
n.e.s. 519,570.

Page twenty-two

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS, continued MICELLANEOUS ITEMS, continued
Military items, n.e.s. -- $ l,789,005,783. Cement refractories 1,023,012 lbs $ 191,569.
Radio ground equipment, aircraft -- 4,541,082. Chromite refractories l2,800 lbs. 759.
Wheels, turbines & parts, water -- 472,245. Sterilizers l6,188 lbs. 2,107,350.
Internalcombustion engine, ac- Surgical & medical instruments -- 7,015,192.
cessories & parts -- 13,336,863. Surgical appliances -- 497,998.
Internal-combustion engines l3,191 77,610,696. Fire clay 42 tons 14,469.
Stationary motors 40,924 11,179,433. Abrasives, natural & artificial,
Terra cotta manufactures, roof-tile -- 24,798. n.e.s. -- 17,053,409.
Stone manufactures, n.e.s. -- l1,432. Surveying equipment & levels 803 191,125.
Grindstones l27,748 lbs. 48,290. Optical lenses, not fitted to in-
Equipment (R.R.) & parte, rail- struments 209 11,977.
way car -- 7,391. Excavator & construction equipment 48,569,181.
Railway parts -- 780,864. Mining & smelting equipment 66,159,901.
Railway signals -- 9,914,560. Pumps & spare parts 12,459,744.
Cars, railway, freight, not over Asbestos textiles, automotive 16,812.
10 tons 565 134,116. Merchant vessels 121 123,803,879.
Cars, railway motor maint. etc. -- 20,992. Motor trucks, buses & chassis 508,367,622.
Steam locomotives & engines 1,168 101,075,116. Tractors & parts 23,998,280.
Locomotives 117 2,624,182.
Locomotive parts & accessories -- 2,175,075. ITEMS LISTED BY RUSSIANS AS "MISCELLANEOUS" FOR 1945
Locomotive frames, cradles, etc. -- 577,427. ONLY, WITH AND WITHOUT QUANTITIES
Steam engines 66 1,532,166. Polymers of styrene, etc. 66 lbs. 50.
Steam engines, n.e.s., & parts -- 486,124. Electric wiring supplies apparatus
Steam boilers, fire, water tube 475,251 sq. ft. 1,175,338. & parts, n.e.s. 1,979,407.
Condensers, heaters, accessories Steam engines, mech. & turb. loco-
& parts -- 4,963,417. motives, parts, frames, cradles,
Tube boiler gauge glass 60 194. etc. 79,427,657.
Steam specialties & parts -- 5,077,762. Pumps, centrifugal, rotary etc. & parts 6,417,175.
Concrete and cement manufactures -- 27,051.

Page twenty-three

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
MISCELLANEOUS FOR l945 ONLY, continued MISCELLANEOUS FOR 1945 ONLY, continued

Woodworking machinery & parts $ 280,128. Explosives, sim. blast gelatine 34,000 lbs. $ 7,480.
Ball bearings, parts, except balls 206,481. Trinitrotoluene (TNT) 31,831,984 lbs. 2,653,679.
Ball bearings, parts, rollers 6,055,945. Explosives, n.e.s. 2,793,977 lbs. 446,212.
Air compressors, sta. & port. 4,139,033. Safety fuses 66,590,000 lin.ft. 650,632.
Paint spraying equipment & parts 938. Blasting caps 10,800,500 272,875.
Industrial instruments, n.e.s. 679,157. Bombers, medium, 2 engine 163 29,634,139.
Water meters & parts, n.e.s. 16,369. Bombers, light, 2 engine 97 10,854,705.
Iron & steel pipe valves, bodies, n.e.s. 6,274,655. Bombers, U.S. patrol, 2 engine 54 9,646,885.
Machines, measuring, precision, fur- Fighters, pursuit, 1 engine l,70l 101,219,909.
naces, metal-working, industrial, Transports, heavy, 2 engine 1 265,783.
parts, n.e.s. 9,200,001. Transports, medium, 2 engine 287 28,319,277.
Guns, ground tnk mach. 50 caL 1,986. Trainers, advanced, 1 engine 54 1,260,954.
Automatic arms, parts 3 178,216. Parts, accessories for bridge building 195,913.
Parts, accessories for inf. weapons 1,294. Equipment kit mess field baking 1,389.
Parts, accessories for fld. art. 66,777. Equipage military, n.e.s. 253,338.
Guns AA, 99 mm 21 3,544,847. Small arms equipment 7,275.
Anti-aircraft parts, accessories 1,139,654. Rifle parts & accessories 7,386.
Guns, airc. 20 mm, HSMl 50 45,100. Parts, fittings, parachute, n.e.s. 39,512.
Guns, airc. 37 mm, M4 63 144,562. Eng. radl. not over 1,830 pd. 154 1,156,427.
Parts, aircraft armament 599,187. Eng. radl. over 1,830 in pd. 100 2,153,461.
Parts, tank armament 207,446. Eng. not over 1,340 in pd. 19 418,000.
Parts, naval guns 181,393. Eng. not over 1,830 in pd. 537 8,504,554.
Tracers, 50 cal. 96,600 rnd. 22,702. Carb. cowls, valves, etc., aircraft 623,672.
Armor-piercing cart. 50 cal. l91,800 rnd. 33,086. Parts, aircraft engine, n.e.s. 7,092,001.
Incendiary, cart. 50 cal. 191,800 rnd. 33,086. Automatic pilots for aircraft 5 2,250.
Components for small arms, tank Aircraft gyro instr. 3 3,150.
guns, shells, etc. 6,970,174. Aircraft navig. instr. 4,402 483,354.
powder, smokeless 22,075,681 lbs. 4,757,604. Directors, n.e.s. 4 62,000.
Dynamite l0,781,450 lbs. 1,049,469. Parts for directors 95,150.

Page twenty-four

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
MlSCELLANEOUS FOR 1945 ONLY, continued MISCELLANEOUS FOR 1945 ONLY, continued
Sights, artillery 500 $447,001. Lacquers, nitrocell pigmented 396 gals. $ 851.
Sights, n.e.s. 2 243. Varnishes, oil spir. nat. syn 8,387 gala 10,99l.
Parts telescope, periscope, sights 11,711. Sodium nitrate, n.e.s. 1,049,200 lbs. 72,804.
Equipment, fire control, n.e.s. 176,673. Equipment, dairy farm -- cu1tivators,
Radio ground equipment, aircraft 6,183,340. planters, mowers, harvesters,
Navigational instruments, n.e.s. 1,638 267,743. binders, threshers, etc. 25,778.
Quadrants gunners & range 180 4,725. Machine parts, agricultural, except 34,549.
Compass magnetic gyroscopic 1,015 95,878. tractor
Listening devices, sub 52,25l. Machinery & implements, agriculture
Tachometers, excl. aircraft 464 31,012. -- 4,002.
Trainers, aircraft pilot 1 23,160. Passenger cars, & chassis 34 77,786.
Parts, military semi-trailers 106,948. Airc. radio trans. & rec. sets 1,094 1,163,680.
Mobile communications units 134 4,807,982. Airc. radio trans. & rec. set pts. 4,399,394.
Tanks, light, n.e.s. 4 212,501. Directors, range finders, airc. 19,150.
Tanks, heavy, over 40 tons 1 96,886. Trans. etc. self-synchron., airc, 29,175.
Trans-rec. tank radio sets 20 25,898. Instruments & parts, airc., n.e.s. 264,614.
Parts, tank radio sets 6,677. Propellers, aircraft 553 1,756,048.
Eng. light, medium & heavy tanks 889 2,514,214. Parts, accessories, propellers, aircraft 3,882,345.
Kng. parts, light, medium & heavy Bomb rack cont. etc., aircraft 2,902,980.
tanks 208,864. Sights, bomb, aircraft 49 156,800.
Parts, tanks, n.e.s. 5,615,155. Other aircraft parts & accessories, n.e.s. 17,441,735.
Propellers & blades, boat 23,312 lbs. 23,410. Motorcyles parts & access., n.e.s. 3,647,804.
Vehicles & parts, n.e.s. 26,690. Vessels, merchant 31 15,990,324.
Ready mixed paints, stains, enamels 28,622 gal. 49,356. Boats, motor torpedo 63 14,726,843.
Pigments, chrome l0% chrome 9,374 lbs. 2,249. Launches, standard, navy 551,399.
Pigments, chemical, n.e.s. 12,022 lbs. 7,735. Craft, naval landing 41 3,890,645.
Paint, colors, paste oil, n.e.s. 668,409 lbs. 75,551. Watercraft, naval, n.e.s. 133,ll5.
Water paints, dry 22,400 lbs. 1,960. Parts, naval craft, exc; engine 4,138,652.
Laequers, nitrocell pigmented 4,650 gals. 20,903. Engines, marine, detachable 852 152,748.

Page twenty five

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
MISCELLANEOUS FOR 1945 ONLY, continued MISCELLANEOUS FOR 1945 ONLY, continued
Engines, marine, n.e.s. 669 $2,759,268. Trailers, semi-military, n.e.s. 604 $ 1,569,131.
Cars, railway, freight, over 10 tons 2,478 9,079,786.
Cars, railway, freight, not over 10 tons l l4,820. JORDAN'S SPECIAL
Equipment & parts, air brake, railway Household & personal effects 86,646.
car 12,806. Cigarette case, compacts, etc. 25,230.
Railway parts, etc., excl. axles 54,087. Jewelry, men's except metal 26.
Railway signals, parts, etc. 1,46l,751. Jewelry findings, parts, material 311,695.
Pushcart & hand trucks 75 4,959. Buttons of material, n.e.s. 5,457 gr. 52,885.
Wheels, n.e.s. 20 ll8. Findings, sboe, excl. leather & rubber l09,371.
Carriers, universal, ordnance 3,887 6,574,555. Eyeglasses, n.e.s. & frames 169,806.
Engines for universal carriers 400 212,240. Teeth 13,328 956.
Parts, universal carriers, engines 2l,882. Clocks, electric 13 210.
Parts, universal carriers, n.e.s. 2,145,129. Clocks & parts, n.e.s. 48,4I8.
Cars, scout, excl. armored 4,559 6,5l8,925. Clocks, mantel, novalty & wall 4 20.
Vehicles, ordnance, combat, n.e.s. 608 5,871,493. Chronometers, marine 6,133 258,537.
Parts, ordnance combat vehicles 6,621,l90. Time recording devices, n.e.s. 59,516.
Trucks, art repair 10 ll2,506. Watches with jewels 9,126 l43,922.
Trucks, machine shop 140 l,838,483. Watch parts 50.
Trucks, small arms repair 72 623,910. Glassware, table, n.e.s. machine made 60,272 15,068.
Trucks, tank maintenance 39 410,729. GLass rolled 28,205 sq.ft. 7,48O.
Trucks, tool & bench 39 442,167. Soap, toilet and fancy 6,222 lbs. 874.
Trucks, welding 30 654,459. Soap, Laundry 2,475,979 lbs. 222,35l.
Trucks, wrecking 14 l54,090. Soap, powdered or flaked 102 lbs. I7.
Trucks, service & repair, n.e.s. 160 l,5l8,643. Scouring bricks, pastes, etc. l2 lbs. 3.
Parts, ordnance, service trucks 88,730. Soap, n.e.s. 67,589 lbs. 7,006.
Trailers, 40 ton tank transport 55 284,061. Lipsticks 400.
Trailers, military, n.e.s. 435 1,911,410. Malt liquors, whiskey, dist. liquer,
Parts, accessories, military trailers l92,930, wines n.e.s. others 373 gals. 2,079.
Trailers, semi T-4, W-van 2 21,704. Rum 55 pfg. 466.

Page twenty-six

Item Quantity Cost in Dollars Item Quantity Cost in Dollars
JORDAN'S SPECIAL, continued JORDAN'S SPECIAL, contniued
Smoking tobacco 4,079 lbs. $ 3,520. Pianos, new 2 $ 530.
Cigars Oc cheroots 2 (M) 109. Phonograpbs, except coin-operated 4 67.
Cigarettes 5,729 (M) 11,959. Band percussion instrudments --- 330.
Fishing tackle, n.e.s. --- 57,444. Band woodwind insruments 51 6,534.
Books, bound, excl. educational --- 234,853. Musial instruments, n.e.s. --- 1,630.
Stereopticons, magic lanterns, etc, --- l61,046. Musical instruments, parts, n.e.s. --- 51,720.
amusement park & playground de- Merchandise value $10 or less --- 36,083.
vices --- 4,352. All other articles, n.e.s. --- 32,752.
Artwork, antique, etc. --- l00. Plans, aircraft photo & blueprint --- 6,500.
Lamps, lanterns, pans, gasoline --- 27,,201. Newapapers, current --- 3,155.
Office supplies --- 23,110. Roofing asphalt 2,000 sq. ft. 5,640.
Ink, writing 581 lbs. 342. Platinum bar, ingot, sheet, etc. 75 Troy oz. 12,043.
Ink, printing & lithograpbic 22,091 lbs. 20,595. Platinum allied manufactures, excl.
Carbon paper 13,256 lbs. 14,042. jewelry 66 Troy oz. 714.
Typewriter ribbons 155 doz. 651. Gold manufactures, n.e.s. -- 438.
Pencils, not mech. 3,653 gr. 24,533. Bank vaults, doors & equipment l 692.
Pencils, mech. plastic & non-plastic 230 doz. 1,383. Fire-resistant safes, vault doors, fire-
Pencil leads 1 gr. 5. resistant 1 l38.
Pens, fount. & stylo, plastic & non- Bathtubs, iron, & steel enameled
plastic 51 doz. 3,599. bath 1O 580.
Pens, points, metallic 231 gr. 553. Household heating-boilers & warm
Penholders, n.e.s. --- 242. air furnaces 6 8,832.
Ink, excl. writing, ptg. & lithog. --- 4538. Pipes, tobacco 1 10.
Paste 4c mucilage 1,736 lbs. 289. Shotguns l 25.
Machines, calculating, accounting, Relief or charity, 1942 10,457,417.
etc., n.e.s. --- 34,483. Relief or charity, 1943 19,089,139.
Duplicating machines --- 13,863. Relief or charity, 1944 25,479,722.
Office appliances, typesetting, printing --- 59,479. Relief or charity, 1945 33,674,825.
Phonograph records --- 12,409. TOTAL "Relief or charity" 88,701,103.




SUMMARY
MUNITIONS $4,651,582,000 NON-MUNITIONS 4,826,084,000 ---------------- Total 9,477,666,000 Note: the figure of $11 billion includes services as well as goods furnished.
The U.S. Government has never released detailed reports on what was sent in Lend-Lease, so Major Jordan's data, gleaned from the Russians' own manifests, is the only public record. More than one-third of Lend-Lease sent was illegal under the terms of the act which specifically prohibited "goods furnished for relief and rehabilitation purposes."

It should be kept in mind that Russia was an ally of Japan throughout the war, that it had been the ally of Hitler during the first two years of the war, that its division of Poland with Germany started the war, that it was an agressive imperialist force that attacked Finland and subverted the Baltic states as well, that it had announced that it intended to take over the world and that most of the aid sent in 1945 was sent after Stalin's February speech in which he said he would continue the war but against the United States.

Franklin Roosevelt's alter ego and Lend-Lease administrator Harry L. Hopkins, a KGB agent, declared to Russia before a crowd at Madison Square Garden on June 22, 1942, that: "We are determined that nothing shall stop us from sharing with you all that we have." He was not joking.
Complete List of Lend Lease to Russia including atomic materials
 
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AS i said...you would have been Driven into the sea if not for the Russians...they defeated the bulk of the German Army and your lend lease came too late...

There were no Russians in France. The plain fact that the Germans were on the outskirts of all the major Russians cities wasn't a good thing for the Russians. Only a bad spell of weather AND America kept the Russians from starving.
 
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The entire battle had Stalingrad had 478,741 killed and that includes a lot of civilians who could not leave the war zone ..Btw... around 8,00,000 German soldiers were gone as well.... Learn some history

And you're telling ME to learn history.
 
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:rofl: a Yankee making up stories and claiming victory for a war which had nothing to do with the Yankees.
 
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Did Russia Really Go It Alone? How Lend-Lease Helped the Soviets Defeat the Germans
By Alexander Hill
Originally published by World War II magazine. Published Online: July 12, 2008
31 commentsFONT + FONT -


ww2-july2008-lendlease.jpg

Soviet general A. A. Kuznetsov climbs from a British Hurricane cloaked in Soviet colors. (National Archives)


The Soviets have long insisted that Lend-Lease aid made little difference. Newly discovered files tell another story

After a series of dramatic Nazi successes during the opening stages of Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, foreign observers predicted that Soviet resistance would soon collapse. By October, German troops were poised outside both Leningrad and Moscow. But the Germans were doggedly held off in front of Moscow in late November and early December, and then rolled back by a reinvigorated Red Army in a staggeringly brutal winter counteroffensive.

That the Soviet victories of late 1941 were won with Soviet blood and largely with Soviet weapons is beyond dispute. But for decades the official Soviet line went much further. Soviet authorities recognized that the "Great Patriotic War" gave the Communist Party a claim to legitimacy that went far beyond Marxism-Leninism or the 1917 Revolution, and took pains to portray their nation's victories in World War II as single-handed. Any mention of the role that Western assistance played in the Soviet war effort was strictly off-limits.

During Nikita Khrushchev's rule in the late 1950s and early 1960s, there was a window of greater frankness and openness about the extent of aid supplied from the West under the Lend-Lease Act—but it was still clearly forbidden for Soviet authors to suggest that such aid ever made any real difference on the battlefield. Mentions of Lend-Lease in memoirs were always accompanied by disparagement of the quality of the weapons supplied, with American and British tanks and planes invariably portrayed as vastly inferior to comparable Soviet models.

An oft-quoted statement by First Vice-Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars Nikolai Voznesensky summed up the standard line that Allied aid represented "only 4 percent" of Soviet production for the entire war. Lacking any detailed information to the contrary, Western authors generally agreed that even if Lend-Lease was important from 1943 on, as quantities of aid dramatically increased, the aid was far too little and late to make a difference in the decisive battles of 1941–1942.

But since the collapse of the Soviet Union, a trickle of information has emerged from archives in Moscow, shedding new light on the subject. While much of the documentary evidence remains classified "secret" in the Central Archives of the Ministry of Defense and the Russian State Archive of the Economy, Western and Russian researchers have been able to gain access to important, previously unavailable firsthand documents. I was recently able to examine Russian-language materials of the State Defense Committee—the Soviet equivalent of the British War Cabinet—held in the former Central Party Archive. Together with other recently published sources, including the wartime diaries of N. I. Biriukov, a Red Army officer responsible from August 1941 on for the distribution of recently acquired tanks to the front lines, this newly available evidence paints a very different picture from the received wisdom. In particular, it shows that British Lend-Lease assistance to the Soviet Union in late 1941 and early 1942 played a far more significant part in the defense of Moscow and the revival of Soviet fortunes in late 1941 than has been acknowledged.

Particularly important for the Soviets in late 1941 were British-supplied tanks and aircraft. American contributions of the time were far fewer. In fact, for a brief period during December 1941, the relative importance of British aid increased well beyond levels planned by the Allies as a result of American reaction to the outbreak of war with Japan; some American equipment destined for the Soviet Union was actually unloaded from merchant vessels and provided to American forces instead.

Even aid that might seem like a drop in the bucket in the larger context of Soviet production
for the war played a crucial role in filling gaps at important moments during this period. At a time when Soviet industry was in disarray—many of their industrial plants were destroyed or captured by the advancing Nazi troops or in the process of evacuation east—battlefield losses of specific equipment approached or even exceeded the rate at which Soviet domestic production could replace them during this crucial period. Under these circumstances even small quantities of aid took on far greater significance.

According to research by a team of Soviet historians, the Soviet Union lost a staggering 20,500 tanks from June 22 to December 31, 1941. At the end of November 1941, only 670 Soviet tanks were available to defend Moscow—that is, in the recently formed Kalinin, Western, and Southwestern Fronts. Only 205 of these tanks were heavy or medium types, and most of their strength was concentrated in the Western Front, with the Kalinin Front having only two tank battalions (67 tanks) and the Southwestern Front two tank brigades (30 tanks).

Given the disruption to Soviet production and Red Army losses, the Soviet Union was understandably eager to put British armor into action as soon as possible. According to Biriukov's service diary, the first 20 British tanks arrived at the Soviet tank training school in Kazan on October 28, 1941, at which point a further 120 tanks were unloaded at the port of Archangel in northern Russia. Courses on the British tanks for Soviet crews started during November as the first tanks, with British assistance, were being assembled from their in-transit states and undergoing testing by Soviet specialists.

The tanks reached the front lines with extraordinary speed. Extrapolating from available statistics, researchers estimate that British-supplied tanks made up 30 to 40 percent of the entire heavy and medium tank strength of Soviet forces before Moscow at the beginning of December 1941, and certainly made up a significant proportion of tanks available as reinforcements at this critical point in the fighting. By the end of 1941 Britain had delivered 466 tanks out of the 750 promised.

The British Military Mission to Moscow noted that by December 9, about ninety British tanks had already been in action with Soviet forces. The first of these units to have seen action seems to have been the 138th Independent Tank Battalion (with twenty-one British tanks), which was involved in stemming the advance of German units in the region of the Volga Reservoir to the north of Moscow in late November. In fact the British intercepted German communications indicating that German forces had first come in contact with British tanks on the Eastern front on November 26, 1941.

The exploits of the British-equipped 136th Independent Tank Battalion are perhaps the most widely noted in the archives. It was part of a scratch operational group of the Western Front consisting of the 18th Rifle Brigade, two ski battalions, the 5th and 20th Tank Brigades, and the 140th Independent Tank Battalion. The 136th Independent Tank Battalion was combined with the latter to produce a tank group of only twenty-one tanks, which was to operate with the two ski battalions against German forces advancing to the west of Moscow in early December. Other largely British-equipped tank units in action with the Western Front from early December were the 131st Independent Tank Brigade, which fought to the east of Tula, south of Moscow, and 146th Tank Brigade, in the region of Kriukovo to the immediate west of the Soviet capital.

While the Matilda Mk II and Valentine tanks supplied by the British were certainly inferior to the Soviets' homegrown T-34 and KV-1, it is important to note that Soviet production of the T-34 (and to a lesser extent the KV series), was only just getting seriously underway in 1942, and Soviet production was well below plan targets. And though rapid increases in tank firepower would soon render the 40mm two-pounder main gun of the Matilda and Valentine suitable for use on light tanks only, the armor protection of these British models put them firmly in the heavy and medium categories, respectively. Both were superior to all but the Soviet KV-1 and T-34 in armor, and indeed even their much maligned winter cross-country performance was comparable to most Soviet tanks excluding the KV-1 and T-34.

A steady stream of British-made tanks continued to flow into the Red Army through the spring and summer of 1942. Canada would eventually produce 1,420 Valentines, almost exclusively for delivery to the Soviet Union. By July 1942 the Red Army had 13,500 tanks in service, with more than 16 percent of those imported, and more than half of those British.

Lend-Lease aircraft deliveries were also of significance during the Battle of Moscow. While Soviet pilots praised the maneuverability of the homegrown I-153 Chaika and I-16 Ishak fighters—still in use in significant numbers in late 1941—both types were certainly obsolete and inferior in almost all regards to the British-supplied Hurricane. The Hurricane was rugged and tried and tested, and as useful at that point as many potentially superior Soviet designs such as the LaGG-3 and MiG-3. There were apparently only 263 LaGG-3s in the Soviet inventory by the time of the Moscow counteroffensive, and it was an aircraft with numerous defects. At the end of 1941 there were greater numbers of the MiG-3, but the plane was considered difficult to fly. The Yak-1, arguably the best of the batch, and superior in most regards to the Hurricane, suffered from airframe and engine defects in early war production aircraft.

A total of 699 Lend-Lease aircraft had been delivered to Archangel by the time the Arctic convoys switched to Murmansk in December 1941. Of these, 99 Hurricanes and 39 Tomahawks were in service with the Soviet air defense forces on January 1, 1942, out of a total of 1,470 fighters. About 15 percent of the aircraft of the 6th Fighter Air Corps defending Moscow were Tomahawks or Hurricanes.

The Soviet Northern Fleet was also a major and early recipient of British Hurricanes, receiving those flown by No. 151 Wing of the RAF, which operated briefly from Soviet airfields near Murmansk. As early as October 12, 1941, the Soviet 126th Fighter Air Regiment was operating with Tomahawks bought from the United States by Britain. Tomahawks also served in defense of the Doroga Zhizni or "Road of Life" across the ice of Lake Ladoga, which provided the only supply line to the besieged city of Leningrad during the winter of 1941–42. By spring and summer of 1942 the Hurricane had clearly become the principal fighter aircraft of the Northern Fleet's air regiments; in all, 83 out of its 109 fighters were of foreign origin.

British and Commonwealth deliveries to the Soviet Union in late 1941 and early 1942 would not only assist in the Soviet defense of Moscow and subsequent counteroffensive, but also in increasing Soviet production for the next period of the war. Substantial quantities of machine tools and raw materials, such as aluminum and rubber, were supplied to help Soviet industry back on its feet: 312 metal-cutting machine tools were delivered by convoy PQ-12 alone, arriving in March 1942, along with a range of other items for Soviet factories such as machine presses and compressors.

Once again, raw figures do not tell the whole story. Although British shipments amounted to only a few percent of Soviet domestic production of machine tools, the Soviet Union could request specific items which it may not have been able to produce for itself. Additionally, many of the British tools arrived in early 1942, when Soviet tool production was still very low, resulting in a disproportionate impact. The handing over of forty imported machine tools to Aviation Factory No. 150 in July 1942, for example, was the critical factor in enabling the factory to reach projected capacity within two months.

Lend-Lease aid did not "save" the Soviet Union from defeat during the Battle of Moscow. But the speed at which Britain in particular was willing and able to provide aid to the Soviet Union, and at which the Soviet Union was able to put foreign equipment into frontline use, is still an underappreciated part of this story. During the bitter fighting of the winter of 1941–1942, British aid made a crucial difference.



Complete List of Lend Lease to Russia including atomic materials

I would suggest you read the Articles before posting :lol:

Lend lease was important but not as much as a hype you give it
 
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There were no Russians in France. The plain fact that the Germans were on the outskirts of all the major Russians cities wasn't a good thing for the Russians. Only a bad spell of weather AND America kept the Russians from starving.

America didn't contribute jack to Russia or the Eastern front in WW2. Only in Hollywood propaganda films made by westerners are myths talked as facts :lol:

And you're telling ME to learn history.

You don't know history, you know propaganda spewed by the Yankees. That's your 'history'.
 
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I suggest you do the same... instead of selective reading n cherry picking.

The Cherry picking was to prove my point that the Lend lease was useful but not as important, the article only proves my point that the Lend lease was barely 4% of the large Soviet Production base .. It certainly helped..but it wasn't a game changer as you claim it to be
 
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America didn't contribute jack to Russia or the Eastern front in WW2. Only in Hollywood propaganda films made by westerners are myths talked as facts :lol:

I've never seen a film that has the U.S. in Russia. But there IS that other part of Europe...you know, France, Italy, Scandinavia, not to mention North Africa .... Yeah, we were there.
 
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The entire battle had Stalingrad had 478,741 killed and that includes a lot of civilians who could not leave the war zone ..Btw... around 8,00,000 German soldiers were gone as well.... Learn some history

Seriously....Zhukov was one of the greatest Soviet Generals of all time... Even Stalin was shit scared of him and did not kill him during the purge even after knowing Zhukov's dislike for Stalin..

yeah im sure zhukov defeated the nazis.. factors like Hitlers miscalculated disasterous military decisions,stuborness,allies,bombing of nazi germans industries etc...lend lease etc had nothing to do with that...
 
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yeah im sure zhukov defeated the nazis.. factors like Hitlers miscalculated disasterous military decisions,stuborness,allies,lend lease etc had nothing to do with that...

Same story goes for Battle of Britain and the Normandy Invasion as well... Britain would be toast if not for the stubbornness of Hitler to bomb British cities instead of Airfields as Britain was clearly very close to being defeated in the Air war...
 
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The Cherry picking was to prove my point that the Lend lease was useful but not as important, the article only proves my point that the Lend lease was barely 4% of the large Soviet Production base .. It certainly helped..but it wasn't a game changer as you claim it to be

Kewl story... read the article again now.
 
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