“But this is no ordinary occasion; the gold is from Russia,
Soviet Russia, and it will be remembered that the right of Soviet
Russia to all things Russian has never been definitely established
to everyone's satisfaction, so there is, of course, a little hesitancy
in receiving this gold for fear there may arise some dispute as
to ownership. The two New York city banks to which it was sent
naturally do not care to take the risk; they have receeived it as
agents, but they do not care to buy so much gold to which there
is not a clear title. And the position of the United States assay
office and the treasury is, of course, very clearly defined by the
law regulating the purchase of bullion—it must be tendered by
the owner. This gold is not tendered by the owner, and those
who do tender it do not care to purchase it.
“Which gives us the unique situation of $5,000,000, not in goods
and chattels, not in promissory notes of either individuals or gov-
ernments, but in the pure, solid, yellow metal, gold, that is abso-
lutely without purchasing power in this country. Unless some
change is made in its status it must be returned to the source from
which it came, Soviet Russia. The gold having been sent to facilitate
trade, which reached the sum of about $100,000,000 annually, it
seems unfortunate that a cloud on its title should; render it useless
and send it a-begging.”
Scranton, Pa., Times, April 4, 1928
FIGHT FOR GOI.D
“The American public finds unique interest in the situation
created by a legal battle between France and Soviet Russia over the
five million dollars in gold bars now held in New York banks in
the name of the Soviet government. France is suing for possession
claiming to have deposited this very same gold in the State Bank
of Russia before that institution was seized by the revolutionists
“ “Washington's attitude is clear cut,” says the Louisville Courier-
Journal of the treasury department’s refusal to permit the gold. to
enter the channels of trade in this country. ‘Since 1920, there has
been an embargo on Russian gold. It is regarded as the property
of the czarist regime. The seizure of it by the revolutionary fac-
tions does not change its title, as the United States does not recognize
the ‘Communist state. Further, the czarist regime owed debts to the
United States which the Soviet will not acknowledge. So five millio?
dollars in Russian bullion lies idle in two American banks and the
treasury department will neither assay nor buy it.’ The incident
suggests to the Courier-Journal ‘how little trust is put in a natio?
RYO