76 WAR BORROWING graph showing the course of the daily “ net balance ­ ” of the Treasury during the period under review. 1 , I The three months that preceded our entry into the war were marked by a steady excess of disbursements ­ over receipts. Starting with a net balance ­ of $113,597,985 on January 2, 1917, the available ­ funds of the Treasury declined practically without ­ arrest. On February 23, 1917, there was for the first time an actual deficiency as compared with the authorized but undrawn amount to the credit of disbursing officers, and a week earlier the “ daily statement ” had begun to note that “ the income tax, constituting a large part of the Government’s revenue, is not collected until June,” and to present the estimated amount payable at that time. The Treasury balance touched its low point on March 15, 1917, at $52,951,594. For the next two weeks some restraint was apparently put upon disbursements ­ ; but on March 30 the nominal deficiency as against disbursing officers’ credits was nearly $10,000,000, with a further immediate requirement of $25,000,000 in settlement of the Danish West Indies purchase. The provision of additional funds could not be delayed, and on March 31, 1917, the Treasury, in anticipation of the income taxes payable in June, borrowed $50,000,000 from the 1 See frontispiece. I am indebted to Mr. Leopold Olceowski of Washington, D. C., for the transformation of my own rough graph into the finished chart.