THE TREASURY 87 retary of the Treasury called the issue of September 17, 1917, ($300,000,000) for redemption on December ­ 6, 1917, and the issue of September 26, 1917, ($400,000,000) for redemption on December ix, 1917 — both issues otherwise maturing on December ­ 15, 1917. The last remaining issue in anticipation ­ of the Second Liberty Loan, that of October 24, 1917, to the amount of $685,296,000, was not redeemed until maturity on December 15, 1917, the transaction then being aided by the receipt of $597,614,026 as the second installment on account ­ of the Loan. In the surfeit of its feast, the Treasury yet faced the menace of a famine. Seemingly ample as were its available funds after the payment of the installment ­ of November 20, 1917, the Treasury balance was approximately only some $300,000,000 in excess of the certificates of indebtedness maturing within the succeeding three weeks. The unpaid installments ­ of the Second Liberty Loan were nominally $1,022,000,000; but probably one-half of this could not be counted upon as available before the third installment date on January 15, 1918. As against these unpaid installments further issues of certificates ­ could not readily be used; another Liberty Loan was not in such immediate contemplation as to justify anticipatory borrowings at this time, and the revenue flowing from taxation and war savings certificates was obviously inadequate. On November 20, 1917, the Treasury invited subscriptions to the first series of certificates issued in anticipation of the war income and excess profits taxes, payable in June, 1918, and $691,872,000 were