[323] Id.
[324] 50 Stat. 3, January 8, 1937, Sec. 1.
[325] 50 Stat. 121, May 1, 1937, Sec. 1.
[326] Proclamation No. 2236, 50 Stat. 1831, May 1, 1937.
[327] Proclamation No. 2635. Subsequently, on November 4, the President signed a revision of the Neutrality Act, in which emphasis was shifted from export control to control of American shipping as the device for maintaining neutrality. The shipping control provisions are discussed later in this chapter.
[328] 54 Stat. 4, November 4, 1939, Sec. 2 (c).
[329] Proclamations No. 2376, 54 Stat. 2673, November 4, 1939; 2394, 54 Stat. 2693, April 10, 1940; 2474, 55 Stat. 1628, April 10, 1941.
[330] Proclamation No. 2348, 54 Stat. 2629, September 5, 1939.
[331] Proclamation No. 2413, 54 Stat. 2712, July 2, 1940, delegating to an Administrator of Export Control his statutory power to prohibit unlicensed export from the United States of basic materials and products. The list included aluminum, antimony, asbestos, chromium, cotton linters, flax, graphite, hides, industrial diamonds, manganese, magnesium, manila fiber, mercury, mica, molybdenum, optical glass, platinum group metals, quartz crystals, quinine, rubber, silk, tin, tolnol, tungsten, vanadium and wool, in addition to specified chemicals, products, and machine tools.
Proclamation No. 2417, 54 Stat. 2726, July 26, 1940, added petroleum products, tetraethyl lead, and iron and steel scrap to the foregoing.