I congratulate Boston on a union in one organization of all of her business men, for it insures a concentration of influence that must make for good.
Editor's note · Context
Remarks at the Banquet of the Boston Chamber of Commerce in Boston, Massachusetts
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I concur fully in the conclusions which the Secretary of War has reached and in the recommendations which he makes.
But there is another, and a very important, reason why the bill ought not to become a law, and that is that in many instances it adopts the principle, rarely permitted in any revenue system, on whatever theory constructed, by which the finished product is made free from duty, and the raw material and the machinery necessary for its production are kept on the dutiable list.
Of course if it shall turn out that the most thorough excavation will not disclose the cause we must be content, but as long as there remains unexcavated any portion of the mud and debris within the wreck or its neighborhood from which evidence may be had of the original cause of the disaster, we shall be derelict in our duty in not prosecuting a further search.
I earnestly hope that Congress will take immediate action in this regard, as recommended by the Secretary of War.





