Page:The Presidents of the United States, 1789-1914, v. IV.djvu/269

 WOODROW WILSON 227 session through the hot summer in order to pass the tariff bill was sufficient achievement for one session and that the currency bill could go over to the regular session. With all the earnestness of his nature, the President urged that there would never be a more favorable opportunity to pass a currency reform measure than the present. He appeared personally before Congress in joint session for the second time and read his message on the currency. &quot;When the work to be done is so pressing and so fraught with big consequence,&quot; he said, &quot;we know that we are not at liberty to weigh against it any point of personal sacrifice.&quot; In making men free to employ individual initiative by removing the trammels of the protection tariff, the President held, there will be necessary some readjustments of purpose and point of view. Then will follow a period of expansion and new enterprise, and &quot;it is for us to determine whether it shall be rapid and facile and of easy accomplishment. This it cannot be unless the resourceful business men who are to deal with the new circumstances are to have at hand and ready for use the instrumentalities and con veniences of free enterprise which independent men need when acting on their own initiative.&quot; One of the chief things business needs now is &quot;the proper means by which readily to vitalize its credit, corporate and individual, and its originative brains. The tyrannies of business, big and little, lie within