Industrial Cuba : being a study of present commercial and industrial conditions with suggestions as to the opportunities presented in the island for American capital, enterprise and labour . erence in the condition of the country now,compared with its condition last September. Then all wasdesolation: now people were more cheerful, and a glimmer-ing of sunshine was visible, penetrating the drab skies ofdepression, ruin, and starvation which had so long envelopedthe Island. It was true that some restless and impatientpeople were asking where was the promised liberty, wherewas the Cuban freedom,


Industrial Cuba : being a study of present commercial and industrial conditions with suggestions as to the opportunities presented in the island for American capital, enterprise and labour . erence in the condition of the country now,compared with its condition last September. Then all wasdesolation: now people were more cheerful, and a glimmer-ing of sunshine was visible, penetrating the drab skies ofdepression, ruin, and starvation which had so long envelopedthe Island. It was true that some restless and impatientpeople were asking where was the promised liberty, wherewas the Cuban freedom, etc. The answer to this was thatCuba now. possessed absolute commercial and industrialfreedom. In framing the new tariff, the President andyourself directed that no discrimination in favour of theUnited States should be made; that you had repeatedlysaid the new tariff must be made in the interest of Cubaand not in the interest of the United States. Spain, on thecontrary, had by outrageous discriminating duties compelledCuba to purchase all sorts of commodities of her whichcould have been bought cheaper and better in other these changes, looking to a better condition, were. A Visit to General Gomez 397 promptly inaugurated on the day the United States beganits military occupancy. Much of the criticism was un-just, not only to the Administration but to the militaryofficials of the United States, who had undertaken thegigantic task of reorganising the country, of reforming itsiniquitous tax system, of improving its sanitary condition,of building up its destroyed industries. Our militaryauthorities had found Cuba without capital, with hundredsof thousands of people on the verge of starvation, to whomrations had to be furnished, and with the incubus of Span-ish rule resting upon all branches of its government, muni-cipal, provincial, judicial, and general. It was a great task,and one that must take time. There were still from twentythousand to twenty-five thousand Spanis


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidindustrialcubabe00port