DEPOSITORS AND DEPOSITS 95 posits authorized by the proposed legislation should be exempted from attachment for debt and from taxation is a separate question to be considered by itself. 39 Such rights of exemption were not an essential part of the proposal to raise the deposit limits. 3. A third argument in opposition was urged by Senator Weeks of Massachusetts. It may best be stated in his own words: “I feel per fectly sure that if this is undertaken you will see men from time to time dropping into the country post office and depositing their money where the postmaster has no facilities for caring for it, hav ing no safe or any other means of protecting de posits. . . . [They will do so] not for the pur pose of saving the money, not for the purpose of getting interest on it, but simply for the purpose of leaving it there for safe keeping until it is wanted.” 40 These were the only arguments worthy of men tion advanced in the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses, on either side of the broad question of raising the deposit limits. Limits on Deposits Raised in 1916 As previously noted, the veto by President Wilson of the Postal Savings bill of 1913-14 39 Ibid., April 28, 1914, p. 7360. 40 Ibid., April 27, 1914, p. 7302.