英:['sʌbˌtreʒərɪ]
美:['sʌbˌtreʒərɪ]
英:['sʌbˌtreʒərɪ]
美:['sʌbˌtreʒərɪ]
sub·treas·ur·y
suhb tre zh ri
复数:subtreasuries
subtreasurer (n.)
noun
a subordinate treasury or place of depositespecially: any of nine former branch treasuries of the U.S. … the United States Treasury with its subtreasury system had come in 1846; but still there were many, many wildcat banks … —Theodore Dreiser
"… Whig or Tory, with their interminable brawls about banks and the sub-treasury …" —Nathaniel Hawthorne
国库的分库
国库支库
The first known use of subtreasury was in 1702
1 Under this law, silver 10, 25, and 50 cent pieces were to be exchanged through the post offices and subtreasuries for fractional currency till it was all redeemed.
2 However, most creative among the solutions promoted by the Farmers’ Alliance was the call for a subtreasury plan.
3 The United States mint will issue without any charge its transfer drafts on the subtreasury in New York in return for deposits of gold, the new product of mines, or for deposits of imported gold.
4 Require him either to show that the subtreasury would not injuriously affect the currency, or that we should in some way receive an equivalent for that injurious effect.
5 Progressive reformers cribbed its structure from the Populist Party’s radical subtreasury plan, which sought to weight currency value to labor and crop exchanges.
6 I repeat, then, that by the subtreasury the revenue is to be collected in specie.
7 The privilege which the subtreasury enjoys of making its exchanges through the clearing house is a matter of great accommodation both to the subtreasury and to the banks.
8 Furthermore, being from farm country, he was very familiar with the farmers’ plight and saw some merit in the subtreasury system proposal.
9 I have already said that the subtreasury will reduce the quantity of money in circulation.
10 I assert that we have again and again, during this discussion, urged facts and arguments against the subtreasury which they have neither dared to deny nor attempted to answer.
11 The instructions make it look mighty bad for our Government, for the gold was drawn directly from the subtreasury the day it was shipped.
12 "But they arranged to send the gold right out of the subtreasury at San Francisco—or was it New York?—to the Chinese government."
13 Maybe we had the heir to a subtreasury panting to join us and maybe his freckles were his fortune.
14 It was a case of funk, I could see that; and maybe I wa'n't feelin' like I'd carried a gold brick down to the subtreasury and asked for the acid test.
15 But, again, by the subtreasury scheme the revenue is to be collected in specie.
16 The most important subtreasury, from the standpoint of the volume of business handled, is located in New York City....
17 When it outgrew that role, it was converted into the heavily fortified subtreasury and, after World War I, became the largest repository of gold in the world.
18 The Bank of America first acted as a depository, but after the beginning of the greenback epoch the associated banks chose the United States subtreasury as such depository for both gold and currency.
19 The Register of the Treasury issues and signs all bonds of the United States, registers bond transfers and redemption of bonds, and signs transfers of public funds from the treasury to the subtreasuries or depositories.
20 November and December are the months of largest transfers of cash to San Francisco by the United States subtreasury in New York.