51
VOL V
LINCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1891.
NO. 6
Professional Cards.
Has locked at Lincoluton and of
fers his services as physician to the
citizens of Lincoln ton and surround
ing country.
Will bo toand at night at the res&
idence of B. C. Wood
March 27, 1891 ly
BABTLETT SMIPP,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Jen. 'J, IS'U. ly.
Finley & Wetmore,
ATTYS. AT LAW.
LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Will practice in Lincoln and
surrounding counties.
All business put into our
hands will be promptly atten
ded to.
Ai.ril 18, layu. lv.
SURGEON DENTIST.
OFFICE IN coeb BUILDING, MAIN ST.,
LINCOLNTON, N. C)
July 11, 1890. ly
t t
DENTIST.
LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Cocaine used for painless ex
tracting teeth. With thirty
years experience. Satisfaction
given in all operations' Terms
cash and moderate.
Jan 23 '91 ly
GO TO
SDUMIEHK STAB
5 1
BARBER SHOP.
Newly fitted up. Work aways
neatly done, customers politely
waited upon. Everything pertain
iug to the toosorial art is done
according to latest styles.
IIeney Taylob. Barber.
Dow 3Ien Die.
It we know all the methods of approach
adopted by an enemy we are the better ens
abled to ward off the danger and postpone
the moment when surrender becomes in
evitable. In many instances the inherent
strength of the body suffices to enable it
oppose the tendency toward death. Many
however have los- these forces to such an
extent thai there is little or no help. In
other cases a little aid to the weakened
Lungs will make all the difference between
sudden death and many years of useful
life. Upon the first symptoms of a Cough,
Could or any trouble of the Throat or
Lungs, give that old and well-known rem
dye Boscbte's German Syrup, a careful
trial. It will prove what thousands say of
it to be the benefactor of any home."
Baby Carriages, $7.50
Baby Carriages, 7.50
Baby Carriages, 7.50
Baby Carnages, 7.50
EM A I DREWS,
FURNITURE
PIANOS & ORGANS.
I made tue largest purchase of B ABY CARRIAGES this season since
I have been in business. Bought oyrr
75 CARRIAGES
At on single pu-chae: I can sell you a bet utiful RATTAN CARRIAGE with wire
wheels at $7.50. Did you ever see any of t .ose 12.00
Silk Plush Upholstered Carriages
Ofmine? Thnkofit! Silk plain at $12. I have something new to shew you this
season. They are beautiful styles in Rattan carriages, finished 6th century, for from
$15 to $25. The BAMBOO is something nevr also, and is having a big run. I can
furnish you CATALOGUES of all my style j, and I guarantee to sell you carriage?
troin 15 to 20 per cent, less than any other c aaler in the State.
1 have an endless variety PAKLOR UITS to suit all tastes and e verybody's
pocket. I can sell you anything from the Wool Plush Suit of Opera, in Walnut
Frame, for only $35 00 to the handsome Suk ot 5 pieces for $250 00. This is a suit
tbat retail in New York Oity for $325.00. My stock is more than complete in every
respect.
Eimnm mm WEEmm
Of the finest, most reliable makes sold at lowest prices for cash or on easy payments.
Write for my new CATALOGUE.
E. M. ANDREWS,
14 and 16 West Trade St. Charlotte, N. C.
fT"' 1 ' ' V V- '"'Ml V"" "
aMi.iinii..i.iiii .a- ir-i "imin'ii ii m'i .iiiiiMi in - -imn
for Infante
'CMtri te so well adapted to ehOdrm th4
I recommend It m superior to any prescription
known to me." H. A. Xmcsmm, M. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T.
"The um of 'Castor!' is BoanlverMl txA
its merit so well known th&t it eema a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent familiea who do not keep Carton
within easy reach."1
Cajuxm Uakttn, D.D.,
New York City.
LAte Factor Bloomlngdale Baion&ed Church.
Tn Cxmin
THE FIRST STEP.
pKrhaps you are run down, can't eat
can t sleep can't think, can't do anything
to your satisfaction, and you wonder what
ails you. You should heed the warning,
you are taking the first step intoJNervoua
Prostration. You need a Nerve Tonic and
in Kleetrie Bitters you will find the exact
remedy fur restoring your nervous system
t6 its normal, healthy condition. Surpris
ing results follow the use of this great
Nerve Tonic and Alterative. Your appe
tite returns, gone digestion is restored,, and
the Liver and Kidneys resume healthy ac
tion. Try a bott'e. Price 60c. at Dr. J. M
Lawing'a Drug Store.
It is hard to rutlie a man who
keeps close to God.
A DUT TO YOURSELF.
It is surprising that people will use a com
mon, ordinary pill when they can secure a
valuable English one for the same money.
Dr. Aeker's English pil.'s are njositlve
curet or fiok headache and all Liver Trou-,
nble. They are small, sweet, easily taken
and do uot gripe. For sale hf Dr. J M
Lawing, Druggists.
Some people can trust in God as
long as they have plenty of money,
but when the hank breaks their re
Jigiou all goes with ir.
CAN'T SUCEP NIGHTS
Is the co.n plaint of thousands suffering
from Asthma, Consumption, Coughs, etc.
Did you ever try Dr. Acker's English Re
medy ? It is the best preparation known
lor all Lung Troubles. Sold on a positive
guarantee at 25 cents and 50 cents. For
sale by Dr. JM Lawing, Druggist.
-
There are more quarrels smother
ed by just nhutting your month and
holding it shut than by all the wis
dom in the world.
A LITTLE GIRL'S EXPERIENCE IN
A LIGHTHOUSE.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Trescott are keepers
of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand Beach,
Mich., and are blessed with a daughter
four years old. Last April she was taken
down with measles, followed with a dread
ful cough and turning into a fever. Doc
tors at home and at Detroit treated her,
but in vain, she crew worse rapidly, until
she was a mere ''handful of bones." Then
;he tried Dr. King's New Discovery and
after the use of two and a half bottles was
completely cured. Tney say Dr. King's
New Discovery is worth its weight in gold
yet you may get a trial bottle free at J. M.
Lawing's drugstore.
Mathematicians figure that a man
sixty years old has spent threa
years battening bis collar. How
much time has been consumed by a
wowan of forty five by putting her
hat on straight. Life.
WE CAN AND DO
Guarantee Dr. Acker's Blood Elixir, for it
has been fully demonstrated to the people
of this country that it is superior to all
other preparations for blood diseases. It is
a positive cure for syphilitic poisoning,
Ulcers, Eruptions and Pimples, It purifies
the whoie system and thoroughly builds
up the constitution. For sale by Dy J. M.
Lawing, Druggist.
All sonshine makes the desert.
A CHILD RILLED.
Another child killed by the use of opiatas
2-iyen in the form of Soothing Syrup. Why
mothers give their children such deadly
poiaon is surprising when they can relieve
the child of its peculiar troubles by using
Dr. Acker's Baby Soother. It contains no
opium or morphine. Sold by Dr. J M Law
ing, Druggist.
Parlor Suits, $35
Parlor Suits, 35
ParlorSuits, 35
ParlorSuits, 35
and Children.
CMtorin enrol Ootte, Comtipoiion,
Sour Stomach, Diarrnoea, Eructation,
XiiU Worm, five sleep, and promote U-
JSiowtinjarto
us medication.
" For several years I have recommended
yonr Oastoria, ' and shall always continue to
do so as it baa invariably produced beaafloial
reaulta."
Eownr F. PAnnn, X. D.,
Tbe Wlntnrop," lasth Street and 7th Are.,
New York City.
Our-urr, 77 Mumi Stuzt, Nw Tons.
's Answer to a Stan's
Question.
Do you know you have asked for the cost
liest thing
Ever made by the hand above
A woman's heart, and a woman's life,
And a woman's wonderful love?
Do yovknow you have asked for this price
less thing
As a child might ask for a toy ?
Demanding what others have died to win
W.ith the reckless dash ot a boy.
You have written my lesion of duty out,
Manlike you have questioned me ;
Now stand at the bar of my woman's soul
Until I shall question thee.
You require your mutton shall always be
hot,
Yur socks and your shirts shall be whole;
I require your heart shall be true as God's
stars ;
And pure as heaven your soul.
You require a cook for your muttcn and beet;
I require far grander a thing;
A seamstress you're wanting for stockings
and shirts
I look for a man and king
A king for a beautiful realm called home,
And a man that the maker, God,
Shall look upon as he did the first,
And say, "It is very good."
I am fair and young, but the rose will fade
From my soft young cheek one day ;
Will you love me then, 'mid the falling
leaves,
As you did 'mid the bloom of May?
Is your heart an ocean so strong and deep
I may launch my all on its tide ?
A loving woman finds heaven or hell
On the day she is made a bride.
1 require all things tbat are grand and true;
All things that a man should be ;
If you give thia all would stake my life
To be all you demand of me.
If you cannot do this, a laundress and cook
You can hire witn little to pay ;
But a woman's heart and a woman 'a life
Are not to be won that way.
Mary T. Lathrop.
New York Ledger.
MARTHA DREWE'S
PARLOR.
BY J. L. HARBOUR.
nretfcv little farm house. paint-
J
M ed a snowy white, with blinds
of vivid green, stood just out
side the small New England
village of Waterford. The house
was quite new: The shinglds on its
roof were still yellow and resinous.
It had a trim, smart look pleasing
to the eye. A small, old house.
painted a dark brown, stood back a
few yards from the pretty white
house.
Mr. and Mrs. Jared Drewe had
moved from the old house into the
new one. Tnev nau begun house
keeping as a young married couple
in the old house, and they had lived
in it twenty-five years. The new
house was the culmiuation of the
hopes and plans of many years.
True, Drewe had never liked the old
house. It had no "conveniences."
The new house had a well right in
the kitchen, a big pantry, plenty of
closets and a parlor. The old house
had had none of these things.
"I begin to feel as though I was
somebody,'7 Mrs. Drewo said at the
breakfast-table on the morning of
the fifth day after they had moved
into the Dew bouse.
"Do, eh t" replied Mr. Drewe.
"You wimmen are great for puttin
on style. I ain't never felt no par
tic'lar need of a parlor. A common
aettin'-rooin'a good enough for me,
or even the kitchen.'7
"I don't mind settiu in a nice,
clean kitchen, myself' replied his
wife, "but I don't want all my com
p'ny to have to set theie speshly
the minister and his wife. Tve felt
the need of a parlor a many a time,
if you ain't."
"Well, you've got one now.''
uYes, when I git it furnished,"
"Oh, I reckon you'll want to fill it
full of all sorts of flab-dubbery
womau-like."
I'm going to have things nice,
anyhow. Land knows, I've waited
loug euoogh for 'em."
"What you call 'nice V
"Well, I'm going to have a real
Brussels carpet, for one thing, and
a marbletop table and a plush sofy
and lace curtains and nice chairs."
"Shucks !" Mr. Drewe said, con
temptuously, but he did not offer
any objection to this extravagant
outlay of lone: and carefully hoard
ed funds. He knew, moreover, that
most of this splendor would bo pur
A Womai
chased ont of his wife's own savings.
She was a wise woman and had a
purse of her own.
"Ketch me having to run to Jared
or to any other mau ev'ry time I
want a little money," she had said,
in the begmuiugof their pilgrimage
as man and wile. "No, sir; my sav
ingrt shall be my own
Adhering tenaciously to this re
alve aud ever keeping iu mind a
time to come when she should have
a new house, Mrs. Drewe had mon
ey enough to furnish the house as
she pleased.
Bat his wile's second proposition
aroused a spirit of antagonism in
Jared Drewe :
"I want to have the parlor paper
ed some timn next week."
"Papered
Mr. Drewe looked up quickly, sur
prise and opposition depicted on ev
ery line of his face.
"Yes, papered," replied Mrs
Drewe. "You s'pose I'm going to
have bare white walli when ev'ry
body else has theirs papered V1
"We'd all bare walls m the old
house.''
"I don't care if we did, we kept
thinkin' and thinkin' we'd build ev
'ry year, and it didn't seem worth
while to do any paperin' or fixin' up;
but if you reckon I'm goin to live
the rest o' my days in bare whiter
walled rooms you're mistaken."
She spoke decisively, for she saw
unusual depths of opposition in her
husbaud's large, unbearded face
with its square, firm jaw and chin
indicative of great fiimuess of pur.
pose. Her own face wore a resolute,
emphatic expression. She was a
plucky little woman. Her husband
had a secret pride in what be called
her "grit,'7 although he would have
died before he would have confessed
it.
"I don't see why on earth you ob
ject so to a little wall-paper, Jared."
"I despise wall-paper," he said,
with something like childish per
verseness. "Why ?'
"Because I dor1
"That ain't any reason."
"It's unhealthy, for one thing.''
"Fiddlesfaddle 1"
"Any doctor'll tell ye so."
"I wouldn't b'lieve it if he did.
Everybody has wallpaper nowadays."
"We haven't."
"We're goin to have."
"We're not."
Mrs. Drew sat haek stiffly in her
chair, itsolute and defiant. Her
black eyes shone as she said :
"There's no sense in your actin'
so, Jared Sparks. I'm goin' to have
that parlor papered."
"You do, and I'll never set foot in
it as long as I live and breathe the
breath of life 1"
"Fiddlesticks 1"
"I never will, Marthy."
"What nonsense!"
"I never will 1"
He rose from the table as he
spoke, took his hat from a nail in
the small entry near the kitchen
door and went out to the barn, his
every movement seeming to accent
uate his resolve.
Mrs. Drewe did not refer to the
matter again; but a week trom that
day, when Mr. Drewe returned home
after a day spent in the city five
miles distant, he met John Hays,
the village papershanger, coming
from the house with an empty paste
bucket and a roll or two of paper
under his arm.
Stepping into the little front en
try, he glanced toward the parlor
at the right. The door was open,
and he saw his wife standing in the
center of the room, looking with
pleased eyes at the foar walls around
her covered with gorgeous giit pa-
per of the most pro n on need pattern.
She assumed an air of ignorance
of any previous discussion of the
subject, and asked, cheerilv :
"Well, Jared, how do you like it t
Isn't it lovely T J think it's just
beautiful."
"You remember what I said, Mar
thy Drewe V1'
"Well ?"
'Tm goin to stick to it."
"Now, Jared, I"
"I'll never set foot in that
room long a 8 I live and
breathe and keep my- senses I
Never P
. He pronounced each word slowly
and with marked emphasis. Then he
turned and went out to the barn.
"He'll get over it," Mrs. Drewe
said, hopefully, to heiself; bnt in
her secret soul 6he feared he would
uot.
IIo made no reference to the mat
ter at the supper table. He even
talked cheerfully and pleasantly ot
the events of bis visit to the city:
The Brnsnels carpet, the plush so
tu, the lace curtain and the marble,
top table of Martna Drewe's visions
aud dreams became splendid reali.
ties during the next week. She
called her husband to note the gen
eral effect when everything was in
place. He came to the open door
and looked in.
"Come in an' set down in this new J
patent rocker and see how easy it
rocks," she said.
"No, thauk ye," he eaid, curtly.
'! never expect to set in it." - j
She tried to laugh lightly as sue
said :
"Pshaw, Jared 1 Don't be so silly!"
He turned and walked away in
silence.
The minister and his wife came
out trom the village to call, the next
day. Mrs. Drewe ushered them in
to the gorgeous pailor, her heart
swelling with pride. Jared came to
the door with an old wooden chair
trom the kitchen, plumped it down
fiat and hard on the oilcloth of the
entry floor, and sat there during the
entire call.
"You never even come in to shake
hands with 'em," Martha said, aften
ward.
"1 know it."
"What you s'pose they'll think V '
"Dunno what.''
"If that's the way you're goin' to
act ev'ry time anybody calls here,I'd
thank you to keep out of sight alto
aether."
"1 reckon I want to see folks much
as you do."
"I've a notion to go and have ev
'ry room in the house papered," she
naid, hotly.
"Then I'll take np my abode in
the tavern," he replied, calmly.
"The Drewes always was a stub
born set. but I vutn I didn't s'pose
Jared could be so pig-headed," she
said when Jared had left the room.
She had mauy callers during the
rext few weeks. The fame of her
gorgeous parlor brought all her
friends and acquaincances to behold
its splendors.
Jared eat at the door on the old
wooden chair during nearly all of
these calls. He was careful not to
let even the toe of his boot enter the
despised room.
The shap eyea of some of Mrs.
Drewe's callers soon noticed J red's
peculiar conduct; their keeu noses
scented domestic discord.
"What's the matter of Jared f
asked Sarah May, Mrs. Drewe's sis
t?r, a few weeks after the papering
and furnishing of the parlor.
"Nothing tbat I know of," replied
Martha. "WTbat makes you ask ?''
"Didn't be want you to buy yoar
parlor things?"
"He didn't care. Whatever put
that idee into your head, Sally !"
"They say he won't set in one of
the parlor cheers, nor even step into
tae room."
"Wh0 8ays so?"
"Oh, it's common talK. I've been
asked about it morcn once."
Mrs. Drewe went home greatly
distressed and humiliated. She was
a sensitive little woman, notwith
standing her "grit," aud she could
not endure the thought of having
her domestic affairs made a subject
of common gossip. She was rigidly
truthful, too, and she was forced to
admit to her sister that she and her
husband had had a disagreement.
She felt hotly rebellions toward Ja.
red as she entered the pretty little
new bouse in which she had expect
ed to be so happy. Jared was lying
on the lonnge in his shirtisleeves and
stockinged feet, reading the weekly
paper.
"Well," said Martha, while unty
ing her bonnet-8tring8,"it's got out."
"Whafa got ont ?
" 'Bout you sayin' you'd never set
foot in the parlor."
"I can't help it if it has," he said,
imperturbably.
'Can't help it!" she cried, hotly;
"you can help it any minnit, Jared
Drewe I "
"How t"
"Why, by simply giving up your
mulish Dens and coming into the par
lor next time we have company."
"Hnraph ! said Jarei, and re
named the readiu of his paper.
Martha raged inwaidly.
So mauy of her plans were thwart
etl by Jared 'a "mulish news."
She bad the deserved reputation
of belli a very "nociable" woinat),
and he had planned to have "a
sight ot comp'ny" iu the new house.
She had ofren pictured to herself
the tea-parties and the dinner-par
tics she should give- She had even
pi meed a grand housewarming,with
a .supper that should surpass any
thing ever given in that neighbors
hood. It as hard to have all these
fair dreams coming to naught.
"For 1 can't invite company with
Jared actin' so. He'd have to be in '
the parlor 8ome,"8he said to herself,
often with hot tears in her eyes.
The summer days waned into
those ot autumn, and the autumn
days gave place to the winds aud
snows of late November and still
the feet of Jared Drewe had never
crossed the threshold of bis own
parlor and Martha had suffered un
told mortification on this account.
They were sitting alone in rather
gloomy silence at the close of a dark
and stormy day in late November,
Martha bad not been well for sever-
al days. She had never been confin
ed to her bed a day in her life and a
slight indisposition usually made
her irritable. She felt that it would
ir some degree be a disgrace for
her to be ill. It was with as much
pride as gratitude tbat she remem
bered that neither she nor Jared
h :d ever needed the services of a
physician.
But she looked ill enough to need
one now. There were great black
hollows under her dull eyes, ber
cheeks were flushed, her lips dry,
arjd she crept about slowly and Ian-,
gc.idly.
"Better let me go for the doctor,
Mirtby," Jared had said several
times. "I b'lieve you're sicker'n
you reckon you air."
'I've an idee I'll be better in the
morning. I'm going to take a dose
ol: them bitters that helped me so
w uen I was kind o run down in the
su -nmer. Wish you'd get em for me.'
'Where are they !' he asked, ris
ir from his chair, the paper he had
br en reading still In his band.
Ob, they 're in the the set down
Js red,l'll get up and get 'em myself.'
Sue was lying on the lounge at
thi time and she sat up painfully
ard slowly,whiie he hastened to cay:
'No, uo, Marthy ; lay still ; I'll get
'em. Where are they V
'Theyre iu that little corner clos
et in the parlor, Jared.'
He stared blankly at her for a
moment, his face crimsoning; he
to:k a step forward and then drop
ped back heavily into bis chair and
held the paper up before bis face in
silence.
His wife rose without a word and
feebly walked across the floor.
breathing heavily and keeping her
self from falling by leaning on ta
bles and chairs. Jared watched her
turtively while pretending to read.
There was a visible twitching of the
corners of his month once, and his
teeth, set close together, showed be
tween his parted lips- The hand
that held the paper trembled, but
be sat still.
His wife slowly groped her way
across the hall. He heard tbe part
lor door open. He heard the door of
the little closet swing back, creak
ing slightly on its hinges. Then he
heard Martha fall.
He ran to the open door of the
parlor. She was lying at full length,
face downward on the floor.
"Marthy I Marthy !" he cried ; but
he stopped short, with his toes on
the parlor threshold, his stubborn,
inflexible will loth to bend or break
even to give aid to the wife he truly
ov?d.
"Marthy ! O, Marthy !" he called,
stretching his arms far into tbe
room toward her, "Lordy, Marthy,
come here, and I'll do anything I
kin for you. Roll over, If you cau't
wa'k, Marthy !"
He diopped to bis knees, bent hi
great body forward and tried to
reach her, but failed by several feet.
There was a ludicrous side to it all.
"Mai thy I" he faintly shrieked.
She neither moved nor spoke, but
suddenly she gave a pitiful groan.
"Good Lord ! What a fool I t !
cried Jared, suddeuly leauing back
aud sinking his breast with his
cleuched fists. "A fool ana a beast
to let tbe best wife auy man ever
had nffer a second, whin I might
help her ! The Lord forgive me l"
He bounded to her side as he
spoke, and took her limp aud un
conscious form up iu his arms, say
ing, as ha did so :
"It'll be a judgment on me if she
dies. The best, wile iu the world
Marthy ! Marthv , deal 1 What aiU
t e ?"
He seldom called Ler 'dear.' He
did so now with great tenderness
and gentleuess.
"Marthy can't ye open your eye9t
See, dear; I'm in the parlor. I'll
come in it right along now. The pai
perin reely sets it off. I've thought
so from the fust but 1 was too cus
sed stubborn to say so. Ob, Marthy!
What is the matter f " For the did
not even open ber eyes.
It was seven weeks before she
left the bedroom to which he carried
her. He had been one of tbe ten-
derest and most patient of nurses,
but the word "parlor" had never
passed either his lips or hers duriug
all that time.
She had thought much about it,
however, but not with pride or
p!easure, because she had no hopa
that Jared would ever enter it now,
aud the wallspaper could not be re
moved. He carried her out tenderly and
gently the first time she left her
room.
"Want me to carry ye into the
parlor, Marthy !" he asked, after he
had her in bis arms. "It's sunny
and bright in there. I've got a good
fire in the stove and the the wall
piper shines beautifully."
She looked up with shioing eyes
and the first flush there had been in
her cheeks for many weeks.
"If you would carry me in and lay
me down on the sofy awhile, Jared.
Why I I Oh, Jared ! What
does it mean ? I thought you Ob,
Jared!'' for as be carried her out
into the dining-room and through
the sitting-room to the ball she saw
tbat all the once bare and cold and
staring white walls were covered
with more expensive and beautiful
paper thau she herself would have
bought.
There was a warm, red and black
carpet on tbe hall floor, a new car
pet for the sittiug-room, new and
pretty chairs and tables here and
there, and a mirror in a gilt frame
between the two front-parlor wia
dows that reached nearly from tbe
floor to the ceiling. Wheu she
caught a reflection of their faces in
the shining glass, she saw in both a
kinder, gentler, tenderer look than
either had worn for years.
IS LIFE WORTH LIVING?
Not if you go through the wold a dys
peptic. Dr. Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets are
a positive cure for the worst forms of Dys
pepsia, Indigestion, Flatulency and Uon
eumption. Guaranteed and sold by Dr. J
M Lawing Druggist.
The TreaHiiry Vault.
Tbe great Treasury vault at
Washington, built not long ago,
covers more than a quarter of an
acre, and is twelve feet deep. In
its interior there is a cage of iron
lattice work, tbe bars of which are
made of wrought iron, and which
were riveted together with red hot
rivets after the lattice work was put
up. It took 100,000 rivets to fasten
tbe iron work ot this vault together,
and tbe lattice bad to be very strong
as the silver is very heavy. The
amonnt of silver now in tbe vault
weighs over 3000 tons, and you
could put these $90,000,000 on one
side ot the scales and 35,000 men,
weighing each 180 pounds,, on the
other side, and the silvar would out
weigh them. It would taks 1V
freight cars to carry this silver to
the sea-coast if America should be
conquered and this treasury vault
looted. And still this is only a small
part of the coin iu the treasury.
There is another vault which con
tains $59,000,000 more of silver and
$25,000,000 in gold. Ex.
TT