NOTICES. VOL. I. 



plele, we hereby inform them that we can supply copies of the first thir- 

 teen numbers to their order, provided they give us timely notice. All 

 letters on this subject, must be post paid. In all cases when requested by 

 persons at a distance, copies shall be reserved. 



BANK NOTE LIST. 



In consequence of the frequent and gross impositions practiced upon the 

 community, and especially upon farmers, by the circulation of counterfeit 

 and spurious notes, the proprietors have resolved on issuing, once in three 

 months, a work of sixteen pages, same size as the Cabinet, to contain a full 

 description of all counterfeit notes, fraudulent issues, altered notes, broken 

 banks, depreciated paper, the state of the money market, and whenever 

 practicable, the situation of the principal banks in the United States. The 

 price of this work, will be 37i| cents per year: but to all subscribers to the 

 Cabinet, who pay in advance, or at the time of subscribing, for the second 

 year, it will be sent gratuitously. The first number will appear some time 

 during the month of August, or early in September. 



The second volume of the Cabinet will commence on the first of August. 

 Those whose term of subscription commenced during the first year, will re- 

 ceive the whole compliment of numbers, (24,) to which they are entitled. 

 We wish it to be distinctly understood, that 24 numbers, when published, 

 will be considered equivalent to one year's subscription. 



MISSING NUMBERS. 



We endeavor to be particular in forwarding the Cabinet to all our sub- 

 scribers. Mistakes may, and no doubt, do occur occasionally in our office. 

 We are not willing, however, in all cases to bear the blame. We know 

 that papers and letters are frequently detained on the way, and generally 

 from unexplained causes. For instance, we have just received a letter 

 bearing the post mark of ^'Elkton, March 24." We are satisfied that it 

 left the office where it was mailed, on the day designated: — and yet there are, 

 perhaps, no post offices in the country managed with more fidelity and 

 general correctness, than the office in this city and that at Elkton. We 

 request our subscribers not to blame us for all the delay in the receipt of 

 their numbers. And we would ask them when their numbers are received 

 very irregularly, to request the Post Master at whose ofiice they receive 

 their papers, to inform us. — Duplicate copies shall be sent when necessary, 

 and every effort made to remedy the evil. 



