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JB/002/145/001

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Click Here To Edit 11 Annuity Notes Elucidated
[21] [23]

[21] [Notes of this kind may be purchased]
[23] [A Note, torn or defaced, may be exchanged] A ruleFacility of changing
a coin for a Bank
Note, an encouragement
to the circulation
of them.
in case the regard
to Bank Paper
Advertisement where
they are to be had
on demand, or other
encouragement
It a man
to get any quantity
of this Paper without
waiting for the
chance of
it in circulation.
- and thus prevents
agio.

all along kept in view has been to exhibit on the
face of the Paper conveying operating <add>employdas a conveyance</add> this species of property,
every circumstance that seemed likely to operate in
recommendation of it. The provision here made security here afforded against
accidents to which this species of document is
continually exposed, appeared to be presented itself as being of the number of
these recommendatory circumstances. Intervention, if being thus given
the means whereby a fresh note may be obtained in
lieu of an old a worn or injured note of the same kind, it would have been
an incongruity not to take the same opportunity of
making it known, by what means notes of the same
kind may be obtained in the first instance, and in
the way of prudence, by as many as may be inclined
to become purchasers. Governm Government
the great and the manufacturer of this species of paper, has
the same motives reasons that other manufacturers have for
embracing this and as well as every other opportunity of advertising
their goods. When, in the cours way of payment
or change a man it happens to a man comes to receive the offer
of one of these Notes, if he accepts the offer, a natural
result is that effect of it is to suggest the wish of obtaining a
further supply more property of the same kind. But whether, within
a given time any more such paper will present
itself to him spontaneously in the same way, is a
pure matter of chance: it is therefore a matter
of accommodation to a time, as often as any of
this species of property comes into his hands, to
receive at the same information of the means whereby
he may increase enlarge his stock of it to any quantity to every
desire. Thus will every-man have his choice at all
times


Metadata:JB/002/145/001

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