Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 7, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for January, 9 AD or search for January, 9 AD in all documents.

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immediately under is in larger letters than in the genuine, and the b in Columbia is defective, whereas it is perfect in the genuine. In the genuine the line "with interest at two cents per day" is printed on the red shade of the large red word "hundred." This shade does not show in the counterfeit, or, if at all, too faintly to be noticed. The whole execution of the counterfeit is inferior the that of the genuine, and the note a little smaller. The date of the genuine note is filled in Sept. 1st, that of the counterfeit Sept'r 1. The $20 is more difficult to describe and detect than the $100, and is the most dangerous counterfeit we have ever seen. We have a counterfeit and a genuine bill before us, and save that the counterfeit has been printed with too much ink, and therefore looks much blurred, it would be very difficult to distinguish the one from the other; and we are not sure that this would he a reliable test, as even the genuine bills are not always uniform in color.