They did have two talking machines: a spider-legged Victor X, and an Edison Standard bearing a celluloid ICS (International Correspondence School) tag.
There were a variety of things about the Edison that did not make sense to me, at least as an ICS machine:
> speed control knob located under the bed-plate.
> "C" or "D" case, but the upper-works has an end-gate for the mandrel.
> No repeater mechanism ( or signs of one )
> Reproducer is an Edison "C", with the adjusting lever a la "Automatic", but the carrier has a locking-thumbscrew, index lug at 12 o'clock, and the reproducer top has a notch for said lug. The reproducer appears to be an original, with a serial number. The carrier also has a knurled push/pull button to lift the carriage, instead of a lever.
When I tried to play it, the mandrel bogged-down and it seemed like the stylus bar was digging-into the cylinder.
I removed the reproducer, and cylinder, and "played" the machine again , to check the speed against the timing marks on the back-rod... as I was doing this, I noticed the eye & front of the carriage bobbing up and down.
All these anomalies put together make me think this machine is a "bitsa" - bits of this and bits of that, bodged together, and a B works dropped onto an ICS case. The case was refinished, so there is no decal. I couldn't see if there was a "ghost" from the original decal.
It does come with an original (?) 14" black & brass "witches hat".
They've had it for sale for at least 10 years, and now have it marked down to $725... ( cough-cough )
I'm not seriously interested in purchasing it, but I am curious as to whether it's really an ICS model or not ?
Any thoughts ?