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A History of Aeronautics by Evelyn Charles Vivian;William Lockwood Marsh
page 64 of 480 (13%)
of any kind can arise beyond the payment of the sum to be
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As soon as the Patents shall be perfected and proved it is
contemplated, so far as may be found practicable, to further the
great object in view a Company shall be formed but respecting
which it is unnecessary to state further details, than that a
preference will be given to all those persons who now subscribe,
and to whom shares shall be appropriated according to the larger
amount (being three times the sum to be paid by each person)
contemplated to be returned as soon as the success of the
Invention shall have been established, at their option, or the
money paid, whereby the Subscriber will have the means of either
withdrawing with a large pecuniary benefit, or by continuing his
interest in the concern lay the foundation for participating in
the immense benefit which must follow the success of the plan.

It is not pretended to conceal that the project is a
speculation--all parties believe that perfect success, and
thence incalculable advantage of every kind, will follow to
every individual joining in this great undertaking; but the
Gentlemen engaged in it wish that no concealment of the
consequences, perfect success, or possible failure, should in
the slightest degree be inferred. They believe this will prove
the germ of a mighty work, and in that belief call for the
operation of others with no visionary object, but a legitimate
one before them, to attain that point where perfect success will
be secured from their combined exertions.

All applications to be made to D. E. Colombine, Esquire, 8
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