What piano would you expect to find in the apartment of Chopin— that wiaard of sound '! Go over the names of every piano you can remember. But stay— ' If you have heard the Pleyel your ver- I diet will immediately fall upon that ! beautifully-fcone instrument. Chopin— j the master — ever found pleasure in the slightly-veiled yet silvery sonorousness and easy touch of the Pleyei which enabled him to elicit tones of the rarest charm from its chords. The Pleyei will charm 'and please you — and your friends — though your musical souls may bo less susceptible than Chopin's. The Wellington Piano Co., Ltd., 124. Lambtonquay, offer these instruments on terms so conveniently arranged that one may be in every home. — Advfc. 3 When business men through the busy season ring up to say they cannot spare the time to go home to tea, their wives should invariably advise them to "GO TO GODBER'SI"— Advt. A man is as old as he fesle, and a woman as old as she looks. ''Vitalis," the nerve-building tonic, makes you well and » keeps you well. — Claude H. Perrett, M.P.S.Ph.O., Chemist, Munnera-Bt.— AdvJ, '
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Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 22, 27 January 1911, Page 9
Word Count
187Page 9 Advertisements Column 4 Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 22, 27 January 1911, Page 9
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