I'jver since the vvorkl ''/'.pan, man has been contriving instruments for the repronro Miction ot sound. Nature's sweetest mu ic—lhe sighing of wind through reeils; the laughter of a brook; or the lapping of waves - these have eHii&ed me - ' to atop <tinl ponder. We see the result in such instruments as the violin, the harp, the flute. But most effective of all, perhaps, is the Piano Imprisoned within ito four walls hide the magic works which breathe forth the harmonies of the wr;rld. Almost anything can he achieved on the piano: it ia t!ie triumph of the musical world 1 .lust to run nne's finders along ihe keys of an instrument such as the Broadwood, the Ronisch, or the Liop is a supreme delight. The Drasden Piano Co., Wellington, who are theft Agents for these, and, _ idneed, every instrument of high repute, will gladly tall you about their Ba*y time-payment system, which makes it /6asy to possess shis kmg of instruments—the piano.
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXX, Issue 8994, 3 December 1907, Page 5
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162Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXX, Issue 8994, 3 December 1907, Page 5
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