Evening Star Newspaper, December 9, 1928, Page 4

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4 BORDER-CROSSING LEGISLATION ASKED Davis Seeks Laws in Case! Supreme Court Decides | Against Government. PIETER VAN VEEN'S CATHEDRAL |PEACE IN AMERICAS PAINTINGS EXHIBITED HERE BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. | Immigration restriction threatens to | pass out of the hands of Congress into | the hands of the United States Supreme | Court, according to revelations just | made by James J. Davis, Secretary of | Labor. If the court decides the so-called | Canadian border-cressing case, now be- fore it for review, adversely to the United States Government, the bars un | America's borders and coasts alike will be down, in Secretary Davis' judgment, for the admission of certain groups of ! aliens practically without limit, includ- tng Aslatics. Such a development, he declares, woula practically “nullify” the immigra- tion restriction laws enacted by Con-| xress i 1924. Senator Johnson of Cali- | tornia and Representative Johnson of | Uregon, the respective chairmen of the | ssenate and House committees on immi- | gration, have been urged in a Io\'cclul‘? letter from Secretary Davis not to let the present short session of Congress slip by without enacting legislation to | forestall a possibly unfavorable decision | by the Supreme Court. Oth: > the year 1 Mr. Davis foreshado! be a year of old-time immigrant inun- | dation. Step to End Abuse. H The case regarding whose outcome Becretary Davis cherishes such anxieties eoncerns the rights of aliens who cross | the border from Canada for daily jobs | in cities like Buffalo and Detroit, and | then return to their hemes in Canada | for ths night. To put a stcp to indls-! criminate abuse of this privilege, ll\: Department of Labor on April 1, 1927, issued the now-famous general order No. 86. The purpose of the order was | to require aliens entering the United | States subsequent to June 30, 1924 (the | date of our new immisration law), for | the object of engaging in existing em- ployment or seeking employment in this country, to be considered as aliens of the immigrant class. The order was de- signed to rob these cliens of the rank of persons visiting the United States temporarily as tourists, or temporarily for either business or pleasure. General order No. 86 was aimed primarily at European and other aliens, who desired to eircumvent the quota restrictions of the American immigration law by quali- | fying as Canadian citizens and then ! being able to crcss the Yankee border— like Canadians—without restrictions of Forthwith a determined effort was made to break down the application of general order No. 86. Aliens of Euro- pean countries, who were residing in Canada, were used to test its validity in court. Mary Cook, a British sub- States immigration authorities on De- cember 1, 1927. Mary Cook, residing in Cenada and intending to remain there, crossed the border seeking employment in the United States. Antonio Danelon worked at Niagara Falls, N. Y., but lived in Canada. Gain Freedom on Writs. The arrested aliens procured their release on writs of habeas csraus, and on petition of the United States, they were_sul uently proceeded against in the Federal District Court in Western Ney York. That tribungl sustained the attitude of the immigration authori- ties, dismissed the habeas corpus Writs, end remanded both Mary Cook and Antonio Danelon to the custody of Fed- eral officials. for exclusion to the coun- try (Canada) of which they were resi- dents. On Miss Cook’s behalf the celebrated Anglo-American so-called Jay tre of 1794 was invoked. Under this treaty, which has never been re- voked, British subjects and American citizens, as well as Indians dwelling on either side of the boundary, are granted the right “frecly to pass and repass” the Canadian border. United States was thereupon compelled to defend -its: position a sec- ond time when the Cobk-Danelon case was taken on appeal to the Federal Circuit Court of for the West- ern District of New York. This court, on March 5, 1928, e the action of the lower Federal Its find- ing was based on the conténtion that the Jay treaty, being still in force, de- prived citizens of Canada of the char- acter of immigrants within the mean- ing of the American 1924 immigration act. As a result of the Court of Ap- * decision, hundreds of aliens have admitted as border-crossers under writs from the district courts, but under bonds to the courts to abide the final Supreme Court decision on the disputed question. Decision Momentous. In the course of his letter to Sen- ator Johnson and Representative John- son, Secretary Davis says: “If the final action of the Supreme Court be such that the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals remains in effect, it is the Department of Labor's view that the decision will be of serious and far- reaching effect upon the 3 tion of the immigration laws. The de- cision is momentous, first because it d res that the Jay treaty of 1794 was not terminated by the War of 1812. If ithe Supreme Court leaves the Court of Appeals’ decision in effect, the con- nce will be, in the opinion of the $rtmem of Labor, that not only British subjects of the black and white rages, but also those of the Oriental rages, except Chinese laborers, can zsfl' Canada and then immediately in to the United States rqma. ‘They would be able to induige in,this privilege without regard to the jmmigration laws, which forbid the admission as immigrants of persons by race ineligible for citizenship. “The other reason why the Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision is serious and of far-reaching effect is that it legalizes the entry into the United States of any alien who is a Canadian citizen as “visiting the United States temporarily for business,” even though such alien only crosses_the border by day to work and returns to Canada to live at night. To accord the term ‘visit- ing the United States temporarily for business’ a meaning so broad as to i clude the aliens just described, appea: 1o be unwarranted and unjustified. ‘The term ‘temporary’ is so flexible and re-entry under the same conditions so easy that the job in this country would practically be of permanent duration. Having to depart only so often that the stay could be considered temporary, say, every six months, a great influx of foreign laborers, even into the in- terior cities. could be expected. If the decision stands, it appears that the re- sult will be that not only are the gates thrown open on the Canadian border, but hordes of aliens can enter =long the Mexican border and from the West Indies through ports in our South- eastern States. In fact, under the court’s construction of what consti- tutes an entry ‘temporarily for business,” & way is open for the entry of laborers from these countries unrestricted by the 1924 quota law. I urge the enactment of bills at the present session of Con- gress which will insure us against a serious breakdown in the control of immigration in the event of a Supreme Court decision against the United States.” (Copyright. 1928.) ‘Tests show that the Eskimos are not of Indian blood. A relationship with . Manchurians is revealed, ’ 127 Works in Oil Placed on Display at National Gallery of Art. French Ambassador Is Pa- tron of Showing by Dutch Artist. _Twenty-seven oil paintings, showing exterior and interior views of famous French cathedrals, painted during the last eight years by Pieter van Veen, dis- tinguished Dutch artist, were placed on exhibition -in the Natonal Gallery af. Art of the Smithsonian Institution yes- terday afternoon under patronage of the French Ambassador, Paul Claudel. The French Ambassador, officials of the museum and scores of Washington art patrons attended the opening of the exhibit, which is placed in the center gallery. The exhibit includes views of such fa- mous cathedrals as those of Rheims, Amiens, Rouen, Chattres and the Churches of Moret and St. Ouen. Many of the interior views are entirely origi- nal documents because the space with- in the particular cathedral is so lim- ited as to make impossible satisfactory photography. In painting these old of Gothic architecture, Mr. Van Veen labored for eight years out- doors drawing and painting with ma- ture skill the vast structures before whose Iofty heights every mechanical lens has failed in its perspective ca- pacity. Although he maintains a studio in New York, the artist was born in Hol- land and studied at the Art Academy in that country. He also studied in Prance and Italy. After the showing here, which will continue until the end of the month, Mr. Van Veen plans to place his work on exhibition in all of the large cities of this country. The purpose of the showing. he sald, is to demonstrate to the people of this country the rare ar- chitectural beautv of the French cathe- drals and to familiarize them ‘with their design. INAUGURAL GROUP NUCLEUS CHOSEN BY COL. GRANT (Continced From First Page.) expression of ideas, as to the scope the plans should take. It is the alm of Col. Grant to ap- point the secretary of the inaugural committee in advance of the committee personnel. He is hopeful also that he will have determined upon those whom he will name to the more active com- | mittee chairmanships, of which the | finance cimmittee is looked upon as being the most important. Because of the fact that there is any amount of detail incident to arranging for an, inaugural celebration, and because it is necessary to ‘the success of the occa- sion to have an efficient organization, it is thought likely, from what Col. Grant has intimated, that he will to a very large extent call on a number of those who have had wide experience | in Szch things to serve with him in this work. Conference Is Held. In this connection it was pointed out that all inaugural celebrations are sim- ilar. whether or not they be of the simple kind that marked the Harding and Coolidge affairs, and the kind fo: which President-elect Hoover has i dicated a preference, and for this re son the inaugural chairman sees the wisdom of having the assistance of those whose natural talents and past experience commend them. He con- ferred informally yesterday in the office of Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of the Republican national committee, with five members of the executive commit- tee of the Republican State committee for the Distrcit of Columbia, and from what Col. Grant ssid afterward this latter represented the nucleus of his of assistants and advisers. In this group were William T. Galliher, who was chairman of the Coolidge in- augural committee four years ago; . Lincoln Townsend, who has been prom. inently identified with inaugur: mittee work in the past; Edward F. Colladay and Mrs. Virginia White Speel, Republican national committee man and woman respectively for the | District of Columbia, and C. C. Glover, jr., vice chariman of the Republican State committee for the District of | Columbla. ! THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, Above—Interior of the Cathedral Rouen. Left—Picter Van Veen. of the celebration to be planned. He is, however, certain that the committee, in its decisions, will conform with the wishes of th2 President-elect. He under- stands that the latter wants the affair to be as simple as is possible. He has not been officially notified to this extent by Mr. Hoover himself. In order to receive something definite and official in this matter Dr. Work, at Col. Grant's request, sent a cable yes- terday to the President-elect. Plans to Be Based on Reply. Col. Grant hopes to receive the de- sired answer from Mr. Hoover in ad- vance of the initial meeting of the general inaugural committee. This reply will form the basis of the plans to be work2d out by the committee. One of the first important steps to be taken in connection with. the plan- ning of this inaugural is the formation of a budget of expenses and the reach- ing of a decision as to the ways and means of raising the money to meet the expenses. With the absence of the Inauf 1 ball in the more recent inau- gn celebrations, the matter of defray- g the incidental expenses has been considerable of a problem. It is under- stood that Mr. Hoover has frowned upon the s of an inaugural ball as orie of the features of the cele- bration in his honor. Col. Grant said yesterday that he expects to open headquarters for the inaugural committee, probably in the ‘Willard Hotel, within the next day or so. AMERICAN /OUNDED "IN COLOMBIAN STRIKE .Banana Plantation of United Fruit Co. Suffers From Acts of Violence. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, ' December 8—The tions in Colombia have been affected by strikes in Magdalena Province, an- nounced today that reports to its of- wounded. reports had been received because of destruction of the company’s telephone communication lines wih its planta- tions. Available reports were that some buildings had been burned, railroad bridges destroyed and damage done to plantations. “Our reports indicate that the Colom- bian government has the situation un- der control,” Mr. O'Hearn said. “We are convinced that only this prompt ac- tion by the government prevented great loss of life, and possibly a serious in- ternal crisis.” O'Hearn said the Colombian trouble was caused by persons who were neither employes of his company nor recog- nized representatives of any established body of laborers in the banana zone. Pay Your Bills Start the (Christmas Holidays with a (lean Slate THE MORRIS PLAN, o Pay Monthly Deposit For 12 Months $10.00 $15.00 $20.00 $25.00 $360 $30.00 $540 $45.00 $1,200 $100.00 $6,000 $500.00 Easy t Loan $120 $180 $240 $300 It is not necessary to have had an Ac- count at this Bank to Borrow. THE MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S: Treasury 1408 H STREET, N. W. Col. Grant has as yet no definite Jdeas regmm» the nature and scope United Pruit Co., whose bahana planta- fices here indicate that no British or American employes have been killed, although one American was' slightly M. C. O'Hearn, vice president of the company, said very few authoritative HOPE OF GATHERING HERE TOMORROW (Continued from Pirst Page.) | isphere to all acts of aggression, state | plainly their desire to maintain their ilmflvidufl sovereignty and establish all | the rights which any of these countries | may hove to see written into a code of | international law. Such a treaty would ‘at the same time recognize obligations | of the nations, providing a code of law | | that will represent not an isolated doc- | | trine or mere ‘“preachment.” as Mr. | { Hughes expressed it at Havana, but | i real principles of justice. which will | { tend to.make war between nations of | North and South America a virtual im- | ‘ possibility. Outgrowth of Havana Meeting. 1 The present conference is the out- | | growth of Havna conference, ! which adopted a resolution declaring that “the American republics adopt ob- ligatory arbitration as the means which | they will employ for the pacific ‘solu- | tion of their international differences of a juridical character.” It was further resolved that the| American republics should meet in| ‘Washington within a year, “in a con- | ference of conciliation and arbitration, to give conventional form to the reali- zation of this principle, with the mini- . mum exceptions which they consider indispensable to safeguard the inde- pendence and sovereignty of the States, as well as matters of domestic concern, and to the exclusion of matters involv- ! ing interest or referring to the action &Ll State not a party to the conven- ik | It was agreed at Havana that the | delegates attending the Washington | conference, who already have begun to | gather in this city, should be armed | with instructions regarding “the maxi- | mum and minimum which their gov-| ernments will accept in the extension | of arbitral jurisdiction.” In plain words this meant to be a strictly business conference, held for the purpose not alone of talking, buf of accomplishing actual results of bene- fit to the republics of this hemisphere. While no mention is being made, nor is likely to be made, of any European or Asiatic nation, it is well known that the eyes of the world will be focused on this conference, for statesmen every- where say that the future, both as to prosperity and the effect upon the rest of the world, lies in the Americas. Argentina was a signatory of the Havana resolution, but has since de- clined to send delegates to Washing- ton. There has recently been a change of administration in Argentina and one of the public reasons assigned is that there is not time to send properly instructed delegates to the conference from Buenos Alires, or to study the pur- poses of the conference, The Argentine Ambassador, Senor Don Manuel E. Mal- bran, is absent, but other members of the embassy staff are in Washington. Privately, diplomats say that Argen- tina hesitates to join with the United States in any treaty which might in the future be interpreted to limit her right to oppose the United States in tariff matters. Nearly all'of the ex- | | facturing pu 1 gut D. C, DECEMBER )9, Europe are raw materials, which the United States is glad to get for manu- rposes with little or no y charged, but the chief products of rgentina, such as meat and other foodstuffs, raised in a climate similar to that of this country, come in com- ge':l:ei:n with products of the United One of the proposals which have been made by representatives of Argentina would contain reservations on the part of the Argentine government of all questions which might arise under that country’s constitution. Such reserva- tions, representatives of the United States have pointed out, would, of course, render the treaty almost value- less, so far as Argentina is concerned, since virtually every question is or can be made a constitutional one. Hope to Settle Difficulties. However, with President-elect Hoo- ver's receptions in South America ag- parently growing in popularity with the people of that continent, and his visit to Argentina so near, it is hoped by the American State Department that a way will be found to settle all dif- ferences and bring the Argentine gov- ernment into the family of American | republics which are expected to have representatives at the conference. In any event, the present plan 1s to permit any nation of the Western Hemisphere, even ones not represented at the conference, to sign the covenant at a later date, if it so desires. ‘The conference will open tomorrow under temporary chairmanship of Sec- retary Kellogg, who will doubtless be | elected rmanent chairman. Presi- dent Coolidge’s address will come after the preliminaries of organization are | over. Tomorrow evening the delegates and ladies of their party will be guests of President and Mrs. Coolidge at a state dinner at the White House, after which a reception will be held by Sec- retary Kellogg at the Pan-American Building. One of the interesting features of the conference will be an arrangement by which, although the deliberations will be conducted almost entirely in | Spanish, any delegate who does not understand that language may clamp on a set of ear phones and hear a sim- ultaneous translation of any speech in his own language. ‘The interpreters will speak in whispers into microphones, but their voices will be magnified so as to be audible through the ear phones. Suci simultaneous translations will be an innovation and many persons believe they will revolutionize international conferences of the future. ‘The countries which will be repre- sented and their delegates are as fol- lows: Bolivia, Diez de Medina, Brazil, S. Gurgel do Amaral, Araujo Jorge. Chile, Dr. Manuel Foster Recabarren, Antonio Planet Cordero. Colombia, Dr. Enrique Olaya, Dr. Carlos Escallon. Costa Rica, Manuel Castro Quesada, Rafael Montufar. Cuba, Dr. Antonio Sanchez de Bust- amante, Dr. Orestes Ferrara, Dr. Gus- tavo Gutierrez. Dominican Republic, Angel Morales, Gustavo A. Diaz. Ecuador, Gonzalo Zaldumbide. El ]snlvndor‘ Cayetano Ochoa, David Tosales. ports from the other Latin American countries to the United States and 2 before deciding <o Atwater Kent Majestic—Radiolas Radios Why wait any longer when Stromberg-Carlson is that a treaty might be ratified which | 1928—PART 1. Haiti, Augustus Bonamy, Raoul Li- Zzaire. ’ Honduras, Dr. Remulo Duron, Dr. Marcos Lopoz Ponce. Mexico, Dr. Fernando Gonzales Roa, D!N Benito P’IDDr:A § icaragua, Dr. Alepandro Cesar, Dr. Maximo H. Zebada. Panama, Dr. Ricardo J. Alfaro, Dr. Carlos' L. Lopez. Paraguay, Dr. Eligio Ayala. Peru, Dr. Hernan Velarde, Dr. Victor M. Maurtua. Uruguay, Dr. Jose Pedro Varela. Venezuela, Dr. Carlos Grisanti, Dr. Francisco Arroyo Parejo. U. S. SEEKS TO TRAP NARCOTIC RING CHIEFS LINKED WITH SLAYING (Continued From First Page.) off an express train at Buffalo after his baggage was found to include $2,- 000,000 worth of drugs, and Mrs. June Boyd, arrested in Chicago by agents whose attention was drawn to her by a telephone call Unger made to her from New York. A suit case full of narcotics was found in her possession. The pawns, held only as material witnesses, are Mrs. Esther Meyers, an intimate of Unger's, and Samuel Lower, an addict wi a prison record for whom Rothstein once went bond. The were arrested here and held in bail, $10,000 for Lowe and $5,000 for the woman, as Mrs. Boyd and Unger were on their way back to this city in charge of Federal agents. Officials said they would ask bail of at least $100,000 for Unger. Arrests Made Despite Threats. The arrests and seizures followed close on inspection of business records of Rothstein’s obtained on a search warrant and were carried out in the face of threats of violence from the underworld. United States Attorney Tuttle ex- pressed the opinion today that from cover the motive .for the shooting of Rothstein. Up to this time police had proceeded on the theory he was killed by fellow gamblers to whom he had re- fused to pay his card debts, but today it seemed likely that the motive might be found somewhere among the stealthy activities of, the drug traffic. Agents were beginning to get “warm” on the Rothstein trail a week ago, but ' before an attempt was made to scare them off. James R. Kerrigan, the agent who came narcotic men investigating the Roth- stein case, received a telephone call from a man who gave no name. “Listen,” said this man, “You want to lay off or you won't stay healthy.” With the reply, in effect, that he wasn't in the business for his health, still greater efforts. A search warrant was obtained yes- terday to permit agents of the United States attorney’s office to enter the ‘of- fice of the mortgage company that Rothstein used as the headquarters for files the searchers found memoranda confirming what before had been not much than a suspicion, and giving tips Guatemala, Dr. Adrian Recinos, Dr. Jose Falla-Ariz. way to Unger. that were acted on at once. It was these papers that pointed the Unger was preparing those same records officials might dis- | they knew all they have since learned, | here from Washington to direct the |ave Kerrigan spurred - his subordinates to | his manifold activities. There in the | g Federal agents at to arrest Unger and Mrs. Twentieth Century Limited's outside and a llmzubhckybook containing and addresses. Mrs. Boyd's arrest fol- lowed in her Chicago apartment, and 4 Mrs. Meyers and Lowe were picked up | here today. seemed calm and slightly amused when she was taken to court. Lowe, however, | wept loudly and begged to be released. They will be taken Monday before a | Federal grand jury, which United States Attorney Tuttle expects will indict “quite a lot” of people. Births Rc;rcd Raymond M. and Theodore C. Grinder. bo: Edward P. and s ] nov: se nd Neliie Moral ind Mat 3. an, boy. a 3. Tovlor les. boy. Stephen a Theodor mel, boy. Kenein' ¢ .‘".n‘é“}.«‘.’r‘;’%.“-‘ifco“ Sl . hn E. and Beulah M. Keefauner. girl. rry an urtz, girl. William and Elsie Frizzell, girl. Benjamin and Melvin Van Ness. girl. Raymond H. and Effle V. Morris, girl. Paul nd Ruth Stafford. girl, Heary and Lue Corbin, giri. Arthur H. and Austine’ Stevens. irl. Prank J.' and Katherine C. MacDonald, and Goldyne H. Schloshers. girl. in_J. and Myrtle M. Shepherd, girl. girl. hel A. Pischer, girl. Lol Lake, Bos.. " Ethel Young, boy. Deaths lieporlcd. The following_deaths have been reported {8 the Heaitn Department in'the past 24 ours: Jane Goodwin Cox. 98, 1221 Mass. ave. Hugh Goldie Payne, 81, 604 Alabima fiy . Denmark. 78, Eviscopal Eve, Ear Emily am Andrew J. Bennett, 76, 1910 2nd st. n.e. Maurice ‘J. Roche, 10, Walter Reed Hospl- al, Mary B. Updike, 69. 7553 Alaska ave. Elizabeth Johnson, 68, 2328 lst st. Sara Van Gundy, 66, Garfield Hospital, (Edward J. Kinsella.” 65, Providence Hos- 4 J. J. Puller. 61, Episcopal Eve, Ear and Throat Hospital. William 8. Cléary, 59, St. Elizabeth’s Hos- Elis th P, 59, . ” Bl B Snan A AR ; T . Mi , 54, 34 Boroies B Yemract: ShtRarler & 2o James Stuart, 82, Home for Aged and In- Lewis E. Brooks, 62, Preedmen' ital. Eaviaed CUONT S5 Rorae ior abed"und nfirm. (Eljzbeth Richardson, 43, Freedmen's Hos- Agnes Mondeln, 18, Preedmen’s Hospital. o) n. 4.’ Children’s Hospital Henry M. Harley, 1, 924 24th . Leo Edwi d SEES NEW PARTY FORMING N SOUTH Representative-Elect Garber Addresses Arlington Re- publican Banquet. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALLSTON, Va., December 8.—Rep- resentative-elect J. A. Garber of the seventh congressinoal district of Vir- ginia, speaking before the Arlington County Republican Club at its fifth annual banquet and entertainment held at the Washington-Lee High School lrut night, deelnre‘d that there‘;.u a new y composed of - publicans and g:mocu'.s. “It is our duty to help in forming | this new purifying organization on the high_ standards for the people of the South,” he declared. He further expressed his gratification f&’:he peopl: of the sl:e’: gt’:r tl}zlr n on not being gul a_few old-time Democratic leaders “who have Repul tee, speaker, declared that he was a party man, and that he did not want to see a bloc, as it would be disastrous to the country. “I want to credit the womanhood of also spoke. Letters of regret were read from Col. Henry Anderson, Republican com- mitteemen and Raipreuntatlve-elect M. Lankford of Norfolk on not being able to_attend. Louis C. McMahon served as toast- master, while G. H. O'Denthal was mn.‘s_.t:er of ceremonies. . rogram was rendered by Dave ucwmflm and' the City Club Synco- pators, featuring Al Virts, with Phil O'Brien directing; the City Club Trio, banjoists and vocalists; E‘mu: d z" itler, harmony and 'apps and Zeitler, an sense; O’Halre, banjo; Phil Hayd and Peggy Little, in moderistic dan Bob Carbauh, Stevens in a5 horuss Bung by e and ¢! sung banqueters, with John P. Mullane leading. SR The dinner, served by the domestic . De Moll & Co.—Twelfth & G Sts. - PIANOS—VICTROLAS—FURNITURE—RADIOS "Be sure to visit our Radio Department b and Ev What a Christmas There is a beautiful Steck piano in our store for $785. ening Until Xmas It will enter your family circle on Christmas Eve for a first payme‘;‘t-of $25 . that’s all! The balance will be extended over a period of 2 years (not 12 months - l_mt 24 month_u). If you have a piano - it will be taken in exch;mge - and with a liberal allowance. To appreciate the value of this offer - let us tell you something of the piano itnlf. . It is the é STECK Petite Grand -th;mostpopuinmodelofthe' most popular piano in America. The Steck enters more homes than any other piano name It is one of the three great international instruments - the only one with a and Australia. That’s a piano to be proud of! That s the piano that will enter demand so world-wide that it is made in five countries - in America, England, France, Germany, your home for $25. Each Christmas we make a feature of the Steck - for we have found that it has the greatest appeal. And Christmas time is phno-fimé th@wofld around. 25 will work such magic? - Eolian Christmas Instruments In our store you will find dozens of pianos to match her fondest dreams - pianos in infinite - variety from %300 to #6000. Most of them are made by the Zolian Company, from whose hands have come the foremost developments in the pianoforte in the past 25 years. : There is a Steinway DUO-ART (#3975) - #350 down There is a Weber DUO-ART ($2785) - $250 down There are palatial period models from the @olfim Custom Built D¢, .rtment up to %6500 There is a Steck DUO-ART ($1650) - %150 down There is a Stroud DUO-ART (*1295) - $100 down There is a Steck Louis XVI (#825) « 80 down There is a Stroud Miniature Grand (#645)-%50 down Individuality in:Furniture at De Moll’s

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