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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1916)
Supplement to the Day ton Tribune MISS WILSON’S SINGINGJRAISED teaciUDtf 1 ha*» never known any who baa worked aa hard aa the daughter of the ixrealdent.” . Mt— WUaou baa a lyric aoprauo The Chipmunk la a Hermit. Evidently the chipmunk has no part ner and will spend the winter in his subterranean retreat alone. I think this Is an established chipmunk cua- tom. rendered necessary. it may be, by the scant supply of air In such close quarters, three feet underground. nt|d maybe under three or more feet of snow In addition. At any rate, the chipmunk, male and female, is a her mit. and there Is no co-operation or true sociability among them They are wonderfully provident and industri ous, beginning to store up their winter food In midsummer or aa early as the farmer docs his.-John Burroughs In Hnri>er's Magazine. voice. with a dramatic tendency. Rhe ■luge with perfect breath control, and tn the studio taken high I) with ease. In public, however, »he han sung only up to B Hat She la able to auatabi her ; high voice, which is growing every day. She 1» essentially a Heder singer, and It Is her ambition to l>ecoiue nne of the greatest Heder singer» in Amer lea. Her German is perfect, and she has good command of French and Italian Of course she sings in Eng lish too. But. what Is more remarkable. Miss Wilson has the mettle to stand up to deliver her message. She has the j»ow- । Forgetmenot. Her Teacher, Rote W. David, Who Hae er of concentration and the pro|>er , A gentleman wboac Ix-autlfu! grounds Been Inatructing Her Four Yeare, amount of "nerve’* to become a suc were often visited by the public had Declares Miss Wilson Has Made cessful singer an «»Id gardener who was tn the habit While her private recitals had at Singing Her Life’e Work—She Will of showing partie« round the beds. At tracted considerable recognition It was Appear Soon. the success which attended her first such times he would tn a hurried, gab New York.—Many persons have ask public appearance at the Syracuse mu bling voice explain the names to the ■ ed Roas W. David, singing teacher to sic festival last May that determined visitors. When nearing the exit gate be her to become a professional singer. Miss Margaret Wilson, daughter of the Subsequent concerts In Cleveland and _ would, however, suddenly pause and president of the United States, why Buffalo, where she won the unstinted . draw six* la) attention to a pretty clus she has decided to tiecome a prof es praise of all the musical critics, con ter of modest (xmles and then. In a sig slonal singer. To them lie has replied, vinced her that she hail decided wise nificant tone of voice, exclaim: "These.„ Indies and gentlemen, are because it gives her the greatest oppor ly. Wilson G. Smith, an Influential tunity, for expressing herself. He said: Cleveland critic, publicly announced forget-me-not.”—Chicago News. ¡“Mias Margaret Wilson has made before the concert that if she did not Shakespearean. singing her life’s work. To her, sing "deliver the goods” lie would send her Father. In the hall, had been stand lug is her very life. I have been her back to the White House. But the Ing for hnlf an hour while Millicent teacher for four years, and 1 think I following day he wrote: "It was her unaffected pers-mallty | and Harold bade snub other good night know her. She puts her singing above and the sympathetic and lyric quali Ui the doorway. everything else, and I can truthfully ties of her voice that won the audl "Parting,” quothes Harold, "Is such say that in all my eighteen years of sweet sorrow that I could say good enee "There were no efforts at vocal cht- night till”— cauery to catch the audience. Her at At this speech father gets a Hbnke titude toward her art and her auditors spearean inspiration, of Ills own and was one of genuine earnestness to in tramim down the stairs terpret the musi'-al language she loves, "Seema to me.” he asserts, "that without self exploitation there is too much adieu about nothing “The sinwrity of^ier artistic predi here.”— Philadelphia Ledger. lection was evidenced in her selection and sympathetic interpretation of two Camel Carriagos. of Robert Franz's too much neglected Came) carriages are not common songs, models of classic purity. If Miss conveyances in most parts of India, Wilson had done nothing else she but on the great trunk road leading would have won my critical esteem.” to Delhi they are frequently to be seen. With criticisms of such a nature it They are large, double story wagons, was only natural that Miss Wilson should feel encouraged to sing at other drawn sometimes by one. sometimes festivals. She will appear at several by two or even three camels, accord events in April and May. and next fall ing to their size. Iron bars which give she will begin an extended concert them a cagelike ap|»carunce were .’Orig tour, singing in New York ns well as inally Intended as a defense against In the principal eastern and southern robbers, and the carts were probably cities. also used for the conveyance of pris oners. Our Friends of Fiction. Ari a Trustworthy History. It Is well to balance the Influence of Groat nations write their autobiogra one’s transient mortal associations by phies In three manuscripts—the book of acquiring a peaceful intimacy with these ever living men and women their deeds, the book of their words whose deeds, aspirations, lore and and the book of their art. Not ono of courage are recorded in books, who are these books can be understood unless never against us. who never despise ua, we read the two othera. but of the dot fail us. nor betray ua, being strip three the only quite trustworthy one is ped now of that mortal part which ren the last The acta of a nation may be ders all men uncertain, liable to bypoc- triumphant by Ite good fortune, and Its rbriea, conceits and a sort of human batnousneea which life tn the flesh words mighty by the genius of a few never quite escapes.—Corm Harris in of its children, but its art only by the reneral gifts and common sympathies Photo by American Preso Asencloflea Mew York Independent. uf the race.—John Hoskin. ■xas MAnaAsnr wixxml President’s Daughter Margaret to Be a ProfessionaL HAS ALL IN HER FAVOR.