BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores SINGER’S ART SUPERB Marian Anderson’s Second New York Audience Overflows America’s Music Spot New York, Jan. 31—(ANP) Marian Anderson, contralto, fresh from her Town Hall triumph of just three weeks ago, essayed to enchant another and larger audi ence at Carnegie Hall Monday- To put it modestly and at the same time comprehensively, the singer’s art was one superb achievement from beginning to end • Of the seventeen numbers list ed, orlv six composers shared hon ors, all are either celebrated or well known, two of them immort als. Miss Anderson’s Bach con sisted for in opening group of Have Mercy Lord. My Heart Ever Faithful (and how personal her delivery of this was!) and Komm Suosser Toil; her Brahms, i!mmer Leise wird mein S- Mummer. Dcr Sehmidt, Die Mainncht. These to gether with Richard Strauss, Mor gen and Zveignung made up the second group. Then came Hum mel's Halleluia. The final fourth and fifth lists comprised works by Sadoro and Harry Burleigh: Era Amuri Tarantella by the former, and Swing Low Sweet Chariot, I Don’t Feel No Ways Tired. Deep River and Heav’n Heav’n by the latter. “Amuri, Amuri,” was a touching piece of dramatization and shared honors with the rapid diction of the Tarantella The well known “Deep River” probably best represented Mr. Burleigh. Marian Anderson’s interpreta tions have risen to great heights within recent years. She not only has won the plaudits of the public but the approval of distinguished vocal pedagogues as well, which is the more substantial recommen dation- A sold-out house in these tim.es was probably not anticipat ed and so enthusiasm ran high Some of it got into the box' of fi e and the courtesy press tickets intended for this reviewer were sold (miintentionally we hope!) with the others. So that “we” were compelled to stand during the per formance. Two well known max ims apply very pointedly here: “ ’tis an ill wind that blows no one good”, and “Distance lends enchantment”. We were able dur ing the “standing act” to hear Miss Anderson from various points of the auditorium- To those who were close by the intense sincerity of her art was most apparent, to the rest the exquisite beauty of her voice ever-prevalent was unmistakeably obvious and en trancing. In the matter of encores she was deeply gracious. Besides hav ing to repeat Bach’s “Komm, Sues ser Tod” and Brahm’s “Der Sch mied” Miss Anderson followed Hummel’s “Halleluia” with the “Swiss Echo Song,” Sadero’s “Tar antella” with her accompanist’s Finnish folksong, and the last of the spirituals with the “Cuckoo Song” and “Will O’ The Wisp” made popular by her years gone by (but oh, how differently sound ing now) Dvorak’s “Songs My Mother Taught Me”, and “My Soul Done Anchored in The Lord " KostI Vehanen, from Finland, followed Miss Anderson faithfully throughout Civil War Organ ization Honors Miss Dandridge Boston, Mass., Feb. 1, (A. N. P.) Mis Mary Dandridge, a mem ber of one of Boston's oldest fam ilies, was installed a preident of the Women’s Relief Corps, a Civil War organization of which the newly installed president and her sister, Miss Winifred Dsfid ridge, are the only member of color. The installation ceremony was attended by Mr- and Mrs, Nelson Dandridge, brother and sister-in law of the president, and a num ber of other relatives and friends. Following the installation cere monies, was a banquet at which time the work of the president, Mis Mary Dandridge, was empha sized by various after-dinner speakers as a civic worker and in local church circles. Sponsored and Supported by Public Spirted Northside Business Men for the Purpose of Creating Better Understanding Between Merchantsand Consumers an dfor the Purpose of Bringing Dircetly to You the Latest Price Quotations - Deplores Homicide Record Of South Birmingham, Ala., Feb. 1, (A N. P.) In a ringing indictment against the homicide record in Southern states, as indicated in a recent survey made by the United States Department of Census, the Birmingham News, editorially here Tuesday attributed the high rate in these states to the wanton kill ing of Negroes by whites and the fact that Negroes hold ilfe cheap ly when only members of the rac ial group are involved. The survey pointed out that the highest homicidal rates were found in Alabama, the District of Colum bia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennes see, with the lowest rates found in Wisconsin, Vermont, South Da kota, Rhode Island, North Dako ta, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Minnesota and Iowa. Whites Kdl Negroes in Large Numbers Discussing the reason for this de plofable condition the editorial declared: “Students of this prob lem recognize the fact that the racial situation in the South is largely responsible for the high homicide rate in this section. This is primarily due to the high ho icide rate among Negroes. White people kill Negroes to an appal ling extent in the South and Ne groes kill white people at a rate that is alarmingly high, but the biggest factor in the situation is the shocking frequency with which Negroes kill other Negroes. “Among themselves Negroes hold life cheaply. It is a distress ing situation which has received much attention from both white and Negro leaders but not nearly so much as it should have.” Cites Heningburg’s Plea The plea made by Alphonse Heningburg, director of the Per sonal Department of Tuskegee In stitute, made hero in an address recently, for Negroes to cease to kill each other, was cited and lauded. “He pointed out" said the edit orial “that murders among Ne groes overshadowed the njumber of lynchings and he appealed to the Negroes of Birmingham to cease murdering themselves. It is an appeal which should be taken up by every Negro leader in the southern communities, for itis largely by precept and example of the more enlightened memebrs of the race that this evil situation must be remedied.” South’s Suicide Record Lowest Referring to the fact that the Southern states had the lowest suicidal rate, it was pointed out that “if the South has the worst homicidal record it has the best record in the matter of suicide. Just as the racial situation ac counts for the higher homicidal rates in the South, so does it go far to explain the low suicide rec ord- If Negroes kill one another all too freely, they seldom take their own lives. A Negro suicide is a rarity. “It has always been assumed that the low suicide rate amnog Negroes is due to the tempera ment of the race. Negroes are a happy spirited people. They are not as a rule subject to the morb idity that so often leads white people to commit suicide. Troubles do not weigh as heavily upon their minds” Commentators on the editorial attributed the wanton killing of Negroes by whites in the South nd the slaying among themselves, to the laxity of the law. If was pointed out that when a Negro is ! killed by a white man, even for the most trivial reason is the courts jare liberal in dealing with the white slayer and if a Negro is arrested for the murder of another Negro, the attitude generally is that “just another Negro is dead, and the perpetrator of the crime is either released or given a light sentence. A correction of these two conditions, the commentators, declared would go far to reduce the homicidal rate in Southern states as is evidenced by the fact that those states having the low est rates are those states in which the laws against murder are the most stringent. Beauty Parlor Blue* •'Don't you agree that time If the great healer?" "He may be but he's certainly no beauty spe cialist." A. K. A.’s See Mrs. Roosevelt About Discrimination Washington, Feb. 1, (A- N. P) Complete details of the visit of Miss Ida L. Jackson and Dr Dor othy Ferebee of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority to Mrs- Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the White House following that group’s an nual boule at Richmond recently, and their discussion with her of the Mississippi health project and railway discrimination were re vealed to the Associated Negro Press this week. The nation’s first lady chatted without apparent reserve and she seemed extremely interested in the health project, an undertaking which revealed many of the sordid peonage and suffering in the Miss issippi cotton areas. Funds Asked ‘We realize federal monies are appropriated to the South for var ious projects that should benefit the Negro as well as others, but unfortunately these monies rare ly filtered through or down to where the Negro received any ben 'efit,” Bliss Jackson, who is the national head of the A. K. As-, asserted ” We feel that this pro ject proves that Negroes can go into the'South and work with and for Negroes. “We believe that the time has como for the government to real ize that if Negroes are to obtain any benefits or have a chance, Ne groes must be assigned to posts so as to carry out such a plan ” Bfr- Roosevelt intimated that she considered the idea feasible and suggested that this or a similar plan might be worked out as a P. W. A. project, if there were avail able enough Negro workers ca pable of conducting the project. She reminded her visitors they would have to be on relief rolls to bo eligible for PWA employment. As an alternative, the president’s wife suggested that the sorority continue to sponsor and supervise the project with paid assistants who were qualified and on relief. Tell of Jim Crow The two visitors also told the First Lady of their trip here from the convention in Richmond dur ing which they were crowded into a small Jim Crow coach inadequate for the journey Miss Jackson said she was informed that white wo men in the South have stated they are willing for Negro women to not the same- The sorority leader pointed out it was not a matter of sharing a Pullman car with whites but the right to have equal accommodations for travel and comfort as those provided for the other patrons Mrs. Roosevelt told her visitors she was interested in their prob lem but suggested that some such organization of white women as the Women’s Federation of Clubs, might be able to handle the prob lem better than could the soror ; ity The two sorors took the grant ing of the interview with them at a time when Mrs. Roosevelt’s cal endar was crowded, as evidence of her genuine interest in the health project. I . _ __ Fisk and Tal ladega Split Nashville, Tenn., Feb- 1—Win ning the first of a two game ser ies with Talladega college 30-20, (the Fisk University Bulldogs lost to the ’Degans’ In a hotly contest ed game to second tusslee 41-36 For Tallarega, Tolliver, Smith, White, and stratten stood out, while Allan, Hughes, and Cornett starred for Fi3k. * tf * 13$*' ytL, * v v J I "" ZD We have discovered the way to dream anything you wish and have it come true. If you wish to have success with your dreams answer thus ad at once. If not, don’t write. Free details. Daggett Pub. Co., 3439 Rhodes Ave., Chicago, I1L SAM KLAVER IN RACE FOR LEGISLATURE Omaha Attorney Files As Can didate For Unicameral Legislature __ i From Sixth District | Mr. Klaver, In Filing Issued ■ Following Statement I nm filing for the mti-cnmeral legislature, because I believe that I can be of service to the people of my district, of Omaha, and of the state. 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