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The Anniston Star from Anniston, Alabama • Page 21

Publication:
The Anniston Stari
Location:
Anniston, Alabama
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ptf TvtatpOM, Tli Aanlstoa Star, Thorsday, Dec 1, 1M9 5 tin s. 4w WBRC-FM To End Broadcast Tonight BIHMINGHAM, Dec. 1 (ff) WBRC-FM, Alabama's most powerful fretuncy modulation radio station, will stop broadcasting at midnight Saturday. Mrs. Elois Smith Hanna, president of the company which also operates WBRC.

and WBRC-TV, said the decision "was brought about due to the fact that frequency modulation has not been accepted by the general public. "Therefore, consistent with the policy of the Birmingham Broadcasting Co, of serving the people of Alabama, It was decided that It was in the public interest to concentrate all efforts on WBRC and WBRC-TV." virnen it rains tyr-h jrT rM-, it pours Plain or iotfiztrj '7Tjf LAST This bangry moos teok a nibble ef cheese, nap ped his ema pictvr and sealed Us doesa all la a fraetlea a ad. NEA-Acan CerrespoBdeBt Win to. Sextos HarrlsoSTiUe. rigged th trap to th shutter bis camera eaten th aansaal abet ef a mouse being caught la a trap.

Not motion the business end ef the spring at tight Th abject la the air aver the trap is a weight need ta alw dawn the spring. Use Qassif ieds MAKES PEU6KXJS Gold Medal gives you Valuable Extras at Ho Extra rum fit iul nra iscmTt wh yo bay Gold MU1 "KUcKtn-tuttd" Enrichad flour (pUin or aelf-rking) you'r ratting a wonderful floor far sou thorn biscuit -plus evary otbar baking naad all in an bag. Gold Modal' ramaxkabU baking oualitiaa ara uniformly auparb. It'a tbo only flour you naad for everything you baka. FIRE COTTON IM-HO PtlgTlltl.

Gold Medal' 26, 60 and 100 lb. aacka hava no printing on tham juat a pa par labal which aoaka off in 2 or 2 minutes. yf IK PRODUCE STIIII fO mOAILI tUnlWlIt COUPON. Coupon, good on atunqing "Quaon Beat" Pattern ailvarware in ganuina Tudor Plat by Oneida Com munity Silversmith. ICTTT ClOCHI CBOKINI NtlPl New aaay rad- pea for tba beat and thriftieet eatin' traata Tor deTeiopad by America 'a No.

1 food Betty Crock. MJf HOMY BACK GUARANTEE: General Mill gwrnli 011 Modal Inrlched Flour I give completely tati tract ery ratult a yvr moy baKk. rBwttr Oackir" aaa -aTlrtai tmttf ng. waaaaafki at Oaaaml MUa roip mm mm FRUITS Florida ORANGES 0 z. 19c LETTUCE CELERY Extra American Indiana used to build totem poles aa high aa 00 feet IUI At Your 4-Lb.

Ctn. 3-Lb. Pail Can can Cadohy's Wkktow Sliced BACON, lb. 39c 43c 49c 48 7ic 4SC 29c 11TTEB Iceberg Head Brookfitld V4-Lb. Prints Per Lb.

vc Kluxer Brags Of Floggings, Court Is Told Cafe Owner Tells Of Incident In Qvil Rights Trial ROME. Dec! 1. (U. A white eafe owner testified In a civil rights trial here yesterday that on of the 12 defendants stopped at his place after a Ku Klux Klan jubilee last April 2 and told him had been "out to see som Negroes get their rears whipped." The witness, Floyd E. Brandon of Trenton, said that Defendant Robert L.

Keener told him the Negroes were forced to get up and run after the beating and "it sure was fun to watch them." Brandon testified that Keener said "really got a kick out of it" More Witnesses Dm U. S. Attorney J. Ellis Mundy planned to call more government witnesses in U. S.

district court today and said he might need as much as two more days to complete his case against Keener and 11 other white men, including Dade County Sheriff John W. Lynch. Brandon's testimony completed identification by witnesses of all 12 defendants. The defendants are charged with conspiring to deprive seven Negroes of their civil rights by abducting them and handing them over to a robed and hooded mob to be flogged. The alleged flogging was said to have taken place at Hooker, near Trenton, on the night of April 2, the same night on which Brandon said Keener told of the flogging.

Identified Earlier Keener earlier had been Identified by one of th flog victim as the driver of a station wagon in which they were taken to a Negro school for the beating. Brandon said a number, of. men stopped at his cafe at Trenton, th Dad County seat a few miles across the state line from Chattanooga, the night of April 2. Earlier that evening, Brandon testified, he had seen a "Ku Klux Klan Jubilee" at Trenton. Th cafe owner said he saw automobiles beloning to C.

Spears, Woodrow Daniel, the Rev. Sam Peters and Ferries (Cotton) Durham, all defendants, carrying robed men through the town in a parade. 8ea At Ceaavbnnlng Earlier yesterday another government witness, Lon Brldgman, placed three other defendants at the seen of a cross-burning which preceded the alleged flogging. Bridgman, whit owner of the property rented by Negroes from which the victims were abducted, named the men as N. Stokes Me-Cauley.

William M. HartUne and John Bleckley, all deputies of Sheriff Lynch. Bridgman said he saw th Negroes being put first into th sheriffs car and then Into a station wagon. Myrton Little, 20-year-old Trenton fanner, testified that he saw several men don robes behind a drug store owned by Terrell Wheeler on the night of the floggings. Wheeler is one of the defendants.

Test-Herd Starts In South Alabama FAIRHOPE. Dec. 1. (P) Like any wide-awake fanner, Otto Brown picked up two or three good beef cattle at a Baldwin County livestock sale a few days ago. But Brown's purchases may on day have far-reaching results In Alabama, where beef production is well below the sunny state's year-round potential.

For Brown Is director of the Gulf Coast Sub-station of the Alabama Experiment Station, and the cattle will be used In a study of "the cheapest way to produce a pound of beef." The project Is right down Brown's alley. He la a firm believer that the South, where cattle can be fattened out of doors the year round, Is a natural beef raising center. The test herd will be held to a maximum of SO or 40 animals, and grazed on different kinds of pasture which can be grown on Alabama farms. Information will be accumulated, weighed, and then passed on to stock growers for guidance in their operations. The beef cattle project replaces a satsiima study which waa conducted at the Gulf Coast Station over a 12-year period.

Brown said results of the citrus observations will be made public later. 7 Satsumas were grown extensively in Alabama and Mississippi until a combination of sever freeze and disease almost wiped the groves out. They have begun to be raised on a commercial scale agauy-only in the past few years! TOO MUCH SYSTEM JACKSON. Mich. flJJO Detec tives found two young women with a partially checked-off "Christmas list" and arrested them for shoplifting the $100 in merchandise they were carrying.

father's Dctffe kaAls! Large. Stalk 5-Lb. Bag mm axra.rysajrfxi uaiUABLE fcr Coupon afH -m on pgaiBH BTJ CraaW i (rag mm CABBAGE RUTABAGAS Cobbler POTATOES, 5 COLLARDS or Turnip GREENS Pole Beans ami -i z) a aa I STOKELY'S (SirainiIiDiriry Saane 1M French Market COFFEE, lb. Margold Yellow OLEO, lb. Green Lb.

5c Waxed Lb. lbs. 19c Du. Cukes Grapes J3c 2fc $1.19 15c fen ccn KcCcrclcft -SPICES- -EaTRACTS PORK ROAST, lb. PORK RIBS, lb PORK CHOPS Glenn Valley PEAS, 303 can, 2 for25c CLOROX, quart IBc Pster Pon PEANUT BUTTER, 12 oz.

size 35c DUZ OXYDOL Lge. 27c Corn MEAL 10 Lb 1U Bag 29c Pet Silver Cew. Camatin MILK 3 Tall or 6 Small 35c Ground Bttf, lb. 45c Star lb. roll 39c Sraall Fresh Center Cut CUDAHY PURITAN ii Ail Frtsh Armour's Sausage, fj Old 77 Wieners, Boneless Hickory.

Cell 7kg. lb 49c DILL PICKLES, quart COOK KILL quart GREEN BEANS, No. Vaa Comp's RED KIDNEY BEANS, 2 Stew, lb 59c BACOII 45c flew. Improved, Creamy-lYhite Octagon Toilet Soap is Richly Perfumed-Removes all Trace of Perspiration Odor! in two AA" CHOICE VEAL Round ik Ke Chuck Roast, lb. 49c Rolled Roast, lb.

65c gflagagaHMaaaiBlaiBnM II 11 fi I This special Sale is to introduce you to the new, impnvtd Octagon Toilet Soap. It is richly perfumed and removes all trace of perspiration odor. New Octagon Toilet Soap is to last longer and save you money. So take advantage of this big If Sale toJajnow at all dealer No. 1- 12C0 PRIE AVE.

No. 2- 913 Y. 15TII ST. Anfad. Lbs.

4 -rr mm M. CARTE! Oxford. Ala Kt.

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About The Anniston Star Archive

Pages Available:
849,438
Years Available:
1887-2017