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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH. UTAH the rich county reaper second class matter Feb. 8. 12 Entered Office, Randolph, Utah, ander the at the Pest of March 3, 1879, Per Year in Advance Subscription 81.5Editor and Proprietor Lsvton Marshall, Wm. E. Marshall, Business Manager , i asnas ? ; aaornim A quiz with answers offering information on various subjects J- (wfWfw(Wwwfu(wfW(i.fUfW(WfwNOM Preacher Ties Daughter, Deals Her With Strap T The Answers The Questions 1. The. plate umpire. the umpires is su2. The year 1888. baseball? in league major preme 3. A wedding. Henry the VII 2. The community chest origimarried Elizabeth, daughter pf nated in Denver in what year? 3. What ended the . War of Edward the IV, and thereby unit' ed the House of York with the Roses? of Lancaster. House moons 4. Hqw many doesJupi1. Which of . . Hated Pleasure and Saw to It Girl Didnt Have Any by Belt Lashings. - ter have? 5. "What ermen? 6. How 7. How So she KNOXVILLE, TENN. would be safe from worldly associations on her 16th birthday annipart-tim- e versary, a pleasure-hatin- its name? 4. Eleven. 5. Michigan,, which issued 904-,licenses last year. big are the Statue of ' 6. Each eye is 2 feet wide. 7. From Pitcairn, a midshipman eyes? did Pitcairn island get aboard Carterets ship, who first saw the island in 1767. state has the most fish- 557 . Libertys ' - ' . g, preacher chained his daughter to a bedstead augmenting his'usual of the blonde weekly girl, police said. The sobbing girl was released by authorities. She bore welts on heri body from the repeated lashings. The police took the father, William Massengill, to jail and held the stepmother for questioning. Massengill was described as an itinerant minister who took paperhanging jobs to supplement his meager income from the collection plate at camp meetings and other temporary pulpits. Geraldine (Jerry) Massengill, the small, slight daughter, owed her escape to her own ingenuity. As her 16th birthday anniversary dawned, she said, Massengill came in her' room and padlocked a big iron chain, around her ankle. He padlocked the ether end of the chain to the bedstead in her dingy room. The chain gave her enough freedom of movement to get to the window to toss a note to Edward Johnson, 8, playing outside. Friend Notified. v f It was addressed to Barbara Jean Rutherford, a neighborhood girl of belt-lashi- Jerry's age. j Daddy has chained me to the , bed, please call the police," the note said. Edward took the card to Barbara' and she called police. Capt. C. V. Christenberry and Pa-- : trolman Henry Grady arrived within an hour. When Christenberry saw the chained, bruised child he called Police Chief Joe Kimsey so he could see it for himself. As the police struggled with the. locks and chain, Massengill came in and gave them the keys. He readily admitted chaining her to the bed and said, I guess I am ashamed of this, but it was the only way I could keep her home so, she wouldnt get into trouble. You wont believe me, but I loved her, he continued. When police questioned him about the red welts on the girls hips and legs, he admitted that he was in the habit of whipping her. At least every week, broke in the weeping girl. Massengill produced a collection of belts that he said he used in the ' beatings. Described as Quiet. Mrs. Delbert Johnson, mother of the boy who delivered the note, said Geraldine was a quiet child who stayed at home virtually all of the time. Geraldine said she had never been to a movie, gone swimming or attended a party because of her fathers harsh rules. Her brother, Edward, 18, ran away from home almost a year ago because of the severe beatings he received from his father, the girl added. Jerry will be placed in a juvenile home where she can receive proper care, officers said, and when they told her she tearfully exclaimed: Thank goodness! Police were so touched by the took up a colgirls plight that they a to lection complete new buy her outfit of clothing. :m"' Formal charges had not been placed against Massengill or his wife. Jerry and Edwards mother died some years ago and Massen-gill- s first wife had also died. . Owner on Foot Race Blasts Thieves From Bus Motor Car Magistrate PHILADELPHIA. Victor F. Girard dismissed Anthony Jistarri on charges of reckless use of his .32 caliber revolver and ri of the firearms act after explained: 1. He had to run a footrace his own automobile for a against mile. ' S. He punctuated the race with lour revolver shots. I. He watched his automobile wrecked against a pole, crumpled an accordion. jjejfetarri said he was sitting in his bonne, heard a car starting and looked out and saw three young as about to drive away in my i He grabbed- the gun and gave The vio-lati- on Jis-ter- , V BOON TO BABIES AND PARENTS, TOO .! . . Experiments conducted by University of Nebraska food and nutrition laboratory have shown the value of feeding meat to babies. Mothers are interested from a nutrition standpoint; fathers are impressed by the fact that babies'are less fussy and sleep better. Patsy is shown here receiving a blood count at the hands of Dr. A. K. Myrabo, pathologist of University hospital, with Dr. Ruth Leverton, university nutritionist, standing by to help. Avoid leaning against the door when riding in an automobile. If you like to sit sidewise, put on the safety latch. places around machines can be conveniently lubricated by attaching a soda straw to the stem or spout of an oil can. FOB THE BETTER, TOO Hard-to-get-- Even Babies Are Affected By Revised Eating Habits TASTER-SMOOTHE- R? r Before washing dirty curtains, allow them to soak in cold water overnight, to loosen dirt. WNU Features. Chances are your LINCOLN, NEBR. would have no more thought of eating a "love apple" than of flying to China. But now we call love apples by the more prosaic name 'of tomatoes and not only eat them but drink em, too That doesnt prove much except that peoples eating habits change, condition who did not get meat The University of Nebraskas food lost 10.3 per cent during the same great-grandmoth- at er Your or kitchen step-sto- ol der cant be too carefully chosen. It should be as wide and sturdy as possible with rubber feet and treads for safety. Take no chances on a rickety ladder. (SINGLl OR DOUBLS BOOS Skin olcbes and irritations non-sli- p off summer To be ready with quick relief keep handy a jar of soothing, and nutrition laboratory is trying to period. The red cell values of the I Resinol Ointment. d Removing outside paint is best see to it that they, change for the meat eaters jumped an average of Use freely, see how the medicathe but done with a blowtorch, etter'22.2 per cent while their competi-tion eases itchy irritation of ivy element of danger must always be Take babies six weeks old for tors chalked up a gain of only 6.2 poison, mosquito bites, sunburn, borne in mind. Use only enough instance. A lot of mothers would per cent. chafing . . . For added comfort Then to the melt flame paint. bathe with mild Resinol Soap. gape in astonishment if you said, Nurses at the institute reportGet both today from any druggist scrape immediately with a knife. Why dont we give the baby a nice ed the babies who . got meat Hold the torch in one hand and II OINTMENT of meat helping today? They might seemed less fussy and slept betfor use the other the scraper. uw AND SOAP even tell you scornfully that babies ter than their competitors. The until at meat dont get institutions pediatrician said the theyre least nine months old. general physical condition of the meat-eater- s Babies Like It. was better, too. Yet, Dr. Ruth M. Leverton, uniResults comparable to those at versity nutritionist, and two pedia- Child Saving institute were obtained tricians have been feeding meat to at St. Thomas orphanage. Among tiny babies for some time now. The the babies in private homes, the recbabies like it, and the results have ords were not as spectacular prob-abl- y interested even the American Medbecause the routine of care was ical Association Journal, which not as exacting but even in the doesnt get interested very easily. homes the meat eating .babies Andrew Doherty and Maudes Conway agree: The big thing that Dr. Levershowed no loss in hemoglobin conton and her associates found is its pleasing la pipes pleasing in papers its tent of the blood while their comg tobacco. Prince Albert-t- he worlds that meat added for eight weeks petitors who did not get meat lost to the diets of babies as young 8 per cent. as six weeks can knock out nuIt was this ability' of the meat tritional anemia. Ibis, they eaters to qvoid hemoglobin loss that say. Is important because that the researchers consider important. v ' type of anemia is common to According to Dr. Leverton it means most infants. that the protein in the meat diet The researchers dont pretend that kept the babies from taking the I blocking anemia from babyhood is downward road to nutritional going to produce a race of super anemia. men and women. But they do say that anemia keeps the human body little or big from 100 per cent Worth 50 Scents, performance. pipB J0Y It may be that freeing infants Old Trapper Opines from anemia will let them grow strong enough to toss off some of the usual childhood diseases. AnyBig Skunk way, thats what Dr. Leverton hopes and the laboratory is assisting with RANGELEY LAKE, ME. Aint further study along that line. Great in Pipes..., i3R been so much fun down Maine way . Launch Experiments. .. Tve enjoyed Prince Albert In The universitys food and nutri- since the lassie moose mistook an tion laboratory launched its attack air raid siren for her lovers call to my pipe for years, says Andrew Doherty. P. A. has a rich on anemia seven years ago. It found arms. tobacco taste that is mild and The first skunk hunt in the Pine that meat added to the diets of a swell tasting down throughthe Tree state was of a such sockeroo that reduced simple group anemia. they say its going to be an annual affair from here on in, with brass ithtffriT During the war, a second N. a a. 3. . Winat bands and all that. study revealed that meat was of benefit to blood bank donors. I wouldnt have missed it for 50 scents, giggled one grizzled Next eamt a study of expectant old trapper. mothers. A meat supplement to Skunks are a bit of a problem in their diets boosted their hemoCRlM the resort area of inland Maine. So globin values which is a fancy this year, in an effort to speed mass PRIH& way of saying they did not become anemic. migration of the burrowing carniEncouraged by these results, the vora in the Rangeley Lake region, & wornresearchers turned to babies. When W. Scott Peirsol, general manager the study started, strained meat for of the Rangeley Sheraton hotel, sobabies was not yet on the market licited the services of Bostons fanbut meat processors cooperated and ciest debutantes and their escorts produced strained meat of custard for the first mass skunk hunt. 0CTt&MlLP Their weapons for the fray includconsistency which could be added to baby formulas. Since then a meat ed wicker baskets (you throw the product has come on the market basket over the skunks head or, if you prefer, over your own); flashcommercially. In cooperation with doctors at lights (not too far front, please), and Child Saving institute in Omaha, at pitchforks (by process of eliminaGreat in Papers... St. Thomas orphanage in T.Wniw tion, since nothing in Emily Post, and with a small group of parents, recommends the. use of any other "Crimp cut Prince Albert la a Ihe battle of babies versus anemia fork as de rigeur). great cigarette tobacco, eaye Maurice Conway. P.A. gives was begun. At the outset, a third of To climax three days pf unrivaled, me an ounce of strained meat was add- unfettered frolic, a Skunk Hunters cigarettes. ed daily to the formulas for babies ball was held for .all participants. six weeks old. This amount was increased until at the end of a week Three t(Cs Now an average of a full ounce of meat a day was being added. NORMAN, OKLA. Its the three Show Marked Gain. Cs instead of the three Rs Records of Child Saving institute for wives of war veteran students disclose that the 18 meat babies at University erf Oklahoma. Instead! showed an average gain of 13.3 per of writin and rithmetie, a The National Joy Smoke l! i cent in hemoglobin content of the theyreadin, are learning about cumin, &kod at the end of eight weeks. crochetin and ekrfhin in CWHCI TOBACCO SPECIALLY TREATED Khek competitors 15 babies of the sponeored TO BtSURE AAAIKST TOMCUE BITE fee by mM cf W M Cpty" Saferfef tShta N.B.C. world-fame- ' - BESIHI I Who Know largest-sellin- s S s ef V- y gSSm- At co-e- Hunt ds ffilhWr r trt -- ' v easy-rollin- g, full-peck- ed PRINCE AVBSKT ! w fe , |