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Show Jess Allen Beaten By Hunters; RMS Loses Again, To Rangely, 6-0 Jess Allen, Pleasant Valley seed grower, and a hired hand were seriously beaten Sunday by pheasant hunters on the Allen farm. A warrant has been sworn out by Allen for J. V. and R. C. Kramer, both of Salt Lake City. Allen couldn't identify the men who allegedly beat him, but took down the auto tag numbers of the two cars, which were traced and found to belong to the Kramers. Allen said there were six or seven men in the two cars. Sheriff Arzy Mitchell, of Duchesne Du-chesne county, said Allen and the hired hand were quite seriously ser-iously beaten. According to Allen', he had put up "posted" signs around his place, and finding hunters on it, went out and asked them whether they could read Whereupon, Where-upon, Allen said, they jumped him and his hired hand. The Kramers, in Salt Lake City, claimed that the fight started when' Allen started roughing up the 14-year-old son of one of the hunters. The boy's father started fighting Allen, and within a few minutes everybody every-body was involved. The Roosevelt high Rough Riders lost another ball game Friday, this one, the last of the season, to Rangely, 6-0. A Rangely fullback, Orr, cracked over on an off-tackle smash shortly before the game ended, to sew-up the contest. Roosevelt outgained Rangely -by a margin of about 300 yards to 150, but had drives stalled four times on the Rangely one-yard one-yard line. RHS backs Don Snyder and Ron Duncan kept the Rangely line occupied. Snyder made two runs of about 30 yards each, while Duncan matched him with two of 20. Some of the sting of this last defeat was alleviated, when Region Reg-ion Five coaches picked Snyder as the league's outstanding player. play-er. The next major sport on the agenda at Roosevelt high is the coming basketball season. The conference schedule has already been completed, and Coach Clint Nelson is now busy drumming up intersectional games to take out the slack. |