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SPORTS. Cbl@zatp Foot Ball Will Make Its 1931 Bow in This Section Tomorrow START T0 BE MADE BYVIRGINA, V... Cavaliers’ Outlook Bright, but Cadets in Process of Rebuilding, BY H. C. BYRD. HREE of the larger colleges in Virginia and one in North Carolina open their foot ball schedules tomor- row. The game closest to Wash- ington {s at Charlottesville, where | Virginia entertains Roanoke Col- lege. Other clashes in Virginia are between William and Mary and Langley Field 'at Willlams- burg and between Virginia Mili- | tary Institute' and Hampden-Sid- ney at Lexington. Davidson is the | North Carolina institution to get| under way, with Elon College as its opponent. Virginia begins its season with better ago. Not better and its coaching situation is greatly im proved. In Fred Dawson, formerly of Princeton and Nebraska, the Cavaliers think they have one of the best mien in the country. Also there are available tomorrow some 14 letter men, an ex- tegflonll number of seasoned .veterans. three or four players from the team are expected to and Blue ought not to mn‘ away with mn nor team hardly - a work expected w smoothly enough to run s tremen- dmes‘munh-m?hunnuu- i Institute, in the not be as REGAL REPRODUCTIONS OF WORLD Right now Virginia pmhbly has the poorest Virginia schools. Certainly it ll not llkely to have lnyfl!ln‘ like as good material as Virginia, Washington and Lee or Virginia Poly. ILLIAM AND MARY should beat Langley Field by just about as| ‘wide a margin as it cares to. In- cidentally, that Willlam and Mary eleven may be something of a tartar for its opponents this season. It is ul{l to have excellent material and it has a man in charge who should get the most out of that material. Bill Fetzer, who formerly coached North Carolina, is in charge and nobody would ever care to intimate that Fetzer does not know just what he is doing. 8o good are William and Mary's pros- pects that rumor has come from Wil- liamsburg that there is more than a little expectation that the team will give Navy a terrific battle when it plays at Annapolis in the Midshipmen’s open-. ing game. William and Mary will have the advantage of having played two formal contests, one tomorrow and an- other September 26, prior to its trip to Annapolis. LL the other schools in the section probably will spend their time to- morrow in more or less formal scrimmage. Some of them, noubly Georgetown and Catholic University, are |- much farther advanced in thelr prac- tice than the others, and are likely to go through a decidedly hard afternoon under conditions nlmumlnl a real game. About the only two games north of the Mason-Dixon line are between Bucknell and Broaddus and between Clarkson and Alfred. Bucknell is by far the strongest of .these four and should win- as it pleases. Clarkson is the likely victor in' the other. Coach Carl Snavely of Bucknell told his players st the. first practice ses- xpected to have of fact, Bucknell, situated it is, seldom gets the credit it de- either in its athletics or its its. It really is fine old university: It plays George- mlwmher. N the far South the only teams of any note that have games are Mississippl College and U. Southwest Texas Christian and the two larger schools that Mmmwmum-uofm hools have contests against more ik gass 3 THE EVENING STAR, WASHIN HOYA GRIDIRONERS RETURN TOMORROW {Colonials Testing Linemen. Rookies at Catholic U. Pressing Veterans. EHOBOTH BEACH, Del, Sep- tember 18.—Head Coach Tom- my Mills has indicated that he might not name his start- ing line-up for Georgetown's opening !oot ball game with :b;x'mn \{aflu in Septem until game L!m e Hoyas will return to Wash- damentals occu- pied the G. U. boys m y_because and it was dmhflul ether there would be a today. BRIDGE. It DOCTOR, WE'RE WORRIED S1CK OVER OUR BaY, HE'S NINE YEARS OLD AND - STHL BIDS A NOTRUMP FOURTH HAND WITH ONLY TWO AND A HALF QuickK TRICKS, HE SEEMS NORMAL IN OTHER RESPECTS AND WE CAN'T QUITE BRING OURSELVES To THE POINT OF SENDING HiM To A SANI- TARIUM CAMP LETTS, Md., September George Wi I':g mlwhmngn nting e e center of the line. They the work of , AD comers bel e ing looked over as v.mlvectlve Catholic University 1930 letter win- sure :l“flull' jobs. Bus She ful sure us eary, 1= huk is the lone veteran who rt;’ht now to team, are getting a stiff run for their posts. ¥ 18— coaches are devot- just now to experi- by no means satisfied with aspirants. Frank Blacki- ly_and showed well. d Edmonds are mew- themselves in no wise Halfback the backbone of the Noble Cook, Eugene Augusterfer and Horse Holbrook were lmer schoolboy products in the yesterday La_Fond cnhom: vniuflttn freshman eleven lqudotu' reported hmeuum-m!or GTON, D. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1931. —BY WEBSTER Hm! HAS THE CHILD ever SUSTAINED A SEVERE - BLOW. ONTHE HEAD - SUCH AS A KieK' FROM ‘A HORSE OR A FALL FROM A CONSIDERABLE HEIGHT?Z? AND WERE THERE ANY MENTAL DISORDERS N €1THER BRANCH OF THE FAMILY 7 SPORTS. VIRGINIA UNDECIDED ON STARTING TEAM Eight Letter Wearers and Three Newcomers Likely to Open Against Roanoke. UNIVERSITY, Va., September 18.— Pred Dawson, coach’ of the Virginia *| Cavaliers, isn’t announcing in advance Just who will start in the season's open- er against Roanoke College tomorrow, but to judge from the way he has been lining up his first team in late prac- tices, there'll probably be it letter- men md three newcomers at the the last scrimmage he lined u Blll Condon and Bill St. Clair on thg Rohrbou ends, Ed th and Gene Wager ; tackles, cnm pkins .and Her- Doug Myers at All of this eleven have won the “V” Gridiron‘Clashes During Week End - Today Loydla vs. Louisiana College, at New Orleans. North Dakota State vs. Concordia, at_Pargo. Ml-llnovemrvl Danville Tech, at Han- er, Daniel Baker vs. Simmons, st Brown- wood, Tex. sout.hw:u':n v, lr leMurray, at Georgetown, La. X Wartburg vs. Augustanna, at Clin- Tech ntcc.:n’m vs. Panhandle Aggles, V. M. L vs. Hainpden-Sydney; t wufumuaumnumyma. ltBWfl.l - ucknell vs. at 3 ‘hattan 'l\ex. hon vs. Alfred, ‘t m (mlhl) g and Wi 'x'hh up isn’t certain. ar Gravatt, vmnn end, may replace eif E—— Condon or m George m. regular o nthe '30 first-year team, fill one of the tackles, lnd there may be_some shifts in the Mckfleld Virginia pla: Hlnrden Beptember 26, gxt its first big '-me o{ the year wil be with Maryland at Col- Ly lege Park on October Miller of Navy Sees Hard Start NNA?OUS Md., September 1i “I guess we are in & ity tough situation for lh‘wl::rt of the foot ball campaign,” said Rip Miller, new head coach at vay “I understand that Willlam Mary, which we play in our October G zln’:! but I lor us, Latrobe. Fort Worth. TRE ks S 0 tomer and is po! H, September cannot point lor the Wil tha Despite the fact tlut Navy is de- * ;:'l:r&d h'fi be counting hea vpon promising sophomore tal. ent, tfie line-up thal has been used 50 far in practice has been mainly mx‘mon udlogg:l ends; m an y, Bryan and Chambers, pson_and Undlrwood e LL AMERICAN Washington TICKETS ON SALE A guards; Dlvh. AT 9:00 AM. ‘Thom) Capt. Tuttle, center, Kirn, Konrad and FAMOUS BOOTMAKERS’ ORIGINAL MODELS _NOW_ALL ONE PRICE $G60 ORIGINAL ‘clu-lpho‘?nph of Bunting's d" Gr:in A A o'l ‘#:d 6% 53308 Ia London, Actual phote 3 ot X2 Ia All Regcl Stores REPRODUCTION ction of Buntin ‘: the. ! Gt ssso . RIDING BOOTS HUNTING BOOTS NEWMARKETS JODHPURS SKATING BOOTS SKIING BOOTS HIKING BOOTS SHOOTING ROOTS LEATHER LINED STORM SHOES And 60 other Regal Reproductions of World' * Famous Bootmakers’ Models for Sireet.’ Dress, and Sporis—ALL ONE PRICE $6.60 Actual photograph of section of Regal Store Window Showing Originals eand Regal n.woducflwn‘ of a complete line of Shoes for Sireet, Dress and Sport, Designed by the Masier Bootmakers of the World, which they describe (see letier) as a Shoe Wazdrobe “Fit for a King.” No Shoe Manufacturer or Retailer in America or elsewhere ever attempted to produce a line of shoes of this Quahty with this complete range of Expensive and Exclusive Styles to sell at TWICE our one price $6.60. When you see a Hunting Boot 16 inches high for $6.60 made of Genuine Weather Grain Leather with Viscolized full double Oak Soles and steel slugged solid leather heels, it makes everybody sit up and take notice and wonder how it can be done. But it is more difficult to see ‘the difference in Quality in a Smart Street Oxford. That is why this year so many are apt to be fooled by a Price Ticket on a dolled-up window shoe. We thought the easiest way for you to make a comparison and the best way for us to prove unusual Value in a Stylish Town Shoe was to buy the best shoe made by the King’s own boot- maker and put the Regal Reproduction right beside the original in our windows, and let you decide, PROM MAKER TO WEARER ¥ 1327 F Street N.W. (Men's and Women's) These famous Custom Bootmakers buy only the finest leathers, regardless of price. And this year we have not only reproduced their Lasts, Pattenu and every Style Detail of their hand-made Custom models, but we have used the same expensive Upper Leathers purchased from the same tanners. In the Regal Reproductions we are using Bordeaux Grain, the finest Calfskin in the World, made of Paris City skins, never before used except in the highest priced shoes; Genuine Willow Calf tanned in Frankfort, Germany, in the new Burgundy shade; :Holland Grain tannedinOisterwyck, Holland; Martin’s of Glasgow Scotch Grain, Heather Grain and the expensive celebrated Moor Calf, never be- fore used in a shoe at this price. | ‘These exclusive Styles and these expensive Leathers will startle and stop every shoe man who passes our window and we know these unusual values at $6.60 will interest every man who wears shoes. S Chairman of the Board. SHOLES REGAL FACTORIES, WHITMAN, MASE. " 915917 Pennsylvanisi Ave. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS (Men’s Exclusively) ORIGINAL REPRODUCTION Actual pnohi::ph of lnn- e 75s. ($18) lolc:ht Bty ‘18 00 In Loadon, Eng. :3' the. ssiges ase ihe Tast an nd doeie e $660 l’llldllndlu- in_football except Harris, Rohrbough s v OGRS g By chester vs, Adrian, at New Man- St. Vincent vs. Davis-Elkins, .?o""""‘ ve. West Coast Army, at Texas Christian vs. Denton Tech, st 'T0 RESUME RING SHOWS. Pi'rrsmma B ‘Wm eptem ”.'h.’-.luy omm and Tony Herrers, ‘5&5 10-round bout. 3:00 P.M. UE PARK