TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 22, 1923 3 a. 3 Delivered in Portland Four-Cylinder Touring Announcing a New Sport Model We are now booking orders for an extraordinary sport model, fin ished in dark maroon, with gray Spanish leather upholstery and completely equipped with every thing your heart desires. Equipment includes', Biflex bumpers front and rear. Six steel wheels, the two spares mounted on sides of car. Six cord tires with two tire covers. Trunk rack and trunk with waterproof cover, nickeled guard bars on back of body. Rear view mirror. Windshield swipe. Windshield wings. One-piece wind aht eld with nickel-plated posts. Spotlight.' . Nickel-plated drum-type head lights, nickel-plated cowl lights and combination "stop" and tail lamp. Cowl ventilator and nickel-plated radiator. Motometer with looking type monogram radiator cap. Special running-board covertng, topped with aluminum step plates having rubber filler pads. $1895 complete Delivered in Portland jJ l'''1' li! ' " Crowa ""''"" TTTT-. Jl.. li ,,mm , .,.. I anil -T. ... Twins. jhiii.-.ii ji i iiiiiiiiMii...lu.jLiiii I I n ilmiMiili in i n,ui.,.. $1475 Delivered in Portland Six-Cylinder Touring j I II J i I III li iiitt ' J ' j' j I j jj:,, - j I ! j j i I n- I Is al NEW NASH SPORT MODEL Announcing a New 5-Passenger Sedan j We are showing now the first of the five-passenger six cylinder sedans to be built by the Nash Motor Company. A beautiful enclosed car, mounted on the famous 121 inch Nash six chassis. For people who want the maximum of comfort and lux ury without the many driving find parking inconveniences of a big car, this new sedan is ideal. The new cowl ventilator will provide fresh, cool air in the front seat. Sit behind the wheel and feel the natural, comfortable driving positions. The brake leverage has been increased until the slightest pressure of the foot brings instant response on the rear wheels. $2330 Delivered in Portland Arrived I Come and See It! . Ycu'll find it a finer Nash and a more wonderful value It's here on our floor now. than ever before. Drop in on your way to town, or during the day, or phone us for a demonstration. We want you to see the new touches here and there in design and equipment that, coupled with the greatly reduced price,, make the Nash today's outstanding automo bile buy. ' , Observe the new-type ventilator now introduced into the cowl. ' And there's a big, husky bar across the front of the side members of the chassis that gives greater rigidity to the frame. 1 Beautiful disc wheels add a fresh distinction to the car's outward charm. Note the oil kipp equipment. Just give them a push and oil is forced into the steer ing knuckles and steering tie rod. We are proud of the new easy-acting clutch, "smooth as velvet," and of the exces sive brake leverage. The slightest pressure will stop your car. There's a device exclusive to Nash that permits you quickly to focus "the new barrel headlights to any angle you like. ''..'. And there's a new steering mechanism to see. And other important features that will repay your visit. Come in, and come prepared to make the down payment. For'the car will "sell" you itself,. ' Burnside St. at Tenth Portland Motor Car Company We Will Trade Your Old Car Newly reduced prices of Four and Six-Cylinder Models range from $11 IS to $2495, f. o. b.Portland Broadway 0521 FOOTBALL KNEE DM t FANS ALWAYS APPREHEN SIVE OP INJURY. Cure Is Only Effective In Three Months If Player Faithfully Cares for Himself. Every athletic exercise has ts special form of accident. For ten nis players there is "tennis elbow," for horsemen, "riders' strain"; but the injury which gives rise to most anxiety among partisans of any athletic organization is "football knee." Some stalwart of the club, a trusted player in a difficult position, makes a sharp turn in his attempt to pass an opponent, or shoots out his foot to trap the ball; he falls in evident pain; the trainer rushes on to the ground. A consultation is held and the man is carried off. Subsequently the club's anxious supporters learn that the player has sustained a knee injury. The next week the side takes the field with out him and the following Saturday sees him still out of the team. Weeks drag on, and all that the sup porters see of their hero is his hob bling into the grandstand. Football knee is caused by an out ward twisting of the knee when the foot Is fixed. The lower end of the thigh-bone rotates, in the knee joint, on the half-moon-shaped car tilages which cover the upper end of the bigger bone of the lower leg, one of the cartilages is torn up and becomes gripped between the two ends of the meeting bones. The pain is severe, and when the patient is examined it is found that his knee is fixed in a half-bent po sition. On manipulation the car tilage may be persuaded to slip back into its original position. To bring this about, the foot of the player should be held in one hand, the fingers of the other being placed on the inner and outer sides of the knee joint. Then gently bend ing the knee as far as- it will go, the foot is turned slowly inward, and with a swift movement the leg is fully extended. The injury, which the joint has sustained, will cause it to fill with fluid, and on awakening the next morning the player will find that his kneecap has disappeared in a white swelling. The synovitis, which has been a result of the injury, will cure itself usually in about a fortnight, if the patient is kept in bed, but this is not the. principal trouble. Lying between the two bones is the de tached, cartilage, ready on the slightest side movement of the knee 1 to slip out Of position again and set up another attack of snovitis. In the happiest course of events the player will be out of his side for three months, and this period will only a see a cure if he faith fully keeps his knee night and day in a hinged splint, and wears an elastic kneecap for at least another tnree months afterwards. If he neglects to follow the treatment as recommended by the surgeon he will have repeated attacks of knee locking. - PITCHER ' DISLIKES EAST Walter Mails Wants to Return to Coast League. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 21. Walter Mails, big Cleveland American southpaw pitcher, wants to come back to the Pacific Coast baseball league next year with San Fran c'sco or Sacramento. Mails in 1920 was a Cleveland ace when the In dians won the American league pennant. "I have permission to make a deal with any Coast league club that wants me." Mails said. "I had a chat with Charlie Graham, one of the owners of the San Francisco club, and he said he wanted me and would write to Tris Speaker, the Indian manager, to see if it can be fixed up. "Oh, yes, my arm is as good as it ever was. I can win up in the majors, but I don't like the climate." Bush League Notes Pour games are on the schedule in the Spalding 13u-pound league today. Home Athletic club plays Goose Hollow at 2:30 o'clock at West End; Albina Aces and Stephens play at 1:3 o'clock on Buckman field; East. Side and Ken ton play at 11 o'clock on the same field and Holy Name lines up against Wood stock at 1 o'clock at Woodstock. In the Spalding 140-pound league Highland and Irving Park play at 12:30 o'clock at Irving park and the Bachelor Club Juniors and the Woodstock Seniors play at 2:30 o'clock at Woodstock. The standings of the teams in the Spalding Junior league are as follows: 140-pound League SEALS TO BE BUILT UP ! . M MANAGER PROMISES GOOD TEAM NEXT YEAR. Pennant AVinners Declared to In tend to Preserve Record Established in 1922. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 21. Chiefs of the San Francisco baseball club, which won the P aific Coast league pennant, this year, . intend' to give the,fans as strong a team next year as they had this year. Jack Miller. manager of the Seals, declared re cently. . - "San Francisco is the greatest minor-league city in the land and, as such, deserves the greatest minor league baseball team,'' Miller said. "I am making no predictions for 1923, but I can promise that the club will be a .pennant contender if It's within the power of the owners and myself to do so." - Miller left recently for his home in Kearny, N. J., after having won the pennant during his first year as manager in the Coast league. He came west last March for his first year in minor-league baseball. ' Two San Francisco stars, Willie Kamm and Jimmy O'Connell, go up to the majors next year for the highest prices ever paid for minor- league players. Kamm was sold to the Chicago White Sox for UOO.OOO and O'Connell to the New York Giants, champions of the world, for 75,000. In their places, however. San Francisco will have two young sters, Gene valla and HaKRhyne, both of whom show great promise. The penant was the first won by San Francisco since 1917 and the first championship to be captured by the club under the ownership of Dr. C. H. Strub, Charles H. Graham, George A. Putnam and Tom Stephens. 130-pound League W. L. Pet. .20 1000 , 0 0 .000 .01 .000 . 0 1 .000 , 2 0 1000 , 2 0 1000 ,10 1000 . 1 1 .500 . 1- 1 .50 , 0 1 .000 0 1 .000 . 0 2 .000 It Must Be Round. A basketball must not weigh less than 20 nor more than 23 ounces. BRITISH TENNIS BODY HIT Players Move for Better Plans In International Matches. LONDON, Oct. 21. The Lawn Ten nis association, which has virtually had autocratic control of all tennis affairs in this country for many years, is under fire1 from many prominent players and others in terested in the sport. It is aliased that the executive body is unable to deal properly with present-day con ditions. and to counteract this state of affairs a "reform committee" has been formed Which will attempt to bring the association into line with present-day requirements. Well-known tennis players of the 1 Oxford and Cambridge university team. Lord Rocksavage, Max Woos nam, F. G. Lowe, Wallis Myers and others, are among the reformers who are anxious, . among other things, to make better arrangements for the Davis cup competition and other international matches. At tempts also 'will be made to im prove tournament conditions gener ally. , Young players will be encouraged, and it is hoped in this way to as semble a representative team capa ble of holding its "own against the champions of any other country. Santa Barbara Wants Harbor. SANTA BARBARA, .Cal., Oct. 21. A move to provide a yacht harbor for Santa Barbara has been launched here. One of the features of'the campaign was a cruise of a score or" more yachts from southern California points to the channel islands, off Santa Barbara. HAS BIG RALLY GRID COACH MAKES FIRST SPEECH TO STUDENTS. FORMER OREGON AGGIE 8TAR . NOW MOUNT ANGEL COACH. if $?m& 1 Joe Kasberjcer, who played quar terback for Oregon Agricultural college Inst ih-nNoo, Is In charge of football at Monnt Angel col lege, where he has developed a ' fast eleven. Mount Angel ex pect to make a good record this year. J, - School Declared to Be Trying to Establish Traditions and Live Up to Them. UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO. Mos cow, Oct. 21. (Special.) "Univer sity of , Idaho football teams are trying to establish traditions," said Coach Mathews, Idaho grid mentor, at his first public appearance be fore university students at a rally Wednesday. Other speakers were Dean O. P. Cockerill, chairman of the athletic committee; Lynn Her sey, president of the student body, and President Upham of the uni versity, but the students were all keyed up to hear from the coach who developed the team that almost beat Washington. "First," said Mathews, "Idaho football teams are religiously try ing to follow training rules and thus" far have made good progress. "Second, on the trips they are trying to conduct themselves as col lege men and in a manner which will reflect praise and favorable comment upon the institution they represent, and In this, too, ' they have made a good start. "Third, Idaho teams may not al ways win, but they will never be whipped, .and in this the team has also made a good start. "Fourth, Idaho teams may lose every game, but they never will lose faith, and again good progress has been made. - "At Seattle, Idaho spirit was sold to 20,000 Washington students and Seattle people. That day at Seattle will . go down in Idaho traditions and will long be remembered as one of the greatest days in Idaho his tory f.gainst a team outweighing them 25 to 26 pounds to the man, the Idaho team did something never done before in football they held seven Consecutive times within the shadow of their goal posts." Mathews cautioned students not to discuss -iwobable outcomes with any of the football players and urged their co-operation in helping the team observe the traditions that have been started so well. Catcher Sets New Record. Catcher Si Perkins of the "Ath letics didn't have a single fielding chance in a recent game at Cleve land and, believe it or not, he went through the next tilt with nary an out or assist to his credit. This means that not a single Indian struck out or fouled to the catcher in either game; that Si did not throw a Tiger ' out, two of them stealing on him, and that he did not handle a ball in assisting in re tiring a Cleveland player. Wonder if this ever happened to a catcher before In 17 innings of play! GERMAN TITLE IS VACANT Teuton Republlo Lacks Welter Boxing Champ. BERLIN, Oct 21j Only one box ing throne remains unoccupied in Germany's pugilistic world. The ownerless title is that of welter weight champion, and a holder Is ex pected to develop for it during the coming winter. The other cham pions are: Flyweight, Erich Kohler; ban tain. Urban Grasz; feather, Kurt Sasse; light, Richard Naujocks; mid dle, Kurt Prenzel; light-heavy, Wal ter Bukszum, and heavy, Hans Breitenstraeter. "Phenomenon" Volkmer, a boxer who has passed his 40th year, is in training to contest the bantam weight title. At the same time that he meets the champion Grasz it is planned to have the bill include two other titleholders, Naujocks and Breitenstraeter. Opponents for the latter two men have not yet been selected. Golf Facts. INSIDE. OF GAME KNOWN TO MOST LITTLE FANS. However, Football Has so Alan; Appealing Virtues It Is Be coming Biggest Sport. . Football has so many appealing features that it is developing into America's biggest sport. The gridiron game has its unique features also, and one of them was pointed out a few days ago by Ernie Quigley. National league umpire and one of the prominent gridiron referees. "Less is known about football rules and the inside part of the game than any other big American sport. It is rather surprising to think sometimes that such immense crowds will turn out to see a game that the majority knOjW so little about," Quigley said. "Take baseball, for instance. The base runner is being run down be tween two bases. He evades one of the basemen and gets safely to the bag, but is called out by the um pire. Practically every spectator knows that he was out for running out Of the line. "Boxing rules are known to the letter by the youngest fan. When one contestant in the ring is dis qualified the majority are able tu tell the reason without a moment's thought. "When the time comes that ths football rules are familiar to the ordinary layman and when the fine points of the game are known, it will be impossible to accommodate the crowds." ' Q. In a tour-ball match, can tha players of one side insist that the player of the other side, whose ball Is larther from the hole, putt first? A. -No. A side has the option of play ing the g-ane in whatever order it sees fit on the putting green. ' Q. Wi'-h a ball lying in a deep trap close to a wall of same. Is a player pen alized, if -in making a trial, back swing, he touches the side of the wall with his club? . A. No. o. TTnder the stymie rule where two balls lie within six Inches of each other, , can the player whoso ball is nearer the bole lift his ball, if he chooses, whether or not the other player wants It niiea? A. Yes. Q. If a player plays his tee shot out of bounds, is he entitled to move to an other part of the teeing grounds say across from one side to another to play his next stroke? A. No. The rule says the next stroke must be played from as near as pos sible to where the preceding stroke was played. Q. Is there any rule or custom in golf that arbitrarily sets the number of strokes one player may receive from another at one stroke a hole, regardless of the difference between their handi cap allowances? Say for instance, the difference between two players' handi caps is 28 strokes. Taking three-fourths of this, the low handicap man would nominally have 'to give the other 21 strokes, meaning two strokes on at least three holes. Is there any custom or rule against this? A.. There is no custom or rule that limits the number of strokes one player may concede another. AUTOMOBILES On Display at Premier Sales and Service , Station One Brand New Premier Roadster, special price for immediate sale. . .2385 One 7-Pass. Premier Demonstrator. .$2385 These cars have been reduced over $1000 under regular selling price. They carry a factory warrantee. See them Sunday. Open all day. Premier Sales Co. Ninth and Couch Sts.