FORT WORTH OUT TO BEAT WORLD Has Four Consecutive Cham pionships Tucked Into Its Belt and Is Now After Bal timore's Record. Bjr JOHN U. FOSTER Cmtlftl. 1*24. ? T?. AMm >ort Worth, Texas, March 20 There's a long and historic trail a-windlng between here and New Orleans. It's the trail of the Kort Worth Baseball Club, . which licked everything It its own league for the fourth time in a row and then Jour neyed down to New Orleans with a trainload of of big hatted fans to paralyze the New Orleans Club for the Dixie championship. It was that trail which the writer followed all of a long day to drop down In this cKy of Texas cham pions, where Jake Atx, the McQraw of the minor leagues, bids fair be fore he is finished the baseball life to equal the minor league for man aging. Give him time, that's all. The Fort Worth team began to put on the medals as kings of the plans when Paul Lagrave, owner of the Fort Worth Club, got well s? In the game. It was a little slow at the start, but once he got under headway, there hasn't been enough sand in the state to stop him him in his wild quest for pen nants. In 1919 Lagrave got Into the final with 8hreveport. The Louisiana outfit licked him In the play off, but not again. In 1920 he won, then In 1921, 1922 and 1923. And now the other Texas league clubs are sitting up nights trying to figure out some way to head him off from a fifth vlotory. Hut Lagrave is nursing ambition to equa llhe record of Baltimore for consecutive championships. "We'll have to play ball to do It," he con cedes. "You've got to fight In this league The boys play ball because they like it. and they'll bottle any learn for a nine Inning finish. If we win that five penmanta In a row. we'll take on Baltimore anytime they say the word." Time was when Dallas was the biggest peacock in the Texas pea cock alley, and Waco, too, once hot- 1 tie up pennants like a pop ractory working over time. But neither of' them ever did what Korlh Worth liasl done ? -win four In a row. And neir tlier ever slapped the Southern As- J ?oclatlon ?o hard. Mobile managed to w-ln the Dixie title once for the Southern Association but that was because Fort Worth was bunged up. The Fort Worth leam has hud to work hard to keep up with the city which has grown wonderfully, ex panding miles since the days when t o flr?t big league teamn were wont to stop here for exhibition names. Then Fort Worth was only In the Texas League outfit. Now It Is the high roller of the frontier. Jako Alz figures on his fifth championship this year with the calm assurance of a man who knows what he wants and how to go about I getting it. He has had to make his I team over, but like a good, rc-l sourceftil manager. that doesn't worry him. lie knows what the championship Job Is. lie can lake a' h^mC,re T, " J11- ,hcre an" foment, Ing^luh 11 real ba" "la>'-| 8lmp,y KOt lo K? ?vrr to the Southern Association and hi. h n "?? ,t,|lnw,, another lesson In baseball, says Jake. "If the Amer ican Association and the Interna-! national want to come out here we I will 1'ike them on. too. o?r little1 "" r f 0f ,he "Iuln? '? "econd id. ??. "ml ,na>'h" 'he big leagues would like |Q sample ?on. of It. They don't corne als1 y lo Practice any more of h?vn '0un,'ler named Cantrell may uw.h- g0"" ,l""1 "> "<> with For* ^ ?r,h, " ?<"?>?" this season lie f, from Lehigh. Oklahoma. Last ?on he would pitch all the amateurs of his part of the country Into sitli f Kor' Wort" i?ok him ?, keep him a8 " Wor,h Make, you think of Ed Walsh In in .l?e and ?y?. ,hu Cantrefl NiJ" easy action with speed. He doesn't nse a splttcr, hut he uses a head, In-! experienced as he ia in the pro fess lonal game, and he Is full of pluck. I banners on the bases don't worry him. That is his cue to take the batter in hand. Fort Worth has shown enough so far this spring to make it certain that she will do some hitting this year, end gloom Is due to sit hea vily on some of the Texas League pitchers when the Panther Giants clout the ball. Kraft, who wns one of the big ?tickers of the Texas circuit In 1923. already seems to be in mid-season batting form. The writer say him lay one on a line to the fence? -on* of thosr ten foot hlph drives that never float, but cut the air like a bust ssw going through a stick of soft pine. * FHJIIT XWiltO ILMTKIIACY rill:.-. :en?hU, March 20.? (Ry the Consolidated Press.) ? Leadlnx ne groes here have been enlisted to co operate with tne local chamber of commerce and other bodies to flght i r t r. gro Illiteracy. This has re sulted from the recent heavy In crease In negro population. PHONE 114 THEY WILL SEND IT. Standard Pharmacy New York. March 20 ? Wide dis cussion has followed the recommen dation of Prof. C. L. Hare, of Ala bama Poly (Auburn) that after a term of yean ? my 1928 ? the duties of all paid coaches In the Southern Conference be confined to the development of athletics for the entire student body. Teams engaging in intercollegiate contests shall be coached by students alone. I In the South the suggestion has met both with favor and with opposi-| tion among the members of the ex-! ecui.ve committee of the Coherence to whom It was submitted at a re cent meeting In Atlanta. What even tually will come of it may not be I said. There Is, however, reason to ! believe that It will not die before it ' has revealed signs of sturdy life. If then. I Prof. Hare's views are sound en j ough. He would have the highly ! paid, highly specialized coaches de I vote their time to Improving phy sique and knowledge of games among I student* generally, giving them a love of sport and teaching them to play It as well as they can. He would relieve them of their work of con centrating on the task of develop ing the utmost skill in from a dozen to twenty young men who have shown high qualifications for one sport. In such case, as Prof. Hare points out, they would no longer be at the mercy of alumni and others who appraise an athletic instructor's val ue upon the basis of the success or failure of a varsity team. Under the Hare plan the coach would lead a peaceful, stable, unstrained exis tence and his functions as a teacher would relate themselves to those of any faculty member. On the other hand, were the cap tain of a team and a duly consti tuted board of students to train and develop the varsity outfits they BASEBALL QUESTION BOX If you have some question I to ask about baseball ? If you want a rule interpre ted? If you want to know any thing about a play or player ? Write to John B. Foster, the man who helped make the rules under which tho game Is played today. If you want a perstmal reply enclose a stamped, self-eddressed en velope. Otherwise your ques tion will be answered In this column. I Address: John B. Foster, special baseball correspondent of The Dally Advance, 811 World Building, New York. ' Question ? Shortstop throws wide to first base and the baseman I reaches out to get the ball. He catches It with his gloved hand butl he touches the batter who was com ing down tho line with his bare hand. He does not touch the base. Ih tho batter out? Answer In this case, no. It Is too evident that the batter is not touched by the ball. Question ? Strikes are on the bat-] ter. Catcher fumbles the third strike! and the ball rolls behind him and is j lost In the urass. The batter contin ues on, his way and is half way to second base when the umpire calls him back to first, saying it was a passed ball. Could the umpire do, that? Answer ? Not legally unless there was a ground rule. Question ? Batter pops an easy would have the benefit that comes of using their brains to constructive ends while the players would be play ing for their alma mater solely In stead of as now in part for their alma mater and perhaps in larger part for their coach's reputation. j So in a general way run Prof.' Hare's views and any person who 1 keeps in touch with current trends! I of university sports will be the last to say that they warrant light con-j slderatlon. Primarily, if there is one thlng: that our urge for specialization does ? more than another it is to exalt the! j gifted few at the expense of the aver- ( , age many. For example our toestj ? golfers, tennis players, oarsmen and 'the like can probably beat the world but If you took a thousand Araerl-| cans and pitted them against a thous and Englishmen in the various sports played in common by the two countries the chances are we would make a very humiliating' showing. In fact It is practically certain we would. In England every boy Is taught and taught well, and not by a coach as a rule either, but by older per Mons who are proficient in the var ious sports. They swim, row, play golf, tennis, football. Under our i university system a comparatively j few specialists are picked for the i varsity teams and even in the In tramural sports the premium is all ; upon victory. The qualified man ? ! not, to be sure, of varsity calibre, ; but still qualified ? is selected for i the instrumental teams and, as a : consequence the great bulk of the j students are still out of it. Sports for all, played with due j regard for form and all technlcali ; ties under the tutelage of compe j tent instructors ? this, as the writer | sees it. Is Prof. Hare's aim. And , a mighty sane and significant aim it is. j foul behind the plate and the catcher muffs the ball. Is it right to charge him with an error even if the batter does not get to first base afterward? Answer ? Give him an error. The batter's life is prolonged if an easy foul is muffed. MAY BE BLUFFING OR JUST IRRITATED Either Way Firpo Will Proli ably Not Leave King Until He Loses His Punch or Makes H is Pile. By FAIR PI .AY Cwyrtfhi. 1 924. by TM Atfvanea New York, Mar. 20 ? Luis Flrpo's announcement of his retirement from the ring might be accepted as part and parcel of Dempsey's con flicting statements of late. Nobody believeB that the Argentino will not fight again. In short it looks as if Kearns, Firpo and Rickard were all playing poker and not letting the public see what cards they hold. Or Firpo s statement may have been due to irritability over the ne cessity of working a lot of fat off him before he comes to the United States. Luis' most enjoyable task Is putting fat on. Taking it off afflicts him grievously. Just now everyone who has seen him says he is in no shape to meet any good fighter. Probably not until he feels the necessity of more money (Continued on Page Eight) Hold your horses don't be in a rush to buy Crawford shoes just because we say they are good. We know they are and we're sure you will agree. But don't take our word, come in and examine them yourself. Q lie (?tIU>|oni S/lDC MOST STYLES $8 BENTON & WEST 8 Poindexter St. Capital Stock $250,000 Member Federal Reserve HERTFORD COLUMIILA KI,I7,AI(ETH CITY Or. A. L. Pendleton, l're*. loo. R. Mttle, Canhler. Earner P. Hood, Vico-Prt*. It. C. Abbott, Vlco-Pre?. 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