Newspapers / The Echo (Pisgah Forest, … / Feb. 1, 1942, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
E$^nuury, 1942 THE ECHO Page 5 TEN PIN LEAGUE TO HAVE A l^eynolds, Morris Increase Averages In Tri-City League Can Land In Third Place Ecusta’s big bowling team can do of damage in the Tri-City League “’Jring the next three or four weeks. There is no reason why our boys *^®onot push themselves into third Mace before the curtain is brought At the present, there is only game to prevent Ecusta from 2 •'aving an excellent season. Sruce Reynolds and “Knuckleball” continued their fast pace by J^^feasing their averages to 185 and respectively. League Standing W ^«ampion 63 G Stores 44 H M Garage 39 “^ndler Transfer 36 ^heville Tire 36 Jcusta 35 hsi Cola 29 J^evard 28 & Abee 22 A A 14 K Individual Averages feynolds 185 Morrig _ 184 Vviiiniii”-” Ss 167 '^^oert 165 162 oftis Starts Team On ^ Second Half March Pritz Merrill Bowls 140 Game Champagne Duck Pin Team is complete control of the first pCe position in the Men’s Duck Pin I ^gue during the second half. Goode ^ftis gave his team a good send off he crashed through with an dazing set of 379. B’ritz Merrill of the Pulp Mill took high game honors on January with a 140. Several new faces showed up from Paper Mill for the second half j evidently they will give a good '^count of themselves. League Standings W L j^ampagne 8 1 Inspection 6 3 K^Per MQl 3 6 % Mill 1 8 ) Six Highest Averages !f>ftis 117 owier 109 '^^gford 108 107 __ 100 %rt - 98 ^ith Nobody Shoved Around h If this appeared in a dispatch from Adolf Hitler has, in six years, 44,000 bridges in Germany. His battalions have constructed 5 than 110,000 miles of truck roads I.country roads. Under command ik the labor fronts, 2,000,000,000 have been planted, and 5,200,000 have been built to control ero- The reaction would be: Dicta- J®hip certainly gets things done. democracy can’t match it. Ima- t)g ^ 5,200,000 dams! Yet this work has done, not in Germany, but in S. A. by C. C. C. boys, all en- on a voluntary basis, with no- shoved around by a fuehrer.”— Grafton. Endless Belt Bowling Team CLOSE FINISH OFnCE TEAM UPSETS lEADE CHAMPAGNE Pulp Mill Creeping Up On The Leaders ■’ V %s . 1- TTiPmbers of the Endless Belt bowling team. wt^ri^tTo"^-Virgi„ia Davis, Mildred Albert Trrison. TOP row:-Mary Sue Thome. Blanche McCoy and Addie Bell Rhodes. Endless Belt Team lU Pushing Handbooklet B Close Race For Top In Store The Endless Belt Bowling team ap parently has found stride during the past few weeks. They are now pushing Handbooklet ^ place; five games separatmg th Pulp ‘‘A’’ Adoings The Office Team led by Hank New bury and Pete Eberle, put a different light on the standings of the Men’s Ten Pin League by breaking through the mighty defense of the Champagne Bowling Team on Monday night, Feb ruary 3rd, to win the entire three games. These victories no doubt are the biggest upsets of the season to date. The standings now find only five games separating second and third place from first place. There remain twelve more games in the schedule and one can never tell how hot or cold a team may be. The finish may be a sizzler. League Standings W L Champagne --35 13 pulp Mill 30 18 Inspection 30 18 Office 21 27 Maintenance 20 28 Paper Mill 3 40 Team High Three Games: Maintenance 3018 Pulp Mill 2961 Inspection 2946 Team High Single Game: Maintenance 1093 Inspection 1062 Champagne 1031 Individual High Three Games: Dunne 607 Israel ^38 Morris ^36 Individual High Single Game: R. Morris 249 R. Kappers 244 W. Straus 234 Heard from all three of the shift A boys in the service. Harry Laughter, our Army boy, reports that he has ^e situation well under control in the Panama Canal Zone. Chnt Morris, our fighting Marine, writes of the life with the Blue Jackets at Pans Island, S. C. He said he had a sweet tooth but no candy so we sent him some by return mail. Boyd Meixell, the flying bleach- teams. although in third er, is now in training at Jackson, Miss., The coS out of the and is anxiously awaiting a chance to place, cannot be Noumea u setting aside picture. They are only eight games bomb ^okia away from the top. _ Western North Carolina view Fourth place position is ^el t ^ ered with the Machine ® , j. gjijft by bringing baby girls hooking horns. These two ‘f “ are „red our snm y well balanced, and theto^Ue to he homes^ ^ ^ ^ ^ay Zd theri in a much better posi tion. League standings: Hand Booklet Endless Belt . Office “B” Macnme Hand Booklet A Finishing Finishing ^ — w L 33 9 28 14 25 17 24 18 24 18 ___-16 26 11 31 6 36 look up and SMILE When you’re disgusted, disgruntled and busted, Look up and smile, When friends forsake you And enemies break you Look up and smile; When going is tough and path looks rough Look up and smile; When you feel sort of blue And don’t know what to do Look up and smile; Don’t sit around and pine, Just try it sometime— Look up and smile. —Evelyn Williams to ine iiuiiici? V/* - Carl Caldwell. Good cigars too. Monroe Collins and Marson Baynard must buy their shells by the case fiom Se — of shooting they do when a covey of birds gets up. . .; Teague must be fast. It is said that he can go to the Chem Lab and back be fore you can get a phone call through. Wonder why H. Fouts prefers a iittle blue coupe instead of his sedan. Maybe it’s the heater and radio or the gas tank that. Bill Hunnicut keeps full . • • We are glad to have Dot, Dean and Ricey on our shift in the chem lab. . . . K Frank Tinsley doesn’t put a governor on his car his re-caps will be un-capped after about 3,000 miles. .. • Jim Dalton started to put an ad in the paper when he lost his electric truck. . • • Wonder how Fritz Merrill felt when he bowled a set of duck pins just above dummy. His little son made a strike with the first ball. . . . Well, that’s all from the shift A news room except that the boys who are doing the fighting are expecting us at home to do the writing. —Sang Lyda. YOU, TOO By Elmer A. Tabbert I’m just a nine pin bowler, boys, You’ve heard a lot of me. There’s always one pin standing Where a vacant spot should be. I can hit ’em in the pocket Just as perfectly! and then, I’ll see one stick still standing, One darn single out of ten. I toss my first one “New York” high, And then I toss it thin. But always with the same result: I can’t get that last pin. It makes me mad; I fume and fuss; But rantings are in vain. For after each and every pitch That ten pin stands again. But then if I could get ten pins Each time I throw that ball. I’d roll three hundred, and this game Would be no fun at all. So I’ll just keep on pluggin’ hard, Take nine counts—if they be. And keep the thought in mind that there Are millions more like me. casFyoufT^te In an effort to determine which of the two is most popular the Athletic Dept, wants every interested employee to cast his vote in favor of ^jseball or softball. The game that polls the most votes will be used in the inter- dept. league, this coming season Please check preference and drop into suggestion box or bring to Ath letic Office. .Softball .Baseball Confucieus say, “Buy a stamp each day and we’ll keep the Japs away. -Bram.torm from the Job Printer.
The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1942, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75