Word: eats
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
CRIMSON CAFE DINING ROOMS.- We try to make people pleased with what they eat, and our meats and vegetables are especially fresh and wholesome. For meals cooked to order our charge is $7.00 per week; for regular first-class board $5.50 per week. Our special aim is to please the students and give them good wholesome home-cooked food...
...following men eat at the training table: - Cameron, Pillsbury, Pierce, Greene, Thompson, Miller, Capen, Whiteside, Stevenson. F. Davis will not row this spring...
...Greer of New York preached last night at Appleton Chapel from the text "God hath said, ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die," taken from the third chapter of Genesis. He said: It seems at the first sight hardly credible that death should have entered into the world by one man's disobedience and that in so slight a thing as eating fruit from a certain tree. But taken as a parable this story has a lesson for every one. The Garden of Eden may stand for the life...
...situation in Memorial Hall at present is peculiar. The hall is divided into two sections, of which one has more than two-thirds of the seating capacity, and the other less than one-third; and yet in this smaller section five hundred and ninety-seven students must eat their meals, while the larger section accommodates but five hundred and twenty. That is, materially less than one-half the students in Memorial occupy more than two-thirds of the hall. The smaller section is daily over-crowded; the larger section is never completely occupied. Frequently a score or so of students...
...descriptions were most vivid and clear. What, said he, could be more picturesque than an old fence, every fibre of which has been whitened and softened by wind and rain until it shines like finely woven silk? The weeds cluster in the patches of earth at its foot, worms eat their way through every splinter, and where some particularly ugly old stump disturbs the eye a little bit of vine peeps gaily over the top and offers its services to hide this blot and leaves at its death a golden patch of color...