. The Tiger (student newspaper), Sept. 1918-June 1919. Acacia Hotel J. W. ATKINSON, Manager BANQUETS SERVED BALLROOM FOR DANCING We cater to College trade jnder pressure of the high casualtylist. I know one man who did 190operations in. one day. In describing his duties. Mr. Thur-ber said: My duty as a Red Cross man wasto take care of the numberless needsof the men not accounted part of thearmys work. I provided delicacieswhich were not on the hospital menu,took care of the cables to relativesand, on occasion, loaned money lomen who needed it. It was a sort ofhandy mans job and the Red Crosseq


. The Tiger (student newspaper), Sept. 1918-June 1919. Acacia Hotel J. W. ATKINSON, Manager BANQUETS SERVED BALLROOM FOR DANCING We cater to College trade jnder pressure of the high casualtylist. I know one man who did 190operations in. one day. In describing his duties. Mr. Thur-ber said: My duty as a Red Cross man wasto take care of the numberless needsof the men not accounted part of thearmys work. I provided delicacieswhich were not on the hospital menu,took care of the cables to relativesand, on occasion, loaned money lomen who needed it. It was a sort ofhandy mans job and the Red Crossequipped me to take care of nearlyany emergency which might arisewhere real service could be provided. Mr. Thurber had warm praise forthe work of the Y. M. C. A. in had a tremenduous job and he saidits services to the soldiers was inesti-mable. COLORADO COLLEGE Founded in Colorado Springs in A. DUNIWAY, DEPARTMENTS OF ENGINEERING, MUSIC, ARTS AND SCIENCES, BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION AND BANKING For information apply to the Secretary. NEW COURSES OFFERED FOREWORD In response lo numerous entreaties inthe past week that the Line Plungesnot be made so deep—or, perhaps,they meant obscure—we shall endeav-or to interpret the life of the Collegein this issue in all its simplicity andclarity, refraining entirely from any-thing about which there might ariseeven the least translucency, not to sayopaqueness. Therefore, if the witseems to pall, you may cither blame itupon a simple mind or a simple heart. ¥ 9 ¥ ¥ * ¥ W PICKUPS FROM THE PAST (This title means that the follow-ing material is gathered from the pag-es of history and is controverted bythe writer into an atmosphere of to-day.) Julius Caesar (v. Ency Brit.) stoodon the bank of the Rubicon. (This isa small river in northern Italy whichseparated the territory assigned loCaesar from that assigned to Pom-pey^ It may be found in the Atla


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