New Elks Club House at Council Bluffs American Student (Copyright, 1901, by V. Clrlbuyodoff.) PAU1S, March 1. Time a havo changed Bluco Murgor wrote his "Scenes of Doho mlau Llfo," with Ita pictures of wild rovol und duliuuch, In thu Latin Quartor. Tlio student In Paris, with ull hla natural gaiety and love of u frolic, la every year becom ing u more unil more serious being with u uaner outlook on life. Iu tho cuso of the American student colony, especially, the change amounts to u revolution. Today tho traiiButlantla "freshman" has the advan tage of foreign experience and of the un rivaled educational facilities of UiIb city without necessarily abating one Jot of his native Amurlcnulsm, either In his moral view or In his dally habit of llfo. Sometimes, Indeed, tho newcomer Is u little disappointed with l'arls on that very account, lie arrives, full to tho top of his heud with ideas of a picturesque Doha mlaulsm, and 1b Bcurcely lu tho city a week beforo ho haB made a tour of ull the cufes of tho quarter lu search of "types" clad In weird artistic costumes, whoso baggy corduroy or velvet suits and tre mendous slouch huts and wildly lleatlnK black tics (n yurd long und a foot wide) ho hastens to Imltuto on his own person. Hut ho very soon learns sense from the compatriots whom he begins to moot at his cafo or at tho university or art schools. Thoy "guy" him unmercifully until he bus discarded his eccentric raiment and ap pears on the street clothed like them and In his right mind. An art studeut who came over a whllo ngo from a northorn city, which had granted hi in a "bourse," enjoys to this day the tttlo of "Mossoo," In inomory of tho wildly Bohemian nttlre which ho donned In tho flrBt weeks at his arrival. lie 1b now a sane nnd soborly dressed student, Ilka all tho rest, not dis tinguishable In costume from fifty young mon of his age on tho Btroots of any Amer ican city, but ho will probably carry to his grnvo tho iiamo which commemorates his brief period of Murgercsquo Insanity In TarlB. Homo for Aim-Mean. One institution which has a very dis tinct tendency to keep Americans in touch with their country In tho strange laud Is tho American Art association of Paris, Bltuato on tho Qual Contl, Just opposite tho Louvro, noxt door, almost, to tho In stitute do Franco, the classic homo of the "Immortal" academicians. Consldorublo historic Interest attaches to tho houBO, lu that Napoleon Donaparto, when a young lieutonant of artillery, was a constant vis itor there at the salon of brilliant Mmo. Permon. The old house retains evident Life in Paris signs of Its ancient grandeur lu the spa clous, low-celllnged rooms with curved wood paneling and largo, old-fashioned windows, llut Ub llttlngs uru very modern and com plete; with Its reading and smoking rooms, Its library uud Its restuurunt, it mukes an excellent club, very Amcrlcun, u bit of homo lu tho hourt of 1'nrla to tho charac teristically young manhood that frequents It. Thoro Is, In fact, vory llttlo pretense and posing among tho members at the American student colony. As n rule, thoy nro much liked among tho swnrtu of stu dents of ull countries who muko up thu population of tho quarters. Curiously enough, howovor, tholr popularity has suffered somowhut ot late on accouut of tho English war in tho Transvaal. The avorago Europeau Ilnds it vory hard to get rid of tho absurd notion that an Amcrlcun la lu most ot his Ideas only an KugllBhman who happens to live- 3,000 miles from Lou don; besides, tho American accent In speak ing Frouch Is not very different from that ot u Ilrlton. Occasionally a bund at young Americans at a cufo has been tho subject of Insult from Borne desperate pro-Doors, who have taken tho strungcrs for fellow citizens of Mr. Chamberlain. Then there has been trouble Sometimes the Amer icans havo had to give fistic demonstra tion ot tho proposition that a man with an English accent to his French Is u good per son to lenvo alone. Social l,ir In riciiMiuit. Hut In normal times, nnd especially whon tho native students get to know their American confreres Intimately, the youth ful citizens of tho two republics got on ad mirably together. Tho Americans, for one thing, provo themselves a distinct gain to tho social life of tho clrclo ot comrades they fall among by their froc-handed hos pitality. Almost always thoy aro better oft than the bulk of tho other students, who qulto frequently pnss tholr wholo univer sity llfo on nbout $5 n week. Tho Amorl enn, ns often as not, lias n brightly fur nished llttlo lodgement wbcro he can re colvo his friends lu tho evening In modost, but sufficient student luxury. Thero will be coffee nnd cakes for tho comforting of the Inner man, plenty of tobacco to holp on the talk, a plana on whirl) to pound out the latest "chansons" of tho quartor, which all tho guests will roar In chorus. Two or thrco girl students may look In for nn hour or two, there will bo plensant, friendly conversation, perhaps a llttlo mild Illrtn tlon, a good deal of happy-hearted, Inno cent fun, a goneral atmosphere ot home like good fellowship. Tills kind of thing Is qulto an Institution among the American students, they take It lu turns to oiler tholr rooms tor such familiar reunions, und so they cement friendly relations with "tho natives," who go away delighted with American hospitality, vlvuclty and camara derie. One quarrel, by tho way, tho other stu dents have against "les trunsatlaiitlqucs," as thoj cull the Americans In thu quartor. It Is that the "transatlantics," with their preposterous Ideas as to money, spoil tho waiters In the cafes, the men servants who look after the roams In the furnished apart ment bouses, nnd tho jouclergcs who re ceive jour letters and parcels and pull the cordon to let you In nil through tho wntches at tho night. Tho thrifty Caul gives tho waiter 1! cents an evening. On the gnrcon do chamber he bestows CO cents a mouth (for cleaning room and shoes every day; thirty times each for GO cents) and he gratMes tho conclergo with $1 evory twelve months for tho New Year's gift. Strange though It may soem, thoso are tho customary rates nil over tho Quartler Latin. Hut the American simply can not conform. Ho astonishes waiters by leaving an Indis criminate heap at capper coins on tho cafo table when ho has paid his consummation; he Is capable of doubling tho hotel servant's monthly fee; ho la even addicted to giving Mmo, La Conclorgo tho overwhelmingly largo reward of fl n month. It Is truo he gots his shoes really shlned a rare luxury In Franco; nt tho cafo thoy mako a cleau sweep of ull tho Journals for his reading; nt homo ho gets hla lottora early, qulto fre quently thu very day thoy nrrlve, and hla friends nro greeted with n plcaBant smllo and can count on knowing when he Is out without having to climb up nnd down five or six stories for tho Information, Uut hla comrades protest vehemently. "Don't go to t hat house," an old habltuo will say to a friend who Is seeking to Install himself, "It has been spoiled by tho transatlantics; you would be ruined by tho extortions of tho personnel," Where Old (Jlory Files. Thero Is forming In tho Montpnrnnsso and of tho quarter, at tho far end of tho famous Doul' Mich', nn almost exclusively American settlement. Passing down two or threo streets In this neighborhood one Is likely to hear moro United States than any other language From an upper win dow of ono house Hies over, wot or fine, feast day or work day, a gorgeous Amer ican flag, thrown out on the breeze, ap parently by soino pntrlotlc person who can not rcfrnln from proclaiming his prldo of nationality from tho housetop. The "creamorles" In tho side streets nro filled with Americans nt tho hour of tho "petit dojouner" which opons tho day. In the only good enfo nearby, tho waltors, when ycu glvo "your order .are apt to murmur on absent-minded "nlrl!" This neighbor hood has Its merry side, but It could toll Borne Bad tales, too. For If most of our young countrymen over here are suffi ciently provided with tho means of living, thero are, of course, some who fight n dally lattlo with poverty and Its attendant pri vation and humiliation. Often these nro young men und women who have recklessly como over tho water, attracted by tho glit ter ot Paris llfo and hoping to make a living by teaching English whllo they pur suo tholr studies. Generally theso Ideas provo absolutely unfounded and tho un fortunate dreamers drng out moro or less of a martyrdom till good sense sends them homo ngaln or till misery, cold nnd hunger kill them. Mori Women Than Men Starve. Women seem to have more ot tho foolish courago for thoso risky experiments than men. At this moment there nro not u few bright Amcrlcun girls halt starving in Paris garrets of tho quarter, unnblo to 11 nil any teaching to do and either too wedded to their studies or too ashamed of facing tho questions of their friends to roturn to their distant homes, confessed failures. Very often theso girls mannge by u thou sand woman's arts to conceal their pov erty from tho bulk of their associates. Thoy dreas with quiet neatness nnd pass for hav ing some small private means, nnd nobody over suspects thnt they live on half a pint of milk a day with a tiny roll of bread and n raw egg. To nssuro themselves of this miserable Insufficiency of food they have to get a llttlo sowing to do, or even some domestic work for tho beforo-brcakfast hours. Somotlmes these resources fall. One day a girl does not appear at the nrt clasB or literary lectures sho has been following; her friends find that she has had to pawn her things ono by ono till now sho has nothing left In tho world. Thon thoy ninko a collection, porhnps, and sond her homo, for the colony Is very generous to Ita poorer members, Somotlmes nobody finds out tho truth till It Is too Into. Some threo months ago an American studcnt-glrl committed sutcldo lu her room, unable to hear any longer tho black misery and hopelessness sho had been struggling against for moro thnn n yenr. Sho had always shown a bravo faco to tho world, and of all her dally associates not a. slnglo ono hml any Idea that sho was ever In need of a meal. Yot It was proved at the Inquest thi.t for months sho had lived on bread nnd milk, and that for threo days beforo her death sho had eaten absolutely nothing, Not All In Hard l.ui'k. It must not, of course, to supposed that most of tho women students, or even nny notable proportion of them, llvo under theso hard conditions. Tho great majority, whllo not rich, are at least comfortably situated. Thoy have charming llttlo rooms to study and frolic In. lu the summer they aro nblo to take tours with bicycle and skotch book In Normandy or Drlttany, or four or five of thorn club togethor to hire u cottngo somewhere near tho wooded glades of Fontnlneblenu In tho artist col ony that has made tho foreBt famous In water color or oil whoiover pictures aro seen. When winter comes thoy havo tho rosourco of tho theaters and the opeta and tho countless literary, artistic and musical reunions which mako Paris so delightful to people of cultivated taste. All theso pleas ures aro within reach of almost every purse; nowhere elso In tho world can tho highest class of Intellectual pastime bo had nt so llttlo cost. Hundreds of women who nro now filling Important places In the busy llfo ot America, either as artists, writers or hard-headed business women, look back on their two or thrco years of student llfo In Paris ns the brightest and In somo ways most profitable period of their career. V. GRIDAYEDOFF. A Bachelor's Reflections New York Press: The best euro for a woman who can't bear tho smell of tobacco smoko Is to make her eat a cigar. A meal to a man means a pleco of meat and a cigar; to a woman It means some thing new to talk about and a fluffy de.i sert. A man's letters to a girl never begin to bo really dangerous till after ho gets too fnr along to bother with quoting poetry In them. It Is tho opinion of nlno women out of ten thnt the averngo man believes ho Isn't getting everything that is coming to him unless ho is leading a doublo life. Apostolic Detroit Journal: Impossible, thought I. "Surely," i exclaimed, "thoso peoplo havo not romoved you from olllcol Why, thoy nro tho very apostles of civil service re form!" Glendowcr smiled wanly. "Hut tho ax of tho apostles, you know!" ho faltered. This remark Interested mo. For tho qunllty of tho fellow's humor showed that ho was English nnd not Scotch-Irish, as ho had claimed. Furnished by Russell A notlcenblo featuro of tho furnishings of tho now Elks' clubhouse nro tho gas and electric fixtures, which In thomselvcs are not only ornamental, but thoy add an artis tic harmony to the surroundings. Tho main hall is dene In Moorish; tho fixtures are mado of wrought Iron, tho lights bolug In closed in ruby opalescent glass. Tho effect Is vory pleasing. The largo reception room Is lighted by nn elegant twonty-four-llght chandelier of tho Prostor design and Is a gem within Itsolf. Tho various other rooms nro trented In a heavy Flemish stylo, thus adding to tho harmony of tho decorations nnd furnishings. Tho designs nnd work were mado by F. M. Hussell, tho gns flxturo artist of Omaha.