Show NOMONEYTO BI SAVEll IN PARS II I I J Therefore S the Person Who Wart to Save Money Had I Better Stay AwayThe EightDoIlaraDay Man and I the ThreeDollaraDay ManPeople in Paris from Our Mountain Country I x o I Paris July 10The man or woman whose present purpose In life Is to save money would do well to stay away from the Exposition Unlverselle at Paris in this year of our Lord The Parisians high and low show 0 curlou I disinclination to assist them in their purpose In fact the Parisians are after af-ter that very sum the man and woman t propose to save and the chances are 100 to 1 that the Parisians will succeed I if the economical so far forget themselves them-selves a to wander this way Parisians Parisi-ans arc subtle but determined and their ability to smile innocently and charge for extras amounts to genius Roughly speakfng the visitor to Paris may live for 10 francs or a trifle less tluin 8 a day or he may live at 15 francs orq bit less than p n day according to his means and wishes ER passant there are few Americans among the thee lollaraday men visiting visit-ing Parl There is an infection in the air that makes the Amerlran adopt the motto I shall live like a prince in Paris if I live like a pauper at home the rest of my life So he goes the way of all the spendthrifts and tbe fact that his money is gone Is announced an-nounced to his friends by his sudden and unexpected return home I know a woman who came to Paris intending to remain a year She came last February Feb-ruary on an ocean palace and stayed at one of the best hotels In Paris She sailed yesterday on a cattle steamer She said the trip was longer but there was 0 double keel which gave u Immunity Im-munity from seasickness She said something about illness in the family but one who knows her well says she has not a relative in the world We understood that she had lived too well and shopped too much in Paris Now the eightdollar manand his price may be very much higher if he wishes is the one who lives at first class hotels drives to the exposition and other points of Interest goes to see performances by such expensive theatrical stars a Sarah Bernhardt Coquelin and Bejane the first two at their own theaters their MORE ECONOMICAL The threedollaraday man will live at a clean but barefloored little pension pen-sion or boardinghouse where the food js scant and the rooms arc as small and almost as bare as cells He will go to the exposition iu an omnibus or one of the high ponderous green street carp that somehow remind you of a moving guillotine But Instead of riding inside or either of them for 30 centimes or 6 cents he may prefer to ride on fop see more and pay balf the price exn acted for interior accommodations You can ride well across the city on an omnibus or street car for 3 cents If you wish On the other hand the cabbies charge two francs or 10 cents an hour They always act a pour bolre for drinkor fcewhlch varies from 25 centimes 5 cents according to the time or distance or cocheres whim and he Is a creature of whims and posl tlveness Tho cab hire seems small In comparison with our own dollarand ahalfthefirsthour rate but It must be remembered the stranger walks nowhere no-where In Paris and he visits many remote re-mote places In the course of a dayTime day-Time thrcedollaraday man usually eschews the theaters He doesnt need their diversion for rising betimes and seeing sights busily011 day he retires early and sleeps long 1 while the eight dollar adaYQ more man gives night spreads at the Cafe do Paris and doesnt yawn his last protest against extravagance until far past nOl Perhaps the throcdollaradrfy man may reduce his dally expenditures a quarter of a dollar or GO by getting t room say In the Latin Quartlcr for a couple of francs a day and dining at the puval places where the food is good and clean but scant and where he may get 0 far meal for a franc and a good ono for one and a half francs He may choose to live In the suburbs at about the same price and have a dailysteamboat ride of threequarters of an hour to an hour on the Seine at a nominal prIce EXHIBITS NOT WORTH SEEING The price of admission to the exposition exposi-tion grounds is not ruinous only one franc and the exhibits for which there Is an extra charge are not worth seeIng see-Ing There is no Midway Plaisance nor Its cousin to beguile many francs from his pockets UltraBohemians vote tho Exposition Uuiverselle dull because be-cause of Lls From the splendid new Elysce Palace hotel on the Avenue des Champs Ely I sees wh reby the way Thomas F Walsh hate of Ouray Cob now of 1 Washington said ta be the richest of the American commissioners and his wife have been living for three months I to the little sparsely furnished roorn in the vicinity of the Latin Quartler is 0 far cry But a man can live at the latter place and see the exposition and Paris well Ho escapes the extortionate system of tipping which robs the American of half the uleasurc of his visit by reason of his impotent rage at the system He escapes the extras At French hotels the price of your meal Is a amaH item I The extras nearly double it Tho French hotel proprietor accounts a napkin 1 nap-kin a glass of water butter salt and i pepper as extras and charges you enthusiastically en-thusiastically for them WESTERNERS IN PARIS Among th9 citizens of Utah vhose Interested In-terested faces have been seen usually turned toward the exhibits of the Eta Unls within the past fortnight art James Anderson Mr and Mrs John Dern Miss Elizabeth Dern and Mr F H Dern Mr Derns party Is staying at the Hotel Athene S H Auerbach Is c frequent visitor to the exposition grounds and affects the department of textile fabrics He Is living at the Hotel Continental Mr W H Gardner is also registered from Salt Lake City Thomas G Webber is hereon a com bined business and pleasures trip and is domiciled at the Hotel Meyerbeer Mr and Mrs J M Marriott of Salt Lake City are at 1 Rue San Pro Cllcnay Logan Utah Is represented among the sightseers by A R Irvine of that city Of the Intelmountain neighbors Colorado Colo-rado Is perhaps best represented as to attendance Rev F W Oakes of Denver Den-ver is staying at 4 Square de Jo Four Marmbourg L L Lingle of Colorado Springs Is living alone at that favorite resort of visiting Coloradoans in Paris the Grand Hotel Cecil Ira Donaldson of Denver Mr William Barber and Miss Barber of Pueblo Cob divided their time equally between the exposition and the multitudinous sights of Paris I Miss Minnie C McClary Miss Emma J Ilolllday Mr and Mrs II B Page 3 1 of Denver are at the before mentioned Grand Cecil hotel Miss Sarah Raub of 1 Denver is at the Hotel Rem John A1 Anderson of Denver has half a mind to turn Parisian Miss Mary C McAlliston of Colorado Springs Miss Julia M Mitchell and ad Miss Harriet Ball of Denver are among the guests of the Grand Hotel l Cecif Mrs A M Christie and Miss A Ceci monds of Denver are making their home for the summerat 93 Avenue Niel Miss Myma C Langley Miss Virginia s Rico and M E Lambe are among the Donverltes summering here F fi Marquardlen Payctte Ida ig a iruost of tho HOtel Continental a gest ADA PATERSON |