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Maison Lavenue. Here one finds quite a gorgeous cafe, with a pretty garden in the rear, and another room--opening into the garden--done in delicate green lattice and mirrors. This side is far more expensive to dine in than the side with the three plain little rooms, and the gentlemen with little red ribbons in their buttonholes; but as the same good cook dispenses from the single big kitchen, which serves for the dear and the cheap side the same good things to eat at just half the price, the reason for the popularity of the "cheap side" among the crowd who come here daily is evident. [Illustration: RODIN] It is a quiet, restful place, this Maison Lavenue, and the best place I know in which to dine or breakfast from day to day. There is an air of intime and cosiness about Lavenue's that makes one always wish to return. [Illustration: (group of men dining)] You will see a family of rich bourgeois enter, just in from the country, for the Montparnasse station is opposite. The fat, sunburned mama, and the equally rotund and genial farmer-papa, and the pretty daughter, and the newly married son and his demure wife, and the two younger children--and all talking and laughing over a good dinner with champagne, and many toasts to the young couple--and to mama and papa, and little Josephine--with ices, and fruit, and coffee, and liqueur to follow. All these you will see at Lavenue's on the "cheap side"--and the beautiful model, too, who poses for Courbel, who is breakfasting with one of the jeunesse of Paris. The waiters after 2 P.M. dine in the front room with the rest, and jump up now and then to wait on madame and monsieur. It is a very democratic little place, this popular side of the house of M. Lavenue, founded in 1854. And there is a jolly old painter who dines there, who is also an excellent musician, with an ear for rhythm so sensitive that he could never go to sleep unless the clock in his studio ticked in regular time, and at last was obliged to give up his favorite atelier, with its picturesque garden---- "For two reasons, monsieur," he explained to me excitedly; "a little girl on the floor below me played a polka--the same polka half the day--always forgetting to put in the top note; and the fellow over me whistled it the rest of the day and put in the top note false; and so I moved to the rue St. Peres, where one only hears, within the cool court-yard, the distant hum of the busy city. The roar o
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