Trie Globe Olotliing: House -want yota.tr tracle, THE COURIER 11 the examplo of Council Bluffs, whero young ladies in society gave what was said to bo one of tho most diverting minstrel shows over Been in that city. Tho entertainment in Omuha this week was wholly in the bands of the women, and seems to havo been a suc cess. Is Lincoln going to follow suit? if- ' n'UHW...iv WmamM '"K9HM V" '"Tc The first Patriachs dance was a lead. ing event of the week, and was an au& K. iflJH picious Degmning ior mis ciuiuu mJ m W organization. For the remainder of the month there are several bright things in prospect notably among which will ho the recention at the Lincoln hotel given by Mr. and Mrs. Charles 0. Dawes for tho returning bridal couple, Mr. and Mrs. B. G.Dawes. The Dickens party, for the benefit of tho First Presbyterian church, will be given at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. lates next Tuesday evening. Miss Fay Marshall has returned from Chicago. Oscar Funke and G. H. Baughman spent Sunday in Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Dawes will give a reception for Mr. and Mrs. Beman Gates Dawes at the Lincoln hotel, October 26. Mr. and Mm. B. G. Dawes are expected home Monday. J. B. Weston and Miss Elizabeth Weston, of Beatrice, were in the city Monday, enroute to California. H. T. Dobbins returned Tuesday from Chicago. H. E. Mitchell, city editor of The Call, is in Chicago. Mrs. J. Miner, of Grand Rapids, Mich., who has been in the city for the past few weeks the guest of her sister, Mrs. F. E. Price, left for her home Monday. Rev. U. C. Lasby delivered a lecture on "The Yellowstone," in the St. PauT-M. E. Church Tuesday evening. Mrs. Daniel A. Risser left Tuesday for Council Bluffs. Mrs. A. N. Young has returned from a two months visit at Hud son, S. D. Tho following officers were elected at this week's grand encamp ment of Odd Fellows: Grand chief patriach, W V. Bain. Lincoln; grand scribe, I. P. Gago, Fremont; grand senior warden, N. Chne North Platte: grand junior warden, L. A. Simmons, Cortland; grand high priest, Major Hines, Omaha; grand treasurer, Sam McClay, Lincoln; grand representative, F. B. Bryan, Omaha. Mr S. B. Duffield, in charge of the art department of the conser vatory of music, delivered the first of a series of lectures on the pro gress and development of art, at the conservatory Monday evening. W. H. Pcnn, of Alliance, Neb., was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Humphrey this week. Mrs. K. Tierney, of Tecumseh, sister of Miss Carmody, will reside in Lincoln, this winter, at 1G02 E street. It is entirely within the range of probability that the charity ball may eventuate in to fact. Several prominent society people have expressed a willingness to assist in the movement. A great many rumors concerning the Pleasant Houraclub havo been floating around tho last few weeks. About fifteen years ago people began predicting tho demiso of this organization; but the club has lived while its detractors have fallen by tho wayside; and there is at tho present timo no indication that the Ploasant Hour club, which has held its own for so many years will relinquish its hold this season. Indeed plans are already forming for infusing now life into the club and thero is every insurance of a most success ful season. Organization for tho season of 1H-93 will bo effected be fore tho close of the present month. Somo private dancing parties aro projected for next month. The wedding of Miss Cochrane and Mr. Frank Woods, which occurred last evening, was the first wedding ceremony in this city to be celebrated on Friday in the memory of the oldest inhabitants. Mr. Oliver Wendell Holmes once told a dinner party how ho undertook to solve the enigma of creation. Having ohsrrved that when unconsciousness is consciously approached, as during tho in halation of an anaesthetic when tho mind is on the confines of two worlds thero aiise sublime and voluminous but fugacious thoughts, and having satisfied himself that in these thoughts, if they could only be caught and transcribed, there lay enshrined the secret of the universe, he determined that by a supreme effort of tho will he would catch and transcribe them. So, placing himself in his arm chair, with pen, ink and paper at hand, ho inhaled the vapor of chloroform. As drowsiness stolo over him, and just as unsciousness was impending, those sublime and marvelous thoughts arose, and by a vigorous effort he seized his pen and wrote, he knew not what for before he had finished he fell back unconscious. When he awoke with trembling anxiety he turned to the sheet of paper on which he could read, in scrawling characters, but quite legible, the secret of the universe, written in the words: "A strong smell of turpentine pervades the whole."' Omaha society this month indulges in a miBtrel show, following Ward McAllister, replying to Paul Bourget's criticism of Ameri can society remarks: "Let us now ask if the critical Frenchman who has attempted to decry a place which is essentially social has himself passed a lifetime in society. Is ho a great social authority in his own city of Paris? Has he been there a striking feature of the Partisian fashionable world? Truo it is, he has written "Cos mopolis," a work which has made him famous as a student of phy siology, and has passed a student's life in his library, shutting out tho world to devote his energies to literary work. Is such a man, whose life has been thus passed, out of society, on visiting Newport and taking a cursory glarco of the place, mingling with its swell young set, devoting most of his time to the millionaire element, on returning to France, capable of writing and declaring to the world that we are simply a people of money bags? If he had carefully studied our social history he would have found that many of our best people trace their ancestry to the English gentry, to the best Huguenot blood of France and to the Dutch. That from 163G they have been cultivated and refined, that their wealth and breeding have decended to their decendants now occupying high social posi tions in Newport. All Europeans find our society most attractive. The only criticism they usually make is that we have not a sufficient ly largo leisure class of men. In going to balls in both LonJon and Paris there is but little enjoyment owing to the overcrowding of the rooms. I have never yet. as an American, been able to appreciate the great honor conferred in permitting one to approach royalty, and to be received in salons filled with titled people. I doubt if there are any balls given in London or Paris as enjoyable as our Patriarch balls which have been given for the last twenty-one years in New York City. A great Parisian authority has frequently stated to me that he has never seen in Paris more luxurioussuppers and more beautifully decorated rooms than the Patriarch balls of New York." )kins Hat. You will lik e it.