THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: ATRIL 5. 1903. "I have sent about two hundred of my employes, from butcher to foreman, and all have been permanently cured. (From a personal letter to Dr. Keeley) I do not think there is any one thins or any one man wio everdid the good to humanity that you are doing with your cure!1 P. D. ARMO UR, cmcAod ill. Late Head of the Armour Packing Co. TUE LATE P. D. ARM0U2. COW DOES THE KEELEY CURE AFFECT TOE GENERAL HEALTH? There can be but one truthful answer, and that is that it is beneficial in every sense of the word. There is no nausea or other sickness during treatment. The rem edies build up the nervous system, and it follow from this that the general health must be improved. Ask our patients; they know and will tell you truthfully. Do not ask a saloonkeeper or other person whose interests are against our work. Informa tion upon any subject should be asked of those who know, not of those who guess. The Keeley Cure is now more than twenty-nine years of age time enough, the most cap tions will admit, to test its merits and the permanency of its effects. Could we re main in business' over twenty-nine years and still be prosperous if we injured the health of our patients t . The alove letter shows you the faith the founder of the great Armour Packing company interest had in the Keeley Cure. Dr. Keeley 'a most enthusiastic supjwrters were among our very best business men and professional men, men who, not requiring treat ment themselves, have observed the wemderful good that has been accomplished by the Keeley Cure and have advised their friends of it. And hundreds of business houses have, like Armour, sent us their employes for treatment. None other than the late Joseph Medill, publisher of the Chicago Tribune, after a thorough test, wrote: "I sent Doctor. Keeley five of the worst drinkers and opium eaters I could find. After a month they were sent back cured. The poison had been expelled from their systems. They looked as if a miracle had been performed upon them." now Long Does II Take? The cure of drunkenness Is usually ef fected In four week. All patients receive thorough physical examination, and the treatment Is adapted to the needs of each Individual case. Alcoholic stimulants are supplied to patients undergoing treatment for drunkenness during the first few days, after which the desire disappears, and hence there l no struggle to "quit." no craving and no delirium. If. upon arrival. patient la unable to care for himself, ho Is placed under supervision of an attend ant until sober. There la no sickness at- Twenty-nlne years of uninterrupted suc cess, the Indorsement of the friends of humanity, and the applause of more than three hundred and fifty thousand gradu ates. Is the record of tin Keeley!"ure for liquor and drug addictions. In 1880, when Doctor Keeley declared that drunkenness was a disease, and that he had discovered a remedy for It. the declaration was re ceived much as the news of Ualllleo's dis covery that the earth was round, or Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blond. Abuse and ridicule were heaped upon the bold scientist. Even so great philosopher as Bacon did not believe In blood circulation. But truth Is ever tri umphant, and time and investigation nave confirmed all that Doctor Keeley claimed for his twin discoveries disease and the remedy. What Doctor Keeley said then, and what the pioneer institute at Dwight, 111., and its many branches throughout the United States and elsewhere say today Is, namely, that If the drink habit be con tinued long enough, the victim becomes a drunkard. This Indicates a diseased con dition wherein the nerve cells have become ao accustomed to performing their func tions under the Influence of alcohol that they are dependent upon It, and will no longer perform their functions properly and painlessly except when under alcoholic Influence. This condition prove that a craving exists. The craving proves a dls eased condition of the nerve cells. As the physician diagnoses a cough as the symp torn of diseased condition, the Keeley phy sician diagnoses the liquor desire as a symptom of diseased nerve cells. The general practitioner alms to remove the cause, when this Is done the symptoms disappear. The Keeley treatment restores the cells to a normal condition and the craving for drinX disappears. Who Takes the Keeley Core? We have cured thousands of veterans of the War of the Rebellion In the National Soldier Homes of the country, whose ages range from fifty to eighty years. We have cured children under five years of age who were addicted to morphine and opium, such addiction having been ac quired through the mother's own addle tlon or direct administration. No consti tution Is too delicate for the Keeley treat ment, as the remediea are perfectly harm less. We have cured hundreds of soldiers in the regular army of the United States, and have letters from officers of all rank, from Major-Generals to Lieutenants, commend Ing the Keeley Cure in the highest terms. We have cured senators, congressman lawyers, clergymen, business men, merch ants, laborers, men of all occupations and of no occupation, to the number of over 350,000. Among them are 19,000 physicians tendsnt upon the treatment, and the physi cal condition Improves at the stitrt. At the end of four weeks the patient Is vastly Improved mentally, physically, and morally. His head Is clear, mind active, and thoURht consecutive, appetite and in gestion good, eyes bright, and complexion clear; morally changed because of Ills dfff gust for his former life and his determi nation to live properly In the future. It la a common thing to hear A Keeley pa tient say. "I feel ton yenrs younger." Write for free booklet, "Facts About The Keeley Cure." Address Keeley Institute, corner of Twenty-fifth and Cass Mrecfs. Omaha, Neb. 'CM' :'.; . s -. J.. ; ,,t f ti if $',k ;.',.,,?; i. t ?V V ;:" '-I',--") UU- i" . I v..- . ......... t - , 'y , , The above la a picture of the Keeley institute building, the home of the Keeley Cure in Omaha. Tt Is one of the best equipped of all the Institutes In the country. It haa been fitted up especially for Keeley Institute purposes by Mr. Burns, the manager, after years of Observation and experience as to what Is desirable In sucli an establishment. It contains elegant sleeping rooms, perfectly heated and lighted by the most modern appliances, a spacious club room, numerous hath and toilet rooma. with abundant supply of hot water, etc., supplying aa It does all the com forta and privacy of one's home. All patients are cared for In this perfectly tip polnted building. The only Keeley Institute In the state of Nebraska. The only jilnce In the state where the Keeley remedies are used or administered. THE KEELEY INSTITUTE Cor. 25th and Cass Sts.. Omaha. Neb. BAD TASTE IN WALL PAPER Women Unwilling to Take Advice, ' Says a Dealer. StJGQESTlOSS A3 TO. THE NEWEST FVteaes that An ropular and Silk ' Floss Pae la n Expensive NT-Hr for Drawini Rooma. . NEW YORK, April 4. Asked what are some f tha newest design In wall papers a dealer replied: . "Mora stripes, mora varieties of color, more elaborate frlesea-acenlc, heraldic, landscape and floral more grades of paper to bs used In connection with a wooden frlesa or a cornice." Asked why It Is, with such a profusion of really beautiful, artistio wall papers as are shown here and elsewhere, one sees so many commonplace Inartistic examples on the walls of New York houses and apartments,- the dealer merely shrugged his shoulders. "Are salesmen to blame, or is It true, as a portrait painter charged recently, that the average New York woman la not at alt artistic?" Here Is the dealer's answer, which may intereat Intending buyers: "Buying wall papers is about as difficult a proposition aa any woman can tackle. It Is the only proposition about which she 'does not crave advice." When selecting wall papers most women turn a cold shoul der even to advice from a aalesman. Often when by 'special requeat I have given per sonal attention to a customer she has as sumed an air aa one who would say: 'My gdod man. It's all very, well for you to buy and sell wall papers, but when it comes to a question of refined taste and critical Judgment I fancy I know a lot more than you do.' What Baleamea Do. "And as the main object of any dealer Is. to sell his goods, I nover resent this manner and with the best grace I can muster consent to color schemes and com binations of paper far below the artistic standard we try to maintain here. It U true that salesmen often seem indifferent. . But whyT Because they have learned that In the majority of cases to show the goods and let a customer make her own selection Is the easiest and in the end the most satisfactory thing to do. I' ulcus atiked to do ao some salesmen never trot out the newest deslgna and combinations, for the reason that If a customer starts in by an nouncing with decision that she wants a certain sort of frlese or a particular kind ot paper there la not much use In showing her. anything else. The salesman may sus pect that the room the customer Is buy ing paper for would look better with quite another sort of wall hanging, or 'he may be aware that the selection Is a year or two behind the fashions, but Is he going to upset the woman by Interfering with her choice? Not on your life. "In the long run the woman who eomes In and says she doesn't know Just what to chouse for this, that and the other room and lets the salesman make suggestions fares much the better in artistic results. In that case he asks the slxe of the room, the height of the celling, the style and color of the furniture and carpets before going to work. He is on his mettle, as It were. He haa an Incentive tn do his best. And ten chancea to one the customer gets something artistic and up to date. I am speaking, of course, of the average well-to-do buyer, not of the wealthy, who, as a rule, put a Job into the hands of deco rators witli few provisos and leave it thore till dona rieatr ( ratteras. "The output ef wall paper every year is now ao treiueoiloua that is ao reason why even for a comparatively small sum one need have anything inartistic, ugly or old-fashioned. As for hanging the paper, cheaper varieties can be treated with as much style as more expensive ones. In the ordinary class of house," he went on, "the paper frieze Is now a feature for the reason that the new spring designs are so beauti ful and so reasonable in price. . "At first the scenic and the landscape frleses we got were somewhat crude. Now they are made after designs done by noted artists and In a sufficient number of sec tions to relieve monotony. "For a living room, a sitting room, a sleeping room, there Is nothing newer than a frieze of this sort matched with suitable wall paper." The dealer, tn Illustration, mounted some of the new designs on a tall easel. One very noticeable scenic frieae about eighteen lnchfa deep Included a small structure nesfllng under trees, a glint of water, a sky line, all dqne In soft browns and ecrus, end Instead of the same view be ing repeated every yard or so the frieze included several views which, according to taste, could he matched at regular or Irregular Intervals. Because of their sub dued treatment none of the scenes Jumped at one, so to speak. The wall paper to match this frlexe was a one-tone, soft brown eltonbury covered with a mottled or slightly watered pattern. There was alao a golden brown, plain Ingram paper, the latter the cheaper of the two. The scenic friezes are not confined to browns. There are greens of all shades and many others which Introduce contrast ing touches of color. Effecta la Krlesrs. This is the case also in tha landscape friezes, which include only drawings from nature. It is In the heraldic friezes per haps that the most surprising and pleasing effects are seen both in drawjpg and colors, the tatter for the most part dull grays, greens snd browns mixed. For instance, one remarkable example representing the Crusaders shows battalions of armed men mounted and unmounted; and massed so closely that the effect is Inconspicuous rather than Intrusive. The soldiers' tall shields and their armor are done In steel gray, the rest of the picture showing sev eral shades of brown, 1ind touches of light green. The best wall paper to match this frieze is an imitation of burlap, the warp of green, the woof of brown, giving a bronzed result. In fact, thla paper Is called Japanese burlap. Many of the best of the floral friezes are of French design, and all of the new de signs are cut out Irregularly cn the lower fxitfe. This frtyle, to be sure, was Intro duced some time ago, but the earlier exam ples were commonplace beside those shown today, a variety of which may be compared for lack of a bettor simile to delicate open work passementerie. Take, for Instance, the Cupid frieze. Cupid, representing the daintiest pastel shades of White and blue, touched with rosy pink, is suspended from chains of Inch-wide pale blue ribbon, a gar land of pale pink roses drooping from his fingers. The interstices between the cupids and garlands are of course filled In with the wall paper which In places continues up to the ribbon chain ajid of course har monises perfectly with thVfrtese. The particular paper displayed (or this purpose had a white ground decorated with quarter-Inch pale blue vertical, atrlpea placed three-quarters of an inch apart. Be tween these mere two hair linea of blue. An alternative wall paper even daintier had a white ground covered with vertical rows of quarter-Inch long leavea done in fine hair lines of blue. t'osublaatlvas Not dood. In the dealer's opinion a solid" toned paper or a flowered or wide striped wall paper would spoil this frlese, and he em phasized the point that to match moat of the new floral frlezea nothing was so artistio aa a narrow satin striped wall paper. Exceptions, be said, were the darker toned oriental effect floral designs, which would be the better for a plain underneath. In this class was a foliage frlese, a study in rich browns and greens, touched wtlh red, which, when mounted over a dull green wall paper was exquisite. Clusters of small roses almost hidden by green and brown leaves, a cluster drooping alluringly' every now and then over the edge, or what would be the edge were the frieze finished in a straight line, sur mounted by a wall paper of white crossed vertically with quarter-Inch yellow stripes, alternating with hair lines of yellow. One remarkable design resembles an old fashioned valance as much as anything, the draper caught up every nine Inches or so with a bunch of flowers. In one of these the colors are brown and yellow principally; In another soft, old red, deep almost as port wine, mixed with gray, and matched" respectively with an Inch wide satin striped yellow paper and an Inch wide striped paper of warm gray. A frieze in which old pink the very shade one sometimes sees in old tapestries was combined with paler pink In narrow ribbon patterns, enclosing fine wreaths of variegated, very email wild flowers, had a striped wall paper to match the old pink, and a delft blue frlese, which included gray and white tones, was matched with French gray striped paper. These are only a few examples of the many dozens of frleses now shown by manufacturers for the spring trade and which are suitable for almost any room of a country house or a city apartment, except perhaps the dining room. For the last named, among many other examples of paper more or less new is a variety, comparatively ' Inexpensive, which Is an excellent Imitation of band-tooled leather, even to the coloring, the metal ef fect being produced by a mixture of green and gold and gray. This paper Is finished at the celling simply with a four-Inch wood moulding or a wood cornice, or the paper may cover two-thirds ot the wall, only the upper third being ef a plain, raetal-flnlshed paper, a narrow moulding connecting the two. Better still, have the upper third en tirely of wood, but then, aa the dealer suggested, with that style of moulding a more costly style of wall covering would be used. Topping a Library. A certain style of wood cornice or a wide wood moulding put on close to the ceiling is not by any means expensive, and for the time being It is one of the newest and most stylish ways of topping a library, a dining room or a drawing room wall paper. Particularly Is this the case when Japanese grass cloth is used in the parlor or drawing room. "The grass cloth now in the market," the dealer explained, "Is finer, handsomer and the coloring more beautiful than any thing we have had previously. For this reason there Is an unusually brisk demand for It, red and green In particular being much used for wall hangings in the dining room or the drawing room of houses which give a good bit of space to such an apart ment. Even In the small city apartment decorated by the tenant Japanese grass cloth Is a leader Just now for the parlor, finished with a wood cornice from, eeven to ten lnchea wide. No other style of frieze will give such good results with this paper." The Japanese grass cloth papers shown on the easel were one yard wide and the texture finer, and more even than the ex amples seen a few years ago. In the yel lows and browns, as well as in the reds and greens, there are also many more shades than formerly. A more pretentloua drawing room paper is called silk floss paper, for the reason that the raised pattern on the surface Is actually done with silk floss Included In the paper pulp. Champagne color Is a fa vorite In this paper and one of the best designs Is called Florentine and Includes conventionalised standards of flowers' en closed in diamond-shaped sections defined with wide raised bands, flowers and bands and groundwork being soft-toned. PAINTED FURNITURE AGAIN Eerival Following the Vogue of the Adam Period. a THB.EE points about furniture Mack Like the Old Tlsae Cottage Far altare, Oaly Better It Permits Greater Harmony of Fit ting's la Bedrooms. The demand for furniture of the style designed by the Adam brothers continues as great as It was twelve months ago and preposterous prices are still patd for furni ture of that period imported from England. That little of thla furniture is really the work of either of the two better known Adams or of their disciples Is well known apparently to all but the purchasers. Three facts about the Adam period In English decoration should be tolerably fa miliar to all by thia time. One la that the name of these decorators does not end In an "a." Vet half the purchasers of this high-priced furniture refer to the style as "Adams." Fact No. X is that the period was a very debased one In interior decora tion, although In architecture it achieved better results. Fact No. t is the absolute falsity of nearly all the so-called Adam pieces. Most self-respecting dealers who offer a piece aa of Adam will on a repeti tion of the question as to Its sou roe say "Period of Adam" If they are not anxious to mislead the purchaser. It seems, however, that very few collec tors with money enough to buy furniture of this fashionable period care whether or not it Is genuine. So soon aa they, see blrdseye maple painted with figures or conventional decorative designs they mur mur "Adam" ecstatically and let it go at that. Thus the dealer la able to save his conscience and be merely paaaively a party to the great Adam Invasion. Follow Adasa Deelsae. The great majority of the stuff that passes now for furniture done under the direction of the two great brothers Is In deed In their manner. It follows in detail many of their own designs. It is not, of course, painted by such artists aa Angelica, Kaufman and others who gave to thla furniture moat of the artistic dignity that It possessed. Its decoration came from the painters employed by the English furniture-manufacturers that have continued without In terruption to turn out so-called Adam fur niture as a standard pattern. Some of thla output la naturally older than other specimens. That produced half a century ago has clalma to antiquity In comparison with a piece finished last week. But It Is ssld to be doubtful If there Is In the market single specimen that carne under the eye of either of the two deooratora who have auddenly acquired a vogue. "Once a fas. 'on not founded on the high est Ideals of taste," said a salesman In one of the ahopa on Fifth avenue, "gets a hold on people who are able to indulge It there la no telling what It may lead lo. "Of course my business la merely to sell our customers what they want. I'm not here to try to educate taste. Already I can note the bad effects of this so-called Adam revival on the taste of our custom ers. "Do you observe how fashionable paint d furniture la again becoming? And do you remember how ahorl a time ago It was that people arose In their wrath and threw out all they had of the old cottage furniture? Old Ideas la Palatiag. "Until twenty yeara ago cottage furniture was accounted one of the most artistic blossoms of mid-Victorian household art. You must hare seen It tn the spare room of some country house to which it has been relegated. . "It was usually In some damp and rather musty stiade of (ray. with (lowers or small landscapes as a decorative scheme at the top of the bed, on the doors of the wash stand and wardrobe and on the top rung of the chair backs. It was made of in expensive wood and the cost of cottage furniture was not great.- "That made it popular with young mar ried couples going to housekeeping. They gradually moved it along until It passed from their own to the guests' rooms, If they bad any. Otherwise It went to the nursery. "It wasn't bad. Of course the highest standards of art were not met by it, but it had some beauty and It waa more appro priate to Its use than any kind of Adam Is In nine cases out of ten. But what hap pened? "The aeathetlo craze brought tn the taste for antlquea and then came the rebellion against black walnut by persons who talked a great deal about It without know ing that some of the most beautiful furni ture In the world was made In that wood. So cottage furniture waa declared hope lessly against good taste and It went. So decided waa the revulsion against It that some of it even went to the fireplace. "Now painted furniture is rapidly be coming the rage. It Is more costly than It uaed to be, largely because everything costs more. Perhaps It is more carefully done than the old painted furniture and I have no doubt It la made up In more grace ful shapes in some cases. "But tt Is not in Its general character very different from the cottage furniture that was put out of sight with the ex pressed wonder that one could have stood anything so tasteless for such a long time." The painted furniture, which is likely to be much In demand before a few months have passed, comes In various forms. Some of the seta have ornaments of flowers on a white ground. Others have porcelain pat terns, and a favorite style copies the colors and designs of the Delft porechtins. Other manufactures of chinaa are not missing. Dresden 'in its flowered patterns and the reddish brown of the royal Berlin factory with Its accompanying landscapes or cupids are to be had and there are exqui site Japanese effects. This painted furniture need not be made of the finest woods, but the enamel Is so thick and firm and the painting of ao much more elaborate character than that on the so-called cottage furniture that It Is not bought, as that style used to be, for the sake of economy, ."One .charm of the painted furniture te many women," aaid the Fifth avenue au thority, "la that It may be had to match exactly the color of the other decoratlona In the bedroom or boudoir, and you mutt understand painted furniture has not as yet traveled to any other apartments. "If there Is a pink wall, for Instance, and It is intended to have hangings of the same color, the funlture may be of that tender ahade ao far aa Its background Is concerned. The same is true of pale blue and yellow. Some Beaatlfal Desla-as. "I have seen beautiful pate pink furniture for a boudoir and bedroom, painted with an exquialte pattern of pale green, dark browa and gold and peacock blue butterflies play ing about great blossoms of hydrangea. A beautiful yellow act had the bronse, red dish tones of tne Berlin porcelains and the figures were cupids and butterflies. "The only dlbing room set of this painted furniture that we ever had waa Intended for a breakfast room and there were the regular Delft scenes of water life painted In Delft blue on Ivory. A bedroom set which bad a background of very pale cafe au lalt was painted only In deep toned fleurs de lys of purple and blua One pale green background has bunches of vivid crimson geraniums as the only ornament for the various pieces of furniture. "Of course this is -all much more artistic than the simple old-fashioned cottage fur niture used to be. But It la of the same school, and all, of Its bad qualities are the bad qualities of the Adam school, which would have disappeared forever from house hold decoration bad not thla period been revived to take the thought of people away from the use of the old models that our furniture makers are now using, to their own glory and the Improvement of their customers' taste." Persons who are anxious to' have uni formity between the furniture and the deco rations of their rooms have been known to paint the woodwork the same shade as the background of their furniture and orna ment 't with the painted patterns. In sucli cases the hangings should be of the same shade as the backgrounds, but without patterns; or if there be a pattern. It follows the design of the furniture and the wood work. In some cases there are cretonnes and chintzes which match exactly. In these rather overdone Instances the lamp shades are made of the same material. NAKED ARMY PLAN A MARCH Caaadlaa Faaatlra, Clad In Rdenle Issseeaee, Threaten to Move oath. y Lady Uodlva will be cast into the Umbo of insignificance whim the big nude trek of 10,000 Doukhobors of Manitoba, sched uled for warmer weather, begins next sum mer. Without a stitch or even a fig leaf, thia spectacle of living statues, both stal wart and fair, will move out of Canada, acroas the border and down the Missis sippi valley in search of a Land qf Prom iseunless Anthony Comstock Interferes and gets out an Injunction. This army, uniformed in innocence, will be composed of those Doukhobors, or Russian fanatics, who were settled in the Canadian Northwest by the dominion government a few years ago at the solicitation of Phlla delphlan, Parisian and London Quakers. Their leaders have announced that the Premised Land lies to the south of here, in the valley of the Mississippi, and al ready preparations are being made for this great trek. . Owing to the proclivities of the Doukhobors to cast off their clothing, always scant, whenever the climate will allow, and to depend for sustenance upon God and the good people whose territory they pass through, the American authori ties will likely have much trouble In In ducing these people to comply with the laws of the lapd and common decency. For some weeks past the Doukhobors have been silently and surely preparing for this great exodus, and it Is quite on the cards that their leader, Peter Veregln, will head the band, directing them to the Land Of Promise. Last fall they disposed of all their cattle, sheep and horses; their look ing glasses and. clocks have been collected and disposed of, while a recent edict of Peter Veregln forbid them to have more than the clothes upon their backs. Once prosperous, these Doukhobors are now poverty-stricken In every way, with the ex ception of bsrd cash, a large sum being held In the common fund, and will doubt leos be uaed by the commune after the Promised Land has been located. In one way the pilgrimage will be a good thing, for It will rid Canada of thia most troublesome sect. Those who left the Doukhobor villages last spring are now squatted at Fort William, Ontario, having been stopped by the authorities from con tinuing their eastern tramp owing to the approach of winter, and consequently the little lake city has been burdened with them ever since. The small shack In which they live shows deplorable conditions, all the pilgrims being stark naked, many of them not having worn clothes since their arrival. In this small shack are some seventy-six Doukhobors of all ages, huddled together for warmth, being devoid of any clothing or aense of decency. The govern ment at Ottawa la being appealed to In order that an end may be put to these treks, snd the mounted police have been instructed to be on the watch for the first signs of the trek toward I'ncle Sam's do mains. Philadelphia Record. GREAT MEN'S LETTERS SOLC Two Written by Colonel Roosevelt, Three by Mnrk Twain, and Many Others. Two letters of President Roosevelt, writ ten during the Spanish war, were among the lutereottng autographs sold by the An derson company In New York City last week.. Both are addressed to Job,n Brl.i ben Walker, then editor of The Cosmopoli tan Magazine. They are typewritten, but signed by Mr. Roosevelt. One, diited "First Reg., IT. S. Vol. Cav.. In ramp at Montauk Point, Aug. 3, lsns, is as follows: My Dear Mr. Walker: I should like very much to accept, but upon my word I do not know how I can, for 1 Iihvij had infinite requests to write, and It is going to be difficult to meet H tenth of them, and they offer me. prices which 1 really should not have dreamed of asking my self. Very sincerely yours, T. ROOSKVKLT. This fetched $2.26. The other letter is dated Camp Wikoff, Montauk, L. I., Sept. 7, IpH, ami Is na follows: My Dear Mr. Walker: In a little while I think , I shall be at leisure to have the writer of whom you sKk call on me, I only wish I were able to write, for vna myself, but I am engaged to tne hilt. Sin cerely yours. T. ROOSEVELT. This letter sold for $2.50. There were also three Interesting and characteristic letters written by Mark Twain to Mr. Walker, the earliest of these Is a four-page 12mo, dated "Kal tunbentgeben bel Wlen, Sept. 19, 1NHS," and reading as follows: Dear Mr. Walker: Sure It s the llllgant (sli conscience you've got and few there be that can afford such an expensive one. Yes, the second check astonished nnil gratified me. I didn't know what It whs for. 1 merely uttered my little prayer of humble thanks and went and caillied'il. Many would have thought Hod sent It, hut I knew, by the signature. It wss you. In deed and Indeed, I sjii hoping I shall vet appear again In The Cosmopolitan. ' This letter brought $13.26. Another of the letters is two pages and ia dated London, March S, inno. The . let ter paper bears a mourning border. It re fers to a request for permission to repub lish one of his articles. This letter' sold for M.60. The third letter Is dated Wallls Hill, London, Sept. S7, 1300, and is of similar Import to tne previous letter to Mr. Walker. It sold for 4.M. William Jennings Bryan was also rep resented In the sale by a two-pago letter to Mr. Walker. It was written In Lincoln, Neb., but bears no date. It Is entirely In Bryan's handwriting. Such letters. It is said, are rare. It la as follows: My Dear Mr. .Walker: I do not know to what extent It Is considered proper for a publisher to tell others of his rates, but to the extent that It Is proper I would like to know about what rates are charged per l,(i circulation. I have not taken adver tisements, but shall aoon. I prefer tho class of advertisements found in the maga zine. You will be interested to know that The Commoner has about 41.0U0 now, and has been increasing at over l.imo per day for two weeka. Regards to the family. Yours truly. W. J. BRYAN. This fetched $3.26. Other Interesting Items sold as follows: Oeneral U. 8. Grant's order to General Thomas. December I, 1864, to advance on the confederate General Hood at Nash ville, $76; a letter of John Hay, Washing ton. D. C, November 1. 1890, "I have never written a word of gossip about the White House and never shall," $4.60; a let ter of Oliver Wendell Holmes, January 7, 1891, about his Introduction to the "History of Woodstock," $12.60; a letter of Rudyard Kipling. March 16. IStf. In regard to writing articles from India, $11; the signatures of President Uncoln and his cabinet on one sheet of paper, $1$; a letter ot President McKlnley. New York, November 30, 1904, $19.26; and a typewritten letter of Andrew Carnegie to John Brisbcn Walker, declin ing to write his autobiography; 40 cents. New York Tlmts.