v The Commoner. 8 Vol. a, No. 9 The Home Department. Oft in the Stilly Night. Oft in tho stilly night, Ero slumber's chain has bound mo, Fond momory brings tho light Of other days nround mo: Tho smiles, tho tears, Of boyhood's years, Tho words of love then spoken; Tho oyes that shone, Now dimmed and gono, Tho cheerful hearts now broken. Thus In tho stilly night, Bro slumbor's chain 1ms bound me, Sad memory brings tho light' Of other days around mo. Whon I remember all Tho friends so linked together I'vo seon around mo fall, Like leaves in wintry weather, I feel liko ono Who treads alono Somo brtnquet hall deserted, Whoso lights aro iled, Whoso gurlands doad, And all but ho departed. Thus In tho stilly night, Bro slumbor'3 chain has bound me, Sad momory brings the light Of other days around me. Thomas Mooro. Ue Patient With tho Boys. I have a profound respect for" boys. Grimy, ragged, tousled boys in tho stroot often attract me strangoly. A boy is a man in the cocoon you do not know what it Is going to become his lifo is big with possibilities. He may make or unmake kings, chango ! Xbc diver dies without air to breathe. The consumptive dies wijjiout lungs to breathe the air, optyjf- lungs rendered incapable of breUiing by disease. The blood ns it flows in and out of the lungs cress. As the lungs grow weaker less oxygen is inhaled and the blood ch auger, from scarlet to pur- 0)Ple. Oxygen is the lite of the v blood as the blood is the life of the body. The effect of Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discovery upon weak lungs is to strengthen them, to en able the full oxygenation of the blood, arrest the progress of dis ease, and heal the inflamed tis sues. Luncr diseases have been tf?ft and are being cured by "Golden auuuii.ui xijv:uvi:iy, in cases where deep-seated cough, lrequent hemor rhage, emaciation, weak ness, and night-sweats "'have all pointed to a fatal termination by consumption. "Some years aRO I was almost n help Jess victim of that Ircad disease con sumption," writes Mr. Chas. l'ross. St P. M., or Sitka. WlltpOn Tiirl tir was confined to my room for several months; ny friends and neighbors had given up all hope of my recovery, until one tiny a friend advised me to take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, and after I had taken the contents or the second bottle I began to improve. After takitiR six bottles I was, I honestly believe, delivered from the crave and entirely cured. I am now a strouff and hearty man." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets nlnnnc the clogged system from accumulated impurities. boundary lines between states, writo books that will mold characters, or in vent machines that will revolutionize tho commerce of tho world. Every man was a boy it scorns strange, but it is really so. Wouldn't you liko to turn Time backward, and seo Abraham Lincoln at twelvo, whon he had never worn a pair of boots? the lank, lean, yellow boy, hungry for love, hungry for learning, tramping off through the woods for twenty miles to borrow a book, and spoiling it out crouching boforo tho glaro of tho burning logs. Then there was that Corsican boy, ono of a goodly brood, who weighed only fifty pounds whon ten years old, who was thin and palo and perverse" and had tantrums and had to be sent supporless to bed or locked in a dark closet because he wouldn't "mind!" Who would have thought that ho would havo mastered overy phase of warfare at twenty-six, and when the exchequer of France was in dire con fusion, would say, "The finances? I will arrange them." Distinctly and vividly I remember a squat, freckled boy who was born in tho "Patch" and used to pick up coal along railroad tracks in Buffalo. A 'few months ago I had a motion to mako before the court of appeals at Rochester. That boy from the "Patch" was tho judge who wrote the opinion granting my petition. Yesterday I rode horseback past a field whore a boy was plowing. The lad's hair stuck out through the top of his hat, one suspender held his trousers in place, his form was hony and awkward, his bare legs and arms were brown and scratched and briar scarred. Ho turned his horses just as I passed by, and from under the flap ping brim of his hat ho cast a quick glance out o dark, half-bashful oyes, and modestly returned my salute. When his back was turned I took off my hat and sent a God-bless-you down the furrow after him. Who knows? I may yet go to that boy to borrow money, or to hear him preach, or to beg him to defend me in a lawsuit; or he may stand with pulse unmoved, bare of arm, in white apron, ready to do his duty, while tho cone is placed over my face, and night and uoatn como creeping into my veins. Bo patient with the boys you are dealing vrith Soul-stuff Destiny waits just around the corner. Be patient with tho boys! Elbert Hubard in the Philistine. Homely Wrinkles. Cottage pudding is not out of place in a palace. When flat-irons do not heat well turn a large dishpan over them. Put a little baking soda with tho batli brick and see what a polish you will get on your knives. If a house is on fire and the flames cannot be extinguished, shut the doors leading to the place where it rages. Several minutes may often be gained in this way to save valuables, but re member your life is worth more than they are. Keep a bag hanging in the kitchen into which strings from all parcels may bo placed, and have one drawer of the dresser devoted to paper bags, etc. A hook screwed into the wall over the table for a pair of scissors is a necessity. The older members of a family ought to write down their reminiscences of their parents and of important family occurrences. It would be of Interest to future generations if a family chron cle, with dates carefully entered, were kept by each generation. The Northern Sscttrities Test (Continued from Pago Seven.) deem necessary to aid in any manner such railway companies or enhance tho value of their stocks. In tliis manner tho individual stock holders of these two independent and competing railway companies wero to bo eliminated and a single common stockholder, the Northern Securities company, was to be substituted; the interest of the individual stockholders in the property and franchises of the two railway companies was to termi nate, being thus converted into an in terest in the property and franchises of tho Northern Securities company. The individual stockholders of the Northern Pacific Railway company were no longer to hold an interest in the property or draw their dividends from the earnings of the Northern Pa cific system, and the individual stock holders of the Great Northern Railway company were no longer to hold an interest in tho property or draw their dividends from the earnings of the Great Northern system, but, having ceased to be stockholders in the rail way companies and having become stockholders in the holding corpora tion, both were to draw their divi dends from the earnings of both sys tems, collected and distributed by the holding corporation. In this manner, by making the stockholders of each system jointly interested in both systems, and by practically pooling the earnings of both systems for tho benefit of the former stockholders of each, and .by vesting the selection of the directors and officers of each system in a com mon body, to-wit: tho holding corpora tion, with not only the power, but the duty to pursue a policy which would promote the interests, not of one sys tem at the expense of the other, but of both at the expense of the public, all inducement for competition be tween the two systems was to be re moved, a virtual consolidation effected and a monopoly of the interstate and foreign commerce formerly carried on by the two systems as independent competitors established. In pursuance of the unlawful com bination or conspiracy aforesaid, and solely as an instrumentality through which to effect the purposes thereof, on the 13th day of November, 1901, the defendant, the Northern Securities company, was organized under the general laws of the state of New Jer sey, "-with its principal office in Ho boken, in said state, and with an au thorized capital stock of $400,000,000. A copy of the articles of incorporation of such company is attached to and made a part of this petition. Among the purposes and powers designedly inserted in said articles is the purpose and power, not only to "purchase" and "hold" "shares of the capital stock of any corporation or corporations," under which said company wrongful ly claims and is exercising the power to acquire by exchange and hold the stock of the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern Railway companies, uul me purpose ana power, while own er thereof, "to exercise all tho rights, powers and privileges of ownership;" that is, to vote such stock, collect the dividends thereon, and in all respects act as a stockholder of such railway companies; and the purpose and pow er "to aid in any manner any cor poration ... of which any bonds ... or stock are held, . . . and to do any acts or things designed to protect, preserve, improve or enhance the value of any such bonds ... or stock," meaning thereby to do whatever it may deem necessary to aid in any manner the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern Railway companies. c: to preserve or enhance the value of their stocks or bonds. VIII. In further pursuance of the unjaw ful combination or conspiracy aforo said, and solely as an instrumentality through which to effect the purposes thereof, on or about the 14th day of November, 1901, the defendant, the Northern Securities company, was or ganized by the election of a board of directors and the selection of a presi dent and other officers, the defendant James J. Hill, the president and con trolling power in the management of the defendant, the Great Northern Railway company, being chosen a di rector and president thereof; and thereupon, in further pursuance of the unlawful combination or conspiracy aforesaid, the defendants, James J. Hill and his associate stockholders of the defendant, the Great Northern Railway company, assigned and trans ferred to the defendant, the Northern Securities company, a large amount of the capital stock of tho Great Northern Railway company, the exact amount being unknown to complainant, but constituting a controlling interest therein, and complainant believes a majority thereof, upon the agreed basis of exchange of $180, par value, of tho capital stock of the said Northern Se curities company for each share of the capital stock of the Great Northern Railway company; and the defendants, J. Pierpont Morgan and his associate stockholders, of the Northern Pacific Railway company, assigned and trans ferred to the defendant, the Northern Securities company, a large majority of the capital stock of the defendant, the Northern Pacific Railway com pany, the exact amount being un known to complainant, upon the agreed basis of exchange of $115, par value, of the capital stock of the said Northern Securities company for each share of the capital stock of the Northern Pacific Railway company; and thereafter, in further pursuance of the unlawful combination or con spiracy aforesaid, the defendant, the Northern Securities company, offered to the stockholders of the defendant Tailway companies, to issue and ex change its capital stock for the capital stock of such railway companies, upon the basis of exchange aforesaid, no other consideration being required. In further pursuance of the unlaw ful combination or conspiracy afore said, the defendant, the Northern Se curities company, has acquired an ad ditional amount of the stock of the defendant railway companies, issuing in lieu thereof its own stock upon the basis of exchange aforesaid, and is now holding, as owner and proprietor, substantially all of the capital stock of the Northern Pacific Railway com pany, and, as complainant believes and charges, a majority of the capital stock of the Great Northern Railway company, but if not a majority, at least a controlling interest therein, and is voting, the same and is collect ing the dividends thereon, and in all respects is acting as tin owner thereof in the organization, management, and operation of said railway companies, and in the receipt and control of their earnings, and will continue to do so, unless restrained by the order of this court. By reason whpronf o irifoi consolidation under ono ownership and source of control of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Rail way systems has been effected, a com bination or conspiracy in restraint of the trado or commerce among tho sev eral states and with foreign nations formerly carried on by the defendant railway companies independently and in free competition, one with the other has been formed and is in operation, and the defendants are thereby at- SUX ? t0 monPUze and have mon opolized, such interstate and foreign iS?nnS ,commei,ce. to the great and ?J 5Ieda,n.age of thG pePlG of tne United States in derogation of their (Continued on Page Ten.)