CHRISTMAS. 1907, was made happier 1 to thousands of children the country over becauso a young woman's letter to President Roosevelt turned every one of Uncle Sam's letter-carriers Into a mes senger hoy for Santa Claus. Children are still hugging toys they never would have had but for the success of a plan devised and put through by Hies Elizabeth Phillips, of Philadelphia. She it was who persuaded the Postof flce Department to deliver to charitable organizations letters addressed to Santa Claus by children of the poor, who knew no other way to reach the jolly old patron saint of the young. In previous years no notice was paid to letters of this kind. Uncle 8am, state ly in his official dignity, refused to bother with him. He did not know tho address of Santa Claus; perhaps he was one of the ignorant skeptics who do not believe In the existence of such a person. - It made no difference to him that little ones, many not tall enough to reach his letter boxes, indited in awkward childish handwriting letters that told what they desired for Christmas, but could not fair ly expect from parents so poor as hardly to be able to buy the necessities of life. Many of these letters in their simple expression contained a pathos whose depths the greatest novelists never sound ed. Nearly all of them, some written on wrapping paper, most .of them without stamps, all showing the signs of poverty. Mad in them some word of sadness. The most pitiable told of parents dead. The most unselfish asked nothing for self, but told of little baby brother or sister who wouldn't have any Christmas unless Santa came to the rescue. After every Christmas in past years thousands of such letters found their way to the oblivion of the dead letter office, and for nearly every one was somewhere . child's pillow wet with the tears of dis appointment that Santa Claus had paid no attention to a letter on. which were Built those fond hopes which the inno cence and dreams of childhood can so .swiftly build on the slightest foundation. But this year no such missives wtjl go to the bins of Uncle Sam's department of unclaimed mail. Kvery letter sent to Santa Claus has had an answer. . I The action of a tender-hearted wom an, aided by the help of two devoted fathers. President Roosevelt and Post-niaster-General Meyer, worked a re form that perhaps spread more Joy throughout the land than any action of President Roosevelt's administration. Miss Phillips has In past years found her keenest Christmas pleasure In car ing for the children of the poor. Her quiet acts of charity found willing help from other friends, nd only the difficulty of ascertaining the children 'who were deserving kept the project to its original limited bounds. Then came her plan of having the fcirita Claus letters sent to herself and others charitably inclined. First she wrote to President Roose velt a simple letter, in which she point Pd out the possibilities of bringing Joy to children If the names of all who wrote to Santa could only be brought to the attention of those able and will ing to give. President Roosevelt, perhaps with an tye on his little Kermlt and Quentin, replied to Miss Phillips that he would do what he could. t" i - .yi ,h, white TTnune to the Postoffice Department went a letter por trntlous in its possibilities to Toung America. In it the President of the United states asked the Postmaster-General if there was anything to prevent the exe cution of the plan. Mr. Meyer, him nclf a father and a family man of the Uocvelt type, at once responded Joy ously that nothing could interfere. It was a simple matter that would In ..Ain. iftti vtm work, perhaps, but that If Miss Phillips would acquaint me aeparimem - ti l n.it: ucaucu In the matter of such mail it would be ent wherever she wished. Then' throughout the length and breadth of the land to every Postm trr In every state in the Union, from New York down to the smallest cross roads posofflce, was sent the fateful communication, known officially as "No. S3i" that first of its kind in this country. It reads as follows: "Ordered, that hereafter and until the close of the first day of January, 190S. Postmasters are directed to de liver all letters arriving at their re spective postoffices addressed plainly and unmistakably to 'Santa Claus," without any tcrnw or expressions iden tifying the person for whom such let ter's are Intended, to any regularly or " t ;'.s.B?-?;.s;&g: ganized charitable society In the city or town of address, to be used ex. clusively for philanthropic purposes. In the event that claim should be made by more than one such society for let ters so addressed, such letters will be equally divided according to number between or among the societies mak ing such claim. ' "G. vU METER, . "Postmaster-General." This much achieved, - Miss Phillips ad dressed herself to completing her organ ization ! Years of work for charity made this no difficult task. There were friends In many big cities and points all over the Union only too eager to assist. It takes little capital to please the child. An expenditure that would satisfy one adult Is enough to bring Joy to a dozen kids, and the obligation of making child ren happy .is one that all share on what ought to toe the greatest day In the year. iMiss Phillips was surprised at the. heartiness of the response. Even grumpy old bachelors got busy. The Rev. Her man I Duhrlng. of Philadelphia, pastor of an aristocratic congregation, organ ized the men of his church to help. He expected the married ones to aid gladly, but was surprised to see how willingly the bachelors, those who might have been expected to be out of sympathy with children's wants, got into line. Many who did not personally have time to receive letters and make pur chases of presents gave of their means to Miss Phillips to -help her make her purchases. Merchants made contributions of dolls and toys, children of the rich gave old toys that had lost their charm but which were still good enough to be hailed as treasures by children many of whom had never known what it was to be In pos session of anything meant for pleasure. As In all cases addresses had to be given by the writers so as to tell the destination of the presents. It was not difficult to investigate and find out who deserved and who did not. In cases where it was found that the tparents had ample means to buy gifts, naturally the FROM SILVER INTO GOLD Philadelphia!! Says "Merely a Question of ,Fiising Western Ores. CONFIDENTLY asserting his dlscov yer of a process to transmute sil ver into pure gold, J. ' Emory Blram, selected Councilman from the Twenty Third Ward and master of ceremonies at bathhouse openings, has given ad ditional information of ' the ' scientific theory on which he says his process is based. "' -.':-' "We Just duplicate the forces of na ture," he says, "and really complete the process to which silver was being sub jected in geologio times. "Now, let me illustrate. Take a. glass of beer, for Instance. You know when It is drawn there is always a 'collar on It." In spite of the spread of local option and the temperance idea, this premise seemed to be based upon a fact of vir tually -universal knowledge, and was al lowed accordingly.- ;" "Well." proceeded the alchemiet of Frankford, "that collar Is merely beer mixed with air. Just let the air escape, and the froth will settle down into ordi nary beer. Now. it . is Just the same with silver and gol(C When all these metals were being formed, way back in prehistoric times, the whole mass was cooking, so to. speak, and the eilver is the froth which was on top when the natural forces desisted. The specific gravity of the metals, and the fact that gold and silver .are always found to gether, with the" silver on top, proves my theory. That silver froth, if the natural process Is duplicated, can be converted into gold, and that Is what we will do in Cheter. - "This . little book explains all." - he added, and pointed out a page in Truth, his pamphlet advertising stock for sale in a Gold Manufacturing Company. The extract explains the Byram theory of . matter in these words: I A 11 minerals are made np of atoms. THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX,', PORTLAND, JANUARY 12, 1908. The Young Woman Deliver Letters -TV charity was withheld, but perhaps in many of these cases close-fisted mothers and fathers were shamed into gifts that might never have come had not some pleading letter exposed to them the tragedy of childhood, the pleasures of other children denied . by a policy of over-stringent economy. In these plaintive missives to Santa, the mother instinct of . the American All matter, animate and Inanimate, obeys the atomic law. The action of that law on silver, and gold I have dis covered. The study of astronomy, chem istry, the higher mathematics and phys ics taught me that matter had a fourth dimension, ether or the ethereal state the others being gaseous, - liquid and solid; that there was a cause for the variance in the weight of atoms and the specific gravity of matter, and that under certain conditions some substance existed that would' free the- atom and allow It to regroup at will." Philadelphia politicians, noted for the distance at . which they can see a good thing, the avidity with which they seize It and the tightness with which they hold it, are fighting hy of the Byram gold plant, though the modern exploiter of the philosopher's stone offered to pass out stock' to numerous public officials on the easiest of terms: "I'll let you in on the ground floor." he Is reported to have eaid to enterprising organization office holders who are mak ing gold out of other things than silver. "We may get in on the ground floor, but what'e to prevent some one else from being In the sub-cellar?" is quoted as the tenor of their responses in de clining. Byram's glittering proffers. . "Why do you want to sell stock at all if you have such a good thing?" was asked of Byram. "Well, we're only, selling enough to re imburse me for my 'expense in fitting up the laboratory and installing the ma chinery in the Chester plant," he ex plained. - ' "Will you patent your process?" "Not much," was the prompt reply. Anybody can get a copy of a patent for 10 cents. , "All metals look alike to your process, do they? Can you make gold out of any metal?".. " . "Yes; only the process Is harder.. I AT !. j. r M , I B 1 met Who Prevailed on for Santa Claus to girl was shown In the request for dolls. Fifty per cent of the letters called for babies. Those that were sent were not the great big ones that cause wonderment when displayed in the show windows, but they were pretty enough to accomplish their mission of giving Joy. - The Teddy Bear was also a popular form of request. The boys wanted sleds and penknives, footballs, baseballs, toy have made some gold from copper, but silver is. nearer to gold In its nature. Copper, silver and gold all go together" as one group, with chemists, you know." Down in Chester, where , the James Emory Byram Gold Manufacturing Com--! pany has obtained a big mill and is fit ting it up -to convert silver into gold and clear up 11200 or $1500 a day, according to the Inventor, the people understand that the factory is merely to reclaim gold by a cheap 'and new process, from the refuse of Western mines. Byram Insists that this Is not the case, but that he will actually transmute sil ver, so that a pound of pure silver shall become a pound of pure gold. It's not a reclamation process, he says, but-an ac tual realization of the medieval dream. In this he was substantiated by Charles D. "Crawford, late of the United States Navy. Heavy machinery is- being put into the mills, and there will be two powerful crushers, capable of exerting a pressure of- 400 pounds to the square inch. The acid vault ,1s said to be a real curiosity. It is a brick-walled chamber. 12 feet long. 8 feet wide ' and s feet deep. Its top is even with the floor of the mam factory room, and it will be. guarded day and night against Intruders. A complete police call system has been pat Into place. . According to the Chester account, the mine refuse is to come from 'the West' in steamships, and the cargo . will be sent up Chester Creek in barges to unload at a big wharf now being built. The fac tory has a long water- frontage. Expert workmen are to be kept loyal by sharing in the profits of the concern, and it Is said that 1500 hands will eventually . be employed, though Mr. Crawford, whb has charge of the mill, says that only 20 hands will be "put into service when the mill is opened next February or' March. "It's nothing new." says' Byram Indif ferently. "As far back as 1897 I made two bars of gold from silver, and they were sold in the name of. Captain Craw ford to the United States Mint in -; this City. ' ' "Dr.- Stephen H., Emmens. inventor, of smokeless powder. ' at the suggestion of i 'r nil l; ; S-- r : , Will W I AY . ":-' , z&t thm I the Postal Authorities Charitable Concerns 7 guns, etc, Xext Christmas will see the project tried oh a still larger scale. Miss Phillips and her associates think-it suc ceeded well enough to warrant the organ ization, of branches all over the. United States. ' " 4 "Some of our critics, argue" that we may be imposed upon," iaid Miss Phillips, "and I am not prepared to deny that a minor percentage of our- gifts may not Captain - Crawford, took up the idea of making -gold,, and at Dr. Emmens' death, In 1900, Captain Crowford consulted -'me. My first results, which convinced me that transmutation of minerals was pos sible, were obtained while experimenting in the Central High School Laboratory in 1857. Philadelphia North American. "- Fish In the Great Lakes. ; " - v '-Chicago' Tribune. The fish stories of the Great Lakes are' both big and ' true. Practically every variety of fresh water fish in common use as food is found In the Great Lakes. The principal yield Is trout, whitefish and herring, but there are' dozens of other kinds that are .' taken In considerable quantities. Even the despised sucker rep resents a alue of $121,576 in the latest report by the National Bureau of Fish eries. Sturgeons were caught- to the value of $39,394, yellow perch amounted to $139,670, pike, perch or walleyed pike to $407,367. German carp to $1,2S5, turtles to $2,372. --Hie Punster 'Goes Buggy Biding." ' Eugene Field. . "Suppose," he said, in accents soft, ""A fellow Just like me Should axle a little girl to wed, What would the. answer be?." The maiden dropped her liquid eyes. Her smiles with blushes mingle. 'Why seek the bridle halter when . You may love on, sur, clng-le ?"' , And- then he 'spoke. "Oh be my bride, I ask you once again: You are the empress of my heart, '. And there shall ever rein. ' "I'll never tire of kindly deeds . ;' To win your gentl heart. - . And saddle be the ehafv that,rends . .Our happy lives apart.' Upon her cheeks the maiden - felt The mantling- blushes glow,. f - She -took him -for-her faithful hub. To share his wheel of whoa! . ' More than 00.000.000 ties were. bought -br railroads - in the United . States last year, involving 3.00O.00O.O00 to 4,000,000.000 feet of toil nd tintV.nr to r w - - . .... i-. "'- ...... 7? s7?szs have reached entirely deserving hands. "But the proportion ' is- bound . to be small, for the baby mind has not enongh guile to. cheat, and . our ' investigations were of a : character - that- ' enabled us to ascertain almost to a , certainty who had a right and ;. who had not, to our help. . - ' " ' ; "To me It seems " that , it .. is far better that some few should-get who did not deserve rather than that any .child, should unfeergo- the- tragedy of. facing, a Chrlst- i n i s 513 LABOR UNION GROWTH Began In 1 80S, When the New York Shipwrights Organized. THE shipwrights formed a society in . New York- City ;in 1803,-: and' the tail ors and also he . carpenters did this . In 1808 - in the same. town. This, -says the Gateway, may be said' to have ' been the beginning of labor unionism " in the United States. , ' - - . ; , In the next four or five decades organ-' lzations were established In ' most of the great industries,1 some of which -lasted only a few years. . Many of these grad ually became National. '..'. The printers were the first craft of any consequence to extend their organization all over the country. They established the National Typographical Union in 1852. So as to take in Canada they established the International Typegraphical Union in 1S62. being the leader also in this broader field. The formation "of " great " corporations and the immense - expansion In industry which began soon after the Civil War In cited larger labor combinations than had existed prior to that time. Some of these formed the National Labor Union, estab lished at a convention - in Baltimore in 1866, which entered - politics in 1872 by nominating the Labor Reform ticket, put ting Charles O'Connor-'pu for -President. Its votes were few,- and It attracted no general attention I the campaign. That broke up the . oonralnation, and labor so cieties, as societies., kept- out of politics for 'the next few years. 'As societies their most extensive , participation .in: politics was in the Congressional , - campaign of 1906.' " ' " Starting as a local '-. secret society in Philadelphia ifl 1869 and holding its first general assembly" in' 1878 . the Knights of Labor was j the earliest society, which aimed to gather i all the workers of all trades into a single organization. It had 600.000 members -in' 1886,, with (Terence V. Powderly as the' head, i '. '- ; Then beg-nn1 it decline ) and fall."' Its' 'i ..J '. f ......3 7y:y .ryr& j&x mas without any. of the Joys that make it dear to other chlllren. Children feel deeply. Adults do -not' often " enough recall this-fact,' and -.mature years have no more- poignant griefs than many of the woes, of childhood that. we dismiss as too trival -to need consolation. . "In implicit faith these letters are sent to Santa. We who have hearts that beat In tenderness for babyhood : should exert our utmost to see' that these hopes are not -disappointed." - ' strike . on .the . Gould - system of railways in St.- Louis and the Southwest in 1SS5 it won.- but the largest strike in 1886 on the same roads 'it lost. From that time onward it gradually shrunk In importance. Today it is only a shadow of- its former greatness. - " . The American Federation of Labor rose as the Knights of Labor fell. At a con vention in. Columbus,. O.. in 1S86, . the American . . Federation of - Labor was formed, . and it has gradually absorbed nine-tenths of all the labor organizations of the United States. In it the several crafts - retain their autonomy, but are federal for purposes of co-operation. In 1907 the American Federation of La bor comprises 119 National and- Interna tional unions and claims to have 2.O0O.004 members. The affiliated unions publish 245 weekly or monthly : papers devoted to - the cause of labor. . . -' The federation's head is Samuel Gomp ers. and 'its organ, of which - he is the editor. Is the American Federatlonist. Outside of the American Federation are about 15 labor organizations, the most important of which are the Knights of Labor,, the Stone Masons' International Union, the Bricklayers' and Masons' Union, and the various switchmen, train men, conductors and others. ... The societies not affiliated with the American Federation of Labor have a membership of about .500.000, making the membership of all the labor societies of the United - States, In the - aggregate, about 2,500.000. A" Rejection Slip. . . "Sir," said -the "shivering ' beggar, stopping the prosperous magazine edi tor on the street, "I have a long, sad story " ........ "Sorry," briskly" replied the magazine editor, passing on, "but -we are only open for short, funny stories. Just now. Full of "tbe'other kind.