ORZOON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1907. ? M0J J'OOKKV'OOO'O-C 0 0O'0OOO00O'0-0' Helicon Hall Hobbies Inconsiderate Fire Interrupts an Interesting Ex perimcnt In Collective Housekeeping. Upton Sinclair' Eojlewood Effort Toward Individuality Thromh Limited Co-operationMerely an Organized Protest Afalnit the Irrita tion ot Existence In a Blf City Not Brook Farm - Dream, but a Business Proposition. Colony May Continue. )000OK000,0,-00,0,00,00C,00'0' T By ROHERTUS LOVE, i HAT wns a ui'Htt unmannerly anl Inconsiderate Are which de slroyed Helicon 1 1 nil, th roof tree of t'plim Hlnchilr's home colony on tho height of JCngle wood, N." J. Hut for Hint blame, ho sudden Mini sweeping, this latent experiment In limited ce operation tnlifttt Imve run nloiiK III Ht original grcsive until the tent of time should pronounce ,tt priii' tlriililn or luipriictlciiblc, A It lit, I In eoliiny now uiiiNt make n new Hlurt, If It determine to Weep going tit nil. Tint experiment at ' ICnglewood has I Mi' n tulsiilidcrstiMMi 1 1)' (111 gCIICrill public. There 1 Junt n possibility Hint some of (lie experimenter themselves dlil not quite comprehend It. The hab It linn been to Hpciik of tint Helicon I In II project a h Knelnllslle or coin iiiiiiihI coniiiiiiiilty. to Mourn sense tlil was trui. In n broader senite It was an Individualistic coiuuiunlly. I'erbapa Mr. Hlncliilr himself will dispute this, but IiIm owu description and declara tions Co toward proving It. The Helicon Hull people cooperated In an efTort to realise Individuality, la Hint paradoxical? I l uh see, Most of them,' perhaps Nil, were resident of tho city of New Vrk or Is-lnnged t tliut hirgo chis of city worker who Voniitniie" from the suburbs, They were Impplly nil of llirin survived the fire, we iniy any they sre pemon of nil Nile or Intelleclunl tciiiteiii Tltcy me it wenllhy. Their Income are itiiMl.'Mf . enrinil by priifenhlniinl or iMntltiem bib'ir In the clly or connected with the rlir, thus requiring Hint they rvtililc wllhlll shooting illnlllljre of III metropolis The iiillllminlre may live In roiiiii'iihil i'livlroiitnent provided be -9 : i OnK(K) I i la the servant question, Where are tlie servants? All thoNo who have sat isfactory servants please raise the right hand. The Wby of Helicon Hall. Mr. Sinclair determined to overcome the annoyances of separate hoiisekecp. lug. Ho hud no notion of surrendering imjf of hU ludlvldiiHllly. (Hi tho other It it tul. bo proposed to develop Ida Indl vldiiiillty by getting rid of tho petty fetters which hindered It growth, Thnt, a n mere matter of fact, was the why mid wherefore of the found ing of Helicon Hull. Mr. Kluclnlr din coveted ninny other who thought as lie did concerning tho comparative use lenxiifN of tho conventional manner of keeping bonne, and these per urn went Into tho cooperative colony. How far did the co operation go? Not fur enough to hurt. Tho Helicon Hull people rvally established for them selves au Improved boarding bouse, J with tho disagreeable featurca ellml i tinted. Tho very first tiling was to get congenial fellow boarder. Aa a mat ter of fart, tho worst feature about the average city Imnrdlug house la the promiscuous aggregation of human specimen with whom one needs muni be iiMHiM'luted. That 1 even worse t hit n tho prune aud the picture. Tho id ti ii ucroxN the tnblo limy perfuijte hi ! perwoii w 1th linink tlmt Hhrlcka to henf ! .... i i uii. t....... i rn. noil oe umj mi iiornu wneu juu prefer bomlletlca. Tho liewltchlng fe nut In creature at your aide may eutcr tuln you thrtxigb a whole dinner with a illamTtntloii on tho virtues of her pe-t poodle, pup when you would b more liitlinntely lutercNted In n d!a aerlntloti on Mnt pig, a In Ijitnb. , - mj . in, tan i l . tm r m tjt-' si. t it k. -- t.-m i a, i an . i r ' . n ii m r : j . j 6 i . . dn . i mm i ...lawm ma i . t Mm i ri m - pi v. s. i. r a iu utm a m i t rf'IM MM I. A lie A.Mi HKLK'ti.N HAI.l. bnn bnlliiK etioiiKh. It Ih liol mi with thi artlitt, tho ntithor, the college pro femir or the liewHpuper iilitor whm limited Income depend upon hi (tick ing clone to n great city. tptun Sinclair' Protest. For audi pcrum city life menu tho botirdlng hoiiKe, with all It ngo worn borror. tho flat or apartment, with It III iiihI i'vIIh, or the rooming Iioiiw. rr tienlwl with the fiMimliig reMtiinriilit exlntence. Mr. Sinclair something u thnn a year ago conceived the conviction that IMHiple didn't really have to put up with tho annoyance, tho Irritations and the downright dlNtroHMc of the aeparato household nyntettl of living. They could get together and do the thing better. Why not? Ho eoiudd rred hi own cimo. Tho young author had been living on n farm In New .7cr So thee Helicon hoarder took good care thnt they ahould Ih congenial one to another. There was much pruning down and weeding out. This pro'tH hurt now and then, n ml Home of the hinndmlttrd candidates vented their (opinions through tho people" to provide their own mualc .nd ,of tho dally newpaK.rs One gentle, j T,1(l Bfwk ,,nru h, 1 ninn itei'iareti tnai no mm neen exciua- ed because Im wa n Jew, but Mr. Slu- this, the Inference being j thnt tho candidate was not nccepted i becaiiHe he evinced an overweening de- ' lre to rule the roost. , I The Children's Dormitory. At hint the colony got down to a llrl i uJ "ls aasoclntea surely ! Inir liiml llelli'im Inill nun nemilrn.1. ! Credited W Itll a SclieillO and Into last fall the co operative , biutidlug Iiouhc was opened. It was j well tilled, with plenty of candidates ! on tho waiting list. An executive com- soy, which was very tlno In theory, j lull too served In lieu of the traditional In practice It was otherwise, as any landlady. There was a big dining city iKim, college bred, artistically In clined person will discover by trying It for awhile, Thero were no ninuse nienls. uo neighbors of congenial tastes, nothing but broad fields, whis pering woods and a largo lonesome ness. The city wns not to lie thought of because there was tho small boy of tho household, ami what really thoughtful parent ever Is satisfied w ith bringing up n child In n hoarding house or on apartment? Tho clly Isiardlng house wherein tho filet runs largely to prunes and the art environment Is bounded on tho dining room wall by a nightmare rhromo of bullet slain birds hanging by their necka after they are dead nnd on tho bedroom w all by n steel cngra Ing of Washington crossing the Dela ware when It wiib full of floating Ice--well, who wants to live In a boarding house? Then there Is the flat, which tn New York they call npnrtinent. That la a cliff dwelling with modern Im provements, Tho family occupying the lodge directly overhead may pos sess a phonograph with an nil Ilowery repertory, aud the fumlly luhabltlng (be ledge below you may subsist on garlic ami take the household dog to tied with them. Doee anybody ever occupy a New York apnrtment except from sheer necessity? Aa to living In a whole bouse tn yournclf -now, that appcala. But there room, with family tables, though only tho adults ate therein. The children had a dormitory to themselves, where they slept, ute nnd played under the watchful eyes of one or more womeu belonging to tho colony. This chil dren's dormitory Iden, by the way, wai one of Mr. Hlnclalr'a pets, He held o theory as to the bringing up of chil dren which seems to be gaining ground slowly throughout the world, but very slowly. Most mothers still prefer to keep their chlldreu In their vwn cure, nnd even nt Helicon Hall some of them did this. In several Instances tho chil dren slept In tho rooms of their par ent. There were no hldebouud rules aa to tho children. Intellectual persona to do the cooking, I tho washing, the denning nnd other I necessary duties about tho big bouse was tried at first, but when found tui- I practicable It wns given up In the , main, outsiders being hired. Character of the Colonists. Most of the colonials were authors, editors, artlsU or devotee of Intel lectual pursuits of some other sort. This Is significant. People tike to talk uli.ii ftlwlaa rxf m fmillw will 1 nrM j nuvi'i ifii m va- i' " a i ;vu a iiw rr The hod carrier prefers the society of another hod carrier to thnt of the bricklayer or tho construction fore man. Ho It la with those higher up. It U gulte conceivable thnt Mr. Klnclalr'a associates, could they have happened to get together In a large boarding house In the city, would have enjoyed life Just aa well as they did at Helicon Hull, but without cooperation tbey could not get together so they must be Ilellconlwd. A somewhat widespread misconcep tion as to the Helicon Hall status led to many annoyances. Mr. Klndalr was obsessed with cranks and ntilxnuces of all sorts. Homo there were who seemed to Imagine that the Hall was n sort of free for all, thnt the Hollconlans were living In a atate of free and easy hos pitality audi aa only the very rich cau afford and not even the very rich ever dispense. (in one occasion Mr. Hlnclalr received a telegram from a man of whom be bad never beard to the effect that this Individual, "with friends," would ar rive that evening. An hour Inter the self announcer arrived, accompanied by another man and a woman. All car rled suit cases and announced that they bad come for a week'a visit. Aa it happened Unit every room In the Hall i was occupied and some colonists were ' sleeping on bunks, the visitors were I delicately directed to the Englewood I hostelry. Tbey made what la described ! aa a scene, and the ringleader filled 1 columns of newspapers with his denun ciations of the colonists. It was a seer tallied that at an anarchist meeting on the east aide In New York this man bad casunlly met a member of the col ony, who bad casually said: j "Come up and see us some time." i Not Like Brook Farm , Another error In relation to Helicon I LUll Is to call It a Itrook Farm expert , uicut. There la aenrcely anything about the Helicon proposition to aug gent tho celebrated experlmeut In to opera tlo't which was tried for two or ' three years by a small band of eulbu ' slasts near West Itojbury, Mass.. early la the forties. Brook Farm was alto gether a different proposition. Profes sor Oeorge Ripley bad a theory that men and women could dig a living out of the dust of the earth by working a few hours a day and could live on a higher and more rational piano by so doing. He gathered about hlin a band of plain livers and high thinkers. They founded Brook Farm. Mrs. Itlpley, a highly accomplished woman, did the community washing. Nathaniel Haw thorne la said to have fed the pigs. At the memlwra were vegetarians this lm- i putittlon Is exploded. However, sever al of these afterward eminent persons did furm labor and household drudgery. Among them were Margaret Fuller. Thoreau, TJeorge William Curtis, Charles A. Dana and A. lironsoii Al cott. Mr. Emerson alo used to run out from Concord and trausceudental lie tho enthusiasts, but be was not a member of the community. After a time Rrook Farm got under the Influence of Albert Brisbane, a de vout Fourlerlte, who Fourlerlzed It aud Incidentally killed It off. The farmers built a phalanstery after the teaching of Charles Fourier, who held that all mankind should divide Into "phalanxes" of 2.M ersons each. Oue large building, or phalanstery, was to house all the' 2.0O0. In this building and on the land around It they were to produce nil things tieccs- sary for their subsistence. They were amuse- phulanstery , burned down one day, and the farmers ' separated to become noted poets, phi losophers. Journalists and other things Just as good. i Helicon Hall wns something In the I order of a phalanstery, to lie sure, but It wiis not Fourlerlstlc. Mr. Sinclair in iin t tie ac 111 u eh more practicable than thnt which was tried and found wanting nt Brook Farm. That I'pton Sinclair Is not over whelmed with fine haired theories was proved by his athletic nnd corporeal swatting of the beef trust with his club, called "The Jungle." last yeor. The tire como too soon for hlin and bis associates to have a fair trial of their experiment It Is well known that the original. Iden embraced the separate cottage system, with the community dining hall. Mr. Sinclair and ninny other members declare that the colony must go on. nnd In tho event of Its continuation It Is not unlikely that the cottage system will be tried. The Father of the American Na.vy. PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY i TH08 f. RYAN, ' ATTORNEY-AT-LA W Probate and Realty Law Practice Specialties. Real Estate, Insurance and Loans. Office Upstalri, first of Courthouse. building south 0. D. EBY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Money loaned, abatracta furnished, land titles examined, estate settled, general law business transacted. Over Bank of Oregon City. GEORGE C. BROWNELL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 1 I TT7" 1 . . nl . . n n . 1 . m - m. A ,w log more and more fond of erecting memorial to their j k military and naval heroes. One ' of tho latest of these la the statue of Commodore John Bsrry, recently un veiled In Philadelphia. It stands In I . - . . t it. . . - M ZZXZ Zr Phone: Main 521 Office In Caufield Bid Main and Jhth Sts. associated with the birth of American ) llUrtr. Barry la often called the "fa-I .DOI U'REN & SCHUEBEL ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W DEUTSCHER ADVOKAT Will practice in all courts, make collections and settlements of estates Fummi. abstracts of title, lend you money on first mortgage. Office in ENTERPRISE Building, Oregon City, Oregon. V to1 " - " ' ' " W W ' &t vaw (saaiwfei . --f i. r m V -V U- ' '1 1 'v . . J. E HEDCES F. f. CRIFFITH HEDGES & GRIFFITH LAWYERS- Rooms 10-13 Wcinhard Building, opposite Court House H. E. CROSS AT ATTORNEY Heal Bntate, Loans, Insurance LAW Main Street, OREGON CITY THE BAHttr atONUMIUtT IN I'HILADELPHfA. ther of the American navy." John Taul Jones was an officer under him. The statue of Barry now possessed by Phil adelphla was presented to the city by the 8oclety of the Friendly Bona of St Patrick, of which the naval fighter was a member, and It was unveiled by Miss Elsie Hazel Uepbiiru, ' great-great-grandntece of the hero, on March 10. Barry was born la Ireland In 1745 and came to the colonies when fifteen years old. He elected to make the aea his profession and soon took rank as a aallor of rare ability and was given command of a number of big ships en gaged In commerce. At the outbreak of the Revolution he was commissioned to command the brig Islington, and this vessel w as the first to fly the Con Unental flag. He captured the first ship ever taken by an American war ship. Ills remains lie In the church- yard of the venerable St. Mary'a Ro man Catholic church In Philadelphia, and the Inscription on his tomb reada In part as follows: ParrWt to the mmory of Commodor John Barry, father of th American navy, I-t tlie Clirtatlan patriot and soldier who vlaila tilt-no mansions of tlie dead view this monument with resect and venera tion. Lleneath It reit th remain of John Barry, who was born In the County Wes ford. Ireland. In the year 17. America was the object of hi patriotism and the aim of his uaefulne and ambition. At the Ix-Klmilng- of th Revolutionary war he held the commlmlon of captain tn the then limited navy of th colonies. HI achievements In battle and his renowned naval tactic merited for htm the position of commodore and to be Justly regarded as the father of the American navy. He fought often and bled In tlie cause of freedom, but his deeds of valor did not diminish In him th virtu which adorn ed hi private tile. Parry died In 1S03. One of the most exciting of the engagements In which Killed by th Railroad. A striking editorial paragraph In the current Harper's Weekly calls atten tion to tho callousness of Americans re garding tho enormous nunuul list of dead and wounded travelers and em- To each of the colonists rooms were , ployees on the rullronds of tho United assigned In the big hull. In tliepe rooms, of course, there was the sumo privacy that oue finds In, his own home. There wns n common drawing room, with n big fireplace, a music and amusement room and Iu the Interior of the building a gluss roofed court where rubber trees flourished and the colo nists might wander at will. Most of the members of the community were "commuters," going dully to New York city and back. They paid for their food at so much per week, just aa In a boarding house, aud for rooms accord ingly. Only a few of the actual colo nist did any work about the place. The experiment of finding artistic and States. Tke disquieting statement Is made thut since the 1st of Jauuury this yeur 123 persona have been killed and more thuii 300 Injured In seven disasters on five different roads. "The rallrouds," comments the writer, "have the strongest possible motives for avoiding accidents. Shifts that result In dend passengers and wrecked ma chinery save neither time nor money. How our railroad mortality Is to be re duced Is a question for our railroad ex perts to solve. And It must be solved. Not only In the case of the railroads, but In a hundred other fields of our J activities we Americans are dlsreputa bly waste of human Ufa." COUUODOBB JOHN BARRY. he participated was that between the Alliance, which he commanded, and tho British ships Atlanta and Trepassy. j At the beginning of the battle the Alllaiico lay In a dead calm and could ' not bring her broadside to bear. The ' two British ships poured a galling Are Into bcr! and early In the engagement Captain Barry was carried below wounded In the shoulder by a grape shot. The flag of the Alliance was shot away, aud the crew of the eueuiy beguu cheering at the prospect of a certain victory. ; Barry, lying wounded Iu the cockpit, declined to listen to any proposition to surrender. i "If the ship can't be fought without It," he said, "I'll be carried1 on deck." j His bravery stirred his crew. They ' cheered wildly the bloody figure car- j rled on deck, a new flag was hoisted, 1 and the American shot was sent rip- j ping Into the enemy afresh. Then na- . tu re came to the aid of the Borely i pressed Americans. A breeze sprang ' up and gave the Alliance a chance to shift and use her guns. The Ameri cans then fought with such unparallel ed vigor that the two British ships were forced to surrender. I SAVERS WANTED Whenever we persuade an individual to become a saver of money we cDuiiir that we have conferred a benefit upon him and upon the community as well. We want more savers The Bank of Oregon City AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAArArVrrVAAAAAAAAAAAM Gives More Light Gem High Efficiency Electric Lamp. This new line of high candle-power lamps signalizes an important development in the use of electric light, and marks a notable advance in the betterment of illumina tion. The actual gain is 20 per cent better efficiency than is at present obtained from the highest efficiency incandescent lamps. : 1 '-'Vt 1 15 i High Efficiency Lamp with Distributing Holophane Reflector. Appreciating the great gain in lighting secured by the use of proper reflectors, there has been designed for use with the new, lamps a special line of Holophane Pagoda shades, which, when used with the new lamps form a brilliant and highly effective lighting combination. Two kinds of reflectors are provided, the distributing or "D" form which is shown above, and which is recom mended where wide areas are to be illuminated, and the concentrating or "C" iorm of reflector which is admirably adapted for use in show-window lighting or wherever a concentration of light Is desirable. The GEM lamp with its Holophane Glass reflector forms a brillant lighting combination and merits the at tention of store keepers and all those interested in the improvement of lighting facilities. On exhibition at the Companyfs office 609 Main Street. Call telephone 1081 for information. Portland Ry, Light & Power Co. Anyone contemplating wiring for electric lights or rewiring hia store or premises to comply with the underwriters' rules, It would be well for htm to call at the office of the company and get prices on wiring for the different kinds of lights which are now on exhibi tion at the office of the company.