1
Other Texas cotton-growers studying conditions here are J. C. Lacy, J. C. Lacy Jr. and J. W. Allen. Tliey are convinced of the adaptability of soil and climate to cotton-growing, and are examining land with a view to establishing themselves in Imperial Valley. One of the party has 900 acres in cotton in Texas this year, and can do no more than make experimental plantings here until that crop is taken care of. These men and their associates probably will unite in securing a sufficient area of land for cotton-growing on a large scale and in putting up a gin. A quantity of seed has been sent from Texas to Ira Aten, and extensive experiments in planting will, be^ conducted on his ranch to determine the. best varieties for this region. MILLAT LOS ANGELES The Los Angeles cotton mill project appears to have taken definite form. According fto Denis Howarth, a manufacturer of experience, quoted by the Los Angeles Times, the plant is to cost $400,000, will occupy a Questions concerning various details of cotton growing were asked by the . farmers and answered by Mr. Johnson. Imperial Valley land would produce at least two or three bales to the acre, possibly a great deal more. In Texas, cotton land was worth from $35 to $60 an acre, and the cost of produc- ing a crop was from 33 to 50 per cent of the value. A bale of cotton was worth $50, and the seed was worth about half as much. About 1000 acres would be required to keep a gin in operation, and a gin could be put up for $6,000. At the special public meeting called by the Chamber of Com- merce at El Centro last Saturday, W. C. Johnson, a cotton grower of Texas, who has been study- ing the cotton possibilities of this region, talked on that subject to the assembled farmers. Mr. Johnson said he had always maintained that Texas was the biggest thing on earth, and he was free to admit that Imperial Valley is the next biggest. - He never had seen the equal of Ira Aten's cotton plants. In Texas they produce from one third of a bale to .one bale to the acre and have many drawbacks to contend with. In Imperial Valley there are no boll 1 weevils and the grow- ers 'won't be compelled to join the Farmers' Union. The quality of cotton raised here is, first class. For eight or ten years the price of cotten in Tex- as has ranged from 10 to 13 cents a pound. A year ago 'it was sold for 4 1-2 cents, but that was not the price of' cotton, said Mr' Johnson; it was speculation. Supervisor McHarg has been granted a leave of absence from - the State for six months. Live stock Inspector Hubbell has examined and admitted 98 head of horses and mules this week. The new company will, in addition to the experiments al- ready made, conduct extensive and exhaustive experiments in its ? own behalf, covering a period of a year. Twenty acres of representative Valley soil has been secured on the Wilsie ranch and work will be begun there as soon as the necessary machinery can be brought from Los Angeles. These experiments will be conducted under the per- sonal supervision of a beet sugar agriculturist, and their nature is such that the exact result to be secured in the raising of sugar beets here can be determined. Further details of the project willbe worked out within a few days and announcements will be made from time to time for guidance of , the farmers who propose to raise and sell beets to the factory. EXPERIMENTAL PLANTING Experiments made several years ago in the raising of sugar beets by the Brawley Farming and Experiment Co. have been taken into consideration by the promoters of the company. These experiments were care- fully made and . proved success- ful. They demonstrated that more beets can be grown to the acre in Imperial Valley than elsewhere and also showed that the beets here have about two per cent more sugar than the average 3in other localities. The board of directors will include some of the leading farmers and business men in the Valley, and it is pro- posed to carry the project through to consummation with as little delay as possible. Act- ual work on the factory ) will not be begun for about- a year and it may, be nearly two years before it will be in full operation, but a substantial begining has been made toward the establishing of one of the biggest industries the Valley has yet had. The committee appointed by President Brown held Several conferences with Mr. Hayhurst during the week, and say they are entirely satisfied that his plans for the establishment of a factory here are feasible. These plans present so much of certainty and so little that is problematical that the members of the committee became con- vinced that they should act ai once. Articles of incorporation have been drawn up, therefore, and the preliminary steps taken toward the formation of a sugar beet company. COMPANY FORMED ...... ... . . \u25a0 Clark, F. G. Havens, John M. Eshleman and W. E. Wilsie. s Sugar beets and the possible establishment of a factory in Imperial Valley were discussed at the meeting called by the El Centro Chamber of Com- merce and held in the school house last Saturday night. J. Stanley Brown, president of the chamber, was chairman of the meeting. 'W.\ T. Hayhurst, formerly president of the Chino beet- sugar company, related briefly the history of the beet-sugar industry in the West and . his experience as a grower of beets .arid manufacturer of; sugar, and "then presented to the meeting an outline of his plan'forthe establishment of a sugar factory in the valley. Mr , Hayhurst proposed that the enterprise be undertaken by the farmers as a mutual project; that a corpora- tion be organized and a number of farmers and others' subscribe for a portion of the stock as a guaranty of local interest in the enterprise. There were capital- ists outside of the valley desir- ous of becoming interested in such a project, and if a satisfac- tory showing were made) and the farmers would agrfce to grow beets in sufficient quantity, their assistance could be secured readily. ~ CROPS CERTAIN Mr, Hayhurst- said he was con- vinced that sugar v beets can be grown successfully in Imperial | Valley, and that s the yield per acre would be at l§ast one-third greater than in other districts. Whether ', or not more than one crop a year could be grown would have to be * determined by experiment. There was no question that beets planted in December would grow, through' the winter and mature in June. If they could be grown through the spmer to mature in Decem- ber, continuous operation of the factory would be possible.". He advised that systematic experi- ments be conducted for a year, under expert superintendence, to determine the proper seasons for planting, adaptability of soils and varieties, best methods of irrigation etc., and that funds sufficient to 1 carry on the cx- i periments be called for as first payment on stock subscribed/ ,If the farmers were disposed to interest themselves in the enter- prise, he would lay his plan in detail before a committee and give ' assurance of his ability to secure the. necessary cooperation of capital. On motion of Ira Aten, the cliair appointed a committee to consult with Mr. Hay hurst and formulate plans for preliminary organization if it should be found advisable to take up the project. The committee was composed of Ira Aten, R. H. Feasibility of Factory Project Demonstrated to Imperial Valley Farmers and Business Men, Sys- tematic Experiments in^Beet Growing to be Carried on by the Corporation. BEET SUGAR COMPANY FORMED IN EL CENTRO Imperial Valley Press. Official Paper of Imperial County INCORPORATION OF EL CENTRO EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1908. COTTON GROWERS COMING TO IMPERIAL VALLEY NO. 42 Census Shows Sufficient Pop- ulation for City, VOL. VII Proposed Extension of Limits Beyond Present Town Site to Take In Residence Sections—Petition For Incorporation Circulated. -r- r\ , r- . ii i .\u25a0 ii. ii Texans Preparing to Establish the Industry Here Bscause the Soil Will Produce More and Better Cotton. Will Plant This Year to Test Varieties and Conditions, El Centro needs some .street improvements/ extended water service, sanitary regulations, tree planting and distribution of water for gardens etc. to keep pace with the growth of the town, ' and only by united, organized effort can anything in that Mine ;be done effectively/ The -only practicable organiz- ation appears to be an incorpor- ated city. .) A petition for an election on the question of incorporation has prepared for presentation to the Board of Supervisors. It is proposed to include in the incorporated town enough of the adjoining residence districts to make a tov^nsite two miles long by a mile and a half wide, an area equal to' three sections, provided the. residents in the territory generally approve the plan. A census of the half constituting the town-site of El Centro has been taken prelimi- nary to the circulation of a petition for town incorporation, the result showing §91 residents on the strip a mile long and half a mile wide. Outside of the townsite but within. a mile radi- us from the . center are as many more residents. More than 1000 persons get their mail at the El Centro postoffice. FIVE TO ONE The Los Angeles cotton mill will be the first to be established west of the Rocky Mountains, arid Mr. Howarth and his associ- ates believe it will be the fore- runner of a new and profitable industry that will spread over the entire coast. WML Mr. Howarth has been> in Lbs Angeles about three months, in- quiring into the prospects and making plans for this enterprise. In . addition , to his interests in* Pennsylvania, he also is at. the head of the Woodstock cotton- mills "at Anniston, Ala. \ For several years, he says, it is likely that the f Texas cotton fields will supply all the raw ma- terial for the proj ected local mill. The shipping distance is not great and the quality of the cotton is j said, to be superior in many ways to that grown in the Southern states. Imperial Valley; it is be- lieved, will supply the cotton '_ of the future, successful trial crops of .excellent cotton fiber ~ already having been produced. , Mr. Howarth said to The Times: ' 'There is to be nothing experi- mental inthis enterprise. I have spent more than twenty years in the manufacture of similar grades of cotton weaves in Chester, Pa. ;' \u25a0 and other eastern cities, and ;I { know the business thoroughly. I shall take personal charge of the > mills and operations and will bring experienced heads of de-, partments with me from the East." ground area of nearly three acres and probably will be located on a site near the river? where good transportation facilities may be obtained. Plans contemplate the completion of the mill by the first of next year. Albert H. Beach, a local real estate and mining man, is associated with Mr. Howarth' in the enterprise. Other Los Angeles business men also are interested. Of late there have been sev- eral cases of smallpox among the Mexicans just below the line, and a few cases of a mild type have appeared in the valley. Dr. Hamilton refuses to admit that these are genuine cases and has been very free in his criti- cisms of quarantine precautions. With Dr. Hamilton on Smallpox Dr. E. E. Patten, Health Officer and County Physician, presented to the Board of Super- visors in special session this week a letter explaining his action in quarantining a case of smallpox. Dr Patten said that th£' patient had been attended by Dr. F. L. A. Hamilton, who denied that the disease was smallpox. Dr. Patten visited the patient and found it a plain case of small- dox, but in view of an unpleasant controversey with Dr. Hamilton over another case he deemed it expedient to call a consultation. On the morning of Jan2l, the patient was examined by Drs. Patten, Baumgarner, Way, Blake, Peterson and Hamilton, and all but Hamilton, pronounced the disease small-pox beyond a doubt, whereupon quarintine was estab- lished. Physicians of the County Disagree It is easy to understand any- thing which appears in an Im- perial Valley paper. Not long ago an editorial appeared which stated that there were no grave- yards in that part of the country because nobody ever died, and no doctors who did not carry a side line in order to eke out a pre- carious livelihood. Killed four ducks with one wallop of a shovel eh? Who was Baron Munchausen, anyway? nobody but a piker after all. Ananias was thought to have ' some class as a plain, nickel-plated prevaricator, but in the Imperial Valley his price would be 10,000 to 1 every time out. —One of Hearst's Falters. The Imperial Valley Press tells the story of one of the ranchers down there who is killing wild ducks with a shovel. Sounds fishy, but the Press is noted for plain, unvaried truth, so we believe it. Redlands Citrograph. TWO POINTS OF VIEW The Board of Supervisors has levied and authorized the collect- ion of a road poll tax of $3 and a hospital poll tax of $1, making the total poll tax of Imperial County $4 a year.

Imperial Valley Press....Imperial Valley land would produce at least two or three bales to the acre, possibly agreat deal more. In Texas, cotton land was worth from $35 to$60 an acre,

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Page 1: Imperial Valley Press....Imperial Valley land would produce at least two or three bales to the acre, possibly agreat deal more. In Texas, cotton land was worth from $35 to$60 an acre,

Other Texas cotton-growersstudying conditions here are J.C. Lacy, J. C. Lacy Jr. and J.W. Allen. Tliey are convincedof the adaptability of soil andclimate to cotton-growing, andare examining land with a viewto establishing themselves inImperial Valley. One of theparty has 900 acres in cotton inTexas this year, and can do nomore than make experimentalplantings here until that crop istaken care of. These men andtheir associates probably willunite in securing a sufficientarea of land for cotton-growingon a large scale and in puttingup a gin.

A quantity of seed has beensent from Texas to Ira Aten,and extensive experiments inplanting will,be^ conducted onhis ranch to determine the. bestvarieties for this region.

MILLAT LOS ANGELESThe Los Angeles cotton mill

project appears to have takendefinite form. According ftoDenis Howarth, a manufacturerof experience, quoted by the LosAngeles Times, the plant is tocost $400,000, will occupy a

Questions concerning variousdetails of cotton growing wereasked by the . farmers andanswered by Mr. Johnson.

Imperial Valley land wouldproduce at least two or threebales to the acre, possibly a greatdeal more. In Texas, cottonland was worth from $35 to $60an acre, and the cost of produc-ing a crop was from 33 to 50 percent of the value. A bale ofcotton was worth $50, and theseed was worth about half asmuch. About 1000 acres wouldbe required to keep a gin inoperation, and a gin could be putup for $6,000.

At the special public meetingcalled by the Chamber of Com-merce at ElCentro last Saturday,W. C. Johnson, a cotton growerof Texas, who has been study-ing the cotton possibilities of thisregion, talked on that subject tothe assembled farmers. Mr.Johnson said he had alwaysmaintained that Texas was thebiggest thing on earth, and hewas free to admit that ImperialValley is the next biggest.

-He

never had seen the equal of IraAten's cotton plants. In Texasthey produce from one thirdof abale to.one bale to the acre andhave many drawbacks to contendwith. In Imperial Valley thereare no boll1weevils and the grow-ers 'won't be compelled to jointhe Farmers' Union. Thequality of cotton raised here is,first class. For eight or tenyears the price of cotten inTex-as has ranged from 10 to 13 centsa pound. A year ago 'it was soldfor 4 1-2 cents, but that was notthe price of' cotton, said Mr'Johnson; itwas speculation. •

Supervisor McHarg has beengranted a leave of absence from

-the State for six months.

Live stock Inspector Hubbellhas examined and admitted 98head of horses and mules thisweek.

The new company will, inaddition to the experiments al-ready made, conduct extensiveand exhaustive experiments inits ?own behalf, covering a periodof a year. Twenty acres ofrepresentative Valley soil hasbeen secured on the Wilsie ranchand work willbe begun there assoon as the necessary machinerycan be brought from LosAngeles. These experimentswillbe conducted under the per-sonal supervision of a beet sugaragriculturist, and their nature issuch that the exact result to besecured in the raising of sugarbeets here can be determined.Further details of the projectwillbe worked out withina fewdays and announcements willbemade from time to time forguidance of ,the farmers whopropose to raise and sell beets tothe factory.

EXPERIMENTAL PLANTING

Experiments made severalyears ago in the raising of sugarbeets by the Brawley Farmingand Experiment Co. have beentaken into consideration by thepromoters of the company.These experiments were care-fullymade and .proved success-ful. They demonstrated thatmore beets can be grown to theacre in Imperial Valley thanelsewhere and also showed thatthe beets here have about twoper cent more sugar than theaverage 3in other localities.

The board of directorswill include some of theleading farmers and businessmen in the Valley, and itis pro-posed to carry the projectthrough to consummation withas littledelay as possible. Act-ual work on the factory

)will not

be begun for about- a year anditmay,be nearly twoyears beforeitwillbe in full operation, buta substantial begining has beenmade toward the establishing ofone of the biggest industriesthe Valley has yet had.

The committee appointed byPresident Brown held Severalconferences with Mr. Hayhurstduring the week, and say theyare entirely satisfied that hisplans for the establishment ofa factory here are feasible.These plans present so much ofcertainty and so little that isproblematical that the membersof the committee became con-vinced that they should act aionce. Articles of incorporationhave been drawn up, therefore,and the preliminary steps takentoward the formation of a sugarbeet company.

COMPANY FORMED

...... ... . • . \u25a0

Clark, F. G. Havens, John M.Eshleman and W. E. Wilsie.

s Sugar beets and the possibleestablishment of a factory inImperial Valley were discussedat the meeting called by theEl Centro Chamber of Com-merce and held in the schoolhouse last Saturday night. J.Stanley Brown, president of thechamber, was chairman of themeeting.'W.\ T. Hayhurst, formerly

president of the Chino beet-sugar company, related brieflythe history of the beet-sugarindustry in the West and .hisexperience as a grower of beets.arid manufacturer of;sugar, and

"then presented to the meetingan outline of his plan'fortheestablishment of a sugar factoryin the valley. Mr , Hayhurst

•proposed that the enterprise beundertaken by the farmers as amutual project; that a corpora-

tion be organized and a numberof farmers and others' subscribefor a portion of the stock as aguaranty of local interest in theenterprise. There were capital-ists outside of the valley desir-ous of becoming interested insuch a project, and ifa satisfac-tory showing were made) and thefarmers would agrfce to growbeets in sufficient quantity,their assistance could be securedreadily. ~

CROPS CERTAINMr, Hayhurst- said he was con-

vinced that sugar vbeets can begrown successfully in Imperial

|Valley, and that s the yield peracre would be at l§ast one-thirdgreater than inother districts.Whether ',or not more than onecrop a year could be grownwould have to be

*determined

by experiment. There was noquestion that beets planted inDecember would grow, through'the winter and mature in June.Ifthey could be grown throughthe spmer to mature in Decem-ber, continuous operation of thefactory would be possible.". Headvised that systematic experi-ments be conducted for a year,under expert superintendence,to determine the proper seasonsfor planting, adaptability ofsoils and varieties, best methodsof irrigation etc., and that fundssufficient to1 carry on the cx-

i periments be called for as firstpayment on stock subscribed/,Ifthe farmers were disposed tointerest themselves in the enter-prise, he would lay his plan indetail before a committee andgive

'assurance of his ability to

secure the. necessary cooperation

ofcapital.On motion of Ira Aten, the

cliair appointed a committee toconsult with Mr. Hayhurst andformulate plans for preliminaryorganization if it should befound advisable to take up theproject. The committee wascomposed of Ira Aten, R. H.

Feasibility of Factory Project Demonstrated toImperial Valley Farmers and Business Men, Sys-tematic Experiments in^Beet Growing to be Carriedon by the Corporation.

BEET SUGAR COMPANYFORMED IN EL CENTRO

Imperial Valley Press.Official Paper of Imperial County

INCORPORATIONOF EL CENTRO

EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1908.

COTTON GROWERS COMINGTO IMPERIAL VALLEY

NO. 42

Census Shows Sufficient Pop-ulation for City,

VOL. VII

Proposed Extension of Limits BeyondPresent Town Site to Take InResidence Sections—Petition ForIncorporation Circulated.

-r- r\• , r- . • iii .\u25a0 ii. iiTexans Preparing to Establish the Industry Here

Bscause the Soil Will Produce More and BetterCotton. Will Plant This Year to Test Varietiesand Conditions,

El Centro needs some .streetimprovements/ extended waterservice, sanitary regulations,tree planting and distribution ofwater for gardens etc. to keeppace with the growth of thetown, ' and only by united,organized effort can anything inthat Mine ;be done effectively/The -only practicable organiz-

ation appears to be an incorpor-ated city. .)

A petition for an election onthe question of incorporationhas prepared for presentation tothe Board of Supervisors.

Itis proposed to include in theincorporated town enough of theadjoining residence districts tomake a tov^nsite two miles longby a mile and a half wide, anarea equal to' three sections,provided the. residents in theterritory generally approve theplan.

A census of the halfconstituting the town-site of ElCentro has been taken prelimi-nary to the circulation of apetition for town incorporation,the result showing §91 residentson the strip a mile long and halfa mile wide. Outside of thetownsite but within.a mile radi-us from the.center are as manymore residents. More than1000 persons get their mail atthe El Centro postoffice.

FIVETO ONE

The Los Angeles cotton millwillbe the first to be establishedwest of the Rocky Mountains,arid Mr.Howarth and his associ-ates believe itwillbe the fore-runner of a new and profitableindustry that will spread overthe entire coast. WML

Mr. Howarth has been> in LbsAngeles about three months, in-quiring into the prospects andmaking plans for this enterprise.In.addition , to his interests in*Pennsylvania, he also is at. thehead of the Woodstock cotton-mills"at Anniston, Ala.\ For several years, he says, itis likelythat the fTexas cottonfields willsupply all the raw ma-terial for the projected localmill.The shipping distance isnot greatand the quality of the cotton is jsaid, tobe superior inmany ways

to that grown in the Southernstates. Imperial Valley; itis be-lieved, willsupply the cotton '_ofthe future, successful trial cropsof.excellent cotton fiber

~already

having been produced. ,

Mr.Howarth said to The Times:''There is to be nothing experi-

mental inthis enterprise. Ihavespent more than twenty years inthe manufacture ofsimilar gradesof cotton weaves inChester, Pa. ;' \u25a0

and other eastern cities, and ;I{know the business thoroughly. Ishall take personal charge of the >

mills and operations and willbring experienced heads of de-,partments with me from theEast."

ground area ofnearly three acresand probably willbe located on asite near the river? where goodtransportation facilities may beobtained. Plans contemplate thecompletion of the mill by thefirst of next year. Albert H.Beach, a local real estate andmining man, is associated withMr.Howarth' in the enterprise.Other Los Angeles business menalso are interested.

Of late there have been sev-eral cases of smallpox among theMexicans just below the line,and a few cases of a mild typehave appeared in the valley.Dr. Hamilton refuses to admitthat these are genuine cases andhas been very free inhis criti-cisms of quarantine precautions.

With Dr. Hamilton on Smallpox

Dr. E. E. Patten, HealthOfficer and County Physician,presented to the Board of Super-visors in special session this weeka letter explaining his action inquarantining a case of smallpox.Dr Patten said that th£' patienthad been attended by Dr. F. L.A. Hamilton, who denied thatthe disease was smallpox. Dr.Patten visited the patient andfound ita plain case of small-dox, but in view ofan unpleasantcontroversey withDr. Hamiltonover another case he deemed itexpedient to call a consultation.On the morning of Jan2l, thepatient was examined by Drs.Patten, Baumgarner, Way, Blake,Peterson and Hamilton, and allbut Hamilton, pronounced thedisease small-pox beyond adoubt,whereupon quarintine was estab-lished.

Physicians of the County Disagree

Itis easy to understand any-thing which appears inan Im-perial Valley paper. Not longago an editorial appeared whichstated that there were no grave-yards inthat part of the countrybecause nobody ever died, and nodoctors who did not carry a sideline in order to eke out a pre-carious livelihood.

Killed four ducks with onewallop of a shovel eh?

Who was Baron Munchausen,anyway? nobody but a pikerafter all. Ananias was thoughtto have

'some class as a plain,

nickel-plated prevaricator, butin the Imperial Valley his pricewould be 10,000 to 1 every timeout. —One of Hearst's Falters.

The Imperial Valley Press tellsthe story of one of the ranchersdown there who is killing wildducks with a shovel. Soundsfishy, but the Press isnoted forplain, unvaried truth, so webelieve it.

—Redlands Citrograph.

TWO POINTS OF VIEW

The Board of Supervisors haslevied and authorized the collect-ion of a road poll tax of $3 and ahospital poll tax of $1, makingthe total poll tax of ImperialCounty $4 a year.