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Imperial Valley Press. VOL. VIII NEW KIND OF MEETING HOUSE SIGN OF SANE CIVILIZATION Social Needs of Community and Demands of Young People Considered in Dr, Shepherd's Plans for a Rational Church, Preacher's Salary Goes Into the. Building % Fund, Ten Thousand Dollars Needed. If the religious and- philosophical lectures given every Sunday in the Holt Opera House at El Centro were dollvered in Los Angeles, tho Temple Auditorium "would be too small to hold the* congregation of listeners. And that Is typical of this remarkable com munity of desert pioneers in imperial Valley. Among these frontiersmen of the twentieth century are men who have been leaders in thought and ac tion In the older communities and in the great centers of American clvlU , zatlon, and here on v the southwest -border they are establishing a better, higher, cleaner, saner and truer civil ization than that from which they came. They have brought with thwA all that is beat of the, old, and artr planting it in a cleaner roil. It is taken by these desert people as a matter of course that men of the highest attainments, and broadest cul ture should be with and cf them, an»l -it is not remarkable to ibem that n man of Dr. R. P. Shepherd's callbie should be the pastor of one of the. v churches and talk to them every-Sun day. Perhaps there Is a little too much of the matter of course and not quite enough appreciation of the'great -er and better opportunity for intellec tual enjoyment open to this commun ity than many large cities are able to •command. As was said in the opening sentence, a preacher like Dr. Shepherd would speak to crowded houses in any large ■oity. ; His discourses would be printed in full in the newspapers, and Ills fame would be "national — if he talk ed as he talks to a little group of hear ■ers in,. El Centro. He Is no'common place preacher of sermons, no spinner -of theological webs, no soporific dron •er of hackneyed -essays on the sinful ness of sin and the total depravity of -human nature. , Nor (Is he of the mounteback ..breed that turns the pul pit into a vaudeville stage and tickles the ears of groundlings with ragtime religiosity. Dr. Shepherd is a doctor of philoso phy of Columbia University, and his ■Sunday discourses, are lectures on the history and philosophy of religion and life— offhand talks of broad scope and ADJUSTING RELATIONS OF IRRIGATION COMPANIES PROPOSED INCREASE OF STOCK OF MUTUAL NUMBER ONE. Agreement in Settlement of Difficulties Submitted to Stockholders — Number Nine Ccneidering Water Stock Pro pooition — Proposed Fixing of Rates May Change Whole Situation. Tho directors of Water Company No. 1 are submitting Xo the stockholder for final decision an agreement for ad\ justircnt of relations with the Califor- .nia Development Company which the directors approve. . Under this agreement, the capital stock of No. 1 la to be Increased 35,- ■000 Rhar?:; and of tho $25 per share, the i::lnluHim price of the stock, the C. D. Co. Is to. receive $15. The C. D. Co. h to dcllvt r 510,000 acre feet of water instead of 400,000, and No. 1 is • to take* over the distributing system and nmke all new deliveries to water stock construction to which Is not al ready approved. The new stock is to be paid for in annual Installments of $5. The C. D. Co. is to get half of Official Paper of Imperial County EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY. MAY 23, 1908. profound 7 Interest, full of virility, hu man sympathy, knowledge of the mind of man and simple Interpretation of the gospel of Christ. Ho was once a professor of Greek at Hiram Col lege, tho "Garfield school," in Ohio, and later he taught at Berkeley. The doctor Is not a parson of the conven tional type. He Is essentially a iniiti ot afllairs and lie . approaches tiic questions of dally life with Intimate knowledge of the layman's way of looking at and dealing with them. His religion is of the practicable kind, applicable to tho day's work and de void of the formalism and wornout wrappings of creed and -dogma., Dr. Shepherd's purpose is to build up a church on the basis of simple Christianity and human fellowship, discarding the distinctions of sect and denomination, and he has persuaded his congregation to cooperate with him to that end. It is his intention to erect a 'building, which shall serve as a social center . for the community, containing reading and v club rooms, gymnasium, baths, games etc. and providing the entertainment and amusements which > young people need. "I would be ashamed," he says, "to say" a word against pool- rooms and such places of amusement if I could not provTSe something bet ter in their place." If there is any space left after all the social needs of the community have been met, the building may con tain a lecture room in which the pas tor may talk to the congregation. Dr. Shepherd wants to raise about $10,000 for his new kind of church building and to that end he demands that his congregation' pay him $100 a month for preaching/He announces that he will pay the whole amount in- to the building fund, taking . nothing for his own use, but the congregation must pay $100 every month or he will stop talking. The salary will be'forth coming, and citizens who do not go to church and wear no label of sect or. creed will .help pay it. The sort of church. Dr. Shepherd- is going to build is what men have been waiting for-T-^waiting outside ; the meeting houses and the prayer meetings and church societies lo these many years. ea.cn ef the first two installments and all of the third and fourth. The California Development Com pany agrees to pay Imperial . Water Company No. 1 $1.50 per share for"a!l shares of the so-called Mesquite Lake Cattle Company's stock yet undeliv ered to which Imperial Water Com pany No. 1 may be compelled to^make deliveries for at its expenses, it be ing understood that the California De velopment Company is to stand all ex penses of litigation arising out of the refusal of Imperial Water Company No. 1 to mako delivery to this stock. In consideration of the' California Development Company reconstructing the Ten Foot drop at the intersection of the main canal on the international boundary line, Imperial Water.Com pany. No. 1 agrees to accept deliv eries to the Alder, Acacia, Beach, Ban yan, Birch and Boundary canals at the now construction, the California Development Company agreeing to re construct all necessary deliveries oc casioned by such change in point of delivery. The agreement is intended to-con stitute a blanket adjustment of all matters pending between the Califor nia Development Company and the Mexican Company and the Imperial Water Company. No. 1. A similar arrangement relating to water stock has been proposed to Wa ter Company No. fl. Stock to bo sold at $25 a share, and $10 retained by the district to pay for building a dis tributing system. Some of the land owners In No. 9 say they can build their system at a cost of $5 an acre, and then compel the C. D, Co. to de liver water at a rate fixed by the Su pervisors, and they object to. paying the C. D. Co. a bonus of $15 an acre. The whole question of rates and wa ter stock Is likely to be opened for de bate, and possibly to litigation, when the Supervisors take up the petition of taxpayers demanding that they es tablish rates. ARTESIAN PROJECT. Standard 'Drillers Ask for Chance to Did for Contract to Bore. Operators of standard drilling rigs have written to the projectors of the El Centro artesian well experiment that they are prepared to bore to any required depth and are ready to come down here, look over the ground and bid for a contract. It Is proposed to mako a thorough exploration and sink deep enough to determine whether or iiot water can be obtained by boring. Possibly water might be developed.in side of 1,500 feet, but if necessary the drill will be sent down 3,000 or 4,000 feet, and the machinery must be capa ble of drilling through rock iMt should be encountered. BIG WAREHOUSE IMPORTANT FACTOR IN COMMER CIAL GROWTH OF EL CENTRO TO BE SUPPLIED. PRODUCE AND STORAGE CO. Farmer^ May Store Crop and Use Receipts — Cold Storage .for Perishable Products — Strong Or ganization Will Soon be Ready for Business. The Imperial Valley Produce _ & Storage Company is the name of a corporation just organized in. El Cen ti*o to conduct a business of great im portance to all industrial interests and particularly to the farmers "of this sec- tion. What the producer of staples needs is warehouse accommodation, and the company proposes to build close to the railroad a warehouse for the storage of grain, feed, flour, root crops, etc., and' a cold storage plant for perishable products. The company's charter will permit It to engage In all collateral lines of business, and it will bo a wholesale dealer in all that the farmer has to sell and all that he uses, and will act also as commission broker in the mar keting of products. The farmer may store his grain and other imperishable crops, and take warehouse receipts, which are negotiable at bank and as good as cash, the warchouso being li censed and subject to the laws of the state and to supervision. . Tho company will deal In seed, and will employ an expert to ascertain the needs of farmers and to aid them In the selection of seed of all sorts, In order that only tho best varieties shall be planted and tho quality of valley products maintained at the highest possible standard. Fifty thousand dollars Is tho capi talization of the concern, and more than half of the stock ha 3 been sub scribed and paid for in cash at par. No stock Is offered to tho public. The incorporators n^id directors are W. F. Holt, C. E. Galloway, Gro. A. Carter, R. P. Shepherd and Work- on construction of a larse warchouso near the railroad depot wU.I begin immediately, and 'the entire plant will be ready for business In time to handle fall crops. Thl3 enter prise e^tablhhen the commercial centre of the valley finally and firmly at the county seat. FIVE HUNDRED COLLEGE BOYS COMING TO PICK CANTALOUPES Growers and Distributors of El Centro District Bringing in High Class of American Youths to Help Gather the Melon Crop. Gdod for the Valley and the Boys. Some May Come Back as Settlers. From GOO to 750 college boys and students from the various polytechnic and hfeh schools of tho larger coast towns of Southern California will be In the vicinity of" El Centro as melon pickers this season. The first party of these ambitious boys arrived this week. There are seven of them, from the Los Angeles Polytechnic High School — sent down as "samples" — and they seem to be about the right sort. These lads have been sent out to tire Shepherd- ranch, and they will be followed by others as the demand for . field labor in creases, until by June 5 it is estimated that fully 200 of them will be at work in the cantaloupe fields from which shipments are made by. the Cruteh fleld & Woolfolk Company. From the first week in June until the height of the season they are to come in bunches of from fifty to one hundred, and it is expected that they will find steady employment In this vicinity until July 15. The employment of college boys as melon pickers is a* new wrinkle for Imperial Valley, but managers of the cantaloupe' moving industry believe they have struck a satisfactory solu tion of the labor problem, and that they will get a better class of helpers than could be furnished through the ordinary employment agencies. Through the activities of H. B. Peai* son and E. J. Pheleu, the move to se cure college boys was started, and the idea was taken up with enthusiasm in every school where it was presented. Most' of these boys will come Irom the University of Southern California, Occidental College and the Los An geles Polytechnic High School. They will bring with them their camp out nts, and designate certain ones among their number to act as chiefs of the MELON PROSPECTS UNUSUALLY GOOD DISTRIBUTOR MAKES OPTIMISTIC ESTIMATE OF ACREAGE IN BEARING. Finds Thousands Acres of Good Melons in El Centro District and Re ' markably High Percentage Through out the Valley— High Winds Have Done No Harm. A careful survey of the fields con trolled by the El Centro Fancy Melon Growers' Association, made during the past three days, shows a higher per centage of good results than has been anticipated. In the El Centro district this association had planted 1200 acres acres of cantaloupes, and this week's estl mates show that of "these there are 1004 acres of good melons, and a large percentage are extra fine. In the Heber neighborhood ranchers afllliated with tho Crutehfleld & Wool folk Corn puny planted 1060 acres of cantaloupes, and of this planting H. B. Pearson estimated yesterday that fully 821 acres would produce a good crop, while of the 540 acres planted for thi.s company's handling at Calex ico, he estimated that thei'o would be 355 acres of good melons^ and some of those are in extra prime condition. Of the 134 acre's planted at Melo land, eighty-four acres nmdo a fine Shawjnfi i'ti inspection during tho past week. Mr. Ptar on takes a most optimistic commisary department and ' chefs. They have been fully Informed as to conditions, that the weather will bo hot and the work arduous, but all have evinced their determination to come down to the valley prepared to stick to the work through the entire melon season. They will be given $2.25 per day, with a bonus of twenty-five cents per day, payable at the close of the sea son, for good service and faithfulness. Mr. Pearson and the directors of growers' associations in El Centro hold the view that handling the crop is not the only thing to be considered in securing help. They are not in fav or of employing Japanese pickers un less they are literally obliged to do so in order to save the melons. The college boys are the right sort of peo ple to have either as . temporary or permanent residents, and it is likely that many of them will recognize the opportunities open to yonug, enterpris ing men in Imperial Valley, and will plan to come Into this region and take part in the development of the coun try-when they leave school. Five hun dred keen, intelligent, active young Americans will see and learn much about Imperial Valley 'and its possibil ities, and what they learn they will tell in . their homes and schools, spreading the fame of the reclaimed desert and making the facts known to thousands. It will be good for the boys to take part in the pioneer work going on here. The work is hard, and the con ditions will test the fibre of a young man and bring out the qualities that are in him. At the end of the season, the boys will have funds either to car ry them through the next school term, if they are making their own way, or to spend on outings during the^ re mainder of the vacation. view of the cantaloupe situation. He declares that the high winds of the past two weeks were really a benefit to the melon proposition as a whole, as they killed off the struggling vines that would only have matured imper fect melons, and he said yesterday that out of the more than iO.OOO acres, planted to cantaloupes at the begin ning of the season in Imperial Valley, he believed there would be fully 7500 acres come to producing maturity. From the acreage to be handled through the Crutehfleld & Woolfolk Company, he estimates, there will be shipments of from 575 to 650 cars. BRICK WORK COMPLETED. The brlckmasons complete their work today on the three-story hotel block being erected by Helms & Pel let, and the carpenters will have the place roofed by Wednesday of next week. This building has broken the record for rapid construction and It also has the record of not a single workman even having received a minor hurt during Its progress. Electrl claps are now wiring the interior, and each room Is to have electric bells and telephone service. Next week the in terior will be in readiness for the plasterers. AT THE METHODIOT CHURCH. No preaching services in tho morn- Ing on account of tho ::. orial ser vices at Imperial, but Sim Jay School at 10 o'clock. In the cv. uirig the Rev. F. P. Sigler, of Huntin-ton Beach, will have charge of tho pei'vi; County Treasurer Pan! 1 lonian is In Sacramento this week.' a/.' nding the State convention of coati ivasurorH. NO. 7