TIIE MORNING OREGON! AX. THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1009. Over New Life Insurance Written and Paid for in 1908! Tfee Most Eem&rkabie iear r. T. In the History of Yl T7 Yl n irae irracdieirMiia. 21 o J -firs-, 5' Paid Policyholders ; O Vei0 1 (SO Million Dollars Ordinary and Industrial policies. Ages 1 to 70. Both Sexes. Amounts, $15 to $100,000 THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA Incorporated as a Stock Company by the State of New Jersey JOHN F. DRYDEN, President HOME OFFICE, NEWARK, N. J. . Agents Wanted. Good Income. Promotion. BRANCH OFFICES IN PORTLAND: JOHN PAUER, Superintendent, Rothchild Biulding P. M. HOWARD, Manager (Ordinary Dept.), Corbett Building Tfie New Monthly Income Policy Pro Tides Support for Your Family or for Tour Own Old Age. INVESTIGATE IT1 112 INTERSTATE FISH TREATY PROPOSED Two Resolutions Introduced at Olympia Favor Such Course on Question. BOUNDARY LINE INVOLVED Washington Shy on Latter Question, Iaring Oregon 'Would Ob ject to Reopening Uie Matter Now. OLTMPIA, TVash . Jan. . (Special.) The joint resolut'or: providing for the appointment of confeience commissions and extending- an Invitation to Oregon to enter Into a treaty agreement settling tha fisheries and boundary question on the Columbia River went Into the Senate this morning with Senator K. L. Stewart, of Cowllta County aa thj author. Representative Burke, of AYahklakum County, Is preparing; a resolution which differs from the Stewart resolution, in that It gives almost exclusive mention to the fisheries question. It la Representa tive Burke'a idea that the boundary mat ter should be approached with caution. Inasmuch as It lias once been decided by the Supremo Court In favor of Oregon as to that portion of the river near the mouth. Mr. Burke fears that Oregon would not care to engage In a conference if it were believed In that state that the boundary matter was the vital Issue. The Stewart resolution was prepared with the assistance of Senator McGowan, of Pacific County. The preamble recites that there have been for many years controversies and disputes between the two states involving the boundary line, fishing privileges', police regulations and other Important subjects. It proposes a conference between the Commissions appointed- from the two states, the Wash ington Commission to be named as fol lows: Two members to bo appointed by the President of the Senate: two mem bers by the Speaker of the Hous?, and three by the Oovernor. The resolution provides that upon ratification by the two Legislatures and Congress, any agreement entered Into by the proposed Commission shall be binding on the two state for the term of years agreed upon In the treaty. It Is also provided that the report of the conference shall bo submitted to the next session of the Legislature for ac ceptance or rejectment. The Senators and Representatives are working In good feeling on the matter, and It Is proposed that the House and Senate resolutions on the subject shall he referred to the Joint committee on fisheries which shall select what It deems the best features of each. CONGRATILATIOXS FOIt JOXES Vashlntrton Legislature. Formally llei-la res Yakima Man Klected. M.YMPIA. Wash.. Jan. M. (Special.) Hio-sh simply a formality, the meeting tf he House and Senate in Joint session to envass tne vote on United States Sen atorttracted more visitors to the Lcgis Ullvt Halls than did the actual ballot ing of yesterday. The galleries of the House, where the session convened at noon, were filled with spectators, number ing among them the Governor. Mrs. M. H. Hay and the wives of many of "the members. The canvass of the vote con sisted merely of reading the minutes of the seperate sessions of yesterday and the making of a formal announcement that Wesley L. Jones had been elected United States Senator, to succeed Levi Ankeny. This announcement was made by Lieutenant-Governor Hay, as presiding officer, and It brought forth energetic handclap plng from the floor of the House and from the galleries. G ARC E I 0 NEW PRESIDENT WAR OVER WATER PROBLEM Eugene Councllmen Discharge City Treasurer. EUGE.VE, Or., Jan. 20. (Special.) The City Council of Eugene Is meeting with considerable difficulty In securing the right of way for the new municipal power plant from the McKenzie Rivttr to Eugene. This, however. Is not from the property-owners along the pro posed route, but from City Treasurer Relsner, who refuses to pay warrants drawn on lilm by the Council. There have been some exceptions taken to the action of the Council by those who think that the Council Is exceeding its authority. Bonds were voted by the city for a water supply adequate for the needs of the city. The Council, through the City Attorney, interpreted this to mean that It conferred the right to install a power plant sufficient . for pumping the water, and has gone ahead xvlth tha Intention of providing power sufficient not only for the present, but also for the future needs of the city. - To this some have taken exception and have presented a petition to the Circuit Court to have the Council enjoined from proceeding with the proposed power plant. The members of the Council have been notified of such pe tition, but claim that they have not been served with any restraining order from the court. The Council has accordingly gone ahead and secured the richt of way from all the property-owners, with one exception, and has filed the deeds and Issued warrants for payment of same. But the City Treasurer, afraid of lay ing himself and his bondsmen liable, yesterday refused to pay a number of these warrants, when presented, though he had previously been advised by the City Attorney that he was not person ally liable for any warrant legally au thorized by the Council. Section 32 of the city cliarterpro vldes that the Council may remove or suspend any officer, except the Mayor or Councllmen, for neglect or refusal to perform his duty and last night the Council met In special session and re moved City Treasurer Relsner and ap pointed J. J. Walton to the position. But Mr. Relsner refuses to turn over the books and funds. Suicide Had Romance. RAWHIDB, Nev.. Jan. 20. Investigation into the affairs of Thomas H. Niblock, the broker, who committed suicide, shows that his real name was Thomas H. Proo ban, of the well-known family of that name of West Downs, Ireland. He served In the Commons from West Downs and In the zenith of his career eloped with a celebrated Irish beauty. Four years later he left her In Paris and went to New Tork. The day he left his companion was killed In a train wreck and a man crushed beyond recognition In the eame compart ment of the wrecked train was buried as Prooban by the members of his family. Prooban read of the affair, but main tained silence and allowed hie family to continue in the belief that he was a vic tim of the wreck. He came to Nevada and won and lost a fortune before he committed suicide in a fit of despondency. Bishop Hughes Outlines Leader of Willamette What Uni versity Can Obtain. TASK WORTHY OF EFFORT Save money at Rosenthal's shoe sale. Boundless Influence of College - Training Shown, and New Pres ident Urged to Be Loyal to Ills. Trust. SALEM. Jan. 20. (Special.) A feature of the closing ceremonies Incident to. the inauguration of Rev. Fletcher Homan aa president of Willamette University waa the brilliant charge to the new official delivered this morning by Bishop Edwin H. Hughes, of San Francisco. Discussing the educational future of the University, with special application to the endowment feature. Bishop Hughes said: "It Is no hazard to say that were you to push endowment of this college tar up into the millions, the fields beyond would still be ao large and so attractive aa to lure you mightily. Keep your eyes on those fields, but enter them not until you see whence shall come the Instrument of the tillage and the wages of the toil ers. Meantime you may' respect the qual ity of your present work and be very sure that the small college, if It does honest service, wins regard by Its closeness of ties, and keeps an honored place In our system of education. I should say also that the very difficulty of your task work makes It attractive. ."Tour task Is not to be accomplished by any spectacular graces, nor yet by any Jaunty and occasional efforts. It Is too big to be In small time or In a pmall way. It Is Indeed so big that you can give It every ounce of your strength, every drop of your blood, and every day of your working life, and still feel at the end that, as your service is a thing of ages rather than of hours, you are a faithful partner in the millennium of effort." Large Constituency. Continuing, the bishop said: "You have come here to work with eight circles of constituency. Moving from the outside In, they are as follows: The general pub lic, the educational public, the church, the City of Salem, the alumni, the trustees, the faculty and the students. . . . No one can possibly set any boundaries to your Influence In so far as the general public is concerned. The most far-reaching force on earth Is a college. An insti tution like this furnished the man through whose hands passed the correspondence leading to the Russo-Japanese War and furnished another man who acted as spokesman of the peace commissioners on the New England coast. . . . Tour col lege is not a large one, and yet it Is so large that It will cover the earth with its power. . .' . "Tour alumni will enter public service. and If they carry with them the spirit of this school, they will stand for civic righteousness, be valiant servants of civic reform and help to bring In the golden age of civic life. ... To the educational forces of your state your relation is to be Intimate. Ton will cultivate friendly feel ings toward tha other higher Institutions of learning. Tou will not attack the State University; for you will feel that it is un American to demand that all of our stu dents be trained In denominational Insti tutions. You will not attack the great privately endowed universities of your state: for how can a man cast a stone at his partners? You will not decry other church colleges, for are they not co workers with this college in their very form of service? Appeal for Broadness. "Some there are who know less of the five points of Calvinism and the five points of Armlnlanlsm than they know about the Five Points of New York. . . . There Is no such thing as Metho dist mathematics, and there is also no such thing ' as Oregon chemistry. But there is a University of Oregon, and there Is a Willamette University, and both in stitutions have their spirit. Let us give each spirit its own freedom, and above all let us stop talking nonsense. . . . "A man must live with the worst both In his city and his college. The large peo ple in Salem will be with you In genuine sympathy; It may be that you will have to be patient with some very small and some very good folk whose nearness to your work Is a doubtful Institutional blessing but a certain personal disci pline. . . "If ever some Impudent fellow, seeing that you take part in local civic affairs and stand on your feet to speak like a man, shall- Intimate that you are a for eigner, give him no heed. A college pres idency disfranchises no man; and it should. not be allowed to sap his Independence. Owing to the recent difficulties In the school, resulting in the suspension of several students for certain pranks special Interest attaches to that part of the charge of the bishop relating to the relations of the trustees and the presi dent. "These men nave made you presl dent," declared the bishop. "Be presi dent. But do not tell anybody that you are going to be president. Just be; that's all." ' The inaugural address of President Ho man was a scholarly effort, dealing in part with the career and life work of John Wesley,, founder of the Methodist Church. Bishop W. C. Smith, of Portland, pre sided. The bishops, the 'faculty, the trustees, the students of the university and of the High School marched from the chapel to the First Methodist Church, which was filled to overflowing when the opening prayer was said by Dr. D. L. Rader, of Portland. Five Await Death. SALEM, Or., Jan. 20. (Special.) When C. Y. Timmons was placed In the state penitentiary yesterday for the murder of his wife, Estella Timmons, a total of five murderers made up the list of candidates for the execution chamber. Harry Daley, Joe Anderson, Walter Johnson and Math Janclsraj are the other four. All have re ceived stays of execution, with- the ex ception of Timmons, who has given up all hope and will hang February 26. In opn court he asked that his body be sent to Portland and turned over to his brother, a resident of that city. Cottage Grove Buys Park. COTTAGE GROVE. Or., Jan. 20. (Rneclnl.) A special city election was held here today on the question of the city purchasing a five-acre tract of land from J. C. Long for a park. The land Is In the corporate limits and will be beautified, aided by the ladles' club, which has worked hard to this end. The land Is to cost J33.000. Rosenthal's great shoe sale Is on. fL RAILROAD f WATCHES . I W At cut prices m on easy VI M payments f. i8 Marx & Bloch 4 V 74 Third Street BE ONE OF 1 ASK 'COLUMBIA TRUST COMPANY "My Futiir Son-in-Law" has the most refreshing mother-in-law a man could wish at least if you can judge by what she writes in the February Woman's Home Companion. Her first advice to her marriageable daughter is a gem of shrewdness. " Choose a healthy one," says she. And she has other sane ideas practical sedatives for this valentine season .which will interest every mother and daughter, to say nothing of prospective and practic- In fact, ingr husbands, This Special Valentine Number is filled to the covers with features for all the family. From the " heart of hearts " cover design, by Howard Chandler Christy, to the flour advertisement on the last page; it is brimfull of charming pictures, strong helpful articles, and page after page of practical departments for women all and more in the February WOMAN S H OM COMMNION At All News-stands