A 1 MR OMAHA srXDAV P.I'K: .1 AMWKY 101: i V ( Famous Pleader for Business Efficiency lauil I. Ftrandels. recently took rait In a conference regarding the po'slhlll tios of Introducing scientific ninusninent Into Industrial operations, ami gave the following notable address on tbnt occa sion entitled, "The New Conception of Industrial F.fflclency." "As I look at the watch I feel a preater regret at the brevity of lif than ever before; becau-e there him been all by some of the speakers who pre ceded tne so much thut was not true and to much thiit shows a failure to understand what scientific management 1 I shotild like to enter upon such a statement of thut science as would make It possible for every one of you to know what It means, niul what it offers to this country; what the introduction of knowl edge aa opposed to Ignorance offers to the great world of human industry. It means the opportunity to secure In a much-neglected field advances In produc tion which would enable our p-oplo to satisfy those just demands of labor, the satisfaction of wbjch is essential to the development of American civilization. "I am amazed to find a representative of organized labor us aide and as enlight ened as Mr. Dunciiu, taking. In Ignorance of the principles of scientific inunage luent, the position which he has. It is a position which must necessarily rest, if It Is to be taken literally, upon the proposition which belles cvetj thliiK upon which American prosperity rests, and which Is necessary, and has been nec essary, for that prosperity which we en Joy. It is as If ho hud said we cannot make progress. Why We Prosper. "Isn't It a fact that the prosperity we liave In America today comes not so much from Illimitable or so-called illim itable resources of America, ns because we Jtv America have advanced or had rVe of until recently advanced beyond all other guiwn; r c 5 i I- : v s : i . . . c 'A ..... f! V'. -ft 'V vV (W'v..f '. , N : f V V. s ir , . r-. 1 v A- '-V r PHOTO V HARKI1 AND IWlNO WASH people, in cllminatins the wustc of f.uman labor? This Is what we stand for. The prosperity of the south besan with the cotton Kin. Th prosperity of the west lay not so much In her fqrtllo fields as In her agricultural machinery, and In her transportation system, which enabled Us to eliminate waste, to create a field for profit out of which we, and all of us, were able to git a living, better than was obtained In foreign countries. In our New England, und in parts of the Kast where manufacturing prevails; It has been our necessities, and not our re sources, thut have been the sources of prosperity. It has been the necessities tho poor soli, which drove us to man ufacturing, and high wages, fortunately, which made us tho mother of invention. Vnfortunately that movement to Invent, to Cave labor, was arrested. Why? He cause of the Illimitable resources of foreign labor. It was cosier to tap the foreign labor supply than to think, and to work persistently upon the lines of saving labor. NothliiK to Ilonxt Of. "It Is something to bo proud of that bricks were laid, and In most countries are being laid, precisely as they were laid in tho days of riiaraoh? No! Mr. Gllbreth, after lie had studied Mr. Taylor, came to think whether the principle which Taylor had applied to the machine shop and other things could riot be applied to bricklaying. What did he do? lie did just what Taylor had donej He put the mind of tho scientist on to the operation. The greki fiuic- mcntal vork of the scientist Is to observa observe and take nothing for grunted. So Mr. Gllbreth, who Is a bricklayer by trade, who fitted himself to that us he did to other branches of tho building trade, began to dissect this operation of laying brick, lie began at the beginning, und said, 'What is the first thing to do? Well, tho first thing was U reach down to the floor of the scaffolding and pick up a brick; and It occurred to him, for the first time, although he had been in the building trade for nearly twenty-five years, that it was a fool thing for a niun to bend down to the floor to pick up a brick. It took a good dcul of effort. It took a good deal of time. He said to himself, 'The thing for me to do Is not to go down and pick up the brick, but to liavo that brick up where I am, and to have It where I can just reach out my hand and get It. It will save me a good deal of labor, and It will save me a good deul oftline.' So he Invented a shelf it was a very sllgh Invention he arranged that It could bo screwed up from time to time by a boy who passed around, so that the brick would ulways be up at the hand of the man who has to lay It, He would simply have to stretch his hand out," Instead of going through the athletic performance of picking it up off the ground. Then ho said, 'What Is the next thing I do? I take that brick in my hand, and I take my trowel and test it two or' three'' times. If It Is not a good brick I take it and throw It down on the llohr. I am up on the fifth or slNth story. Thoso bricks which have been painfully and expensively brought up to where T am are painfully curried down again. Wouldn't It be better to have only those bricks come up that are selected instead of being pitched on the hod, or raised by the derrick, and sent up without being tested?' To lie Economic. "He concluded that would be economic. Then he said, 'What Is the next thing 1 do? I look that brick all over to get the face of that brick and to get It Just rlgtit. Wouldn't It be better when thut man down below Is selecting the good brick, before It comes up to me, that ho should put those bricks in a packet light Bid? up. so that when they conio up they will be delivered right side up, right on this shelf, right ut hand. All I would have to do, I, the bricklayer, would be (a take " each brick, knonin;,' that all Lricl.s wore sound, and knowing all were right side up, and to lay it.' Tiien viien the time came when he was ready t.j lay i;, li put it down on tho wnll; then he tapped It with tlie trowel aaln (that ii: d always been done since tl, days of I'hai "ioi. . Ii occurred to him that pcrlups thut an not necessary. If the mortar . i j-i.it of the right texture, the v. i.-nt. the known weight of the brick, would be suf ficient to press the mortar down to where it belonged. Ill that way. with t.oiiie o;'.nr changes, he faund that the eighteen motions which were ordinal ity Involved In laying a brick could be reduced tj six. "Now I want to ask ou g. ntlcrin n whether that method of laying brick is not more In accord with the Uts of America, and the twentieth century, than the methods of I'hariioii? Hour la Oilier I nd imlrlen. "What Mr. (Jllbnth did with brick has b.-eii done In man uther industries. It must be done in thourands and ten of thousands, and hundreds o:' thousands of operations, before we r ui h what '.' lie fere we reach a right way of doing things. And to learn the light way of d ling we must do Just what the scieiui-ts have ahvas done, in all other fields. To oh- iTve: lo siuu; 10 . iu kink at a Missourian who nauts to be That Is what he does. That is LOV1S 1). lUtAMUJIS. Ists, with the eye of a skeptic, or the I that money, and I wanted It, and I went there; but It was an awful Job for me to (In all t'mt shoveling. I began to think whether or not It was necessary. 1 be gatvjo think, too, that that engineer was putting u good' di-al of work on me that he oughtn't to. I though 1 found out a few things a built firing an engine, and I n.ado up my mind that when I became an engineer I should not work my fireman as I had been worked." Later that man became an engineer and It was discovered luce years alter he hail been in that posi tion thut on his engine he saved fort tins of fuel a month as against thoso around him. Ho says that In man and as an engineer, and ull the years that he was a flre until this discovery was made ut that lato day, he had never heard one man suggest to him that coal was something to be saved, and but for that experience and thatBtudy which he Individually made, with u view to saving himself labor, he never would have known how to savo coal. .ei - - - - . teiy uperutlun, and vcilIUiitf thut ti-iinaii, 1 'iiat Taylor did. That was the method which Taylor pursued. One of the first things lie did everyone doubtless at this time Is familiar with. He found out how to do the simple operation of sending pig Iron from the yard into a railroad car. He Increased the performance of the in dividual man from twelve and a half tons up to about forty-seven tons. lld he do it by speeding up? Not at all! He did it by precisely the same methods as aro pursued in the careful training of a man to do uny work. He found out how to do It. He found out the laws that govern It. Ho gave careful thought to the individual. He said that this man who picks up the pig iron and carries it Into that car, if he doesn't know how to do It best, will be Just like the manoTI the college crew who wears himself out when he gets Into the boat. There is some .'peed which is the best Bpeed for that mtn to go. So fast, and no faster. There l. a certain period thut man ought to rest in order that he can work the full eight hours cr nine hours In tho day. There is a certain angle which is the best angle for that man to walk up the in clined plane from the yard Into the car. Hy studying those thing he finds out there are laws, there is a science, In much that has heretofore been regarded as unskilled and unscientific. The great aim of scientific management is to establish that there Is to bo nothing unskilled- nothing iat is not to be worked out, as scientists are working out for us day after day the problems In other depart I'lltf of t'JHiUr. act!c;;y. - All Are Together. "If Mr. Duncan and his friends would ctmo to understand what scientific man agement means, they would see how im lcrtant it Is to the working man, and to us, because we and they are all together. Mr. Pagan talked as if the railroads were opposed to this Idea of efficiency. Mr. Willard's letter shows you that is not the feet. What say you to this as proposi tion? '. thin"" chen. and in . n' wcnen tnl c lldren noro valuable. Let lliu mi i.i ... ieia..-e tor llu many. In this principle of efficiency is bound up the welfare of our race." That, gentlemen, is a quotation. Those words were spoken, within a fortnight in this city by Frank Trumbull, chairman of the board of directors of the Chesapeake & Ohio railroad, three weeks after the de cision of the Interstate Commerce com mission denying the advances In freight rates which the railroads of the country hud sought. Isn't that a platform, on which every man and woman here can aland? Isn't that the only platform upon which we should stand? Isn't wasto sin ful, however it may come? HI imt Klimiunte Waste. "Wo cannot satisfy the demands of American democracy until e have elim inated a large part of the waste which new exists. The talk this evening has been aa If that waste lay wholly in what is here spoken of us efficiency or Inef ficiency of labor. That tells a very small part of tho story. Thcrj Is a very large purt of this possible saving that organ ised labor or tny tcn.H of organized la bor cannot possibly lie opposed to. Take this Illustration from the railroad world. Last year, k-3 than a year ago, the sup erintendent of jnotlve power of the Frle railroad, Mr. Hayes, pointed out at a meeting of his associates what might be done in the savint; of fuel. He showed the tests which he hud made upon his own railroad In the operation of a par ticular engine, and on a particular divi sion, by the same fireman and engineer in two -successive hours. In tho first hour that fireman and engineer were op erating that engine without any speclut caro as to tho consumption of fuel. In tho second hour a trained man got upon that engine with them and saw to it that they operated the engine, and stoked the fire as it should b" stoked. The result as, as Mr. ik.ycs pointed out, that hl ihough tho work actually done In the secot-1 hour v.u.t great-r than in the Lirtf hour, the coii.-a:i;,M,un of co:.l was only cne-l'iii'd of what H was in the first hour. All thut eu U'ji uinaiy saving re sulted lrom know led,'; and car '. Not the Old Yn. "Does Mr. Duncan or djes any man be ilive thnt it i;i bi tter to go on In the old v.iiy allowing the nan to waste that fuel ii s.iciid of teoiu;; to it tlr.it tho men who liro that engine and who run it should havo 'inie regard fr the l.iw.s of com bustion, niul ti.e laws o'. t c .no ny '.' Fuel ia this countiy coMs the lailrja-ls ??, 'C",' .io p r year. 1'iobably from one-fourth to one-half of that fu--! could be s.ced simply by securing from the i, --in ihe first place giving th nun k no v. ! d,-e, iilnl In tho li'vl plae,.. 1, allien'; thcin through some propc lne ntivi -to save Instead of to wastethut fuel. 1 n one of my arguments I lefured to Mr. Haves' tes timony 111 repaid to what he found to be posslhl". That was mi a: foment before ihe Interstate Commi ice coimubsaiii. A f i w days afterwanl 1 leeelved tt letter f cm u in. in w ho liai. fin in-i iy been a fill nam, und v. ho had fuim-rly lieea an eic-ini cr, who told till- stoiy. ll said: "When I went ouio an engine in fir was a weak boy, but ComimrlNon f Types, "Now I ask you whether that engineer and fireman is not a truer American, and does not hold up a higher Ideal for his fellow workmen than the man H ho comes and tells you, "Wo know It all. Wo will not listen to advance. What we do not know Is not worth knowing." I ask you, gentlemen In business and In manufacturing, whether tho thing you do not know Is not Just the thing that Is worth knowing? "1 sympathize aboslutely with tho ap prehension of Mr. Duncan and his as sociates. I believe that we have in this country a situation which presents much that we can be proud of, much that we must bo ashamed of. The richest country of the world, the country of greatest opportunity, has In It horrible conditions, In very many places, and In very many trades excessive hours, In sufficient wages, conditions dangerous to lifo and health, und conditions which would be infinitely worse It It wera not for labor's steady and progressiva fight through the labor unions. Hut while the unions have done and are doing a great work, they stand not only In their own light, but In our light, und lu the light of the democracy und the udvance of the world, If they undertake to block the Introduction of science In business. ".Mr. Duncan closes with tho sugges tion 'What more, what better could bo done than to undertake to make work regular. Instead of sporadic." I agree with him. Led to All Heat. "In one business, one business with which I became very familiar, where the principles of scientific munugement were Introduced, that wan the great aim to which they directed themselves, and It led to all the rest. It produced, from an irregululity comparable to that which Mr. Duncan spoke of of SOU working days in the year a regularity where the actual working duys ran tip to tlie rwo working days which Mr. Duncan desired. That was by virtue of Manning; by virtue of introducing Into every depart ment of that business careful thought, the best effort that could be had, to do vise what everybody must see Is desir able that there should be no waste. What waste is comparable to the waxtc that brings the pain and demoralization (,f men dismissed and thrown Into the street to "kill time" as best they may until again in the chaotic condition of that uusmess mere is a demand Tor a great number und they run overtime! "Hut this altitude which Mr. Duncan shows and In which organized labor ap proaches this plan, suylng 'You slia'n't do thut; you shall proceed as you have proceeded," is tho opposite to what we strive for. We should pick out every defect, whether It be Irregularity or waste, or whether It be overtime, or any ono of a thousand ether delects, and let the mini of man dwell on it, not in the taiisii of deapuir like .Mr. 1-ukuh. but In tho sumo view In wlihii everything has Dceii accomplished -with a sense of hope nnd certainly that the futuie has In It things belter than the present, that sume hopo which cieui.d und has glien u;i the. great railroads which cross tho continent to tlie 1'uilH. What we net 1 Is that. We ncd tho open mind as wi ll as courage. We reed patience. It will tahe a gleet deal of patience to deal with tlie InulvUlinl. l! will tako a gnat deal of time to bring about these changes und i he work will never tie done, us. tlie 1 .- ...a, I, ....... i l. i . . : ..'ii ui in , i-iiioa; iiiaciiincry is noi clone, and wo h ipu never .vlll be done. Jl.it fur us. tho Ihicg for n to do in. v.- Is t.( enter upon it. The thing for organized lab .r to do is not to sl nnl in the way of liie eniplioer, the le.llioad nuinagi r o.' tne iii.iiumi i' of the faiioiy, but to join uliii hh.i, sjjiii.;, "u will economize, we will n id you In e. ry conceH alio way; but wo will use that force, thut power which organized labor has, t., bt,.0 iu t that, we get a fair share us the com munity shull g. t u Jul:- share, and the employer shall j., t a la;r so.ne, , each of us striving, putting Iclu.e of the others, tne right i' v. , el .. : at sums to us ngiii, what s et.e, t u , and tiius We shall ultain . ., ii. . tj justice as It Is poa-ible. to t-ltain lu this Wonderful Showing of Big Omaha Land Operating Company Located In room '.'U of the Vce hiilldim; is a concern that is the largest rompunv operating lu land in ,he V l ited Mates, This firm Is the 1 it'-i n 1 1 hoial J.and and investment cempain. e," liieli John II. Shary. u profi t ssie ouei; man, Is pres ident ami general maniiKcr lniiimr th hist two veins the volume of business done by this company totaled the immense sum of Sl.T.Mi.oni. This bo-i-in ss does not Include that w hich w as done ilurlng tie month of December, It'll. M. D, Thomas, accountant, bus Jut finished work on the hooks of the Inter national Lund and Investment e'ontpnn . and gives the fuels of the business just i as they are. The International Land and Investment company Is one of the best bo sters and advertisers for Otualm that this city post-esses. A firm doing Ihe Immense bus. ness that It docs can place Itself in the way to make Omaha known In all pints of tlii1 countiy. and this company docs this. All Its thousands of pieces of liter ature and Us many thousands of business letters go out from bete. In addition, the company owns seviral private curs that lire ui-ed for taking parties to view tthe hind under control of the company lu the south, (in these cars Is the name of the International Land and Investment company, with Omaha dlspluvcd In huge lettei s. During l'.'lti, H'. curs of people were taken south to buy hind. lu It'll the number of cars was greater. The Omaha firm has the only private ears that are operated by any land company In this section. The operations extend all over the west. The company did a business of more than a third of a million In West Virginia lu I'.UO and lull. A large business Is done lu Illinois. Ohio, Indiana and several other states. The largest emigration train ever taken out of Kansas City wus sent over the Santa Fe line by tills Omaha firm. There were thirteen curs and all owned by the International. Trips aie taken with prospective land buyers twice a month from Kansas City. This firm bus colonised the famous Taft ranch In Texas and has three large tracts of land in that state Welder, Drls coll and Tuft ranches. These lands lie hear Corpus Christ!. This land Is some of the finest in tlie country and tile rapidity with which the International Laipl and lnv estt.ncnt company has sold It Is proof that tho people know It Is good. This firm lias practically sold all the land In these tracts to buyers from all parts of the country. During this year the International Land und Investment company expects to show a huge increase over the business of any previous year. Another Item that gives a true hint as to the volume of business done by tills firm Is Its postage bill for 1H11, which was more than $L',(KH), and Its express expense, which was more than f l.ooo. established agencies are maintained to the number of 1,100 and these aro located In various parts of (ho Vnlte'd States. The importance of this firm to Omaha Is something that people of this city should remember, and they should recog nize that It Is ono of the city's best advertisements. pave If ia I flayer 17 nan 8ur Ireat i Selected a mm o or wgan from mmmm Sale? OVERHEATED FURNACE CAUSES SMALL BLAZE A small blaze wus caused yesterday at 10 o'clock at tho home of L. H. Ham ilton, 1S17 Capitol avenue, when tho fur nace became overheuted. The loss Is small. Wc wish to impress upon your mind that every instru ment offered in this big Clearance Sale is guaranteed to be absolutely first class in every particular, and any one of them will give you lasting satisfaction. This Is the .Yiost Important Piano Sale That Omaha Has Ever Known. and GREATER VALUES are given than any sale heretofore offered in our 53 years of piano business. You can make no mistake in buying from a firm established in your own city and state since 1859. The large number of sales we made during the past week con vinces us that customers appreciate value and tho great bargains that will be offered during this coming week will attract hundreds of buyers from all over this section of the country. The following comprises the largest variety of pianos ever offered for sale by any piano company in this country. Those instruments will bo sold on terms to suit cfich customer's convenience. Flic. Mow 125 :so 75 rorm.r Pile. Hallct & Davis practice piano $275 $ Pease Bros, practice piano $250 $ Vose & Son practico piano . . . $300 $ Kimball upright piano $350 S Hospe upright piano $200 $ 85 Arion upright piano $250 SI 15 Davis & Son upright piano . .$225 SI 25 Estey upright piano $3C0 $130 Norwood upright piano .' $250 $135 Bradford upright piano $275 $1-15 Estey upright piano $450 $185 Vose & Son upright piano $375 $100 Hardman upright piano $400 $150 Prlc. How Former Pric. $375 $185 $325 $1G5 Steger & Sons upright piano Boothe Bros, upright piano Hallet & Davis upright piano $350 $175 Baldwin upright piano $400 $200 Knabe upright piano $450 $210 J. & C. Fischer upright pianos $475 S275 Chickerirg & Sons, almost new $600 $325 Knabe grand, almost new ...$500 $310 Steger & Sons Grand, almost now $800 $390 Stcck grand, almost new $750 $285 COO player pianos, now $275 11 A 550 player pianos, now $250 You cannot appreciate the value of the above pianos and player pianos without mak ing a personal investigation of same, and it will pay you to give this advertisement your immediate attention. Orders by mail will be given prompt attention. Every in strument fully guaranteed or money refunded. WE ARE EXCLU SIVE REPRESENT ATIVES FOR THE MATCHLESS "STEIN WAY" Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co. Manufactiircrs Wholesalers Retailers 1311-13 Farnam St. OMAHA, NED. Thd Thing To Do If you loso jcur iiockattiooiv, uiuureilu, watch or Rome other article of value, the thing to do la to follow the example of many other people and advertise without delay in the Lost and Found column of The Dee. Thnt U what most people do when they loso articles of value. Telephone us and tel) your loss to all Omaha in a alngle afternoon. Put It In The Bee Agricultural Meetings on This Week nesinnlm? Wfiliu-Hiiay, January 10, ami ciintlnnliiK until Siitunhiy, a trio of ur KanizatlniiH will be holding practlrally a Joint inri'tln in Oinalin. Tho organiza tions art) the Ni'hraska Itinol Ufe coin misHinn, tlm Ni-liranka 1'ariniTB' ironBri-Hs and ttio Kai niiTs' t'o- ipi-rative tiraln and Uve Stork association. 1 loaitituii rt er of the Co-Operative aHsociatlon will bo at tho Millard, and the other two organi zations will make headquarter a, the Home. A Joint program has been lrniued that Indies ton there will tin dlseuHSlons of more than ordinary Intel-put.1 At the opening Bennlon, to be held Wednesday evi nliiK at tlie Koine, Presi dent O. tl. Smith of the Co-operative as aiH'iatloii will pri-nlde. Mayor Dalilman and 1'reHldent Iiavid Cole of the Com mercial i lull will extend greetings and good wishuH on behalf of the municipality and the busineHs men. Hi-Hpunses will he made by T. W. l.angdoii, vicn presi dent of tlie Farmers' Co-( lucrative asso ciation, and I'reslilent I. C. I.awson of the Karniei'S' congress. When the formal eouiteMes hnve been exchanged, addresses will be made by M. H. Myers, editor of the American Co operative Journal, Chicago, und by I'rof. (ieoiKe K, Condra. president of the Ne braska Conservation congress. "The Mural Survey" will be the topic of l'rof. Condra'a address. Thursday morning will be given over to business sessions of the farmers and the gruln und live Ht .sk men. At 1 ;-10 Thurs day afternoon a meeting will be held, open to the puhlh', which will be ad dressed by J- W. Slmrthill of Hamilton, Nell.; Seeretaiy F. I. Manchester of the Omaha, (iiuin exchange, mid Willis K. Herd of Madison. Mr. ShorihlM's paper ulll be on 'Conservation In the Farmers' I .'levator Movement," and will be fol lowed t y n discussion, epeit to Ull coii leii.iil. cietuiy M'inehester will tell of want Omaha i.-i doing md will do for f.'iiiHi.i ii :i j'ra'n exchang-, and Mr. Keel's top. : v ill be "I'lices." Tin.!. -day evinlii;-, 1 1 -ri ry W. Vales of On. all. ui!! finnl i: food for a llni'ty iHiiiuli in a--!"i: I .'.' a paper le-voted to tho .Mill'll ll'I'T'ene,- p...i IIS It affects the funner. Pi of. A. I. Wilson of the M inneMita Agricultural ollege will nul lum the Herman i yi lein of co-operaTivc u ;.-cultural 1 1 1 ilits, and u half hour dis. ens-ion will follow. In-, (ieorge o. Vlr ti.o of the l'lilveisity of Nebraska pnlltl- ( al SC.eliC- lI' I'U! llliepl W ill I'iO'.e till- Hl'-l- sion with a paper on 'Siib.-tltuKs for the pi r-oii.'tl 1 i operty Tax." Friday morning will be spent on a tnu to the Soiitii Omaha Hock yui ls. and .' i 11 o'i loi Ii liruee .M-t'ulloch v. nl i- lKir an laldre.-s In tin- K.' hai.K' building on ".-'hipping and Mail.eiipg la.e Mo. I.." Friday rfiernoon a, SMiiposluni i f prntii !-ini: cim:. i-ler Is on ll program i.n lei ti c hi :i'l "Co-Oper, :t!on In Koiope." I.. !-'. I lei roe of Lincoln wbl lead if Willi a I;, hi I' li-nmaik an. I toe llano, ll lie. followed bv II. F. Ilceiiia., "( Illu.Jiu mij "i In Ko. I dale stoi ." Thoioin I". Slut- , g. s. el' Tn- Tweiith tii iVm ir..' Farm- I : w,:l i-pa! oil rinaii A gi cult are ; A. i g TJ Live T V rZTv x mJWMi X n ':,' Aims SfuivJ Life ComzniJSJcu. Sec'y M'lr: Air wr's' Cro2igTess i ..i.i. i.i sp. al. I' Adaio r. pre-eiilall es . . -limit meet ii Lis address to ii. ral nil.), i t f Fui in l.al tl I i Illinois lion hi adlllu I at la ' , aod w ill il, oiivl-l.-i atlon i f e of the Vote the 1 in-Cdcd jliiiperl-jcl wc-ild M. Templln on "IP und 'feiiuni, ' and L aiioiis of l.uielluid i narh C. l.awsoli on the I Ni .-bra i: Pes H ill ol i o-o. .-r.it a a I '.-an . v ot the Fid' ersiiy i.r lli-CllsS UlU Hlbjecl Of ' Agi iciiltuie lu the Itural Sihuol," and Chancellor Aety of tho university will deliver nil address on "The Fnlversity and tic- s-iatc." Saturday's si s-ions arc to I : given wholly to business, receiving repoils of office'-! and commit tees and laving plans for ill.- i-ar ahead. The lucctlntjs will draw to Omaha a great many of the leading men and best thinker concerned with all the phases of agriculture, the improvement of rural life, co-operative movements. niurkt-tinK and shipping- if grain and stock, and the session prouranis are Indicative ot much Instruction aad mental profit.