Resuming Traffic in Omaha Scenes on the Streets When Teams Were Started as Photographed by a Staff Artist i 'J FREIGHT PACKAGE HANDLERS LEAVE OFF WORK, ..... "II w - Jar J .,"- - -. . - v " ' ' - - .... . . . ........... . . J . . . . ; .- . -. . . . . j ' ! , . .... C - ;;. u:-.. -si n i v , ' ''. . . ONR rOINT IN THE WHOLESALE DISTRICT. OMAHA. POLICE WERE VIGILANT. BUT HAD LITTLE TO DC 4".- I "ft ' J L r; ONE OF THE BOSSES DRIVES HIS OWN TEAM. WATCHING A NONUNION DRIVER AT HIS WORK. , t . " ? ... . . n r I -'fcT ... ELEVENTH STREET VIADUCr AS A "GRAND STAND.' WATCHING THE "BOSSES" WORK. Secret of Correct Walking D ON'T tip tho houlUer from itldo to (ttile when walklnR. It n cwfllnply liiiRrttceful hublt. , Don't throw the houldora Ir back of th lino of the hlp nor inil (h irmi rlcldlv at the idva. Don't bnd forward when walking but hold tha body erect, with tha cheat well arched and the Mip thrown back. Don't lake a heay atrlde, but one that la light, free and firm, balancing the upper part of the body alternately upon each h!p. but without away Inn it perceptibly. Don't take the Impetua forward from the heel, but horn the ball of the foot, with a alight aprlng. Don't hold the leg at Iff. although it imuit h held etralght In thla way one walka with the leaat phyalcal expenae and with the greateat eaao, comfort, hea.lthfulneaa and beauty. Don't pitch the head forward. Excea alve relaxation of the neck, with undue train of the body, la awkward, destroying harmony, dignity and grace. . .. Don't fall to remember thle rule, that in walking you ahould carry youraelf ao that a 'plumb line, dropped from your noae, would fall Juat an Inch in front of your great toe. Don't bend the Knees in walking. No one wanta to appear "weak-kneed." If you do, you cannot be a poem when you walk. Don't wear ahoea run down at the heela, and don't wear high-heeled and narrow toed ahoea. They are the Inveterate em-mlea of grace. Don t acquire tho athletic, awlnglng gait, although It la tho fad of the hour. Don't drop forward from the walat, another faahlonable atyle of walking, and an exceedingly utfy one. Don't walk too far at first, when taking up outdoor exerclae for the aako of your complexion. Stop Just ahort of being tlrej. Don't run uptalra. Go alowly and delib erately. Remember that you are lifting the weight of the body many times, and It la no light exercise. - - Don't trudge ' as ' though trying to push holes in the slops. Take each step with a springing motion. Don't waddle from side to sldo when mounting stairs. Don't tread on the ball of the foot only. Put the whole foot, heel and all, lightly but squarely on the step. Don't bend double when ascending a flight of stairs. Give the lungs full play, for you need plenty of breath. Don't think that time wasted which you spend In acquiring a graceful gait, for It exercises a subtle and mighty charm. Reflections of a Bachelor Nagging has driven more men to crime than all the vices In the world. The trouble with present-day humanity Is that It la being coddled Into wreck and ruin. A girl can blush so easily that she will do it even when she is reading in a novel where the heroine beglna her honeymoon. . The more a man explains a thing to a woman, the surer she is she could under stand it better without the reasons being made clear. It is very thoughtless of a girl who de serves to be kissed to wear one of those big hats that act to a man the way a battle ship's torpedo net acts. New York Press. Judging by the Job A man was taken on as a laborer In one of the large shipbuilding yards on the Clyde. The first Job he had to do was to carry some rather heavy planks. lie had been about an hour carrying them, when he went up to the foreman and said: "Did ah tell you ma name whin ah started r "Aye," said the foreman. "Ton said It was Tamson." "Oh, that's a right," replied the man, looking over at the pile ot planks he bad yet to carry. "Ah wis wunnerln' If yon thocht ah said t was Samson." neVBttn.