THE EEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. JULY 1, 1920. Woman Fight Vigorously for Nomination of McAdoo DOWNFALL OF SENATOR REED DUE TO WOMAN William Morten Leads ensive inai nesuus in fusing Seat to Missouri Senator. By WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD. (Written Exprmnly for the International w Smrlce). San Francisco. June 30 A wo man "got" Jim Reed. When Mrs. William Woodrow Martin of Cape Girardeau, a little town in Missouri, got onto a street car in front of the conventibn hall at 2 o'clock yesterday morning and vent to a little room in an incon spicuous hotel to retire fcr the right; she was due to awaken fa tncus. .- Between the hours of 11 and 2 she had "polished off" Senator James A. Reed of Missouri, had read him out of the Missouri delegation, out of the convention and practically out , of the democratic party. Eight hours later the great convention it self was hissing the very name of the man she had overthrown. Monday night at midnight the credentials committee, made up of master democrats, one from each state, got around to hearing the Reed case in the committee room at the auditorium. The committeemen were sleepy end tired; what's more they are all political acquaintances of the men who were speaking and they were taking things pretty much for granted when Edward Galtra, na tional committeeman from Mis souri, asked the committee if they would hear Mrs. Martin, and an al ternate delegate. Not Experienced Politician. No one had heard of Mrs. Martin in politics bef6ie outside of Missouri. Mrs. Martin took the "witness chair" and within five minutes she had the sleepy and ponderous committeemen laughing at her sound wit and home ly common sense. She told the whole story of how Missourians had elected Reed to the senate at a rime when Reed was supporting Wilson with might and main. "But as soon as he was all safely elected." she said, "he turned on us all and began to oppose everything that Wilson did. He was against food measures in the war; he opposed conscription; he blocked us in every way. We mothers of Missouri were giving our sons to the country and Reed was in our path." She spoke with an easy smile; committee mem bers said afterward that they felt like boys who were being tolerantly scoiaea Dy a wise and common- se mother. Calls Him Unruly Boy. speaking of Kansas City and ssea clique she introduced a ot domestic life that won her 'Kansas City couldn't get 4nu.-u m me siaie conven- aid. SO it tried to crtt it"l Kansas City was given name a delegate beside but it didn't do so. It was a bad bov." she said, drollv. "whose mother gives him a chance to have any number of good things to eat, but who keeps from him one certain thing that will make him sick and perhaps make the whole family unhappy. The boy says if he can't have the one thing, he will starve; he won't take the other things that are offered him. But he doesn't starve. At night, after everyone is in bed, he goes to the cupboard and tres to steal what was denied him. There's nothing for that boy," Mrs. Martin added, with i quiet smile, "but a good spank ing." : Mrs. Martin's picture of home life was so true and so completely de scribed the Reed case that it over rode all the eloquent arguments of the attorneys and the great political leaders on the other side and. still smiling, the committee voted 39 to 9 against seating Senator Reed. Will Address Meeting. Today Mrs. Martin is to talk of the convention. One of the honors that Came to her, before the day was old. was to be officially invited by a representative of . the governor of Georgia td speak to the legislature of that state on woman suffrage. '-Mrs. Martin is a simply dressed lady of middle age. She speaks with t Missouri drawl and gives one an impression of extreme common sense, with no frills. "My husband is a professor in the Missouri State Teachers' col- 1es " tnM m. "H' snlnHirl He believes just as I do about things and he helps me to do things. Reed got so bad in our state that he didn't represent the folks any longer and when I was asked to tell the creden tials committee about him I agreed to do so." Was Not Embarrassed. "Didn't the big moguls embarrass you?" I asked her. She smiled benignantly. I caught her fleeting thought "Did they really seem like boys to you?" I asked. "Well, I felt sort of maternal withthem." she answered. Then she gave me a little touch of the homtly common sense " with which she won over the credentials committee in the wee hours Tuesday morning. . "Y6u know," she said, "when men and women get together in politics it ought to be just like Paw and Maw talking over family affairs." Woman's Ashes Are Scattered From Seaplane New York, June 30. In compli ance with her request, written and sealed 14 years ago, the ashes of Mrs. Sarah D. Brown, who died last w eek, were scattered over the Statue of-Liberty from a seaplane soaring above it. Nine white and two red roses, sym bolic of the age of 92 years, at which Mrs. Brown died, were dropped with the ashes. " Mrs. Brown was noted during her lifetime aa temperance worker and writer of jjbildrtn's stories, "Dry" Nebraskans at Frisco Convention Lef to right: Elmer E. Thomas, Wilson's Ideas Followed By MA.RLEN E. PEW, International S'ewn Service Staff Correspondent. San Francisco, June 30. Herewith is presented an authoritative fore cast of essential planks in the tenta tive draft of the democratic platform which probably will be finally adopted within the next 24 hours. Foreign Relations. As previously stated in these dis patches, the famous Virginia plat form which unqualifiedly endorses President Wilson's league of na tions, is the model of the foreign relations plank, the changes being for the purpose of making the doc ument more simple and comprehen sive, the altered phraseology in no way modifying the meaning of the original paper. Article X stands in tact. The plank purports to declare that nothing in the covenant may be construed to take from the United States the control of her own troops, (hat no internal questions, of inter est to the United States alone, shall be surrendered to the league of na tions; that the MonrOe doctrine shall not in any way be affected by the covenant. Unless some change is made after the subcommittee has submitted the platform to the com mittee on resolutions and platform, the plank will stand exactly as President Wilson, as represented here by Senator Carter Glass, would have it. There was much time spent hy the subcommittee in a discussion of shades of meaning of words and phrases, but there was no serious effort to disturb the essential mean ing. Text of Wilson's Plank. As submitted to the subcommittee the Wilsonian draft of the league plank is as follows: "League of nations. "The democratic party favors a league of nations as the surest, if not the only, practicable means of main taining the permanent peace of the world and terminating the insuffer able burden of great military and naval establishments. "It was for.lhis that America broke away from traditional isolation and f.pent her blood and treasure to crush a colossal scheme of conquest. "It was upon this basis that the president of the United States, in prearrangement with our allies, con sented to a cessation of hostilities against the imperial German govern ment and upon this 'basis "that the armistice was granted and a treaty of peace was negotiated. "The honor and integrity of the United States are involved in ratifi cation oi this agreement, which brought war to an end. Senator Walsh of Montana, thi only opposition senator on the sub committee, objected at the outset to some of the phraseology in the plank, which is an amplification of the Virginia convention expression on the subject. For that reason the subcommittee had not, at a late hour, given final approval to the plank, but administration senators said there would be no change in its substance. Score Knox Resolution. "The Knox substitute for the Ver sailles treaty was passed by republi can senate and house and this con vention can contrive no more fitting characterizing of its infamy than that made for the Forum magazine of December, 1918, by Henry Cabot Lodge when he said: 'If we send our armies and young men abroad to be killed and wounded in northern France and Flanders with no result but this, our entrance into war with such an intention was a crime which nothing can justify. The intent of congress and the intent of the presi dent was that there cOuld be no peace until we could create a situa tion where no such war as this could occur. We can expect no peace ex cept in company with our allies. It would brand us with everlasting dis honor and bring ruin to us also if we undertook to make a separate peace.' "Thus to that which the republican senator leader considered the 'black est crime' his party in congress would give its sanctity of law, that which 18 months ago was of 'ever lasting dishonor,' the republican congress accepted as the esesnce of faith. And because a democratic president blocks the way of this im moral thing he is hated and reviled for his obduracy. "We enddrse the president's view of our international obligations and commend democratic senators for voting against reservations designed to cut to pieces the vital provisions of the Versailles treaty and against resolutions for separate peace which would disgrace the nation. We ad vocate the prompt ratification of the treaty without reservations, which would impair its essential integrity. "Only by doing this may we re trieve the reputation of this nation among the powers of the earth and Dr. Jennie Callfas, William J. Bry Closely in Platform recover the moral leadership which Wilson won and which, with Amer ica's seeming indifference, paltering republican politicians at Washington sacrificed. "Only by doing this may we hope to aid effectually in the restoration of order throughout the world and take the 'place that we should as sume in the front rank in spiritual, commercial and industrial advance ment." Labor. The labor planks are construed by members of the committee as highly progressive. A strong argument was made to recognize the right of labor to be represented in collective bargaining by repre sentatives of their own choosing. The last four words, it will be re membered, were the rock on which the president's industrial relations committee foundered last October at Washington. The demands of labor for restricted immigration were not favored but rather the open door was to be proclaimed to work men of the world. The plank sug gests that immigrants must be en couraged to take on American standards of living and customs and that segregation of foreigners should be deprecated. Child labor is in veighed against. The program of the woman's party having to do with such as old age pensions, non employment insurance, maternity benefits, improvements of conditions among workers has been met favor ably, it is said. The use of the in junction in labor disputes was the subject of long discussion, but con demnation of it may be omitted. Ireland. An effort has been made to put into the platform an Irish plank which will declare the futility of passing resolutions in favor of the Irish republic or even recognizing the republic, but the importance of turning the question over to the league of nations is favored. It is not clear at this time what form this plank will take. Mexico. The sentiment of the committee is for a plank which will withhold recognition from any government of Mexico that does not comply with such responsibilities as main tenance of effective border patrol, honest government, enactment of laws fit to protect foreign invest ments and legitimate enterprises, fair taxation of foreigners and pay ment of international obligations. Soldier Bonuses. It is doubtful if the platform will favor the flat payment of soldiers' bonuses, but will provide for proper assistance for maimed, crippled or sick soldiers as a government duty through an efficient board. The tentative draft denies that able bodied men who fought for Amer ica expect financial rewards, but in sists that a scheme for putting vet erans in possession of land for ag ricultural pursuits, when desired, should be effected without delay. The entire platform, it is said, will make about 5100 or 6,000 words, if the tentative subcommittee draft is accepted and indeed reaches the committee on resolutions and plat form in about the same form that it was in this morning. Senator Carter Glass is the chief voice in the document. Pay More for Dead Thief Than Stolen Auto Ottawa, Kan., June 30. Automo bile thieves here are worth more dead than alive. In telegrams sent out to police headquarters of sur rounding cities a reward of $500 was offered for the body of the thief who stole a motor car from an Ottawa automobile company. An additional $100 was offered for the recovery of the car. George Creel Will Put the Finishing Touch On Platform San Francisco. June 30. George Creel, who was chairman of Presi dent Wilson's committee on pub lic information during the war, joined" the committee of nine which is drafting the democratic platform, and it was understood he would work with the subcom mittee in drafting the document. Mr. Creel came to San Francisco with Secretary Daniels. His part in the drafting of the platform, it is said, would be to look after its literary qualities in somewhat the same manner that Col. George Harvey polished up the republican platform at the Chicago conven tion. " an, Mrs. P. T. McGeere, Charles Bryan. Iowa Delegate Who Is Treasurer of the National Committee 'W. MARSH Wilbur W. Marsh, delegate to the democratic national convention at San Francisco from Iowa, is also treasurer of the democratic national committe. This photograph was made at San Francisco. We Request Our Patrons to Shop in the Forenoon I - I DENIAL OF SEAT WILL NOT ALTER REED'S ATTITUDE Missouri Senator Still Opposed To League Despite Action Of Committee. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. San Francisco, June 30. Senator James A. Reed of Missouri, who was denied a seat in the democratic national convention, Tuesday issued the following statement: "The great democratic Kansas City district of Missouri was dis franchised solely because it named me for one of its representatives. "I was objectionable only because on the floor of the senate, acting under my oath of office, I refused to consent to the abandonment of the policies of Washington, Jeffer son and Monroe and to enter into a contract to send young men of America to fight and die in defense of the territories of foreign govern ments. In a word, I was excluded because I refused to support the league of nations. "My title to a seat in the conven tion was so clear as to indubitably demonstrate the truth of the iorego ing. The action taken will in no re spect affect my lifelong democracy, neither will it change my course in the senate. "I am still a democrat. I am still opposed to the league of nations. I will never surrender the destiny of the republic into the hands of the representatives of foreign powers. I am an American nationalist, not an internationalist." . "One of the Most Wonderful Sales of Its Kind That is the expression heard from every woman who has attended the shoe sales in this store during the last two weeks. Those who are readers of this newspaper and who read this advertisement may have purchased shoes in this store at some time, some may have attended our recent sales, but at no time have the women of Omaha been given such an opportunity to buy Quality Shoes at the prices which we will now quote. On July 1 Our Clearance Sale Begins A General Clean-Up of All Low Shoes in the House Reductions from 20 to 50 On Women's Low Shoes This sale also includes our entire stock of ladies' white oxfords and pumps in cloth and leather. 3C 1I6IH AND FAR NAM ST. OmaTia Bryan in Fine Fighting Trim, Defends His Policies Nebraskan Tells Congressman Bell He Attends Con ventjert1, as Democrat to "Defend Homes and Children" Not in Pay of Anti-Saloon League. By ilYE WITNESS. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bm Leaied Wire. San Francisco, Jun . 30. "I would like to ask whom you came here to represent," said former Con gressman Theodore A. Bell of San Francisco, turning to William J. Bryan at Tuesday's session f the committee of rsolutions of he dem ocratic convention. With a resounding bark that made Mr. Bell vibrate, Mr. Bryan replied: "I came here as a democrat. I came as a defender of the homes of this land and the children of this land whom your traffic would slay. I want you to be just as open as we are. If you are here for pay, you ought to tell them you are here as an attorney." Mr. Bryan settled himself to gehter physically in the manner of a lion that has made the spring and is satisfied with the distance covered. He also allowed silence, copious and tense, to settle upon the big committee room, which was crowded to the window ledges. Mr. Bell broke it by not unman fully acknowledging that he had come to represent the California Grape Growers' association, of which his father was a member, and he did not propose to have Mr. Bryan and his associates put his father in the criminal classes. No Salary from Drys. Bourke Cockran, who had been resting his chin upon his cane, looked up relishingly, his old eyes brightening with an Irishman's joy in a good fight. Mr. Bell continued: "I would like also to ask, do you get a salary from the Anti-Saloon league?" Not moving a muscle save those required for the delivery of the words, Mr. Bryan replied: "None whatever, not any." "Not a nickel?" interjected Mr Bell in a tone meant to admonish. "For a period of four months," continued Mr. Bryan, so rapidly that Mr. Bell's interruption was lost save to the nearby listeners, "I-receiveci compensation for specific speeches. But for nine years I fought at my own cost the damnable traffic you represent." Senator Carter Glass, wishful that all, including himself, should be handled with care, rapped for order, and in soft and southernly drawl from the side oi liL jicuth depre cated intemperate speech. Mr. Bell, who went to the Fifty eighth congress from the Second California district, was the demo cratic nominee for governor of Cali fornia in 1906 and 1910, and was temporary chairfnan of the demo cratic national convention at Denver in 1908, subsided into his chair, rather pink about the ears, and Mr. Bryan resumed whispered but em phatic conference with his retinue See Our Windows t of bishops, statisticians and petition bearers. All the morning Mr. Bryan was in fine fighting form, taking capa cious bites out of everybody from the faltering Congressman Adolph Sabath of Chicago to Senator Glass, chairman of the resolutions commit tee. "Do you," asked the congressman, who is not expeditious in parlia mentary rough and tumble, "Do you er do you want to enforce er this impossible of enforcement Volstead law?" Mr. Bryan, dispensing with "er," shot back: "We will favor enforce ment instead of demoralization." Congressman Sabath resumed a sitting posture. Another speaker got his head up long enough to ask whether Mr. Bryan proposed to endorse the Vol stead act in the democratic plat form. Accurately measuring the dis tance, Mr. Bryan shied at the head this sentence: "We propose to endorse this law and not to run from it.' Represents Church Members. The head disappeared. He em ployed short sentences heavily bal lasted. While he was announcing one of his dignitaries as represent ing such and such interests, the ques tion reached his ears: "Who do you represent?" "I shall not speak now," he said. "I will speak later when the time is not so short, but I will sav now that I represent 20,000,000 church members in the United States." There was no more heckling along those lines. $ The swift exchange of warm words between Mr. Bryan and Sen ator Glass grew out of the sena tor's not very well concealed dis position to take the proceedings over which he presided as merely an opportunity for zealots to blow off steam. U. S. Red Cross to Fight Plague in Vera Cruz Mexico City, June 30. Conditions in Vera Cruz have become such that Provisional President Adolfo De La Huerta has decided to accept the offer of the services of an American Red Cross unit to aid in fighting the epidemic of bubonic plague in that city. President Huerta has made the ac ceptance subject to the condition that the members of the American unit place themselves under the orders of the Mexican sanitary au thorities, however. THOMPSON-BELDEN & COMPANY These Silk Reductions are for Thursday Printed Georgettes That cost no more than the cotton voiles, -yet these are all silk, in qualities that sold up to $5 a yard. For summer wear printed Georgettes are delightfully cool and attractive. $2.29 a Yard Heavy Silk Shirtings A splendid assortment of patterns in fine silk crepe de chines and broadcloth silks (36-inch). Considering their many uses, a purchase at these low prices is worth while. $4.50 Quality, $2.98 a Yard $5.50 Quality, $349 a Yard Handkerchiefs for Vacationists Plain hem, everyday styles, 20c, 25c. Pure linen for 35c. Embroideries of excep tional quality for 15c, 20c, 25c. Colored edges, 12Voc, 20c and 35c. Embroidered corner, pure linen, 35c to 75c. Madeira embroideries, 60c to $2.75 each. WOMEN AMUSED BY CONDUCT OF MEN DELEGATES Are Given First Intimate rk sight Into "Conventional Ways of Other Sex at Frisco Meeting. By MRS. GEORGE BASS, f'hnirmaa of th Woman Bui-mo Democratic Committee. Written Eiprrnolr for International Newt Servlre. San Francisco, June 30. A good many women are having their first insight into the may 1 say the con ventional ways of men for the time they are dazed, amazed, amused, confused and interested all the time. Some of the women here were at the recent Biennial, so they have an xeccllent chance to compare this convention fwith that one this with its brief indefinite day-to-day spon tancous program so different frotr the league, carefully worked out, sometimes exhaustive and always exhausting mental bill of fare that gives every good club woman brain fag biennially. However, there are certain points of agreement. Most of the delegates to both club and political conventions are in dead earnest, burning in its zeal for some great cause and with no little iute of their own to grind, and if weare all acquainted with the occasional woman delegate whose main idea i as possible, she has her counterpart in me man who thinks his one, emn, urgent uutv is to make as much noise as possible on every possible occasion. Men are used to going to conven tions and letting the committees do the work, but in women's conven tions we all of us have a great deal to do right along, and 1 am willing to predict that within the next dozea years the meetings of the platfor and resolutions committee, and they should be separate committees, will make up a far more important and integral part of the convention than they now do. All these women are together and interesfed and they want to know what is going on and hear the discussions that precede the recommendations of the com mittees. The sinister jest that platforms ' are meant to get in on, rather than' to stand upon, has gone into the dis card forever, and if women had done only this in the year of '.heir great advent into politics they would have more than justified their presence. New Timekeeping System. London, June 30. The British ad morality has published a new sys tem of timekeeping at sea. This has been adopted by the navies of the United States, Great Britain, France, Italy and Spain. Summer Gloves are of Silk Kayser's and Fowne's are recommended as the best of silk gloves. Two-clasp styles in white, black and colors, $1 to $2.75 a pair. Twelve-button, whit e, $2.75 a pair. Sixteen-button, whit e, $2.25 and $3. Silk gauntlets in beaver and gray are $2.75 and $3. Petticoats for Summer White sateen with flounce, regular and ex tra sizes, $3.50 and $4. White cambric and nain sook with lace flounce, $2.50, $3.50, $4.25. White with embroidery trimmings are $2, $2.50, $3.25 and $4.25. Thursday Special One lot of white sateen skirts (double panel), $2.75 quality for $1.98. ea i I ment 1 rpart Vf , sol-, e as -1