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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 24, 1962)
'TVi.'x 4; cJ' - .f'9 w VI f ' ;y! !,- J REPUBLICANS MAKE BID In December of 1862 the Radical Senate Republicans made a bid to take over conduct of the Union side of the Civil War. Their target was Secretary of State William H. Seward, left. Their ammunition was correspondence indicating that the Secretary, not President Lincoln, (center) was running the admin- ; SsCIV IL Senate Radicals Bow By MERTON T. AKERS UPI Correspondent The Radical Senate Repub licans made a bid at mid-December 1362 to take over con duct of the Union side of the Civil War and ran head on in to A. Lincoln, politician and master manipulator of men. On Dec. 16, three days after the disastrous battle of Fred ericksburg, the R a i a c a 1 s made their move. Their tar get Was Secretary of State William H. Seward. Their ammunition was a volume of diplomatic correspondence in which Seward had written to U.S. Minister Charles Francis Adams in London some indis creet passage indicating that the secretary of state not Lincoln was running the administration , and fur thermore running it against KadicalRepublican principles. Late on that Tuesday after noon of Dec. 16 the 32 Repub lican Senators met in secret caucus at the Capitol. First they proposed to offer a reso lution in the Senate expres sing "a want of confidence" ;:i Seward, meaning that they wanted him fired. Indignation Session Several conservative senat ors objected to so dramatic a resolution and- the meeting soon . turned into an indigna tion session during which all the old and new charges against Seward were given an other airing. Seward was against the war, the arguments ran, want ed a peace without victory, cared nothing about freeing the slaves and would welcome the seceding states back into the Union without punish ment. Some of the diplomatic correspondence seemed to bear out the charges. Sen. William Pitt Frcssen den of Maine said he had been told that there was a back stairs influence which often controlled the apparent con clusions of the government it self. The "backstairs influ ence," of course, was Seward the cabinet member who had informed Fessenden and tile other was Secretary of Tres ury Salmon P. Chase. Every man at the caucus knew Chase was a dedicated anti slavery man and also had his eye on the prisidency. The senators slept over the problem and the next day adopted a resolution reading: "Resolved, that in the judg ment of the Republican mem bers of the Senate, the public confidence in the present art ministration would be in creased by a change in and partial reconstruction of the cabinet." They decided to present it to Lincoln rather than to the full Senate. Acted Immediately Before the linal vote was taken. Sen. Preston King of Xew York, a close friend of Seward, left the caucus and hastened downtown to sec the secretary of state. The former governor nf New York was silting before a wood fire smoking an after dinner cigar when King ar rived. The senator quickly told him what (lie caucus had done. Sou ai d acted immediately. 'They may do as they please about me. but they shall not put the President in a false position on my ac count." Seward said. He wrote a few words on a silrrt of paper. "Sir, I hereby resign the of fice of secretary of state, and big that my resignation may be accepted immediately." He callrd his son. Fred- nek. assistant secretary, told him to wrile his resignation, t-m. and to deliver both to the Pnsi.ii nt. King went along "What does tins mean.'" Lincoln asked and King re jvatrd the story of tile caucus. Still ptir.zlrd. Lincoln walked ?ii;rn.-s to Seward's house. The seVictary was firm. lis resig i. on stood, a istration. A good bit of this ammunition came from the Treasury Secretary, Salmon P. Chase, right. Lincoln, however, was to out-maneuver the radicals. The party in fighting was to end with Lincoln holding the resignations of both men, neither of which he was to accept. (UPI) On Capitol hill the caucus sing senators took a vote. The 31 present favored the resolu tion. King was recorded as not voting! Sen. Jacob Collamer of Ver mont was named chairman of the committee to wait on the President, probably because he was a moderate. All the other committee members were Radicals. Lincoln agreed to see the delegation at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 18. That gave him about 24 hours to determine his strategy not any too long a time considering his whole administration was shaken by this cabinet fight. If he al lowed Seward to resign, the Radicals could claim domin ance over the administration. If he retained Seward the Radical senators solid ex cept for King's abstention could block any administra tion measure in the Senate. Lincoln knew the country would stand for neither. The next morning - Dec. 19 Lincoln called a special cabinet meeting. He outlined what the Radical senators had said and proposed that the cabinet meet with him and the committee that night. The venerable White House witnessed that night from 7:30 until after midnight the mas ter politician at work. Read Resolution The committee of senators and the cabinet assembled in the same anteroom but the senators went in to see the President first. He asked their permission to bring in the cabinet. , To the combined group Lin coln first read the committee resolution, outlined the pre vious conference and then be gan defending his methods of dealing with the cabinet. He especially defended Seward. Most important questions were discussed in cabinet meetings, Lincoln said, but in emer gencies he acted without cab inet sanction. But to the de cision, once made, the cabinet acquisced. With that he turned to the cabinet members and asked: "Did they not?" All eyes turned to Chase. Everyone in the room knew the charges against Seward originated with Chase. Ang rily the secretary of treasury sai dhc had not come to the meeting to "be arraigned." Both Welles and Fessenden recorded Chase's answer. In general their accounts j agree that Chase said impor , tant questions had been con j sidered by the cabinet, but not thoroughly enough and, once a policy had been laid down, acquiescence had been the rule. THANK YOU Thank you for your patronage dur ing the year and we hope your Christmas is a merry one, complete with all good things and that your New Year will be filled with peace and prosperity. CLOSED THE DAY FOLLOWING CHRISTMAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26 Walt Young's MEDFORD STATIONERY 210 East Main 773-3668 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. wm To Lincoln The meeting broke up on that note with the Radicals angry at Chase for not stand ing up for his previous state ments to the senators against Seward. Early the next morning Welles, after a sleepless night, saw the President and urged him to stand fast against ac cepting Seward's resignation. Lincoln agreed and said if he surrendered now the govern ment might cave in. He told Welles to see Seward and re peat the words to him. Assents to Views Welles did and returned to the White House. There he found Chase and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton with Lincoln. "Have you seen the man?" Lincoln asked Welles. "I have and he assents to our views," Welles replied. Lincoln turned to Chase and said he had asked him to the White House because he was deeply troubled. Chase replied that he was troubled, too, and that he had prepared his resignation. "Where is it?" Lincoln de manded quickly. As Chase took the paper from his pocket, Lincoln said "Let me have it," and reached for it. He opened the letter, read it and said: "This cuts the Gordian knot. I see my way clear." Lincoln dismissed all three with, "the trouble is ended." Now if Seward went, so would Chase. Lincoln summed up -his vic tory with a frontier phrase: "Now I can ride. I have got a pumpkin in each end of my bag." Lincoln wrote on Dec. 22 to both the secretaries that the country needed their services and that he refused to accept their resignations. Missing Man's Car Located in River Sweet Home - IUPII - A car owned by a man last seen Dec. 14 was found in the South Sanliam river near here Sunday, the Linn county sher riff's office reported. Herbert Knippcl, 40, Leban on, was last seen at the Ore gon Plywood company. He was reported missing Satur day night by his wife. The partially submerged car was found in the river at the fool of Clark Mill rd. near the Sweet Home Sand and Gravel pit. A search of the river was planned, deputies said. MEDFORD. OREGON Value of U.S. Farm Land At S140.1 Washington - IUPII - The Ag riculture Department says that as of July 1 the value of all farm land in the Unit ed States was an estimated $140.1 billion. This is $6.7 billion, or 5 per cent, higher than the $133.4 billion estimated for a year earlier, and $2.1 billion or 2 per cent, higher than the pre vious record value of $138 billion on March 1, 1962. The department's Economic Research Service said the market value of farm real estate has maintained an al most uninterrupted rise that began in the early 1947s. The area of greatest price strength was the southern por tion of the United States. Of the 19 states where market prices of farm land increased 6 per cent or more during the yea; ended July 1, 17 were continguous states extending from California through Tex as and Florida to Maryland. The only other two states in this group were South Dakota and Wisconsin. Maine Shows Drop Maine was the only state to show a drop in farm land val be attributed to the low prices July 1, and this was a rela tively minor 1 per cent. ERS said some of this oftness c . be attributed to the loy prices potato growers received for much of the 1961 crop and the prospect of continued low prices for the 1962 crop. Farm real estate values In creased 2 per cent or more in 22 states from March 1 to July 1. Values remained virtu ally unchanged in 21 states and declined 2 per cent or more in the remaining 5. Al though the average value of farm land in the United States rose sharply in these four months, the increase was far from uniform and general v Mm W Figured Billion ly was confined to the south, much of the plains stales, and the Far West. First Time Since 1959 Average land values In creased in all farm production regions during this year end ed July 1, for the first time since 1959. The rises were fairly uniform through most of the country, reflecting a relatively good crop growing season in combination with comparatively good prices for most crops. In the northeast, where land values increased the least, a widespread but spotty drought was in the mak ing and the farm price of fluid milk had begun to de teriorate. The value of all farm real estate sold during the year ended March 1 was nearly $2.5 billion. With an estimated 125,000 transactions, the aver age price per transfer was $20,000. Most of these trans fers were between farmers. The actual cash outlay was substantially less than $2.5 billion, because more than two-thirds of the transactions involved credit. ARTIFICIAL ; L I G H -T I i That Is for Photographic Purposes Only '& St G-E AND SYLVANIA FLASH BUIBS - PROJECTION BULBS - PHOTO FLOOD BULBS - DARK ROOM V BULBS - ELECTRONIC FLASH UNITS. 3 Open Christmas Day 10 AM to 9 PM J I HUDSON'S !001 613 East Main St. n Eugene Teacher Killed in Crash By United Press International The Christmas holiday week end traffic death count in Oregon stood at one Mon day. The victim was Alice Thompson, a 26-year-old Eu gene school teacher who was killed Friday night. She died in a one-car accident on U. S. Highway 20, 14 miles west of Burns. Her car went out of control and overturned after hitting ice on the highway. Michael R. Williams, a 22-year-old sailor from Gladstone stationed aboard the USS Bu chanan, was killed in a one car crash near Gorman, Calif., Sunday. The car in which he was riding swerved off a highway and overturned. DISCLOSES CASUALTIES Port Said, U.A.R. - llll'H President Gamal Abdel Nas ser said Sunday night that 136 U.A.R. officers and men have been killed fighting on the republican side in Yemen. "The shoes of each one of them are more precious than the crown of King Saud or the crown of King Hussein," he told a "victory day" rally. Saud, of Saudi Arabia, and Hussein, or Jordan, support the deposed Yemen monarch, Imam El Badr. Phone 773-4288 "iiHtiljlUHujiH it'M , Wooden Building for Sale by Government The Oakland. Calif.. De fense Surplus sales office will offer for sale four small wooden buildings at the Sa moa Coast Guard station. , The buildings vary in sie from 12' - feet by 16' a feet to 29 'a feet by 15' a feet. For further information contact the Defense Surplus Sales office, Defense Logis tics Services center, building 502, Naval Supply Center, Oakland. Bids will be opened in Oakland Jan. 8. GREETINGS TO SCOUTS Washington - Wl'li - Presi dent Kennedy sent Christmas greetings Sunday to the Boy Scouts of America and-to its leaders "who are helping to develop them into responsi ble young men." Kennedy is honorary president of the Scouts. He is the first Ameri can president to have been a Boy Scout, serving as a member of Troop 2, Bronx ville, N.Y., for two years. MOW! , siiiwii Accouniina I Secretarial n DECEMBER 31-Day School Beginning: JANUARY 3-Night School Robertson School of Business 40 No. Riverside, Medford, Oregon, Phone 773-4264 May your heart be filled with the joy of Christ mas . . . tree-trimming with the whole family . . opening gifts Christ mas, morning ... a thankful prayer before the family dinner . . . may all these dreams come true when we say, "Merry Christmas." mi MONDAY. DECEMBER 24, 1962 ONE CONCESSION Douglas. Isle of Man - IUPII - T. A. Bridson celebrated his 102nd birthday Sunday with one concession to old age. He pos.poned until better weath er his annual birthday climb up 2.034-foot Suae Fell, the island's highest peak. iU,iMTiiilMiiitHaiii Sorry this is late, due illness, we want to take opportunity to thank all friends and patients for beautiful cards sent to and wish all of you A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR Dr. and Mrs. Jouett P. Bray 1 m -'..W'lnn luwxm wmm vm .,l - T . 1 s Courses 9 1 " f mm WW i tet 'irV' i fir DOGS FOR CHRISTMAS Framingham, Mass. - llJPli -Dog control officer Lee Berta has spread Christinas cheer while easing one of his most pressing problems. He dis tributed 60 homeless dog from his overcrowded pound to local youngsters. to this our the us, j.iuy J " qiLiil 4liMliL il W-2 i