- ... .. .. .;. i j mm J Jin i; Terms, .$4 per Annum, CHARLOTTE, N. C, JUNE 27, 1865. Volume 13 Nnmber 672;. I NORTHERN ITEMS. Governors Vance and Letcher are yet ton fined in the Capitol prison, and have not yet ap plied for pardon, although it is expected they will do so. - Tbe .Mexican .Minister is confident that the French will be driven out of Lis country before the close of the present year. Mrs Patterson, daughter of President John son and wife of one of the new Senators from Tennessee, will arrive in Washington this week, to preside over the domestic arrangements of the White House. Of the 300,000,000 of banking capital au thorized by the National Bank Act, and the amendments thereto, of the last Congress, only 67,000,000 remains to be taken up. In order to secure a loyal feeling in the South, it is proposed that the land warrants given to soldiers surviving the late war, be located in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Geor gia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, in abandoned lands or confiscated estates. The report of the special commission sent out to examine charges against Gens. Banks and Hulburt is said to be very damaging to their characters as officers and gentlemen and fully justifies the removal of both. The Log Cabin in which Mr Lincoln resided when he split rails and learned to write and stu died law, is to be exhibited at the' great fair in Chicago. Hefnry S. Foote, lately of 'Mississippi, is on his way to California, where he has children residing. Some of the Sutlers who followed the army and rushed intcilichmond with, their wares, in anticipation of doing a tremendous business, on the supposition that the Southern people had plenty of good money, are closing out, one by one, and returning to the North, wiser, if not richer men.' The wholesale commission houses published since the evacuation are doing will. John Mitchell, formerly assistant editor of tbe Richmond Enquirer and Examiner, and who lately connected himself with the N. Y. News, was arrested in New York week before last by order from Washington, and put in prison. Generals Ilallecks. and Stoneman have writ ten letters to the War Department in reply to the strictures upon them made by General Sher man. General Halleck is understood to throw all the responsibility of hjs action in, the premi ses upon Lieutenant General Grant, and Gene ral Stoneman to claim that by acting upon his own judgement ho compelled the fugitive Jeff Davis and his party to take up a line of march which resulted in his capture by the troops sen! ut to heaa him off. Mrs Stephen A. Douglas has givtn a brilliant cntertaiufiiept in Washington, the first public reception since tbe death of Mr Douglas. A larjre number of negroes, who followed the Army of Georgia to Washington, have made ppication to return to their former homes. More than 1,800 .claims for damages by the war have-been tiled at Washington, amounting to oyer 50,000,000. In the Washington city cleotion the conser vatives voted in greater strength than since the war began, and elected the ticket which they preferred. They polled large majorities against all who participated in the recent meeting for the banishment from the city of those who left during the war. Greenbacks. It may not be generally known that,. by Act of Congress, United States Treasury Notes generally termed 4green backs" are legal tender for all dues except import and export duties and the interest on jhe public debt. Gold and silver can only be rated as articles of merchandize. Thi3 should be understood by one and all. The judges of the supreme court of Pennsyl vania have delivered an opinion affirming the constitutionality of ihe legal tender act, on the ground that the clause of the constitution au thorizing congress to coin money and regulate the value thereof, and of foreign money," does not constitute a prohibition of the issue of pa per money' instead of coin. The court held that the words of the constitution should not be construed literally, butaccording to their spirit, and cited the authority given to congress "to declare war" in the same instrument as not be ing sufficiently comprehensive to authorize it to make and carry on war if interpreted literally. SOUTHERN ITEMS. Gov. Watts, of Alabama, who was arrested a few days ago at Macon, Ga,, has been released from arrest, and has returned to Montgomery. The military authorities at Chattanooga, Tenn., have issued' an order prohibiting all pa roled officers and men of the late Confederate army from visiting any places of public resort or amusement in that vicinity. A vessel has arrived at Norfolk; with corn,, from Hyde County, North Carolina, and the captain reports that there is plenty of corn there but no money. Some of the corn had been in store since the war commenced. Howell Cobb is reported to have remarked, when he heard of Gov. Brown's arrest,. "Yes, d n him! he'll go to Washington a prisoner, and be sleeping with Andy Johnson in less than a fortnight. The choicest cotton is selling at Vicksburg at twenty-five cents. News from Jackson, Mississippi, is to the ef fect that the country thereabouts has already far more merchandise than the people have mo ney to pay for. Good bacon was selling at ten dollars per hundred- pounds, and lard for the same by the wagon load, showing that there has heretofore been a general concealment of prop erty of the edible kind. A correspondent writing from New Orleans says: "In a short time twenty-five thousand South erners, from Texas, will be in Mexico. The sympathies of the leading men of that party will not be with Maximillian." Gen. Dick Taylor's Louisiana plantation, near New Orleans, which had been confiscated, was sold a short time since for 89,000. It com prises 2,500 acres, with all tha improvements sugar house, mills, engines, dwellings, &c. ' - . ; The Indictment of General Lee. A Washington correspondent wsites: "The indict ment found ugaiont Lee, bjj the greed jury of Eastern Virginia, is a most nonsensical pro ceeding. The bill could not be. issued on the authority of the General Government, for the latter is pledged not to molest Lee; while fur ther, it does not recognize the proceedings of the court which t has brought the indictment. Nor can the grand jury act thus for th,e State, for Lee has not committed, treason against it. He took up arms in obedience to a call .of the State, in her defence, and how then can he be indicted for treason against the State? So silly is the action. of the grand jury, that I find every one is laughing at it. The status of the general afficers paroled un der the terms of agreements between Grant aud Lee is becoming a question of some importance. Already' the Grand Jury at Richmond has found indictments for treason, against Lee and several others. It is claimed that - convictions under these indictments are necessary to make valid the confiscation of their property under the laws. On the other hand, it is contended that any and aH "prosecution? against officers thus paroled are barred by the terms of their surrender. . The matter has been submitted to both itbe Presi dent and the Attorney General; but for the pre sent both decline to take it under consideration, believing that the- defence should properly be presented in the courts which may take cogni zance of the indictments. n Important Decision of the Wisconsin; Su preme Court The United States Stamp Act held to he unconstitutional. -The - Milwaukee Sentinel of Friday says : v In the case of Jones and others vs. Keep, our. Supreme Court decided Wednesday that the law of Congress requiring, stamps to legal processes, in the commencement of suits or other-wise, is unnconstitutional, and that 'the law in this respect is void, and the stamp on legal papers 19 not necessary. This decision was made by Chief Justice Dixon and J udge Cole. Judge, Downer dissented. We have not yet seen thfi written opinion of the Court, but we presume it proceeds upon the ground that the imposition of a tax upon any proceedings or processes in a State Court is an invasion of the right of the State to regulate proceedings in its own courts; that if Congress can tax these pro ceedings At all it cab lay upon thetn a tax whUh would practically amount to a ' prohibition, 'and can thus practically legislate the State Court out of existence. . v . - Reliable information has reached the friends of John C Breckinridge at Lexiogwn, Kech tucky, that he has arrived safe In Quba. How he got there they refuse to say. LETTER FROM! B- F. MOORE, ESQ. . Raleigh, June 17, 1865. To tlie Editors of the Standard: In your paper of this morning you have trans ferred to its columns two letters addressed to the New York Herald, by its, Raleigh corres pondent, bearing date 4th of June, inst., which after noticing as "one of the most unpleasant lcatures of the history of North Carolina, the scrambling among the politicians at this period for office," the correspondent proceeds, jn con nection with my name, as follows: "B. F. Moore, the moss formidable of the rival candi dates, of Mr Holden, and the leader of the rival delegation to Washington has also withdrawn. The two delegations fused in Washington, and Mr Moore, so the understanding is, has the pro mise of the State Senatprship or Supreme Court Judgeship." In the first place, it was an error in the cor respondent to call the two parties of gentlemen, who visited Washington, delegations. Got. Holden was invited thither by the President himself, and he associated with him the respect able gentlemen who accompanied him. Within a few days afterwards I received through Gen. Schofield, a telegram from Washington, that ex-Gov. Swain, Win. TSaton, jr., and myself, would be acceptably received by the President, in behalf of the State. I was no party to the telegram to .which this was a reply. So soon as convenient, we repaired to the city. Gov. Holden, and the gentlemen who accompa nied him, had had an interview with the Presi dent before we arrived, the 20th day of May. We then had a separate interview with the President on the Monday following, in which was principally discussed the most effectual mode of restoring the civil government to the State as a member of the United States. The President favored,' as the most proper, a total ig noring of the State government. In this we differed from him. The next conference at which we". were present, was on the following Thursday; and Gov. Holden and his associates ,were present, both they add ourselves having agfetrfi tbe yeBtng before to- meet at the con ference. At this interview the matters debated and considered jointly, were altogether in refer ence to the amnesty proclamation, and trade of the State, and an appeal which was made to him to allow, if possible, the State, penniless as it was in its finances, to take charge of the State1 property, and use it for charitable purposes, as supporting the Lunatic asylum, and the helpless poor of the State. This conference, and for these objects, closed the interview, and neither Mr Eaton nor myself saw the President any more. Tho opinions of all, in this interview with the President, seemed to harmonize as to their objects, and I doubt not that they were cordial and candid. There was not between any of u., as I . believe, a par ticle of jealousy or ill feeling one towards anoth er. For myself I say, I went to Washington, for the good of tbe people of my State; as for the like object, I had a short time previously met Chief Justice Chase at Wilmington. It is not true that I have withdrawn my name as a can didate for Governor; I have never given per mission that it should be used for that purpose. It is not true that I have "the promise of the State Senatoaship, or Supreme Court Judge ship. - ' I should feel very much humbled if ray fellow-citizens shoufd believe' that, while profess ing to aid them in this hour of heavy trouble, I was capable of bartering myself away for office. 1 presumeMessts. Editors, that the' reflec tion upon my integrity had escaped your notice, else you had done me the justice to disabuse the public mind of the charge that I was engaged in a scramble for office. THE AMNESTY PARDON. Attorney General Speed has issued the fol-. lowing circular, for the benefit of those classes making application for special pardon, under the President's Amnesty Proclamation : Attorney General's Office,") Washington, June 7, 1865. j "By direction of the President, all persons belonging to the excepted classes enumerated in the President's Amnesty Proclamation of May 29, 1865, who may make special application to the President for pardon, are hereby notified that, before their respective applications will be considered, it must be shown that they have re spectively taken and subscribed the oath or affir mation in the said Proclamation prescribed. Every such person desiring a special pardon should make, personal application in writing therefor, and should transmit with such appli cation the original oath or affirmation as taken and subscribed before an officertutUorized, under the rules and regulations promulga ted by the Secretary of State, to administer the Amnesty oath prescribed in the said Proclama-, tion of the President. "JAMES SPEED, Attorney General." Very respectfully youra B.' F. MOORE. Baltimore, June 16. A number of per sons, from Baltimore county and elsewhere, have been summoned here to appear befere the military authorities, to give evidence against the Rebel Major Harry Gilmor, looking to his indictment and trial for treason. The city grand jury has found an indictment against his broth er, who ijas with him on the raid in Maryland a year ago. He is now in jail awaiting trial. Many indictments are being found against Ma rylanders who participated in the above named raid, and other treasonable depredations. ; The Sioux Indians are again making hostile demonstrations in Nebraska. Five hundred of them attacked one . hundred men of the Elev enth Ohio cavalry, fifteen miles west of Fort Mitchell, and killed four and wounded seven of ihem. A.number of the Indians were killed. SENSIBLE TALK. The New York Times, speaking of Northern sentiment and expectations about the South, says : . "We (the northern people and authorities) are too exacting -also in regard to the political ac-. tion of the Southern people. We expect them, now that the war is over and they are beaten, to become at once, not only loyal citizens, obey ing all the laws, and sustaining fully the nation al authority, but ' thorough-going abolitionists, and advocates 6f negro suffrage. Anything short of this we consider half-way loyalty and think theyt have not been whipped quite enough yet. We denounce them as still Secessionists, at heart, and call for their exclusion from the . rights of citizenship. . This 13 unreasonable and unwise. Wc have really hothiog to do with their hearts. Wc have no right to exact the complete change of sentiment and feeling which we demand. We have a right to insist that they shall obey the law, that they shall acknowledge and respect the national authority, and conduct themselves, as peaceful law-abiding citizens. If they do this, we can demand nothing more. They may believe in their hearts what they please; they may feel as they like about the war and the gov ernment; they may be at heart rebellious still; but that is really none of our business. We, cannot control their opinions or their sentiments; we can and must control their conduct, but that is all. Nor is it reasonable to expect that the mass of the Southern people can or will become suddenly devotees of doctrines and sentiments which they have hitherto abhorred, and against which they have staked their fortunes and their lives. Men do not thus instantly change their "whole natures on compulsion. And any osten tatious pretensions of such a change would be hypocritical. The great body of the Southern people were unquestionably honest and sincer.e in the opinions, the prejudices and the resent ments which led them to rebel against the Gov ernment; and it would be folly to 'suppose that those feelings, would 11 be at once eradicated by the simple fact that they have been beaten in the field. A radical change in the sentiment of the Southern people, concerning slavery and the purpose and temper of the national authori ty, can only be wrought by time, by wise laws, wisely administered, and by their experience o the new condition upon which they have enter, ed. , Nor should we desire to break the , spirit, or crush the self-respect of the people of the South ern States. Their courage, their resolute and determined spirit, is now among the priceless possessions of the whole country. It has beep our enemy, but hereafter it is to be our.friend. It has been turned against usr and! hag.vainly sought our destruction; hencefcrth it fights on ly on our side, and swells the power, and the courage with which we may confront a world in arms. It would be suicidaVv in ns to , crush or destroy it we should be destroying a pa! t of that which is to give us th proudest .place ever held by any. nation on the face of the earth. They confess and feel themselves overcome subdued,, subjugated From!,DO quarter do we. hear the faintest hint of .any w$sh even to renew the contest. . It is not for us to poison, the wound , we hava inflicted on their pide, awsto stab, with insulting blows, the dead.bbdy of their am bition." " " , ; -' JBg Judge Sharkey has been appointed Pre-,, visional Governor of Mississippi