HIS liXH PI Terms, $4 per Annum. CHARLOTTE; li C, AUGUST 15, 1865. Volume 14 Number 679. THE EXTENT OP THE PRESENT MILITARY AND CIVIL GOVERN MENT IN NORTH CAROLINA. After all that has been said and written about the present military and civil government of AVorth Carolina, it tuay be doubted whether the condition and extent of the two are well under stood by our citizens. At any rate, we are dis posed to assume as a certainty that the condition is not plainly understood, aud to make one more effort to explain it. First, 'What is the power of the military of the United States stationed here? North Caro lina is a military department of the national government, and over this department an army olficer presides, who has entire and unlimited coutrol over the civil and military laws of the State, and who still has absolute power over everything the most remotely connected with the army, and whose absolute power over the citizens aud the civil authorities, is only limited by the authority invested in the Governor by the President's proclamation. Secondly, there is in the State a treasury de partment of the United States government, sep arate and distinct from the military, existing under the laws of Congress. This department has its own head, and is totally and entirely in dependent of any civil government existing here. Then comes the Freedmen's bureau, estab lished by Congress, with its. own laws, and its own officers to control and execute them. This Department is established amongst us, subject only to the laws and regulations of the United States, and entirely free, distinct, and indepen dent of any aud all civil authority now existing in North Carolina. Then comes the civil government of the State, having no power except such as is conveyed upon Governor llolden by the proclamation of the President, for the purpose of enabling the loyal citizens of the State to hold a Convention to alter and amend their constitution, and with authoriiy to exercise all the powers necessary and proper to enable such loyal people of the State to restore said State to its constitutional relations to the federal government, and to pre sent such a republican form of government as will entitle the State to the guarantee of the general government. Thus it is the powers of the Governor are limited to "a particular purpose, which is to enable and assist the loyal citizens to hold a convention, and to establish the connection of the State with the general goyernment. He has no control over the military, the treasury department, or the Ereedmei's bureau. Of course, the first great object is to assist and enable the loyal citizens to hold a Conven tion for the purpose of altering and amending the eonstitutien. This will be done as speedily as is consistent with the proper consideration of the rights and privilege? of all loyal citizens. As soon as all such people can qualify them selves with convenience to vote and to assist in electing members to the Convention, the elec tion will be ordered. But it is not to-be hoped that a Convention can do any act that will restore us ' to all our rights and privileges. It is not to be expected that the military power will be surrendered to the civil authority, and the military withdrawn from the State, until our members of Congress are elected, and admitted into the Congress of the United States, and our State restored to its constitutional relations with the federal govern ment. The meeting of the Convention is greatly to be desired, and certainly that body will do many thiugs to aid and relieve the people in their pre sent'distressed and unsettled condition, but it must steadily be borne in mind that the Con vention cannot restore us to-the privileges of the United States government. We are compelled to wait until December when Congress shall have convened, before we can hope to enjoy that privilege. In the meantime, if we continue peaceable and united, and present an acceptable constitu tion .o Congress, when our members are elected, we shall be admitted into the Union, and be restored to the rights enjoyed by our fathers. But if we get up dissensions and strifes among ourselves, or with the military authorities, or if we fail to present to Congress such a constitu tion as we know the national government will demand of us, under the directions of President Johnson, we may remain, in pur, present condi tion for years to come, and the military remain amongst us and have the same control of our affairs that they exercise to day. It is not tfie meeting of the Convention or its action that can relieve us," but it is our restoration to the national government through the action of" Con gress. Raleiyh Standard. A Proclamation. BY WM. W. HOLDEN, PROVISIONAL GOVNOR, To the People of North Carolina. In pursuance of power vested in me by ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States, by his Proclamation of May 29th 1865, appointing a Pro visional Governor of North Carolina, under the fourth article of th& Constitution of the United States, which guarantees to every State in the Union a republican form of government; and in order to enable the loyal people of said State to organize a State Government, whereby justice may be estab lished, domestic tranquility restored, and loyal citi zens protected in all their rights of life, liber.ty, 1 and property; and in order, also, that said State may be restored to its Constitutional relations to the Federal government, by presenting such a re publican form of government as will entitle the State to the guarantee of the .United States therefor,f and its people to protection by the United States against invasion, insurrection and domestic vio lence, I, WILLIAM W. HOLDEN, Provisional Gov ernor as aforesaid, do hereby proclaim that an elec tion will be held in said State, on Thursday, the 21st day of September, 1865, for a Convention, to be composed of one hundred and twenty delegates, to be chosen as follows : The county of Alamance wilPchoose two mem bers. The count- of Alexander will choose one member. The counties of Ashe and Alleghany will choose one member. The county of Anson will choose two members. The county of Beaufort will choose two members. The county of Bertie will choose two members. The county of Bladen will choose one member. The county of Brunswick will choose one mem ber. " . The county of Buncombe will choose one member. The county of Burke will choose one member. The county of Cabarrus will choose one member. The county of Caldwell will choose one member. The county of Camden will choose one member. The county of Carteret will choose one member. The county of Caswell will choose two members. . The county of Catawba will choose one member. The county of Chatham will choose three mem bers. The counties of Cherokee and Clay will choose one member. The county of Chowaji will choose one member. The county of Cleaveland will choose two mem bers. The county of Columbus will choose one member. The county of Craven will choose two members: The counties of Cumberland and Harnett will choose three members. The county of Currituck will choose one member. The county of Davidson wiH choose two members. The county of Davie will choose one member. The county of Duplin will choose two members The counties of Edgecombe and Wilson will choose two members. The county of Forsyth will choose two members. The county of Franklin will choose one member. The county of Gaston will choose one member. The county of Gates will choose one member. The county of Granville will choose three mem bers. ' . The county of Greene will choose one member. The couuty of Guilford will choose three Mem bers. The county of Halifax will choose twd members. The. county of Haywood Will choose one member. The counties of Henderson and Transylvania will choose one member. The county of Hertford will choose one member. The county of Hyde will choose one member. The county of Iredell will choose two members. The county of Jackson will choose one member. The' county of Johnston will choose two members. The county of Jones will choose one member. The county of Lenoir will choose one member. The county of Lincoln will choose one member. The county of Macon will choose one member. The county of Madison will choose one member. . The county of Martin will choose one member. The county. of McDowell will choose one member. Thecounty of Mecklenburg will choose two mem bers. The county of Montgomery will choose one mem ber. The county of Moore will choose one member. -The county of Nash will choose one member. The county of New Hanover will choose two members. The county of Northampton will choose two mem bers. , The county of Onslow will choose one member. The county of Orange will choose two members. The county of Pasquotank will choose one mem ber. The county of Perquimans will choose one mem ber. . The county of Person will choose ode meiuber. The county of Pitt will choose two members. The county of Randolph will choose two mem bers. The county of Richmond will choose one member. The county of Robeson will choose two members. Thecounty of Rockingham will choose two mem bers. The county of Rowan will choose two members. The counties of Rutherford and Polk will choose two members. . The county of Sampson ill choose two members. The county of Stanly will cfcoose one member. The county of Stokes will choose one member. The county of Surry will choose one member. The county of Tyrrell will choose one member. The county of Union will choose one member. The county of Wake will choose three members. The county of Warren will choose two members.' The county of Washington will choose one member. The county of Watauga will choose one member. The county of Wayne will choose two members. The county of Wilkes wiil choose two members. The county of Yadkin will choose one member. The counties of Yancey and Mitchell will choose one member. The Clerks and Sheriffs of .the respective counties will proceed at once po assemble the Justices of the Peace, a majority of whom will select from their number not less than six nor more than eighteen Justices, men of intelligence, discretion, firmness, and approved loyalty, whose duty it shall be to ad minister to those who may be entitled to receive it, the oath contained in the President's Amnesty Proc lamation of May 29th, 1865, under such instructions as may be prescribed in tjiis Proclamation. The Justices shall, at the same time, appoint Inspectors of the elections at the various precincts in their re spective counties, ir accordance with the law in re lation tnereto, Chapter 52, Revised Code of North Carolina. The elections for members of the Con vention shall be conducted in the same manner as elections for members of the House of Commons, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 52, Re vised Code, so far' as saidprovisions niay be appli cable; and the officers appointed to hold said elec tions, aud to mske returns thereof, shall be liable to the same penalties for failure to act, or for neglect of duty, as are prescribed in chapter 52, Revised Code. No person will be allowed to vote who is net a voter qualified as prescribed by the Constitution and laws of the State, in force immediately before the 20th day of May, 1861; except that the payment of a poll tax shall not be required. All paroled soldiers of the army and navy of the pretended Confederate States, or of this State, and all paroled officers of the army and navy of the pre tended Confederate States, or of this State, under and including the rank of Colonel, if of the .army, and under and including the rank of Lieutenant, if of the navy, will be allowed to vote, provided they are not included in any of the fourteen excluded classes of the President's Amnesty Proclamation; and, provided further, that they are citizens of the State in accordance with the terms prescribed in the preceding paragraph. No petson will be allowed to vote who does not exhibit to the inspectors a copy of the Amnesty Oath, as contained in the President's Proclamation of May 29ih, 1 805, signed by himself and certified by at least two Justices of the Peace. The Sheriffs of tlie respective counties shall fur nish, as soon as practicable, certificates of election to those persons who may have received the highest number of votes as members of the Convention; and the Sheriffs shall also immediately send to the office of the Secretary of State, Raleigh, a statement of 'he vote in their respective Counties for the mem bers aforesaid, and also a BtatemenEof the said vote, sealed up, directed to the President of the Conven tion, Raleigh, to be laid before the Convention. The members of the Convention thus chosen, will assemble in the city cf Raleigh, 'on Monday, the second day of October, 1865. The attention of Justices appointed to administer the Amnesty Oath, is especially directed to the fol lowing fourteen exclud'ed classes of the President's Amnesty Proclamation of May 20th, 1865 : " First All who are or shall have been pretended civil or diplomatic officers or otherwise, domestic or foreign agents of the pretended Confederate govern ment. Second All who left judicial stations under the United States to aid the rebellion. Third All who shall have been military or naval officers of said pretended Confederate government above the rank of Colonel in the army or Lieutenant in the navy. " FourthAll who loft seats in the Congress of the United States to aid the rebellion. Fifth All who resigned or tendered resignations of their commissions in the army or navy of the U.S. to evade duty' iu resi&ling the rebellion. Sixth All who have engaged in any way in treat ing otherwise than lawfully as prisoners of war per sons found in theU. S. service, as officers, soldiers, seamen, or iu other capacities. Seventh All persons who have been or are ab sentees from the U. S. for the purpose of aiding the rebellion. Eighth All military' and naval officers in the rebel service who were educated by the government in the Military Academy at West Point, or the U. S. Naval Academy. Ninth All persons who held the pretended offices of Governors of States in insurrection against the United States. Tenth All persons who left their homes within the jurisdiction and protection of the United States, and passed beyond the federal military lines into the so-called Confederate States for the purpose of aiding the rebellion. Eleventh All person? who have been engaged in the destruction of the commerce of the United States upon the high seas, and persons who have made raids into the United States from Canada, or been engaged in destroying the commerce of the United States upon the Jakes and rivers that separate the British provinces from the United States Twelfth All persons who, at ,the time when they seek to obtain the benefits herepf by taking the oath herein prescribed, are in military, naval or civil confinement or custody, or under bonds of the civil, military oi naval authorities or agents of the United States, as prisoners of war or persons detained for offences of any kind either before or after conviction. Thirteenth All persons who have voluntarily participated in said rebellion, and the estimated value of whose taxable property is over twenty thousand dollars. Fourteenth All persons who have taken the oath ! of amnesty as prescribed in' the President's procla- j mation of December eight, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, or an oath of allegiance to the government of the United States since the date of said proclamation, and who have not thencefor ward kept and maintained the snine inviolate : Provided thatspecial application may be made to the President for pardon by any person belonging to the excepted classes, and such clemency will be lib erally extended as may be consistent with the facts of the case and the petice and dignity of the United States." - , ? Under the first exception are included all persons .who have been civil or diplomatic officers or agents of the pretended Confederate government, either within or without the territorial limits of the United States. Under the seventh exception are included all offi cers, agents, or private citizens who have been ab sent from the United States for the purpose of aid ing the rebellion. ' Under the thirteenth exception are included all who, during the rebellion, have held any office or agency under the State or pretended Confederate government; or have in any way voluntarily joined in the rebellion, as for example, by entering or marching with armed forces hostile to the United States; by sending or furnishing money, provisions, or arms to persons engaged in the rebellion, save in cases where none or provisions were furnished from the projoptirgs of charity or humanityj by acting with assemblages of persons, whether organ ized or unorganized, hostile to ttie United States; or in any other way giving voluntaryuid, assistance or encouragement to the rebellion; and whose tax able property on the 29th day of May 1865, exceed ed in valua the sum of twenty thousand dollars. The other exceptions are so plain as not to require explanation. No certificate will be granted by the Jnstices to any person who is included within any of the four teen excluded classes, unless on exhibition by the. party of his pa:don for his offence from the Presi-. dnt. , The Justices appointed to administer th amnes ty oath, and tofuruish certificates of the same which shall be evidetice of loyalty, are especially instruct ed to be vigilant aud faithful. While it will not be their duty to attempt to pry into the hearts and con sciences of men, they will nevertheless admonish those who may apply to take the oath, that it must be taken and subscribed in good faith, with an hon est intention on their part to keep it without secret, purpose or ditnt.il reservation upon any occasion or at any time lo committ any act in violation of said oafji; and they will warn them that if the oath is not thus taken and kept, the pardon offered them by the. President wiil be void, and they will remain subject to trial under the law for perjury and treason. The Justices, Clerks and Sheriffs, .whose duty i' is -to provide for administering the oath and to Gon duct the elections, are enjoined to use every practi cable means to enable every citizen to take the oath who may desire and be entitled to do so. And the Inspector ire enjoined, to inspect and examine fair ly and trolr, tor decide in every case in accordance with the la.v, and with the instructions they have received torn this office, and to make prompt and correct re:urns of the number of votes and for whom cast, attiieir respective precincts. Done a: our city of Raleigh, the 8th day of Au gust, one thousand eigiit hundred and sixtyfive, and in tie year of the Independence of the United States tie eightv-ninth. ' ' WILLIAM W. nOLDEN, By the Governor : Provisional Governor. Lkwi$ Haxes, Private Secretary. 'August 14, 1865. , m i JfFFEitsoN Davis. Notwithstanding the. various stories set afloat in regard to the ill-treatment of Jefi. Davis, it is but just to the author ities lo state positively that he is treated with the cansideratiion due a noted prisoner of state by tie Commandant 'at Fortress . Monroe. No officer has been or is stationed in his cell; he is alloved to take frequent walks on the ramparts and is permitted to choose his own food. The stories that his cell is guarded by a score.or more of bayonets, that in his promenades be is attended by a battalion of soldiers, aqd that his. diet is limited to the army ration, are as ridicu lous as they are untrue. . - . The ftev. W. M. Green, Episcopal Bishop, of Mississippi, in an ecclesiastical order issued by him on the 19th ult., instructs the clergy under his charge that so soon as the military rale of the government in the State shall be withdrawn they shall resume the regular prayer, for the President of the United States and those in authority, but not before. He also expresses himself as opposed to a reunion with the churches of the North. . w Mortality. This, city has been entirely free from epidemics diseases, and yet the oldest inhabitant has never known it to be so sickly as it has been for the past two-, months." The. number of persons, black and white, who have, been in and around the city for some time, is evidently. the cause. The colored population has trebled the former number. The number of death among the citizens has not been exces sive, but one of the Quartermasters inform us that the demand for coffins in his department for several weeks, has. averaged about 70. Most of these have, been Blacks. Blacks, who have left their homes and. come to the city, living, without employment .and on such fare as they get, have suffered terribly. In some instances, more than half of those who left their homes, have died. Raleigh Christian Advbcate.