?33X3 WATBAZHO VLAOB8. Oar Riwptrt forre?po?4*i?w. Nbwtoit. R. 1 , July -0, IS? 7?.? HUtitandiht Matnt Lijuor iMW-Gtargt P. Dcvmni:'* 1(4 f/U Hotwi ?wl Prtftnm Es. fttokm** The Kail Fiver boats tiuek twice here every klsht? once in going to, and again in returning |i?m New Ycrk-and, though they we CTOwdinl ?*b passengers, very few ot them rem.m ?* .New port. The great bulk of those fro. the ^ulh ""J W.st, in search of health and pleasure pa* .on , by the most pleasant mode of travel ? ?w r?W? to the White McuDtwn% *n^void Newport w they would a city ot the plague. rho cause 5 ?hi/i, the despotic L i?uor law which a.?e into operation here yesterday. rbe l

? M( the fact . and the best prsof of it is a re fere nee to arrivals at the hotel*, now in the very height o? Ml* itwon. At the three hotels, yesterday, the arrivals were as follawr.? Ocean House, 22; Ailan *#, 11; Bollevue, 8. In a Saratoga paper, just arrived here, I find tbht the arrives at a single hotel ?f that watering plate till half a column. The BeQevue House, which is the smallest, the most aris Weratie, and furnishes the best tabic, is nearly filled, t)1 the votaries of fashion, but with those _fc, Kck for quiet enjoyment and repose. The At lantic Hotel, which is the most ably conducted, and arcend in sue, is not m full as the Ifellevne Hou*e. bot far better tilled tban the Ocean House, which : the largest atd m?t fashionable, though by tar the worst n.anoged of the three. The Ocean House is B.t more ?Un half filled. The cottages arc for the most part occupied with the Jtifi -haired, straight C'dfcold water class But these ^ ?nei t v and cannot compensate tor the class that ha " en drive n a wo v . The wine observation applies to ibe betels You will meet staid old dowager? ?nd aswient gouty gentlemen- spinBters of forty year# and t,rvav Of .and bachelors who nav e long -mice despaired ?[ cver getting a wife ; but tie youn*, .he Miivt and the cay are not there as the J Joriner 3 ears Tbev seek a more congenial atmo phere elsewhere, the Southern people who sivod tktir money so freely, are almost wholly di n en ?way from Newport. Prom any point south of N ew Yoik u?u will scarcely see a name on the hooks oi the hotels. This is felt and spoken ?t oy all. But von will be told that though the Maine aw has come into effect, it is already a dead letter, and will not be carried into execution. 1 ooplc, howl er at .?? distance, will not oome te 1 Newport trui sting K, the mere sufferance of the pettyj authorities of so taean a ciiy for the exercise of that individual li Wr?\ ?hic?i they have enjoyed from their cradle, wh eh is the birthright of every American, and which they can enjoy unshackled at other watering nUccs on every side. illfh of spirit and mde Sendint feeling, and of sound moraJity, do not wish to set the law of the place where thoy rewde at defiance. nor do free bom A moricans wish that then mk of wine and other drinks should depend on the ?mtc will of the majority of a common council. It is true that liuuor can be got at certain bars by eeUivg for something tlse, and gjving a knowing wink to the barkeeper, who will scrutinize your Statures to fee that jou are not an informer, *hiU at other bars they sell oj-enly, and at the J1?'4-,18 two or three bottles of wme are brought to the taUe But gentlemen do not want to drink hi stealth, and tbe re suit is that wine, which is the 2, tog and profitable department of a hotel, is iwl-, dy drank at the Newport hotels at all ^Tho only man who is doing a thriving buaness J ,t present, is George T. Downing, of New York', so celebrated for his oysters. For A^teJ"|J ??c rears he has come for the summer months to Newport, where he supplies oysters m every shai*. r&ui e Burners, and ice ereama. Uia establishment ^.^lif d tbe Yacht House, aud is right opposite the ? ~r tpiJ Fartic ot' gentlemen, and often of ladies -vnd gen ?2fn not satisfied with the fare or attendance at t> there to get a rtchctcht enter. niii h^ii- cooked and served up in a style that cannot be arWoachcd at any other establishment in New llrt lTe h"s his game, and oysters, and liquor-, lie dhect from New York, and all are of a "upe ftor'nuirity, that whe.iaDytha.gni^wanted L, }t. rC to Downing V. (icorge evades the law in r' "y: He dves not sell any chammgnc, or ?ther wines, but lie gives i' gratuitously, taking enre sourccrof profft.' He also supplies dinner- and suppers, and ices to the ?t ranger? residing ir thecottages. George Downing has mere than an ncrc of real estate in the be*t part 0f Newport, with seven stores on it. let to va nons rersons, beside- a rarge of stables which he hires out for the season Ho is about building on the snrre pro? city two cot tc gee to let. Such is the fltmrishing business done by a gentleman of color, in consequence of the incompetence and ridiculous tolf- conceit and mismanagement of the hotels. His ke creams are as- much superior to anything you ?tn cct at the hotels, or at.y where in Newport, as hU oysters are superior to all others, t.eorgc not , only bus the best viands but he has the art to cook and trepore them best for table. 1 Tbe wholesale liquor houses arc closed. <)n . a tnrdav lost, Newton gave a largo quantity of liqu'i , away'to all who applied for it. This was by way of : clraxii g out hfs -took. Pitchers and demijohns w*rc sent to htm from every quarter, and it is said that olc little girl came the seventeenth time with ktr pitcher, when at length Newton ?^?rTmK11' teld her to tell her father to send somebody el e i?*xt time. Such terror has this law inspired, tha or e druggist refused to seU alcohol on Monday. The t?ison applying lor it, however, got it in aaether establi&hiiieut. The inten.rctat.on given to the law by some wholesale dealers ts cunou^ They say that any liquors ordered before the 1. ;n,o or* ration, may be suppUed and rtemerea to tbe retailers at anv time hereafter, % Yat, iie the law . A nd on the same principle the re tail' fs say they v* ill supply their cuitomcrv Thus, practically, the law is a faree, except to do iui? Jhitf. There is mors drank than ever by the Jmiknnl.' and larger (luantities of liquor hu\e_ Ttrnwrance, it is well known, have secured an ex la surX It is only the moderate men who do Sffi the gifts of tb- gods, and who, being the most numerous drinkers, are the real supi?rt of the trade? it is only those who are deprived of their ac ?nstorced beverage by this most fanatical a absurd law. And Newport is seriously injured by >t Atlantic Hotei,, ) Nkwv ort, K. I , July 22, 1KV2. $ The Commc n Covntil and the Maine Jmii' ? Tin In former Refuse! his Certifcate ? The Origin of the Law in Bhode It/and ? How the IVhigs wtrt En* Itnjiptd? H< "? the Hotel Keepers hunt Protected Themselves from tin Opt rat inn of the Imw ? JIow w Works ? Interview between fleorge Downing and a Jh'hop ? Netepart Behind the Age ? ProgrtMS of Root Beer and the Colic ? Cold Water Bulls? The Belie* of the Hotels ? Thi Owner ? and Ornt j*, nt* of Cottage*? "Symptoms of Poverty in the Hot its ? Extreme Ihlness ? Curious fbxhwns ? Ihingerous Abandon ? Excursion* by Sizht ? Pro gres* of Demoralization? Georf!! Dooming anil Faro Table ? Proposition for a Sew llottl? 7 he Mountains of Air w Hampshire. There have been two meeting of the Common Coancil here, during the last two 01 three day*, and the nik.ject of the Maine law *m warmly dbcuMod, though y?,u 'win look in Tain for any intelligence on the luhject in the local paper, which is called Tint An/-*, somewhat on the principle of I writs a nr,n Imrendo ? that if, lurus, a grove which is dark, ii derived from luiro, to fliine. The Newt is to culled became it givel i v ntv , one 0f these meetings ?f the Comma Council, Captain Pratt, who was appointed the c< mmon intormer, by a town meeting daring the last month, applied to the chairman for hi? certificate The chairman, who ia the only temperance man left In the Board, refuted to sign it, because the obj^'t of thi? appointm denouncing the mcaeurc. The Captain likes a good gliw of wine, Of course, in flwderaileo; be cannot * c objects animate or inanimate, unle^? tbey are very olose to him: nnd he communes in church- yarui by night, win the spirit*, in>t of al *obol, but of 'he other World. J he Comnaon Council bare refused to appoint a public vendor of liqoor fr>r medicinal and aacra mental purpose*, and kbe frii ndc of the tick h;ne Mnaonuently to apply to tb< hotels and public hou*os for it. It i* curious enough that the Common Council *'eetcl for the purple of carrying out the law. ron-'iat" "f the ho le! keepers, pot. henna and sinners: Mid thereby luogs k tale about the origin of this movement. Ttte tc?p? ranee perU ?t first rjjilit'l to the democrat* to tssfat thr'm in parsing the law. The ?ic3ioorHt? deeiintd. The whig* were n?t tW llvufc, a hading whig politician, mill I.awm re. the democratic candidal# f?'r (!om(BW, bud an understanding between them that the law u to be defeated. ?ud Weaver promised Li* io fuenee *o aototDptish tbat p said crime before and after meat, and felt himself \a?!!y refreshed in the inner man When he culled for h.^ bill, the Bishop observed that Downing was charging no'hhig for the ale. "That is all right," said Downing, "I don't sell ale or other strong drinks, 1 give thciu free, but I charge a decent profit upjn the eat* blea." "Oh," says the Bishop. laugh ng, "I see b it. is: then I will come here every day and pay you for the use of your room, and seeing the winery from your windows, and you can let uie have a bot tle of that Scotch ale for nothing." "Agreed, sir," replied Downing, "and anything el-c you require, fj*m lleidsick to the best Otard." This Is one ex ample from many. It is said here by some that, no three citizens can be found who will agree to give information, and swear they suspect any individual hn? liquor on his premises. But many will not trust to this kind of sufferance for the enjoyment of liberty. The great mn.-s of the citi7.cn-> of Newport are poor, as you will see from the dirty, dincy api>earince of their houses, and the poverty of the business part of Uie city, which forms quite a contrast to the majority of the cities and \ lllages of New England. The few handsome dwellings in the npperregion are, for the most part, occupied by nabobs, si?me of them bciDg from Boston, and soiuc from New York, and some from other quarters. Men of wealth who re side lierc do not invest their capital in Newport, but in other placcs. 'iYere are only one or two factories, and they but of small account. There is no waterpowcr for manufacturing purposes. There is no ?nterpriso here ? little or no trade ? it is extremely dull in every sense of the word. The city is halt' a century behind the age, and has made little or no i progress, while Providence is going ahead. The ] people chiefly live upon the strangers who come trom othfr parts of the Union in the summer season, | and hence their aversion to the Maine law inflicted j upon them by the rural districts, and the politicians ' of their own city, and from the apathy, and wunt 1 of talent, influence and circulation of the mise- j ruble daily paper t\int' rrprcw?>t? tU?n Newport, with its 10, (MH) inhabitants, is adapted by nature Tot ' a watering place, and is never likely to be anything else; but even in that respect it stands in a fuir way of being ruined by the Maine law. Some of the opponents of the law here, say that if they canr.ot get liquor privately they will have nn in surrection. But the tem{?rance j>arty say they wijl not permit the law to be defeated, and that when the Legislature meets, they will have it si? amended, that its o]>eration here will not depend upon She will ot' the Common Council, or the iu hubitants oi Newport. The root beer and siin:iur establishments arc flourishing; but a grc.v, many who drink * h is '?perilous stuff' complain of col).-;, and other Jlisi'd,. ??auuvtluur in tlwu iatagtingg. Ill [bis hot, weather people will bare something to drink besides cold water, .-md those accustomed to mixing a little brand j in the water find those other strange drinks do not agiec with their stomachs To Riant there is to be a cold ivvt^r ball at the Bellevue House --fifty cents admission for out siders: so J Oil may pucs- what Sort of ?n aiTair that is to be. The pretty .Mies llislop. of New York, is hotel* went there--Bor?o 1 in carriages, but the majority walked, the ladies in their bate hair, and dressed in the pink of fashion, i Indeed, it was revolting to all ordinary ideas of pro I pritty, to see bevies of them in the shades of night, and without a lamp of anv kind in the streets, trip \ p'ng along withoui a '? ntleinan to protect thcu from imnTt. In fact, many ladies seem to think, I when they coin, to Newport, that they may cast off all conventional restraint, and juut do as they pl?a he Hence you will sec married ladies, who ' com* here without their husbands, driving out and | flirting at an awful rate with young swells. Vou will Me giddy girl- at these hotels, without anv ! father or mother, or male protector whatever, f know one instance of threo or four sisters who are 1 here alone, and arc among thi gayest of the gay ? I one of th all the tempta tions and seductive arts of unprincipled men. What the consequence of all this is likely to be, I leave you and your resderetojud^e. Here there are black legs, and giiiiiblcrs, ami pickpockets, who travel under feigned name*, and lie in wait for their vic tims. It is very funny to see ladies of the highest res|>cctability waltzing and gallopading with these. All propriety of dress scorns to be abandoned hi re. One lady will walk into the breakfast room in ball dress, another will sit down to broukfa?t or tea with her bonnet and shawl on, and, in fict, every on does that which is most pleasing to her >*n ' tste, no matter what sinctators may think of it- There is a sort of abtnulov among some of the ' young ladies here that otni ni- ill for thoirown future happir.c

as of this deeeription in fall blast, and a gambling den open at all hour*, for *11 vomers, and without ai>y disguise whatever. Bv-the-by, yesterday. when I ww at the barber's shop, in Downing's block, Oeorge T. Downing and the proprietor of the gambling con cern happened to be there. George, who supplies turn with game suppers for his "pigeons, aud thus knew him, asked what effect the Maine law, ai d the articles in the Hk&ald about it, would have npon the visiter* 1 Fa.ro ? A very great effect. I'owkimo ? Are there not a great many visiters here now ? Fako ? Not near so many at the hotels as there were last year. 1'owNiMi ? But there are a good many in the cottages. Faju>? Yes, of the straight-haired kind; but they are good for Nothing. The Koutherners, who have money to spend and the heart to spend it, are not coming this seas-on, thanks to the Maine law and the Hkbai.d. Downing acknowledged the eorn, and said he was afraid be was going to suffer himself this season, though his business had been every year increasing for the last few years. "Butt" he added, "when they bear that the Maine law is likely to be a dead letter, will they not then come ?' Fako? No, not at all. They will not trust to that; betides, it is now too late. They have made their arrangements, and mad? up their joiuds to go elsewhere for the season. With these words, Faro? whose eve I h*d caught upon mc Severn) times ? gave me a piercing glance, as if to take my weight and measure, ana form a conclusion as to the length of my purse, and whether there was anything green in my phis. What judgment he arrived at 1 know not; but, on going out, Le gave Downing an order for a game supper. not forgetting the (Jrisped potatoes, & la Saratoga lake ? a secret which tho great oystcrman, fume liow or other, hue got possession of, to the in finite chagrin of the hotels. In the list of Pown irg'h property, which I gnv? you in my former let ter. I emitted to mention a handsome cottage adjoinii c his Yacht House- It was occupied list sva.'on by Colonel McMurray. Downing does a'l the pie-nic bssinesn of Newport, besides what he supplies to private families in cot tages. and the supper anu dinner pnrties ordered by the guests of the hotels. It is not at all wonderful thn' be should mnke money by tlio latter, for tho food is bad, the cooking bad, and tho attendance very bud in the majority of them Tho fish soino timot absolutely smells, and they insert in their bill Ot fare dithes Which they hHve not, and if you ask for one of these, the waiter will come back and tell yon it is a)I gone A train, when you ask for oi dish, another will be brought to you, and the same waiter will come to you three times and ask you what tou wnnt, after your i> ' the order twice before. If you are smartyou will get nothing to eat at dish upon which yon cust a longing ej e itched away from jou like a flash of ligt ust as vou are going to try it, and you will n? . if apam, thus leaving you pretty much in thi nation of Tantalus in the infernal regions. Then tin eternal clatter and tho noise (#' the servants whi stling, and singing, aud clsgj^ig of doors, reminds one of the same locality. Tkrre is r.mple scope for a new hotel, and Oeorge Downing could not do better than start one upon a large scale. The other three, or at least two of them, might then close up, as they will probably do snyhow, front the operation of tho Maine law. In Newport there is no Marvin, or Howard; the hotel keepers are totally ignorant of the business, with one exception, and he is only a second rate. The atmosphere is very worm and moist and op pressive, for the last two or three days. Your dummy elothes adhere to yonr skin, and the feeling is piost uncomfortable, except on the seashore, which is a long way from the city. How different from the elastic, dry, bracing air of the mountains and lakes of New Ham|>shire. How any one who has ever been there can stay for three days ?t Newport, I am at a loss to conceive, unless that they have not money to bring them any further, or prefer dull inarities, as stupid as a thrice-told i ale to Uic glorious charms of nature in her most lovely aspect, and the rollicking mountain breeaes which bring healing on their wings, and the exer cise which restores vigor and strength and tone to the system, and inspires yon with the fooling I bat you are a new man or woman. The number of sickly, wan faces that meet your eye at the hotels of Newport, proclaim that this is not the best pla-e for health of body or mind, or for trie enjoyment. The only thing for which Newport is at all valuable or st rangers, is its bathing facilities. But com paratively few avail themselves of this, nnd with many persons salt water bathing and sea air do not agree. By inserting this communication, you will confer a lasting benefit upon liiar.y of your readers in the South. Our Mit^'ora Corrr*po?itleiice. Niagara Falls, June 2H, 1852. ; lntcri -ting Physiological Fart ? The City and Fall v ? cf X iii gam. Coming up to New York, from Buffalo, wi'bin a few rter, on board tie boat, thus: Gent. ? " Do you belong to this boat!'' Col ored person ? "Yes, fir." trout ? "Where is the nigger who took charce of my baggage!'' Colored person, indignantly ? "There ain"t 110 niggers on boa rd this boat, fir." (Southern gentleman dumb ) A great physiological and political fact wn- revealed to him. He will, probably, make a note of it. The opening of the new railroads from Canandai gna to Elmira, ar d from Rochester to I.oekport and Niagara Falls direct, are all the talk. The ioriuer has been open some time, but the latter is juat ready to reaeive passengers. The ears commence running regularly this week. They are both fine | roads, out the Rochester and I.oekport road is said to , excel, in its appointments, any road yet built in the t inted States. It has all the lateht improvements This new road to the Falls will make a great change in the current of fashionable travel to the Falls. Very few persons, goiug from New York or Boston, 1 will now visit Buffalo first, as before, but will come direct to the Falls by this new route. The Ogdens ; burg and I.akc Ontario route will also command a l large share of travel, and thus Buffalo will become oi)l v a place of transit, not a place for stopping over nignt, a." formerly. It will U.-wen the pleasure- seek ? ing visiters at Buflalo, at least one third. The people are beginning to visit the Falls in great numbers Yettferday (Sunday) a. dinner, th? landlords of the principal hotels assured me that they had nearly as maiiy guests at table, as any day last season. The new hotel, to be called the " International House," is not quite finished, but will be ready for guests about the 1.1th of .luly It i? a very large stone house, but not very beautiful as yet, 1 though it may be, when the verandah, &c.,is cmi , pleted. # The Clifton House, on the Canada side, i- in fine ' condition, and rapidly filling up. They have six cottages, for families, ultached to the house, and every thing looks in the most perfect order. The new park is a great ornament, though the trees arc yet small. The fall of Table Bock, and the constant ( rum bling of the bunks near the Morse Shoe I 'all, line made a great change in the aspect of the ??< ??. ne ? but . not for the worse, I think, a- even these changes ' are so full of interest that they compensate forev?ry 1 thing that has been lost. 1 Goiog under the central or middle fall, on the 1 American side, and into the "Cave of the Winds,"' j is now the great feat of the day. and entiroly ! cchpf?? the od venture ol the same kind on the Ca nada side, so they say ? ai.d I am perfectly willing ; to take the current report for tmtn, w .thout a per sonal test. Niagara city? do you know it is a city, with a real charter and a real city government ? Well, it is. Ningara city line risen in five years, from three hnndred inhabitants to the dignity of 11 city? and they do things in city style lare, I assuro you. It j is a whig city, too, aid will go for the hero of j Lundy's Lane, though they all nay they would r& 1 ther have Webster, and they think the Fillmore i j m*0 will preler to vote for Fierce, rath>r than for a I 1 Seward man. But Lundy's Lane i.< hard-by here, 1 and il there is any thing iu a name. Niagara ought j to go for Scott. Tiik Oec'TOK. Croloii Water, TO Tin: I'DITOR OK THE SEW YORK HEU.tl.ll. Your rorresjioiident, "< 'ommon Senae," is no com- | in on man. He has diheovered tho causo of the de ficient supply of wuter. It is the officers of the department that eaine the . mischief "at the High Bridge, where the water overflows, and tuns by the thousands of gallons per minute into the Harlem river " Aye. that's it. If these stupid officers would only tnsVe this surplus ran through the pip s on the bridge?which pijies are already full? why then, then would be more water delivered in the city. Seriously, there is a small overflow of water at the gate house on the Vfastcbeater end of the High Bridge. This assuics tho faotthat tbepipw lying on that bridge are not only full, but under pressure of a head sufficient to accelerate the Hon of water through them, and thus increase the daily quantity delivered. "Common Sense" may |>o-sihly see the phi lor of by tf thir, and that wioile there is any !iifii?'K -urpliisin the t'roton river, it is better to nsc tbut suij lo u.i j, uead tb HigllBiMge, than to |i?* il mi ujelessly our t!.c 1 .. av t'." ? >nr*e of ! 'TP '/? fiti-rr v. INTERESTING LETTERS. Our New Hampshire Corr taponucr?l I'ierce, iht demooiatie candidate for tbe Presidency. and having teen charge* In certain newrpapertt allectintf tlia miral character of that gentleman, tho writer applW'B to jou for authentic infoi motion upon tbe rutyert. aa hav ing the be*t opportunity for knowing hit habit* ? not that be believes, or ever did believe, thiwe dotcnviitR. but that the truth may aome out in such a chape that it cannot be gain* ay ed. Conaoad, July IB, 1862. Ooncobd. N. II , July 10. 18.VZ Drm 8ta ? In reply to your note juxt reeolvtl I am happy to etate thai I have been well uequainad with Ocn. I'n rre ever cinoe be became a raniilent of Oouourd. in ISott. during ?Oft ad tufamoua charge* to which jou refer, and whi?h a moat tiiidigtiant S..rtixau spirit hut put iu circulation, need no refutation t rc. wbeie Oca. l'i? rce is personally kuowu ; and al though a politi. al opponent. 1 fe< I the ut most di*gu*tut tli if foul attempt tu prejudice him in the estimation of th<*e * ho do not enjoy the honor of hU personal ac <|Utiintanro. The t< *timony of respectable men of siAI parties, iu thw town, will rhow Ueu. Pieroe to be unaar puf i d iu the full and unexceptionable discharge of all tli< ihitic* pertaining to the gentleman and tho private cituen Yours sf*|*etfully. WILLIAM W A LK Kit Comoro, N. H.. July 19. 1HJ2. Pur Sir ? I cheerfully reply to your note of tbit date. 0< n. l'lerce and hi* family have boarded with me sincc No vernier. IMA and do ho Mill. I have always been a whig myself, tmd have uniformly voted with the pirty oppo??d to Gen Pierre in polities and am mortified, thai, through the ag< ncv of any member of our pnrty. there should be oocaMon to d< ny imputations ko entirely groundless as tliOfC which, for partv pur)>ofct>. have Ixvn put In circu lation. 1 am Mire that among honorable men of both pai ties. who have had an opportunity to kuow Oeu Pu ree well. y<.u would find no unfavorable testimony :i ni l li'ui. om a private eitisen. While we do uot like Iil- |K.litien we are ready to award to him all reepcet and honor in other re*peetti. I never knew the leas, was any man, in any State, so much the embodiment of his party as Prank Pierce. It is calculated that io the coming election for President, the State will give him 10,000 majority. That he has not sought the Presidency, directly or indirectly, is known and believed of all parties in this State. In fact, bis taste lay more in his profession than in public affairs. In 1842, as 1 bare stated, be resigned the office of United State* Senator. In 1W5, be was appointed by tbe Governor, according to the eonsttlntion, to fill the unexpired term of Levi Woodbury, who had accepted a judicial office. Ue declined the office. Subsequently the democratic party unanimously nominated him for Governor. He doelined the honor. In 18 Hi, President Polk of fered him the Attorney Generalship, mid would havo given him anything else he desired, but Pierce declined all 1 bave collected these facts in no spirit of paiti pansbip, for 1 am do party man, but in tho spirit of fair play, and a* a homage to justice and truth. If be is defeated, let it be on pi inciples, and not by calumnies. 1 shall conclude by what a New Hampshire lady said to me, in tho ears, when leaving Concord : ? " Is that President Pierce 1" "sho a?Ued, having seen him talking to some gentlemen at the depot. "Not jet President, niadame," I answered. "If he ia not, he ought to be," was her cmphatic reply. V I ATOK. Our Washington Correapon?Innee> WASUiN(iTeN, July 21, 1852. The Cud fish Dispute ? The Candle Lighted at Doth Ends ? Retaliation of the British Government for the Seljish Conduct of the South ? Niggers verms l.anip Oil, fyc , fye. The course of the British government iu relation to the Nova Scotia fisheries, it is said, has, in some measure, been superinduced by the restrictions im posed upon British subjects in relation to the fisheries on the coast of Florida; and also the course of South Carolina, and other Southern seaboard States, with respect to British oolored seamen. Prior to the cession of Florida, in 1819, and for seme time after the cession, the British Bahamians carried on all the wrecking, fishing and turtling on the const, and amongst the keys of Florida. The wrecking privilege is a very valuable one, boing estimated at a million and a half dollars annually. Tbe fishing for the Havana market alone, is estima ted at several hundred thousand dollars per annum, $100,000 being annually paid to the Captain (ieneral of Cuba, for the monopoly of the sale iu that city alone, and large quantities of turtles caught in those waters are shipped to Europe and every part of the United States. The wrecks on the Florida coast and keys were foimerly ourricd into Nassau and New Providence for adjudication. On the acquisition of the Flori das, the British were excluded by the Americans from all these privileges; and the exclusion became more ligid upon the passage of tbe British Eman cipation act, in IKJo, inasmuch as the crews of many of the British fishing smacks and wrecking visatl* were composed of colored cmancipeee. Since 1829, the people of Florida have claimed the exclusive property in and control over these fish eries, and denied the right or power of the f? ileral government to interfere with them. Upon the incoming of every now administration, since 1?24, application has been made to the federal go vernment by the British minister", in Whalf of the British Bahamians, for the privilege of participat ing in these immunities. It has been a ment- and, in exchange for this, It was stated in the Canadian legislature, last session, by Dr. Hincka, the leading member of tho government, that the provinoe it authorised by theparont State to concede to American vesscla the right to navigate the river St. Ijiwrcnee to the sea. fn addition to this, it has recently been pro pored, on the part of Canada, to allow American fishermen greater privileges on the sea-coast, to j Which, aa might be rappoaed, the Kostcru provinces, | and eTP? Ixiwer Canada, are opposed, whore the provincial nahcrmen enjoy gr at natural nnd national advantage*. tat ?bo ?*hijo?. coui|>ete with tkoM of thu dui'.t'd St (Me-, ow?..g I4>iql' bounty granted by (JocgKis, kud tiio imposition of a high rato of duty on foreign e.mglit, fish, whoa im port*."!. Th^y ?r? enabled, however, to mako a nuperior deseripiion of h-du which id uurod wbers caught, thus reuoetirig it U ttor fitted for tho South Amwioau aud Mediterranean market. A. la< go proportion of i h>s iJ. b iri prion of fish finds its w ay to the United blame, tieing purchased by tho American ti^hprmeu, in exchange for ram, sagar. and molasses ? for wbi> b. of course, they obtain the bounty allowed by Congress. Whatever arrangements the British ambassador may enter into with the Secretary of State, must be i ij aeoordanee witb bin itia' ructions, and expressly authorized by tho British government; and th<3 granting any privilege to American fishermen, be yond what they already potaess, will doubtless ho opposed by Nova Sootia and N'ew Brunswick; anl the agricultural influence iu Congress will, doubtless, be sufficient to prevent tbu adoption of reciprocity. If discussions can bo protracted till after the next; meeting of Parliament, when tho return of a liberal majority may drive tho Derby ministry from power, better terms will then prob ibly be obtained; but* in tho mean time, as Mr Webster observes, the fail fishing will be jeopardised, if not ruined, for tho present year, as the American fishermen will ho restricted to cfeep sea fishing; and they will be pre vented from purchasing British cured ^sh, on wuhh to obtain a bounty on their return to port, from tho national treasury. A mistake is made by the correspondent of tho Baltimore Sun, of this morning, when he asserts that the claims of the British government havo never been enforced, an I haw seen fifteen or twenty American fishermen brought into Halifax harbor at a time, for a violation ot ibo terms of tho conven tion. That w^s, ho*o\or, when the present ruling party in England wore b. fore in power. That all waters within a line drawn from one headland to another, are within the jurisdiction of tho OOUtry in which they arc situated, is an admitted axiom of nationul law, beyond winch tho Court of Admiralty alone can take cognizance of oft'oncos that are com mits d there. X ? A Our Buffalo Ooir?kpoiiilenMa Bufpalo, July 17, 1852. The Litter of Amcrirus ? The Srutt Ratification Wettings ? The Weather, <$ majority. Mr. Papineau is a violent radical. Tho government candidate (so called) was a very modo rate man, in every respect. Mr. Papineau is a man ot splendid talents ? an orator, a scholar, and ? gentleman. He was supported by the ultra libe rals ? red republicans ? and also by the Wies, in op position to the so called government candidate. It is said that Mr. P. will be offered the Speaker ship ot the Ilous?. A contemplated grand Jilibus trro invasion of Upper Canada by th< supporters of General Scott in tho United State*, has caused much exoitement here. Representations hava been sent to the government ujion tho subject, and considerable feeling is manifested. I shall be able soon to give you tho full particulars; but it is evident that thcro is a movement; on foot that is calculated to disturb the peaca of tho two countries. I shall be able, la tt dnyortwo, to raise the veil from certain proceed ings. which, I trust, will inaku the sensible pcoplo of the Cnitcd Statm and Canada pause and reflect, upon the gn nt drama which is being played beforo them, and which, if persisted in, will lead to bloovl-* tiled and revolution. I iiave a number of documents on the nbject, wlii< li I shall submit to you very soon. OftlON. Senator C haw's Letter* Kindkhiiook, (aruund Lindenweld,) > .Inly 21, 1852. S 10 Tin: K1HT0JI OK Till: N K W YOKK HERALD. blK ? The letter of Senator Chase, of Obi*, to Bandy Hill Butler, published in jour paper of the Atthult., in regarded here as u great curiosity, and a deserved Hack