situated on the north-west coast of America, and so named by Captain Cook in 1778. The men, women, and children of this found are all clothed in the same manner. Their ordinary dress is a sort of clothe frock, or rather robe, which sometimes reaches only to the knees, but generally down to the ankles. These frocks are composed of the skins of various animals, and are commonly worn with the hairy side outwards. The men often paint their faces of a black colour, and of a bright red, and sometimes of a bluish or leaden hue; but not in any regu-