We liave changed the place of meeting from that of laftyear ; so that none of you should have reason to complain : It i» your own ground, ana on that land we wish to renew our former'trade and friendships, and to remove every thing that has blinded the path between you and us. We are now governed by a President, who is like the old King over the Great Water. He commands all the Warriors of the Thirteen Great Fires. He will have regard to the welfare of all the Indians ; and when peace lhall be established, he will be your father, and you will be his children, so that none shall dare to do you harm. We know that lands have been the cause of dispute between you and the white people ; but we now tell you that we want no new grants ; our obje>ftis to make a peace, and to unite us all under our Great Chief Warrior and President, who is the Father and Proteeftor of all the white people. Attend to what we fay. Our traders are very rich, and have houses full of filch goods as you were used to get in former days ; it is our wish that you Should trade with them and they with you, in ftridt friendfhip. Our brother George Galphin will carry you this talk ; listen to him, he will tell you nothing but truth from us. Send us your answer by him. Andrew Pickens of the U,,,ted State, 7 > for Indian Affairs in the South- H.Osborne. \ J ern Department. April 20, 1789. [_A true copy from the original.] CHARACTER OF THE NEAPOLITAN. From Sherlock's Letters. Travellers are often mistaken in judging of the Italian, especially the Neapolitan. They think he has no sense, because he wants ideas. A man can have but few ideas when he has never been out of his own country, and when he has read nothing; but examine the Neapolitan on all the subjeCts with which he is acquainted, and you will fee whether he wants natural capacity. He re sembles the foil of his own country : a field well tilled in Naples produces the moll plentiful ci ops ; neglected, it yields but briars and thirties. It is the fame with the genius of the inhabitants ; cultivated, it is capable of everything ; untilled ; it produces only folly and vice. ON MRS. SIDDONS. A CELEBRATED ACTRESS IN LONDON. WHAT art thou ! Thou who canst steel foft pity's tender bread, and at thy feign'd revenge, teach her to greet the agonizing groan, and eye the reeking dagger with a smile 1 i hou, who canlt soothe the rooted anguish of the fmai ting foul, and turn its trickling streams to bathe thy painted wounds ! I hou, who canlt arrest the callous thief*— suspend liis pilfering rage—teach him to feel— and drop an honeji tear 011 thy fictitious grief! Thou, who canst wring the Stoic's ltubborn heart, and force the maiden tear ! Thou, who canst melt the Miser's flinty foul, and make him weep andgive J What art thou ! the dazzling meteor of a stint ed day ! A splendid transient wonder! great, but confin'd ; and where unseen, unknown ; for alas ! thine is a trackless path, where no vestige can di rect to trace thy glory: The unseen Beauty fee bly thrills in story ; and as when radiant Phoebus dii'appears, the pale-face Moon comes forth, and faintly cheers us for the loss of day—so fonie less brilliant light, not rilen, or now loft in thy su perior blaze, when SIDDONS sets, lhall glitter in its turn, the idol glory of a darker hour. E. C. * It was said that a thief wasfo much affr&cd with Mrs. SidJon's actin , that he was detected in the of picking a pocket, by neg lecting to withdraw his hand. ON SCANDAL. - ——" Hcrretlatcri iethalis Arundo." AGAINST Slander there is rto defence. Hell cannot boast so foul a fiend ; nor man deplore so fell a foe : It stabs with a word—with a nod with a shrug—with a look—with a fiuile : It is the pestilence walkingin darkness, spreading con tagion far and wide, which the most wary tra veller cannot avoid : It is the heart-searching dagger of the dark Aflaflin : It is the poisoned arorw, whose wound is incurable : It is the mor tal fling of the deadly adder : MURDER is its employment: INNOCENCE it's prey—and RUIN itsfport. E. C. LAW and PHYSIC. IT has been a fubjet r t of enquiry, how it comes to pals that the profeflions of law and phyftc ap pear to have preserved a decided pre-eminence of all others, in all the variation of principles and manners, that have obtained among man kind ?—This may be accounted for si om this con federation, viz : That their obje