INDIAN NATIONS, &c.—BOOK & 81 
NAU-DO-qUES, 
On the Sabine, sixty or seventy miles from the Yattasces. 
The French had formerly a factory here—language Caddo. 
ADDAIZE, 
Forty miles from Natchitoches—below the Yattasces j lan¬ 
guage peculiar—extremely difficult to speak. 
eyish, 
Near Nacogdoches—nearly exterminated a few years ago 
by the small-pox—language peculiar* but speak Cadd6. 
KYIS, 
On the Trinity river, near where the road to St* Antonio 
crosses it. Language peculiar. 
TACHEES, 
On a branch of the Sabine—language Caddo—gave their 
name to the province of Texas-— Nabadaches , in the same neigh« 
bourhood. 
beddies, 
On the Trinity, about sixty miles S. of the Nacogdoches^ 
speak Caddo, but have a peculiar language. 
accokesaus, 
Two hundred miles S. W. of Nacogdoches, on the W. side 
of the Colerado—speak a peculiar language—wander about the 
bay of St. Bernard. 
MAYES, 
On the bay of St. Bernard, near the Guadaloilpe—hate the 
Spaniards, and are attached to the French—have a tradition of 
the landing of La Salle in this neighbourhood—speak Attakapas. 
CARANKOtTAS, 
On an island or Peninsula in the bay of St Bernard, 10 miles 
long and 5 broad—at war with the Spaniards—a peculiar lan¬ 
guage. 
