BRITIS SETTLEMENT tilarly enumerated a superior kind of In- digo, which has always obtained a very marked preferneo in the several European Pawrlket Large quantities of this comic modity sometimes find a vent by the oppo- sit sea, but more frequently by the river Police, whi4i kmpties itself into the At* lantic, through theaGultf the same name. Considerable sums in specie-are also ship- pd at stated periods from Guatimala for Q144d ain. Thi A ticles of commerce obtained from the Spaniards are chiefly pgroured by money,. but it is exceedingly well understood, that goods of British manufacture,. suitable to their wanh wouQld-tbeA' more acceptable to them. . The Gulf of Dolce but a few leagues distant from the English Settlement, and. Truxillo, from the excellence of its hart bour, would deserve important consider-. tion, if an extension of our commercial in- tercowse were attempted in this quarter of the world. Establishments for the purposes