4 • p'• h ri *.' 4 ; ) \• i• 1I A, WILLIAM BREWSTER, } EDITORS, SAM. G. WHITTAKER, Ely Drama. [Prom the N. York Commercial Advertiser.] A SCENE OF THE DAY. Extract from "The Age of Chivalry"—An no• finished Tragedy. [Scene in a Washington Hotel.] Brooks to Keil,. The glorious South, for chivalry renown• ed, Ifath twice already in this stormy ses sion Chastised the "insolence" of the craven North. And new occasion fit demands n stroke Such as shall bring down the cowards to their knees. &N. What mean ye, Brooks, by this exalted strain? Explain ll,' enigma of your noble brain. Brooks oh, dull of understanding! Huth not Herbert Laid the Hibernian in his gory bed, For.words too freely spoken in debate? And did not chivalrous Rust fit Aiken. sas, Backed by his friends, bent unresisting Greely, Until we thought free speech was quite extinct ? But now Now England's champion in • our Senate, Forgetful of the danger of his deed, Huth with a bold presumptuous spirit dared To beard my uncle in the Senate hall. Gods I I will revenge my noble relative. And teach "impertinence" to hold its tongue. Still. It well befits that Carolina's son With that majestic arm, should vindicate His august relative by deed of strength, And humble Massachusetts in the dust. • But•what do you propose, my valiant friend ? Brooksl have a rifle, pistol, bowie knifo and ClllO, _ And T se:u•co resolved yet whieh to use On the doomed ettliff. Keit/. My noble friend, this surely will not un- Your goner°us blood heated to high em• prise, Must cool apace ero yo determine thus ; Lest the avenging anger of the North, Like a great milldam swollen by con• stant vain Break o'er ita dike and sweep to ruin diro Our homes, our slaves, our chivalry tunl nll. Brook/ Well ye havo spoken, Keitt 1 there's rc• sped. To circumstances duo, fur minim; is not valor. And I have feared that should I kill the wretch Pp pistol, dirk, °rather murderous wea. pun, There may be found in all the frozen North Some during bravo who might let out my wind ; To mingle viewless with tho empty air. The laws I dread nut in this ten mile, square, For Southern gentlemen they wore not made. But 0 cold lead l whether at Bladens• burg, Or in th r o - dark streets of this capital, It is my soul's Odium.° Krill. Now tliat your blood goes down to bill• oleo well Wills prudence rcason,let me now dc• -scribe. Brooks speak on. 'lis true this offence was grave ; great Butler's mono Like the mad Kuight iu old Cervantes' tale Was made ridiculous by that brilliant speech. Yet ridicule, by honor's nicest code, Deserves not death, but such correctness meet As insolence front slaves demands he. times. My voice then :3, that in some favored place And moment with this gotta penile cane You deal him chastisement in measure full, And if he die, the intention you nay plead Was no murder but correction sound, )aloe But what, if he like a maddened slave should torn And beat me sore. Or worse, perchance with dirk, Or pistol, chase no through the street. Such sad event would tarnish Southern pride, And Carolina's chivalry would blush. Ecilt. You 1111 me with amaze. A puritan From Massachusetts armed. Ha Iha I ha There is no danger to bo feared from thence. A clergyman a blunderbuss may hold— A Lowell factory girl may bear conceal ed On her soft breast a ponderous slung. shot, 'Tis possible I mean that this might be. But this fine spoken Sumner's never thought Of lead or steel save for theme of trade. Brooks Zuunds I You have raised my coutttgo in the deed That you suggest. But, 01 my friend, stand by And if resistance front his hand I moot, Draw your revolver and your dirk as well, Whilst I with weapons of lilts deadly force Defends my skull, and thus togethor we Will pierce him Through and through with uteel and load And after, plead the right of sel Heroine. 'Tis fitly spoken. Now's Wu: time to act. [Scene in the Senate Chamber.] Keil!. See I See I the villain occupies his seat, Hemmed in 'Ms chair and desk be sits and writes, Resistance is impossible. Fear not, Advance and strike, for to I ho sees us [Brooks ;Wiles. Steamer falls insensible.— Brooks repeals his blows on ilte Allen, stunned and helpless Senator.] As Falstaff stabbed dead Hotspur, fear. in' he might rise, Su 'go/tun/lit treeks beat senseless Sum Her e'enbe face sod eves 1 (sdert CAPTAIN JACK . 0P THE JUNIATA. From Jones' 41istory of the Early Set tlement of the Juniata Valley," recently published, we copy the following account of the person from whom Jack's Mountain is said to be named : Among the first settlers in Aughwick Valley was Captain Jaok, certainly one of the most noted characters of the day. He was a white man, of almost Herculean proportions, with extremely swarthy com plexion ; in fact, he was supposed by some to be a half breed Indian, and by others a quadroon. His early history and real name aro altogether shrouded in mystery. He flourished about Shirleysburg between 1750 1762, when, with two or three companions ho went to the Juniata and built himself a cabin near a beautiful spring. His solo pursuit, it would appear, was hunting and fishing, by which he procured the means of subsistence. Late one summer evening, returning, with his companions from a fishing excur sion, Capt. Jack found his cabin in ruins, and his wife and two children murdered From that moment he became an altered man,•roaming the woods alone, sleeping in caves, hollow logs, or wherever ho could find shelter, The loss of his family no doubt crazed him for a time, as he did not appear among the settlers until the fall of 1753. In the interim, however, ho was frequently seen, and we may add frequent ly fell, by the savages. There is reason to believe that on the discovery of the wrongs done him, he made a vow to de vote the balance of his life to slaying Indi ans. If he did, right faithfully was his vow kept, for his fame spread far and wide among the red-skins. The settlers about Aughwich, as well as those in Path Val ley and along tho river, frequently found death savages, some in a state of partial de cay, and others with their flesh stripped by the baldmagles and their bones bleach ing in the sun on the spot where Jack's rifle had laid them low. On one occasion he lay concealed in the woods by the side of the Aughwick path, when a painted warrior, with a red feath er waving from his head, his body bediz ened with gewgaws recently purchased from a trader, came down the path—a crack from Capt. Jack's rifle, and the sav age bounded into the air and fell dead without a groan. It appears that three others were in the company, but had tar ried a t a spring : on hearing the discharge of the rifle, being under the impression that their companion had shot a bear or deer, they gave a loud ..whoop." Jack immediately loaded, and when the Indians came up to the dead body, he shot and killed a second one. His survivors then rushed into the thicket, and one of them getting a glimpse of Jack, shot at him, but missed. Seeing that the chances wore desperate, Jack jumped out and engaged in a ltand•to-hand encounter--the fourth savage being armed with a tomahawk.— Ho soon despatched the third by beating his brains out with his rifle ; but the fourth an athletic fellow, grappled, when a lung fight followed, and only ceased when both were exhausted by the loss of blood. Thu Indian managed to get away, leaving Jack the victor on the field of battle. Weak and faint though he was, he scalped the three savages, fixed those trophies upon bushes overhanging the path, and then without deigniej to touch their gewgaws or their arms, managed to work his way to the settlement, where his wounds, con sisting of eight or ton stabs were dressed. It is said that one night the family of an Irishman named Moore, residing in Augh wick, was suddenly awakened by the re port of a *gun ; on opening the door they found a dead Iritian lying upon the very threshold. By the feeble light which shone through the door, they discovered the dim outline of Capt. Jack, who merely said, "I have saved your lives," and disappeared. With an eye like the eagle's and a con stitution that could bravo the heat of sum mer us well as the frosts of winter, he roa med liko an uncaged tiger, the most formi dable foe that crossed the red man's path. Various were the plans and stratagetns re sorted to by the Indians to capture him, but they all proved unavailing. He fought them upon their own ground, with their own weapons, and adopted against them Their own merciless warfare. In strata gem ho was an adept, and in the use of the rifle his superior did net exist in his day and generation. These qualifications made him not only a terror to tho Indians, but fatuous among the settlers, who for their own protection formed a scout or company of rangers, and tendered to Captain Jack the command, which he accepted. This company was " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INBEPARADI.E. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1856. uniformed like Indians, with hunting shirts, leather leg,gins, and mocassins, and, as they were not acting under the sanction of the government,styled themselves Capt. Jack's Hunters. All the "hunting" done, however, after securing game to supply their wants, was probably confined to hunt ing for scalps of Indians ; and as it was a penal offence, then, to occupy the hunting grou ads of the Juniata Valley, (much more to %shed the blood of any of the savages,) it is not likely that the squatter "hunters" ever furnis hod the Quaker Proprietors with an official list of the killed and wounded. These exploits gave Jack a number of so briquets is the absence of his real name : ho was known as the ..Black Rifle," "Black Hunter," <