AN OLD FIGHTER. Dr. Leonard Wood who is to be Colonel and Command the Rough Riders. No command in the Uuiied States army or the voluuteers is attracting more attention nowj-dured every posible hardship tnan the Regiment of Rough Rulers whicu is being organ zed by ex-Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theo Rooseveb. Mr. Roosevelt not being an experi enced military man, took the place of lieutenantscolonel of the regiment and his friend, Dr. Leonard Wood, the famous In dian fighter, is to be the colonel. As soon as the Texas cowboys are organized into1 compan ies and the commanders named the regiment will be sent im- m .diately to Cuba to cooperate with the troops who were re cently sent over. The regiment will be the most formedable cavalry regiment ever put in the field. All of the members of the regiment will be men who have spent years on the plains, and all the while be was facing im mediate death froin starva tion and massacres. Through the roughest and wildest couns try on this continent he went after Geronimo, and his handful of men hung bravely on the trail despite their hunger and thirst. bmally after the troops had en tney came upon the Indian camp; and by one determined assault captured the blood thirs ty chief, and his band ofassasins The regulars, with Dr. Wood at their head, then returned in !- ... 1- Tit- " uiuiupii wun ueronirao as a prisoner. Ke had barely time to imprison his captives in Tex as before he was called upon to go m pursuit of another band of Apaches who were murdering the settlers in Western Texas. Wood followed this band across the state and finally drove them into Mexico. He at last lobt them in the uncivilized wilds of the mountains south of the Yaqui river. They never troubled the settlers again. The last dangerous undertak idg in which Dr. Wood distins who are used to rough riding jguished himself was in 1888, 1 n t" 1 i 1 and an kiucis ot nam experien ces. A medal of honor, awarded to him by congress, is worn by Colonel Wood. This was given him in recognition of his many acts of daring in the wild west. when he was sent after Apache Kid, the vvorstJndian chief who has done murder in Texas. Dr. Wood captured the chief and had him sent to a California iss land. He was imprisoned there It was Colonel Wood who cap ! for awhile, but finally escaped turifd the celebrated Indian chief and returned to his trade of Geronimo, who crossed the southwest with his band of Ap aches and left behind him a trail mtr'ced with blood of wo men r.;:i 'ioics. "Hundreds of unprot ci ! settlers, with their familit.-., were ruthlessly mur-. murder. Since his duties as an Indian fighter have ended, Dr. Wood has been stationed in California and Georgia. Chased the Eagle. Kty West, May 16. Advices dered by the Apache chief, and received from the southern coast it looked as if the entire south- of Cuba say that a Spanish gun west would be overrun by the j boat, taking advantage of thede warlike savages. The Kigth parture of the Nashville and the United States infantry was divi" j Marblehead after the fight at ded up so that the only availa- tCienfuegos, last Wednesday, ble portions did not have officers ' chased the mosqnito fleet boat of rank. Dr. Wood was at that 1 Eagle off from Cienfuegos. The time surgeon and had the rank J Eagle blazed away, and in re of captain. When it was found , turn was struck several times, that the soldiers must go on the riie Marblehead, hearing the warpath, the detachment and , firing, came back to help the with a small force of men he j Eagle. The Spaniard, however, left on the hardest task ever ' escaped. The Eagle's injruies laid out before a crowd of men. were slight He took up the trail of the In -'. dian chief and his band, and for 5?1 ip2:.3- n . 2,400 miles he followed, though Kmd You Have Always Bought HEROE'S GRAVES IN THE POTTERS' FIELD. Where lie the Maines Silent Dead. Is the way you like your MEATS, fresh is way we have it. OUR eel Veal, MuttOIl and All from our own slaughter house and fresh every day. Buy your meats of Caleb Walker, Stsu UnTo. 4, CITY MARKET. Phone 91 AND GET THE BEST. Finest Poultry at The Lowest Prices. 9 t c i1(1Va vnnr orders, thev shall have our most careful nnd nroniDt attention. Remember Stall No. i, City Market i j, V A 9 r- m j m I I ill PiWfi w v Si &s i In ii 4 1 . In r 1 p4wWf. 2 o o G ill rtiKi o A ill gr j :t;i;;;;HSi!!ii;!ii::i.:2ili'iffi!i,!i!f' : o ihk-r 1 ill' !2SS& I a S I f a .ii store of MAIN STREET, You'll find a ful sto1 hicn 1 am onenngfat anything usually kept V W-class Grocery store ELIZABETH CITY,N. C. G-EOCBEIES om prices. Call and you will Key West, Fla. In the out skirts ot town where the smail Spanish, cottages cluster silent and sun burned along the nar row street is the City Cemetery of Key West Near the main en trance, which is guarded by 1 .11 i . creaicy oia wooaen gate. is a group of newly made graves. 1 hey are in the potters field the part of the burying ground set apart for the pauper dead. These are the graves oi the heroes who lost their lives on the battleship Maine in Havan na harbor on the night of Fed- ruary 15. Above each mound of glitteiing white limestone soil a small American flag droops in the fierce sun that beats inces-. santly down upon the island. l'he flags are faded and frayed. When a breeze comes up from the ocean they flutter sadly for a moment and again drop to the scorching earth. On the center of each mound is a small glass goblet which still holds the discolored stems of flowers. They were put here by a lady from Philadelphia, said the dreamy old sexton, but t don't know who she was. She came here about ten clays after the bodies buried and put flow ers on all the craves. I ask- ed her who she was but she. said no matter. And these faded little flags and withered stems of flovve' s are all that mark the resting places of the heroes of whom the civilized world has been talking since the fatal night, nearly three months ego. There is nothing else to story the strand ger who passes the potter's field where the heroes of the Maine are sleeping. The place where the graves are was evi dently prepared in great haste. iear the little white mounds on all sides are unsightly heaps of litter and rubbish. In one spot stands an old hearse, weather beaten and ghastly in its very aspect of loneliness and decay. Tne sexton said it had once beeu used as the city iiearse, but one day it broke down while carry ing a body to the potter's field and there it still stands. Just to the north of the rest ing place of the Maine sailors is a small iron enclosure which marks the grave of Bridgett F. Hoffman, who died in 1864. "I guess we will have to call her Mother Hoffman," said the old sexton, "for she is the only one buried here who has got a name, and I think she ought to be flicther to everyone in the pot ter's field." Very close to the twenty four mounds is a group of thirty six naval seamen who died of yel low fever. The sexton, however, was unable to tell when they were buried there. Nothing on the 12 inch slab, at the head of each group, tells the story of the life or death of the seamen. The names and the words, "United States Navy," are alone carved upon the slabs. But nature, even with the barren lime rock below i.re the scorching sun above, seems try ing to do what the hand of men has failed to do in beutifying the graves of the heroes. The luxuriant trees of the tropical species aie all about the newly made graves. On one side a massive gieen cactus lifts its pulpy foliage high in the air. On the opposite a row of tropi. cal trees, refreshingly green, are in full bloom, and with every breeze cover the sun burned mounds with beautiful scarlet flowers. Near another side ot the little burial plot is a row of roy al spruce pines, which throw a shadow upon the graves in the afternoon and through whose branches the sea breezes con stantly sing when the sun has gone down. Rarely does anyone visit the place, it is without care or atten tion, a bycorner of the island, for two centuries Spaniards, ne groes and fisher-folk have put their dead and forgotten them. Perhaps one half of the graves in the cemetery are those of un known sailors, whose sleeping places are unmarked. Mo.st of the inscriptions on tombstones are in Spanish. The graves of the Maine's victims are sur rounded by tombstones with bpumsn inscriptions. it is a picture of melancholy desola tion. The grave yard is located on a high point in about the middle of the island and from it the great stretch of blue ocean may be seen on either side but half a mile distant There is no soil there. The graves are sim ply carved out of the limestone and rock. All day the sun beats down upon the barren white rocks surface until the scanty vegetation curls and crackles in the heat. Rarely is there a sound to break the mel ancholy silence. Sometimes one hears the cry of the sea bird or the soft parrot like voices of the Spanish children in the cot taes near by. But that is all. WHY AMERICAN GUN NERS WIN. Xfo-To-Bao for Fifty Cuu. Guaranteed tobacco habit cere, makes weak xooa 80901 0109a pure. WC.U. &U OniffglS- The Old Confederate Naval Fighter Explains Their Success. Mr.John W. Reynolds, of 1 ,S3 1 Edmonson avenue, a North Car olinian by birth and formerly Master at arms on the celebrated Confederate ram Albemarle, de clares that the recent exhibition of American naval gunnery at Matanzas is not the first exam pie of the natural skill of the bluejackets. "Americans are natural born marksman," said Mr. Reynolds, a fact which history has long since demonstrated. Perhaps one of the most striking expla nation for their success is found in their superb couiage. That invests them with coolness and self possession, two special qual ities which are absolutely essen tial. I have had large experience in heavy contests with naval guns. When it is remembered that I was'aboard the Albemarle during the days of her career in 1864, it will be readily un derstood what I haye seen. Thatj boat, perhaps, engaged in the j fiercest naval battles -which have been fought in the last half century. Reference to the memorable conllict in Albe marle Sound is a sufficient il lustration as to the character of her fights. That was an in stance in which the three qual ities of courage, coolness and expert gunnery were virtually es sential. The situation was one of life and death. It was one of wh'cli the least trepidition, the slightest touch of confusion or wild excitement, the most triv ial inacuracy in the matter of markmanship, would have causs ed a heavy loss in every detail. "As it was, there was display ed a perfection of bravery and splendid dexterity in gunnery which proved the excellence of American markmanship, both Federal and Confederate; in fact the general prowess which that battle called forth demonstrated to the world that the combined puissance of an amicable Amer ican nation would constitute a power utterly invincible. It clearly disclosed that a union of Northern and Southern forces, endowed with their intrepid pluck, and self possessed cool ness, and calmness in battle, would qualify the nation beyond the peradventure of a doubt to successfully combat the best na vy;afloat. "I understand the striking differencces between gunnery- today and what it was a gener ation back. At the same time I know equally well that exactly the same qualities which made a good gunner then contribute to the same end now. A good American knows no such thing as fear. The word timidity is to him an unfamiliar term. For that reason his4 nerves become fluttered with an excitea anxi ety. There is nothing which more quickly destroys accurate and deadly gunnery than either nervousness or excitement. "There may not be much of the close range firing in this contest such as we endured dur in the days of the civil war. In the first place I do not believe the Spaniards will suffer us to approach too close to their boats. Nor do I apprehend much danger rom the play of Spanish guns. Our only source of peril, if there be any at all of conse-. queuce, will be found in the Spanish torpedo boats. Their action in battle is strickingly in laimonv with the Spaniard's natural treacheiy of heart. They are boats which seldom attempt o perpetrate their havoc except under the cover ot darkness 01 fog or uutil a heavy curtain of smoke obscures and hides their mauouvres, and then they will attempt to steal up and strike some covert and stealthy blow. Therefore they need watching. "Americans of today and Ameiicans of thirty years ago are very largely the same. Our present age gunners on board our fleets, are compelled to han dle large guns and more compli cated machinery. But the same qualities which made the gun ners of the past are equally req uisite for the gunner of the present. And " those qualities are couspicuous on every ship. "The condition has arisen in which I made a prediction, and it is a prediction which was made thirty four years ago, based on experience, not on mere speculation. I have stood in the midst of a storm of shot and sheli in which Americans alone were the hurlers of the thunder bolts. I said then that the world contained no race of men whus capacity for victorious fighting could parallel the Uni ted States. What I said then I am now prepared to reiterate. Time will soon show that when the American guns are trained on the Spanish enemy and Am erican blood begins her united fight, the ultimate issue with its train of events, will be a speedy triumph of the Stars and Stripes. Spain can never stand under our American dash." -Baltimore American. mm MP Eg The prevailing idea at this time to make big- prom ises in order to draw trade, but as Abraham Lincoln said, "you can fool some of the people all the time, you can fool all of the people some times, but you can't fool all the people all the time- We consider the best advertisement we can put before the peo ple is the most fashionable and best goods for the money on the market; which we are doing and al ways hope to; the truth of which is evidenced in our constantly increasing trade, to whom we return our nost gratetel thanks and assure them it will be our constant aim to give them the best values for the money. CLOTHING. Sack Suits Singh up-to-date, and at prices that astonish the CLOSEST BUYERS. Our prices are lower than any concern in the business in this city. i and (f fWiR Ii I Mi I 500 Men's pure wool suits, $4.25 to $5.00. 800 Boy's suits from $1.25 to $4 50. Men's suits at :ill puces- Wo are the leaders, others follow. ; W e make the prices on all merchandise. 1 00 oods, etc., yds. Dress silks, lawns, Chat JMust Be Sold. Remember we are the price makers and leaders- The most complete LINING DEPARTMHNT in the city. All the new things procured as fast as aotten out. 800 pairs of $2.00 and $2.50 Shoes to be clos ed out at $1.5o and $2oo. we have never resorted to any catch penny, or fake sales that are gotten up to deceive the public: but have always taken square dealing as our motto, giving the people the people the worth of their money, hence our success; our business has grown continually under this motto; week by week, year by year, until we are soaring ahead of all our com petitors- Not being able to procure larger quarters at our present stand, we move Sep tember 1st, in the new Bradford Building, cor- Main and Poindexter Streets- EA5T SIDE WATER ST Eliza-Toet-b- Cit3r 1ST The Leading Merchants and Hustlers.