s anger directed. He wants | man's sealp. It ia a sort of ly feud—a feud that embroils the tribe of Apaches detained as ere of war by the United States ent en a reservation in Okla- Fer Geronimo, Kriown the world | chief of the Apaches, is chief A rival has dared to usurp Squaw and danghters have of his tribe for ait a hundred ? has Jeturned to his people to November, 1961, has 8 unlucky mon ten Geromi- For dozens of foe from-—unlias one would do Ate battle. That is why there | tronbly brewing these days on the Apache land in Oklalioma. It sil happened bicause Geronimo to the fattiring invitation him by the officials of the exposition. : #pent the summer there and was & eonspicuous fomturpy of the great His stay was thoroughly en- i de, bis lifs at the exposition 8 one of continual comfort and re, As to the future he trou- 5 thes ‘before he Taft Bowe wp Ly one Macenborses, an who had jealously longed for ay years to step into Geéronimo's sins. Macenhorses openly ac Geronimo of catering to the of certain cattiemen who | : of followers. Be ase ot the pa. mition people. The chiet of at brian He 41d not nough of the attitude | s | who converted it into a large dwelling ¢ho ing over the bitterest pill ser had to swallow, He ix assassiviation of ‘Macenhorses j2xt event anticipated by those the mood that the de- ed chieftain is now chafing under, ever yet Lag fro escaped Geroni- ey 4 Was absent in the East 1 = a and a atty, An election was held a fort- iin ,lographs referring to himself while he was In (his country. The cuttiigs respondence on the subject | sib is formally called upon to ap- come to a satlafactory arrangement. | i has for its clubhouse the old western { home of John Brown of Harper's Fer.’ rem as bunkers on its eourse the re { tion of thess bunkers little thinking “according to & story pubilshed recently in one of the local papers. The incl dent occurred during the trial of 5 case § county. 1 | simple, but owing to the pecaliur tac ¥% | | ties employed on both sides was soon 1 transformed Into an exceedingly com- | plicated and mystifying problem. Aft for Hatening for many weary hours to { the haranguing of counsel and the ex | the room, with the sphiited exclama- i tion, "To ~~ with It." and all {others followed him out. The court, i 1 1s sald, thereupon decided that since {| could be assessed. : ] Guilford, Maine. i interior. Stairways were placed on the this rather odd dwelling house, friend of his h as soon as posible. bers only two ‘hundred and | night ago and Geronimo was defeated. His lordly raiment was then handed over to Macenhories, who was formal ly proclaimed chief. This was the cheering condition of Aptche politics when the unsuspect. ing Geronimo, his sport ended, left the haunts of the pale-face, whose over: tures had indirectly wrought his rain, and hastened home, He Immediately thallenged Chis Macenhorees to fight & duel. The pew ralor retaliated by having Geronimo arrested and fining him ten ponies The band Apaches on the reser. vation minding Port Bill, though Hty prisoners of war, are prac. teally free, as they bave had their Hberty for years and show po inclina- tion to escape. They control their own land to rent or use, and live in their own preferred Apache way, Geronimo himself draws $25 a month as scout. be A oy A 5S AA SHAH OF PERSIA IS SUED. French Clipplog Peresn Sens to Re cover for Press Notices. A French justice of the pesce is try- ing to make the long hands of the law reach no less a person that Muzafar ed Din, 8hah of Persia. Stamped paper containing a summons is to be sent from Paris to the shal of Teher. an calling on him to pay a litila bil] which he left unsettled while he was staring at Contrexevills in the sum- mer of 1900. During his sojourn in France the ruler of Persia made an arrangement with a newscatting agen cy which eontractad to sapply his majesty with all the articles and pho- were In Aue course carefully forwarded to the shah, and at the end of last year the supplying agency sent in a bill for £4806. The amount was considered exorbl- tant at the Persian legation, and a sum of £80 was offered. This the newsetitting agency flatly refased to accept, and then ensued a long cor. Reeling that this led to no practical fesults, the agency took out a “conciliatory summons” against the shah. As the document will not reach Teharin for a long time to come, the case 18 tn be beard before the justice of the peace | of the Rus Drovot in April, 1962. The poar before the justice In order to it possible, with the plalatiia Historia Relies In Gott. The Portage Golf Club of Akron, O., ry fame, and the members made as Taw changes 8x possible when they fitted it up for thelr purposes, It was the scene of John Brown's early conferences to ward the liberation of the slaves, po vious to his desperate attempt to Pa ry out his own ideas with & small bang The Bavsnnzh (Ga) Golf Clad util. maing of the earthworks thrown up by the confederates for the defense of the city during the civil war. Instead of stopping shot, shell and bullets, they now fulfil the more peaceful and en-| { tertaining duty of catching driven golf balls. Gen. Robert BE. Lee “badly personally superintended the constroe- of the benefit be was confronting upos the devotees of the royal and ancient Independent Jurymen. A Jury in Prince Edward Island seems to be 8 pretty independent body, for the assessment of damages, which was up before the high sheriff of the The case was originally very amination of witnesses, one old fury. ‘man finally got up in disgust and left the the jury had disagreed, no damages Maine's Steepled Tenement House There is a unique tenement house in Years ago the old Universalist Church in that plans was abandoned as a place of worship and it fell into the hands of several owners house by the alteration simply of the outside, leading to the upstair tene ments, but beyond these exterior addi tions the church retained all its forme: appearances of a “meeting hicuse.” and is known locally as "The Church.” The high steeple and itz weather vane add ed little ornament and no usefulness to hut they continued to occupy this exalted if incongruous position until a wesk ago, when the carpesters tore down ‘the steeple, and this old landmark of “Pious HII” lost, as it were, its piety First make up your mind as to the validity of doing an action, then do It | somn o. NOOKEFELLER, JR, TELLS [Son of the Richest Individual in the men are the victims of eclreamstances, bitek and walt for the door to open’ 60 when 8 man knocks on the door to | may be ignorant, he may know nothing i tally, OF THE ROAD TO SUCCESS. World Talks of the Trials of His | Own Lite-—How le Was Convinced of the Weakness of His Methods. Before a large number of young men, pany of them members of his Bible class fn New York, John D. Roeckefel- ler, Jr. delivered a short address on “Opportunity.” In an earnest misnner he expressed the balief that mere chanos has litle to do in shaping the fortunes of men, and that opportunity niast be sought, He based his remarks on the promise given in Matt. vii, 7: “Ask, and #t ghall be givin you) seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened | ants you” “It often happens,” said Mr. Rovke folier, “that & young man in all ear nestness says, ‘I want to do something for myself, something for my friends something for my family and some | thing for my God,” and falls to do any- thing, Thin he sighs and Believes {hat opportunity has never offered itself to him. “I supposes that It often happens that but more often au better explanation fx» fatlure can be found, Boe gay that | Hobson did that great deed fn the har- | bor of Santiago becauss fortune fav ard Bim. Others who were thors were brave and competent and just as will ing as Hobson, yet the opportunity was | old customs, and were making the only for him. “The reason that one man finds an | opportanity while another falls fs that | the fired seeks while the other waits to bo called. It Is not always so, but at least ninety-nine times in a hundrad fortune favors tha persistant hunter and passes by the Ingeard “Christ says, ‘Go and knock on the | dnor If you want to get In. Don't zit sticcess and demands an opportunity, hs may he 8 mighty poor specimen, he of the task on the other side of the | door, but the fact that he knocks and ohn te demands admittance shows that he dine puErees to be tried, and in nearly every cass fortune opens the door to him and | the opportunity is bia “It has been my experience that | though 1 have been willing to do | church work, and felt It my duty to! dc it, 1 failed for a long time. It was | because when the request for a teacher | came, when there was a call for volun. | teers for mission work, | at once sald: ‘That ifan’t my call more experienced than 1 but the opportunity hasn't arrived’ and the door was opened. | sought an opportunity and presented mvsel!. ad. mitting my unworthiness. My work has beon enster ever since. And so it is with all things in this world. In business and In professional lite op- portunities must be sought. If you find yourself idle while willing to work | | anid you think that opportunity passes you hy, stop and consider more care that the fault ia yours i "Opportunity consists of one-tenth | circumstance and snihe-téenths effors Look at the men and women who suc- | coed In the world. In a majority of cases success hiss come, not because op. | portunity ran against them, but be cause they ran azsinst with so much force that they carried | everything before them, ; “1 believe that the man who has! found his opportunity and has made | the most of it ix more greatly benefited by the results than the world is bene. | fited by his work” A opportinity | China's Fleet for Sala Everything goes by contraries, of | « course, out here. The European of | proverbial experience buys a grand | plano which, being bought. necesst. | tates corresponding alterations and improvements in the drawing room | and so to the house In general the result being a removal from the villa t oa mansion China jenaws. : Bhe buys an expensive fleet, i foresesing the trouble and nT i | is going Ww Ye to her in a thousand different ways, gets Into 8 quarrel with Japan so that she may rid herself uf a considerable portion. That the second step ls taken. So that all | temptation may be removed she gives | away her naval porns, g Now she puts up ta auction the few | remalning vessels. “Going, going” —and not yet “zone ™ the troubles and anxieties of a fleet | Lote, | “Hana in Lunck™ was nothing to fr. Wonderful China!—Shangbal Mercury. | cantly called attention fo the f deebergs are frequently useful in this way. Navigators of polar sous often | | on the sea. That is for one I am ready, : | will bulld a bateb of engines, tay, 30, of “Then | changed methods. | knocked, | pt the English chareh, ‘to guaropean Pehurek In a frock coat, a tall bat, and patent | mother, however, still keeps fo her na- | tive costume, which consists of a cloak of a pratty shade of pals blue spangled | with silver. The cloak Is worn in much | | the same way as the Roman toga poguidanes of shire al soa Is ba far Baltimore, Lhe epiipy + mukleipal economy. There in an idea grevalent hat the : strict obsorvance of the Sabhbuih was almost wholly confined to the North. | - Nothing could be more “The Blue Laws” of Connecticut, sur- viving as a proverb for hardness, have {| impressed the popular mind and xed an idea which was, however, not ab- intel Recurate, As severe us those | enactments were, they were scarcely | more rigorous. whenever the observ ance of Bunday was concerned. than those under which the colony of Vie Rinla was established and developed. Attendances on divine service was as strictly enforced, and abstinence from all secular employment as rigidly en- joined. It was a church. -goltig time Religion engrossed (ne energlan of the people. Participation in warship was the law and whoever failsd in It wag a lawbreaker and was dealt with sce cordingly. Later on-—-that Ia, prior to tha Revolution—there came 8 certain Iaxness—the reflex of the taut-steang bow--when the fox-hunting, cock- fighting parson was fnducted Into the livings: but. as the enuses wire tems porary, the main canse being the peo litical appointment by an absentee Metropolitan, so the effect was pot permanent. It was out of thess sonditions that Hanover preshytery sprang. under the fnfinence of Patrick Honey's model, the eloquent “Parson Davies” later the president of Princeton colleges, Indeed, whi‘e some of the English parsons who have made the time notorious, were | diefng, and drinking. and fighting, ¢ nity were standitg staunchiy for the saddiing upon them of such nmilreroants one of the charges in their indictment against the government “at the faith, They build charchis which stil] stand to-day ax memarialy of thelr piety and ehurehmanship ~~ From “An | O14 Virginia Sunday,” by Thorsas Nel- son Page in Seribner’s, SAA 0TH RA AR Queer Travels of Flangs One would not imagine offhand that fra could possibly be instrumental in scoompiiabhing tha distribution of plants, yet a French scientist hss re encounter bergs carrying enormous masses of Aehris, with more or less sail, In which plants srs growing Eventually the lve mags rons aground spon the shore of some distant Jand, there depositing the plants which may find thomesives 30 situated ae to we enabled to reproduces thelr specien The case of volcanoes as plant dis tributors is even more remarkable, though one must regard as very ex- eoptional such instances as that noted | #1 Port Eilzabeth South Africa, IRST, where large quantities of Cane in ii On these fragsnents of pumice were found various siaall anil mals unfamiliar to that part of the world, and there was also a sort of eocGanut. The nut was planted, and in dus time produced a palm atrange to the African cowst It was decided i that the pumice came from 1hs great eruption of Krakatoa, in the Straits of Sunda, which was In its way the most remarkable volcanic eaticliysm of modern times —Phlladeiphia Evening Post. ———— wm Anties of Machinery. “The goasrest thing about maskin. ery.” aid an oid raliroad man, “is that Ai erent machines. all bullt on exactly the sams lines with every part of the game size and of the same material possess a dlatinct {ndividuaiity, Take fowomotives, for instance. A rallroad a certain claws. All of them will be of the same dimensions, the same detalls in every particular, and yet #very ons will behave in a differant manner. Theres will be as much difference be tweon them an between 20 mun. Some will steam well, others not. One will | be cranky in a certaln parthenliz, and | a second in still another, One will be stiff, rigid. another loose-jointed. And then, just like members of the human in all probability you will find | tamily, some will be remarkably une i baeky, through no fault of thelr own, while thelr mates go through His with . out a scratch” long et hy Fashions in Ashanth The Ashantis says an English paper, i have hecame most regular attendants | and church. goers have become quite used to the ludicrous spectacles they afford King Prempeh 1a particularly partial dress, and appears a haather boots. The queen- The other Asante nearly all wear European dress on undays, though | sntne of them appear oo colors, bright yellow erimson and green appearing to be thelr favorile shades, Elsctriclty to Gatde Shipa A pew electrical apparatys for the ing ade shoal ilght-shin wi iid 10) throw a 13-inch ele ectric beara skyward, and the rellottion, Wis promised, LE RL i EA A A 8. Municipal ¥eonomy Jackson, Ont, had made a record for Of the J2.000 vot. ad for decorations {or the reception of the Duke and Duchoss of Cornwall and York $300 was not ‘=pens ( erroneous. | Canbstnnoos, Bai. home.” | They withetood Innovation. They kept curiosities of Texas, It A sound lke that of an Aeolian harp fact that | | morous side tH it pumice wore observed flasting | nto desuetads and decay? | buying the rw stand can be seen thirty or forty i malles away, There is sald to be walt enough in| the sea fo cover soveu million sguare miles of land with a layer one mile | in thickness. ernie The New Hampshire Historical So | ciety lias the original pritent on a pro cess for the ose of steam in propel tag boats. It was Sasaed to Saniuel Morley, March 25 179% and was signed by Gorge Wasabugton. The 19th of Say. 1750, was dls thngubshed by the phetomenon of a remarkable darkness over all the Northern States, and ix stilt called the § The darkndss commenced § Dark Dae. between the hours of 10 and 11 8a. mo, and oontinowd to the middle of the sext night. It wae occasioned by a talkek vapor or clomd, tinged with s yellow ecolor, or faint red. and a thin cunt of dust was deposited on white mouth, Me, to New Jorsey. A man-made voleano existy In Bol look, which has been burning con stantly for pearly one hundred years, amd emits east colupins of black mmoke, rendering the nelghboriog country barren, baked amd atterly one profitable. At Brals, Frases, is oven the most remarkable volenno made by Originally it was a nase of coil, millions of tons. One day, about & century ago. the conl cnoght fire, and it has never consad burning The sununit of the smoulderiiz mass bas A genuine crater, oie A gioglng well 1g one of the natural io Boe wenther in given out by the weil At times the sonind Is oleay; thew ft revedos. as I far away, and then It reaches the Lear very faintly. Thesp changes take place avery few minutes, and with great regularity. With an east wind hlewing the water In the well gets very low, and the mysterious musical sound Is faint A strong west wind chumes the water to rise and the sound to jncresse in volume and clearness SR An interesting roln has Just been | 8G sturdy. 00d In Germany. It is one of the Tew coins In the history of the world which can be scrused of having a hn In 1679 the Danes descended on the port of Hamburg bat thelr attack proved unsuccessful The inhabitants of the town strock a medal fo commemorate the occasion fie depend on the cudn wits as follows: “he King of Denmark has been tol Hawbore If thou wouldst know what Ge sclioved, hak on the other shin” If Is pgeadioss to add that “the ptlhier slide” iv a blank, Ta Lying » Lost Ars? Fins the anilent art of lying fallen Have wa domme pon an unimagiastive age of truth, naked and suadorned? cnt negotiations over the Nivaraima Canal are characterized by the English press as “the diplomacy of truth” and the pewspapers of France atid Ger many are discussing ia posderous fuarh lon the serlovis valine of owth In in ternational arrangements. Commer chadly, too, the great department stores | lend the war against lying, and every employe is warned against misvepre senting comninditios offered for sule The very advertisements of the dally gevwshaper reflect thin tendency toward truthfal exploftativn, Commercialism has discovered the wenkness of pre varieation, and we have to Dank the rude trade Instinets of the nation for this new ascendency of truth Thus the artistle and pleturesgue nwtioel for untrath Is crushed by the strengous struggle for giin~Harper's Weekly. Sheep in Varted Clothing. One of the results of the investiga tion of a special committer of the So elety of Arts into the guestion of bookidading goes to show that sheep sZin fs often ued Ly tookbinders un der very diferent names marscey, straight grain mwroccey pigskin, coal skin, crocodile and alligator leathers of whieh, en close wicroscople ex pilnation, were found to be the ordl nary common sheepskin, on which had been staaped the special grains and markings of the sing they wers got up to imitate. The coumnnities, how wore shtistied that in many cased bath the Doeolbdnders and the Uhearioas bad Bodght these leathers ter the fmpression that ty were gensive artvle~Londed roe, haed-gain BY pr 213 3 Globe, s— An Antomebile Fire Engine. The frst tov in England to effeet ively display pussibiilties of the meine dre engine far tive brigade pas poised Is Fe fn oLagieashiiye, Th engine wos eotisiry Ly oa lacal tr sl Bas proved a ouEspiousas success. It carries five men, 300 yards of hose, Tibpaest, ® Hing iteldors, umn SRARTY apuara- flea iy a six bonse It is remarks. ay silent smd averages a speed of fourteen to siitesn miles per Bower an the Jevall Ir bas also estab ished its ability for elhnbiog stiff gra. dlenis with facility, i.¥ AA mh fase “les sheet anid It is elagivio om ing wither tne, Pawel Hey RoI ory 13.0550, & Fountain Pen Hobeme, When a newly designed fountain pen fails to work nn auxiliary pea can be | pushed down to take its place by op erating a siding ring vn the holdes, the second pen being Batended for use Ite extent was from Fak | mtea the happy day was fixed Our re I ter he fant crying. They tonnd | Books boand, nominally in Levant mo- And it anid, an 1 chuckled ad laughed 0 “Now, 1 be good to the box on the shelf” But the iittin kay stopped, with & shiver sad Por there was a bright new key in the lock. Brea AT am sorry por Taney 4 plaos is filed, my itnehe led, my pooe litle Key, HUMOROUS. Blalm—Da you awn your ows home? Sloblwg-- Wall 1 thought | did ull te Dew oul copa Stlllcus—8apphedde always says what he thinks. Cyalous—I‘ve noticed he rarely opens his mouth, “You can't always trust a man whe hesitates about telling a H&” “No? { "No! he may Bave an impediment in bis speech.” rS Wigg~How is Rjones making out In the rea: estate business? Waggpe Great. He has just sold a site for » blind asylum. Editor—This story of yours Is hardly available. Jt - premp-—ar-lnoking In color. Author—Woauld you advise mie to uae rod ink pext time? Nelb--Heo married her for her beauty Bit beauty won't last. Bele—And she married him for his money so they are both in the same boat : Mrs. Highfalutio—-I'nt' getting @& Jovelr coat of arms mate. Mra Crosse roads-~Good gracious’ They ain't makin’ coats without arms, be they? “Wall,” said she, for the 20th time “I haven't got my new hat vet.” “No be replied; “you haven't got your pew hatebet, but you've stil got your old hamper, haven't you” “I think you will sunt,” sald the mistresti; “how about a reference? “That's all right, mum.” answered the Bbired girl, affably;: “1 loike yer looks. Never moind a riference” Thay were talking of trees. “7 Hike the oak.” she sald. “It is so majesticsw Which one do you prefer?” "Yew." he answerad siviy. In 10 Bis “Married men are much more philo~ ; sophical than single men” remarked the Wiis Guy. “Of course” retorted the Rimple Mag “A married man knows he has to make the Best of fL” “What business brings the heaviest returgs’” asked the man who wanted to know. “The literary business” sighed the struggling suothor. ss be opened a two-pound rejectad book manuseript : Mr. Youngpop-—~What's the matter with the baby? Don’t you think we ought to send for the doctor? Mm Youugpop-—What do you ses the mat. with him? Mr. Youngpop— Why, "Heary, bow is the plot of that ses povel ranoing? “Well, just at this chapter there {s & terrible storm, sad the pastengers are afraid the bost will £0 to the top” “You mean the bot tom.” ‘No, this is a submarine bost.™ A Provident Bridegroam, Ha wis a loiterer. and | was 3 loiter er; but thers seemed more purpose in his loitering than in mine, and there was a look fa his eye which suggested apprehunsfon. We were both marcel ing up and down between the steps of St. Martin's church and Morley's hotel =i tor the purpose of getting such alr ax Trafalgar square afforded; he, ap parently, with some definite and almost sinister resolve. The square was In one of its golden moods: the pigeons about the National Gallery strutted and shone gallantly: the idle fous. taing kwked as though they might bave spouted golden rain. But these things were not for my fellow-lciterer. He sauntered along with that purpose ful look which arouses suspicion, sod when [ tame to look at Sim closely my suspicions were confirmed. He was wearing enormons black woolen gloves ‘thesa struck an utterly incongriens note in an attire which was otherwise tmpeconble; Lia patent leather boots shamed them. Then [ observed an extraordinary thing. As the Lands of St. Martin's clock neared 11 he ran 2p the church ateps. turned at the door and drow off the woolen abominations to dinciose hands 'iocased in lavender kid. The vautious and provident crea- tures was going to be married!'-—The Acadumy, He Got the Pass, A tory is told of a vertain prom frent railway director who is equally rencencd for bls ability to make or take a joke An empiorve, whose home ia in the couniry, applied to him for & poEr to visit his family, “Yon are in the employ of the come pany!” (nguired the gentleman alinded to. “Neg” "Yai receive your pay regularly ™ Ye. hl “Well, working ennIpAnY, player fo Saturday now, supposing yon were for a farmer ustead of the wohl you expect vour ewe talkie omt his horse avery night and carry you home? This senmed a8 poser, but it wasn't “Not said the man, promptly. would not expect that: but if the farmer nad his horses out and was go- ing niy way, 1 should eall him a very mean follow if he would not let me fe.” ~The empicye came out three minutes after ‘with a asa ood for 12 montha, %
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers