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UNIQUE among autobiographies is that of Geronimo, the once powerful Apache Chief. Mr. S.M. Barrett, who recorded the Indian's life story, had to apply to President Roosevelt for permission to ...
In 1904 legendary Apache warrior and chief, Geronimo, a longtime “Prisoner of War” in the United States – and 19th century media darling – was sent to the St. Louis World’s Fair where he ...
The sign out front, on the highway, is his advertisement: ”Stop and visit Geronimo III in his tepee. Grandson of historical Apache chief Geronimo I.” We came across the sign on our way from ...
NOGALES, Arizona, Oct. 11.--The last remnant of Chief Geronimo's band of renegade Apache Indians have been captured in the Sierra Madre, in Sonora, Mexico. There were four bucks, two squaws ...
Calling it "a grievous insult," a great grandson of Apache Chief Geronimo today asked President Obama or Defense Secretary Robert Gates to apologize for the military's use of the codename Geronimo ...
Visitors came to see how the “savage” had been “tamed,” and they paid Geronimo to take a button from the coat of the vicious Apache “chief.” Never mind that he had never been a chief ...
The movie they most likely saw was Geronimo, a Western film about the Apache chief of the same name. Now, young Eberhardt, armed with liquid confidence, began bragging about how he wasn’t scared ...
Few are as devoted to getting to the bottom of a case as Rodent’s Gazette editor-in-chief Geronimo Stilton, and we’ve got your exclusive first look at the delightful character’s return.