The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1926, Page 9

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v ‘SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1998 ° BGOTHAM HAS - A MANY WAYST0 GET BUSINESS ‘Manhattan Ready to Flock to Business Pluce That Has Best Ballyhoo ?* New York, June (#)—Enter- prise and business ingenuity prob- § ably pay higher cash dividends % Gotham than in any othe® city. Manhattan is ready to flock, not! 49 the man who makes the best # lousetrap, but to the one who ff} ballyboos his mousetrap in the most effective manner. ; Thus ‘one restaurateur has come to a secure place on “Easy Street” through putting his patrons on an )/ honor system. His plan is simple. | The patron eats and then on the ‘way out of the restaurant stops at the cashier’s cage to name: the amount of his own check. There is no supervision. Yet the res- taurateur says his percentage of loss is so small that he actually | [4 Saves money through the elimina- | tion of help required for a checks ing system. Besides, he says, the idea attracts new patrons, Capitalizes on “Drawl” The audacity of his plan is the ‘more eet when compared with that of a chain soda fountain or- ganization which requires all pa- trons to pay in advance for their * orders before they will be served, The Manhattanite has a strong leaning for “atmosphere.” The soft, Southern drawl is very popular on i: the island, so much so‘ that it is { frequently exaggerated by those who would not give it a thought in their home tow: One man made ‘afortune by capitalizing the idea. He opened an “old - fashioned Southern waffle house” and hired young lady waitresses who were fortunate enough to possess a real or pseudo-Southern accent. * Ideas even extend to popular res- | ; taurants, the latest gouge being to | ; add $2 to the couvert charges for |: tables located near electric fans. Pitch'Men Meet Occasion There is a former bartender who is quietly amassing a fortune down in, the “padlock” district by the uique idea of requiring the patrons of his little cafe to obey the pro- hibition law. Neither will he serve any food unless a soft drink order also is given. His rule is arbitrary. No person will be served who does not order the prescribed beverage, or who comes in under the influence of liquor. The pitch men are others who do a land office business on the streets. They cones ee? openston. tie it, rains they sell cheap umbrellas | pj has sold leather it about four times thely value. If Pecan ol ————ooOoOoOoOO BE a A a nestnas Ge Captain Tom Custer Officers and their wiv Mrs. Custer. 4. life of the fort. a favorite haunt. | CHEVROLET SEDAN Original paint, good tires, upholstering, and top. Thoroughly overhauled and mechanical condition, lota o portation in thid car HUPMOBILE TOURING wants mechanically HUDSON’ TOURING mer from whom we get this Hudson would not be afraid to sturt on a trip merons the continent thin car right now. Plenty of Bower and ron ie MAXWELL TOURING A Maht¢ five pansenger Touring car that in well worth the price: inted Yor thin | iad money for leek will please youeA ride you Relatering. M pt ae wile "you. ' DODGE TOURING ‘oul Ford—necing in « it is'a parade they can be depended upon to supply the American flags. Times Square is their popular rendezyous but Park Row is also One Park Row pee the. same..corner. for. tif- 298 1 Repainted and in good methanical condition. - this ear for your vacation trip and enjey | eae ArT ome ‘92 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. teen years. He tells all his cus- tomers confidentially that his brand of shoestrings -is the secret brand with which so many fellows have started in business. He supports a family and owns a comfortable - [Jittle home out on Staten Island. ‘Join the Money-Makers as Lot at Third and Main Street , More than half of our stock be had. Ask our Salesmen Good Used Car strate RECORD. | OFFICERS AND THEIR WIVES AT OLD FORT ABRAHAM LINCOLN .; here and they likewise have ‘)pered this year. An elk Mrs. Elizabeth Custer, wife of General Custer, whose book “Boots and Saddles” is a valuable record of early days at Fort Abraham Lincoln. ‘sat Fort Abraham Lincoln in the days when the Custer family was stationed there. Gencral Custer is standing third from the left while Mrs. Custer is to his left standing on the lower. step. Lieut. Benj. Hodgson is standing between General and The Custer home at Fort Abraham Lincoln where General Custer wrote his articles on army life. This house was the center for the social BABY 17 POUNDS Kansas _City—Spencer Wood went. to General ital the other day 17th child, a 12-pound ood gave birth to a baby a rs ago that weighed 17 cere or mee papain licen TIMES A RABBIT McPherson, Kansas—A_jackra can £0 trouble Salthouse, bit 10: miles an, hour with no t all, declares Dr. H. L. who a rabbit that ran before his ear for several miles the other day. Who Are Thronging to This BY * - Great Used Car Sale! It is the Greatest Sale of GOOD USED CARS ever staged in Dakota—better by f. than anything you have ever seen before or are like! The best values ever offered here in Good Used Automobiles. AFRAID TO SAVE DON’T DARE MISS THIS SALE—you have seen hundreds of sales but you will never forget this-sale of the Dakota Auto Sales Co., Inc. one will be quick to appreciate the significance of this event because we within the bounds of conservatism when we say. that these used cars are far better in quality and variety than has ever been b; Moreover, in the question of prices, we have lutely extraordinary in every sense of theword. ' OPEN AIR USED CAR MARKET Third and Main Streets — Open Sunday Come Saturday night and Sunday. Our S ‘8, Bismarck, any’ time Sunday—all jday has been-sold, but—thére are many more good values to about our wonderful new selling ‘offered for. sale, =| Yellowstone Virtually unghanging as the mighty ‘ockies that cradle it, Park nevertheless moves along quietly through a never-ending metamorphosis, geysers, new hot springs, ne mals, new tourists. Thus Superintendent Horace M. Albright, in his annual statement ‘{of conditions in the Park at the opening of the tourist season. Mr. Albright called attention partic larly to the fresh outburst of slenergy at Angel Terrace, long a =|favorite beauty spot at Mammoth =| Hot Springs, to the new buildings i and additions to the Park personnel. “In the spring, when activity is resumed after winter's snows,” Superintendent Albright said, “the changes are most noticeable. The forests and park lands abound with tiny new animals, the geysers show renewed activity and new faces ap- pear at headquarters, as Yellow- =) stone Park prepared'to welcome the thousands that annually visit here. Wild Life Abounds “This year, above all, has been a banner one for wild life. progressed in numbers here, and the mild win- is responsible for what is prob- e greatest increase ever is rightly the Park res sab yore Albright . He has carefully check- ig herd, now numbering 738 animals, and found that to date ly 100 calves have been born this year and it is expected that ae total number of young e 1 Approximately the same number ly to see for many moons. IF YOU ARE NOT of antelope kids have been born, swelling the total number of these animals to 650. The antelope have been seen by nearly every pre- season tourist and all of the Park rangers, and promise to be a big attraction to “In Gardiner - Out Cody” vacationists this summer. Elk exist in the greatest number ros- calf is now being raised on the bottle at the Park headquarters, Mammoth Hot Springs just below Gardiner Gateway, and will be here for all to see, A baby antelope is likewise at Mammoth. Zoo a Big Attraction The zoo at Mammoth has always been an attraction and will be this year. In addi antelope, a young buffalo, “Grunt,” is there, to be joined by the “show” herd of from 12 to 18 monster bulls shortly. A badger, an old mother hen with a b of wild ducklings which she hatched out and other different species of birds form the remainder of the zoo. Every park visitor carries away memories of the bears. No hung- rier wild animal has~ ever been: mood tiren iu 7. Let un tell ye own @ good used Model’ 4 with Tri Repainted an ing, tiren and Every- are well rought together for a sale in Bismarck. marked them down until they are abso- & good tand bent feels “ear ” And fo ww an th will please you. n will be on the Open-Air-Used-Car r plans, by,us at THE LOWEST PI and evening. to demon- ICES ON i-| big fellows and many cubs. ion to the elk and | Le: ‘YELLOWSTONE PARK OFFERS TOURIST MORE ATTRACTIONS THIS YEAR THAN EVER BEFORE, SAYS SUPERINTENDENT |known, for they thrive on any and all sorts of foods, especially sweets. A pet bear “Juno,” is now at Mai moth, while every hote! center the Park boasts a number nc ein it is estimated that there are about 200 black bears and 75 grizzlies now in ellowstone. Among: the changes this year a few occurred in the hot spring and geyser formations. At Mammoth jthe hot springs have delighted all {by bubbling forth in increased _ac- |tivity at the beautiful Angel Ter- jtace. It is said to be finer than jever this year. This terrace is the gem of the Mammoth Hot Springs formation. Nature has seemingly provided for the tourists who stop at both the permanent camp and hotel in Mammoth the northern base of the formation, near Hymen Ter- race and only a short distance from the hotel, a new spring has appear- ed this year which graphically illus- trates the manner in which the limestone terraces are built up. Just above the camp, a hot spring formation, inactive for some ey has resumed bubbling this year. True to Its Name There is one feature of the na- tural phenomena in the Park which never changes. It is the geyser known the world over—Old Faith- ful, still true to its game, needless to say. A number of other geysers in the Upper Basin have shown unusual activity this year. Daisy Geyser, ‘particularly has become of interest, playing every one to one and a half hours. Riverside, Grotto and Castle Geysers are all active. Grand Geyser ‘has been playing every other day and sometimes at shorter intervals. In the Lower Basin the Great Fountain Geyser is unusually active, as well as Clepsy- dra Geyser. The latter has increas- ed in magnitude, while the fre- quency of display has decreased. The colorings in the Mammoth Paint Pots and on the shores of Primatic Lake are extremely beau- tiful this year. In the Norris Basin, to the north, the steam vents and small geysers are as noisy as ever. Mud Geyser is most active, spurting from two jets, and the Minute Man has belied its name, playing every 45 seconds. Chief Ranger Sam T. Woodring and a group of local Izaak Walton vague members have constructed a series of three fish ponds at Mammoth this spring, to be used for the propagation of trout, one of them at present is harboring 11 big cutthroat trout that were brought down from the Fish Lake hatchery of the Bureau of Fisheries. Building New Reads Two new roads are now under construction in the Park, one of -the shores of-Yellow. FORD TOURING A hetter Ford To ing car repainted with very good nhape mechanic- ou how eany it in for you to car, OVERLAND TOURING CAR lex it FORD TOURING CAR Just a ute and you drive it away, happy. OVERLAND 90 TOURING by. Th the Ove A good little car for Original good “this "car. has. ESSEX 4 TOURING CAR iy at rt eet. me at ree * stone Lake and the other along the Firehole River. The lake road will be opened this season, and pro- vides a beautiful drive. A new garage of the Transnorta- tion Company, located at the Gardi, ner Gateway, the Northern and or- iginal entrance to the Park, will be open this year. This is the largest garage between Chicago and the west coast, holding 400 cars, and is of concrete construction through- out. The transportation.company has also purchased 20 Lincoln cars to be used in the Park. ‘These cars. are equipped with special one-man tops, for scenic purposes, and were built for seven passengers. The Yellowstone Park Hotel com- pany has likewise made all prep- arations for the summer and each of the four immense structures at Mammoth, Canyon, Lake Yellow- stone and Old Faithful has been renovated and prepared for the ac- commodation of vacationists. The permanent camps of the Yellow- stone Park Camps company are also ready, fortified by the con- struction of a new camp at Lake Yellowstone. Housekeeping tents are available in the larger automo- bile camps for persons traveling in their own cars. Cooking is al- lowed in these tents. The park stores have large stocks of merchandise on hand to fill every want that the vacationist may feel. Prices are no higher than at points immediately outside of the park and every ¢ of merchandise may be bought from the Hamilton stores, Whittakers, the Park Curio Shop and the Haynes Picture Shops. Hotel Managers Mr. H. B. Brown has succeeded T. E. Keefe as superintendent of the Hotel Company. n endeavoring to provide the finest service ob- tainable, the Hotel Company thi year has secured the services of a number of well know manager: William one Jr, forme manager of the Olympic at Seattl will manage the Mammoth Hote Lake, Miss Elsie Jone identified with many large_hote! including the Waldorf and Vander- bilt in New York and the Palace and Cliff.in San Francisco, will assume the duties of manage M. E. “Don” Olson, former manag: er of the Huntington in Pasadena, will have charge of Old Faithfu! J. C. Petres, traveling passen; agent of the Northern Pacific Ra way, will be stationed at Gardiner Gateway to take charge of rail- road matters. A second speed boat has been conheine by the Yellowstone Park joat company for use on Lake Yellowstone. It was built by the Dingle Company in St. Paul and wd have a speed of 40 miles per our. For First Class Shoe Re- pairing go to the Bismarck Shoe Hospital Henry Burman, Prop.

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