Park Hill Topics Volume 8 No. 36 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 8 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset
|
Loading content ...
PUBLISHED FRIDAY—REaAD IN EVERY PARK HILL HOME
VOLUME VIII—No. 394
DENVER, COLORADO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1940
NUMBER 36
This and That
Elect Joe Cook for Juvenile Judge and save our community a great deal of money. Cook, as Juvenile Judge, will
decrease the population of the Industrial School at least one-
half. He has the ability to talk wayward boys out of mischief—he speaks their language and they will abide by his
advice. He has, in past years, proven these facts in his dealings with boys. He will save many a youth from becoming
an inmate in the Industrial School.
"Five more billions are being spent," says a headline.
If Hitler does not hurry up and take us we may not be worth
taking.
We hear that the president would like to retire to private
life but that he feels the current unrest in this country and
in the world compels him to remain at the helm of the gov1
ernment. Well, the main unrest at home is the result of
New Deal mismanagement of affairs, and unrest abroad is
caused chiefly by three men who also feel that they are the
only ones in the land who are capable of running their government. Voters should beware of a man who has such a
high regard tor himself. There are plenty of men in the
United States, including the Republican nominee, who are as
capable as Mr. Roosevelt.
We condemn and investigate "un-American Activities,"
and very properly so. But let citizens realize that there is
nothing more un-American than failure to vote.
Scout Mother's Auxiliary
Scout Mother's Auxiliary, j
Troop 10, was organized on Aug- '
ust 23rd by Mrs. V. B. Preston,
District Chairman, at the home
of Mrs. James A. Read. After
the preliminaries of organization,
the group elected the following
officers: President, Mrs. James
A. Read; first vice present, Mrs. ;
H. G. Spradley; second vice pres-!
ident, Mrs. C. D. Short; secre- j
tary-treasurer, Mrs. A. E. Johnson; publicity chairman, Mrs.
Russell W. Brown, The next regular meeting will be held Tuesday, Sept. 17th, at 1:00 p. m. at
the home of Mrs. Russell W.
Brown,. 2910 Ash street.
On Wednesday, August 28,
Mrs. James A. Read entertained
at luncheon the officers of the
newly organized Scout Mothers
Auxiliary, Troop 10. At the Board
meeting which followed the
luncheon, it was decided that the
regular meetings of the Auxiliary would be held the third
Tuesday of each month. After
a general discussion of plans to
promote the welfare of Scouting,
the following appointments were
made: Courtesy committee, Mrs.
Fred N. Holland; Telephone committee, Mrs. R. A. Nichols; Ways
and Means committee, Mrs. C.
D. Short, second vice president.
Thanks!
We want to take this opportunity to thank our many friends,
who have been so kind and generous during our time of need.
—Mr. and Mrs. Joe Milan.
stylartIi!
if
Beautv Shop 111
|j!
Air-Condit'.cned % * \
Permanent, Now £ j 1
Croqulnole Perm. Wave, v j
Starting at $2.50 1 S
Spiral Perm. Wave,
starting at $5.00
Awaken your Dry and
Split Nails to Hot Laetol
Manicure
Prompt, Efficient Service
28th & Fairfax EM. 9811
f
f
I
i
I
EDOUARD'S
New—Exclusive
BEAUTY SALON
Permanents
Specials for
School Girls
3.50to$5
4916 E. Colfax
EM. MU
Man-Made Laws
Not Enough
During the next couple of
months the country is going to
hear plenty of discussion regarding the agricultural problem. A
political candidate's biggest headache is the farmer. The farmer
lives by nature in all her abundance—or scarcity. And the cleverest, most farsighted body of
lawmakers cannot guess from
one year to the next what to do
about the farmer in order to
maintain his purchasing power
at somewhere near a stable par.
The farmer cannot wait for
man-made laws to outwit nature.
He has developed machinery to
market his produce at the best
going price. The marketing cooperatives, for example, have become his effective ally in his job
of trying to make the erratic productive forces of nature jibe with
the almost equally erratic demands of the consuming public.
It is not an easy job. It calls
for unremitting effort and scientific organization. The marketing cooperatives have all of
these. In any program of agricultural aid they inevitably play
a vital part, and help to make a
tough problem a little less tough.
New Beauty Shop
Announcing the opening of a
new beauty shop at 1474 Birch at
Colfax, called Primp Shop, with
Miss Nancy, operator in charge,
with many years experience in
the beauty profession in Denver.
She will be glad to see old and
new patrons. Come in and we
will give you a complimentary
facial to introduce our Dolly
Madison cosmetics.
York-Colfax Hardware Co.
In New Location
The York-Colfax Hardware Co.
are now in their new store, a-
cross the alley from the former
location.
The new store is twice as large
as the former one, giving excellent room for displaying all of
their goods to better advantage.
All fixtures and furnishings
are new, built to fit in their respective places. The display is
excellent and the lighting effect
superb.
Next week, an extra bargain
introductory sale has been arranged and we refer you to page
3 for detail oi this sale.
Beauceant
The first meeting of the year
of the Clio Club of Denver will be
a tea to be held Sepv. 11 at 2 p.
m. at the home of Miss Clara Ell,
1418 Glencoe St., with the president, Mrs. Charles C. Kitzmiller,
in charge.
The speaker of the afternoon
will be Mrs. Wesley Taylor, Jr.,
president of the Colorado Poetry
Fellowship, who will review the
western lyric poet, John G. Nei-
hardt, and read from his epic
cycle of the west, some of the
narrative verse that portrays the
heroic period of American history.
Mrs. Wendell Ellsworth will
sing a number of songs and
Charles Kitzmiller, violinist, will
play several selections. Mrs.
Mary R. Guerber will be the accompanist.
The tea will be in charge of
Mrs. J. F. Liebman, the social
chairman, and the members of
her committee who are Mes-
dame sA. H. Holland, H. N. He-
cock, W. E. Heider, M. Taylor,
H. E. Jones and Frank Seeleman.
90 BEAUTY
SALON
EM. 6986
5024 E. Colfax
at Fairfax
For That
| Back to School %
Permanent
Spiral & Croquinole
Machine or Machineless
For best of materials and
workmanship — Call us
Today
l
->
.-
t
A regular meeting of the Denver Assembly No. 1, Social Order
of the Beauceant, will be held
Friday, Sept. 13 at the Masonic
Temple. After the business meeting, presided over by Mrs. Ransom L. Sare, the president, there
will be a social hour with cards.
There will be a visit to Sands
House, Wednesday, Sept. 25, in
charge of Mrs. Oscar A. Olson.
THE LOW iOW;
■from-
HICKORY GR0V1
This old saying about it being
cheaper to move versus paying
rent is one idea, but on the other
hand there are other excuses too.
Like with us, our boys have passed the whoopin'-cough and music
lesson age—and their tonsils are
out—so we feel kinda foot-loose,
and can move.
So Susie says, Josephus, this
old house we been living in don't
look like the ones we see in the
movies. So I says O.K., we will
move.
And the thing I want to tell
you about is not the moving—it
is about getting settled, and the
house built, and hooked-up with
everything, like lights and water,
etc.
There is lots of poppin'-off a
bout the gas, and the water, and
the phone company, etc. — and
what a robber they are, and to
watch 'em. But the outfits we
had to watch the least were the
ones we been warned against the
most.
It is time somebody chirped up
with a good word for 'em, so I
do so now while it is fresh in my
mind. The service was super-
skookum—net a horse-thief in
the whole lot.
Yours with the low down,
JO SERRA.
Open House Friday, Sept. 6
Alta Mayo
invites you to come in and see her new shop . . .
convenient for you!
Alta Mae Beauty Studio
Meet her staff of expert and experienced operators
The shop is one of the most beautiful in Denver .
word in modern equipment and convenience.
. the last
4524 East Colfax at Cherry
PHONE EM. 7993 FOR APPOINTMENT
Reasonable Prices Topgrade Work
OPEN WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS
Hi-Schoo! Books
— THE gJQ Store —
FOR JUNIOR AND SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
SECOND-HAND BOOKS
CLEAN • SOUND • SANITARY
COMPLETE LINE SCHOOL SUPPLIES
BOOK
STORE
Ke. 1418
BARGAIN
406 15th at Tremont
$ OPEN. EVENINGS, SEPT. 3rd to 14th
■f HIM
Object Description
| Title | Park Hill Topics Volume 8 No. 36 |
| Creator(s) | Steele, Alfred |
| Summary | A weekly newspaper distributed to the residents of the Park Hill neighborhood. This contains articles about neighborhood events, news, and gossip. As well as advertisements for local businesses. |
| Date | 1940 September 6 |
| Notes | Description based on: Vol. 1, no. 11 (Oct. 13, 1933). |
| Physical Description | 8 p. |
| Subject (topic) | Community newspapers--Colorado--Denver. |
| Subject (geographic) | Park Hill (Denver, Colo. : Neighborhood) |
| Rights | Contact Western History/Genealogy Dept. Denver Public Library, Denver, Colorado |
| Reproduction Available for Purchase | Yes |
| Language | eng |
| Publisher | Steele, Alfred |
| Place of Publication | Denver, Colo. |
| Digital Origin | reformatted digital |
| Format-Medium | Document |
Description
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Park Hill Topics Volume 8 No. 36