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FREE Issue 490 - August 17, 2015 Neighborhood Media

August Of Lakewood, Golden & Wheat Ridge

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TIDBITS® DRINKS WATER by Janet Spencer

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August is National Water Month, so let’s have a drink!

IT’S A FACT

• Water will stay 9 days in the atmosphere; 2 weeks in rivers; 10 years in the largest lakes; 3,000 years in the ocean; up to 10,000 years in deep groundwater; and 10,000 years in the polar icecap.

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• Water on Earth acts like water in a pan: turn the stove burner on under a pan that’s dry, and the pan will scorch and melt. Turn the burner on under a pan of water, and the water absorbs the heat and keeps the pan in good condition. Without water, our planet would be a scorching desert, unable to regulate the heat of the sun. • There is a total of 369 quintillion gallons of water on Earth. If all the water were split evenly among the residents of the Earth, we would each have about 85 billion gallons. • The amount of water on Earth has not changed since the beginning of time. It covers 3/4 of our planet. It’s the only material that passes through the three stages of liquid, solid, and gas within a range of temperatures that can sustain human life. It is also the only substance that becomes less dense when it freezes. Otherwise, there would be no life on Earth, because the oceans would freeze from the bottom up. • Water dissolves more chemicals than any other substance, including sulfuric acid. This is a leading factor in pollution, because water dissolves and carries contaminants. • The average faucet flows at a rate of 2 gallons (7.5 l) per minute. At 1 drip per second, a faucet can leak 3,000 gallons (11,000 l) per year. • There are approximately one million miles (1.6 million km) of water pipeline and aqueducts in the U.S. and Canada, enough to circle Earth 40 times. • If you poured all of the water of all of the Earth’s oceans into a huge baggie, it would be one-third the size of the moon. • If all the water in the oceans was spread evenly over the surface of the Earth, it would be 6,000 feet (1,828 m) deep everywhere.

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WATER (cont’d)

• If all the groundwater in the world were pumped to the surface, it would cover the Earth to a depth of 100 feet (30 m). • If all the water in the atmosphere fell at once as rain, the Earth would be submerged to a depth of only one inch (2.5 cm). • There is 30 times more water underground than in all the world’s rivers and lakes.

BODY BITS

• 70% of the Earth’s surface is covered by water, and about 65% of the human body is water. • Blood is exactly the same salinity as the ocean. • Blood is 92% water, and bones are 31% water. Tooth enamel, the hardest substance in the human body, is only 2% water. • The human brain weighs about 3 lbs. (1.4 kg), but if all the water were squeezed out of it, it would weigh only 10 oz (283 grams). • Baby’s bodies contain a higher percent of water than grown-ups.

DOWN THE DRAIN

• Americans as a whole use more water per capita than any other country. • Every day, residents of New York City use over 1.5 billion gallons. Although New York and London are about the same size, New York uses about three times as much water. • California uses more water than any other state, but Alaska uses the most per capita. • Americans use an average of 200 gallons (757 liters) of water in the home daily. That includes 5 gallons for every flush; 3 gallons for brushing teeth if the water is running; 40 gallons for a bath; 10 gallons to wash dishes; 8 gallons to clean house; 30 gallons to wash clothes; 30 gallons for lawns and pools; and a mere 2 gallons for drinking and cooking.

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This is an example. DOES NOT COUNT.

• If you include industrial and agricultural uses as well as home use, the average American uses 1,900 gallons (7,192 l) of water per day. • 40% of water used in the home is flushed down the toilet. The average toilet is flushed eight times a day. • It takes 13,000 gallons (49,000 l) of water to carry away 165 gallons (624 l) of body waste per person each year. • People living in cities that charge a flat rate for water have been found to use twice as much water as people in cities that meter water use. In Tucson, Arizona, water use per person dropped from 200 to 140 gallons a day when the price was raised significantly.

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• It takes 40 gallons (151 l) to produce one egg; 80 gallons (300 l) for an ear of corn; 150 gallons (567 l) for a loaf of bread; 230 gallons (870 l) for a gallon of whisky; 2,500 gallons (9,463 l) for a pound of beef; and 100,000 gallons for a new car. • More than 700 chemicals have been found in drinking water, but most municipalities typically test their water for fewer than ten.

FAST FACTS

• Hoover Dam holds as much water as would flow through the Colorado River in two years. • Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone gushes 33 million gallons of water each day— enough water to provide for a city of 300,000 people. • Niagara Falls has eaten its way seven miles (11 km) upstream since their formation 10,000 years ago. At this rate, they will disappear into Lake Erie in about 22,000 years. • The waterfall with the greatest flow used to be Guaira Falls in Brazil. At 1,750,000 cubic feet per second, it would fill the Capitol Dome in Washington, D.C. in 3/5 of a second. It was submerged by a dam in 1982. • 45-foot Khone Falls on the Mekong River on the border between Laos and Cambodia, is now the biggest waterfall by volukm. It runs with twice the flow of the Niagara. • The Amazon River carries more water than any other river— more than the Mississippi, the Nile and the Yangtze rivers together.

ICE FACTS

• Ice cubes will freeze clearer if they start out as warm water, which prevents tiny air bubbles from freezing inside.

• The Antarctic ice cap contains about 66% of the world’s fresh water. At its thickest point the ice cap is over 2.6 miles (4.3 km) thick. • Each year, some 430 cubic miles of ice become icebergs, enough to fill the annual water needs of 5 billion people for a year. • If the Antarctic ice cap were melted at a uniform rate, it would fill the Mississippi River for more Despite Microchip, Dog Never Found

DEAR PAW’S CORNER: Last year, our beloved Sheltie “Charlene” disappeared. We’ll never know if she ran off, got lost in the woods and injured, or if someone took her. I let her out in the backyard and that was the last we saw of her. Charlene had a microchip installed by her veterinarian, but we had never followed up with registering the chip. So we’ll never know if she was found and her chip scanned. Please let your readers know that they need to register their pet’s microchip with the manufacturer, and provide a copy of the registration to their vet. And they need to update the information each year or if they move to a new address. Otherwise they lose a vital tool in locating a lost pet. -- Carol in Wisconsin DEAR CAROL: You told them, and I hope they’ll heed your advice! If you know your pet is chipped but have lost the information, you can still check to see if the chip is registered. The American Animal Hospital Association maintains a database online at www.petmicrochiplookup.org with registrations for most, but not all, microchip manufacturers listed. If you haven’t yet registered your pet’s microchips, now is a great time to do so. Find the microchip registration information that was provided to you by the vet at the time your dog or cat received its chip. If you lost it, contact the vet’s office to see if they have the manufacturer and date of chipping on file, as well as the microchip number.

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Neighborhood Media Tidbits Paper

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ICE FACTS (cont’d)

than 50,000 years, or all the rivers of the world for 750 years.

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patented. Four years after that, it began to be sold on the market, mostly for military applications at first.

• He took Teflon home with him, experimented with it in his basement after work, and established his own company. His son Bob joined him, and in 1969 they discovered that Teflon would stretch if it was heated and then pulled slowly. They wanted to stretch it into a fabric, but time after time – while heating it and pulling it slowly – they failed.

Noteworthy Inventions ROY PLUNKETT

• He weighed the tank, which showed it should be full of gas. He checked the valve, but it worked fine. Perplexed, he cut the tank in half to find out what happened to the gas. He was surprised to see the gas had congealed into a solid, waxy substance. • Plunkett ran some tests. The new material was impervious to chemicals and heat; it did not absorb things and nothing absorbed it; it was colorless and odorless; and it had an extremely high melting point. • Plunkett had accidentally discovered what is popularly known as the slipperiest substance on Earth, equivalent to two wet ice cubes rubbing against each other in a warm room. The molecules of the substance are some of the largest molecules known. • Three years after Plunkett’s accidental discovery, the process of manufacturing the substance was

Noteworthy Inventions BILL & BOB

• Bill was one of the researchers working in the DuPont lab when Teflon was invented. He continued to experiment with it, inventing many uses. However, the DuPont Teflon team was disbanded in 1957. Bill begged his bosses to let him continue to work with Teflon, but was turned down.

• Arctic waters freeze at 30° f. (-1.1°C) instead of 32°f. (O°C) because of their high salt content. A person who falls into water this cold will become unconscious after only two minutes. This is one of the reasons why so many people drowned when the Titanic sank.

• On April 6, 1938, chemist Dr. Roy Plunkett was experimenting with coolant gases used in refrigerators and air conditioners at the DuPont laboratories in New Jersey. From the freezer he removed a tank of experimental gas he’d been working with, called tetrafluoroethylene. He expected to find a container of very cold gas, but when he turned the valve to let some gas out, nothing happened.

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• Fifty years later Plunkett was inducted into the Inventor’s Hall of Fame. Today the product has hundreds of uses. It’s used on windshield wiper blades, it’s in fingernail polish, it forms a scratchresistant coating on eyeglasses, it covers cookware, it protects fabrics, and it covers lightbulbs to make them shatterproof. The list is nearly endless. What is it commonly known as? Answer: Teflon.

• Finally in frustration, Bob heated it and then yanked it. That was the secret. Teflon, when heated and stretched quickly, expands to 1000% of its original size and forms fabric. • Normally raincoats are made out of two layers: the outer layer is polyester or nylon, and the inner layer is polyurethane. More on page 7!


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HOME THEATER HIDEAWAYS

15+ years of Home Theater Installation & Design experience

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Sandwich Your Summer

• Need to bring along a bow while you’re transporting a present? Place it inside a zip-lock sandwich bag, close partway, fill with air and seal. The bow will make it to your destination uncrushed, and you can stick it on at the last minute. • “The combination of one part warm water and three parts baking soda makes a great paste for removing rust spots. Simply use an old tooth- brush in a circular motion to smear in the paste and wipe away rust.” — C.B. in Alaska • Having trouble starting that back- yard charcoal grill? Maybe you just need to head for the snack table. Potato chips and nacho tortilla chips (like Doritos) will burn bright and hot enough to cook your dinner, and certainly well enough to give your charcoal a great start. • Make a floating cooler for your pool with this easy trick using a pool noodle. You’ll need a plastic container, a bungee cord or length of rope that will wrap around the container and a pool noodle cut into four pieces no longer than the sides of the container. Run the cord or rope through the noodle pieces, line noodle pieces along sides of container, and secure rope or cord tightly an inch or so lower than the container’s lip. Toss in pool, fill with drinks and ice, and enjoy. • Recycling one glass bottle saves enough electricity to light a 100-watt bulb for four hours.

A sandwich is the perfect way to enjoy a simple, yet filling meal on a hot summer day. If your taste buds are tired of traditional sandwich fare, it’s time to explore other cultures. A modern Vietnamese banh mi sandwich is a delicious melding of Asian spices and ingredients encased in a French baguette. The original components of the banh mi (pronounced BUN-mee), a generic term used to describe food made with flour, were introduced to Saigon by the French in the early 20th century. A traditional French-style banh mi consisted of buttered baguettes that the locals called banh tay (literally, “foreign cake”), and ham or pate. By 1945, “Tay” had been dropped in favor of “Mi” to become Banh Mi, which literally means “bread made from wheat.” The change signaled that bread had been fully accepted as Vietnamese cuisine. This was significant because rice had long been the staple food. The introduction of banh mi heralded a new phase in the culinary sensibilities of the Vietnamese people. In time, the banh mi took on a decidedly Asian flare. After French rule ceased in 1954, the Vietnamese started to include their own ingredients,

condiments and garnishments. Butter was replaced with a kind of mayonnaise, while pickled vegetables and fresh chilies were added to enhance the flavor. Thinly cut pork, chicken and beef were preferred to ham, and spicier condiments such as pickled vegetables also were added.


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cave and even face-to-beak encounters with penguins. • As the new school year kicks off in the United States, it might be interesting to renew a familiarity with a now-disused word: a “belter-werrits” is an annoying child.

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By Samantha Weaver • It was beloved Russian author Leo Tolstoy who made the following sage observation: “Nothing can make our life, or the lives of other people, more beautiful than perpetual kindness.” • If you see a group of flamingoes together in one place, it will be handy to know that the appropriate collective noun is a “flamboyance.” • It may be the hottest part of summer in the Northern Hemisphere, and temperatures in the United Arab Emirates may be reaching the triple digits Fahrenheit, but that’s no impediment to winter sports in Dubai, the UAE’s most populous city. Residents and visitors can take a break from the heat at Ski Dubia, an indoor ski resort featuring a 290-foot mountain, sled and toboggan runs, climbing towers, an ice

• Many people know American counterculture figure Ken Kesey as the author of the 1962 novel “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” which presents a disturbing portrait of life in a mental institution. It’s less well known, though, that Kesey got an inside view of the system when he worked as a janitor in a mental hospital before he became famous. • If you’re planning a sporting visit to Pennsylvania, be sure to note that dynamite-assisted fishing is illegal in that state. ***

Quiz Ya Corner Answers: page 7 page 5


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Posting Date August 17, 2015

1. HISTORY: What country once was known by the Latin name of Caledonia? 2. ANIMAL ADJECTIVES: What is a group of dragons called? 3. ANATOMY: Where is the retina located? 4. TELEVISION: Who played the character Latka Gravas on “Taxi”? 5. U.S. PRESIDENTS: How old was Bill Clinton when he was inaugurated as president? 6. MYTHOLOGY: The Greek god Aeolus commanded domain over what area? 7. GEOGRAPHY: The Catskill Mountains are located largely in which U.S. state? 8. FOOD & DRINK: What kind of plant does saffron come from? 9. MOVIES: Who directed the movie “The Lost Weekend”? 10. U.S. STATES: What is the only letter of the alphabet that does not appear in the name of any U.S. state?

Trivia Test Answers 1. Scotland; 2. A weyr or flight; 3. The eye; 4. Andy Kaufman; 5. 46; 6. Ruler of the winds ; 7. New York; 8. Crocus flower; 9. Billy Wilder; 10. The letter “Q”

©2015 King Features Synd., Inc.

Modern Piano Lessons

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DOG NAMES

• French-speaking people who heard a dog howling named it ‘begle’ which is French for ‘open-throated’ or ‘bugling.’ That breed became the beagle. • ‘Schnauzer’ comes from the German word meaning ‘snorer.’ • An Airedale is a breed that originated in the dale of the Aire, a river in England. • Cocker spaniels were bred to flush woodcocks in Spain. • A German dogcatcher named Louis Doberman set out to develop a watchdog by crossing terriers and pinschers. • Terriers were bred to dig in the earth to snatch small animals from burrows. The Latin word for earth is ‘terra.’ • ‘Dachs’ means badger in German, and ‘hund’ means dog: dachshund. • Poodle comes from the German word ‘pudel’ meaning splashing in water.

den: horns, bones, hooves. The pups chew and gnaw on these objects as their teeth are coming in. When humans leave their slippers or newspapers laying around, the pup assumes it’s for the same purpose, and will chew the object to bits— and then be completely bewildered when it’s punished for doing what comes naturally. • It’s been estimated that it costs about $6,000 to raise a medium-size dog to the age of 11. • There are about 400 pet cemeteries in the U.S.

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IT’S A DOG’S LIFE

• A dog’s nose prints are as distinctive as our fingerprints and can be used for identification.

Noteworthy Inventions (cont’d)

Bill and Bob found that when sheets of this new Teflon fabric were inserted between the two layers, the raincoat was porous enough to breathe, but tight enough to be waterproof. • The fabric contains over 9 billion microscopic pores per square inch. Whereas the pores are about 20,000 times smaller than a drop of water, they are also 700 times bigger than a molecule of moisture vapor. Therefore, water droplets cannot get through the fabric, but gases and water vapor can easily escape. It was superior to any outerwear on the market. • Bill and Bob were granted a patent in 1976, the product line hit the market in 1989, and Bob was inducted into the Inventor’s Hall of Fame in 2006. The name of the fabric is based on Bill and Bob’s last name. What’s it called? Answer: Gore-Tex, named for Bill & Bob Gore.

DOGS

• In a study done at the University of Pennsylvania, 11 of 39 coronary victims who did not have pets died within a year, compared to only 3 out of 53 patients who owned pets.

• When dogs wag their tails, it squeezes their anal scent glands and fans their signature smell all around. • Puppies don’t learn to wag their tails until they’re between 30 and 49 days old. • Free-roaming dogs spend up to three hours every day re-marking their scent posts. • All dog breeds are genetically compatible: Great Danes can mate with Chihuahuas; and any dog can breed with wolves or coyotes. • Dogs roll in dead things to disguise their smell. A deer will sniff the wind and think, “I smell a dead skunk” instead of thinking, “I smell a canine on the prowl.” • Wolves bark a little and howl a lot. Dogs bark a lot and howl a little. Wolves and dogs both howl for the same reason: to get the entire pack together in communication and galvanize them for action. A howl means, “Where are you? Come join me! Let’s go do something!” Sometimes when people start singing, their dog mistakenly thinks they are howling in order to draw the pack together, and will then start howling along. • When wolves are teaching their pups to eat solid food, they will leave animal parts lying around the


Grab a Tidbits at the Following Locations Always Available at TidbitLocations.com

Goodyear Indiana Street Starbucks 16th Street Jiffy Lube 6th Street Sally Jobe Burger King King Soopers Starbucks Health One-Radiation Oncology Corner Mechanic Grease Monkey Arapahoe Street Western Hematology-Oncology W. 6th Street Dickey’s BBQ Pit Mtn Blue Cancer Care Meyer Hardware Premiere Health Associates Peerless Tires Golden Coin-op Laundry Colorado Retina Associates Bonefire Burritos Bono’s Italian Restaurant Rocky Mtn Pediatric Orthopedics LaCarreta RJ Salon Aveda East Street Rocky Mtn Ophthalmology Laundry Mat Noodles & Ice Cream Golden Auto Clinic Tin Star Smokehouse Accent Dermatology & Laser Institute 12th Street South Philly Cheesesteaks El Amigo Season Nails Mannie & Bo’s Pizzaria Sinclair Gas Station Jackson Elote’s Cafe Bow Wow Boutique Pet Spa Anthony’s Pizza & Pasta South Golden Rd. Safeway-Starbucks Panini Bistro Santiago’s Mexican Restaurant Golden Auto Sales Ford Street Gentile Smiles Rock Restlodge Barber Taco Bell Mountain Mufflers JC’s Cafe Foothills Chiropractic 13th Street Ford Street Salon Rocky Mtn Roos Comfort Dental Bob’s Atomic Burgers Johnson Rd. Miers Deli 13 Cafe AutoSport Collision Repair Wala Hair Roast & Toast Cafe Golden Ridge Rd. 14th Street McDonalds Dart N Mart Eye Clinic, Ste. 200 Big O Tires Higher Grounds El Tapatio Mexican Restaurant Pekin Gardens VA Clinic N. Rubey Dr. Al Babba Grill Shabby Sheek Los Marcelos Canyon Point Orthodontics Big Daddy Bagels Physiotherapy Associates Amira Grill Loaf n Jug

Lakewood Locations

Sassy Styles by Milan Family Dentistry

Alameda Scotch Wash Laundromat Vein Care Institute Colfax Ace Hardware Days Inn- Day Break Cost Cutters Green Mountain Family Medicine Caribou Coffee Blue Sky Cafe Perfect Teeth Family & Occupational Medicine Sports Clips Family Dental Einstein Bagels Papa John’s Mimi’s Cafe Quiznos Moose Hill Cantina Burrito Express Perkins Restaurant Comfort Dental Coloradoland Tire Foothills Animal Hospital Subway Midas Perfect Teeth Burger King Garlic Knot Pizza Yianni’s Gyros Salon Michaelyn Firestone Tires KFC-Taco Bell Holiday Lanes Allison Street KFC-A&W Studio West Lakewood Allign and Brake Taste of Philly Carr Street Bob’s 50/50 Uncle Dan’s Pet Grooming Mountain Pawn Chicago Market

Davies Chuck Wagon Diner Old Fashion Hamburger Stand Safeway Grease Monkey My Favorite Things Mazda of Lakewood Sheridan Auto Tech Mark’s Automotive Massa Auto Pawn Bright Now Dental Labor Finders Home Depot HD Stand Rocky Mtn Gastroenterology Winchell’s Donuts Lovely Nails Coin Laundry at JCRS Burger King Florida Carmine Lonardo’s Italian Garrison Cafe del Sol Nelson Chiropractic Donut Burst Iris The Auto Shop Jewell Great Harvest Bread

New York Hair & Nails Taste of Denmark State Farm - Bruce Aaron Nicolo’s Pizza Marina Pool and Spa Magill’s World of Ice Cream Bingo Kipling Street Lube and Latte Merrill Auto Electric Senior Burritos Salon with Style Ace Hardware Quail St. Great Clips Sheridan Just Brakes Sunrise Cafe Talking Book Library Look in Good Restaurant DK Dental Taco Bell Yanna’s Cafe Venus Flowers & Gifts

Four To Go Tubs Laundry Fran’s Cafe 26th Ave. The Ridge Acupuncture T-Bird Roadhouse Gunsmoke Gratitude Hair Studio Clancy’s Irish Pub Dent Clinic Davies Chuck Wagon Diner B&F Tire Co. Dairy Queen Quality Automotive Sundance Automotive Complete Accounting Solutions Farmer Market & Gas 38th Ave. 7-11 Convenient/Gas Store Big O Tires Starbucks-Lutheran Hospital Darby’s Cabinets Good Neighborhood Garage Streets of Stylez Shear Class Wheat Ridge Auto Service Fido’s Grub n Tub Vinnolas Italian Market Entenmann’s Bakery Outlet Danny’s Barber Shop Subway Joe’s Cafe Suite Success Cleaners Mama Sannio’s Italian Vincenza’s Italian Bakery & Deli Midas La Fonda Restaurant Salsas Mexican Restaurant Burger King Subway Audacious Salon Special Nails Just Brakes Rambling Rose Coin Op Laundromat 44th. Ave. 44th Ave Gril Sunrise-Sunset Restaurant Diamond Gas Station Pep Boys Chalet, Inc. Abner’s Garden Center Dianna’s of Denver Hair Aqua Salon Rocky Mountain Forest Products Wheat Ridge Used Furniture Right Coast Pizza A Cup of Faith Salon Fiore Dave’s Automotive Specialists Auto Reflections

S. Kipling Sun Valley Automotive High Tech Automotive Brunswick Zone Hilario’s Mexican Restaurant Dedicated Dentistry Rodolfo’s Mexican Grill Jiffy Lube Tequilas Great Clips Denver Vision The Signature Salon Union Denny’s Pot Belly Sandwich Shop SportsClips Tuk Tuk Supercuts Jason’s Deli Le Peeps Del Taco Anthony’s Pizza Jimmy John’s Brueggers Fire House Subs

Barker Shop Al’s Pine Garden & Nursery Altitude Hair Salon North West Automotive, Inc Allstate US Bank Les Schwab Tires Primary Dental I Care Vision Centers Sunrise Cafe 49th. Ave. Denny’s Kipling Wrench Bender Automorive Philly Cheesesteaks Apple Ridge Cafe Paramount Bowl

Golden Locations

Washington Ave. Grappa Cafe Windy Saddle Cafe Buffalo Rose Goozell Yogurt & Coffee D’Deli Golden Sweets Blue Canyon Grill Snarfs Table Top Inn & Restaurant W. Colfax AC Transmission Center Subway Croc of Soup Jack in the Box Youngfield St. Dairy Queen Jimmy’s Wings Teller’s Taproom & Kitchen

Everyday Mart WestRail Tap & Grill Big O Tires El Jamador Restaurant Green Mountain Auto World Chevron Express Lube Tires for Less Vance St. Lakewood Lube & Auto Van Gordon The Point at Lakewood Wadsworth Rocky Mountain Dental Group Lucky Nails Los 3 Garcias Gregorio’s Fine Mexican Food DeCino Family Dentistry Elana’s Restaurant Danny’s Carnation Restaurant Yolas Beauty Concepts Insight Eye Care Taco House

Wadsworth-South Westwood Inn KFC-A&W Brothers BBQ Kids First Pediatrics Pickering Auto Johnny’s New York Pizza WingStop Sun Spa Salon Sunrise Restaurant New York Bagels Cafe Dairy Queen Dickey’s BBQ Village Inn Garlic Knot Pizza Comfort Dental Spicy Mexican Grill Granny Scotts Pies Masterpiece Cake Shop Midas Auto Yarrow St. Exhaust by Massa Clements Community Center

Wheat Ridge Locations

Wadsworth Foothills Perodontics & Implant Lucky Nails Rocky Mountain Pediatrics Cosmetic & Family Dentistry Vina Hair Salon Gregorio’s Fine Mexican Food My Pie Pizza Parlor McDonalds Fantastic Sam’s Jiffy Lube Midas Burger King

Sheridan Sunrise Cafe Just Brakes


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