The annual Autumn Craft Show drew more than 25 hand-selected vendors to the Ken Baxter Community Center and Comeford Park, with at least one coming from as far away as Sedro-Woolley, to attract what KBCC Coordinator Maryke Burgess described as a steady stream of shoppers and browsers throughout the day on Saturday, Oct. 12.
MARYSVILLE — Josh Meidav, restoration ecologist for the Tulalip Tribes, summed up the progress of the Qwuloolt Estuary Restoration Project to a packed house in the Evergreen Unitarian Universalist Church library on Sunday, Oct. 13.
MARYSVILLE — Maryfest is conducting informational meetings on the Marysville Strawberry Festival for next year, as it solicits Junior and Senior Royalty for next year’s Strawberry Festival by inviting applications for its Royalty Scholarships.
LAKEWOOD — The Plant Farm at Smokey Point is again covered in pumpkins, as the Rotary Club of Marysville’s annual “Pumpkins for Literacy” program kicks off on Saturday, Oct. 12, and runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., seven days a week, through Halloween on Thursday, Oct. 31.
MARYSVILLE — Soroptimist International of Marysville recruited a few new business and professional women into their members during their “Last Splash of Summer” get-acquainted social and picnic-style dinner on Tuesday, Oct. 8, at Marysville Fire Station 62.
MARYSVILLE — Windermere Real Estate in Marysville is soliciting donations of food and dollars again this October, as part of their ongoing efforts to bolster the work of the Marysville Community Food Bank.
MARYSVILLE — As the teacher of the Life Skills class at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, Jim Strickland is familiar with student frustration, so on Tuesday, Oct. 15, he aims to do something about it, with a program entitled “When School’s Not Working.”
Residents of the Marysville School District are invited to submit their comments to the MSD Board of Directors at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 16, regarding two tax proposals slated for the ballot on February of next year.
The local impacts of the federal government shutdown were partially mitigated as of Monday, Oct. 7, when the Smokey Point Commissary at the Navy Support Complex in north Marysville reopened, and all 43 furloughed civilian employees of Naval Station Everett returned to work.
Although PermaBilt’s construction of the Marysville Historical Society’s long-awaited museum began with little fanfare early last month, Ken Cage and Steve Muller noted the progress that’s already been made in clearing out the site and laying down the lines establishing its foundation and perimeter.
German native Randolph Westphal is riding throughout the Pacific Northwest, on a bicycle with two Husky dogs, to spread a message of hope about cancer, and on Monday, Sept. 30, he stopped in Marysville for a moment before heading up north to Arlington on the Centennial Trail.
Scott Sherwood comes to The Marysville Globe and The Arlington Times with decades of experience not only in sales, but also in the local area.
TULALIP — All six of the Marysville City Council candidates in contested races this fall were represented at the Greater Marysville Tulalip Chamber of Commerce’s candidates forum on Friday, Sept. 27, as the Chamber asked them to address the city budget, tax revenues, economic growth, traffic and infrastructure.
