“Captain Smartypants” and “Sensible Shoes,” known by their followers as “Pants and Shoes,” will perform Oct. 17 at 8 p.m. in the Marysville Evergreen Coffeehouse, with proceeds from the $10-per-person suggested donation door price going to benefit the Marysville Evergreen Unitarian Universalist Fellowship and the Marysville Community Food Bank.
A levy for the Sno-Isle Libraries is on the ballot Nov. 3, but even if it passes, the 21 community libraries in the Snohomish and Island counties will still be facing some belt-tightening.
At approximately 7:50 a.m., a residential fire was spotted in the 1400 block of Cedar Avenue by the Marysville Fire District battalion chief.
Marysville Fire District crews responded Tuesday at 7:50 a.m. to the 1400 block of Cedar Avenue where they found a detached garaged on fire.
The Smokey Point Plant Farm is attracting attendees from throughout Snohomish County, and even Canada, through the Marysville Rotary’s annual “Pumpkins for Literacy” program this month.
Three months after its groundbreaking, the Community Transit park and ride station at the intersection of Cedar Avenue and Grove Street celebrated another milestone Oct. 12, as contractors installed the park and ride station’s prefabricated lavatory building at the southeast corner of the station’s approximately two-acre lot.
Snohomish County Prosecutor Janice Ellis is leaving her post, before the end of her term next year, to serve as the Tulalip Tribes’ prosecutor.
Marysville resident Janice Waters, 60, was charged by Snohomish County prosecuting attorneys Oct. 5 with committing voting fraud, for voting under an illegal registration in the wrong county several times, forging and voting her son’s ballot in last year’s general election, and illegally double-voting in that same election by voting ballots assigned to both her son and herself.
While the Marysville-Pilchuck High School football game against Lake Stevens raged on in the M-PHS stadium Oct. 9, the school’s 15th annual Oktoberfest drew its own large, loud crowds that evening.
After six years in the role, Jay Goss retired as Tulalip Tribal Police chief in 2007, but two years later, he’s back on the job.
Local author J.R. Nakken enjoys drawing from real life to write her fiction, and her third published book, “Sweet Grass Season,” is no exception.
“I still feel 35,” said Ursula Earnshaw, a resident of the Marysville Care Center who celebrated her 104th birthday Oct. 8. “I don’t feel any different.”
The health district is reporting that the first round of vaccines for the H1N1 flu have arrived.
