or the “Kick Battens for Carl” Soccer Camp & Silent Auction, We Thank You, whole heartedly. To all the businesses…
If your car isn’t running well, you take it to an auto mechanic, not a lawyer. If you have an…
Sign up now for fall sports at Arlington Boys and Girls Club The Arlington Boys and Girls Club is holding…
North Snohomish County residents have a few options for where they can cast their ballots Aug. 18.
North Snohomish County residents have a few options for where they can cast their ballots Aug. 18.
The city of Arlington is offering visitors to Twin Rivers Park the opportunity to go on a guided nature walk Aug. 21.
In spite of a blanket of clouds and a slight threat of rain, the Arlington-Smokey Point Chamber of Commerce still staged its annual barbeque luncheon at Legion Park in downtown Arlington Aug. 11.
First Heritage Bank will honor its customers and shareholders with two appreciation barbecues, the first on Aug. 18 at its Marysville branch, located at 9417 State Ave., and the second on Aug. 20 at its Arlington branch, located at 404 N West Ave., from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on both days.
Sound Harley-Davidson of Smokey Point is teaming up with Washington’s Kasey Kahne, driver of the No. 9 Budweiser Dodge Charger in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, to present the “Raising Kahne for Kids” benefit motorcycle ride Sept. 13, to raise funds for the Kasey Kahne Foundation, whose beneficiaries include area charities such as the Ronald McDonald House in Seattle.
The city of Arlington Parks and Recreation Department’s Music in the Park series is continuing every Thursday in August at 6:30 p.m. at Terrace Park.
The Stilly-Snohomish Fisheries Enhancement Task Force hopes to recruit volunteers to save salmon and enhance wildlife habitat Sept. 18, by removing invasive Himalayan blackberry and planting native trees along Whitehorse Creek, near Arlington, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The “Old Bags” of Arlington wound up benefitting from their own charity recently, in a way that will help the community in turn.
When the son of an Arlington couple steps outside, inhaling crisp Alaskan air on a base surrounded by mountains and pristine wilderness in America’s “last frontier,” he is far more likely to run into a bear or a moose than an enemy of the United States.
