Robert Wendell Marshall passed away Monday afternoon at his home in Holladay surrounded by friends and family. He died after…
Eichmann Strickland won’t be coming home for Christmas, this year or any other.
EVERETT — Snohomish County has launched its second series of meetings geared toward defining a vision for its rural lands. Four public meetings include one in Arlington, 6:30 – 8 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 23 at Pioneer Hall, 20722 67th Ave. NE along with meetings in Monroe, Sept. 17, and at the Snohomish County Campus Sept. 25. The first meeting was held in Maltby Sept. 3.
The city of Arlington could save money on the changes for the 67th Street median strip by shortening the strips — better access for trucks; eliminating the sprinkler system, cementing over Remrling strips — cementing would eliminate cost of mainenace, no need to replace two or three times a year and no need to weed the gardens.
I was saddened to open The Arlington Times paper today and find that Nick Agostinelli, an Arlington Times/Marysville Globe delivery driver, had passed away.
As a student of M-PHS and a citizen of Marysville it has really come to my attention that there is a growing graffiti problem.
He was a law enforcer, then a lawbreaker and now wants to be a lawmaker. Fred Walser, candidate for Senate, 39th District, former Sultan Police Chief for 12 years and many years with the State patrol was convicted of a gross misdemeanor which carries a maximum penalty of 365 days in jail and a $5,000 fine.
Thank you for endorsing me as a second choice in the primary for Washington State Senate. Although I did not receive top two status in the primary, I am by no means finished with politics. In fact, I am continuing to work to improve our future and to get the creative ideas I have to become realities.
If I were a member of Harvard’s planning and donations committee, I’d be watching my back after the Republican snit about a Harvard education.
According to London’s Financial Times, European manufacturers are bypassing China and Asia and looking to the southern U.S. states to build new plants that provide thousands of family-wage jobs.
Reasons for moving from our home of 46 years started popping up 10 or 15 years ago. First was the lawn. A good part of our 23,000-square-foot lot is grass that grows with a vengeance before we want to be away having fun. Looking back, the days when we were free of obligations were the same days the lawn was dry enough to mow. The moral is: Man is not born to be shackled to a lawnmower.
Compact fluorescent lights are trendy, environmentally sound and last forever — up to 15 times as long as incandescent bulbs. But they’re no angels. They are mini fluorescent lights, like the tube versions found in nearly every office in America. That means they contain calcium phosphate powder, which contains mercury. This gets into our landfills, and can eventually seep into our waterways.
Electricity had always tormented me. I didn’t understand it. And all my instincts had told me to steer clear of it, like a mean, heavy-drinking uncle.
