If you’ve ever desired to dabble in the Japanese comic book art called manga, the North Bend library has an upcoming event that just might draw you in.
On Friday, Oct. 12, Snoqualmie Mayor Matt Larson and Northwest Railway Museum Executive Director Richard Anderson met on the platform of the downtown museum, inking a new agreement that will, for the first time, provide restrooms to the general public in the downtown Snoqualmie historic district.
Basking in the glory of their royal coronation at halftime Friday, Oct. 12, Mount Si High School’s Homecoming Queen and King, Corianne Castagno and Quinn Hopkins, wear the regalia of their crowning.
Val-ley voters have two choices to make in contested Sno-qualmie Valley School District Board of Dir-ectors races, which will be settled in the upcoming general election.
Herb Miller started out on the road of life in the Snoqualmie Valley in 1940. Though his road ended in 2002, his boulevard lives on in Alaska.
A North Bend family rescued a wayward racing pigeon that had become lost during a flight.
A Preston-based real estate company has purchased the Snoqualmie Inn, popularly known as the Old Honey Farm Country Inn, that was damaged in a suspicious fire in 2005.
Down to Earth Flowers and Gifts in Snoqualmie donated more than 30 custom floral arrangements and plants to decorate the new home for the Chapin family.
Parents and community members are invited to attend one of three public forums to help the Middle School Boundary Advisory Committee develop recommendations on how to balance student populations when the new middle school opens in the fall of 2008.
As dusk fell on Snoqualmie Thursday, Oct. 4, the 19 members of the city’s first-ever citizens academy were off on a trip. Their mission: to find out where their water comes from.
Considered one of the Valley’s hidden treasures, the new Snoqualmie Point Park opens to the public with a grand-opening celebration at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 27.
Chock full of historic photos, “Images of America Snoqualmie Pass” tells the story of the Pass with pictures.
It might have been a private office park with dramatic views for the tenants. Instead, Snoqualmie Point Park will be dedicated to the public Saturday, Oct. 27, as a visitor attraction site in the 100-mile Mountains to Sound Greenway along Interstate 90.
