By Susan Sampson When I turn the page on my wall calendar to March, it looks pretty bleak. I see no national holidays or religious events to celebrate. Sometimes Easter falls in March, but not this year. I do see … Continue reading →
By Rod Molzahn George and Margaret Blair rolled into the Wenatchee Valley in October of 1883 with a four-horse team, Margaret’s 15-year-old son, Charles Davis, and a wagonload of little girls. The gaggle of girls included 9-year-old Mary Irene (Mamie), … Continue reading →
‘’I don’t know what to do! I am as light as a feather, I am as happy as an angel, I am as merry as a school-boy. …. Whoop! Hallo!” — Scrooge, A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens By June … Continue reading →
By Jim Brown, M.D. I am sure all of us have seen ads for so-called “brain or memory” enhancers like Prevagen hundreds of times on television. I have been skeptical of these claims and concerned at how effective the manufacturers … Continue reading →
By Bruce McCammon Globally, the thrush family contains 169 viable species; three other thrush species are now extinct. Eight of the 169 species are commonly seen in north central Washington (American Robin, Hermit Thrush, Mountain Bluebird, Western Bluebird, Swainson’s Thrush, … Continue reading →
By Mike Cassidy Editor I smiled when the story on the featured home for this month came in, as it is the house on South Cleveland Street we owned in the 1990s. We had been looking for a house in … Continue reading →