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View Special Section
September
2005 Issue
Key
Peninsula gets first traffic light
A
traffic light being installed at the intersection of State
Route 302 and Key Peninsula Highway is expected to reduce
the number of accidents, improve traffic flow.
>Full
story
Vaughn teen carries
artistic message to D.C.
Peninsula High School’s Sarah Spunaugle is among 10
students nationwide selected to travel to the nation’s
capital as part of an art contest.
>Full Story
Renaissance Faire
entertainers enjoy summer sun, growing crowds
Simpler times, fighting knights, minstrels and royalties
descend on the Key Peninsula, attracting tens of thousands
visitors.
.>Full Story
Residents on landlocked
properties question map accuracy
Inaccurate county maps have led many landlocked residents
on 144th Street to believe they had legal access to their
properties. Now, they risk losing access completely unless
they sign waivers.
>Full Story
A very special place
The Beadin’ Path in Purdy offers customers a serene place
to relax, heal and create art, thanks to a Wauna resident
who followed her dreams.
>Full Story
From Pioneer Stock: Helen
Skahan of Elgin
Old-timer Helen Skahan recalls the days of growing up near
the site of Brookside Restaurant and raising her family
near the Minter Creek fish hatchery.
>Full story
The Art Barn is center of
creative attention
Artist Beverly Pedersen opens the doors to her Key Pen
studio to fellow artists, rising talent, and the public.
>Full
story
Monthly
Events Calendar
>Download entire
September issue in Adobe pdf format (2.54 MB;
all images are low resolution)
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