
function retrieveObits() {
	var data = "		<span style=\"font-size: 24px;\"> 		<div style=\"border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; text-align:center; color: #555; font-size: 0.8em;\"> 			<form method=\"get\" style=\"margin-top: 8px; margin-bottom: 3px;\"> 			<input type=\"hidden\" name=\"cmpRegion\" value=\"\"> 			<input name=\"paper\" type=\"hidden\" value=\"97\">Search all papers by Last Name:&nbsp; 			<input type=\"text\" name=\"name\" size=\"16\" value=\"\" >&nbsp; 			<SELECT name=\"paperSelect\"> 				<OPTION value=\"all\">All Papers</OPTION> <optgroup label=\'Sound Publishing\'><option value=\'190\'  >Arlington Times</option><option value=\'194\'  >Auburn Reporter</option><option value=\'96\'  >Bainbridge Island Review</option><option value=\'195\'  >Bellevue Reporter</option><option value=\'214\'  >Bonney Lake-Sumner Courier-Herald</option><option value=\'196\'  >Bothell Reporter</option><option value=\'83\'  >Bremerton Patriot</option><option value=\'93\'  >Central Kitsap Reporter</option><option value=\'200\'  >Covington Reporter</option><option value=\'213\'  >Enumclaw Courier Herald</option><option value=\'91\'  >Federal Way Mirror</option><option value=\'86\'  >Islands Sounder</option><option value=\'87\'  >Islands Weekly</option><option value=\'208\'  >Issaquah Reporter</option><option value=\'97\' SELECTED >Journal of the San Juans</option><option value=\'198\'  >Kent Reporter</option><option value=\'130\'  >Kingston Community News</option><option value=\'205\'  >Kirkland Reporter</option><option value=\'199\'  >Maple Valley Reporter</option><option value=\'191\'  >Marysville Globe</option><option value=\'201\'  >Mercer Island Reporter</option><option value=\'95\'  >North Kitsap Herald</option><option value=\'92\'  >Port Orchard Independent</option><option value=\'202\'  >Redmond Reporter</option><option value=\'203\'  >Renton Reporter</option><option value=\'209\'  >Sammamish Reporter</option><option value=\'204\'  >Snoqualmie Valley Record</option><option value=\'85\'  >South Whidbey Record</option><option value=\'206\'  >Sumner Reporter</option><option value=\'90\'  >Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber</option><option value=\'84\'  >Whidbey News Times</option></optgroup>			</SELECT> 			<input type=\"submit\" name=\"submit\" value=\"Search obituaries\" tabindex=\"2\"> 			</form> 		</div> 		<p style=\"font-weight: bold; font-size: 0.8em;\">Browse obituaries: 54 records found </p> 		<a href= \"?paper=97&amp;submit=&amp;name=&amp;skip=10\"><img src=\"http://raven.b-it.ca/portals/images/nextobit.gif\" width=\"45\" height=\"12\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Next\"></a> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Getz, Lawrence W.</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Saturday, 24 Mar 2007</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			<b>Lawrence W. Getz<br>Dec. 3, 1930 - March 24, 2007</b> <br> <br>Born and raised in Friday Harbor, Washington state. Served his life as a journeyman plumber - pipe fitter. <br> <br>Retired to Apache Junction, Ariz., to live life and play golf in 1993. <br> <br>He is survived by his sister, Donna MacKinnon; son, Mitch Getz; daughters, Michele Wilson and Melinda Adkins; lifetime friend, Sylvia Bednarz; nephews, Dale and Bruce; five grandchildren, Ryan, Tyler, Jesse, Alisha and Scarlet. <br> <br>He was a loving, endearing, devoted father and grandfather. He will be greatly missed by all whom he touched in life. <br> <br>Memorial service April 7, 2007, 2 p.m., at the Allen Funeral Home, 1130 S. Horne, Mesa, AZ 85204. <br> <br>In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to your local chapter of the American Cancer Society in remembrance of Larry Getz. <br> <br><i>— Family of Larry Getz</i> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Mathisen, Ole Alfred</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Monday, 12 Mar 2007</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			<b>Ole Alfred Mathisen</b><br>Ole Alfred Mathisen died March 12, 2007.  <br> <br>He was 88.   <br> <br>He was born in Oslo, Norway on Feb. 9, 1919 and studied zoology at the University of Oslo. During World War II, he served in the Norwegian Underground Service.   <br> <br>He came to the U.S. after the war to continue his studies at the University of Washington and earned his PhD in Fisheries Biology in 1955. He was a professor at the College of Fisheries, University of Washington, teaching and conducting research, from 1955 to 1982. During this time, he spent summers in Bristol Bay, Alaska studying the population dynamics of sockeye salmon.   <br> <br>In 1983, he became the dean of the College of Fisheries and Ocean Science, University of Alaska in Juneau. He served as a visiting scholar at the University of Moscow in 1960-61 and also was a Fulbright Scholar in Norway in 1965-66 and in Malaysia in 1988-89.  <br> <br>During his professional life, Ole participated in many scientific expeditions to regions ranging from the Bikini Atoll to the Antarctic to South America and the African continent. After his retirement from the University of Alaska, he built a log cabin near Friday Harbor on San Juan Island, Wash., where he continued his research and many professional activities.  <br>  <br>He is survived by his beloved wife of 58 years, Randi; his two children and their spouses, Sven and Gro and granddaughters, Karine and Benedikte of Oslo, Norway, and Heidi and Klaus and grandchildren Kristiaan and Annika of Seattle; and many friends and former students all over the world.  <br>  <br>Two memorial services will be held. On March 31,  a service will be held at 1:30 p.m. in Friday Harbor Presbyterian Church, 425 Spring St., Friday Harbor, Wash. On April 3, a service will be held at 2 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1200 10th Ave. East, Seattle, Wash., with a reception following at Lake Union Crew, 11 East Allison St., Seattle, Wash. His ashes will be interred in Norway later this year.  <br>  <br>Remembrances may be sent to the Nordic Heritage Museum, 3014 NW 67th St., Seattle, WA. 98117,  http://www.nordicmuseum.org   <br> <br><i>— Family of Ole Alfred Mathisen</i> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Rishel, Anne L.</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Saturday, 20 Jan 2007</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			Anne L. Rishel died on Jan. 20, 2007 in Burlington, Wash., after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. <br> <br>She was born in North Union, Fayette County, Pa., on Oct. 1, 1915. She joined in marriage to Dale A. Rishel Sr. on May 5, 1940. She resided in Pennsylvania with her husband until March 1946, at which time they moved to San Juan Island, where she remained until July 2001. <br> <br>Anne was a member of Friday Harbor Presbyterian Church, where she filled many positions over the years including, Sunday School director, Sunday School teacher, elder and clerk of session. She also volunteered at the Food Bank and San Juan Island Library.  <br> <br>Anne enjoyed reading, playing cards, writing stories and poetry, bird watching and gardening. Anne may, however, best be remembered for her wonderful baking skills. Over many years, she provided cookies, pies, bread, mouth-watering dinner rolls and beautifully decorated wedding cakes and birthday cakes, as well as a never-ending supply of cinnamon twists. <br> <br>Anne was preceded in death by her husband, Dale A. Rishel Sr.; three brothers, Bud Lowe, Paul Lowe and Don Lowe; and one sister, Dorotha Garred. <br> <br>She is survived by four children and their families: Dale A. “Butch” Rishel Jr. (Dorothy Stone), of Friday Harbor; Gary Rishel, of Mi Wuk, Calif.; Dorian (Lynn) Langum, of Everett, Wash.; and Clark Rishel, of Fort Bragg, Calif. <br> <br>She has nine grandchildren: Kari Rishel, Donald (Debbie) Rishel, Tammy Colgazer, Carl (Shannon) Rishel, Shelly (Jeff) Suth, Jeff (Melissa) Rishel, Jayson (Mollie) Langum, Sarah Langum and Tommy Langum. <br> <br>She has 14 great-grandchildren with one more on the way.     <br> <br>She is also survived by four sisters, Lois Elleard, Mary Williams, Doris Gilroy and Vi Young; and two sisters-in-law, Lorraine Larson of Friday Harbor and Cookie Lowe, as well as numerous nieces and nephews. <br> <br>By her request, there will not be a memorial service at this time. However, a gathering of family and friends is being planned for a later date. <br>— The family of Anne L. Rishel <br> <br> <br> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Lindsay, Hazel Velma Taylor</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Tuesday, 05 Dec 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			Hazel Velma Taylor Lindsay was born on October 13, 1915 in St. Louis, Mo., and passed away on Dec. 5, 2006.  		 <br> <br>She lived 91 years surrounded by love from countless family members and friends. She left school at the age of 14 to work in a dime store to help her family in lean times.   <br> <br>She married William Spencer Lindsay at 18 and moved to California with him when their son, Bill, was a toddler. Their daughter, Janice, was born in 1943, and the four Lindsays lived happily for many years in Compton, Calif. <br> <br>When Bill was 52 and Hazel 49, he died suddenly, leaving her grieving and alone, with no skills to earn a living.   <br> <br>She went to work as a saleslady for Desmond\'s and supported herself on a small salary until she retired. Hazel was proud of her self-sufficiency and her adaptability to change.   <br> <br>She was a traditional woman with boundless love for her husband and children, who knew comfort and security in the life she lived wholly for them.  She knew that God watched over her every day of her life. <br> <br>As the years began to take their toll, Hazel moved to assisted living in Vista, Calif., and then to beautiful San Juan Island to live with Janice and her husband, Rich.   <br> <br>At the end of a year and a terrible time with hip surgery and pneumonia, Hazel moved to Islands Convalescent Center. It became home.   <br> <br>She celebrated her 90th birthday and then her 91st, growing healthier and more beautiful every day in the care of the outstanding ICC staff.  <br> <br>Hazel’s children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren were here with her to celebrate the 90th anniversary of Nana’s birth. <br> <br>Hazel’s last year was a gift to us all. She was the queen of the ICC float on July 4, relishing every minute of that magic day. <br> <br>She suffered a stroke in October that diminished her physically but did not impair her spirit. Speech was difficult. One day, her daughter asked her to try and say her name. Hazel said clearly, “I love  Janice.”   <br> <br>She loved us all and we knew it. We all loved her and she knew that too. <br> <br>One life ends and those left behind live on. Two grateful children, Bill and Janice, a devoted son-in-law, Richie, four grandchildren, Eric, Kira, Spencer, and Joe, and four great-grandchildren, Audrey, Eric, Kaya, and Kenna, will live on with precious memories of their beloved Nana. She is with Daddy now. <br> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Toth, Andor</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Tuesday, 28 Nov 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			Andor Toth, world–renowned violinist and founding director of Chamber Music San Juans, has died. <br> <br>Toth was 81, his daughter-in-law, Lynn, said. He had had a stroke and died Nov. 28 in Los Angeles, where he was living near his youngest son, Chris. <br> <br>The family is planning a memorial service at the Valley Church. The maestro will be interred next to his wife, Louise, at the Valley Cemetery. <br> <br>In a career that spanned more than six decades, Toth earned international celebrity as a soloist, concert artist, conductor and music educator. <br> <br>During his career, Toth played his violin to comfort wounded soldiers on the World War II battlefields of Aachen, Germany; performed with the NBC Symphony under Arturo Toscanini; formed several musical groups, most notably the Oberlin String Quartet; conducted symphonies in Cleveland, Denver and Houston; was founding concertmaster of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; and recorded for Vox, Decca and Electra. <br> <br>Born in Manhattan in 1925, Toth began playing violin as a child and launched his career at 17 as solo violinist with the original Ballet Russe, while he was still a graduate student at Juilliard. <br> <br>In 1942, Toth formed the Alma Trio with Adolph Baller and Gabor Rejto. At 19 in 1944, Toth performed for wounded Allied troops on the battlefields of Europe, a medical experiment with music therapy believed to calm wounded soldiers and aid in their recovery. <br> <br>Following the war, Toth joined the NBC Philharmonic under the direction of Arturo Toscanini. Toth was one of the youngest members to ever join the philharmonic and was in the pit for the original Broadway performance of “West Side Story.” <br> <br>In 1955, Toth formed the Oberlin String Quartet with violinist William Berman. <br> <br>In the ensuing years, Toth performed with the New Hungarian String Quartet and briefly directed the Morrison Artists Series in the San Francisco Bay area. <br> <br>Toth premiered Beethoven’s “Grobe Fuge Op. 133” in Carnegie Hall in New York on Feb. 16, 1975. Toth performed the number with the New Hungarian Quartet, accompanied by Richard Young, violin; Denes Koromzay, viola; and Toth’s son, Andor Toth Jr., on cello. Toth’s son became an accomplished musician in his own right, before dying unexpectedly in 2002. <br> <br>In a Sept. 28, 1982 review in The New York Times, John Rockwell wrote of Toth’s first New York recital in four years, in the Abraham Goodman House. <br> <br>“Mr. Toth’s principal virtue is his ability to invest even the most brilliant of passages with thoughtfulness; every phrase sounded shaped and considered, with a rich, ample tone. If, at times, in the Bartok and Saint-Saens (pieces) especially, this seemed purchased at the price of impulsiveness and excitement, the gains were still worth savoring -- especially in this era of soulless virtuosity. <br> <br>“… Mr. Toth is hardly one of those violinistic poets who wins one over despite an erratic technique; his intonation and articulation were secure in a way that was continually impressive yet never called undue attention to itself.” <br> <br>In 1983, Toth co-founded the Stanford String Quartet with Stephen Harrison, performing until his retirement from Stanford University in 1989. <br> <br>During his educational career, Toth taught at five major universities and is a professor emeritus at Stanford. <br> <br>Toth also toured Europe in 1993, playing first violin with the Takacs String Quartet, before founding Chamber Music San Juans. <br> <br>Shortly before his retirement, Toth said he had had a wonderful career “and I wouldn’t trade a minute of it for anything. This has been the most amazing career I could have ever imagined. It’s been a marvelous experience.” <br> <br>In a December 2005 story about Toth’s retirement, local entertainer RuthE Wells commented on performing on the local stage with Toth. “It was fun being a part of the ensemble. Andor is very much a perfectionist, but at his core he’s an educator.” <br> <br>Wells also talked of how Toth discovered a musical prodigy as well. <br> <br>Jonathan Chan, now 15 was discovered by Toth at age 9 during a musical competition that Toth was judging. Chan has performed several times at the San Juan Community Theatre since being discovered by Toth, and now lives in Vancouver, B.C. <br> <br>Toth retired in December 2005 from Chamber Music San Juans and passed the musical direction to Patricia Kostek, a clarinetist from University of Victoria. Kostek had performed with Chamber Music San Juans for 12 years. At the time she inherited Toth’s leadership, she recalled being “a bit awestruck” by the fact that she was invited to play with such a renowned musical figure as Toth. <br> <br>“His genius and artistry were cemented in my mind from having heard his many string quartet recordings, all of them a brilliant display of wonderful music-making and crystalline technique,” Kostek said at the time. <br> <br>“I could hardly believe my good fortune. Musicians go to great length to perform with Andor Toth. He is a great, yet humble artist. Performing with Andor is like being guided down a path by an expert traveler, a Sherpa guide through the mountain of great classical masterworks.” <br> <br>Kostek continued with her praise. <br> <br>“He possesses an innate ability to inspire us to stretch beyond a good performance, to reach for a higher level of expression and communication. For Andor, it’s always about the music and not the role he plays. It’s about the journey, the excitement of creating music with friends.” <br> <br>Toth’s retirement came shortly after his wife of 58 years, Louise, passed away. She was an internationally acclaimed soprano, a graduate of Julliard and, with her husband, performed chamber music, lieder and art song concerts in the U.S., South America, and major European capitals. She known for her first performances of contemporary composers solo works and operatic roles. She also taught voice and vocal diction at several colleges and universities, including Oberlin Conservatory. <br> <br>In September 2002, their oldest son, Andor P. Toth, a cello professor at Oberlin Conservatory, passed away and the event took its toll on both parents. <br> <br>The Toths’ second son, Tom, remembered his father as a devoted dad who gave up touring and took a teaching job at Stanford so he could spend more time with his family. <br> <br>“He still traveled a good bit, but not all the time,” Tom said. <br> <br>Tom said his father was not the type to throw a ball with his sons; he didn’t want to risk injuring his fingers. But he enjoyed sailing, briefly owned a boat that he didn’t get out on much, sold it and then “enjoyed fantasizing about sailing,” the son said. The concertmaster also enjoyed relaxing with a mystery or a non-fiction book. <br> <br>“He is probably remembered best for chamber music. He is known throughout the world. He played solo, he was a concertmaster, he performed on every continent on the world except Antarctica. I don’t think there was a violinist with a better sound than him when he was at his peak.” <br> <br>Anne Haskins, secretary of Chamber Music San Juans, remembers Toth for his sense of humor and gracious way. “He always opened the car door for you and he always picked up the tab at lunch,” she said. “He had a great gift of bringing people together.” <br> <br>Toth is survived by his sons and their wives, Thomas M. and Lynn Toth, and Christopher F. and Abby Toth; and grandchildren, Daniel C. and Ruby R. Toth. <br>	—  Journal Editor Richard Walker contributed to this story. 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Brant, Bill</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Sunday, 26 Nov 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			Sept 25, 1915 – Nov. 26, 2006 <br>Â  <br>Bill was born in Seattle.Â His parents were Edward Lee and Lucy Brant, early Northwest pioneers. <br> <br>Bill attended Lincoln High School and the University of Washington School of Architecture.Â He married Beverley Dorr in Tacoma in 1938.Â   <br> <br>With World War II approaching, he did tool design work at Boeing, later moving to Santa Monica where he became involved in the first atomic bomb project.Â   <br> <br>After the war, he did store design work while studying photography.Â In 1949, Bill and Beverley opened the Brant Photographers, Inc., in Bellevue Square.Â   <br> <br>They operated their studio for more than 30 years until retiring to San Juan Island.Â   <br> <br>His photographic work consisted of portrait, commercial, aerial, magazine, textbook and more than 2,000 wedding assignments.Â   <br> <br>In the early 1950s, Bill became fascinated with British sports cars and raced his MGTD and later a Jaguar XK 120 when not busy photographing races for Road and Track magazine.Â  		 <br> <br>Time permitting, many happy days were spent at their Mitchell Bay cabin with lots of salmon fishing.Â  He was a member of the San Juan Island Golf Club and a charter member of the San Juan Island Yacht Club; he served as commodore in 1979. <br> <br>Many wonderful trips were made north on the “Starduster” and later the cutter “Tangerine.\"Â  	 <br> <br>Six years were spent as a port commissioner and recently four years on the Marine Resources Committee. <br> <br>Bill’s love for the islands was so strong he felt he must have salt water in his veins.Â  		 <br> <br>Survivors are his daughter, Becky Shull of Burns, Ore.; grandson, John Workman and great-grandson, Shade Noble Workman of Friday Harbor; and sister, Peggy Donahue of Honolulu, Hawaii.Â   <br> <br>Interment will be in the San Juan Valley Cemetery.Â  Arrangements are in the care of Evans Funeral Chapel and Crematory, Inc., Anacortes, Wash. <br> <br>To share memories of Bill, please sign the online guest register at http://www.evanschapel.com. <br> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Hymer, Carole</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Saturday, 18 Nov 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			Carole Hymer has sailed off island. She died peacefully, Nov. 18, 2006 in the arms of close friends Dana and Melody Rice. She was born 1936 in Kansas City, Kan. <br> <br>Carole’s career in the U.S. military as a surgical and burn unit nurse sent her to Japan during the Korean War. She was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army.  <br> <br>While raising a family in Lafayette, Calif., Carole also enjoyed her work as a dedicated surgical nurse in the San Francisco Bay area. After retirement, she and her husband, Warren, fell in love with the San Juan Islands and moved to Friday Harbor with their youngest son, Carl.  <br> <br>Carole and Warren became active participants in the Friday Harbor community. <br> <br>Her husband, Warren, preceded Carole to Heaven. She is survived by a large and loving family, including her children, Cathy, John, Cheryl and Carl; her brother, Joe; and her sister, Norma. “Grandma Kay” has six lovely grandchildren: Amanda, Erica, Megan, Vivian, Michael and Maxwell. <br> <br>The family will hold a private memorial service. They would like to thank all the members of the Friday Harbor community who have touched Carole and Warren’s lives. They loved you! 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Certo, Leoleon Alice (Pat Wagness)</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Thursday, 25 May 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"float:right; width: 80px; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; padding:4px; margin-left: 9px;\"> 			<img src=\"http://raven.b-it.ca/portals/obituploads/sanjuan/0525Cervo.jpg\" height=\"100\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Photo of Certo, Leoleon Alice (Pat Wagness)\"> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			<b>Leoleon Alice Certo (Pat Wagness)</b> <br> <br>	Leoleon Alice “Pat Wagness” Cervo of Lopez Island died May 13, 2006. <br> <br>	She was 87. <br> <br>	She was born Sept. 10, 1918, in Twining, Mich. to Harry and Alice Babcock March. The family then moved to Stanwood, Wash.  <br> <br>	She graduated from Stanwood High School, then attended junior college in Mount Vernon, Wash. She continued her education at Western Washington University in Bellingham, earning a teaching degree. <br> <br>	Pat taught school for 25 years in the Highline School District in Seattle; most of those years were devoted to third-grade children. <br> <br>	Pat and her husband, Ken, moved to Lopez Island in the mid-1960s. Kenneth Wagness died in April 1999 and Pat remained at the family home on Lopez. She married Gordon A. Cervo on Oct. 26, 2003. <br> <br>	She is survived by her husband, Gordon, of Lopez Island, Wash.; sons, Harry Wagness of SeaTac, Wash., and John Wagness of Anacortes, Wash.; daughter, Patricia, and her husband Wayne Crinklaw of Portland, Ore.; brother, Wayne March of Vacaville, Calif.; sisters, Nina, and her husband Bill Babcock of Terre Haute, Ind., and Marian and her husband Ray King of Camano Island, Wash.; grandchildren, Matthew and Stephanie Crinklaw of Sammamish, Wash., Ken and Sarah Crinklaw of Redland, Wash., and Jeff and Katie Crinklaw of Portland, Ore.; and great-grandchildren Blake, Allison and Bailey Hoppe Crinklaw. <br> <br>	Funeral is May 24, 2006 at 1:30 p.m., in Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, Stanwood, Wash., with burial at Anderson Cemetery in Stanwood, Wash. <br> <br>	Memorials may be made to Skagit Valley Hospital Foundation or to the Catherine Washburn Memorial in care of Lopez Island Medical Clinic, Lopez Island, WA. 98261. <br> <br><i>	— Family of Leoleon Alice “Pat Wagness” Cervo</i> <br> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Smith, Victoria</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Friday, 19 May 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"float:right; width: 80px; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; padding:4px; margin-left: 9px;\"> 			<img src=\"http://raven.b-it.ca/portals/obituploads/sanjuan/0525Victoria-Smith.jpg\" height=\"100\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Photo of Smith, Victoria\"> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			<b>Victoria Smith <br>May 19, 1935 — May 12, 2006</b> <br>  <br>	Victoria Smith died peacefully in the home she loved and shared with her husband, Alan. She was a wife, mother and grandmother. <br> <br>	Victoria was a woman born with more ambition than 10 women put together. She lived life to the fullest.Â  <br> <br>	She enjoyed doing so many things, especially creating things with her hands, such as stained glass, (her home was filled with beautiful stained-glass windows and lamps). She loved pottery and book binding and scuba diving, snow skiing, ice skating and riding horses with her girlfriends in Friday Harbor. <br> <br>	Victoria lived in Seattle, Wash., for most of her life. She and her husband, Alan, moved to San Juan Island in 1997. They shared their time between their home at Eagle Cove and their second home, in Yuma, Ariz. They had recently purchased a big truck and camper, hoping to do a lot of traveling.Â  <br> <br>	Victoria was always challenging herself. In her 50s, she decided she wanted to become a pilot and get her pilot’s license.Â So she did, and even received her commercial license.Â She purchased her own Cessna 172, which she flew all over — to Mexico, to Roche Harbor, or just to fly her granddaughter, Shauna, to Bremerton to get an ice cream cone. <br>Â  <br>	Victoria spoke fluent Russian, Portuguese and Spanish and was learning French. In the early 80s, she took a leave of absence from her job as a bookbinder, and got a real estate license and sold real estate for one year. She was also a ham radio operator using Morse Code.  <br> <br>	Victoria is survived by her husband of 43 years, Alan; her sons, Michael Stempak, of La Conner, Wash., and Tony Stempak of Seattle, Wash.; and Tony’s children: son, Anthony George, and daughter, Shauna Nicole. Shauna would have given Victoria her first great-grandchild in November.   <br> <br>	Victoria is also survived by her beloved Pups, Bonnie and Tika. <br> <br>	Victoria will be deeply missed by all the many friends and family who knew and loved her.  <br> <br>	“Bye, bye, Mama.”  <br> <br><i>	— Family of Victoria Smith</i> <br> 		</div> 		<div style=\"background-color: #eee; font-size: 0.6em; padding: 4px; margin-bottom: 0.5em; height: 1.4em;\"> 			<div style=\"float: left;\"> 			<span style=\"font-weight: bold; color: #006;\">Joseph, Peter Michael</span> <span style=\"color: #bb0000;\">Wednesday, 17 May 2006</span> 			</div> 			<div style=\"float: right;\"> 			Journal of the San Juans Friday Harbor WA 			</div> 		</div> 		<div style=\"float:right; width: 80px; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px; padding:4px; margin-left: 9px;\"> 			<img src=\"http://raven.b-it.ca/portals/obituploads/sanjuan/0517joseph.jpg\" height=\"100\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Photo of Joseph, Peter Michael\"> 		</div> 		<div style=\"font-size: 0.6em; margin-bottom: 1em; min-height:110px;\"> 			<b>Peter Michael Joseph</b> <br> <br>Born Sept 25, 1986 in Spokane, departed this life March 29, 2006 at age 19 1/2. <br> <br>Peter is survived by his mother and stepfather, Maria Joseph and Bill Hendershott, of Spokane; father and stepmother, Dennis and Dana Louthan, of Lynden (formerly of Friday Harbor); half-brother, Craig Leo Louthan; four uncles, three aunts, nine cousins and three paternal grandparents. <br> <br>Peter enjoyed spending time in Friday Harbor during summers and holidays, especially since his little brother, Craig, lived there.Â He made some close friends in the family neighborhood and also at youth group functions at Friday Harbor Presbyterian Church. <br> Â Â  <br>He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents, Peter J. and Ilah Joseph of Elkins, W.Va.; his paternal grandmother, Arlene Rock, of Seiling, Okla.; and half-brother, Ronnie Roy Louthan II. <br>Â  <br>Services were held in Spokane on May 6 and in Elkins, W.Va., where he had been a resident for a time and where he was buried on May 13. <br>Â  <br>He was dearly loved. He blessed our lives and we will miss him very much but will hold him forever close in our hearts. <br> <br><i>— Peter Michael Joseph family</i> 		</div> 		<a href= \"?paper=97&amp;submit=&amp;name=&amp;skip=10\"><img src=\"http://raven.b-it.ca/portals/images/nextobit.gif\" width=\"45\" height=\"12\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Next\"></a> <script src=\"http://www.google-analytics.com/urchin.js\" type=\"text/javascript\"> </script> <script type=\"text/javascript\"> _uacct = \"UA-2178680-7\"; urchinTracker(); _uff = 0; _uacct = \"UA-3534793-1\"; urchinTracker(); _uff = 0 _uacct = \"UA-3544520-1\"; urchinTracker(); </script> </span> ";
	document.write(data);
}

