Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Star Press from Muncie, Indiana • Page 18

Publication:
The Star Pressi
Location:
Muncie, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MUNCIE STAR. WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1987 PAGE 18 Hero Finally to Get Military Funeral Deaths and Funerals Tint trhpn hp rlipd in 1930. relatives didn't realize he Louise D. Van Camp, 84 Louise Doggett Van Camp, 84, 2704 N. Elm died Monday in Ball Hospital after an extended illness.

She was born near Oakville and attended schools in Cowan, Springport and Mount Summit She spent most of her life in this area. Mrs. Van Camp was employed by Ball Brothers (now Ball Corp.) and F.W. Woolworth Co. before retiring.

She was a member of Muncie Moose Auxiliary, Chapter 712. Surviving are two daughters, By JOHN DOWLING Associated Press Writer SPRINGFIELD, 111. A Navy hero who won the Medal of Honor fighting Philippine rebels will get the ceremonial funeral he deserved almost 60 years after his death. The rites set for Wednesday at Camp Butler National Cemetery will fulfill a longstanding dream for relatives of John Catherwood, who was buried in a civilian grave in 1930 because his family didn't know of his military honors. "He will now be with his comrades," said John Johnston, director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs, which helped arrange the ceremony.

Catherwood was a 23-year-old Navy seaman in 1911 when he won the nation's highest military honor, fighting against rebels on an island in the Philippines, then a U.S. territory. After Catherwood and other members of a shore party landed on the island of Basilan, they were ambushed and pinned down by about 20 rebels. According to his Medal of Honor citation, Catherwood was struck down instantly and suffered nine wounds, but managed to rally his comrades to rout their attackers. Catherwood's family knew of his heroism and kept his Medal of Honor in a strongbox in the family home.

was entitled to burial in a military cemetery. So he was interred in a family plot, without military fanfare, at the city's Oak Ridge Cemetery, according to his son, Alfred. Alfred Catherwood, the possibility of a military funeral for his father seemed little more than a dream until last month, when the family was invited to a ceremony for Medal of Honor winners at the state Capitol. "We got to talking to them, and I said, 'It would be great if he could be moved to Camp near Springfield, he said. State and federal veterans' officials cut red tape to arrange for a military funeral at the cemetery, with a Navy honor guard, 21-gun salute, a bugler playing Taps and the special gold-trimmed headstone to which Medal of Honor winners are entitled.

Officials say Catherwood will be the only Medal of Honor winner buried at the 125-year-old cemetery, established as a final resting place for Civil War dead. He will be buried near his brother, Tom, and son, John both Navy veterans. "It makes us feel good," Alfred Catherwood said. "I don't know how to express it. We have accomplished something that we've hoped for all of our lives." I Wilma Frasier, Elea- I nore Kennedy, Los Angeles; two Charles L.

Black, 50 NEW CASTLE. Ind. Charles L. Black, 50, RR. A captain with the Indiana Department of Correction assigned to the Indiana Reformatory at Pindleton, died unexpectedly Monday shortly after arjival at Henry County Hospital.

Mr. Black retired in 1973 as a staff sergeant with tire Air Force after 20 years in the service. He was a -firefighter during his military career, and had been the recipient of a number of Air Force commendations. During his term of duty he served in Alaska, Japan and Turkey. Mr.

Black had been with the Indiana Department of Correction for 14 years. He was a native of Monticello, and was a trtember of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars. Surviving are his wife, Arlene Micki Madison Black; a son, Charles L. Black New Castle; two daughters, Stacye (Russell) Oliphant, Elkhart, and Lisa (Saddine) Chebaro, Dayton, Ohio; his father, Woodrow Black, New Castle; a sister, Bonnie (Jose) Martinez, Ingalls, and two grandchildren. mother, Maggie Black, died in 1985.

Services will be at 10.30 a.m. Thursday in Macer-llall-Pasco Funeral Home, with an Air Force chaplain officiating, assisted by a chaplain from the Indiana Department of Correction. Burial will be in Green Hills Memorial Gardens, west of New Castle. Full military rites will be observed during the services and burial. Calling hours are 6-9 p.m.

today at the funeral home. Memorials may be sent to Bennett House, 205 S. 31th St, New Castle. 4 Michelle R. Ashby, 16 DALEVILLE Services for Michelle R.

Ashby, 16, 205 S. Walnut will be at 1 p.m. Friday in Noffze Funeral Home in Alexandria, with Rev. Hopkins officiating. Burial will be in Park VJew Cemetery, Alexandria.

Deaths Elsewhere FROM THE WIRE SERVICES Actor Richard Egan Dies SANTA MONICA, Calif. Richard Egan, who spent much of his film career playing rugged leading men in action and western movies, has died of cancer, a hospital announced Tuesday. He was 65. Egan died Monday of prostate cancer at St. Johns Medical Center, according to a statement by the hospital.

He had been admitted Thursday. The tall, handsome San Fran 1 1 sons, Marvin and Richard Doggett, both of Muncie; a stepdaughter, Carol Koch, New Orleans; a stepson, Charles Van Camp, Muncie; a brother, Robert E. Epperson, Muncie, and several grandchildren, step-grandchildren, great-grandchildren and stepgreat-grandchildren. A son, John H. Doggett, died in 1942.

Services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday in Meeks Mortuary. Burial will be in Hawk Cemetery. Calling hours at the mortuary are 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. today or before services Thursday.

Roger A. McCarty, 78 Roger A. McCarty, 78, 4009 Maple Lane, died Monday in Ball Hospital after an illness of several months. He was born in Pennville and graduated from Pennville High School. He later attended Ball State Teachers College (now Ball State University) and Indiana State College (now Indiana State University).

He moved to Muncie in 1955. Mr. McCarty was employed for more than 30 years with McCarty Wholesale Lumber Co. before his retirement. He was employed previously by Aero Products in Vandalia, Ohio, and as a young man was associated with his father in the operation of the Pennville General Store.

He was a member of Pennville United Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife of more than 50 years, Mary; a sister, Jeanne Harrington, Fredericksburg, Ohio; two brothers, Marshall McCarty, Bluffton, and Thomas McCarty, Muncie; eight nephews, and three nieces. A son, Ray McCarty, died in 1978. Services will be at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in Gardens of Memory, north of Muncie with Rev.

Claude McCallister officiating. Entombment will follow. Calling hours at Meeks Mortuary are 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday. Memorials may be sent to the American Lung Association or the American Heart Association, Delaware County Unit.

Elmer H. Kaderly, 79 Elmer H. Kaderly, 79, R. 4, died Monday in the family home after a brief illness. He was born in Jay County, near Salamonia, and attended Rathburn School.

He lived in Jay County Calling hours at the tuneral are 4-9 p.m. Thursday. Miss Ashby died Tuesday in Ball Hospital in Muncie from whose character became pregnant after a fling with a handsome boy portrayed by Troy Donahue. Egan was 37 when he was cast for the film, but the classically trained actor played the role convincingly. He also starred in two short-lived television series.

Empire in 1962 and Hedigo in 1964. Both were contemporary Westerns, with Hedigo actually a refashioned version of Empire, focusing on Egan's ranch-hand character. He later had a role in the soap opera Capitol as Samuel Clegg II. Egan also toured in such stage productions as Neil Simon's Ought To Be in Pictures. Hanky Panky.

and Strike A Match, with Pal O'Brien and Eva Gabor. Egan earned a master's degree in theater history and dramatic literature at Stanford University. He appeared in about 30 plays at Stanford during his 3 years there, and a talent scout from Warner Bros, saw several of them and sent him to Hollywood in 1949. Egan married the former Patricia Hardy in 1958. He is survived by his wife, their four daughters and a son.

Funeral arrangements were set for Thursday evening at St. Martin of Tours Roman Catholic Church in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles, with burial Friday at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City. Writer's Brother Dies COLUMBUS, Ohio Robert Thurber. who often shared his wit and memories of growing up with his famous brother, writer James Thurber, has died. He was 90 Thurber, who died Fridav, was to be I4 Related article on Page 7 Injuries she suffered in an auto accident Friday.

She was a student at Daleville Hieh School and worked at L-K '4 buried this week in Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus near his brother, who died in 1961. "My brother exaggerated a lot to make the stories funnier," Robert Thurber said in a February interview with The Columbus Dispatch "They were funny enough as they were." Thurber was a Columbus book dealer who satisfied his desire for fame by collecting the books, newspaper clippings and magazine articles that are his brother's life story. Part of his collection is housed at Ohio State University, where he and James were students. The rest is in House in Columbus, where Robert and James lived with their parents and older brother, William, from 1913 to 1917. Robert Thurber never married.

His niece, Rosemary, James Thurber daughter, survives. Medal of Honor Winner Dies WEST ISLIP, Y. Anthony Casa-mento, a wheelchair-bound ve'eran who picketed the White House for 54 days as part of a successful. 37-year-long effort to obtain the Medal of Honor, died Saturday after a long illness. He was 66.

Casamento joined the Marines in World War II and fought in the battle of Guadalcanal in the South Pacific in 1942. He was wounded 14 times. He was awarded the Navy Cross instead of the recommended Medal of Honor, and began a campaign that ended in 1980 when President Jimmy Carter presented him with the top honor. Famous Indian Athlete Dies NEW HOPE, Minn. Robert Gawboy a member of the American Indian Hall of Fame, died last Wednesday, 18 years after being diagnosed as having multiple sclerosis.

He was 55. Gawboy, who was born on the Vermilion Lake Indian Reservation to a Finnish mother and Chippewa father, set a world record of 2 minutes, 38 seconds in the 220-yard breaststroke at the National AAU Indoor Swimming Championships in 1955. In 1980. he was enshrined in the American Indian Hall of Fame in Lawrence, Kan. The hall has about 60 members.

Restaurant. She was a member of cisco native was considered a replacement for Clark Gable when he arrived in Hollywood in 1949, but his roles chiefly were confined to action and western movies during his career at included about 33 films. Among his movies were The Damned Don Cry. One Minute to Zero. Demetrius and the Gladiators.

The View From Pompey's Head. Love Me Tender. The Hevolt of Mamie Stover. The Hunters. Pollyanna, The Destructors, and The Sweet Creek County War.

In the 1959 movie A Summer Place. Egan played the father of Sandra Dee, Indiana Deaths FROM WIRE AND OTHER REPORTS Longtime Dentist Dies LIGONIER, Ind. Services were held here for Richard J. Stoelting. 74.

a Lake beFVlCeS Wawasee resident since retirement in mhmh 1983. A 1937 graduate of the Indiana University School of Dentistry, he practiced here for 46 years. He was in the Army Dental Corps in World War II. He was active in a number of civic and fraternal organizations His wife, two daughters, a brother, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren survive. WEDNESDAY FORREST, Mary A.

Younkin, 2 Whetsel Funeral Home. Dunkirk. NEFF. James a Flanner and Buchanan Mnrluarv. Carmel PATTERSON.

Dora Mae. 2 Jones Funeral Home. I'pland, RENEAl'. Jesse Earl. 10 a Nettle Creek Church of the Brethren.

Hagerstown. EBB. Holly. 1 30 Parson Mortuary-Adams Chapel. until moving to Muncie in 1950.

Mr. Kaderly was employed at Ramsey Tractor Sales for many years before retiring. For several years after his retirement, he worked with his son, Larry, at Custom Cleaning. He had been a Jehovah's Witness since 1936 and was an elder in the church. Surviving are his wife, Mary Locker Kaderly; two sons, Edwin Weather First Nazarene Church in Chesterfield.

Survivors include her parents. John and Vickie "Gilbert, Daleville; two brothers, Mike Ashby and John Gilbert both at home; a sister, Misty Gilbert, at home; a grandfather, William Ashby, Alexandria; a grandmother, Ruth Ivey, Chesterfield, and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Gilbert, Anderson. Pitcock Services Conducted ANDERSON, Ind.

Services for Guy Pitcock II, -17, RR. 8, were Tuesday in Parkview Wesleyan Church. Mr. Pitcock died Friday after being involved in a traffic accident. He was a native and lifelong resident of Anderson.

Hie was employed at L-K Restaurant, Daleville, and was a member of Parkview Wesleyan Church. Survivors include his parents, Guy and Carolyn S. Johnson Pitcock, Anderson; a sister, Terina (Mrs. James) Elliott, Chesterfield; his maternal grand-rnother, Helen Conley, Anderson; a niece, a nephew and several aunts and uncles. Burial was in Bronnenberg Cemetery, yirginia Pollock Redding, 72 ANDERSON, Ind.

Virginia Pollock Redding, 72, RR. 7, died Monday in Countryside Nursing Home after a long illness. Mrs. Redding was born in Chicago, 111. She retired from Delco-Remy as a secretary in 1973 after 30 years of employment.

vShe was past president of Anderson Business and Professional Women's Association. She was a member of National Secretaries Association, Alpha Sigma Chi sorority and Pleasant Valley Chiristian Church, near Middletown. Mrs. Redding was a pink lady volunteer at Community Hospital. Survivors include her husband.

Ward a daughter, Shirley (Mrs. David) Sheets, Anderson; a brother, II. Gordon Pollock, Albuquerque, N.M.; three Srandsons, Brian James G. and David E. Sheets all of Anderson; seven great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.

Services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday in Ballard and Sons Funeral Home, Middletown, with Rev. Claude Cfeel and Pastor Kenneth Stone officiating. Burial will be in Mechanicsburg Cemetery, near Middletown. r' Calling will be at the funeral home 3-9 p.m.

today. Florence G. Bullock, 95 Ind. Florence G. Bullock, 95, a resident of Miller's Merry Manor, died Tuesday in Ball Hospital, Muncie.

Bullock was born in Blackford County. She Was a member of Sugar Grove United Methodist Church, United Methodist Women's Society and Delaware County Farm Bureau. Surviving are two sons, Gerald, Dunkirk, and Rollie, Bluffton; a daughter, Mary (Mrs. Ed) Maley Fort Myers, 12 grandchildren, 37 greatgrandchildren and 26 great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Herbert Bullock; two sons, Howard and Francis, and a daughter, Geraldine.

will be at 11 a.m. Friday in Sugar Grove ttoited Methodist Church, with Rev. David Cross officiating. Burial will be in Black Cemetery near Albany. Calling hours at Whetsel Funeral Home are 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Thursday and at the church an hour before services Friday. -y. Memorials may be sent to Sugar Grove United Methodist Church. Tornado Kills Villagers .1 MOSCOW (AP) A tornado hit two villages the western Ukraine Tuesday afternoon, killing residents and destroying homes, Tass reported. The Soviet news agency gave no casualty figures but said "there was loss of human life in Shelvov" in the Lockachi region and 22 houses were demolished in the neighboring village of Granatov.

a The Tass report said a broken clock in one of the ruined houses registered the time the tornado struck as 4 45 p.m Warm Cold StaBofwy krru Weaihff, Inc Temperatures Around the Nation and Larry Kaderly, both of Muncie; six grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren. Memorial services will be at 3 p.m. Saturday in Muncie South Congregation of Jehovah's Witness, 1819 E. 26th St. There will be no calling hours.

Meeks Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. Carl L. Jarrett, 90 NEW CASTLE, Ind. Carl L. Jarrett, 90, died Tuesday in New Castle Community Care Center after a long illness.

Mr. Jarrett was born in Spiceland and lived in Henry County all his life. He worked as a farmer and hardware salesman in Henry County for many years. He was a birthright Quaker and a member of Spiceland Friends Meeting. Survivors include his wife, Marie II.

Jarrett, to whom he would have been married 70 years on Oct. 24; a son, William A. Jarrett of Alexandria, a daughter-in-law, Ardella Jarrett of New Castle; five grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, a great-stepgrandchild, and several nieces, nephews and cousins. He was proceeded in death by a son, Gene Jarrett. Services will be at 10:30 a.m.

Friday in Macer-Hall-Pasco Funeral Home, with Rev. Robert Blake officiating. Burial will be in West Lawn Addition of South Mound Cemetery. Calling hours are 3-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Thursday at the funeral home. Clotilda C. McDaniel, 87 HARTFORD CITY, Ind. Clotilda C. (Cody) McDaniel, 87, 219 W.

McDonald died Monday in Blackford County Hospital where she had been admitted earlier in the day. A native of Madison, she lived in Indianapolis and Greenwood before moving to Hartford City in 1979. Her husband, Hugh, died in 1975. Mrs. McDaniel was a member of the St.

John's Catholic Church and the Altar-Rosary Society. Survivors include two sisters, Emma Schantz and Alberta Gottschalk, both of Hartford City, and a nephew, William E. Shantz, Hartford City. Mass of Christian burial will be at 9 a.m. Thursday in St.

John's Catholic Church, with Rev. Leroy Kinnaman officiating. Graveside services and burial will be at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in Garland Brook Cemetery. Calling hours at Waters Funeral Home are 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

today and a.m. Thursday. A rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today in the funeral home. Clark Services Thursday HARTFORD CITY, Ind.

Graveside memorial services Alice Bell Clark, 91, a former city resident, will be at 1 p.m. Thursday in Hartford City Cemetery, with Rev. Lloyd Hall officiating. Mrs. Clark died July 13 in Elyria (Ohio) United Methodist Home, where she had been a resident since 1974.

Arrangements were made by Keplinger Funeral Home By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Showers and thunderstorms were scattered over the Rockies and the Gulf Coast states Tuesday, and a heat wave continued over the eastern half of the nation. Showers and thunderstorms were scattered over eastern Nevada, western Utah, eastern Idaho, southwestern Montana and south-central Wyoming. A severe thunderstorm watch was posted over sections of Idaho, Utah and Wyoming, and a flash flood watch was issued for much of northern Utah. A fast-moving thunderstorm dropped from a half-inch to 2'j inches of rain in an hour on Utah's Salt Lake Valley. Forty miles south of Salt Lake City, hail as big as golf balls pelted parts of Provo, which got three-quarters of an inch of rain in 20 minutes.

A warning of urban and small stream flooding was posted over much of southeastern Idaho. In Michigan, helicopters and boats searched Tuesday for two women whose sailboat capsized in Grand Traverse Bay, the pilot of a downed plane in Lake Erie and two missing swimmers. All five missing were caught by storms that raked the Great Lakes on Monday. Showers and thunderstorms also were scattered over Florida, southern Alabama, southern Mississippi, eastern and southern Louisiana, pnd the upper Texas Gulf Coast. A tornado touched down southwest of Corpus Christi, Texas, but caused no damage.

Mid-day temperatures reached into the 90s from North Carolina into New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. And advisories of high temperatures and high humidity reached from the central Atlantic Coast across the central Plains and up to Lower Michigan. Forecast Mostly sunny today and Thursday with high temperatures near 90. Fair tonight with lows from 65 to 70. Extended forecast Friday through Sunday: Mostly sunny and hot each day, with highs in the upper 80s to low 90s and lows in the upper 60s to low 70s.

Helena 71 58 03 rn Reno 71 58 rdy Honolulu 90 76 rlr Richmond 101 71 clr Houston 84 73 58 cdy Roanoke 99 69 10 clr llimtsville.Ala 94 70 cdy Rorhester.N 87 61 clr Indianapolis 91 66 clr Rorkford 93 69 rlr Jackson Miss 91 69 63 cdy Sacramento 75 56 cdv Jacksonville 90 71 01 cdy St liuis 94 72 clr Juneau 75 56 cdy St Thomas I 88 81 cdv Kansas City 91 72 clr Salem Ore 84 53 rn Knoiville 93 67 rlr Salt Lake City 82 57 72 cdv Lake Charles 91 72 34 rdy San Angelo 90 66 clr Lansing 90 66 cdy San Anlomo 88 73 51 cdy Las Vegas 92 66 01 clr San Diego 71 62 rdv Lexington 92 68 clr Sun Francisco 69 57 rdy Lincoln 93 72 rdy San Jose 74 54 rdy Little Rork 96 71 rdy SjnJuanPR 87 78 rdy Los Angeles 77 61 rdv Santa Fe 8(1 54 21 rdv Louisville 93 71 rlr St Ste Mane 62 55 rdy Lubbock 89 65 clr Savannah 95 68 clr Macon 96 69 clr Seattle 83 55 cdy Madison 91 66 09 rlr Shreveport 94 72 rdv Medford 68 SS .02 rdy Sioux Cuv 89 70 rdv Memphis 97 75 rdy Sioux Fails 90 67 31 cdy Miami Beach 90 82 11 rdy South Bend 90 67 .33 rlr Midland 90 64 rlr Spokane 85 54 rdy Milwaukee 88 69 42 rlr Springfield III 92 69 rlr Mpls-St Paul 88 67 3 82 rlr Springfield Mo 90 69 rdv Mobile 83 73 36 rdy Syracuse 89 66 rlr Montgomery 88 72 05 rdy Tallahassee 92 73 cdy Nashville 94 71 rdy Tampa 93 72 03 cdv New Orleans 88 75 01 cdy Toledo 92 68 clr New York City 91 75 clr Topeka 89 65 clr Newark 97 75 rlr Tucson 105 75 rlr NorfolkVa 99 75 clr Tulsa 90 72 rdy North Platte 92 66 rdv Tupelo 92 68 rdy Oklahoma City 88 72 rdy Waco 96 68 rdy Omaha 92 72 cdv Washington 100 82 clr Orlando 89 75 96 cdv Palm Beach B8 78 13 cdy I'aducah 96 69 clr Wichita 92 69 clr Peoria 94 69 rlr Falls 93 69 clr Philadelphia 97 72 rlr Wilkes Barre 91 67 clr I'hoemx 107 86 rlr Wilmington 98 74 clr Pittsburgh 91 73 rlr Yakima 89 54 rlr Poratello 70 56 83 clr Youngstown 91 71 clr Portland Maine 69 63 04 clr Yuma 100 80 rlr Portland Ore 87 61 rn Providence 86 68 08 cdv National Temperature Extremes Pueblo 99 57 clr for Tuesdav Raleigh 99 69 clr Low 38 at Jackson Wvo Rapid City 102 63 cdy High 109 at Coolidge Ara Hi Lo Pre Otlk AhilewTexas 911 clr AknmCamnn H9 69 clr Albany.NY 91 72 rlr Albuquerque 90 6(1 rdy Allentown 94 71 05 rlr Amjnllo 88 6.i clr Anchorage 62 5.1 rn Ashrville 89 60 cdv Atlanta 94 72 clr Atlantic City 91 76 33 clr Austin 89 72 28 cdv Raltimorc 98 77 rlr Raton Rouge 81 73 IB cdv Billines 75 60 II rdy Rirmingham 92 69 cdv Rismarck HI 62 cdv Boise 86 54 rlr Boston 76 68 rdy Bridgeport 94 70 rdy Brownsville 95 73 cdv Buffalo 85 74 rlr Burlington. Vt. 79 63 1 04 rlr Caribou 64 58 rlr rasper 95 65 rlr Charleston SC 86 74 rlr Charlotte C. 7 71 rlr Chattanooga 95 69 rdy Chevenne 89 56 rlr Chirago 93 67 79 rlr Cincinnati 92 65 rlr Cleveland 90 70 rlr Colorado Spg 90 56 rlr Columbia SC 100 66 rlr Columbus fia 90 72 55 rlr Columbus Ohio 93 72 rlr Concord 78 67 rlr Corpus Christi 91 74 rdy Pallas 94 72 cdv Dayton 91 67 rlr Daytona Bearh 88 74 rdy Denver 95 59 clr Des Moines 89 72 rdy Detroit 91 70 cdy Dulutt 86 64 rdv El Paso 94 71 rlr Elkins 91 61 rlr Erie 84 71 clr Eugene 73 53 04 Kvansville 93 6 rlr Fairbanks 68 16 Fargo 89 65 rdv Flagstaff 80 53 rlr Flint 94 65 cdv Fort Smith 91 68 rdv Fort Wayne 91 66 rlr Fresno 79 59 rlr Goodlind 91 65 rlr Grand Junction 91 54 09 rlr Grand Rapids 88 66 28 rdv Great Falls 71 57 16 Green Bay 89 63 01 rlr Hamsburg 98 79 rlr Hartford 91 69 I 01 rdy Muncie Hourly Temperatures 91 91 S9 80 rn 10pm 77 4 am 1 1 7b 3 a Midnight 7b a lam 7J 7am 2am 7ft 8am 3am 9 9 ti Recfirdt'd 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Star Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Star Press Archive

Pages Available:
1,084,016
Years Available:
1900-2024