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Indiana Obituary and Death Notice Archive

GenLookups.com - Indiana Obituary and Death Notice Archive - Page 328

Posted By: GenLookups.com
Date: Thursday, 3 October 2013, at 2:51 a.m.

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Julie L. Pearson

Julie L. Pearson, 38, Decatur, died at noon Sunday (July 9, 2000) at Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie.

Miss Pearson was a junior at Ball State University, majoring in children’s social work. She was a member of Zion Lutheran Church, Decatur, the Women of the Moose, and the American Legion Auxiliary,.

She was born Nov. 28, 1961, in Huntington, to Herbert and Barbara Salter Pearson. Both parents survive.

Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Michael (Michael Ann) Kuss, Walkerton, and a brother, Tim Sands, Columbia City.

Calling hours are from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Zwick & Jahn Funeral Home, Decatur. Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at the funeral home with Rev. John Fuchs officiating. Burial will be at the Lancaster Cemetery.

Preferred memorials are to the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

Beatrice E. Cloud

Beatrice E. Bocock Cloud, 90, Marion, died at 8:15 p.m. Friday (July 7, 2000) at Fentress County General Hospital, Jamestown, Tenn.

Mrs. Cloud had worked at the Marion Glove Company. She was a lifelong resident of the Marion and Montpelier areas and attended Banquo School in Huntington County.

She was born June 1, 1910, in Grant County, a daughter of Lewis Morton Marsh and Nellie Reimann Marsh. She married George Wiley Cloud Aug. 31, 1956, in Marion; her husband died May 17, 1997.

Survivors include four daughters, Lillian Moreland and Gloria Carter, both of Marion, Phyllis Hartman of Montpelier, and Sondra Carpenter of Albany, Ky.; a son, Ronald D. Bocock, Burksville, Ky.; two brothers, Donald Marsh, Prescott, Ariz., and Paul Marsh, Marion; 23 grandchildren, 54 great-grandchildren, and 22 great-great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by a brother, Lewis Marsh, and a sister, Louise Martin.

Calling is 4-8 p.m. Monday at Glancy Funeral Homes, Walker Chapel, 109 W. Windsor St., Montpelier. Services will be held at the funeral home at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, with Rev. Steve Gray officiating. Burial will be at Grant Memorial Park, Marion.

Justin A. Kirkpatrick

Justin Andrew Kirkpatrick, 4, 829 Hitzfield St., died at 8:28 a.m. Friday (July 7, 2000).

The infant was born on Aug. 20, 1995, in Fort Wayne, to Scott A. and Renee E. Vernon Kirkpatrick. His parents survive.

Other survivors include two sisters, Rachel Kirkpatrick and Kara Kirkpatrick, both at home; his grandparents, Chuck and Sharon Vernon, Huntington, Judy K. Beck, Huntington; and Jack W. Kirkpatrick, Glenwood, Ariz.

Calling will be from 4-8 p.m. Monday at the Bailey-Love Mortuary, where funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Rev. Steven N. Ailes and Father Gary Sigler will officiate at the service.

Burial will be at Mt. Hope Cemetery.

Preferred memorials are to Kids Kampus, 435 Campus St., Huntington, IN 46750.

Juanita L. Stinson

Juanita L. Stinson, 71, 5650W-100S-90, died at noon Sunday (July 9, 2000) at Meadowvale Care Center in Bluffton.

Mrs. Stinson worked as a nurse’s aide at Ossian Health Care and as activity director at Christian Care Retirement Center in Bluffton. A 1946 graduate of Elmhurst High School, Mrs. Stinson was also a volunteer at Christian Care Retirement Center. She was a member of First United Church of Christ in Bluffton.

She was born Aug. 26, 1928, in the Waynedale area of Fort Wayne to Selma Craft and Edward Coleman. On April 8, 1951, in Waynedale she married Herbert E. Martin, who died March 13, 1993. On Aug. 27, 1994 in Yoder she married Max Stinson, who survives.

Other survivors include two daughters Mrs. Terry (Jeanne) Hoopingarner of Huntington and Mrs. Diane Landrie of Van Wert, Ohio; two sons, Stephen Martin of New York City and David Martin of Eaton, Ohio; and six sisters, Mrs. Donald (Martha) Mayers of Fort Wayne, Mrs. Carl (Lucille) Smith of New Haven, Mrs. Veta Elliott of Philadelphia, Mrs. Mildred Ruhlen of Spring, Texas, Mrs. Doris Hayen of Tehachapi, Calif., and Mrs. William (Bonnie) Kitchings of Morrow, Ga.; and nine grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by two brothers, Charles Coleman and Robert Coleman, and a granddaughter.

Calling is 2-8 p.m. Tuesday at Goodwin Memorial Chapel, 3220 E.-Ind. 124, Bluffton, where funeral service is scheduled at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday with Rev. Neil Wilson and Rev. Sylvester Martin officiating.

Burial will be at Hoverstock Cemetery, Zanesville.

Preferred memorials are to the Bread of Life or outreach programs of First United Church of Christ, Bluffton, in care of the funeral home.

James C. Quayle

James C. Quayle was remembered by those who knew him as a congenial man dedicated to newspapers and the people who made them, and devoted to his family and his country.

Quayle, chairman of the board of Huntington Newspapers, Inc., and father of former Vice President Dan Quayle, died Friday in Arizona. He was 79.

“He was the eternal optimist, and I think I inherited his sunny disposition,” Dan Quayle said Saturday from Wickenburg, Ariz., where his father and mother, Corinne Quayle, have made their home for several years. “He always admonished me and my siblings to tell the truth, no matter what. That carried me a long way, because in the political world, truth-tellers can be hard to find.”

Dan Quayle entered politics while working at the Herald-Press, which his parents bought in 1964 from his grandfather’s company, Central Newspapers, Inc. James Quayle had been appointed publisher of the Herald-Press by Central in 1963, and bought the newspaper a year later. He relinquished day-to-day publisher’s duties in 1990. He spent much of his 45-year newspaper career in Huntington, including a six-year stint as advertising director in the 1950s before returning as publisher.

Those who knew Quayle professionally agreed that he was devoted to newspapering.

“He was truly one of a kind in many respects,” said Mike Dooley, a 31-year reporting veteran now writing for the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel. Dooley worked for Quayle while Quayle spent seven years in the 1970s as publisher of the Star and Evening Press in Muncie.

“He didn’t have any pretenses and he wasn’t afraid to say what he thought. There was never much he and I agreed on politically, but you just couldn’t dislike him. He was one of the most outgoing people I’ve ever run into in this business — and one of the most outspoken, too.”

Quayle’s Huntington friends remember a fun-loving, deeply patriotic man.

“One of Jim’s special qualities was his warm personality,” said Emmy Purviance. “And he also cared deeply about the community — about the Herald-Press and the community. At the same time he passionately loved the United States of America, its history, its politics, its economics. He loved to talk about it.”

“Jim maybe came across as a little gruff to the people who didn’t know him,” said Joanna “Joey” Fanning, a childhood friend of Corinne Quayle’s in their native Lebanon, Ind., who renewed the friendship in Huntington. “But he was always fun, whoever he was with.”

All four of Jim Quayle’s children have worked at newspapers. Dan was Herald-Press general manager before embarking on his political career, second son Chris was a Herald-Press reporter as a young man. Youngest son Mike has been publisher of the Vincennes Sun-Commercial for the past 10 years and his twin sister, Martha Thomas, managed the Herald-Press for the family for several years in the 1980s.

“My father taught me strength as well as compassion,” Thomas said Saturday. “My Papa will always hold a special place in my heart. I’ll miss him dearly.”

Added her brother Mike: “He was a real newspaperman. He took that role very seriously. From a very young age I wanted to follow in his footsteps. That won’t be easy, but he has showed me the way.

“My Dad was loved and respected by both his family and his newspaper family. His faith in God and love for his family were the cornerstones of his life.”

Larry Lough, now editor of the Muncie Star, also worked for Quayle in the 1970s.

“He was loyal to his people and he took care of them,” Lough said. “He was always concerned with the people part of the business.”

“Dad had a big heart, he always cared about people,” Dan Quayle said. “As much as he liked people, though, he was a very private person. His favorite kind of night was a night at home with the family.”

Bob Gottschalk, a compositor and the the senior employee at the Herald-Press in terms of service, said the man he worked for for nearly 36 years “made you want to come to work.”

“He was a caring person, a warm person, always thinking about the other guy,” Gottschalk continued. “He always had the time of day to stop and talk to you and ask you how you were doing. Everybody in the Quayle family is that way.”

Indianapolis lawyer William R. Neale became acquainted with Jim and Corinne Quayle while he was running Dan Quayle’s first Senate campaign in 1980.

“His values and leadership undeniably shaped the character of Dan and the rest of his family,” Neale told The Indianapolis Star Saturday. “He will be greatly missed by those who were privileged to know him.”

Shortly before Quayle retired as Herald-Press publisher, his eldest son wrote him, reflecting on a relationship that was important in the vice president’s life:

Washington
“Dec. 21, 1989
“Dear Dad:
“Word has it that you are thinking of retiring. Knowing you for the last 42 years of my life, you may think you are going to retire but it won’t happen in the true sense of the word.
“You have worked hard for your newspaper for many years and I can’t blame you for wanting to diversify a bit. Your dedication to your family and work has always been an inspiration to me. Thank you for being a tremendous father.
“Love, Dan”

James Cline Quayle, 79, Wickenburg, Ariz., died at 2:30 p.m. Friday (July 7, 2000) at Alterra, an assisted living facility in Sun City West, Ariz.

Mr. Quayle was chairman of the board of Huntington Newspapers, Inc., a position he had held since retiring as publisher of the newspaper in 1990 (career chronology, Page 6A).

He was a graduate of River Forest (Ill.) Township High School and a 1943 graduate of DePauw University, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.

He was a Marine veteran of World War II, serving in the Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaigns. He held life membership in the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Disabled American Veterans.

He was active in a number of civic organizations during his years in Indiana and Arizona. In Huntington he chaired the United Way campaign in 1970 and was past president of the Rotary Club, Jaycees, and Crippled Children’s Society of Huntington County. He served on the boards of several philanthropic agencies.

In Muncie, he chaired a successful $2.1 million Capital Fund Campaign for the United Way and was on the board of the Chamber of Commerce.

In Arizona, he was a member of the Thunderbirds and the Chamber of Commerce Special Events Committee in Phoenix.

He was past trustee of Hillsdale College in Michigan and of Indiana Vocational Technical College, both in Fort Wayne and Muncie. He represented Huntington College in the Associated Colleges of Indiana for approximately 10 years.

He was chairman and vice chairman of the United States Business and Industrial Foundation, Washington, D.C.

He held memberships in the Elks and Moose Lodge and Amity Lodge 483, York Rite of Indiana, Scottish Rite of Fort Wayne, and the Shrine Clubs in Fort Wayne and Wickenburg, Ariz.

He was also a member of the Indiana Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, The Continental Chapter, of Muncie, and of the Mayflower Descendants.

He was a former deacon of the First Presbyterian Church in Huntington, a former elder of the Valley Presbyterian Church in Scottsdale, Ariz., and a member of the vestry of Christ the King Episcopal Church in Huntington.

He was born May 25, 1921, in Joliet, Ill., to Robert H. and Marie Cline Quayle. His marriage was Sept. 14, 1943, in Lebanon, Ind., to the former Corinne Pulliam. She survives.

Also surviving are three sons, James Danforth Quayle, Paradise Valley, Ariz., Christopher Pulliam Quayle, Carefree, Ariz., and Michael E. Quayle, Vincennes; a daughter, Martha Thomas, Monticello, Wis.; 10 grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by two brothers, Robert and William Quayle.

Private funeral services will be held Monday in Wickenburg, Ariz. Wickenburg Funeral Home, Wickenburg, Ariz., is in charge of arrangements.

Preferred memorials are to the Salvation Army, 1424 E. Market St., or to the Desert Caballeros Western Museum, Wickenburg, Ariz.

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