The pearl harbor newspaper clippings from December 1941 are worth money to the right history buff or antique collectors. These newspaper clippings are also worth money if individuals involved in the experience or family members are contacted about the newspaper clippings.
Honolulu Stake Tabernacle was created in 1941.
Honolulu Lu - 1941 was released on: USA: 11 December 1941 Sweden: 26 March 1943 Portugal: 18 December 1943
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin is no longer printed. It was a daily newspaper in Hawaii from 1882 through 2010, when after it was purchased by the Canadian group Black Press it was merged with the rival Honolulu Advertiser. The Honolulu Star-Advertiser is now the largest newspaper in Hawaii.
Honolulu Lu - 1941 is rated/received certificates of: Sweden:Btl Sweden:15 USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
The Honolulu Advertiser had their press break down the week prior to December 7. They actually used the presses at the Honolulu Star on December 8. Unfortunately the Advertiser got wrong information and printed the headlines "Saboteurs Land Here". They were reprimanded for that headline.
I don't know which pages you are missing, nor which newspaper. The most common seems to have been the Honolulu Star-Bulletin; there may be digital copies of it online, or you can contact the Honolulu Public Library and ask if there is microfilm you can borrow. The newspaper did print an eight page Extra, and someone digitized it. I enclose the link.
Glommen - newspaper - ended in 1941.
Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu was created on 1941-01-25.
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin from December 7th is valuable, maybe up to as much as several hundred dollars. The 8th, not so much; it's going to be more of an "atmosphere" paper with a value likely in the tens, rather than hundreds, of dollars; possibly even less.
On December 7, 1941 the Japanese Empire attacked the naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The people in nearby Honolulu got very upset by this.
Oktyabr - Yiddish newspaper - ended in 1941.