OCR Text |
Show I ' -" ' v. Mrs. Bradfield LILLIAN STOKER BRADFIELD DIES Funeral services for Lillian S. Bradfield, 61. were conducted conduct-ed Tuesday in the Milford LDS Church. Mrs. Bradfield died August 9, in her sleep, at her home in Milford. The services, under direction of Bishop Richard Leon Jones, were as follows. Prayer at the mortuary, Donald Don-ald Jones. Prelude and postlude music, Mrs. Vicki Fotheringham. Invocation, Gerald Stoker. Solo, "Face to Face," 'Lamar Lund, accompanied by Mrs. Myrtle Tribole. Obituary, Robert Tomsik. Speaker, Jay Hiatt. Vocal duet, "The Lord Is My Shepherd." Mrs. Geraldine Kirk and Mrs. Bonnie Easton, accompanied accom-panied by Mrs. Tribole. Benediction ,Frank Jones. The grave in the Milford City Cemetery was dedicated by John R. Hardy. Pallbearers were Wallace Fotheringham, Jim Smithson, Leonard Mujr, Dan Hutchings, Gerald Stoker and Frank Jones. Out of town relatives attend -ZfieldCf ingheser tcvise ET ing the services included Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Jensen and Mrs. Rosene Bradfield, Salt Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones and family, Springville; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Osborne, Big Springs, Nev.; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Stoker, Cedar City. Lillian Stoker Bradfield was born Oct. 2, 1907, in Mammoth, Mam-moth, to Stephen Wilford and Emjly Maude Fereday Stoker. She married Kenneth R. Bradfield. Brad-field. June 25, 19G5, in Beaver. She was a member of the LDS Church. She had been a waitress in the Union Pacific restaurant at Milford, had worked at the House of Hope in Salt Lake, and as a nurse at the old Beaver Bea-ver County Hospital. More recently, re-cently, she had assisted patients in the Senior Citizen Center at the Milford Valley Memorial Hospital. Surviving are her husband; her mother, both of Milford; a brother, William Wayne Stoker, Phoenix, Ariz.. |