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Show Funeral Services Held Monday For Dr. Mc Bride Funeral services for Dr. Lyman A. McBride, age 71, Tooele dentist for 39 years, were held Monday at 1 p. m. in the Tooele Second ward chapel. Dr. McBride died Thursday at the home of his son, Dr. June P. McBride in Los Angeles Calif., following a lingering illness. He was born Feb. 16, 1878 in Fillmore, Millard County, a son of Charles R. and Rhoda Alice Lyman McBride. The family came to Tooele in 1882 where Dr. Mc Bride received his early education. He later attended the BYU and graduated grad-uated from Northwestern University's Univer-sity's College of Dentistry in 1910. Active in community affairs Dr. McBride was a member of the Tooele city council in 1927 and 19-28. 19-28. He served at Tooele Red Cross chairman during World War I, and as a member of Tooele County Selective Se-lective Service Board during World War II. He was an active member of the LDS church filling a mission to Germany in 1899 and 1900. He hasieen a member of the Tooele North ward stake High Council and later served as stake High Councilor from Tooele Second ward He was a life-long member of the Salt Lake District Utah State and American Dental Association. Dr. Mc Bride was married to Ida Parratt in the Salt Lake temple in 1901. She died in 1946 in Tooele. Too-ele. He is survived by two sons. Dr. Bruce P. Mc Bride, Salt aLke City and Dr. June P. Mc Bride of Los Angeles and a daughter Miss Virginia Mc Bride, Honolulu, a brother, bro-ther, W. Grover Mc Bride, Tooele and seven sisters: Mrs. Echo Kirk, Mrs. Nellie Droubay and Mrs. Vera Gray, Tooele; Mrs. Iva Chase, Pay-son; Pay-son; Mrs. La Vern Gibbs, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Brotherton, Stockton , Cal.; and Mrs. Sadie Frey, Grand Junction, Colo., and five grandchild ren. Services for Dr. Mc Bride were held in Tooele Second ward under the direction of Wendell P. Droubay Drou-bay of the ward bishopric. Prelude and postlude music was played by Mrs. Ruth Bird, who also played an organ solo, Going Home. Stake High Priests chorus directed direct-ed by Alfred M. Nelson sang as the opening and closing numbers, "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning" and "I Need Thee Every Hour" accompanied ac-companied by Mrs. Rebecca Ost- ler. Maroni Overson sang "One Fleet ing Hour" as a tribute from the Lions club, accompanied by Mrs. Overson. Speakers were Dr. Charles W. Bird, and Delbert W. Parratt, both of Salt Lake City and President Alfred L. Hanks of Tooele. Invocation Invocat-ion was by Moroni H. Ostler and benediction by Bishop Bevan Anderson. And-erson. The grave was dedicated by Alfred Al-fred M. Nelson. |