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Show Services held Monday for Lyman Robbins Funeral services were conducted con-ducted Monday afternoon in the Eighth ward chapel, for Lyman L. Robbins, 60, 102 East Third South, who died Thursday of last week at the Utah Valley Hospital. He had been ill nearly five weeks. Bishop J. Melvin Duke was in charge of the services. Burial Bur-ial was in the Evergreen cemetery, ceme-tery, directed by Berg Mortuary. Mortu-ary. , Mr. Robbins was born in Provo, April 22, 1901, a son of Aaron Rogers and Elizabeth Swenson Robbins. He had made his home in Springville since 1928. He received his education in Provo and later worked on construction, con-struction, employed by Talboe and for Strong and Grant companies. com-panies. In recent years, he had been a partner in the Strong Construction Co. A member of the LDS church, he had served as a counselor in the Sunday School and in the YMMIA and had been a ward teacher. He was a former member of the Kiwanis and the Lions clubs. His hobby was gardening. garden-ing. He married Helen Gottfred-son Gottfred-son of Springville February 6, 1928 at Provo and the marriage mar-riage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple. Surviving are his wife, two daughters and a son: Mrs. Kenneth R. (Beverly) Metcalf and Mrs. Darla R. Anderson of Springville and Richard L. Robbins of Provo; eight grandchildren; grand-children; a brother and four sisters, Charles W. Robbins, Los Angeles, Calif. ; Mrs. Ernest Er-nest (Mary) Griffin of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Hannah Pearson, Pear-son, Pasadena, Calif.; Mrs. Clyde (Amelia) Knudsen, Mon-tabello, Mon-tabello, Calif.; Mrs. Bert (Jeanette) Cooper of Medford, Oregon. j Lyman L. Robbins for whom services were held in the Eighth ward chapel Monday. |