Rite Sunday For Doctor
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS (RNS) - Services for Dr. William Edgar Myles, 91, who had practiced medicine in Greenbrier County 59 years, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. E. N. Clower in charge. Burial will be in Big Sewell Cemetery near Rainelle.
Dr. Myles died Friday in a Clifton Forge, Va., hospital, after a short illness.
Born Sept. 30, 1885, at Maywood, he was a son of the late Thomas Gillan and Susan Ann Kirkpatrick Myles.
A veteran of World War I, Dr. Myles had practiced medicine at Neola and White Sulphur Springs from 1913 until he retired in 1972.
Dr. Myles was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in White Sulphur Springs; 50-year member of Allegheny Lodge 136, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of White Sulphur Springs; a 32nd Degree Mason, a member of the Beni-Kedem Shrine Temple of Charleston and past president of the White Sulphur Springs Rotary Club.
A county chairman for the Greenbrier County Democrat Executive Committee and member for 52 years. Dr. Myles also was a member of the benevolent Order of Elks Lodge 1758 of Lewisburg, Greenbrier County Isaac Walton League, American Medical Association and Greenbrier Valley Medical Association.
Survivors include one brother, Thomas A. Myles of Fayetteville and several nieces and nephews.
For several years, he had lived with a nephew, Tip Myles of White Sulphur Springs.
Friends may call at Shanklin Funeral Home in White Sulphur Springs from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and at the church one hour prior to services.
The family has requested the donations be made to Davis and Elkins College scholarship fund of the First Presbyterian Church.
Rite Sunday For Doctor
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS (RNS) - Services for Dr. William Edgar Myles, 91, who had practiced medicine in Greenbrier County 59 years, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. E. N. Clower in charge. Burial will be in Big Sewell Cemetery near Rainelle.
Dr. Myles died Friday in a Clifton Forge, Va., hospital, after a short illness.
Born Sept. 30, 1885, at Maywood, he was a son of the late Thomas Gillan and Susan Ann Kirkpatrick Myles.
A veteran of World War I, Dr. Myles had practiced medicine at Neola and White Sulphur Springs from 1913 until he retired in 1972.
Dr. Myles was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in White Sulphur Springs; 50-year member of Allegheny Lodge 136, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of White Sulphur Springs; a 32nd Degree Mason, a member of the Beni-Kedem Shrine Temple of Charleston and past president of the White Sulphur Springs Rotary Club.
A county chairman for the Greenbrier County Democrat Executive Committee and member for 52 years. Dr. Myles also was a member of the benevolent Order of Elks Lodge 1758 of Lewisburg, Greenbrier County Isaac Walton League, American Medical Association and Greenbrier Valley Medical Association.
Survivors include one brother, Thomas A. Myles of Fayetteville and several nieces and nephews.
For several years, he had lived with a nephew, Tip Myles of White Sulphur Springs.
Friends may call at Shanklin Funeral Home in White Sulphur Springs from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and at the church one hour prior to services.
The family has requested the donations be made to Davis and Elkins College scholarship fund of the First Presbyterian Church.
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