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Daily Press from Newport News, Virginia • Page 21

Publication:
Daily Pressi
Location:
Newport News, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia, Friday, February 1, 1980 21 'Area Obituaries And Funerals MATTRESS SALE! Now is -Extra Firm IT $75 the time for mm Full Set 95 W.C. Copeland SUFFOLK Wilford C. Copeland, 70. of Norristown, died Tuesday at his residence. Born in Nanseraond County, he was retired from Pennsylvania Railroad and was a deacon of Siloam Baptist Church, Norristown.

Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Elease Copeland; three sisters, Mrs. Delliah Mae Cofield and Mrs. Mattie Robinson, both of Suffolk, and Mrs. Florine Turner of Baltimore; and five brothers, Robert and Lin- Financing Free Delivery In-Stock Vha-Maitw Charge Old Mattreu Disposal DEATH NOTICES ANDREWS, W.L.

BYRD, Ernest COGHILL, W.B. COLLINS, B. Jr. COPELAND, W.C. DODSON, W.H.

FORD, L.R. HOLT. Mrs. KAISER, R.J. LAWRENCE, Mrs.

MILLER, Mrs. NEWSOME, W.R. PITTS, A.E. REGAN, J.E. RICHARDSON, W.R.

SMITH, C.C. WHITAKER. Royster WIGGINS, James No Payment Til March lit CAlfC inO Witt Payment 5 OM ff I 0 Days From Completion Fro Estimate CompitH Rooting Sonrieo Seamess Aluminum Guttring Hooting Shktght mmmm mmm KKsajmwiiKS (formerly Scandia) Sherwood Mall (Denbigh) 874-0307 J) wood Copeland, both of Suffolk, James Copeland of Brooklyn, N. George C. Copeland of Danville and Goodsey Copeland of Baltimore.

A funeral will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Healing Chapel Baptist Church here by Elder Madi- son Copeland. Burial will be in Oakland Cemetery, here. The family will assembly at 12:30 p.m. at Wyatt Funeral Home.

W.B. Coghill TAPPAHANNOCK Willard B. Coghill, 85, of Tappahannock, a retired merchant, died Wednesday in a local nursling home. Survivors include two sons, T. Blanton Coghill of Tappahannock and W.

Calvin Coghill of Mechanicsville; three daughters, Mrs. Mary C. Webb of Newport News, Mrs. Ama C. Brizendine of Tappahannock and Mrs.

Charlotte C. Vaughan of Myrtle Beach, i. S. two brothers, James A. Coghill of Tap- A native of King and Queen County, he had been a Peninsula resident 39 years and was an Army veteran of World War II.

He was a member of Riverdale Baptist Church and employed as a machinist at Newport News Shipbuilding. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Carlton Richardson; two daughters, Miss Thelma Richardson, at home, and Mrs. Janice West of Yorktown; a sister, Mrs. Becky Kennington of Hampton; one brother, Monroe Richardson of Seaford; and three half-brothers, J.W., Clyde and Earl Richardson, all of Baltimore.

A funeral will be conducted at 1 p.m. Saturday in Lawrence B. Wood Funeral Home by the Rev. Donald Wade. Burial will be in Lower King and Queen Baptist Church Cemetery, King and Queen County.

The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 tonight in the funeral home and requests expressions of sympathy take the form of contributions to the building fund of Riverdale Baptist Church. Royster Whitaker Royster Whitaker, 843-12th Newport News, died Monday in his home. A native of Edgecombe County, N.C., he had been a Peninsula resident 50 years. He retired in 1975 from Newport News Shipbuilding after 45 years service and was a member of First Baptist Church, East End. Survivors include his widow, Mrs.

Geneva Whitaker; one daughter, Mrs. Eloise Blondell Maxwell, and a son, R. Leon (Beau) Whitaker, both of Newport News; five sisters, Mrs. Hazel Spencer of Chester, Mrs. Eula Whitaker and Mrs.

Claskie Lyons of Whittakers, N.C., Mrs. Dunnie Harper of Rocky Mount, N.C., and Mrs. Ka-thryn Suggs of Fayetteville, N.C.; four brothers, Chester Whitaker of Newport News, Joseph Whitaker of Whittakers, Raymond Whitaker of Battleboro, N.C., and Bert Whitaker of Upper Marlboro, two grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. funeral will be conducted at 1 p.m. Saturday in First Baptist Church by the Rev.

W.M. Burial will be in Hampton Memorial Gardens. A wake service will be recited from 7 to 8 tonight in Gilmore's Funeral Home. The family and friends will assemble, at the residence by noon Saturday. More Obituaries, Page 22 pahannock and Leslie B.

Coghill of Dun- family requests that expressions of sympathy be made in the form of contributions to the Mathews Rescue Squad. Foster-Faulkner Funeral Home, Mathews, is in charge. R.J. Kaiser A funeral for Robert Joseph Kaiser of Newport News, who died Wednesday, will be held at 2 p.m. today in Weymouth Funeral Home.

Burial will be in Peninsula Memorial Park. The family requests expressions of sympathy take the form of contributions to Denbigh Christian Church. J.E. Regan A funeral mass for John Edgar Regan of Newport News, who died Wednesday, will be celebrated at 10 a.m. today in Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church.

Burial will be in Peninsula Memorial Park. Ernest Byrd A funeral for Ernest Byrd of Hampton, who died Monday, will be held at 2 p.m. today in Queen Street Baptist Church. Burial will be in Hampton Memorial Gardens. The family and friends will assemble at the residence, 382 Union by 1 p.m.

The body will be placed in the church at 10 a.m. W.R. Richardson William R. Richardson, 63, 48 Pine Chapel Road, died Wednesday in Medical College of Virginia Hospital, Richmond. IfIIiS eureka" KruAsiiER imil 89 KSS0 27900- 1 Wm csxas-sr I I mT "6 Vibfo-Ofoomf.

-NJ water levels and 3 washrinse mh fTTX temperature 'It iiWSL5 I ln 25800 ri UPRIGHT VAC 'lb DRYER ivfk aooo dalk, two sisters, Mrs. Susie C. Haile of Tappahannock and Mrs. Blanche C. Brooks of Pasadena, 11 grandchildren, and a great-grandchild.

A funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at the T. D. Marks Funeral Home, Tappahannock. Burial will be in Essex Cemetery.

The family requests that expressions of sympathy be made in the form of contributions to the Tappahannock Rescue Squad. C.C. Smith SHADOW Claude C. Smith, 93, of Shadow, a retired sailmaker, died Thursday in a local nursing home after a long illness. A graveside service will be conducted at 2 p.m.

Saturday in St. Paul Annex Cemetery, Susan, by the Rev. Otis Worley. The Diet's Aid To Heart Doubted TCT Cflr- s', lJ 5-cVcle drver features special VvV" I I nrT-fV-- fLrV A 1 ft I I cool-down care to help Faturi dial-a-nap, hut etny. I I II DDI rg I II mmT I JI Ik prevent wrinkles, 3 drying V-VJ roll wheels, lew profile te dean A JHHk 1 ti.

A II I fiN? temperature settings and BMtlC in hard-te-reoch places. With ''T' i V. 1 1 f-. It i-1 it- -tti automatic door shutoff. v'-rm.

tooit' mZi 51 -IK I ilSS WHIRLPOOL jf4 EUREKA 1 iTi fl fl 33 l3 REFRIGERATOa Cncm I 1 1 II I II 1 1 11 II If illHlil ij controls for trmw and rerl- 10 AN tfm construction. IndudM 10 I V'W'V Jt I VOfeT JJ l'eJ5 I IT EET172 oorotor toctions, piocs ittochmont wt. WASHINGTON (AP) A consumer group says there is no firm evi dence that eating a low-fat diet decreases the risk of heart disease, as health authorities have rbeen saying. on the bedding set of your choice "CHOICTOF CHOICE OF CHOICE OF SIZE! fIRMMISCQMFQBX All have durable, foam-quilted covers and extra-heavy borders for edge-to-edge comfort pi? ALL BEDDING SOLD IN SETS ONLY -mm EXTRA I FIRM r'S I ZENITH 19" ZENITH 25" CONSOLE TV C0L01 TV FREE $50 EE BOND ISOW lj with purchase Oiy 2S" diooonol mmin color console Moditorrirnun ttylod cab i not. Compact table color TV with tri focut pieturo tube, ttlplo-plus Dark Oak or Paean finish.

chassis and Super Video Range Tuner. 'Measured diagonally. If Spinal-GusVd was rsiqr-d with the Mp ot the lntfwnttonl ChtfopitKlOfs Assoeiittoa Fck their diWitantt ICAfeceves loyalty tiotnKtug Kotl lo Imlhei llw wofk ot the CrwoXKtic ptoteewon jf. 'ms Zs I i( )) 6907-70 J1S The American Council on Science and Health 1 said Thursday that scientific evidence is too sketchy to draw conclusions about the re-! lationship of diet to heart disease. However, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute immediately countered the council's contention, saying that there is enough data 'linking diet and heart disease to encourage people to modify their eating habits.

"We agree that it has not been shown that reducing cholesterol can prevent heart disease," said Dr. Basil Rifkind, chief of the institute's lipid (fat) metabolism branch. "But most of the circumstantial evidence points in that direction. "There are many people who think that the evidence is strong enough to move in the diet area while we wait for better clinical evidence to come in," Rifkind added. Dr.

Elizabeth Whelan, executive director of the council, disagreed with this approach. She said the public should not be given specific nutritional advice until more facts are known. Her organization's 19-month review of scientific literature "found no "association between a specific food factor and coronary heart disease," she said. The council is a nonprofit, New York City-based consumer informa-5 tion group that usually takes a politically conservative stand on health is-l sues. The group has been accused of supporting industry views.

The council, however, lashed out Tuesday at the American tobacco in mm lBEZsa ts Quiii, OPteotal. gJiLUJll SOUNDESIGN SOUNDESIGN $01 7 AMFM 8-TRACK lEIi 4-WAY STEREO Ll AMFM stereo with track AMFM weo receiver with -track playerrecorder and automatic record and cassette recorders, automata; record changer plus two writ-range spaekers. f.y fSAN VO fe SANYO Lfg, FISHER STEREO PACKAGE cvctcii I Ofl.fl Get Premium-Mattress Back Support at less than Premium Prices! matching POSTURE PLATFORM Foundation 10-YEAR GUARANTEE fStOli REG. 3995 i immnM cs- 07 mj 3 Wwioi u'j-- Futures AMFM stereo I receiver with Grephie Equeliser, AirOyne speaker TWIN i i "oi'ioej I tyttem and daiuxa auto- eoch piece I AMFM receiver with 6-track and cassette.rscordsrplayer and rKord changer. TWIN REG.

129" ochpiecfl QUEEN SIZE Reg. 379.95 30995 QUEEN SIZE Reg 279 95 2291s KING SIZE Reg 399 95 3190-5 FULL SIZE Reg. 159.95 12995 FULL SIZE Reg 11995 899A KING SIZE Reg. 539.95 41 99S mooufortim product itnjcturoHy dttetiv upon In rotvm 10 i focWy or or piece it moy cWiiciejrtnei Ikeperfodor owonM wij of op-lion ropoir end return ot no cat to purcheaei or if replowment il nnonory deliver nr product freight wolfor "oprereM willed period ot oonteodooinotopplytoeevorof mottre.Thiipro AUDITION AUDITION CASSETTE VNlii, AO-FIJI FLAYER m'l RAD, dustry for allegedly Using its advertising influence to discourage magazines from publishing stories on the hazards of smoking. At a news briefing on the diet-heart issue, the council said coronary-ar- tery disease has many I Battery operated.

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1-4 p.m. CASH 3iGim (inm ihB PUOCNASES ID liniCEIUSl KOKIf ti'SLT HfUNtll II I A3 MONTtCELLO AVENUE 1 63 MONTICEUO AVENUE causes and too much emphasis has been placed on nutritional aspects without much data to back it up. srjsvwtvttoeuvATwooiee.

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