The Dublin Citizen (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1994 Page: 4 of 12
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CEBOnEOD
X..... • oW'
dojLll cojj. EXTRA
At TSO get more than
you pay for. For one low
package price you get a
• frame •top-quality
lenses with • UV •scratch
r#
resistance •fashion tint and
■#
• one year warranty.
COMPLETE
EYEWEAR PACKAGES
STARTING
AT
So come to TSO and get
more than you pay
for. I nstead of going
somewhere else and
having to pay extra
for what you get.
Prescripthtl requiri’J. N«> other JiM.'num« ,ippl\ Set p.irrieip.itinu TSO tor Jet.ul-
Smele \ ioon Lent* unlv.
TSO
You Can Really
See the Difference
89 Tempo GL
Auto, a/c. Local
trade. Meticulously
maintained under
Ford Warranty.
6995.“
minimum trade 2000.
Just 4995“
or $164."per month......
wm
93 Taurus GL
All pwr. equip. Ford
Program Vehicle
with balance of
36x36 warranty.
14,995.“
minimum trade 2000.
Just 12,995.°°
or $265.w per month**
92 Ranger Pickup XLT
Loaded, low miles.
Clean, ready to work
orptay 10,495"
minimum trade 2000.
Just 8495“
$212.56 per month.....
92 Tempo
Bright Red Sport
Model. Low, low
miles. Fully
Equipped.
9995."
minimum trade 2000.
or $200 per month..... 7995.
'min trad* u**d can over $4000 only one trade only
"WAC 10% cash down 60 month* ® » 9% APR
"'WAC, 10% cash down JO month* U 155% APR
"W A C 10% cash down 48 month* • 13 26% APR
'"WAC 10%ca*hdown48month*etl 0%APR
'•"W AC 10% cash down36 month*•!$ 26% APR
Page 4
lire Dublin Citizen
Thursday, August 18, 1994
State ^Capital
The Dublin Chamber of Commerce officially welcomed Cafe Trifles with a ribbon cutting ceremony last
week. The cafe, located at 112 N. Patrick, offers soups, sandwiches, deserts and a special entree each
day. Owners are Stormy Armstrong and Carol Gibson.
VOLUNTEER ——■“““
Cout. from page 2
pervised the federal school lunch
program in nine counties.
taught high school there for 25
years.
Mrs. Willingham has reached out
from her printed world many-a-
time to serve others and their
needs. She is program chairman for
Power Squadron. 1 lei husband was
commander in 1968. The Power
Squadron presented Mrs. Willing-
ham with the Ed Voltz Memorial
Award for Educational Achieve-
ment.
Amidst the classrooms and
school books. Mis. Willingham and
her husband traveled the world.
“We’ve been to almost every state,
Canada and Mexico. After my
husband died, I went to New
Zealand, Australia, England and
Alaska."
Currently, Mrs. Willingham lives
in a Renaissance Village in San
Antonio. Her husband died 10
years ago. Christopher the cat and
Woody the dog matched with vol-
unteer work and fiber ait keep the
active 88-year-old growing older in
Dublin fashion.
HIGHLIGHTS
By LynMI William ft Ed Starfiai
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
AUSTIN — Republican guberna-
torial challenger George W. Bush,
U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchi-
son and her Democratic opponent
Richard Fisher of Dallas are alike
in this respect: they did not an-
swer a questionnaire by Project
Vote Smart.
The Oregon-based nonpartisan
Firemen plan
stop, drop and roll
training for youngsters
Stop, Drop and Roll!
Students at Dublin Elementary
receive a full day of fire prevention
training every October. The train-
ing is scheduled during National
Fire Prevention Week, the anniver-
sary of the great Chicago fire in
1871.
“We give each grade level a full
day of fire prevention basics,” says
Ken Jumey, voluuteer fireman and
coordinator for the school’s fire
safety training. “We teach kids how
to respond to a fire. We tell them to
get out and get an adult to call for
help. We reinforce ‘Stop, Drop and
Roll!’ and exit drills at home.
“The safety training is progres-
sive,” says Jumey. “We start with
pre-kiudergaitners and try to estab-
lish a relationship as firemen with
them. We want them to know
firemen are friendly and helpful.
Each year we add to the instruction,
and I am amazed how much the
kids retain. I think it is a very
effective program that saves lives.”
Jumey says this year will be
especially fun for the youngsters
because of Dublin’s new fire truck.
group that informs voters about
candidates' views on key issues
via toll-free number 1-800-622-
SM ART, did, however, get answers
from Gov. Ann Richards to ques-
tions on issues such as crime,
health care, taxes and abortion.
Richard Kimball, president of
Project Vbte Smart, said 42 of the
86 candidates in Texas running for
governor or Congress answered the
survey.
Hutchison’s campaign said the
senator did not receive the ques-
tionnaire, while Fisher’s campaign
said answers were being prepared
for mailing. The Bush campaign
said it mailed position papers to
Project \fote Smart but is now an-
swering more specific questions.
The original deadline for candi-
dates to complete the questionnaire
was April 25, but the deadline was
extended to mid-August.
Tougher Sentences Endorsed
Gov. Richards last week en-
dorsed proposals by the Greater
Dallas Crime Commission to step
up prevention against youth crime
and to toughen sentencing.
The commission is working on a
legislative package that includes:
■ Establishing a system that
makes the punishment fit the crime;
■ Enacting teen curfews;
■ Holding parents responsible
for their children’s failure to make
court-ordered restitution payments;
■ Expanding determinate sen-
tencing, which would require youths
to serve full sentences; and
■ Allowing law enforcement
agencies to share juvenile records.
But Bush, who has proposed
lowering the age at which juveniles
can be tried as adults to 14, said
the governor’s endorsement of the
reforms are “too late and not tough
enough.”
A November 1993 Texas A&M
poll showed crime as the num-
ber one concern of voters. Last
week, the Richards gubernatorial
campaign began airing television
commercials focusing on juvenile
crime.
Bullock Needled Over Aide
Tfex Lezar, the Republican can-
didate for lieutenant governor, said
Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock’s campaign
aide Jim Warren is a gambling lob-
byist and renewed earlier charges
that Bullock has been “bought” by
gambling interests.
In pointing out that Bullock has
received some $150,000 in cam-
paign contributions from casino
promoters, Lezar told The Dallas
Morning Newt, ‘Bob Bullock says
he’s personally against casino gam-
bling. But with a casino lobbyist as
his official mouthpiece, don’t bet
on it"
Bullock, however, said Lezar's
complaint about his aide may be
rooted in the fact that in 1990
Itorren helped state Sen. J.E.
“Buster” Brown, R-Lake Jackson,
defeat Lezar and others for the
Republican nomination for attorney
general.
Death Row Rst TVack
Gov. Richards on Aug. 4 called
for speeding the appeals process
for inmates on Texas' death row,
whose wait averages 10 and a half
years.
“If someone has been wrongly
convicted, we should find out
as quickly as possible. If not,
we should cany out the sentence
imposed by the juty and move on,”
the governor said in a news release,
the day after the death penalty
was carried out on three men on
Arkansas’ death row.
Richards also called for setting
a deadline for filing habeas cor-
pus petitions in state court; and re-
quiring that judges set an execution
date after such petitions are filed.
But Bush, Richards’ opponent,
interpreted the governor’s com-
ments as political and having noth-
ing to do with criminal justice.
AG: Complaint Has (No Merit’
Attorney General Dan Morales
says former Assistant Attorney
General Gary Bledsoe’s racial
discrimination complaint against
him has “no merit.”
Bledsoe filed the complaint with
the federal Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission after he
left his job in January, saying
he was ordered to resign or be
fired. Bledsoe, who is president of
the NAACP’s Texas chapter, had
been with the attorney general’s
office for 15 years, overseeing cases
involving civil rights, elections and
open government.
In September 1993, state Repub-
lican Rirty officials accused Bled-
soe of conducting NAACP and
Democratic Party business while
carrying out his duties for the state.
Morales placed Bledsoe on paid ad-
ministrative leave and ordered an
investigation.
Bledsoe resigned in January,
and two months later, the Travis
County District Attorney’s office,
which conducts ethics investiga-
tions, cleared Bledsoe of any
wrongdoing.
HAPPY 25th BIRTHDAY
TO
1 KATHY JOY
FROM
, MOM and DAD,
RON and GARY
NO MATTER WHAT SHAPE IT’S IN
$2000 MINIMUM trade allowance
PUSH, PULL OR DRAG- IT Ilf*
88 F150 Supercab XL
Tilt, cruise, stereo,
tu-tone paint Local
trade, nice truck
7995.”
minimum trade2000.
Just 5995.”
or $239.Mper month***
91 Escort Wagon
Loaded with all pwr.
equipment. Low miles.
9495.“
minimum trade 2000.
Just 7495 “
or $195.e,per month
• •••
Our extras
The family moved to Sail Anto-
nio in 1940. Mrs. Willingham the American Association of Uni-
versity Women. The Willinghams
were active in the San Antonio
CABS SPECIALS!
86 Taurus LX Wagon
Loaded with all pwr.
options. Local trade
in. Great car for
mom or large
families. Jusf
oo
86 Tempo GL
Auto, a/c, pwr. locks,
stereo etc., etc. Only
64,000 carefully
driven miles. Local
trade in. Jyjf
$3495."
Ford Program Vehicles available. All 1993 models all low miles
and balance of Ford 36 month-36,000 mile bumper to bumper warranty
Se habla espanol
IHl
hi
(BUI
Dublin Motor Compan
211 N. Patrick * Dublin * (817) 445-2253
Your hometown dealer with .small lawn prices.
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Wright Parham, Karen. The Dublin Citizen (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1994, newspaper, August 18, 1994; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth761811/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.