PAGE 6 THE SUNDANCE TIMES JULY, 29, 1993
Presented By Sundance Area Chamber of Commerce
and These Member Business Finns:
Wii!'lll I#@IIII@ CRAZY
Krazy Daze 2-Day Sidewalk Sale
Frl., & Sat., 30 & 31
THE SALE PRICE
OF ALL YELLOW SALE TAGS
* All Summer Merchandise (All shorts, most S/S
tops, swimwear, sandals, straw hats, aqua socks.
MOST ALREADY MARKED DOWN THE
SECOND TIME.)
All Klearance Komer merchandise (some
already below 1/2 price.)
* All Kids' Western boots.
* Selected GIMMIE and ENUF sportswear (now
save up to 1/2 price.)
JUST REMEMBER-
That It is 25% off the sale price of all
YELLOW SALE TAG MERCHANDISE
t
• ea dng Soda
4 tbs, 1 tb.
$1.49 39¢
IIII
on all
Hambwrgers or Cheesebl , gers
on
All Side Orders
Not Inoluding Salads
2834205
on selected
Zenith & Whirlpool Products
Save From $60 to $500
Stop By Our Sidewalk Sale
Crazy Prices On Used Merchandise
Sundance
The girls at Dillon's have gone crazy,
Bargins galore all over the store!
Come in and shop
You just can't stop
Without finding
Something to your liking
• Glasses - 59¢ & 68¢
Thomas opposes
spending bill
for legislators
Two weeks alter passing the
largest tax increase in history, the
majority in the House accepted its
own bloated spending bill "with
little regard for taxpayers who must
foot the bill," Congressman Craig
Thomas said FHday.
"This appropriations bill for the
Congress falls way short in
spending cuts. It certainlyisn't the
serious attempt at cutting the
budget people wanted and I won't
support a bill that fails to suffi-
clentlyaddress our runaway debt,"
3~omas said.
Rather than support only a 1
percent decrease In spending
passed by the majority, Thomas
and other Republicans instead
pushed for amendments thatwould
cut spending by as much as 25
percent.
"The majority in Congress, by
passing this bill, has shown its
disregard for American taxpayers
Sct oot PaPer
• 49¢
Car Sunshade
99¢
• Lots More
Ftower pots
• 19. price
• Lots More
• ,card
ornaments
Wyoming bees with the Wyoming Agricultural totaled 287,000 potmds, "up 49
produce 35 percent Statistics Service. There were percent from December 1991. The
more honey 41,000 colonies in Wyoming dur- average price rece/ved by produc-
WYOMING: Honey producUon Ing 1992 with an average produc- ers for honey sold in 1992 was 55¢
during 1992 from producers with Uon of 70 pounds per colony. In perpoundresultinglnatotalvalue
five or more colonies totaled 2.87 1991 there were also 41,000 colo- ofproducUonof$1.58milllon. Last
million pounds, 35 percent above nles, but producUon averaged only year's avera2e vrice was also 55¢
the 2.13 million pounds produced 52potmdspercolony. Honeystocks per pound.
in 1991, according to Scott Melners inWyomingon December 15, 1992
i I
and their collective voice to" cut
spending first. In 1993 Congress
will spend 1.8 billion dollars on
itself, and the best they can do is a
1 percentreduction?Thls certainly
Isn't what I know people expect,"
Thomas said. Most efforts to fur-
ther reduce the appropriations were
opposed in committee prior to floor
action.
"It's frustrating that Congress is
infinitely more adept at passing
massive tax bills than reforming
itself and leading by example by
cutting its own budget," he said.
"I'm afraid the so-called majority
reformers are all hat and no cattle,"
Thomas said.
'.Those 'tough choices' we con-
tinually speak of were there - most
refused to make them," Thomas
said. The bill passed by a vote of
224 to 187, along party lines.
Among dozens of amendments
not accepted by the Democrats on
the Rules Committee. Thomas
proposed cutting $20 million from
the GovernmentAccounting Office,
a 5 percent cut, and another to cut
$5.77 million from the Govern-
ment Ih-inting Office.
"Sincere friend: One who will say
nasty things to your face instead of
saying them behind your back.
:Z °
o ~ G o
°
O O 0
* 0
LU
y.-
FREE KIDS FACE PAINTING
(Saturday Only)
FREE TOPPING ON
Yogurt or Ice Cream Sundaes
Speshul Prices on Silks and Baskets
MANY MANY MORE KRAZEE SPECHULS AT
THE COUNTRY COTTAGE
& YOGURT GARDEN
~ Store tlours: Mon.-Sat., 8-9. Sun-12-9
423 Cleveland Sundance Phone 283-2450 @
0
0
Ph. 283-3883 S
The tallest building in the U.S. is the Sears
Tower in Chicago, Illinois.