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Show )Tva yourself to a lovely afternoon viewing PanguitcnV jC-fte hornet beautifully Jecovated for the holiJauc! 5vS. : Joln us for S Umdsnab 2000 Saturday, Dec. 2 nfT VW 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. $5.00 per person K) See Colette at Security Title for tickets and information. TjTP' v3tL proceeds to benefit ub for anta. fvy EOUldSr O DEANGLEDHILL v 7rto J Escalante 435-826-4378 Mountain ji cathybagley Realty, Inc. Torrey 435-425-3200 FORTY ACRES WEST OF ESCALANTE Next to Petrified Forest and Grand Staircase Monument Well for home and stockwaterine. Close to electricity. Good building spot. Well populated with Pinion ana Juniper trees. Seller will sell in one piece or in 10-acre parcels.- $144,000 LARGE SPLIT LEVEL HOME Over 3,000 sq. ft. Six bedrooms, six bathrooms, two car garage, fully landscaped. Could easily be made into a duplex. Convenient location to church and stores. 75 West 100 South - $160,000 ONE OF THE BETTER FARMS IN THE VALLEY Good fences and corrals. 61 acres mostly in alfalfa. 24 shares of irrigation water. Farm equipment included. City water meter and electricity. Southeast of Escalante with maintained county road to the property. - $400,000 PRIME COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ON MAIN ST. Home, barn and horse stalls. Huge corner lot with good highway exposure. Any type of business would be perfect on this property. 25 South 200 East. - $116,600 MAIN STREET LOT One full acre on west side of Escalante's Main street. Zoned commercial. Great location for any type of business. Only $59,000 SHEEP FLAT RANCH 271 acres not far from Bryce Canyon. Surrounded by the Grand Staircase National Monument. 6500 feet elevation with sage, pinion and juniper. Remote, quiet and pretty. Fenced, stockwatering well with windmill - $275,000 www.bouldermoiintainrealty.com MYTH 1: THE SKY MYTH 2: . . Natural gas prices will skyrocket due to proposed improve- Seniors, low-income biles and disabled citizens ments in Utah's regulatory process. , T T T g 1 will be Itfe out in the cold this winter I I I II Vj V ' "T due to lack 0 service on Questar's part. BALONEY. -A- -V- JL- JL JL 1 V J m 1 RUBBISH. RATES ARE NOT GOING TO TRIPLE. OR EVEN DOUBLE. THIS MYTH, WHICH IS BEING FURTHERED FOR POLITICAL AND OTHER MYTHS WE'D LIKE EMERGENCY AND SAFETY-RELATED SERVICE CALLS REASONS, IS UNNECESSARILY SCARING MANY CUS- T-v TA I T-'TAT A rT V 1 7 Tv T O r i"" T WILL RECEIVE IMMEDIATE RESPONSE, AS THEY TO IMMEDIATELY DISPEL. TOMERS ESPECIALLY THE ELDERLY AND THOSE ON ALWAYS HAVE. NO ONE WILL BE LEFT IN THE COLD. FIXED OR LOW INCOMES. I - -. .. . IJ . - ',-J-!:- J--- m. - -J . : ",r , ' O - J- ; s - Vour Puoc hfiht happens to go out, in most cases In reality, the State's streamlined regulatory process j . -- j we'll suggest you contact a heating contractor to ensure will continue to protect consumers through two strong ;'-' "yri V.- .i '.'-crZSl.': - j faster service. However, you're also welcome agencies instead of three costly, redundant entities. f'V. ift j to call our new Ask-a-Tech line. A qualified representa- After years of rate decreases, natural gas prices have 'f- - '1','-J?v4J?:S- ;' : j tive will then guide you through the process (and help now experienced a comparatively modest increase. ' " ' .';:; ' j you with any other gas-related, non-emetgency ques- iV- I Thanks to our company-owned natural gas reserves, ... - '- tions). Easy enough? the increase has been fairly small because we don't We figure you would rather not have us increase our need to buy as much natural gas on the open market. ! jft Kj4' - j T staff size, and costs, to provide services that the vast Other states are not so fortunate. In fact, much of the 511"" fi majority of customers rarely, if ever, use like lighting nation has seen increases of 30 to 50 petcent. Here, our f 11I " . i'C" ''O Sv. pilot lights. A common sense conclusion, right! The low- own recent increase was closer to 15 percent. if , est possible rates benefit everyone, especially those in Truth be told, Questar's efforts to improve efficien- jtfj: f" X.--.' the low-income category. , , . .. . . ., MkM -to aw" w cy and rerocus resources have avoided about 537 mil- yw- r'?JJS&r xtT ' oocoooxxoooaxocoaxxoMococo lion in rate increases over the past 15 years. That VViyi t 'X' -y5' equates to savings of $60 annually per customer during JIotP Jljf'i 'jgs"' Questar Gas remains committed to helping low-that low-that time. RQjff V fR jjrfglr V rfj' income customers in many ways. Of course, the best In 1985, the annual natural gas bill fot the typical L jfX H''S fr thing we can do is keep rates as low as possible. Utah residential customer represented 1.9 percent of jf;K "'" 'Vt C n addition, we suppott assistance and weatherization the average personal income per household. Today, ..' - v . -V programs that help those identified by social service even with the recent increase, that figure is 0.9 percent ""'' Jf agencies as having special needs. of the current average personal income per household. - . . . ' ' ""IVm'A,. i Your generosity, combined with that of our employees oooooooooooooooooo and shareholders, provided nearly $130,000 in donations WHILE MANY MYTHS ARE QUITE CHARMING, OTHERS CAN BE last year, enabling the Red Cross and other non-profit Wirh 250 000 new msmmprs in rhp na:r 1 5 DISTURBING EVEN DANGEROUS. SEVERAL SUCH MENACING . ,, , , , ... , with ZDU.UUU new customers in the past 13 years, agencies to assist 867 elderly and disabled individuals and the additional service burden, no stone goes MYTHS, EACH ENERGY-RELATED, HAVE MADE THEIR WAY AMONG US. with their home heating bills. unturned in our effort to become more cost-efficient. r oueitah smakeholdehs. As for the sky, snow is all we expect to see ailing in the near future. fi t fjjj jffj rC''a'''e natura' as '" your homc help you take comfort when it does. " |