On-Line Bill Payment Instructions

To make an on-line payment follow these simple instructions:

  • Click the "My Account" tab on the web site.
  • Click on the option "Update Information/Pay Bill On-line".
  • Enter your username and password, then click the "submit" button.
  • Three icons will then appear on the left side of the screen. Choose the option labeled "account".
  • Scroll down to "payment method". Choose "Credit once then cash/check". This option allows the payment to process one time using the debit or credit card you supplied. Future payments can be made by choosing one of the following options: check, money order or choosing credit once.
  • After you have made a choice, scroll down and enter your credit card information. When you click the "submit" button the information will be entered in our system but you will not receive a payment confirmation. The credit card will process after midnight that night.
  • The options of credit and e-check require a signed authorization form to be on file. Please contact Account Services regarding this option. Click Here to download a form to be completed and mailed to our office.



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Bush signs jobless benefits extension (AP)

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, November 20, 2008. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)AP - With no end in sight to economic bad news, President George W. Bush on Friday ensured that millions of laid-off workers will keep getting their unemployment checks as the year-end holidays approach.


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non sequitur
\NAHN-SEK-wuh-ter\
noun

an inference that does not follow from the premises



a statement (as a response) that does not follow logically from or is not clearly related to anything previously said

Example Sentence
The professor's lecture was a jumble of non sequiturs and irrelevant observations. In Latin, "non sequitur" means "it does not follow." The phrase was borrowed into English in the 1500s by people who made a formal study of logic. For them it meant a conclusion that does not follow from the statements that lead to it. But we now use "non sequitur" for any kind of statement that seems to come out of the blue. The Latin verb "sequi" ("to follow") has actually led the way for a number of English words. A "sequel" follows the original novel, film, or television show. Someone "obsequious" follows another about, flattering and fawning. And an action is often followed by its "consequence."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Let prudence always attend your pleasures; it is the way to enjoy the sweets of them, and not be afraid of the consequences. Prudence is the necessary ingredient in all virtues, without which they degenerate into folly and excess.

Jeremy Collier (1650-1726) English Clergyman

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