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Traverse Global Communications Corp Announces Partnership with Wells ...

Traverse Global Communications Corp is now an authorized private label reseller for Wells Fargo and Authorize.Net merchant account services to provide online real time e-commerce transactions.

(PRWEB) October 11, 2005 -- Traverse Global Communications Corp has agreed to exclusively offer Wells Fargo merchant accounts and Authorize.Net transaction processing services to it's client base.

By offering private label merchant accounts through it's Credit Plus (http://www.creditplus.net/) subsidiary, Traverse Global will be able to leverage the depth of quality services that their new partners offer to their existing client base. For just $29.95/mo, clients of Traverse Global will be able to process credit cards in real time through their own website and receive free web hosting along with a free shopping cart to conveniently process their orders.


SARAH JEAN MARTH BACKNER

W.Va. resident was teacher, 4-H leader

Anna Lenore Headley Clark, 96, of Cameron R.D.5, W.Va., died Sunday, December 30, 2007, in Cameron Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

She was born July 29, 1911, in Greene County, a daughter of Arthur and Florence Yates Headley.

Mrs. Clark was a member of First United Methodist Church, Cameron.

She attended West Liberty State College and taught at Kasooth School.

A 4-H leader for several years, she was retired from State Food Store, Cameron.

Surviving are a daughter, Janet Bishop of Heath, Ohio; a sister, Betty (Darell) Reed of Grove City, Ohio; 10 grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; 11 great-great-grandchildren; two daughters-in-law, Doris Clark of Streets Boro, Ohio, and Shirley Clark of Cameron; and several nieces and nephews.


City's JumpStart program moving toward bigger things MORE INFO GRANTS

Back in June 2006, members of Fredericksburg's Economic Development Authority went out of their way to say their JumpStart plan--a blueprint for redevelopment in the city--would not sit on a shelf and collect dust.

Roughly a year and a half later, JumpStart has become part of the vocabulary around City Hall.

It's been cited as a justification for keeping the courts downtown and building a riverfront park, and it's the basis of design guidelines city planners wrote for the Princess Anne Street corridor.

A series of mini-grants has helped a half-dozen small projects around the city--from an archaeological dig at a downtown construction site to a heated awning for a wine bar--get off the ground.

Now, EDA members are hoping to make some progress on some of JumpStart's loftier goals.



 

 

 

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