| Chamber members have it all: new business, new websites, new jobs
Enjoy the Patriots Game at Sky Lounge on Monday, Nov. 10, and you�ll be supporting the High Hopes Foundation. For only $10 at the door, you�ll enjoy the game with some very enthusiastic friends, get some raffle tickets (and you can buy more) for great items like Patriots or Budweiser gear, storage at College Bound Movers, airline tickets, golf stuff, restaurant gift certificates, and autographed Pats� and Red Sox items. Your $10 tax-deductible donation gets you in the door, and 100 percent of the proceeds benefit High Hopes Foundation. The event is sponsored by Stonebridge Benefits Group and Buy Timeshare.com/VP Resales. Ticket printing was donated by The Copy Shop on Route 101A across from Pennichuck Square.For tickets, call Stonebridge Benefits at 289-8683 or High Hopes at 429-1010.
Three chiropractors a take trip overseas -- to assist others
Three Edwardsville residents went on a mission trip to Honduras this fall, but not to spread Christianity, build houses or rescue victims of natural disaster. Nathan, Thad and Nikki Vuagniaux are chiropractors. They gave free upper-cervical "corrections" to thousands of patients with medical problems including paralysis, Parkinson's disease, cancer, asthma and hearing loss. "(Patients) were extremely grateful," said Nathan Vuagniaux, 33, noting some people brought food and other gifts. "In fact, most of our translators were working on their own time by the end of the week. They just wanted to help." Nathan and Thad Vuagniaux are brothers. Nikki is Thad's wife. They operate the Glen Carbon branch of Upper Cervical Health Centers of America. The three traveled to the capital of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, with a team of 23 chiropractors and support staff from the United States, Spain and Canada.
Rural Bulletin Survey Results: Snapshot…
We received 362 responses from Rural Bulletin readers within the timeframe (more came in afterwards). Of these 185 were from people living in rural areas, 66 from people in small towns and 94 from people in cities. Our thanks go to you all. How you receive it: just under half the respondents received Rural Bulletin by email, and slightly under half were sent it by mail. A small number downloaded it from Rural Women New Zealand’s website. .
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