text stringlengths 9 94.9k |
|---|
Know Lamar High Class of 2017 graduates that are NOT on this List? Help us Update the 2017 Class List by adding missing names. |
More 2017 alumni from Lamar HS Lamar, SC have posted profiles on Classmates.com®. Click here to register for free at Classmates.com® and view other 2017 alumni. |
If you are trying to find people that graduated in '17 at LHS in Lamar, SC, check the alumni list below that shows the class of 2017. |
If you are an alumn of Lamar High you should register now in the alumni directory. We also encourage you to interact with the rest of the alumni on this site. You can find old friends, share photos and stay updated on the latest school news. |
iGlobal is a completely free online directory that aims to provide information and contact details for businesses, services, trades, and professionals, so users can find everything they are looking for in one place. |
This general disclaimer is intended to regulate access and use of this information guide and to define the relationship between users and the guide. |
All of the content of this website is copyrighted by iGlobal, with the exception of images, sounds and computer graphics used under license, and any media extracted via automatic methods of tracking from public sources. All rights are reserved. |
iGlobal is not responsible for the consequences or damages arising from access to this website, the use of information contained therein, or access to other materials on the Internet accessed through links. |
iGlobal also reserves the right to make modifications to the website and information contained within the website at any time and without prior notice. |
For general inquiries about iGlobal services, please refer to our Suggestions form. |
You may request to cancel/delete your listing by filling out the proper form found in our directory and clicking on Cancel. |
Sec. added by renum. 97.1, Title 19, filed Sept. 5, 1974 eff. Sept. 5, 1974. |
I’ve seen several search engine topics involving schnauzers having symptoms of heart failure, and fainting, even when asleep. I’ve been there with two of my schnauzers. My last one just died 12 days ago… always consult your vet with questions, but here is my experience. I’m also an RN (disabled, but got my license 28 years ago and still have it). I was cued in to abnormal breathing and behaviors, which helped me know that I needed to get both of my dogs who had heart failure seen by their vets. |
My first schnauzer to have heart failure was Hannah. I got her in 1988 as a 6 week old puppy. To make a sweater for her (there weren’t many options for puppy clothes back then) I cut holes in one of my socks. She had some episodes that were called seizures, but with how things turned out, she probably had some heart issues starting at about 18 months old when she fainted (and twitched) for the first time. By the time I got her to the vet, she was fine. She had those episodes now and then, until 2000 when in one night she fainted 7 times (I stayed up with her all night). I thought I was taking her to the vet to be put to sleep that next morning, but he got her on some medications and prescription dog food and she lived another GOOD year. I vowed to not make her live just so I didn’t have to face the loss of her. As a single woman with no kids, she was my family. I wanted the best for her, but when she died, it was really hard. She had done well up until the last couple of days; when she quit eating, I knew that was it. I had decided to get another dog before she died, so that kept me going. |
Then I got Mandy. She did very well until she was just about 11 years old. She fainted. Her breathing got too ‘hard’, and I knew what was going on. I took her to the vet, and with an exam and x-rays (showing an enlarged heart, displaced trachea- from the size of her heart, and some lung congestion) she was also diagnosed with canine heart failure. She was put on medications, and did fairly well. She only fainted 3 times total- including one time when she was asleep. The last ‘episode’ wasn’t the same, but it was similar, and she died in my arms within 15 minutes. I still cry every day missing her. |
Something huge to remember is to not give the dog ‘people’ food because of the salt content, unless it has no salt (which means that most processed foods are out). I got freeze dried peas (meant for toddlers) for Mandy, and she also loved freeze dried bananas (NOT the fried ones in the grocery store). Those items had NO added ingredients. She also liked pieces of raw apples. The only commercial treat she could have was “Charlee Bear”- because of the sodium content being low enough (I e-mailed the company for the answer re: sodium content, and then cleared it with my dog’s vet- please check this out with your dog’s vet as well 🙂 Towards the very end, Mandy didn’t want to eat. She had lost weight, so I tried various things- ground beef, ground turkey, scrambled eggs, rice, potatoes, oatmeal, baby food fruit and veggies…. that last morning she had two Swedish meatballs that I’d adjusted for her (low sodium and baked instead of fried- like the Christmas party meatballs were). |
It’s heartbreaking to see them get older and struggle. I made some mental notes as to when it was ‘enough’- though with Mandy it was a bit less clear until she just had a brief episode and then was actively dying in minutes. But I was prepared to have her put to sleep. Hannah died in my arms as she was euthanized. She knew I was there. That was important to me- I couldn’t have either of them think I’d left them. Mandy looked scared until she just collapsed in my lap. Then it was just a few minutes before it was over. I talked to her, and scratched behind her ears as I knew she liked. |
I’m not sure what my malfunction is, but I’m sorta grumpy. I got up way earlier than usual (I’m one of those who is usually up half of the night and then sleeps until noon). I’ve got a vague headache, but that’s nothing all that new. I have chronic headaches. Christmas was really good- I got to see (and meet) family, and talked to my biological mom and half-brother on the phone, which is always good. I got to spend time with family at the Swedish Christmas party since I’ve got the ice vest to wear when I leave home and don’t have as much chance of being overheated because of the dysautonomia. And yet, I’m a major dud this morning. |
I’ve been extremely irritated at comments to news stories on various online sites and publications. So many people are so heartless and cruel. Or pathologically immature and even psychopathic. Responding that they’re ‘happy’ about an article where five people were made homeless by a fire that destroyed their home? How do people get that way? Who dropped them on their head? Or burned them? And then there are the other ‘less’ disturbing posts that are just plain nasty and/or cruel. Or ignorant. I’m actually very thankful I don’t know those people or have to spend any IRL time with them. A click of the back button takes them out of my life. |
The onslaught of horrible stories that are on the news constantly is also a major bummer. I feel really badly for those folks and what they’re going through, but what good does it do anybody to have it dissected in the media for days to weeks on end? I’ve been a crime survivor of a high profile case (before the 24/7 media, back in 1987). It wasn’t helpful to see it on TV for days or see the newspaper coverage over and over. The people who knew about it, and were my actual friends/family already knew what happened, and face it: most people really don’t want to know about real life horrors that happen to other people. Or they don’t know what to do with the information, at least to the persons’ face. Behind their back, the chatter won’t stop. If people would have just asked me straight out what happened, or even if I wanted to talk about it would have been much more helpful than days of media coverage (without any input from me- I was an object). I had one ‘different’ neighbor that responded to meeting me with “I never thought I’d meet you ! ” Really? Meeting someone who has been raped and beaten was a life goal? Step away from the strange one ! |
I’m extremely disgusted with my weight, and have my food diary set up to start on January first. I don’t want to look like this on my 50th birthday next November. I don’t want to be grotesque and repulsive going into the last third to half of my life. I have to restrict food. I’ve tried the ‘normal’ calorie amounts I’ve been given from the doctor and diabetic dietician, and that doesn’t work…so I’ve got to go lower. I can’t do much exercise because of the issue with passing out when my heart rate goes up or I get overheated, and my knees and spine issues. So the calories have to go. A slippery slope for me, so I’ve got to be careful- but I have to DO something beyond what I’ve been doing. I didn’t look like this before chemo… and I want to lose any remnants of those days. |
Losing weight will also save me some time before having to have my left knee replaced (I had the right one done in late 2006, and it was a very unpleasant experience with some complications and ‘dull’ response time by the doc and nurses to a bladder infection). I had to go to a rehab place for the medically defective. It was a good rehab facility- great care, but set up where people stayed in their rooms like a hospital between therapies (no common area), and since I was infective, I was in a private room- not a horrible thing, but friggin’ isolated. It’s not like there was a big risk of someone coming into contact with my pee. My left knee has unrepaired, and questionably healed ACL and medial meniscus tears, done when I turned over in bed back in 2009- about a week before my closest friend from here in this town died suddenly (following several complications from a KNEE replacement). She’d moved to a different state to be closer to one of her daughters, but we were in contact by phone daily, even when she was in the hospital or rehab. I was supposed to have the left knee replacement done, but then got leukemia and everything was put on hold to survive that. Been a weird few years. |
I’m frustrated that I don’t feel that people understand why I’m like I am. I’ve got diagnoses that people haven’t heard of. I ‘look’ like I’m capable of working, and I miss being a nurse SO much- but too much standing or walking, and the whole heat/heart rate thing = one unconscious middle-aged RN. I’ve been an RN for nearly 28 years. I’ve been on disability for 8 years. But I still keep my license, because I still AM an RN. I worked hard for that thing. And I loved working with it… And those days are done. When people ask me what I’m doing to get back to work, it hurts- there isn’t anything that can be done by me or anyone else. Some things CAN’T BE FIXED ! SO those perky, blessed-to-be-clueless people need to shut up and go target someone who has some stuff going on that is treatable. I’ve been dealing with much of this since 1996- and worked until 2004- I held out as long as I could. I fought to keep working. QUIT asking me if I’m going back to work. NO, I can’t ! |
I was raised in an evangelical church, and am a born again Christian, without some of the judgmental drama that can go with those two things. I hate the passive ‘I’ll pray for you’ stuff- prayer is wonderful, and I do it often, but if someone wants to help, some action would be really amazing ! Prayer is about as passive as a person can get and rationalize to themselves that they’re ‘doing’ something– and while I do believe in prayer and that it is a very positive and powerful thing (and pray for people on the news all of the time since I can’t do anything else), it’s not the be-all end-all answer to really being of use to someone. It’s definitely better than nothing, but it really doesn’t show much in terms of actively supporting and helping someone. Sometimes it’s all people CAN do- and that’s appreciated. But remember the ‘faith without works is dead’? I’ve sensed a lot of dead. I wish I could do more for others, and feel guilty about that. Not like I know many people around here to be available for… back in the home where my heart is, I could be more useful, even if I’m not that physically ‘able’… I could drive someone to the store, or appointments. I could water plants when they were gone, or change out cat litter. I couldn’t walk dogs or watch kids… but I’d do what I could. |
Anyway, that’s a bit of what’s rattling through my head today. I’m a little less grumpy now. |
Hannah was my present to myself for my 25th birthday. She was a salt and pepper miniature schnauzer. I’d gone and picked her out from her litter when she was about 4 weeks old. When she was ‘ready’ at 7 weeks old, I drove out to Lake Travis (near Austin, TX) in a raging thunderstorm in November 1988, and got her. She and her littermates were all standing up on the covered patio with their dog mama, peeking in the French doors into the house. They were all so cute, but she walked over to me first when the door was opened. She seemed to remember! |
She was so funny when she was little. I didn’t have the heart to make her sleep by herself, and since she was a ‘baby’ didn’t want her peeing in my bed. I put her into a regular baby bassinet that a neighbor had given to me, and put it next to my bed. She’d give a good puppy howl if she was scared, and as soon as I draped my hand into the bassinet, she’d quiet down and go back to sleep. After a couple of nights, she seemed to understand that I wasn’t going anywhere. As soon as she was potty trained, she slept in bed with me. |
Hannah was about 2 years old when she had her first ‘seizure’. By the time I got her to the vet, the vet looked at me like I was a bit on the overprotective side. Hannah was fine, and just stared at both of us. Back home… She continued to have these ‘seizures’ on and off for years. They never happened more than 2-3 times a year, so from what the vet had said about risk/benefits of medication, I opted to keep her off of meds. She always bounced back as if nothing had happened. |
When Hannah was 11 1/2 years old, she scared me out of my mind. One single night, she passed out seven times. I was up all night with her. She’d get sort of woozy and stagger a bit and, then fall over on her side, twitching. She’d then stagger to her feet and have to go out to pee immediately. Like right now. I thought for sure she was dying. She slept on the couch next to me that whole night between episodes. She had stopped eating the day before (which was very unlike her), but initially I thought it was some bug. I watched her, and she didn’t have any vomiting or diarrhea… but then that night. Oy. I thought it was the end. |
As soon as the vet’s office opened I called, and got her right in. We lived in a small town from the time she was 7 years old; they didn’t have an emergency animal hospital there at the the time. I was glad her regular vet saw her. He asked me to leave her there for a few hours so he could figure out what was going on. I agreed, but I hated leaving her. She was my only companion. My best friend. |
I got the call to come and get her (good news) and when I got there the vet told me that she was in heart failure. Grade 4 murmur ( a ‘5’ is the worst). He’d given her oxygen and a shot of a strong diuretic (water pill medicine), and she’d peed off a bunch of fluid her heart couldn’t circulate through her body normally, to be eliminated through her kidneys. I got prescription dog food, three medicines to give her by mouth, and a bottle of the diuretic medicine to give her as a shot if she needed a ‘booster’ to help her breathing, and the syringes and needles for her shots. He knew I was an RN, so giving shots wasn’t a problem. He just showed me where on the back of her neck to give them. |
She also couldn’t have regular dog treats, or anything with a ‘normal’ sodium level. I got her some low-sodium peanut butter (to hide her pills in). She didn’t like it. She also didn’t like the prescription ‘heart’ diet food, so the rest of that case of cans was returned, and she got the ‘kidney’ food. It had limited sodium like the ‘heart’ diet. And she got grapes (this was about 10 years before I found out that dogs shouldn’t have grapes). She LOVED those grapes. I’d sneak her pills into them, and she acted like I’d given her filet mignon and truffles. |
She did very well, and had many, many days where she was playing, and acting like she felt really good. She knew the names of her individual toys, and would get them, and enjoy chasing them. She still howled when I was on the phone to my folks; my mom had dementia, and one thing SHE still enjoyed was Hannah howling at her on the phone when I said “woof”, or “bow wow”. I just had to say the words, and she’d do her howling bit. Mom loved it ! |
Hannah, and the toy named “Weirdo”- feeling better ! |
Hannah still had an occasional fainting episode, but within a few minutes (and a quick trip outside to pee) was back to her normal self. I had told the vet that I would NOT put my best friend through a miserable year just because I couldn’t say goodbye. If she wasn’t going to have any quality of life, forget it. But he was right- she had some very good months left in her. |
About 11 months later, I noticed her start to change not long after moving to a different apartment in the same complex. She started not wanting to eat, and her breathing was getting funky. I gave her the shots to get rid of the fluid (and it did). But it wasn’t working as well. I had told myself when she was diagnosed that if she started to refuse food completely, that was it. We were done. The shots were only helping for about a half a day, and I had to give them to her a couple of times a day for 4-5 days. Then she completely stopped eating. My heart started to break. That night, her breathing was horrible. I knew what was coming. |
In the morning, she got off of the bed, and peed on the floor. Then she went and hid in my closet, as if to say she was so ashamed. I couldn’t get mad at her, she was sick ! It was pitiful to see her hiding from her accident. She NEVER peed on the floor- she was so good about waiting to go outside, or using the pee pads when I left her in the kitchen to go to work. I knew I had to take her to the vet. |
I sat on the couch before getting ready to load her into the car. She got up on the couch with me, and climbed on my lap. She ended up sitting on my thigh, and then putting her head on my shoulder. I think she was saying goodbye, and it was easier for her to breathe if she was upright, but didn’t have to support herself. I loaded her into a laundry basket to put in the car, since her balance was a little iffy. When I took her in to the vet, he said he’d like to try some more oxygen and medications, and he’d call me. I told him that I could be back there in minutes if it looked like she was getting worse (she was already bad), and he agreed that he’d call me if I needed to come. I did not want her dying without knowing I was there, and I hadn’t just dropped her off and deserted her. |
I got the call around 11:30 a.m. I had the kind of desk nursing job where there was flexibility for such things. I’d told my boss ahead of time what was going on, so when I told the receptionist I had to leave I could just go. |
When I got there, Hannah was hooked up to an IV, oxygen, rectal probe (temperature), and heart monitor. She looked spent. But she also lifted her head a little when she heard my voice. She knew I was there. I was told to take whatever time I needed, but I think when she put her head on my shoulder earlier that morning, that was our time. Right then, I had to do what was best for her, so I started taking the equipment off of her, and just holding her. I was satisfied she knew I was there, and that it was OK for her to stop fighting. I told the vet to just ‘do it’. |
She slowly dropped her head as the ‘go to sleep’ stuff took effect. I could feel her full weight against my arms, and then she took her last breath. It was over. My best friend was gone. I was told that I could spend time with her. (the vet’s office had cleared out for lunch, aside from those who were helping Hannah… and they were all in tears as well). I could hardly see her through the tears, but I did want to hold her for just a few minutes. They let me take her to one of the exam rooms where it was quiet, and private. I just cried, and told her how much I loved her, and how wonderful she’d been as my best friend. I wasn’t in that little room with her for very long. I’d had 12 1/2 years with her to remember… those were gifts. But I got to say ‘goodbye’, just her and me. |
I just hope she knew how much I loved her. |
Founded in 1996, our flagship beer Moonshine is one of the most popular beers in Sheffield. Having started out on a small 10BBl kit, we now brew around 200BBls a week. in 2016 we launched our first core keg beer, Heathen American Pale and sales of this have grown rapidly. |
2017 saw the rebrand of our core cask range and the launch of our new Brewers Emporium range, with Heathen as the focal point. Other notable beers in this range include Voyager IPA (with a new hop grist each brew) and Salvation Stouts (with a different flavour each brew). We also embarked on our first foray into small pack beers with canning Heathen in March 2017. The first batch sold out in two days, so we are planning to make the cans a permanent fixture plus doing small runs of some of our most special beers. |
We have done some exciting collaborations over the last few years with breweries here in the UK and overseas, including Magic Rock, Northern Monk, Siren, Founders, Griffin Claw, Kuhnenn Brew Co, Cerveza Artisana, Rat Brewery, Raw, Beer Ink and De Noord-Hollandse Bierbrouwerij. Keep your eyes peeled to our website, social media streams and of course our Eebria marketplace for all our upcoming beers! |
Funk Dungeon gets canned! The first beer from the Dungeon to get put into 330ml cans. This mixed fermented beer gives a soft oak character from the wood with a sticky hop presence and with a nice slight brett funk. Not overly sour, but very refreshing. |
Inspired by the classic Pina Colada cocktail, with pineapple, toasted coconut and Sorachi Ace hops to provide a totally tropical sensation! |
Deliciously fruity and tropical with a low bitterness, as youd expect from our Voyagers, pale and unfined. Packed full of hoppy fruity flavours for that perfect IPA journey. |
Our Funk Dungeon brewer Jim and Steve from Siren Craft Brews Barrel Project have teamed up to create a delicately bretted farmhouse twist on the classic IPA. Hopped with Mosaic and Simcoe for notes of fruit and pine which harmonise beuatifully with our House Brett culture. |
Brewed in collaboration with our dear friends and family at The Devonshire Cat, our Sheffield city centre pub. This opaque dream is packed with outrageous quantities of Sorachi Ace, Enigma & Vic Secret. |
In collaboration with Leeds based Wilde Child Brewery - weve created this classically clean and crushable West Coast IPA. Heavily hopped with Ekuanot, Amarillo & Eureka for a vibrant and fruity character thats packed with waves of papaya, orange, melon and grapefruit flavours that break into a crisp bitter finish. |
BA Russian Imperial Stout. A huge, robust and boozy Impy Stout which has been finished in wooden ex whisky barrels. Subtle Brett character which increases the complexity of the finish. |
Dry hopped barley wine. Superbly strong with a boozy aroma of caramel & fresh citrus. Smooth & robust with warming alcohol, lots of toffee, candied peel & dried citrus fruits. |
Brewed in collaboration with Melissa Cole for Sheffield Beer Week - a traditional Sheffield Pale fermented with Abbaye yeast strain for a fruity Belgian twist. Plenty of hops with the addition of orange peel give a really well balanced beer. |
Apply for employment and contracting opportunities (volunteer or paid) with JGIA. We may obtain personal information from references or publicly available sources. |
Process applications during the recruitment processes. |
We may also use your personal information for the secondary purposes of conducting market research and analysis, developing products, meeting regulatory obligations and processing competition or promotion entries. |
In order to operate a Website or deliver a service, JGIA affiliates, selected service providers and/or other trusted third parties may be engaged by JGIA to perform a variety of functions, such as data storage, fulfilling orders, conducting market research, processing credit card payments, assisting with promotions and providing technical services. These companies may have access to personal information if needed to perform such functions. Your credit card details are only used to facilitate your donation. They are not used for any other purpose and will never be supplied to a third party other than the trusted parties for the purposes described above. |
JGIA will take reasonable steps to ensure that the personal information we collect, use and disclose is accurate, correct and up to date. We do so via our own internal quality system, using the information that you provide to us. |
If you believe any information that we hold about you is incorrect, incomplete, or out-of-date, please contact us at info@janegoodall.org.au. We will respond to your request within a reasonable period and will take steps to amend your records in a timely manner. |
JGIA will keep information for as long as it is required to be able to provide the intended service(s) or to meet legal and regulatory requirements. JGIA will take reasonable steps to permanently de-identify or securely destroy personal information that we no longer require for any purpose, except in limited permitted circumstances. |
When you visit our site, anonymous technical information may be collected about user activities on the website. This may include information such as the type of browser used to access the website and the pages visited. This information may be used by JGIA to make decisions about maintaining and improving our online services. This information remains anonymous and is not linked in any way to personal identification details. |
My brother mentioned that Mother Dear asked for me by name when I was away. I hadn't seen her in almost a week. I wonder if she noticed I hadn't been around or if it was just something that crossed her mind like when she says she needs to find her parents. |
I guess she was good last Friday but not so good on Sunday when my brother visited. When I saw her on Wednesday, she still wasn't good and the activities director said she hadn't been very interactive all day. She suggested that I ask the medical staff if she had a Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) which are common in assisted living centers. |
Sure enough, the nurse reported that they had tested her on Monday, it came back positive, and that she was on antibiotics. I'm sure the UTI had her down on Sunday for my brother's visit and the meds for my visit on Wednesday. |
The activities director offered good advice. UTIs are common and certainly make the dementia worse in most individuals. If she's prone to UTIs having a regular glass of cranberry juice with lunch isn't a bad idea. I know of some residents that used to get cranberry supplements in their diets to help prevent UTIs. |
My mom used to get UTIs all the time and it definitely made her overall state (both physically and mentally) worse. My friend works in a home and said that UTIs can also cause inbalance & falls somehow! |
Daddy had constant UTIs a few years ago. He had a prostate procedure, then started taking cranberry pills, two a day, and no more UTIs. |
UNTIL, of course, he went into assisted living, then to the adult psych unit, then onto the medical floor at the hospital, during which his cranberry pills were eliminated somehow. Result? UTI. Confusion, agitation in the extreme. |
No one believes that UTIs can increase confusion in the elderly until they actually see it. Pretty amazing. I hope your mom's on the mend soon. |
On October 30th, The BIG 98 held the 6th annual Battle Of The Bones at The Wildhorse Saloon to kick off Halloween. Tyler Rich, Danielle Bradbery, Eli Young Band, and Rascal Flatts performed in their Halloween costumes to get the party started. |
The annual Battle of the Bones event was in support of the T.J. Martell Foundation, which is the music industry’s largest foundation that funds cancer research. The foundation was established by Tony Martell’s making a promise to his dying son. T.J. Martell, a high school student battling leukemia. He asked his father to raise a million dollars so that no one else would have to experience what he had gone through. The proceeds of the show will benefit the FTL Sarcoma Fund. If you’d like to learn more or find out how you can help or donate, click here. |
Either you’re a startup company, or owing a small or medium size firm, you need accuracy in the management of account. The role & importance of QuickBooks software in optimizing accounting efficiency of business is inevitable these days. Generating invoices, processing inventories, estimating sales and so many tasks are now on fingertips. The software comes in different versions & functionalities and is supported with single or multiple systems driven by windows or mac. As multiple functions come integrated with a single software, therefore having thorough understanding of each & every module becomes a difficult task. Also, getting stuck with the accounting due to certain errors is a common issue. For any query, related information or resolve any error with the accounting software, take help from a team by dialing QuickBooks Support Phone Number. |
Therefore, if you want to run your business with futuristic approach & want to scale new heights of success then integrating QuickBooks will be a smart move. There are many QB software packages you can choose for performing accounting actions. And technical breakdowns can encounter any of these programs halting your important transactions delaying the whole processing of the accounts department affecting the other divisions of the organization. And to deal with such problems you need skilled technicians who can diagnose and fix the errors with complete safety. |
The Experts are right here to help you online for covering all the versions and ready to fix errors affecting the functionality and performance software. You can get the assistance for any particular QuickBooks errors through Quickbooks Support Phone Number, and within few seconds, the technicians will be touch with you via call or remote access and help you to fix your software issues. |
How Can You Get Viable Assistance From Experts? |
Let us help you to get QuickBooks Phone Number and Support for Accounting Software that helps you to enhance your business. A team of Expertise understands your problem that’s why you will get immediate assistance services because if you’re facing software errors, it can cause you serious trouble such as data loss, or company file damaged, etc. By remembering all the concerns, QuickBooks Customer Service Phone Number, which handled by the certified experts, accountants, and advisers who will assist you to get over from your software glitches. |
Intuit enhances its software to different editions like Pro, Premier, Enterprise, for any type with certain variations. It is also necessary for us to give solutions to users for different versions. Technicians are available here for users having error while using software. Your accounting or software errors getting a fix is ensured with the assistance of dedicated and Intuit QuickBooks ProAdvisors. For us, clients are the first priority, the customer service team focuses on giving you smooth accounting and Technical Support. Experts have the conventional source which allows you to update knowledge about recent upgrades of QuickBooks. Besides, they help you to read & understand the instructions of software easily. |
There’s straightforward way to leave info in inquiry section, and you’ll see perfect solution for query suggested by specialists. Nothing is better than getting dedicated assistance services from QuickBooks Proadvisor. So, get an associate for your software problem that makes your business better than ever by ringing QuickBooks Phone Number. |
There are plenty of service providers available on the internet. You can communicate with anyone but what is the probability that they’ll resolve your queries instantly. I guess, No one can judge it, an authentic pro advisor can assure loyalty of working as assistance provider. Just in a single QuickBooks Chat Support will connect you with experienced experts available 24/7 just to resolve software queries. |
With QuickBooks software you can generate unlimited entries for keeping the records of all sales, payment received, employee payroll, banking transactions, profit & loss account and balance sheet for single or multiple companies. This complex accounting software can also show errors when not installed properly or due to database corrupted etc. Such errors cannot let you perform any other action or do any anything else. It may be stressful to face random errors while working. Essential is to try to find the solution calmly. That’s what specialist does. They know how to fix any particular, so, even if you’re facing 6000 series, C-series, H-series or other errors. Experts will provide you the instant solutions. You can communicate from any place through our QuickBooks Technical Support team USA. |
Why QuickBooks 24×7 ProAdvisor Customer Support? |
The most admired and preferred choices among the software users to help them quickly with the right approach. If you face any problem contact Quickbooks Support Phone Number USA team and get nonstop online assistance. ProAdvisor QuickBooks Online Support provides the most satisfying work, Toll-Free Number and assistance services are available 365 days and 24 hours, just to provide you the quick better services. |
Subscribe to the 'Moving' topic to help and get support from people like you. |
How to choose the best moving company in Florida? |
Should I tell my best guy friend that I'm in love with him? |
Boyfriend moving out how to cope? |
The girl I like is moving away to colorado read the details? |
Lotus inspiration coin has the word "Namaste" written on the back. Pocket token measures approx. 3/4" x 1/2" and is made of pewter. |
Noodles & Company (NASDAQ: NDLS), a consumer discretionary company with a market capitalization of $506 million, saw its share price increase by 66.6% over the prior three months. As a small-cap stock with high coverage by analysts, you could assume any recent changes in the company’s outlook is already priced into the stock. Is there still an opportunity here to buy? Let’s examine Noodles & Company’s valuation and outlook in more detail to determine if there’s still a bargain opportunity. |
Is Noodles & Company Still Cheap? |
According to my valuation models, the stock is currently overvalued by approximately -23.0%, trading at $12.35 compared to its intrinsic value of $9.52. Not the best news for investors looking to buy! |
Click on any of the analyses above to view the latest model with real-time data. |
In addition to this, it seems like Noodles & Company’s share price is quite stable, which could mean two things. One, it may take the share price a while to fall back down to an attractive buying range, and two, there may be less chances to buy low in the future once it reaches that value. This is because the stock is less volatile than the wider market given its low beta of -0.39. |
What Does The Future Of Noodles & Company Look Like? |
Investors looking for growth in their portfolio may want to consider the prospects of a company before buying its shares. Buying a great company with a robust outlook at a cheap price is always a good investment, so let’s also take a look at the company’s future expectations. |
Noodles & Company’s revenue growth is expected to average 1.4% over the next five fiscal years indicating that the core business could be in real trouble. In fact, this could imply that its products or services are losing demand and/or becoming irrelevant. |
While investors tend to categorize stocks into value and growth, some of the most successful investors view growth as simply one component of a company’s value. |
Unfortunately for shareholders, Noodles & Company’s future growth is relatively low and it appears the stock is now trading above its intrinsic value. Therefore, it may be a good time to begin reducing your position in the company. However, there are also other factors to consider that could explain the current overvaluation. |
Risk Metrics: what is Noodles & Company’s cash ratio which is used to assess a company’s short-term liquidity. View the company’s cash ratio here. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.