Suburban Geriatrics 190 W Germantown Pike STE 100, Norristown, PA 19401 6102728221 (phone), 6102725655 (fax)
Languages:
English
Description:
Mr. Boone works in Norristown, PA and specializes in Internal Medicine - Geriatrics. Mr. Boone is affiliated with Einstein Medical Center Montgomery, Mercy Suburban Hospital and Phoenixville Hospital.
Isbn (Books And Publications)
Answers for Chicken Little: A No-nonsense Look at the Book of Revelation
Tamera Chafin, Debbie Green, Donald Jester, Kenneth Young, Rick Hill, Kim Morris, Donnie Mounts, Marty Mack, Kent Turner, Marvin Gilbert, Max Jones, Cindy Stuart
Dont panic if you need more time to file or pay your taxes, said IRS spokesman Dan Boone. Requesting more time to file is easy, and there are several payment options.The IRS expects Tennessee taxpayers to submit about 190,000 filing extension requests by the April 15 deadline. Nearly 3 million
If you are in the U.S. Armed Forces, especially serving in a combat zone, the IRS knows that you face some special tax situations and wants you to know that you're entitled to some special tax benefits, IRS spokesman Dan Boone said.
IRS spokesman Dan Boone said the agency expects Alabamians to file about 2.2 million tax returns, with nearly 1.9 million of those being filed electronically. He encouraged taxpayers to take advantage of IRS Free File, at IRS.gov, where all filers can prepare and file their returns free online begin
Date: Dec 18, 2013
Category: Business
Source: Google
IRS has $16.1 million for Tennesseans who have not filed a 2008 income tax return
"Some who haven't filed yet for 2008 could be eligible for an even bigger refund than our records indicate," said IRS spokesman Dan Boone. "IRS won't know until they file if they qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit or the Recovery Rebate Credit or both."
Date: Feb 23, 2012
Category: Business
Source: Google
IRS expects 2.7 million Tennessee returns this year
According to the latest figures available, 1.62 million Tennesseans received refunds for calendar year 2008; 400,000 owed money. Last year 74 percent of Tennesseans e-filed, many of them from a home computer. That number (home computer filing) has been rising 15 to 20 percent per year, IRS spokesman Dan Boone said.