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Integrity Merchant Solutions
Credit Card Processing
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Home
Integrations
Solutions
Card NOT Present Payments
Ecommerce
Mobile Credit Card Processing
Card Present Payments
POS Systems
Payment Gateway
About
Contact
WELCOME TO
INTEGRITY MERCHANT SOLUTIONS
NO Hidden Fees
An Industry Leader
Month to Month agreements
Economical Pricing
NO Processor Rate Increases
Integrity Merchant Solutions is an industry leader offering reliable and affordable payment processing solutions.
Our merchants have access to robust payment options creating the least amount of friction at the point of sale, including touch less technology, text to pay, digital invoicing, tap to pay, mobile payments, and everything necessary to accept the various card types now in the hands of American consumers.
The business world has changed.
Will your business innovate or evaporate?
There are many ways to adapt to the changing world environment.
We help businesses continue to take secure payments, while making their customers feel comfortable buying their products/services.
See How We Can Help
Our mission at Integrity Merchant Solutions is to reduce and contain credit card fees for our clients through education, innovative technology and ongoing support.
What Makes Us Different
Privately Held
Veteran Owned
No Processor Fee Increases
IMS is a private corporation unaffected by the pressures public corporations have to report greater profits by increasing margins on existing clients. IMS provides true cost containment, an elite group of expert consultants, individualized personal customer service and the benefit of knowing our clients have NEVER had a price increase. Our founders have worked tirelessly to avoid working with any processing partner removing our ability to maintain a ‘no increases’ solution for our clients. Very few organizations in our space, if any, can deliver this promise.
How We Can Help
EMV Chip
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An EMV chip increases the security and decreases the risk of your customer’s credit card by creating a unique code, which unlike a magnetic strip can only be used once, making fraudulent transactions more difficult.
Google Pay
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Google Pay is the fast, simple way to pay online or make contactless payments with your phone. Your payment info is protected with multiple layers of security so you can pay with peace of mind – all the time.
Apple Pay
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Apple?Pay is easy and works with the Apple devices you use every day. You can make contactless, secure purchases in stores, in apps, and on the web. And you can send and receive money from friends and family right in Messages. Apple?Pay is a safer way to pay, and even simpler than using your physical card.
Pay Now
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Pay Now technology is a funds transfer service that allows users to transfer money to someone else’s bank account by simply entering their phone number or email address.
Tap to Pay
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Tap?and?pay is a safe and simple way to pay by tapping a credit card or device against your card reader to pay instead of inserting a card. It is an easy touch-free way to make a payment.
Recurring Payments
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Recurring payments offer the peace of mind knowing the payment will be made automatically, at a certain interval.
Online Sales
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Innovative payment and security solutions designed to increase customer ROI by increasing revenue, while decreasing costs and risks.
Secure Card Payments
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IMS holds cardholder security as our first priority. We continually add tools and technology to protect data and advise?you in becoming PCI compliant to minimize fraud and avoid penalties.
Stand Alone Terminal
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All of our stand alone terminals include technology that makes managing payments easier, safer and smarter.
Enjoy the peace of mind that comes from advanced fraud protection and security features.
Experience easy internet set-up for all stand alone terminals using your existing broadband connection.
Point of Sale Systems
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We offer the latest technology with the ability to integrate with 100’s of POS software systems. In addition,?access to the full suite of Clover products to transform the way you work by helping track inventory, manage employees, drive customer loyalty and accept payments all on a single dynamic system.
Contact Us
IMS has a payment processing solution to suit every business.
With an unmatched product range and a depth of knowledge across most industries, we provide value to our clients every day.
Amy Russell, Operations/Finance Manager
Promo Logic
Promo Logic made the switch to IMS several months ago and we have been very pleased with the entire process from start to finish. The transition to IMS was seamless with the help of their knowledgeable staff and the best part is we are saving money each month with much lower transaction fees. In addition, we love the feedback that we have received from our clients who have been impressed with the professional look of the payment system as they finalize their transactions online.
Brett Marx, President
ACF Distributors, LLC
I made the switch to IMS in 2018 when I realized how?much money I could save on our credit card processing costs. Since then, I have acquired additional businesses, all of which I have moved to processing with IMS because the experience is seamless,?transparent and personal. There are no hidden fees, my rep educates me on industry?best practices, and whenever I have a question- the response time is the best I’ve experienced. No 1-800 number, no wait time. I highly recommend?IMS and look forward to doing business with them for years to come!
Dr. Seth Kabakoff, DMD, HDS President
Associates In Endodontics
There are very few ways to decrease your office overhead. Working with Integrity Merchant Solutions our practice is on track to save 30% this year.
The transition was seamless. We should have started our relationship with IMS years ago. Don’t wait like we did.? Contact them for a risk-free evaluation.
Mark B. Vye, C.P.A., President
Connecticut Multispecialty Group
CT Multispecialty Group has been working with IMS for the last year. Our 25+ location practice has saved thousands of dollars, a 38% savings, and the transition to their services was seamless and not disruptive to the practice.
Most impressive is their impeccable customer service and quick follow-up when we have questions. We truly feel like we have a great partnership.
I highly recommend your giving IMS a call and letting them do a free, no-obligation savings analysis. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain!
Mary Moses Kinney, Director
Independent Jewelers Organization
IJO has a long-standing relationship with IMS. IMS has consistently provided a very competitive program to our membership along with a superior level of customer service. We constantly receive positive feedback from our members regarding their interactions with IMS. All questions or issues are handled promptly and courteously.
IMS understands the value of the referral relationship. They know their day-to-day interactions with our members directly reflect on our organization as well as theirs. IMS goes above and beyond to make sure our members are taken care of and happy.
We look forward to our continuing our strong partnership with IMS for years to come.
This served his purpose. Clearly no suspicion of being tricked by an ingenious answer crossed the girls mind, and she paused a moment shielding her eyes with her hand and looking towards Bracebridge. That shelter from the sun concealed all her face but her mouth, and looking at her he thought that if her mouth alone was visible of her, he could have picked it out as hers among a thousand others. The full upper lip was the slightest degree irregular; it drooped a little on the right, falling over the join with the lower lip: it was as if it was infinitesimally swollen there. For one second of stinging desire he longed to shut down her hand over her eyes, and kiss that corner of her mouth. It must have been that about which the skylark sang....{239} Sit by me, she said at length, and very soon we must walk back over the down, and when we come to the skylarks nest you shall go on and{316} I will follow after a few minutes. Lets go through these few months, as if pasting them into our memories. We must each have the same remembrance as the other. I hated you at first, do you know? I hated working for you. The books began to bring us together, the mischievous things. Then there came the wood-block for your book-plate, but you apologised. And then came the catalogue, was not that it? By that time I had got to love working for you, though I did not guess at once what was the matter with me. Then came the spring day, that first day of real spring, and I knew. And there is one thing I want to ask you. Did Lord Inverbroom ever tell you about my people? "Why so?" the Doctor asked. After the party had recovered from the fatigues of the journey to Fusiyama, the boys were on the lookout for something new. Various suggestions were made, and finally Frank proposed that they should go to a theatre. This was quite to Fred's liking, and so it did not take a long time to come to a determination on the subject. The Doctor agreed that the theatre was an interesting study, and so the matter was settled. "Sayonara!" echoed Fred, as he followed his cousin's example. "I say 'Sayonara' now, but I hope that some time in the future I may be able to say 'Ohio.'" Who lidee best he most catch tumble down.' "It's a very simple matter," said Captain B, "when you know about it. The fact is, that we were once very near losing our lives by Chinese pirates, and we don't propose to have another risk like it." "That will do. Now, beyond Fayette, about seven miles north, there's a place--" At our two-o'clock dinner I found that our company had been reinforced. On one side of Camille sat I; but on the other side sat "Harry."
I remember vividly yet the high purpose and girlish propitiation that rang together in her voice. Kendall dashed after her while I went against a wet bough that all but threw me; but before he could reach her she flew up the steps, crying "Hold my horse!" "But it must be somewhere," objected Arthur, "that's obvious." Arthur's recent reflections returned to him, and produced a little glow in his mind. "Is there a world," he questioned, "where the problems of Time and Space are different?" "Get me food," he said; "they starve you in those places yonder. I have tobacco, but my stomach craves for food. Go and get me food. I'll go and lock the area door so that you may not give way to a desire to take the air. After that you can find me something." Shrinkage, or the contraction of castings in cooling, is provided for by adding from one-tenth to one-eighth of an inch to each foot in the dimensions of patterns. This is a simple matter, and is accomplished by employing a shrink rule in laying down pattern-drawings [97] from the figured dimensions of the finished work; such rules are about one-hundredth part longer than the standard scale. Steam-hammers are divided into two classesone having the valves moved by hand, and the other class with automatic valve movement. From this it may be seen that there must occur a great loss of power in operating on large pieces, for whatever force is absorbed by inertia has no effect on the underside. By watching a smith using a hand hammer it will be seen that whenever a piece operated upon is heavier than the hammer employed, but little if any effect is produced on the anvil or bottom surface, nor is this loss of effect the only one. The expense of heating, which generally exceeds that of shaping forgings, is directly as the amount of shaping that may be done at each heat; and consequently, if the two sides of a piece, instead of one, can be equally acted upon, one-half the heating will be saved. A FEW words by way of introduction. A few minutes after I left the town a scene drew my attention. A lady stood there with a little girl; the lady seemed to urge the child to do something to which it objected. She refused to take a bag full of various small parcels pressed upon her, and clutched hold of the lady's skirts. I wanted to know what was the matter, got a little nearer, and was amazed to hear them both speak Netherland. I could not help asking what the trouble was and whether I might be of service. Evidently he seemed to confide in me, and told me that they had been ordered to clear the north-east corner of Belgium of enemies, and that by and by they were going to march upon Lanaeken first of all.
So far, we have spoken as if the Socratic definitions were merely verbal; they were, however, a great deal more, and their author did not accurately discriminate between what at that stage of thought could not well be kept apartexplanations of words, practical reforms, and scientific generalisations. For example, in defining a ruler to be one who knew more than other men, he was departing from the common usages of language, and showing not what was, but what ought to be true.93 And in defining virtue as wisdom, he was putting forward a new theory of his own, instead of formulating the145 received connotation of a term. Still, after making every deduction, we cannot fail to perceive what an immense service was rendered to exact thought by introducing definitions of every kind into that department of enquiry where they were chiefly needed. We may observe also that a general law of Greek intelligence was here realising itself in a new direction. The need of accurate determination had always been felt, but hitherto it had worked under the more elementary forms of time, space, and causality, or, to employ the higher generalisation of modern psychology, under the form of contiguous association. The earlier cosmologies were all processes of circumscription; they were attempts to fix the limits of the universe, and, accordingly, that element which was supposed to surround the others was also conceived as their producing cause, or else (in the theory of Heracleitus) as typifying the rationale of their continuous transformation. For this reason Parmenides, when he identified existence with extension, found himself obliged to declare that extension was necessarily limited. Of all the physical thinkers, Anaxagoras, who immediately precedes Socrates, approaches, on the objective side, most nearly to his standpoint. For the governing Nous brings order out of chaos by segregating the confused elements, by separating the unlike and drawing the like together, which is precisely what definition does for our conceptions. Meanwhile Greek literature had been performing the same task in a more restricted province, first fixing events according to their geographical and historical positions, then assigning to each its proper cause, then, as Thucydides does, isolating the most important groups of events from their external connexions, and analysing the causes of complex changes into different classes of antecedents. The final revolution effected by Socrates was to substitute arrangement by difference and resemblance for arrangement by contiguity in coexistence and succession. To say that by so doing he created science is inexact, for science requires to consider nature under every146 aspect, including those which he systematically neglected; but we may say that he introduced the method which is most particularly applicable to mental phenomena, the method of ideal analysis, classification, and reasoning. For, be it observed that Socrates did not limit himself to searching for the One in the Many, he also, and perhaps more habitually, sought for the Many in the One. He would take hold of a conception and analyse it into its various notes, laying them, as it were, piecemeal before his interlocutor for separate acceptance or rejection. If, for example, they could not agree about the relative merits of two citizens, Socrates would decompose the character of a good citizen into its component parts and bring the comparison down to them. A good citizen, he would say, increases the national resources by his administration of the finances, defeats the enemy abroad, wins allies by his diplomacy, appeases dissension by his eloquence at home.94 When the shy and gifted Charmides shrank from addressing a public audience on public questions, Socrates strove to overcome his nervousness by mercilessly subdividing the august Ecclsia into its constituent classes. Is it the fullers that you are afraid of? he asked, or the leather-cutters, or the masons, or the smiths, or the husbandmen, or the traders, or the lowest class of hucksters?95 Here the analytical power of Greek thought is manifested with still more searching effect than when it was applied to space and motion by Zeno. I've elected economics this year--very illuminating subject. I am attending gymnasium very regularly of late. A proctor have bothered you with my affairs if I had known. Yes, I will tell you Inside the temple long arcades connect the shrines sunk in the thickness of the walls, gloomy recesses with images of Vishnu and other idols; where the corridors or arcades cross each other there are vast halls with a sculptured roof supported by thousands of columns. In one of these halls there is a chariot full of divinities. The wheels, the horses, the highly-venerated images, are all of marble very delicately wrought, and amazing after the coarse caricatures on the outside. In the courts again, under sheds, there are cars; one of enormous size in black wood carved with innumerable figures and interlacing patterns; pendant ornaments of the same wood sway in the wind. The solid wheels, without spokes, small and having huge axles, seem made not to turn, and the shafts, to which a whole army of the faithful harness themselves on the occasion of a high festival, are long and as thick as masts.[Pg 114] Another car, past service, lay slowly rotting in a corner; almost all its images had vanished, and its canopy had fallen off; it was almost completely hidden under aristolochia in blossom. Well, then, let that go. Buthe chews gum and theres gum stuck all over in this amphibianhes been here, nights He passed forward, through Sandy, a note. Bang! Another theory gone up in smoke! Dick was rueful. See what Friday, the thirteenth, does for you? Jeff said.
Thats so, Larry. Go on, Sandy. Youve got a brilliant brain! They had devised a hastily planned code of signals, very much like those used by a flying school instructor giving orders to a pupil where the Gossport helmet was not worn. Down the wharf path they ran, turning into the shell-powder path that skirted the inlet on the far side of which the amphibian lay moored. "No," she said shortly. "You had better bet." In the middle of the line there was a one-room mud hut. This, with the tents back of it, was her home. Landor had fitted up the hut with Navajo blankets, Indian baskets, dolls, saddle bags, war bonnets, and quivers; with stuffed birds and framed chromos, camp-chairs and some rough quartermaster's furniture. A gray blanket, with a yellow Q. M. D. in the centre, kept the glare out at the window, and the room was cool enough. One advantage of adobeand it has othersis that it retains all summer the winter cold, and all winter the summer heat. He believed that he had no ties now, that friendships, the love of woman, and the kiss of children all had missed him, and that his, thenceforth, must be but vain regret. So far as he knew, Felipa had gone away without ever having received his letter. The man he had intrusted it to had been killed in the Aravaypa Ca?on: that he was certain of; and it never entered his head that his papers might have fallen into other hands, and the note have finally been delivered to her. She was leading the sort of life that would most quickly put him entirely out of her mind. He was taking the Washington papers, and he knew. She had gone away, not even sure that he had given her a thought since the night in the Sierra Blanca when Black River had roared through the stillness, and they had been alone in all the wild world. What a weird, mysterious, unearthly scene it had been, quite outside the probabilities of anything he had imagined or contemplated for a single minute. He had never regretted it, though. He believed in impulses, particularly his own. The next two days he kept to himself and talked only to his Apache scouts, in a defiant return to his admiration for the savage character. A Chiricahua asked no questions and made no conventional reproaches at any rate. He was not penitent, he was not even ashamed, and he would not play at being either. But he was hurt, this last time most of all, and it made him ugly. He had always felt as if he were of the army, although not in it, not by reason of his one enlistment, but by reason of the footing upon which the officers had always received him up to the present time. But now he was an outcast. He faced[Pg 302] the fact, and it was a very unpleasant one. It was almost as though he had been court-martialled and cashiered. He had thoughts of throwing up the whole thing and going back to Felipa, but he hated to seem to run away. It would be better to stop there and face it out, and accept the position that was allowed him, the same, after all, as that of the majority of chiefs of scouts. George had, if anything, a narrower intellect than his father, but spoke English fluently, though with a foreign accenta great advantage over his predecessor. He was small of stature, and subject to fits of violent passion, neither of which qualities was conducive to royal dignity. Nor did the attributes of his mind supply any gain calculated to remedy these defects. He was possessed of courage, which he had proved at the battle of Oudenarde, and displayed again at Dettingen, and he was praised for justice. Perhaps it was a love of order and etiquette rather than justice which distinguished him. For his sort of military precision and love of soldiers he was nicknamed the "Little Captain" by the Jacobites. But the worst trait of his disposition was his avarice. He admitted, says Lord Chesterfield, that he was much more affected by little things than great onesthe certain mark of a little mind; he therefore troubled himself very little about religion, but took it as he found it, without doubt, objection, or inquiry. He hated and despised all literature and intellectual pursuit, arts and sciences, and the professors of them. "Well, here, take that citizen's horse. Old man, get off, and let this man have that horse." "See here, Bob, I've got something on hand better'n roundin' up stragglers and squelchin' whisky rows. I've got to pick out some men for a little raid, where there'll be a chance for a red-hot shindy. Want to go along?" give much for them if they diddent. Tel his mother He look "That you want to tamper," the old woman said. "Precisely." The others were seated around the long gleaming table of native wood. Dr. Haenlingen stood, her back rigid, at one end, facing them all with a cold and knowing eye. "But I won't allow tampering in my department. I can't allow it."
"You're a queer lad, Reubenand more masterful than your poor f?ather wur." "You must behave yourself," said Reuben, in the tones he would have used to a child"you mustn't go vrothering people to give you sweeties." "Oh, he d?an't mind who it is, so long as the work's done." The request was not so much the outcome of passion as might have been imagined from the form it took. It was true that he was deeply enamoured of her, but it was also true that for three months he had endured the intoxication of her presence without definitely, or even indefinitely, claiming her for his own. He had held himself back till he had thoroughly weighed and pondered her in relation to his schemeshe was not going to renounce Alice for a wife who would be herself a drawback in another way. "It might be Wales or Madagasky, "Hullo," he said feebly. "Come forward, keeper," continued the baron, "and state how these arrows came into your hands!" Calverley had no sooner assured himself of the flight of the bondman, than he dispatched a messenger to assemble the vassals for the purpose of carrying the hue and cry in different directions; and he then entered the castle to inform De Boteler of the event. During the moments that elapsed between the order and the appearance of the men, De Boteler threw himself back in his chair, and was apparently engaged in counting the number of studs in his glittering sword-hilt; and the smith (who, although he felt himself a freeman, yet, from a natural principle of deference, did not consider he was at liberty to depart until the baron had given him an intimation to that effect,) stood, with something of an embarrassed air, awaiting the permission, and the idea every instant crossing his mind whether this summoning of the retainers could have any reference to him. But his suspense was not of long durationthe retainers entered, and De Boteler, raising himself in his chair, said, pointing to Turner,
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