1001
Fifth Avenue
Huntington, West Virginia 25701
(304) 523-4819
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All
our forms are in .pdf format, so you'll need
the Adobe Acrobat Reader to view them. If you don't have this software
on your computer, don't fret -- it's
free! Click
here to download your free copy of the Acrobat Reader.
Note:
If you are using America Online or certain configurations of Internet
Explorer and are having trouble viewing the .pdf files here (and
elsewhere on the Web), you may need to reconfigure your Acrobat
Reader to operate as "a helper application." Fortunately,
it's not as complicated as it sounds. Read the information below.
The configuration itself will take less than two minutes.
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If
you have trouble reading files with Acrobat...
Try
making your Adobe Reader "a helper application."
If you are using America
Online or Internet Explorer, your problem with reading .pdf files may
be caused by a configuration setting between your browser and Acrobat
Reader. Here are instructions to enable your browser to use Acrobat Reader
as a helper application, which should alleviate the problem.
- Exit from AOL or
Internet Explorer.
- Start Adobe Acrobat
Reader.
- Go to Edit >
Preferences > Options (Acrobat 5.0 or higher) or to File > Preferences
> General (Acrobat 4.x).
- Uncheck or deselect
the "Display PDF in Browser option" (Acrobat 5.0 or higher)
or the "Web Browser Integration" option (Acrobat 4.x).
- Click OK.
- Exit from Acrobat.
- Restart AOL or
Internet Explorer.
The next time you
click on a link to a PDF file in AOL or Internet Explorer, a dialog box
will prompt you to specify what to do with the file. If you select "Open
this file from its current location," the browser will open the PDF
file in a new Acrobat window. If you select "Save this file to disk,"
the browser will save the PDF file to your hard drive, from where you
can open it later.
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