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VOL. 14 NO. 47 ORMOC CITY P 15.00 at the newsstands DECEMBER 16-22, 2013
Website address: www.evmailnews.com For feedback/inquiries: e-mail [email protected]
BYLALAINEM. JIMENEA
BIR exec, Ormoc Chamber
dialogue over penalties
SEE BIR P. 3
SEE CONMAN P. 3
Cops nab
budding
extortionist
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AD SPACE
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Photo above shows Vice Mayor
Leo Carmelo Locsin Jr. distributing
some 1,500 relief packs to teachers
of Ormoc City on Friday, December
20. The eco-bags donated by SM
were lled with assorted canned
goods, Del Monte Pineapple
Chunks, biscuits, including a water
container for the schools. The goods
were donated by various sponsors
through the vice-mayors family. At
right, Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomez and
Mayor Antonio Martinez of Merida,
Leyte pose with some newly elected
barangay ofcials in the town. The
picture was taken during the oath-
taking ceremonies of the barangay
ofcials held after the elections,
with Rep. Gomez administering the
oath.
ORMOC CITY Cops hereentrapped a budding extortion-ist on the afternoon of Friday,December 20, after his would-bevictim asked for police assis-tance. Unfortunately, he chosethe brother-in-law of policegeneral Dindo Espina as hisvictim. The extortionist was ask-
ing P 20,000 from Victor Espina,brother of Marydi, the policegenerals wife.
The suspect was identifiedas Roberto Aguilar y Mantilla,45, single and a native of Brgy.Hawaiian, Esperanza, Agusan
ORMOC CITY The Bureauof Internal Revenue and the Or-moc Chamber of Commerce andIndustry, Inc. had a dialogue lateafternoon of Wednesday, Decem-ber 18, to thresh out issues thatarose from the agencys imposingpenalties on late payments lastNovember.
Present to attend the dialoguedespite short notice from Rev-enue District Ofcer Atty. Edu-ardo Obero were Ormoc Chamberpresident Iigo Larrazabal and
some board members; Roger Uy,president of the Filipino ChineseChamber of Commerce in OrmocCity together with former presi-dent Manuel Apao Pascual.
The parties discussed thecontents of a resolution by theOrmoc Chamber appealing forthe suspension of the impositionof the penalties on late ling oftaxes and if possible, to suspendother revenue collection activitieslike tax mapping for the next sixmonths.
As for the imposition of pen-alties, the parties zeroed in on thetime right after Yolanda struckthe city, crippling practically all
businesses and causing the latepayments of taxes.
The chamber, in its resolution,expressed dismay on the imposi-tion of penalties of those who paidlate that month. Penalties wereimposed on some taxpayers wholed after November 20, the dead-line for monthly VAT remittances,despite being made to understandthat they had until November 30to do so. The imposition of the
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2 NEWSDecember 16-22, 2013
Homeless at Brgy. Concepcion to get
bunkhouses constructed by the DPWH
Corro is Liga ng Barangay
president
ORMOC CITY - This
Christmas Season, some2,856 displaced families in
the Yolanda stricken areas
of Eastern Visayas will have
their new dwellings. 16 units
of these bunkhouses is at
Brgy. Concepcion, this city.
Department of Public
Works and Highways regional
director Rolando Asis said the
DPWH workers are fast track-
ing the completion of some
119 bunkhouses each compris-
ing of 24 units of dwellings for
a total of 2,856 units for 2,856
families on or before Decem-
ber 22, 2013.
Director Asis said the con-
struction of these bunkhousesin 29 different sites is closely
being supervi sed by DPWH
Regional Directors and Dis-
trict Engineers from the Re-
gions 4A, 4B, 5, 10, 11, 13 and
National Capital Region, given
special assignment by Secre-
tary Singson to assist DPWH
Region 8 in the emergencyworks in the devastated areas
of Eastern Visayas.
Hopefully, more will be
completed in time for the
New Year, Director Asis sa id
saying that the construction
of 142 bunkhouse units which
will serve as temporary shel-
ter of some 3,336 Typhoon
Yolanda affected families
in Eastern Visayas are on a
fast- track mode.
Immediately after comple-
tion, DPWH will turnover
these bunkhouses to the De-
partment of Social Welfare
and Development (DSWD) for
distribution to beneciaries.Targetted for completion
by December 15 are the fol-
lowing bunkhouses in Eastern
Samar : 16 units at nine (9)
sites in Guiuan; 11 units lo-
cated in Barangays 4, Batang,
Carmen, and Padang in Her-
nani; five (5) units located
in Barangays Paya, Biga andParena all in Giporlos; one
(1) unit in Barangay Busay,
Mercedes; four (4) units in
Balangkayan; four (4) units
in Quinapondan; one (1) unit
in Maydolong; two (2) units
in Barangay Sabang Suribao,
Borongan; two (2) units in
Lawaan; three (3) units in
Salcedo; and two (2) units in
Balangiga.
Moreover, 16 units in Ba-
rangay Concepcion, Ormoc
City are also targeted
to be completed by Decem-
ber 15, 2013. About 22 bunk-
house units being construct-
ed at Motocross Area alongDaang Maharlika (Caibaan)
and one (1) unit at NHA/Sag-
kahan Bliss in Tacloban City
are scheduled for completion
by December 20, 2013.
In various stages of con-
struction are 17 units at Gov-
ernment Center in Baras, Palo,
Leyte; and five (5) units atBasey First Housing Area in
Sitio Bangon (CanManila)
and four (4) units in Barangay
Amambucale, Marabut both in
the Province of Samar.
These are programmed for
completion by December 20,
2013, while three (3) units in
Barangay Abucay, Tacloban
City will be completed by
December 22, 2013.
Site development and con-
struction activities in 29 dif-
ferent sites are hampered by
the sporadic heavy rains being
experienced in area, it was
learned.
Private contractors tappedby DPWH have committe d
to work double time during
good weather to facilitate the
completion of these bunk-
houses. PIA
UPLB frat, Red Cross throws a party for Ormoc kidsTHE GRAND Order of the
Eagles, a fraternity based
at UP Los Baos and the
Red Cross-UPLB, in coor-
dination with the Philip-
pine Red Cross-Ormocchapter, threw a Christmas
Party to an estimated 200
children at the Church of
Latter Day Saints of Jesus
Christ on Saturday, De-
cember 21.Mrs. Rubie Gernale,
PRC-Ormoc administrator,said this was the fraternityshumanitarian mission forYolanda victims, especiallythe children whom theywanted to treat to a niceChristmas despite circum-stances. Aside from the partywhich the kids enjoyed, thelocal Red Cross Youth herekept them entertained with
various spiels. The frater-nity also distributed toys tothe children when the partybroke up.
Also present to enjoythe day, a welcome respitefrom the hectic humanitarian
missions that the PRC here isspearheading, were represen-tatives of various Red Crossmission groups from Europe.Some local board memberswere also present like Atty.Felilina Oliver, Marina Dalesand Carlson Chu.
FORMER CITY councilor Atty. Mariano Corro is now thenew Liga ng Barangay president. He was elected on Wednes-day, December 18, in a DILG supervised elections held at theABC building at the Government Center.
Corros vice-president is another former councilor, Lea
Doris Villar, who was also a Liga ng Barangay President. Thenew board of directors are Pedro Pepito, Nestor Pepito, AlvinRacaza, Roble, Sanchez, Melgazo and Jaballa.
DBP, LandBank okays LGU
employees moratoriumCITY DADS here have a bit of good news to Ormoc govern-ment employees. City councilor Atty. Bennet Pongos, in theirpre-session caucus this Thursday, December 19, said that theDevelopment Bank of the Philippines (DBP) had approvedthe request of the City of Ormoc Government EmployeesAssociation (COGEA) for a 6-month moratorium on theirloans from the entity.
A week before, LandBank representatives also told thecouncil that their management has approved the same request,albeit only for three months. However, they are not sure whenthe moratorium would take effect as there was no instructionsyet on how their computerized system would deal with it. The
employees salary loans are automatically deductible from theirsalaries, it was learned.
Councilor Pongos said the recent news from DBP was re-layed to him by the manager herself. He told the SP secretariatto inform the city accounting ofce so that they could get a copyof the approved moratorium and make arrangements on how togo about it.
A week after Yolanda, ofcers of the COGEA asked the citycouncil to pass a resolution asking DBP and Landbank for a6-month moratorium on their loan amortizations.
Wife batterer detainedORMOC CITY A wife batterer was detained at the Ormoc
City Police Station I here after his wife reported to the police
that she was beaten and trampled on by her husband when
he came home drunk last December 18 in the evening, at
around 10:00.
Rubilyn, the wife, reported the battering incident to the police
which immediately picked up the drunk husband Francisco anddetained him at the station.
The next day, at the police station, the EV Mail chanced
upon Rubilyn who had blue-black bruises evident on her face.
However, when asked if she would pursue a VAWC complaint
against Francisco, she just gestured she would not.
PO2 Christopher Estrella, desk ofcer, said that according to
their investigation, the husband came home drunk and got angry
when Rubilyn asked for some money. However, Francisco denies
he was drunk and even turned the table on his wife, saying it
was she who got drunk attending the birthday party of a neigh-
bor. The policeman, however, said that they can only pursue a
case against Francisco if Rubilyn les. Apparently, she was not
interested to. By Paul Libres
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3December 16-22, 2013 NEWS
Let the peopleknow that your
businesses
are okay or
where you are
temporary
holding ofce.
Inform them
through the EV
Mail, now only
the regionscirculating
newspaper after
Yolanda.
Advertise now!
Call us at:
0918-923-
4408
Homeless at Brgy. Concepcion to get
DPWH-constructed bunkhouses
is also working closely with
teachers and administrators
to support the challenges of
working with children who
have suffered great loss.
The childrens agency has
trained 44 police and social
workers throughout the af-
fected areas to identify chil-
dren who have been separated
from their families and may be
in need of special care.
None of this could have
been done withou t the sup-
port UNICEF has received for
the Philippines from around
the world, especially from
individuals and private sector
partners through our national
committees, said Lake.PIA 8
UNICEF ... from P. 10
del Sur.Cops led by police sta-
tion I chief Sr. Insp. IbrahimJam bir an nab bed him atthe SMART Padala Centerat the IAL Building here,where he told his victimhe would pick up the P20,000 he was extorting.In a well-timed operation,Jambiran said they closedin on the suspect just as he
was picking up the fruits ofhis extortion.
They also confiscatedfrom the suspect three moreextortion letters, one ask-ing for P 250,000 from ricetrader Gabino Sabino, P50,000 from scrap dealerJun Odan go and anotherfor P100,000 from anotherrice trader Junjie Omega.The suspect also had anice pick with him, whichJambiran said was deadlierthan a knife.
The conscated letterswere all handwritten inyellow pad paper, in mixed
Taglish and Bisaya, all withthe same tenor of asking for
a Marry Christmas, withthe warning that dangerwould befall them and theirfamilies if the request isrefused.
In an interview, the sus-pect said the letter he sent toEspina was his rst attemptat extortion. He said he hadbeen residing in Ormoc forquite a time already andhad a thriving business
selling cellophane and otherstuff before Yolanda. Sincehis business was blownaway, he thought hed tryextorting money, thinkingit was an easy way to earnmoney. He even smiledfor the camera as he posedbeside his extortion letters,icepick and cellphone.
Meanwhile, Sr. Insp.Ibrahim Jambiran warnsother people thinking ofdoing extortion within histerritory, saying that aslong as the attempts tomulct money are properlyreported to them, that he
would personally lead theoperations to catch them.
The suspect, Roberto Aguilar, as he poses for the camera. Beside
him is the letter he sent to Espina and the others still to be
delivered that police found on his possession.
CONMAN ... from P. 1
MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN
A reputable establishment in Ormoc City, Leyte is in need of
one (1)
Male, 24-35 years old
Experience preferred but not necessary Willing to work long hours if necessary
Submit application form, bio-data with picture and character references
to:
MS. ELVIRA DL. MARTINITO
c/o EV Mail
Hermosilla Drive, Ormoc City, Leyte 6541
BIR ... from P. 1
penalties created a buzz inthe business community.
Luckily for the others,Rep. Lucy Torres-Gomezintervened for the belea-guered taxpayers and gotthe commitment of BIR
Commissioner Kim Hena-res to just let taxpayers paythe basic taxes and that theirofce would be consider-ate. This was on Novem-ber 26 and in between, sometaxpayers were alreadypenalized.
Otero himself, in a letterto the Ormoc Chamber, saysthat as early as the firstweek after typhoon Yolan-da, the Regional Ofce thruour Regional Director Atty.Diosdado R. Mendoza, re-
ceived instruction fromthe National Ofce to ac-cept payment of taxes ofwhatever types without thepenalties being paid.
This is why, he wassurprised why Larrazabalwas complaining in behalf
of the membership of theOrmoc Chamber. He addsthat our receipt issued toall taxpaying public whohave paid their tax obliga-tion beyond the due dateshave been stamped only
basic tax paid, in compli-ance with the order of oursuperiors.
After which he askedLarrazabal to furnish hisofce a list of the taxpayerswho have been imposedpenalties to be properlyinformed.
In an earlier meetingthat day of the dialogue,Larrazabal had the chanceto show RDO Otero a taxpayment imposed penaltyand surcharge. He said itwas only one of many thatthe chamber was able togather.
Atty. Otero, however,said he has reason to believethat the taxpayers who werepenalized were those whopaid at the bank. This wasafter he saw that Larraza-bals proof was remittedover Landbank.
In his letter, Otero at-tached a letter by districtcollection supervisor AdelfaC. Sia denying they everimposed penalties on latepayments in November.
Manuel Pascual, on theother hand, offered to helpOtero explain why the taxpayment made at the bank
had penalties. He said sometaxpayers avoid lining upat the BIR and pay directlyto the bank and there, havetheir penalties computedand paid.
Larrazabal, on the otherhand, has also sent a formalreply to Oteros letter tohim regarding the cham-ber resolution. In the saidletter, he clarifies that henor the chamber were notcomplaining and thatwhat was being appealed ofwas a period of breathingroom.
ORMOC CITY - Australian DefenceForce (ADF) personnel have completedtheir recovery assistance mission in the
Philippines and will return to Australialater this week.
The ADF recovery mission to areas se-verely affected by Super Typhoon Yolanda(international name: Haiyan) officiallyended on December 16 at a ceremony hereattended by Australian Department ofForeign Affairs ofcers, Australian Armyofcers and local ofcials led by MayorEdward C. Codilla
Commander of the ADF Joint TaskForce, Lieutenant Colonel Rod Lang, saidthe Australian Defence Force was proud ofits contribution.
Over the past month the ADF hasmoved thousands of tonnes of aid by airand sea where it has been needed most,evacuated displaced people, and helped
over 15,000 kids get back to school in Or-moc. I am pleased to say the Philippinesgovernment have the situation here undercontrol and no longer need our help, headded.
Mayor Codilla, on the other hand,thanked the Australians for their contribu-tion in cleaning up schools and relief effortsacross the region.
The Australian Defence Forces sup-port to Typhoon relief and recovery effortscommenced on 13 November and includedAir, Sea and Land operations to Tacloban,Ormoc, Guiuan, Roxas, Cebu and BantayanIslands.
Air Force aircraft deployed the Austra-lian Medical Hospital to Tacloban, carriedmore than 3,000,000 lbs (1,360 Tonnes)
of cargo and about 5,500 passengers in-cluding approximately 3,500 internallydisplaced persons in support of relief andrecovery operations.
Amphibious Australian Navy shipTobruk bought Army Engineers and equip-ment to do school clean-up tasks and de-livered 110 tonnes of humanitarian aid toisolated island communities in the Visayasarchipelago. It returned to Australia 09December.
Between 28 November and 14 De-cember, Australian Army engineers, incoordination with Australian Departmentof Foreign Affairs and Trade, PhilippinesEducation Department ofcials, cleaned-upand repaired 16 schools. These efforts areestimated by Education Department of-
cials to have allowed about 15,500 studentsto return to classes in the region.
The remaining ADF personnel in Or-moc and Cebu will now nalize prepara-tions to return to Australia later this week.
Australia continues to stand by itsneighbour and dear friend, the Philip-
pines, as we move from relief and recoveryoperations to rehabilitation and reconstruc-tion in communities affected by Typhoon
Yolanda, Dr David Dutton, the AustralianEmbassys Deputy Head of Mission, said.We are here for the long haul and will
continue to coordinate with our variouspartners on the ground to make sure thataffected Filipinos struggling to pick up theirlives get the proper support and opportuni-ties that they deserve, Dr Dutton added.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bish-op just last week announced an additionalA$10 million to Australias response toTyphoon Haiyan, bringing the total Austra-lian contribution to A$40 million. The ADFoperations are on top of this contribution,which covers the following:
The deployment of AustralianMedical Assistance Teams ($3 million);
The deployment of Australian
Federal Police Disaster Victim Managementspecialists and humanitarian and consularexperts ($1 million);
Emergency relief stores, includingsleeping mats, water containers, mosquitonets, and health and hygiene kits ($1 mil-lion);
Support for Australian non-gov-ernmental organisations ($5 million) andFilipino non-government organisations ($4million);
Funding to the Australian RedCross ($3 million) and the InternationalCommittee of the Red Cross ($4 million);and
$19 million for the United NationsAction Plan, for the following agencies:United Nation Childrens Fund ($7 mil-
lion), World Food Programme ($5 million),World Health Organization ($5 million),UN Ofce for Coordination of Humanitar-ian Affairs ($1 million), and United NationsPopulation Fund ($1 million).
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4
The foundation day, celebrated every December19, was preceded with a thanksgiving mass in theMunicipal stage followed by a short program toformally commence the focal activity of the day:community outreach programs.
This day is dedicated to the people who re-
main tough through the good times and not so goodtimes, said Mayor Ramon P. Dela Cerna. Now,more than ever, is the right time for a thanksgivingcelebration for the Albueranos, he added.
In front of the Municipal hall (Rotunda),residents from Albueras 16 barangays availed theservices and food prepared for them. More than 400Senior citizens and PWDs pampered themselveswith the haircut and massage services from 10 tentsthat served as the reception booth. They were alsogiven Noche Buena packs which included pasta,sauce and ham.
Over 3,600 children from the Poblacion andnearby barangays, after being fed, were enter-tained with a variety show presented by a groupof entertainers composed of a clown, a singer and amagician. All of them also got a bag of goodies each,including Noche Buena packs for their families.
Simultaneous to the various activities beingheld in the Municipal ground, LGU employeesvisited six remote barangays to distribute reliefgoods and another batch of Noche Buena packs.The gift packs were bought from pooled funds fromall LGU employees budget for exchanging gifts.The employees decided not to exchange gift thisChristmas, and instead buy gifts for the far-ungAlbueranos living in the sitios of Panhugan, Naga,Bentuan, Cabatuan, Manga and Nabunturan.
Pupils in all Elementary schools also had aplay therapy which showcased a clown entertain-ing while food were handed-out.
In the afternoon, Jollibee again entertainedthe crowd of children and adults. Afterwards, thekids enjoyed their food and toys sponsored by theLihuk Leytenyos volunteers from the ofce ofCouncilor Leo Avila III of Davao City. The contribut-ing councilor personally steered his 35 volunteers
STORYANDPHOTOSBY
JHAYGASPAR
ITS BEEN 96 years since Francis Borton Harrison, an American Governor-General, foundednicipality that was eventually named Albuera.
This year, with the theme One vision, one action. Onward Albuera!, the local government uAlbuera successfully celebrated its 96th foundation day in a special way.
in their mission to help Leyte. Padayun angsa Leyte is their battle cry.
After the long day of extensive service asistance to the townsmen, LGU employees, ADepEd ofcials and Barangay ofcials assemthe Municipal Hall ground for a humble celebIn the stress debrieng, speaker Vannessa Ocshared the value of gratitude having safevived a unique catastrophe such as Yolandacrowd was then shown inspiring videos befoshared a diplomatic unity dinner.
Albueras 96th foundation day, chairMayor dela Cerna and Vice-mayor Normanwas conceptualized by Municipal AdmistratLyra P. dela Cerna, Municipal Accountantlene Rio S. Villar and Minerva E. Cubi, MuSocial Welfare Development ofcer. The ideais to lift the spirit of Albuera people despstruggles that the town have undergone.
The idea was generally guided by theirto provide an alternative joyous Christmas dnot having power. The Municipality of Alconsidered as the Christmas capital of Leycelebrated Christmas with alluring lights acors as a tradition for over 18 years already,Albuera an attraction every Christmas seaso
This years is more subdued, albeit moreingful. The decors we set-up are colorful seven if theres no (electricity) power, the spChristmas can still be felt in the atmosphereMs. Dela Cerna. Unexpectedly, they regainedjust last December 17, 2013. Their decoratiolimited to the municipal hall area and themarket, now lights up every evening; an eof a merry Christmas for the town of Albuerafter Yolanda.
A central gure is the simple Christmmade of bamboo. It is decorated with balls anOn each star are the names of various indivand organizations that came to Albueraswhen it needed help after Yolanda, said Ms.Rio S. Villar.
Mayor Ramon P. dela Cern said the 96th Foundation Day was dedicated to the people who
remain tough through the good times and not so good times.
The LGU-Albuera and its People are thankful to thewholehearted help of:
Ramon Aboitiz Foundation Pryce Gas, Inc. Baybay City Government c/o City Vice Mayor Mike
Cari DSWD Caraga World Vision Cebu-DOH, Region VI Medecins Sans Frontieres Miga Malot Galenzoga Henry Francesca Valeria Gaisano Operation Blessing Swiss Humanitarian Aid 52nd Engineer Brigade
Province of Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla GLOBE TELECOMMUNICATIONS United Nation Food Program Medicins du Munde Compaero Cayetano Foundation Doc Alternatibo Dr. Roland B. Abaday LAND BANK OF THE PHILS. ACCORD, Inc. & Care DOH Region 10 Rotary Club of Takurong South Cotabato Student Movement for Christ International Municipality of Tansa, Cavite Philippine Association of Local Government Ac-
countants (PHALGA) Accounting Ofce, Imus City -
DSWD Region 07 Cebu DSWD Cagayan de Oro DSWD Davao WORLD FOOD PROGRAM US Aid ABS-CBN FOUNDATION MEDICAL TEAM FROM DAVAO Leyte Center for Devt., Inc. (LCDA) DILG Carascal, Surigao ANDY TO SEE JOY TRANSPORT DOH Region 7 Philip Romualdez Team MDMC
The Johanniter International Assistance PMA Class 1999 & Singapore Group LGU San Isidro Davao Oriental ACF International Teal of Doctors from Calbayog City Association of Local Accountants of Cavite ( BALAY MINDANAO & ACTION AID LGU San Antonio, Quezon DSWD General Santos ACTS WORLD Relief DOH Region 8 ISRAAID IFRC IMPACT
The Foundation Day was also for kids aged 5-99! Photo above shows the young receiving theirNoche Buena packs. Below, a lola and a lolo who were young once get a massage and a
haircut, respectively.
A Filipino celebration is
not complete without food
and entertainment. Here,
kids get a snack of Jollibee
spaghetti and a surprise
number from the beloved
mascot himself!
Special
Albuera celebrates
on 96th Fou
7/22/2019 December 16-22, 2013 Layout
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Mu-
nit of
pasko
nd as-bueraled atation.ampoy sur-. Thee they
ed byesina,r Ms.s. Ar-icipalehindte the
desireespiteuera,
e, hasd de-akingn.
ean-o thatirit of, saidower
s, justublicblemeven
s treestars.dualsescuerlene
ALAC)
PROJECT 5
The simple yet colorful Christmas tree stands high over the milling people at the front of the
Municipal Hall, a reminder that the season is still worth celebrating despite the challenge of
Yolandas aftermath.
nity and resilience
dation Day
This documentation is powered by
LGU-Albuera, Leyte
Lihuk Leytenyos volunteers from Davao City led by councilor Leo Avila III pose for posterity with
Mayor dela Cerna and the Army ofcers who secured them on their humanitarian work at Albuera.
LGU department heads
and employees pose for
the camera before having
a budol lunch at Brgy.
Mahayag, one of the hardest
hit villages of Albuera (see
photo on the right).
Below, children at the
Sherwood Elementary
School, a remote barangay,
wait patiently for the LGU
employees group to arrive
with their gifts for them.
Because it was impracticalto let the kids come down
to the poblacion to join the
Foundation Day celeb, the
LGU employees instead
brought joy to them!
In the evening was the Unity Dinner. Below is speaker Vannie Ocampo giving a talk on stress
debrieng.
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6 December 16-22, 2013
Let Christmas beeveryday
LALAINE MARCOS-JIMENEAPublisher/Editor-in-Chief
JOSE SANRO C. JIMENEABusiness Manager
Correspondents/ Columnists:
PAUL LIBRES, MUTYA COLLANDER, JHAY GASPAR, TED MARCOS, IVY CONG-SON, DR. MANUEL K. PALOMAR, Ph.D., VICKY C. ARNAIZ, JUAN MERCADO, JTDELOS ANGELES, ATTY. BEULAH COELI FIEL, RICARDO MARTINEZ, JR., FR.ROY CIMAGALA,, ATTY. CARLO LORETO, ATTY. EMMANUEL GOLO, ADELINACARRENO, IIGO LARRAZABAL, YONG ROM, PROF. EDITHA CAGASAN
KEN ENECIO
Section Editor
with MAI-MAI T. VELASQUEZ, GIL-BERT ABAO, EMIE CHU, DR. GERRYPENSERGA, NIKKI TABUCANON SIA
Cartoonist:HARRY TEROWebsite address:http://www.evmailnews.comemail: [email protected] and/[email protected]
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PHIL. PRESSINSTITUTE
Christmas forgotten
man
Oh, Yolanda
SEE FR. ROY P. 5SEE MERCADO P. 5
YES, INDEED, let the spirit of Christmas be
a daily affair for all us. It should not just be
a yearly observance which we drown with a
lot of fanfare and merry-making. It should
not just be a historical event that we want to
remember with some magical nostalgia
Christmas has to be way of life itself. Its a
spirit, more than anything else, a truth of faith
that is supposed to animate every cell and pore
of our being. Its the marvellous reality that
whoever and however we are in this earthly life,
we are actually with Christ, conformed to him,
formally or informally, regardless of whether
we acknowledge it or not.Thats why Christmas always evokes joy
and peace. Amid the ruins left by the natural
calamities and the even bigger man-made di-
sasters due to our pride and attachments that
cause a Yolanda of partisan anger and hatred, a
storm surge of collective cruelty and insensitiv-
ity among ourselves, the spirit of Christmas is
what we need most urgently.
The radical objective reality about ourselves
is that we have been created by God in his im-
age and likeness, through the Son who later on
became man to re-create us after we have fallen
into sin and left alienated from God.
Christ is the very pattern of our being. If
we want to know who we really are, how we
ought to be, we should not look for references
other than Christ himself. And Christ is not
some distant, frozen model or idea that westrive to follow.
He is alive, and he is in us, he wants to be
with us always, he identies himself with us
whatever our situation may be and shows us
how to live that situation. This is what Christ-
mas is all about. Its Christ knocking at our
hearts door, asking to come in, to be born in
us and to live with us.
We have to be more aware of this reality of
Christmas. More than that, we have to learn to
step into that reality and live it as best as we
could, locking ourselves in it always as much
as possible and actively corresponding to it with
all the might that we have.
Lets learn the many precious lessons of
Christmas. Christ born in a manger, Christ who
is God emptying himself to become man and to
suffer all the inhumanity of man, etc.he showsus how to live in this life.
We have to learn how to be simple and
humble. These traits are never a sign of weak-
ness. On the contrary, they are a sure path to
our objective and original greatness that we
lost but was recovered and enhanced for us
through Christ.
This is the truth that we should relish to-
gether with whatever ham, cheese, beer and
lechon we will be having this Christmas. Thats
why the celebration of Christmas should have an
eminently theological character, going beyond
the social and sentimental.
We need to input the truths of faith to the
merely natural and human elements of the fes-
tivity that always have a way, given our weak-
ened condition, to intoxicate and desensitize us
to the greater wonders of our life.
WAIT. ISNT he that chap who blurs into the
backdrop of the Nativity scene? In a Christ-
mas creche, our eyes focus on the Child and
His Mother. Thats understandable. Theyre
the central gures in this drama. But are we
not missing what the person and presence of
Joseph signals?
Yes, says theologian Catalino Arevalo, SJ of
Loyola House of Studies. Thus, many Catholics
were surprised to read an earlier Time magazine
eight-page feature: Joseph, Husband of Mary
and Adoptive Father of Jesus.
It is anchored to the book that Presbyterian
minister Howard Edington wrote after the death
of his 22-year-old son titled: The Forgotten
Man of Christmas: And its theme is a fatherslove for his son.
Edingtons book ends with a meditation
on the power of love to ennoble the lover, es-
pecially if the beloved is God, Time says. A
model of Joseph, as believer, would pass muster
in almost any Christian church.
The French theologian Fr. Marie Dominique
highlights Josephs actions at Christmas, around
the Magi and the shepherds. When the Magi
enter the house where Christ is, they only see
Mary and Jesus, Matthew wrote. Joseph is not
mentioned.
But when the shepherds come to worship,
Luke says they see Mary, Jesus --- and Joseph.
This descendant of David joins the shepherds
in their reverence --- underscoring the role of
modern Christians. (Were) called, like Joseph,
to be silent saints who worship the Childin the manger and offer up our lives through
our work.
Many of us will never stand among great
political gures. But we join multitudes of
common workers like the shepherds. We stand
with the poor ol regular folks in the pew, a
people of silent adoration and submission to
Gods will.
Joseph took Gods son into his home in
Nazareth, thus providing Jesus with a normal,
loving family environment in which to grow,
Edington writes. Joseph took Gods son into
his heart, thus discovering a purpose for his
own life within the greater purposes of God.
He has become part of the bond of faith
and other things - between a father and son not
related by blood, Fr Arevalo points out. A line
from another book notes: As a father, Josephloved the Son who did not have his eyes the
Son of a Stranger.
We need to see Joseph in the context of the
often unremarked bond between fathers and
sons. The gospel narratives tell us little about
the the emotional impacts or of the people in-
volved in them. Luke says of Mary, little more
she did not understand, that she kept these
things and pondered over them in her heart.
Joseph goes through the gospel without
speaking a single word. But he acts in times of
crisis. Herods centurions were mounting to
slay the Child, when an angel told him: take the
Child and his Mother and ee to Egypt. And he
rose and took the child and his mother by nightand departed to Egypt and remained there until
the death of Herod.
And on return, he discovers that that Arche-
laus reigned in Judea in the place of Herod, his
father. Being warned in a dream, Joseph turned
aside to the remote village of Nazareth to shield
the Son and his Mother --- where Jesus grew in
wisdom, age and grace before God and man,
the gospels tell us.
There is also little recorded of those years in
Nazareth. We can only infer. Even as he loved
Mary greatly, he grew to love Marys boy, this
Son of a Stranger with a true fathers love.
Surely, Mary told him of the angels message
about this Boy, and what his mission and tasks
would be, about the pain and the glory in the
future.
There were chapters and chapters of day-to-day existence together, over and beyond the
few precious lines the gospels give us about
Bethlehem and Egypt and the long years in
Nazareth. Joseph was truly part of them all.
He learned from Joseph how to avoid
the knots in the wood, how to cut it along the
grain, and how to make sure it is already quite
dry so it will not unexpectedly split,. How did
Joseph transmit the deeper lessons? How is a
parents love both hard love and tender love,
and all the way true?
There is no record when and more impor-
tant-- how Joseph died. As a man lives, so
shall he die, an old adage says. Some therefore
infer that it may have been Mary who, with
tears, gently closed his eyes after he breathed
his last. He lay in the arms of the Carpenter who,
before the tomb of his friend Lazarus, wept.
JUST THIS week, we lost a family member to
the ravages of a heart attack. Last month, on
November 1, we also gained a new member,
Sophia Ysabelle, now ofcially nicknamed
Pyang-pyang. On November 4, just four
days before Yolanda wreaked havoc on our
lives, loves and homes, I turned 50. Ah, the
circle of life. Some go, some have just arrived
and some are in their crossroads.
That is why, despite Yolanda, I am not go-
ing to let this pag-umangkon ni Uring spoil
my Christmas. First, Christmas is not all about
colorful trees and lights. It is about a newborn
baby who would become the greatest preacher
in the world. He never wrote a chapter of the
Bible but his teachings about peace and lovewould resonate around the world.
This Christmas, we would not only be
celebrating Christs birth. We would also be
celebrating the gift of life, family and friends
with renewed vigor.
At this point, I would like to thank all my
friends and supporters of the EV Mail for your
endless generosity. Indeed, these have been
hard and trying times but as they say, life is a
beautiful journey and it has been made more
interesting with you painted to its tapestry.rrr
I am also happy to note that Tacloban City,
the city where I spent 15 years of my life, is
slowly getting up on its feet. It took Tacloba-
nons a longer time to recover from the ravages
of Yolanda, largely because of the extent of
devastation. If Ormocanons felt like it was theend of the world when they saw how Yolanda
practically blew to bits and pieces the houses of
the low and the mighty, its public and private in-
frastructures, how much more for Taclobanons?
And the people from Palo, Tanauan, Tolosa, etc.
for that matter.
I was told a former employees husband
died, not from Yolanda, but the next day because
his poor heart could not take the sight of dead
bodies strewn around in his neighborhood! That
was how shocking it was for them.
I could not even condemn the so-called
looters. I know of many men, some moneyed
at that, who were forced to go with the looters
to nd food and water.
However, some of the looters went over-
board. They ransacked and took appliances ,
iPads and things they could probably not affordto have in their lifetime. There were even talks
that there were syndicates behind the lootings.
Maybe, maybe not.
Some may nd the actions of the latter un-
forgivable. I dont.
An old Indian story says all men have two
beasts inside of him. One good and the other
evil, one full of love and the other of anger.
They are constantly ghting each other. Who
prevails in the end? The one that is fed the most.
What is important now is to learn the lessons
of Yolanda, and to embrace the future. After all,
Yolanda also showed us we are not alone. The
whole world came to embrace us, and if just
to repay this some other day, we must strive to
live and be alive. A good start is to forgive these
looters, whoever they are.
A good time for forgiving and forgettingwould be this Christmas, too. A Blessed Christ-
mas to all of us!
7/22/2019 December 16-22, 2013 Layout
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The Gospel on Sunday
DECEMBER 29, 2013
Feast of the Holy Family
7December 16-22, 2013
FR. ROY ... from P. 4
MERCADO ... from P. 4
Hands to serve, Heart to love
The Good Life
BYMEGGS. LUNN
Talky talk
This Christmas, lets take account of the
challenges of our times. There are many disturb-
ing developments that we need to face always
with the spirit of Christmas. That would be the
spirit of truth given in charity and causing joyeverywhere.
At the moment, I can think of how many
young people today are trivializing the sacred-
ness of marriage and sex. Reports are rampant of
what are called hook-up relations, the prolifera-
tion of the so-called sele culture that promotes
egoism and vanity.
In the area of politics, we now have so
much inhuman partisanship that the different
characters involved are now into red-hot acri-
mony and bashing. There is now fanaticism in
the mainstream. Its the new normal, as if basic
courtesy and giving others the benet of the
doubt should be shot down on sight.
Extrajudicial Settlement with Sale
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the p roperty of the late VICTORIA R. LABIDES and
VICTORIANO LABIDES re a parcel of land covered by TD No. 14029 00209 R13 and OCT
No. P-33808, situated in Barangay Owak Hilongos, Leyte Designated as Lot No. 493, with an
area of 6,304 sq. m. was settled among their heirs and 1,825 sq. m. sold in favor of VILMA N.
BORELA,DARWIN N. NINEZ, RIZZA N. NINEZ, JAMES N. NINEZ, LESTER N. NINEZ and
JOMAR N. NINEZ per Doc. No. 356; Page No. 73; Book No. VIII Series of 2013 of Notary Public
Ma. Lourdes Madula-Vilbar.EV Mail Dec. 2-8, 9-15, & 16-22, 2013Extrajudicial Settlement
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the property of the late JOSE A. MALOLOY-ON,
JR. re One-Half (1/2) portion of a parcel of land with a residential building, located at Barangay
Cogon, Ormoc City, covered by TCT No. 43986, was settled among his heirs per Doc. No.
53; Page No. 12; Book No. XLV; Series of 2013 of Notary Public Conrad P. Conopio. EV MailDec. 2-8, 9-15, & 16-22, 2013
Extrajudicial SettlementNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the property of the late VICENTA GAYO HATAMOSA
re a parcel of land designated as Lot 7758-B-5, Psd-08-015180, situated in Barangay Catayum,
Ormoc City, containing an area of 2,266 sq. m. covered by TCT No. 38321 was settled among
her heirs per Doc. No. 294; Page No. 59; Book No. CXLIV; Series of 2010 of Notary Public
Nepomuceno P. Aparis I. EV Mail Dec. 9-15, 16- 22, & 23- 29, 2013Deed of Extrajudicial Settlement
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the late DOMINGA M. EJADA had left an account
with BDO Unibank, Inc. Ormoc Branch under Account No. 004910102771 was settled and
quitclaimed unto herself by MARILYN E. ESPINOSA per Doc. No. 302; Page No. 61; Book
No. XXVIII; Series of 2013 of Notary Public Ari G. Larrazabal. EV Mail Dec. 9-15, 16-22, &23- 29, 2013
Extrajudicial Settlement with Absolute Sale
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the property of the late JUAN ANORA re a parcel of
agricultural land designated as Lot No. 3671, situated in Brgy. Bung-aw, Hilongos, Leyte, under
TD No. 05-14010-00065, with an area of 4,506.65 sq. m. was settled among his heirs and sold in
favor of GUADALUPE LAWAS FRISCH per Doc. No. 261; Page No. 53; Book No. XXX; Series
of 2012 of Notary Public Jose Nilo Marquez Reoma. EV Mail Dec. 2-8, 9-15, & 16-22, 2013Extrajudicial Settlement and Partition with Sale
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that property of the late JOSE SEVILLA LICARDO,
SR. re a parcel of land designated as Lot No. 203, Case -4, Cadm. 519, situated at Ipil III,
Palompon, Leyte, covered by OCT No. P-95634, containing an area of 388 sq. m. was settled
and partitioned among his heirs and sold in favor of ONOFRE D. LICARDO per Doc. No. 149;
Page No. 30; Book No. LVII; Series of 2013 of Notary Public Wil ma Cordeno-Matuguina. EVMail Dec. 16-22, 23- 29, & 30 Jan. 5, 2013.
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
LOCAL CIVIL REGISTY OFFICEProvince: Leyte
Municipality: Albuera
Republic of the Philippines)
Petition No. CFN-0006-2013
PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME
I, PACIENCIA P. ALMACIN MATUGAS of legal, age, married, Filipino and a
resident of Poblacion, Albuera, Leyte after having been duly sworn to in accordance
with law, hereby declare that:
1) I am the petitioner seeking the change of the rst name in:
a) My Certicate of Live Birth
2) I was born on May 1, 1969 at Albuera, Leyte
3) The birth was recorded under registry number 224
4) The rst name to be change is from JOSEFA to PACIENCIA
5) The grounda for ling this petition are the following:
b) I have habitually and continuously used PACIENCIA and I publicly
known in the community with that rst name;
6) I submit the following documents to support this petition:
a) O.R & comm. Tax cert. b) Police & NBI clearances
c) Voters reg. record d) Employers cert.
We are getting farther away from the true
spirit of Christmas. And the irony of it all is that
we like to aunt our Christmas greetings and
feastings. It has become a Christmas without
Christ. Sadder still is the fact that we dont seemto realize it. Our ignorance and inconsistency
appear invincible.
But I know theres always hope. Thats what
Christmas also tells us. Gods ways are like
water that through the most difcult mountains
can still manage to pass to the sea.
Let Christmas be everyday! Email: royci-
Maybe. Who knows?
Joseph remains the forgotten man of
Christmas 2013, Fr. Arevalo points out. He is
also the forgotten man of so many the years
before Jesus began his own mission for the Fa-
ther; the years before Calvary and its wood and
its nails hammered by other hands than those of
the carpenter who rst taught the Boy about the
tests and travails of a mans world.
Yet even now, he lives. Our national hero
was given his name: Jose. He is ofcially
protector of the Church, patron of the Christian
home, working people and of Christian voca-
tions, specially to patron of journeys, and a t the
end of life, in a most s ignicant way, patron of
the dying.
(Joseph) was the rst to nd her thus, the
rst of all the world. And when her faint smile
called for him to take Him, for a breathless
moment he was rst to know there is no other
blessedness.
Merry Christmas.
CONVENTIONAL WISDOM says little
girls talk earlier while little boys are slow in
that department but a bit more advanced in
motor skills. But is the talking ability reallysex-linked or is it just a social perception?
Studies have conrmed that women talk
considerably more than men do, to about three
times as much. In fact, one study showed that
during an average day women spoke about
20,000 words compared to 7,000 words a day
for the average man.
But why is there such a disparity between
the sexes when it comes to talking?
Scientists showed that female brains have
higher levels of the protein FOXP2, substance
researchers have termed the language protein.
Previous studies have shown that FOXP2 is
essential for speech production in both sexes.
Researchers say that this is not the end-all-
be-all reasoning. Women probably talk more
because they have more to say. They work, take
care of children and entertain much more thanmen do. They also have ideas that need to be
expressed in ways that people can understand.
Talking more provides better explanations of
those ideas.
When women are done talking people get
what it is that they said. Women also have a lot
of feelings and want to express those as well.
Feelings can be complicated and it often takes
quite a bit of talking to fully express those
feelings.
If the brains of men and women are dif-
ferent it is for a reason - that is why research
is important not just to nd out why people
talk more but to discover cures for cancer and
Alzheimers disease. And perhaps even our
sometimes morbid fascination for tabloid news.
Speaking of news and as a footnote to
shared memories, there has been a lot of buzz
in Facebook, Twitter and in various hangoutson campus - about the sudden closing of Hon-
eycomb, a popular eatery at VSU. There have
been loud whispers that greed or envy (or both?)
triggered its closure. It may be true but only the
dominant players know for sure the real score.
A distinct possibility is that certain individu-
als thought that increasing the land rental as
agreed earlier is not enough and decided instead
to seize the Honeycomb building by canceling
the 25-year contract (for the use of the land). A
few people say it is a legal issue but what about
the moral aspects? The law is rmly anchored
alas on a moral foundation after all.
The Honeycomb owners are split on how to
handle this sticky situation. Should they buckle
up for a long, rough ride or just simply rely on
Divine Justice?
Honestly, it would not be a nancial burdenfor them to lose that sequestered building. They
have never placed too much importance on
material possessions anyway. And the recent
typhoon Yolanda violently showed the fragility
of life and properties even as it spared Honey-
comb of its wrath.
They would have preferred not to talk about
the controversy but words like Responsibility
and Truth plus the fact that silence means
implied consent, keep hounding them.
Time has a way of healing all wounds. But
the pain lingers if inicted by someone you
have cared for and trusted. To be told half-truths
and betrayed are twin daggers not unlike when
Julius Caesar lamented: Et tu, Brutus?. In the
end they know that there is, as always, a balanc-
ing of things eventually. Karma comes to mind.
WE FAILED, we feel pain, we sinned but
God treated us well in spite of our shortcom-
ings. If it wasnt for His great love, we willhave no reason to celebrate the good life.
The season of Christmas is a celebration
everyone is looking forward to, especially
the little children. Where they get excited to
receive and open their gifts. The adults are
also anxious what to give and how to give.
Everyone has reasons to celebrate no matter
how devastated we were in the past few days
from calamities and other unforeseen events.
Thanks God, we are alive!
We are merely steward of Gods resources.
We allow God to use us to be His instruments
and therefore we should always have hands
ready to serve. These past few days, people
from all over used generosity and charity to
open up the consciousness of people to serve
and to stretch an extra mile to share and give.
To heed to the call of God to serve, obedienceis our gift to Him.
To truly serve is to allow God to work in
us in a mysterious way. He allowed us to be
broken to serve others. We need to be selsh,
to sacrice, to feel the pain and die and be
born again to a new person in order for us to
be consoled with His grace and to be rewarded
with more. Therefore, if anyone is in Christ,
he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new
has come. 2 Corinthians 5:17
A heart that love. We are merely agents ofGod. We are here for a purpose. If you dont
know your purpose, examine yourself and ask
God. It is a great feeling to live in peace and
with peace in our hearts when we are lled with
love. Romans 12:9 Love must be sincere.
Hate what is evil. Cling to what is good.
My favourite quote in the Bible about love
is in 1 Corinthians 13:8- Love is patient, love
is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is
not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not
self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps
no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in
evil but rejoices with the truth. It always pro-
tects, always trusts, always hopes, and always
perseveres. Love never fails. But where there
are prophecies, they will cease; where there
are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is
knowledge, it will pass away.Need I say more? To all our avid readers
and benefactors, Merry Christmas to one and
all. May the baby Jesus in the manger bless us
all in this season of Advent, may you continue
to serve with love and love alone. I also look
forward that all of us will have a fruitful New
Years ahead. God bless you.
Matthew 2: 13 - 15, 19 - 23Now when they had departed, behold,
an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph ina dream and said, Rise, take the child andhis mother, and ee to Egypt, and remainthere till I tell you; for Herod is about tosearch for the child, to destroy him.
And he rose and took the child and hismother by night, and departed to Egypt,
and remained there until the death ofHerod. This was to full what the Lord hadspoken by the prophet, Out of Egypt have
I called my son.But when Herod died, behold, an angel
of the Lord appeared in a dream to Josephin Egypt, saying, Rise, take the child andhis mother, and go to the land of Israel, forthose who sought the childs life are dead.
And he rose and took the child and his
mother, and went to the land of Israel.But when he heard that Archelaus
reigned over Judea in place of his fatherHerod, he was afraid to go there, and be-ing warned in a dream he withdrew to thedistrict of Galilee.
And he went and dwelt in a city calledNazareth, that what was spoken by theprophets might be fullled, He shall be
called a Nazarene.
e) Birth cert. (NSO & LCRO) f) Birth cert. certicates (children)
g) IDs (UMID, phil. Health, TIN, & PRC) h) Notice of publication7) I have not led any similar petition and that, to the best of my
knowledge, no other similar petition is pending with any LCRO, Court or Philippine
Consulate.
8) Have no pending criminal, civil or administrative case in any court
or any quasi-judicial body.
9) I am ling this petition at the LCRO of Albuera, Leyte, in Accordance
with R.A. No. 9048 and its implementing rules and regulations.
(Sgd.) Paciencia A. Matugas
Petitioner
VERIFICATION
I, PACIENCIA P. ALMACIN MATUGAS , the petitioner, hereby certify that
the allegations herein are true correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
(Sgd.) PACIENCIA P. ALMACIN MATUGAS
Petitioner
SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN to before me this 4th day of December 2013
in the City/Municipality of Albuera, Leyte, petitioner exhibiting his Community Tax
Certicate No. 11355191 issued at Albuera, Leyte on 8-8-13
(Sgd.) MARIA LUISA V. GRANADA
Administering Ofcer
EV Mail Dec. 16-22, & 23-29, 2013
7/22/2019 December 16-22, 2013 Layout
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8 NOTICESDecember 16-22, 2013
Republic of the PhilippinesOFFICE OF THE CLERK OF COURT
& EX-OFFICIO SHERIFFRegional Trial Court8th Judicial Region
Hall of Justice, Ormoc CityEJF NO. R-ORM-13-00019-FC
FOR: EXTRA-JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE OFREAL ESTATE MORTGAGE UNDER ACT 3135 AS
AMENDEDLAND BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES,
Petitioner-Mortgagee,-versus-
SPOUSES IRENE AND RICARDO NOYA,Respondents-Mortgagors.
x-------------------------xAMENDED NOTICE OF EXTRA-JUDICIAL SALE
Upon extra judicial petition for sale under Act3135, as amended, led by LAND BANK OF THEPHILIPPINES with ofce address at Land Bank Plaza,Malate, Manila, against SPS. IRENE AND RICARDONOYA of Purok 5, Brgy. Linao, Ormoc City, to satisfythe mortgage indebtedness which as of September11, 2013 amounts to ONE MILLION EIGHTY SEVENTHOUSAND ONE HUNDRED FORTY SIX PESOS &29/100 (P1,087,146.29), charges, attorneys fees, etc.but excluding expenses of foreclosure, the under-signed Sheriff will sell at public auction on JANUARY16, 2014, from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. at the RegionalTrial Court, Branch 35, Hall of Justice, Ormoc City, tothe highest bidder, for CASH o Managers check andin the Philippine Currency, the following property/swith all its improvements, to wit:
TRANSFER CERTIFICATE OF TITLE NO. t-42769
A parcel of land certain Lot No. 2 of the con -solidated sub-division plan, Psd-08-000721-D, beinga portion of Lots 6106 & 6098 Ormoc Cadatre, situatedin the Brgy. Of Liloan, City of Ormoc, Island of Leyte.Bounded on the NW, points 1-2 by Lot 19; on the NEalong line 2-3 by Lot 1; SE , along line 3-4 by Lot 19; andon SW along line 4-1 by Logt3 xxx containing an areaof ONE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED FOURTEEN(1,414) square meters, more or less.
All sealed bids must be submitted to the under-signed on the above stated time and date. In the eventthe public auction should not take place on the saiddate, it shall be held on January 20, 2014.
Hall of Justice, Ormoc City, December 5, 2013.(Sgd.) VIRGILIO D. LENTEJAS, JR.
SHERIFF IVNOTE: The scheduled auction on November 28,
2013 was cancelled due to the devastation brought byTyphoon Yolanda to the City of Ormoc.
MTROVDL153
EV Mail Dec. 2-8, 9-15, & 16-22, 2013
NOTICE TO THE PUBLICCFN-0004-2013
CCE-0026-2013
In Compliance with the publication requirement and pursuant to OCRG
Memorandum Circular No. 2013-1. Guidelines in the Implementation of the
Administrative Order No. 1 Series of 2012 (IRR on R.A. 10172), Notice is hereby
served to the public that Adelfa P. Abenoja has led with this Ofce, a petition
for change of rst name from ADELTA to ADELFA and correction of entry in
the date of birth from SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 to SEPTEMBER 27, 1967 in
the certicate of live birth of ADELFA P. ABENOJA at Hindang, Leyte and whose
parents are FRANCISCO ABENOJA and REBECCA PASILLOS.
Any person adversely affected by said petition may le his written op -
position with this Ofce not later that
(Sgd.) DEXTER R. SARCON
C/MCR
Name of Newspaper: Eastern Visayas Mail
Place of Publication: Leyte
Date of Publication: EV Mail Dec. 9-15, & 16-22, 2013rrr
Republic of the Philippines
Local Civil Registry Ofce
Province of Samar
City of Calbayog
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
In Compliance with the publication requirement and pursuant to OCRG
memorandum Circular No. 2013-1 Guidelines in the Implementation of the Ad-
ministrative Order No. 1 Series of 2012 (IRR on R.A 10172/Administrative Order
No. 1 Series of 2001 (IRR on R.A. 9048) Notice is hereby served to the public that
ILUMINADA Parido ROJAS has Filed with this ofce a petition for correction ofentry on the day or month in the date of birth from 13 Nov. to 30 Nov. 1948 to the
certicate of Iluminada Robles Parido at Calbayog City Samar and whose parents
are Crispin R. Parido and Esperanza Robles bearing registry number 97-2445.
Any person adversely affected by said petition may le his/her written
opposition with this Ofce not later than ________.
(Sgd.) FE D. QUEROLJICO
City Civil Registrar
EV Mail Dec. 9-15, & 16-22, 2013rrr
Republic of the Philippines
Province of Samar
Municipality of Sto. Nino
OFFICE OF THE MUNICIPAL CIVIL REGISTRAR
Publication Notice
R.A. 10172
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
Date: December 9, 2013
In compliance with Section 7 of R.A. No. 10172, notice is hereby serve
to the public that ROJANIE BAJALLA AQUINO was led with this Ofce a peti-
tion for correction of entry in SEX from MALE to FEMALE in the Certicate of
Live Birth of ROJANIE BAJALLA AQUINO, who was born on August 17, 1979
at Brgy. Balat-guti, Sto. Nino, Samar, and w hose parents are, DANILO AQUINO
and PURITA BAJALLA.
Any person adversely affected by said petition may le his/her written
opposition with this Ofce not later than__________.
(Sgd.) SIMEON N. PARINGIT, JR.
Municipal Civil Registrar
EV Mail Dec. 9-15, & 16 22, 2013rrr
Republic of the Philippines
Local Civil Registry Ofce
Province of Leyte
Municipality of Hilongos
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
In compliance with Sec. 5 R.A. No. 9048 a notice is hereby served to the
public that GUNAMAE V. NARRA has led with this ofce a Petition for Change
of Gender from MALE to FEMALE who was born on JUNE 3, 1982 at Hilongos,
Leyte and whose parents are FELIPE G. NARRA and ROSALIA A. VILLARUEL
Any person adversely affected by said petition may le his/her written
opposition with this ofce not later than fteen (15) days after publication.
(Sgd.) ERNESTO MA. FULACHE
Municipal Civil Registrar
EV Mail Dec. 9-15, & 16-22, 2013
Republic of the PhilippinesREGIONAL TRIAL COURT
8th Judicial RegionBranch 35, Ormoc CityR-ORM-11-00172-CV
For: LEGAL SEPARATIONCONCESA SEJANO CADELINA,
Petitioner,-versus-
PANFILO BULAWIT CADELINA,Respondent.
x--------------------x
MOTION FOR APPROVAL OF A NEW REGIME OFPROPERTY RELATIONS
Plaintiff and Defendant, with the assistance oftheir respective (undersigned) counsels, unto thisHonorable Court, most respectfully state:
1. That they have reconciled and by reason ofsuch reconciliation, this Honorable Court in the Orderdated October 14, 2013 ordered the termination of thelegal separation proceedings;
2. Considering that the herein parties haveadopted a new regime of property relations, i.e., fromConjugal Partnership of Gains to Complete Separa-tion of Property, this Honorable Court directed theparties to submit a veried motion for that purpose,specifying the following:
1. The properties to be distributed to the newregime.
2.Those properties to be retained as separateproperties of each spouse.
3. The names of all creditors, their addresses andamounts owing each.
3. In compliance to the aforementioned direc-tive of this Honorable Court, the parties hereby submitthe following list of distribution of properties:
3.1 The PLAINTIFF shall have the followingproperties: TCT No. 6383, Lot No. 1441- M (District 26),TCT No. 53743, Lot NO. 1509 (Can-adieng), of Lot #5110-A, TCT # 26890 (Linao), of Lot # 2222-E-2-B-1,TCT # 1664 (F. Ablen, Cogon), of Lot # 5160, TCT #TP 512 (Naungan), of Lot # 5854-K-1, TCT # 48012(House & Lot in Salvacion), Lot # 5273-A-8, TCT #47328, Lot # 5273- A-10-D, TCT # 47333 (Tambulilid),TCT # 49739-300 sq. m. , TCT # 49737-300 sq. m. TCT# 49709-500 sq.m. TCT #49735-200 sq. m, TCT # 49733-200 sq. m. , TCT #49708- 500 sq. m. , TCT # 49710-500sq. m. , TCT # 49744-170 sq. m. TCT # 49810-100 sq. m.TCT # 49808-100 sq. m. TCT # 50246-100 sq. m., TCT# 49746 -150 sq. m. , TCT # 49748-150 sq. m. , TCT #49799-100 sq. m., TCT # 49797-100 sq. m. , TCT # 50252-100 sq. m. TCT # 50254-100 sq. m. TCT # 50249-100sq.m. , TCT # 50251-100 sq. m. TCT # 50342-100 sq.m,TCT # 50340-100 sq.m, TCT # 49854-150 sq.m. ,TCT #49827-100 sq.m, TCT # 49825-100 sq.m, TCT # 49749-150 sq. m, TCT # 49823-100 sq. m. TCT # 49829- 100
sq m, TCT # 49831-100 sq.m. TCT # 50609-100 sq.m,TCT # 50605 -100 sq .m, TCT # 50611-100 sq. m, TCT# 50607-100 sq.m, TCT # 50608-60 sq. m, TCT # 50338-100 sq. m, TCT # 50337-100, TCT # 50336 -100 sq.m,TCT # 49855 -150 sq.m, TCT # 49856-150 sq. m. TCT# 49857- 150 sq.m, TCT # 49858-286 sq.m, TCT #49953-100 sq.m, TCT # 49947-100 sq.m, TCT # 49952-100 sq.m, TCT # 49951-100 sq.m. TCT # 499949-100sq.m, TCT # 50238-100 sq.m. , TCT # 50242-100 sq.m., TCT # 50240-101 sq. m, TCT # 49861-150 sq.m TCT# 49912-150 sq.m, TCT # 49914-150 sq.m, TCT # 49915200 sq. m. TCT # 49816-100 sq.m. TCT # 49815-100sq.m. , TCT #49814-100 sq.m. TCT # 49813-100 sq.m.TCT #50248-132 sq.m. TCT # 49805-100 sq.m. TCT #49803-100 sq.m. , TCT # 49802-100 sq.m. TCT # 50255-192 sq. m., TCT # 49860-150 sq.m., TCT # 49918 -150sq.m. , TCT # 49946-100 sq.m. TCT # 49950-100 sq.m.TCT # 49944-100 sq.m. TCT # 50241-100 sq.m., TCT #50239-100 sq. m., TCT # 50243-100 sq.m. TCT # 50244-146 sq.m., TCT # 49911-150 sq.m, TCT # 49913-150sq.m., TCT # 49916- 150 sq.m, TCT # 49917-150 sq.m,TCT # 49919-150 sq.m, TCT # 49730-200 sq.m, TCT #
51201-200 sq.m. , TCT # 51202-200 sq.m., TCT # 51203-200 sq.m., TCT # 49859-142 sq.m. , TCT # 50247-100sq.m. TCT # 49747-150 sq.m. TCT # 49800-100 sq.m.TCT # 49804-100 sq.m, TCT # 49798-100 sq.m. , TCT# 49796-100 sq. m, TCT # 50253-100 sq.m. TCT #49801-100 sq.m. , all in /Dayhagan, TCT # 16709-150sq.m. , TCT # 16710-150 sq.m, TCT # 16711-150 sq.m,TCT # 16718-150 sq.m. TCT # 16719-150 sq.m., TCT #16720-150 sq.m, TCT # 16724-150 sq.m, TCT # 16725-150 sq.m, TCT # 16726-150 sq. m. TCT # 16730-150sq.m. TCT # 16731-150 sq.m. TCT # 16732-150 sq.m.TCT # 16736-100 sq.m. TCT # 16737-100 sq.m., TCT# 16738-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16742-100 sq.m. , TCT #16743-100 sq.m, TCT # 16744-100 sq.m, TCT # 16748-100 sq.m., TCT # 16749-100 sq.m., TCT # 16750-212sq.m., TCT # 16754-102 sq.m., TCT # 16760-300 sq.m.,TCT # 16761-300 sq.m, TCT # 16762-300 sq.m., TCT #16766-300 sq.m, TCT # 16767-300 sq.m. TCT # 16768-300 sq.m., TCT # 16772-300 sq.m., TCT # 16773-300sq.m. TCT # 16778-100 sq.m.,TC # 16779-100 sq.m. ,TCT # 16780-100 sq.m., TCT # 16781-100 sq.m. TCT #16786-100 sq.m. TCT #16787-100 sq.m. TCT # 16788-100 sq.m, TCT # 16789-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16794-100
sq.m. TCT # 16795-100 sq.m. TCT # 16796-140 sq.m. ,TCT # 16797-120 sq.m. , of Lot under TCT # 16798-1,000 sq. m. TCT # 16808-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16809-100sq.m. TCT # 16810-100 sq.m. TCT #16811-100 sq.m., TCT # 16816-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16817-100 sq.m. ,TCT #16818-100 sq.m, TCT # 16819-100 sq.m. ,TCT #16824-100 sq.m. TCT #16825-100 sq.m. TCT # 16826-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16827-100 sq.m, TCT # 16832-100sq.m. , TCT # 16833-100 sq.m. , TCT # 16834-100 sq.m.,TCT # 16835-100 sq.m., TCT # 16840-100 sq.m., TCT #16841-100 sq.m., TCT # 1842-100 sq.m, TCT # 16843-100 sq.m, TCT #16847-203 sq.m, TCT # 16837-100 sq.m.TCT # 16838-100 sq.m, TCT # 16839-100 sq.m, TCT #16844-100 sq.m, TCT # 16845-100 sq.m, TCT # 16846-100 sq.m, TCT # 16733-150 sq.m, TCT # 16751-100sq.m, TCT # 16752-100 sq.m. TCT # 16753100 sq.m,TCT #16791-100 sq. m, TCT # 16792-100 sq.m, TCT# 16793-100 sq.m, all i n Masarayao; TCT #45192-182
sq.m. , TCT # 45241-150 sq.m. TCT # 45189-200 sq.m,TCT # 45191-150 sq.m., TCT #45563-150 sq.m, TCT #45564-150 sq.m, TCT # 45565-150 sq.m, TCT # 45949-196 sq.m, TCT # 45950-200 sq.m, TCT # 45952-200sq.m., TCT # 45953-189 sq.m, TCT # 40533-300 sq.m,TCT # 45188-185 sq.m, TCT # 45268-150 sq.m, TCT #45190-299 sq.m, TCT # 45242-150 sq.m, TCT # 45566-150 sq.m, TCT # 45567-150 sq.m, TCT # 45568-150sq.m, TCT # 45572-218 sq.m, TCT # 45948-200 sq.m,TCT #45951-200 sq.m, TCT # 45954-200 sq.m, TCT #40697-300 sq.m, TCT # 44720-150 sq.m, TCT # 45240-150 sq.m, TCT # 45948-200 sq.m, all in Dolores; and
P5,118,229.50 (1/2 of cash asset)3.2 The DEFENDANT shall have the following
properties: TCT # 6382, Lot No. 1441-L (District 26),TCT # 53744, Lot No. 1511 (Can adieng), of Lot #5110-A, TCT # 26890 (Linao), of Lot # 2222-E-2-B-1,TCT # 1664 (F. Ablen, Cogon), of Lot # 5160, TCT #T -512 (Naungan ), of Lot # 5854-K-1, TCT # 48012(House & Lot In Salvacion), Lot # 5273-A-7, TCT #47327, Lot # 5273- A-10-F, TCT # 47334 (Tambulilid),TCT # 49697-500 sq.m, TCT # 49698-500 sq.m, TCT #49706-300 sq.m, TCT # 49738-300 sq.m, TCT # 49736-200 sq.m, TCT # 49734-200 sq.m, TCT # 49743-263sq.m, TCT # 49745-150 sq.m, TCT # 49811-100 sq.m,TCT # 49809-100 sq.m, TCT #49807-100 sq.m, TCT #50343-100 sq.m, TCT # 50250-100 sq.m, TCT # 50341-100 sq.m, TCT # 50339-100 sq.m. TCT # 49826-100sq.m, TCT # 49828-100 sq.m, TCT #49824-100 sq.m,TCT # 49822-100 sq.m, TCT # 49830-100 sq.m, TCT #50604-100 sq.m, TCT # 50610-100 sq.m, TCT # 50606-100 sq.m, TCT # 50612-100 sq.m, TCT # 50613-97sq.m, TCT # 49920-261 sq.m, TCT #49948-100 sq.m,TCT # 49699-300 sq.m, TCT # 49700-300 sq.m, TCT #
49701-300 sq.m, TCT#49701-300 sq.m, TCT # 49702-300 sq.m, TCT # 49703-300 sq.m, TCT # 49704-300sq.m, TCT #49705-300 sq.m, TCT # 49732-200 sq.m,TCT # 49731-200 sq.m, TCT #51204-200 sq.m, TCT #51205-337 sq.m, TCT # 51206-125 sq.m, TCT # 50344-98sq.m., TCT # 49711-300 sq.m, TCT # 49712-300 sq.m,TCT # 49713-300 sq.m, TCT # 49714-300 sq.m, TCT #49715-300 sq.m., TCT # 49716-300 sq.m, TCT # 49717-300 sq.m, TCT #49740-300 sq.m, TCT # 49741-300 sq.m,TCT # 49742-300 sq.m, TCT # 49812-100 sq.m, TCT #51207-100 sq.m, TCT # 51209-93 sq.m, all in Dayhagan;TCT # 16715-150 sq.m, TCT # 16716-50 sq.m. , TCT #16717-150 sq.m, TCT # 16721-150 sq.m, TCT # 16722-150 sq.m, TCT # 16723-150 sq.m, TCT # 16727-150sq.m, TCT # 16728-150 sq.m, TCT # 16729-150 sq.m,TCT # 16734-100 sq.m, TCT # 16735-100 sq.m, TCT #16739-100 sq.m, TCT # 16740-100 sq.m, TCT # 16741-100 sq.m, TCT # 16745-100 sq.m, TCT # 16746-100sq.m, TCT # 16747-100 sq.m, TCT # 16757-300 sq.m,TCT # 16758-300 sq.m, TCT # 16759-300 sq.m, TCT #16763-300 sq.m, TCT # 16764-300 sq.m, TCT # 16765-300 sq.m, TCT # 16769-300 sq.m, TCT # 16770-300sq.m, TCT # 16771-300 sq.m, TCT # 16774-100 sq.m.
TCT # 16775-100 sq.m, TCT # 16776-100 sq.m, TCT #16777-100 sq.m, TCT # 16782-100 sq.m, TCT # 16783-100 sq., TCT # 16784-100 sq.m, TCT # 16785-100 sq.m,TCT # 16790-100 sq.m, of Lot under TCT # 16798-1,000 sq.m, TCT # 16804-100 sq.m, TCT # 16805-100sq.m, TCT # 16806-100 sq.m, TCT # 16807-100 sq.m,TCT # 16812-100 sq.m, TCT # 16813-100 sq.m, TCT #16814-100 sq.m, TCT #16815-100 sq.m, TCT # 16820-100 sq.m, TCT # 16821-100 sq.m, TCT # 16822-100sq.m, TCT # 16823-100 sq.m, TCT # 16828-100 sq.m,TCT # 16829-100 sq.m, TCT # 16830-100 sq.m, TCT #16831-100 sq.m, TCT #16836-100 sq.m, TCT # 16707-150 sq.m, TCT # 16708-150 sq.m, TCT # 16799-100sq.m, TCT # 16800-100 sq.m, TCT # 16801-100 sq.m,TCT # 16802-100 sq.m, TCT # 16803-100 sq.m, TCT #16755-300 sq.m, TCT # 16706-150 sq.m, (for refund ofinstallment to buyer), all in Masarayao; TCT # 45243-150 sq.m, (for refund of installment to buyer), TCT #45957-150 sq.m, TCT # 40292 -150 sq.m, TCT # 45947-200 sq.m, TCT # 40288-150 sq.m, TCT # 40287-150sq.m, TCT # 40286-150 sq.m, TCT # 40480-300 sq.m,TCT # 40478-314 sq.m, TCT # 40476-321 sq.m, TCT #
40678-325 sq.m, TCT # 40485-300 sq.m, TCT # 45261-300 sq.m, TCT # 40679-329 sq.m, TCT #40529-300 sq.m,TCT # 40528-300 sq.m, TCT # 45194-150 sq.m, TCT #44719-150 sq.m, TCT #45201-175 sq.m, TCT # 45200-175 sq.m, TC # 45199-175 sq.m, TCT #44718-175 sq.m,TCT # 45258-200 sq.m, TCT # 44714-200 sq.m, TCT #45208-204 sq.m, TCT # 45206-150 sq.m, TCT # 45228-153 sq.m, TCT # 45229-159 sq.m, TCT # 45230-1147sq.m, TCT # 45956-150 sq.m, TCT # 45186-150 sq.m,TCT # 45187-150 sq.m, TCT # 45571-150 sq.m, TCT #45570-150 sq.m, TCT # 45569-150 sq.m, TCT # 45235-150 sq.m, TCT # 45234-150 sq.m, TCT # 45226-162sq.m, TCT # 45225-150 sq.m, TCT # 45219-150 sq.m,TCT # 45218-150 sq.m, all in Dolores and P5,118,299.50(1/2 of cash asset).
3.3 The following properties, all located inBrgy. Tambulilid, Ormoc City, which are presentlyunder court litigations, shall exclusively belong tothe defendant and all legal expenses, applicable taxesdue on the properties, damages that may awarded bythe court for or against the herein parties, shall be forthe sole account of the defendant: TCT # 47324, Lot #5273-A-3; TCT # 47325, Lot # 5273-A-4; TCT # 47326,
Lot # 5273-A-5; TCT # 47330, Lot # 5273-A-11; TCT #47331, Lot # 5273-A-10-A; TCT #47332, Lot # 5273-A-10-C and TCT # 47335, Lot # 5273-A-10-I.
3.4 The following properties, which were in-herited by the defendant shall remain his exclusiveproperty including the fruits thereon: Lot # 10400; Lot# 10371, Lot # 10139, Lot # 10198, Lot # 10066, Lot #10401, Lot # 10545, Lot # s 9549 & 9550, Lot #795, Lot# 542 and Lot # 468.
3.5 The properties ,which were agreed to be co-owned by the Parties as stipulated in the CompromiseAgreement entered into by the Parties on September26, 2013, shall now be divided into two (2) portionswith each Party owning one portion, as follows:
(a) of Lot No. 1457, covered by TCT No.33725, more particularly that portion in Annex Ahereof labeled with the name Concesa S. Cadelina,shall belong to the plaintiff, while the portion labeled
with the name Panlo B. Cadelina shall belong tothe defendant;
(b) of Lot No. 11765-C-3, covered by TCT No.38226, more particularly that portion in Annex Bhereof labeled with the name Concesa S. Cadelina,shall belong to the plaintiff, including the right to col-lect the rents from the existing and future tenants onthe commercial spaces erected (Doors 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and6) on such portion of land, while the portion labeledwith the name Panlo B. Cadelina shall belong tothe defendant including the right to collect the rentsfrom the existing and future tenants on the commercial
spaces erected (Doors 7, 8, 9 and 10) on such portion ofland. The Cadelina Engineering Works, which is alsoerected on that portion of land labeled with PanloB. Cadelina per Annex B shall solely belong to thedefendant, including all its equipments and/or tools,the management and all the income thereof;
Upon the approval of this motion and the com-promise agreement, the contracts of lease executedby the defendant and the existing tenants on thecommercial spaces belonging to the plaintiff shallcorrespondingly be amended to the effect the newLESSOR, the herein plaintiff.
Accordingly, paragraphs G, G-1, G-2 and H of theCompromise Agreement dated September 26, 2013 arehereby modied and/or amended.
(c) of Lot No. 5-G-10, covered by TCT No.36863, more particularly that portion in Annex Chereof labeled with the name Concesa S. Cadelina,shall belon to the plaintiff, while the portion labeledwith the name Panlo B. Cadelina shall belong to thedefendant;
Provided, that with respect to Lot 1457 which is
being used as a conjugal dwelling by the parties, noneof the parties can sell her/his share, except to eachother nor demand a physical partition or subdivisionof the improvements erected thereon, which shallremain as co-owned by the parties;
4. Within FIFTEEN (15) DAYS from theFINALITY of the approval by the Court of this Mo-tion together with the Compromise Agreement, thedefendant shall turn-over the physical possession ofthe transfers certicate of titles, tax declarations andsuch other relevant documents covering the parcels ofland conveyed and transferred in favor of the plaintiffper this Motion and the Compromise Agreement datedSeptember 26, 2013, except those properties whichneed to be physically subdivided, which shall beturned over within the same period of FIFTEEN (15)DAYS after the issuance of the titles and tax declara-tions in the names of the plaintiff. All expenses in thephysical partition, issuance of the titles, tax declarationshall be equally shared by the parties;
4.A. All the terms and conditions contained in theCompromise Agreement entered into on September26, 2013 that are not inconsistent herewith are hereby
afrmed and conrmed by the parties;5. The parties hereby state that they have no
known creditors.WHEREFORE, it is most respectfully prayed
of this Honorable Court that the foregoing be dulyconsidered as sufficient compliance to the Orderdated October 14, 2013 and that the instant motionbe APPROVED.
Ormoc City, Philippines. October 17, 2013.Respectfully submitted:
(Sgd.) CONCESA S. CADELINAPlaintiff
(Sgd.) PANFILO B. CADELINADefendant
Assistant by:(Sgd.) LORETO M.DURANO
Counsel for Plaintiff(Sgd.) EVERGISTO S.ESCALON
Counsel for DefendantVerication
We, CONCESA SEJANO CADELINA andPANFILO BULAWIT CADELINA, both of legal age,
married, Filipino citizens and residents of Ormoc City,Leyte, Philippines, after having been duly sworn to inaccordance with law, hereby depose and say, THAT:
1. We are the plaintiff and defendant respec-tively in the above entitled case;
2. We have caused the preparation and lingof the foregoing MOTION together with the attachedCompromise Agreement;
3. All the allegations contained therein aretrue and correct of our personal knowledge or baseon authentic records;
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have hereunto setour hands this 26th day of October 2013 at OrmocCity, Philippines.
(Sgd.) CONCESA S. CADELINAPlaintiff- Afant
Senior Citizen No. 00531Issued on October 23, 2009
(Sgd.) PANFILO B. CADELINADefendant- Afant
SSS No. 06-0844176-0Issued in Ormoc City
SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN TO before me this
26th day of October 2013 at Ormoc City, Philippines,afants exhibited to me their respective identicationcards the details of which are indicated below theirrespective names above to prove their respectiveidentities.
(Sgd.) EVERGISTO S. ESCALONNotary Publc
for Ormoc City, Kananga, Matag-ob, Merida andIsabel, Leyte
Until December 31, 2013Commission No. ORM -11-12-009
474 Rizal St., Ormoc CityAttorneys Roll No. 32549
PTR No. 3452685Ormoc City, January 4, 2012
IBP Lifetime Member No. 00881TIN 113-492-978
Doc. No. 449;
Page No. 90;Book No. XXX;Series of 2013EV Mail Dec. 16-22, & 23-29, 2013
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Today, the hugely successful series can be enjoyed online through
a dedicated website called Treasures of the Heart, designed andlaunched by Soka Gakkai, the revered organization that Dr. Ikedaleads. The stories are now available in English, Spanish and Chinese.
(treasures-of-heart.com)Anak TV highly recommends the website to parents and teachers
who will nd the site useful because there are adjunct games, quizzesand discussion points. Child users can even post photographs andcomments or download colorful illustrations to create calendars, posters,
bookmarks, cards and other stationery.The treasures-of-heart.com website can be accessed easily from
any personal computer, smartphone or tablet.
In January, Anak TV will link up with the Department of Education toencourage more teachers to explore and use the website for classroom
discussion of values. PR
Parents, teachers, kids urged
to check out Treasures of the
Heart online
Prince and Whit e Horse, one of the
segments of Treasures of the Heart
PAL spreads Christmas cheer
Philippine Airlines, through its PAL Foundation, recently hosted aChristmas party for children-victims of typhoon Yolanda now temporarilyhoused at the Tent City in Villamor Airbase. The event featured parlor
games, story-telling activity, and giving of gifts. Players of BarangayGinebra San Miguel, PAL pilots and fight attendants, and columnist/host Cito Beltran also volunteered to join the event. PR
Cebu Pac slashes 75% off for
2014 travel
CEBU PACIFIC Air (PSE:CEB) offers a 75% off seat sale on all its
33 domestic destinations, from December 13 to 16, 2013 or untilseats last. This is for travel from January 1 to March 31, 2014.
What better way to start 2014 than with exploring the Philippines.We encourage everyone to take advantage of Cebu Pacics extensivenetwork, which can take guests to some of the worlds best diving and
surng spots, as well as family-friendly and eco-adventure attractions,said CEB VP for Marketing and Distribution Candice Iyog.
Guests can book 75% off seats to any of the following destinations:
Bacolod, Boracay (Caticlan), Busuanga (Coron), Butuan, Cagayan deOro, Camiguin, Cauayan (Isabela), Cebu, Clark, Cotabato, Davao,
Dipolog, Dumaguete, General Santos, Iloilo, Kalibo, Legaspi, Laoag,
Manila, Naga, Ozamiz, Pagadian, Puerto Princesa, Roxas, San Jose(Mindoro), Siargao, Surigao, Tacloban, Tagbilaran, Tawi-Tawi, Tugueg-
arao, Virac and Zamboanga.CEBs newest route between Davao and Bacolod is also included
in the seat sale. Travel period is from January 25, 2014, when the route
is launched, until May 31, 2014.Meanwhile, CEB also offers great deals on select international
routes, for travel from January 15 to April 30, 2014. Up for grabs areP99 seats from Manila to Osaka or Guangzhou.
P699 seats are also available for ights from Manila to Phuket,
Kota Kinabalu or Xiamen; from Cebu to Bangkok; and, from Clark orIloilo to Hong Kong.
Those traveling from Manila, Cebu or Clark to Singapore can also
buy P1,499 seats. The same goes for those traveling from Manila toBangkok, Siem Reap or Hong Kong. PR
TACLOBAN CITY - After a
four-day visit to the Philip-
pines and hopping to dif-
ferent places devastated by
Typhoon Yolanda, UNICEF
Executive Director Anthony
Lake said he was deeply im-
pressed by the spirit of the
people and the communities
working with the govern-
ment, United Nations and
other partners to rebuild
their lives and their future.
Lake visited Eastern Vi-
sayas on December 14 and 15
where he met and spoke with
children, teachers and parents
at numerous schools, learning
spaces, child-friendly tents and
vaccination sites in Leyte and
Eastern Samar.
He said the massive ty-
phoon disrupted the lives of
nearly six million children
and destroyed the homes of
1.4 million children and their
families.
While I had followed the
reports of progress closely
from UNICEFs New York
Headquarters, no statistics
can adequately capture the
physical and human challenges
that remain, said Lake. I
came here not only to see the
progress rst-hand, but also to
thank our UNICEF staff who
have been here from the start
and will continue to support
the rebuilding effort for the
long term.In a press statement, it
was learned that UNICEF
has mobilized experts from
all over the world to support
the relief effort, increasing the
staff on the ground to over 100
people to coordinate a plan for
recovery to strengthen services
for children.
This will include work-
ing with the government and
partners in supporting back-to-
learning efforts; strengthening
the child protection system,
working on reestablishing and
rehabilitating water systems
and the cold chain for delivery
of safe vaccines and providingservices to children threatened
by malnutrition.
Eight days after Yolanda
struck, the childrens agency
helped restore water to the city
and hopes to assist in restoring
safe water to more than 60
communities. The Philippine
government re-opened schools
in the area on December 2,
and principals and educators
were already working to help
children resume learning even
in the absence of books and
classrooms.
All over the country, com-
munities are working together
to clean schools; 193 class-room-sized tents have been
erected for close to 20,000
students, and over 50,000
children are benetting from
UNICEF school supplies.
UNICEF is providing child-
friendly tent