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“A sweet friendship refreshes the soul.” - Proverbs 27:9 Always FREE! Your source for local news and entertainment INSIDE... July 12 - 14, 2020 • Vol. 1, Issue 109 Alderman Resigns: Kevin McConnell is moving Page 2 After the storm: Governor gets aid after May storms Page 8 Pets need our help: COVID-19 leaves pet out in the cold Page 13 WEATHER...page 13 Highs in the mid to upper 90s, lows in the 70s. Metal and chrome glimmered in the sunshine during the Ozark Mountain Run vintage Ford truck festival in Branson this past Friday and Saturday. (Photo by Daryl Weather. ‘Crazy ‘bout a Ford truck’

2 • July 12 - 14, 2020 LOCAL By Karen Halfpop, Branson Globe Digital/Production Director Branson Alderman Kevin McConnell is resigning from the Board of Aldermen, effective August 7, 2020. According to a City of Branson news release, McConnell has served on the board, representing Ward III for three years and was currently serving Kevin McConnell. (FILE) a term that will end in April 2021. Submitted to Branson Globe Reeds Spring High School is making adjustments to Senior Week. Administrators say these changes are not ideal but are done in an effort to balance the challenges of keeping everyone safe - including social distancing and wearing masks - while still giving the Class of 2020 the experiences they deserve. Guests in attendance will be limited, however some events will be broadcast on the school district’s YouTube channel. Here are the Senior Week details: PROM Date: Saturday, August 1 Location: Stonebridge Time: 6 p.m. Masks will be required and everyone entering the building will have their temperature taken. AWARDS NIGHT Date: Monday, August 3 McConnell stated that he will be moving out of Ward III and will no longer be able to serve on the Board of Aldermen for Ward III per city code, according to the release. In his resignation letter, McConnell said, “It was a pleasure serving the City of Branson.” The news release from the City of Branson stated McConnell will be officially honored Location: RSMS Auditorium Time: 6 p.m. Each student will be limited to two guests to allow for social distancing in the auditorium. Masks are strongly encouraged. This event can also be viewed live on the RSWolvesTV YouTube channel. GRADUATION PRACTICE Date: Thursday, August 6 New Location: Carl Langley Field Time: 10 a.m. for his service at the regular Board of Aldermen meeting on July 28, 2020. Applications for this Alderman position will be made available for any qualifying full-time resident of Ward III. According to State statute, the Mayor will choose a name from the applicant list and that applicant will need to be approved by the Board of Aldermen. The Reeds Spring releases revised Senior Week schedule GRADUATION Date: Thursday, August 6 New Location: Carl Langley Field Time: 8 p.m. Each student will be limited to eight guests. Students will be seated six-feet apart on the football field. Guests in the stands are to observe social distancing. Masks are strongly encouraged. This event can also be viewed live on the RSWolvesTV YouTube channel. bransonglobe.com McConnell resigns from Board of Aldermen; Ward III representation sought applicant’s term will run until the April 2021 elections. Applications are now being accepted for the position and will be open for two weeks. Those interested in applying or finding out more about the qualifications and duties of a Branson Alderman can find the full application on our website, www.bransonmo.gov and at Branson City Hall. Meet the candidates different this year Due to COVID-19, the Taney County Federated Republican Women’s Group found a different way this election year to let voters meet the Republican primary candidates. According to group member Pam Snowden, candidates will post videos on the group’s Facebook page. To hear the whole story, tune in to At Your Service with Scott McCauley, Monday July 13 at 9 am on 106.3 FM KRZK. COVID-19 in Stone and Taney counties, by the numbers: (As of 7/10/2020. Data provided by TCHD and SCHD websites) DEATHS CONFIRMED POSITIVE CASES TANEY COUNTY 116 STONE COUNTY 12 RECOVERED CASES TANEY COUNTY 52 STONE COUNTY 8 TANEY COUNTY 3 STONE COUNTY 0

bransonglobe.com LOCAL Woman is county’s third death during pandemic Special to Branson Globe The Taney County Health Department announces the third death from COVID-19 in Taney County. The individual was a woman in her 80’s. “We are heartbroken to announce the third death in our county from COVID-19,” said Lisa Marshall, Director of the TCHD. “We want to express our sincerest condolences to the patient’s family and loved ones.” Marshall went on to state, “This is a time for each community member to take social responsibility to slow the spread of COVID-19. Please wear a face covering or mask, follow social distancing guidelines, Submitted to Branson Globe The northbound lane of Veterans Boulevard at the Main Street intersection will be closed beginning at 6 a.m. through 9 a.m. Monday, July 13, 2020, for the wash your hands and stay home if you are sick.” TCHD continues to urge those with COVID-19 symptoms to seek testing through their healthcare provider. Our news partner Hometown Daily News was one of several media outlets that received information about a possible confirmed case of COVID-19 at the K-1 Camp outside of Branson. While no official confirmation has been received as of Friday morning, a story published on the NBC News Website Thursday indicates that a parent of a camper at the K-1 camp received an e-mail from officials at Kanakuk Monday night that K-1 had a confirmed COVID installation of an HVAC unit. Traffic delays are expected in this area. Motorists are encouraged to follow the detour signs that will be in place and use an alternate route if possible. Please be aware case and was ending their session midterm. Springfield’s NBC Affiliate KY-3 asked for confirmation from Kanakuk Communications Director Jeff Mason but only got confirmation of the cases being worked from the K-2 Camp in Stone County. Kanakuk did release a statement later confirming the 34 positive cases that were confirmed with onsite testing at the K-2 Camp in Lampe. For more information about COVID-19 Taney County, contact the Taney County Health Department at 417-334-4544. In Stone County, call the Stone County Health Department at (417) 272-0050. Veterans Boulevard lane closure Monday, July 13 of signage, traffic cones, and work crews in the marked Work Zone. For questions regarding this project, please contact the Public Works Department at 417-3378559. Thank you for reading the Branson Globe! SYCOYA is a 2 year old male. He was owner relinquished because the owner couldn’t care for him anymore. He is good with kids, cats and dogs. This sweet babe is very curious and loving. Come by the shelter and meet this cutie. Meet Hachi, Our July Pet of the Month www.turtlecreekbranson.com Hachi is a great dog and an emotional support animal. He's unique when it's time to work. He is very energetic when it's time to play. He brings peace and happiness to his owner's home. info@turtlecreekbranson.com July 12 - 14, 2020 • 3 Pets of the Week Tri-Lakes Humane Society, Reeds Spring Call (417) 272-8113 or visit www.tri-lakeshumanesoc.org LINDA is a 4 year old female Terrier mix. She was left with a friend to babysit and the owner never came back to get her. She is house trained and loves to play. She is good on a leash and gets along well with other dogs but don’t ask her to share her food. She is a very very sweet dog and loves to be loved.

4 • July 12 - 14, 2020 LOCAL bransonglobe.com

bransonglobe.com LOCAL The Launderette offers laundry service plus Free Dry Friday, Popcorn Monday By Jay Mejia, Branson Globe Special News Correspondent Branson’s The Launderette is giving away hot air with Free Dry Friday throughout July. “We’re seeing lots of tourists coming in, locals, too,” said Suzie Toney, who together with husband Rick and daughter LaTisha, owner, operate Branson’s only full-service laundromat. “Free Dry Friday is just something we came up to offer folks something fun just like free popcorn Monday,” chimed in Rick Toney. Located at 1447 Missouri 248 Suite G next to the Country Mart, The Launderette offers a wide variety of services and family fare to occupy folks while doing their laundry. The Launderette is housed in a spacious 4,000-square-foot setting that features 56 new, sleek Dexter washer and dryer machines. Customers can pay with an application using their debit or credit card or take advantage of a drop-off bundle service for clothes, comforters, rugs and bathmats. The Launderette offers a children’s play area, pinball and video games, large screen television, a wide array of comfortable seats and picnic benches and plenty of vending machines for snacks and drinks. Business has been brisk despite the pandemic. “We opened our doors with a city permit March 18 just before Spring Break,” Rick Toney said. “Two days later the city ordered the shutdown. We’re still getting lots of customers though even during that time. Things are better now.” Toney said he is most proud of the Dexter machines. “We did research and we ran across Dexter to be the best,” he said. “Dexter is an American-made outfit based in Iowa,” he added. “It’s an employee-owned business that’s been around since 1894. You can’t beat Dexter for quality.” July 12 - 14, 2020 • 5 Sheila (right) and husband Stephen Deconcini of Branson enjoy a good read while seated in the comfortable settng and washing clothes at The Launderette. (Branson Globe photo by Jay Mejia) Help Support Branson local businesses @bransonlocalbusinesses.com

6 • July 12 - 14, 2020 OPINION By Daniel Darling, senior vice president of the National Religious Broadcasters Grieved over the more than 100,000 COVID-19 deaths in the United States? Well, you must be a liberal. Grieved over bankrupt businesses and shattered livelihoods? You must be a right-wing hack. Wearing a mask to church? You’ve been duped! Nervous about COVID-19 spread during protests? You must not care about justice. On and on it goes. We are living in Kim Rohde Publisher (417) 872-2951 lkimrohde@yahoo.com Brenda Meadows Editor & Staff Writer (417) 231-7601 info@BransonGlobe.com David Stoltz News Correspondent (228) 355-2900 itcdls@gmail.com Gary Groman, a.k.a. The Ole Seagull Columnist Emeritus KD Michaels Staff Writer (228) 355-2900 kdmichaelsbranson1@gmail. com Rob Doherty Account Representative & Distribution Manager (504) 583-8907 robd@bransonglobe.com Karen Halfpop Digital/Production Director production@ BransonGlobe.com Submit a letter to the editor: Letters to the editor that are sent via e-mail and are fewer than 400 words are given preference. Published or unpublished letters become the property of the newspaper and will not be returned. All letters must include name, address, and verifiable phone number. BransonGlobe Your source for local news and entertainment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. info@BransonGlobe.com • Phone: (417) 334-9100 • Fax: (417) 334-3767 • 1447 US Hwy. 248, Suite EE, Branson, MO 65616 BransonGlobe.com one of the most strange and difficult years in American history and instead of stories to tell our children about how we all came together, we’ll have to recount how Americans argued with other Americans while a virus ravaged our cities and communities. What’s interesting is that while all of us agree that the pandemic has been politicized, we all seem to point the finger at everyone else for doing the politicization. Conservatives accuse Democrats of over-reacting in an election year. Liberals accuse Republicans of valuing profits over lives. And many journalists are glad to exacerbate the red state vs. blue state COVID-19 comparisons. But COVID-19 doesn’t care about our political divisions. The virus is relentless and refuses to play our partisan games. The latest resurgence has seen spikes in the bluest of blue states: California, and the reddest of red states: Texas. Even more mystifying, both states seem to track similarly, even though California shut down early and Texas shut down late. Even the reopenings and the protests aren’t a great predictor, with some re-opened states seeing a spike and some not so much while some cities where there were mass protests seem to have avoided a surge while some are seeing an alarming number of new coronavirus cases. We are learning more and more about the virus every day and our responses are getting smarter and more targeted. And our best and brightest minds are working feverishly to develop vaccines and treatments to hold back this deadly contagion that threatens our most vulnerable. But we cannot succeed if we are bransonglobe.com COVID-19 doesn’t care about our political divide divided. We need less finger-pointing and more cooperation. We need our institutions to display greater transparency. We need leaders with credibility in a time of cynicism. It erodes public trust when public officials shame one kind of public gathering and encourage another. It’s not very thoughtful when others confuse wearing a mask with an infringement of liberty. And it fans the flame of division when media outlets let bias and sensationalism shape their coverage instead of informing the public and reporting the facts. What we need are leaders willing to speak candidly and take measures, not guided by social media chatter or media pressure, but based on the data in front of them and informed by human dignity. We need hope and realism, faith and science, courage and civility. All of us are tempted to politicize the pandemic, to read the daily stream of news through the lens of our own preconceptions. We desperately want the worst to be true about our ideological opponents because it fills us with a sense of the rightness of our own cause. But this is counterproductive in a flourishing society. Instead, we should each commit to working harder to get all the facts, to avoid knee-jerk conclusions, and to resist passing along incomplete information. If we were honest, we might find that it is not always “those guys” politicizing the pandemic. It might be me. It might be you. @BransonGlobe BransonGlobe @BransonGlobe #Branson Globe

bransonglobe.com LOCAL Investment banking: Profile of a successful manager By Bob Hodgson, Investment Banker A key to successful management is the relationship between the manager and his or her staff. It’s the manner in which managers manage people that separate the ordinary people from the good and the exceptional. The best managers: Keep the big picture in mind: • Are consistent in their behavior. • Treat their employee’s time as if it is as important as their own. • • Are unafraid to question their management. Earn the trust of those they manage. Managers should not: • Become intoxicated by positional power. Play favorites. • • Go off halfcocked. • Avoid conflict. • Feel threatened by the abilities of their employees. Past performance is an indicator of future performance. Managers should have: • A proven track record in a large company or as a division chief officer, president or general manager with bottom line responsibility. • Has in-depth knowledge of the industry. Can demonstrate a true desire to build a great company. An outstanding manager is able to bring out talents from their subordinates and they have mastered these • qualities: • • Creativity. Creativity separates excellence from normalcy. Boundaries. Limitations and guidelines define the working structure. An excellent manager is able to work within the structure and discover how to expand beyond the boundaries. • Awareness. People with keen awareness are able to sense • • • Investment Banker Bob Hodgson. (FILE) what others are feeling and thinking. • Knowledge. A strong manager lives, breathes and eats knowledge and this becomes transparent to others. Devotion. A strong manager is devoted to the success of the project and of all team members. They have proven results by moving a team to the end result. Inspiration. The best leaders are those who will be unpretentiously be themselves and respect, connect and inspire others. • Openness. Openness allows the leader to quickly change directions and respond to creative thinking. • Lighthearted. Strong managers know how to keep conversations professional and lighthearted. Being a happygo-lucky attitude projects confidence, reduces overall stress with employees and it goes a long way in persuading others to your views. Focus. Excellent managers are skillful at focusing on the big picture while paying attention to the small details. Amvest Financial Group is a leading international investment banking firm based in Kansas City representing clients with sales from $10 million to over $6 billion. www.amvest.com July 12 - 14, 2020 • 7

8 • July 12 - 14, 2020 STATE JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — President Donald Trump has approved Missouri’s request for a federal disaster declaration for severe storms in early May. Missouri Gov. Mike Parson’s office said Friday in a news release that the declaration means federal assistance will be available to help 19 counties with the expense of responding to and recovering from the storm that churned up 70 mph winds. May storm damage near Gideon, Missouri in May, 2020. (AP) One person died after strong winds knocked a tree into a home in western Missouri. The winds also tore the roof off a Mansfield school building. And there were several bransonglobe.com Missouri to get federal help for costly May 2020 storms reports of downed trees, with thousands of people in the Kansas City metro area without power. The preliminary damage and response cost estimates totaled more than $9.3 million. Parson’s office said some of the federal money will be used to help repair and replace damaged electric power systems, buildings, bridges, roads and other public infrastructure. The counties included in the disaster declaration are Bates, Butler, Carter, Dallas, Douglas, Dunklin, Henry, Hickory, Howell, Laclede, New Madrid, Oregon, Pemiscot, Polk, Ripley, Shannon, Stoddard, Wayne, and Wright.

bransonglobe.com July 12 - 14, 2020 • 9 Crazy ‘bout a vintage Ford truck Just a few of the great trucks on display at Ozark Mountain Run vintage Ford truck festival held this weekend in Branson. All photos by Daryl Weather.

10 • July 12 - 14, 2020 STATE bransonglobe.com Kansas City strips marijuana possession from city code KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City will no longer punish people for marijuana possession, effectively decriminalizing it throughout much of the city. City council members voted 9-4 on Thursday to strip the crime from the city code, The Kansas City Star reported. The change does not legalize its recreational use or change Missouri law. Users can still be charged for possession by county prosecutors who decide to pursue those cases. Kansas City residents voted overwhelmingly in 2017 to eliminate jail time for possession of fewer than 35 grams of marijuana, limiting penalties to an ordinance violation and $25 fine. In Jackson County, prosecutor Jean Peters Baker had already pledged to stop charging most people for possession. But in parts of Kansas City that lie in Clay, Platte and Cass counties, people could still face state possession charges. Kansas City’s chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, which led the 2017 campaign, urged prosecutors in Clay, Platte and Cass counties to join Jackson County prosecutors in not charging low-level marijuana offenses. “Statewide reforms on this issue are needed so that we don’t have a patchwork of laws that more harshly impact some over others,” said Jessica Kelly, the group’s spokeswoman in Kansas City. ‘Girlfriend Fun’ puzzle answer key P O P B E A D N E C K L A C E G H O P S C O T C H X S L L O D R E P A P O I B M C Y Y I L S J S I T U T E M T W P L Y U E S A T T E A S T B E K E E B H R C A A A T A P S G O C Y R B P C I C T A A P B Y K T U R E C S A T O H S B D P T V B E K N O E A R N I S T T A Y E L E A E S S E N L I P R D S L U C Y A L K E L E Y C S A B P I Y N S U P R D S T I N B D I P E T E R R A B B I T W Y P P U P D N U O P M Y A I D

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12 • July 12 - 14, 2020 STATE bransonglobe.com Missourians can be legally denied birth-control coverage By Mary Schuermann Kuhlman, Courtesy of Public News Service JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Missourians can now be legally denied birth-control coverage in their employer’s health insurance, after a new U.S. Supreme Court ruling. The seven-to-two decision sides with the Trump administration, by upholding an exemption to the Affordable Care Act requirement that health insurers cover birth control without copays. The decision means employers and universities can refuse to offer contraceptive health care in insurance policies by citing religious or moral objections. Supporters say it’s a win for religious freedom, but Mallory Schwarz - executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Missouri - contends it’s discriminatory. “This decision jeopardizes health-care access for hundreds of thousands of Missourians who already face systemic obstacles to accessing a range of reproductive health care,” says Schwarz. “This especially impacts people of color, communities of low-income, and LGBTQ folks.” The court ruled that the Trump administration has the authority to require the exemptions, and sent the case back to the lower courts. Schwarz sees the ruling as a blow to reproductive freedom for American women, and notes that access to full reproductive health care is also on the line in Missouri. “Republican politicians in our state have spent decades enacting barrier after barrier between Missourians and affordable, accessible reproductive health care,” says Schwarz. “From birth control and family planning services, to medically unnecessary restrictions on abortion access and limiting criteria for Medicaid coverage.” There are estimates that the rule change could cause at least 70,000 women to lose insurance coverage for their birth control within a year.

bransonglobe.com STATE July 10 - 11, 2020 • 13 Pandemic renews concerns about pet population By Mary Schuermann Kuhlman Public News Service - MO JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Animal welfare groups say the pandemic is exacerbating the overpopulation crisis for cats and dogs. According to Lisa Lange, senior vice president of communications with “People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals,” more than six million cats and dogs enter shelters in the U.S. each year. And with COVID-19 safety protocols in place, she explains shelters are unable to let people come in for pet adoptions, or host off-site adoption events. “And yet there’s still a flow of animals coming in, made worse by people being out of a job,” said Lange. “So, we’re getting reports from around the country that people are giving up their animals because they can’t afford to keep them anymore.” A survey conducted before the pandemic estimated that 44% of Missouri pet owners struggle to afford their pets. Lange says prevention is the best solution, and her group encourages spaying and neutering for cats and dogs. According to PETA, one female dog and her puppies can result in the births of 67,000 dogs in just six years. Instead of purchasing a pet from a breeder, Lange urges Missourians to always adopt from animal shelters. Right now, many are holding appointment-based adoptions. She notes a silver lining to the pandemic has been the uptick in people becoming pet foster parents, which takes pressure off the shelter system. “Really, in the best of all possible worlds, shelters should have a small number of animals,” said Lange. “But we shouldn’t be seeing animals breeding anymore. We have far too many homeless animals, all of whom are deserving of good homes. But we need to bring that number down. “ She adds that low-cost and free spay-and-neuter programs, often available through humane societies or veterinarians, are key to the overpopulation crisis. And she says people should encourage their local governments to subsidize these programs. Here in the Tri-Lakes, animal shelters have also seen many pets relinquished or abandoned when their owners can no longer care for them. Two such animals were featured in Friday’s edition of the Branson Globe. Contact the TriLakes Humane Society in Reeds Spring at (417) 272-8113. You can also get in touch with Shepherd of the Hills Humane Society at (417) 337-7387, or Taney County Animal Control at (417) 332-0172. (Digital/Production Director Karen Halfpop contributed to this story.) Kittens wait for a good home, but with COVID-19 safety protocols in place, shelters are unable to let people come in for pet adoptions or host off-site adoption events. (Courtesy Public News Service) Your Branson Area Weather Source Loving The Ozarks FRI 93 Chance For a Isolated Showers & T-Storms 72 Branson Area 5 Day Outlook SAT SUN MON TUE 94 92 96 98 Chance For Showers & T-Storms 70 70 73 Mostly Sunny Mostly Sunny Partly Cloudy

14 • July 12 - 14, 2020 STATE bransonglobe.com MDC says watch cavities in trees to spot wildlife By Bill Graham, Missouri Dept. of Conservation Kansas City, Mo. – A freshly chipped, round hole in the tree limb’s outer bark led to a newly excavated cavity, revealing a woodpecker’s handiwork. The woodpecker chipped inside the dead locust tree limb this spring and created a cavity, possibly for a nest site. But a thunderstorm snapped the limb from the tree. The limb broke apart at the hollow spot when it hit the ground, a loss to the woodpecker but a lucky new hideaway for a ground-dwelling creature. Nature sometimes tears down what it builds, but nothing is ever wasted, including a hole in a tree. The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) suggests that observing cavities in trees alive or dead, standing or fallen, is a good way for people to spot watchable wildlife using a hole as home. Creatures use hollows created by fungi, woodpeckers, and squirrels as nesting and hiding spots. “I’m sure if the locust limb had not fallen a woodpecker or squirrel would have used the cavity,” said Krista Noel, MDC natural history biologist. Missouri has more than 20 species of birds that use tree cavities as nesting or roosting sites. They have neighbors. Squirrels, raccoons, bats, bees, and other creatures also use hollows in trees as a place to hide or live. Tree cavities can be small or big enough for a bear. Fungi can enter a tree through a damaged spot and consume heartwood without killing the tree. Nutrients that keep the hollow tree’s branches and leaves alive moves up and down in the outer rings of the tree trunk, not in the center. Big trees that appear solid throughout when standing often turn out to be hollow. A black bear may make a large, hollow oak blown down by a summer storm its winter den site. Woodpeckers are pioneers at creating small hollows in limbs or chipping into a tree trunk. They may peck away at dead wood looking for insects to eat and keep going. Squirrels, a member of the rodentia order of wildlife, may use their strong teeth to gnaw larger the hole a woodpecker started. Other birds or small mammals finding a cavity unoccupied may move in for a season, to nest in spring or ride out the winter cold. The hollowed locust limb that fell to the ground can be used, too. Perhaps a lizard or skink needs a hiding spot? “Even on the ground, whether in the woods or a fencerow, a wood cavity still serves as shelter for smaller animals,” Noel said. “I can see a mouse using it for shelter on the ground or perhaps a toad. A snake might use it to escape the heat of the day temporarily, and of course insects would use it.” A dead limb or tree trunk that poses a possible hazard to people and property should be removed. But if a dead tree, or at least the trunk, can be safely left standing in the woods or yards, they serve watchable wildlife, such as bluebirds. For more information about how den trees and snags serve wildlife, visit https://short.mdc.mo.gov/Z8h. A woodpecker carved holes in this locust limb, one big enough for a nest cavity. When a thunderstorm dropped it to the ground, the cavities became available for ground-dwelling animals to use as shelter. Photo by Bill Graham, Missouri Department of Conservation

bransonglobe.com STATE JEFFERSON CITY – Though not as dramatic as the name would imply, pavement “blowups” are the summer’s version of potholes, created by a combination of moisture, weakening pavement and temperatures consistently reaching 90 degrees or more across the state. The Missouri Department of Transportation urges motorists to stay aware of road surfaces during these hot summer days. Pavement blow-ups are fractures that occur when a roadway surface expands at a crack or joint where moisture has seeped in. That crack weakens the pavement and the heat causes the pavement to buckle and warp, creating holes in the surface. Despite the term, the pavement does not actually explode. “Since it is difficult to know where or when a pavement blow-up will happen, our maintenance staff continually monitors road conditions on state routes,” said MoDOT State Maintenance Director Natalie Roark. “When you encounter a blow-up in the road, slow down and report the location to MoDOT as soon as possible so our maintenance crews can make repairs. Remember, never make a cellphone call from behind the wheel. Buckle Up Phone Down.” Be alert to MoDOT crews making emergency roadway repairs. Slow down and move over for maintenance workers and other emergency personnel. It’s the law. Motorists can call MoDOT’s toll-free customer service center to report pavement blow-ups at 1-888-ASK-MODOT (2756636). Plan your summer trip at MO on the GO, MoDOT’s suite of mobile information tools that shares the latest news on work zones, road conditions and traffic incidents. You can access it online at modot.org/mo-go. July 12 - 14, 2020 • 15 Pavement blow-ups could become more prevalent during summer months Hot temperatures can cause bumpy roads. (Shutterstock) Have a news tip? Send it to us at info@ bransonglobe.com

16 • July 12 - 14, 2020 SPORTS CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR will move its August road course race from Watkins Glen in upstate New York because of state health restrictions, and the event will shift instead to the road course at Daytona International Speedway. The move means the Cup Series will make its debut on Daytona’s road course, which is used by the IMSA sports car series and incorporates part of the famed 2.5-mile oval. The race on Aug. 16 was necessary to move from Watkins Glen because NASCAR cannot meet New York’s quarantine requirements for out-ofstate visitors. “This is an unprecedented time in the history of our nation and Watkins Glen International,” racetrack President Michael Printup said. “The dynamic situation we are all confronting is impacting our daily lives and activities in unimaginable ways.” NASCAR will return to Daytona two weeks later as scheduled for the regular season finale on the oval. The Aug. 29 event is unchanged from the original 2020 schedule that has been patched back together following a 10-week shutdown because of the coronavirus pandemic. NASCAR said Wednesday it will determine if fans are allowed at Cup races on a market-by-market basis, in accordance with local and state guidelines. NASCAR is expected to run its Nov. 8 season finale as scheduled, barring changes to health protocols during the 10-week playoff series. The revisions announced Wednesday cover six Cup races at three tracks. Michigan International Speedway will host a doubleheader before NASCAR’s debut on the Daytona road course. After that race, Dover International Speedway will host a doubleheader, and the playoff field will be finalized the next week at Daytona. In this Aug. 5, 2018, file photo, Denny Hamlin (11), Chase Elliott (9) and Erik Jones (20) come around Turn 1 during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race in Watkins Glen, N.Y. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson, File) NASCAR was not scheduled to compete on the road course at Daytona until next February in the exhibition Busch Clash to kick off the season. But many of the ideas for next year’s schedule have been forced into the present as NASCAR attempts to complete its 38-race schedule. bransonglobe.com NASCAR moving Watkins Glen race to Daytona road course The All-Star race next Wednesday night at Bristol Motor Speedway will be the fourth midweek race since NASCAR resumed on May 17 and just the second time in event history the race won’t be held at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Track officials shifted the race to Tennessee, where up to 30,000 fans will be able to attend, because North Carolina is not allowing large gatherings. Pocono already hosted Cup races on consecutive days, so Michigan and Dover make for three doubleheader weekends this season. The Cup Series also had its first doubleheader with IndyCar last weekend at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. NASCAR has adopted one-day shows without practice or qualifying, and the starting lineups have been set by random draws or inversions based on the last race’s finishing order. Many of the elements NASCAR was forced into trying in 2020 could be seen on next year’s schedule. NASCAR will race Sunday at Kentucky Speedway. It will be the 13th Cup race since NASCAR resumed racing eight weeks ago.

bransonglobe.com July 12 - 14, 2020 • 17

18 • July 12 - 14, 2020 SPORTS (AP) The Big Ten Conference announced Thursday it will not play nonconference games in football and several other sports this fall, the most dramatic move yet by a power conference because of the coronavirus pandemic. The conference cited medical advice in making its decision and added ominously that the plan would be applied only “if the conference is able to participate in fall sports.” Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren said it was “much easier if we’re just working with our Big Ten institutions” in terms of things like scheduling and traveling. “We may not have sports in the fall,” Warren told the Big Ten Network. “So we just wanted to make sure that this was the next logical step to always rely on our medical experts to keep our student-athletes at the center of all of our decisions and make sure that they are as healthy as they possibly can be from a mental, a physical, an emotional health and wellness standpoint.” There has been deep unease that the pandemic will deal a blow to fall sports after wiping out hundreds of games, including March Madness, this past spring. More than a dozen schools have reported positive tests for the virus among athletes in the past month but the bad news picked up this week as the Ivy League canceled all fall sports and Stanford announced it was cutting 11 varsity sports. The Big Ten decision is the biggest yet because Bowl Subdivision football games — more than 40 of them, all moneymakers in different ways — were simply erased. And the move didn’t wash away fears the entire fall season could be in jeopardy. “I am really concerned, that is the question of the day,” Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said on a conference call after the announcement. “I was cautiously optimistic. bransonglobe.com Big Ten scraps nonconference football games due to pandemic I’m not even there now.” “By limiting competition to other Big Ten institutions, the conference will have the greatest flexibility to adjust its own operations throughout the season and make quick decisions in real-time based on the most current evolving medical advice and the fluid nature of the pandemic,” the Big Ten said. The other big conferences, the SEC, ACC, Big 12 and Pac-12, have all indicated they intend to play fall sports.

bransonglobe.com SPORTS CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Jimmie Johnson is just as confused as everyone else about his plight with the coronavirus. A positive test caused the seven-time NASCAR champion to miss the first race of his career, and it was followed three days later by a negative test. He never suffered any symptoms and was tested only after his wife, bothered by seasonal allergies, received a positive test. Was it a false positive? Were he and wife, Chani, carrying the virus for some time before their tests? He has no answers. “There’s a lot of speculation there,” Johnson said Friday, a full week after testing positive. “I’m the most frustrated person out there, especially living in a world of facts that we do. To not have the facts drives me bananas.” Johnson sat out last Sunday’s race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which snapped his streak of 663 consecutive starts, longest among active drivers. But he tested negative Monday and Tuesday and was cleared by NASCAR to race again this weekend at Kentucky Speedway. That first negative test sent his constantly changing emotions to a different level. “My first response was just anger. I started cussing and used every cuss word that I knew of and I think invented a few new ones,” Johnson said Friday. “It was just so weird — the anger — because I’ve been asymptomatic. Anger hits. And then speculation in my mind. And then it’s, ‘Wait a second, there is nothing good that can come of this. No one knows. I don’t know. It’s just time to move on. ’ “Then I got very excited and starting looking at the facts that I’ve only missed one race,” he added. “I feel like I am more on the optimistic side of things and out of the dark head space that I was in and moving in the right direction.” Both and he and his wife isolated from their two young daughters as he waited to be tested again. He said Chani Johnson feels fine and, aside from some allergies, is asymptomatic. He is certain he is fit to race, and tested himself in the Colorado mountains this week. “I feel great. I’ve been at altitude this entire time,” Johnson said. “I rode up to 10,500 feet on a bicycle and felt perfectly fine.” Johnson is scheduled to retire from full-time NASCAR racing at the end of this season and had never missed a race in his 19-year Cup career before sitting out the Brickyard 400. The 44-year-old was required to have two negative COVID-19 tests in a 24-hour span and be cleared by a doctor to return to racing. NASCAR approved him to return to the No. 48 Chevrolet on Wednesday. He is 15th in the Cup standings, just inside the playoff cutoff mark, and he received a waiver for the championship race should he qualify. He’s eager to get back to work after a trying week with his family. “Just emotional and a journey that you go through worrying about your safety, your family’s safety, watching a race with somebody else in your race car and the emotion that goes with that,” Johnson said. “Coming to grips with the reality of all that has been challenging, but I’ve always subscribed to growing through these tough moments, and I feel like I’m a smarter, stronger person today experiencing all this.” NASCAR President Steve Phelps last weekend said the series believes its procedures are working, and the sanctioning body has not revealed any July 12 - 14, 2020 • 19 Jimmie Johnson confused, frustrated after virus scare testing results. Two teams have confirmed positive tests among unidentified employees, but Johnson is the only known driver to seek a test. He declined to give his opinion on NASCAR’s protocols. “I don’t know how to add clarity or advice in what changes need to take place,” he said. “I unfortunately feel that there’s a lot to still be learned in the professional and medical field on this and I, like everyone else, are eagerly awaiting on that instruction and that knowledge, a vaccine, better testing, better screening. “There’s just more questions than answers for a lot of us. I certainly don’t have the answers for everybody.” Jimmie Johnson celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Clash auto race at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux, File)

20 • July 12 - 14, 2020 NATIONAL coronavirus patients in intensive care. cases in Iowa jumped Friday by the highest one-day increase since May as state health department data also reflects increasing hospitalizations and Known positive cases increased by 744 in the last 24 hours as of Friday morning to 33,756. It’s the highest one-day jump since May 26 when state data showed an increase of 795 new positive cases. The number of deaths rose Friday by three to 742. While some of the increase in new cases may be a result of increased testing, the data also shows the state’s percentage of positive cases has risen to 9.3%, the highest level since late May. Of the more than 360,000 Iowans tested, more than 326,000 received negative results, state data shows. Still, hospitalizations and the numbransonglobe.com Missouri neighbor sees one-day surge of 744 confirmed coronavirus cases (AP) New positive ber of people in intensive care have gradually increased since early July with 169 patients with COVID-19 in a hospital as of Friday. That’s still considerably lower than the peak of more than 400 people hospitalized in May. Comet streaking past Earth, providing spectacular show Comet Neowise soars in the horizon of the early morning sky in this view from the near the grand view lookout at the Colorado National Monument west of Grand Junction, Colo., Thursday, July 9, 2020. (Conrad Earnest via AP) CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A newly discovered comet is streaking past Earth, providing a stunning nighttime show after buzzing the sun and expanding its tail. Comet Neowise swept within Mercury’s orbit a week ago. Its close proximity to the sun caused dust and gas to burn off its surface and create an even bigger debris tail. Now the comet is headed our way, with closest approach in two weeks. NASA’s Neowise infrared space telescope discovered the comet in March. Scientists involved in the mission said the comet is about 3 miles (5 kilometers) across. Its nucleus is covered with sooty material dating back to the origin of our solar system 4.6 billion years ago. The comet will be visible around the world until mid-August, when it heads back toward the outer solar system. While it’s visible with the naked eye in dark skies with little or no light pollution, binoculars are needed to see the long tail, according to NASA. Astronauts aboard the International Space Station have already caught a glimpse. NASA’s Bob Behnken shared a spectacular photo of the comet on social media late Thursday, showing central Asia in the background and the space station in the foreground. “Stars, cities, spaceships, and a comet!” he tweeted from orbit.

bransonglobe.com NATIONAL NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Dixie Chicks are no more. Breaking their ties to the South, The Chicks are stepping into a new chapter in their storied career with their first new music in 14 years. The Texas trio of Emily Strayer, Martie Maguire and Natalie Maines have been teasing new music for a year, and “Gaslighter” finally drops on July 17 when the nation is embroiled in divisive politics, cancel culture and reckoning with inequality. The timing is right for their voices to be heard again. “It just seemed like a good reflection on our times,” said Maines. “In 20 years, we’ll look back at that album cover and title and remember exactly what was going on in the country right then.” “Gaslighter” is a slang term, inspired by a 1944 Ingrid Bergman film, to describe a psychological abuser who manipulates the truth to make a person feel crazy. In recent years, it’s been used to describe powerful men like Harvey Weinstein or Donald Trump. “I think most everybody has a gaslighter in their lives somewhere,” said Strayer. “But, yeah, it was so weird how it echoes our current administration.” As the best-selling female group in RIAA history, The Chicks appealed to generation of country fans that saw themselves in the band’s stories, whether it was “Wide Open Spaces” or “Cowboy Take Me Away.” After three independent albums, their first major label record in 1998 sold 13 million copies in the U.S. alone. With Maguire on fiddle and Strayer on banjo, they were all steeped in bluegrass and classic country, but relished in fun country-pop on crossover songs like “Goodbye Earl.” They were country music’s next big thing until suddenly the door was slammed on them. In 2003, as then-President George Bush was preparing to invade Iraq, the trio were playing a show in London when Maines announced they were ashamed that the president was from Texas. The fallout became country music lore, a warning to stay away from political talk, especially of the liberal kind. They were booed on awards shows, radio stations pulled their music off the air and fans destroyed their CDs. Maguire only recently showed her daughters the 2006 documentary called “Shut Up and Sing” that showed how the backlash affected them behind the scenes. “I was putting off showing them because I have one that’s 11 and I just thought she was a little young,” Maguire said. “I thought she might be upset by just the death threat stuff.” Instead, her daughters, living in a social media generation when everyone is afforded an opinion, were confused by the reaction to Maines’ tame comments compared to the vitriolic criticism lobbed by politicians and pundits every day. “And it was just funny hearing 16- and 11-year-olds going, ‘Why? What? Wait. She said that? And people got so mad?’” said Maguire. The trio are all now parents of teenagers when youth activists are taking the lead on gun control, climate change and racial inequality. Their song “March March,” which was released the same day they announced they were dropping the word Dixie from their name, was inspired by student-led demonstrations over gun control in 2018. On “Juliana Calm Down,” their daughters and nieces are namechecked in a song that encourages young women to keep their heads held high when struggling through life’s obstacles. Maines is speaking to her two teenage boys on “Young Man,” a song for divorced parents who feel like they’ve let down their kids. Still fans have been quick try to associate very specific lyrics from “Gaslighter” to Maines’ contentious divorce to actor Adrian Pasdar. Between the three women, they’ve had five divorces, so they said people shouldn’t read too literally into the words. “I think people had it in their minds that this album is about one thing and one thing only, and it’s not,” said Maines. “People are jumping to conclusions.” But it’s unlikely the fans who turned their back on The Chicks 17 years ago are going to feel any differJuly 12 - 14, 2020 • 21 With new name and album, The Chicks’ voices ring loud again ent about the band’s return. “We have to say things when the time is right to say them, and we’ve been quiet for 10 years, so get ready,” Strayer said with a laugh. SIZZLING SUMMER SPECIAL! 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 thru AUG 31 Not valid with any other offer. Exp. 8/31/20 Showtimes: 3pm or 8pm 1600 West 76 Country Blvd. Branson, MO Call for Tickets: 877-SIX-SHOW theSIXshow.com

22 • July 12 - 14, 2020 CURIOUSITIES Doggy deliveries help Colombians shop during pandemic MEDELLIN, Colombia (AP) — Eight-year-old Eros trots through the streets of this hilly city several times a day with a straw basket in his jaws, taking vegetables, fruit and packaged foods to customers of the El Porvenir mini-market. The chocolate Labrador retriever is paid with treats and massages of his furry head. Eros carries a basket of bread from the El Porvenir mini-market as he makes a delivery on his own in Medellin, Colombia. The eight-yearold chocolate Labrador remembers the names of customers who have previously rewarded him with treats, and with some practice, he has learned to go to their houses on his own. “He helps us to maintain social distancing,” said Eros’ owner Maria Natividad Botero, amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (AP Photo/Luis Benavides) “He helps us to maintain social distancing” says Eros’ owner Maria Natividad Botero. “And people love it when we send the dog.” Eros wasn’tt always a star. He was accepted into the family begrudgingly by Botero after repeated requests by her son to adopt a dog. But Botero and the rest of the family quickly fell in love with the pup. And when they opened a mini market four years ago in the hilltop neighborhood of Tulipanes, he started to accompany Botero and her kids to make deliveries. Eros doesn’t know how to read addresses. But he remembers the names of customers who have previously rewarded him with treats. And with some practice, he has learned to go to their houses on his own. “He knows the names of five or six of our customers” Botero said. “So I send the merchandise with a receipt in the basket, and my customers pay me through a bank transfer.” As COVID-19 cases in Colombia have climbed to more than 3,000 new infections each day, city governments are imposing social distancing measures, and limiting the number of days per week that people can go shopping. That’s turned delivery workers into an increasingly important part of the economy. Eros might not know that he’s become an essential worker. But he is happy to help his owners and collect his daily pay. “He’s quite a glutton” Botero said. “He won’t leave your house until you give him a treat.” Firm to offer balloon rides from Alaska to the edge of space ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A company wants to use an advanced balloon to fly customers from Earth’s surface in Alaska to the highest reaches of the planet’s atmosphere. Florida-based startup firm Space Perspective plans to use the Pacific Spaceport Complex in Kodiak to serve as one of the launch sites for the vehicle, called the Spaceship Neptune, The Anchorage Daily News reported Sunday. The balloon rides will be manned by a flight crew taking eight pasbransonglobe.com sengers in a pressurized capsule suspended beneath a hydrogen balloon the size of a football stadium. Passengers could pay an estimated $125,000 for a six-hour journey. Mark Lester, CEO of Alaska Aerospace Corp., said the high-altitude rides will be available from Kodiak in a few years and will support Alaska tourism. “You will have people from around the world who want to come to Alaska and see the northern lights from the edge of space,” Lester said. Passengers will begin with a twohour ascent to about 19 miles above Earth. They will then be able to post on social media about the experience or send data. “Neptune then makes a twohour descent under the balloon and splashes down, where a ship retrieves the passengers,” along with the capsule and balloon, Alaska Aerospace said. Capsule recovery would occur in the waters around Kodiak Island and the Aleutian Island chain, depending upon the seasonal wind patterns. The balloon design is derived from technology NASA has used for decades to fly large research telescopes, Space Perspective said. EXP. 7/31/20

bransonglobe.com HISTORY July 12 - 14, 2020 • 23 Today in History: Movies, music and more • 1191 English King Richard I the Lionheart and Crusaders defeat Saracens in Palestine • 1690 Battle of Boyne: in Ireland, Protestant King William III defeats English Catholic King James II • 1790 French Revolution: The Civil Constitution of the Clergy is adopted, putting the Catholic Church in France under the control of the state • 1804 Former United States Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton dies after being shot in a pistol duel by Vice President Aaron Burr • 1843 Mormon leader Joseph Smith says God allows polygamy • 1861 Wild Bill Hickok reputed to have shot and killed David McCanles, possibly his first kill. Hickok later acquitted after found he acted in self defense. • 1863 In New Zealand, British forces invade Waikato, home of the Maori King Movement, beginning a new phase of the wars between Maori and Colonial British • 1913 150,000 Ulstermen gather and resolve to resist Irish Home Rule by force of arms; since the British Liberals have promised the Irish nationalists Home Rule, civil war appears imminent • 1940 Frederick McKinley Jones receives a patent for an air conditioning unit for trucks, helping to change long-haul carriage of food and blood • 1943 World War II: Battle of Prokhorovka - Russians defeat German forces in one of the largest ever tank battles • 1951 Mob tries to keep black family from moving into allwhite Cicero, Illinois • 1954 President Eisenhower put forward a plan for an interstate highway system • 1957 US Surgeon General Leroy Burney connects smoking with lung cancer • 1970 Thor Heyerdahl crosses the Atlantic ocean on the raft Ra II, arrives in Barbados from Morocco after 57 days • 1972 Democrats nominated George McGovern for US president in Miami, Florida • 1982 FEMA promises survivors of a nuclear war will get their mail • 1990 Boris Yeltsin quits the Soviet Communist Party • 1993 Don Imus begins broadcasting to Boston on WEEI (590 AM) • 1998 South African President Nelson Mandela accompanies Queen Elizabeth II on a coach drive through the streets of London • 2013 Malala Yousafzai addresses the United Nations and calls for worldwide access to education • 2016 Bernie Sanders endorses fellow Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in a speech in New Hampshire Movies & TV • 1976 1st “Family Feud” game show debuts on ABC hosted by Richard Dawson • 2018 “Misson: Impossible - Fallout”, directed by Christopher McQuarrie and starring Tom Cruise, Henry Cavill, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg and Rebecca Ferguson, premieres in Paris Music • 1962 Rolling Stones 1st performance (Marquee Club, London) • 1993 Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical “Sunset Promenade” opens in London • 1990 “Les Miserables,” opens at National Theatre, Washington • 1995 Enrique Iglesias releases his first album, “Enrique Iglesias” Sports • 1901 Cy Young wins his 300th game • 1921 Babe Ruth sets record of 137 career home runs • 1954 Major League Baseball Players Association founded • 1959 NBC uses cameras to show catchers signals during Yankee-Red Sox game • 1979 “Disco Demolition Night” at Comiskey Park: fans go wild destroying disco records and cause the White Sox to forfeit second game of a doubleheader to the Detroit Tigers • 1996 Michael Jordan signs a NBA contract for 1 year for $25 million • 1997 Cubs play in their 5,000th consecutive game without being no-hit Birthdays • 1817 Henry David Thoreau, American naturalist and pacifist (Walden Pond), born in Concord, Massachusetts (d. 1862) • 1854 George Eastman, American inventor (Kodak camera, founder of the Eastman Kodak Company), born in Waterville, New York (d. 1932) • 1864 George Washington Carver, African-American agricultural scientist (studied the peanut), born in Diamond Grove, Missouri [or Jan 10] (d. 1934) • 1884 Louis B. Mayer, American film producer and creator of the star system (MGM), born in Minsk, Russian Empire (d. 1957) • 1895 Oscar Hammerstein II, American lyricist who worked with Richard Rodgers (Sound of Music), born in NYC, New York (d. 1960) • 1908 Milton Berle, Harlem • comedian (Uncle Miltie, Mr Television), born New York (d. 2002) 1943 Christine McVie, English rock vocalist (Fleetwood MacGot A Hold on Me), born in Bouth, England • 1951 Cheryl Ladd, American actress (Charlie’s Angels, Purple Hearts), born in Huron, South Dakota • 1978 Topher Grace, American actor • 1997 Malala Yousafzai, Pakistani activist for female education and the youngest-ever Nobel Prize recipient, born in Mingora, North-West Frontier Province in NYC,

24 • July 12 - 14, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS bransonglobe.com DEADLINES FOR CLASSIFIEDS Wednesday’s paper: Tuesday 9 am Friday’s paper: Thursday 9 am Sunday’s paper: Friday 11 am Email: info@bransonglobe.com Call: (417) 334-9100 NOTICES & MEETINGS TO ENSURE THE BEST RESPONSE TO YOUR AD... Please make sure your ad is correct in the first issue in which it appears. The Branson Globe is responsible for one day’s charge of the space occupied by the error. If your ad is not correct, call us immediately to have it corrected. SERVICES OFFERED DON’T PANIC ... SELL YOUR STUFF! FREE ESTIMATES FROM ground up remodels roofs, deck, additions, pole-barns, flooring and complete build 5yr labor warranty 417-699-1635 07/31 FREE FOOD FOR THOUGHT about Jesus Food Bank Program. $10 gas free first visit only. Watch a 40-minute DVD about Jesus, I will answer any questions you might have with the Bible truth. Please call 417-337-3772 for an appointment. 2-3 people at a time. 07/31 ACE HOME IMPROVEMENT Heating & Air HVAC Service & Repair, Doors, Windows, Decks, Fences, Pressure Washing, Int & Ext. Painting, Siding, Roofing, Flooring, Tile & Drywall. Handyman Work! Call Ryan 417-335-1347 07/31 VENDORS WANTED VINTAGE CHIC BOUTIQUE in Forsyth, has booths available, great store, location, traffic and rent. Call afternoons Tue-Sat. 417-677-6673 07/10 Support Our Local Veterans! HELP WANTED SERVICES OFFERED RESIDENTIAL SERVICES OFFERED AND COMMERCIAL service and installation 0% interest financing 100% satisfaction guarantee. GOFF HVAC and Solar Energy 417-334-3681 goff-hvac.com 07/31 GARAGE SALE ESTATE SALE-JULY 24TH25TH, 8 am until 1 pm. 8326 US Hwy 160, Walnut Shade. Quality furniture, cookware, unique decorative items & framed art, gardening, small appliances, and NO clothing. Dealers welcome. Preview large items 7/23 8 am until noon. 07/24 GARAGE SALE FURNITURE FOR SALE -July 24 & 25, 8 am until 1 pm 8326 US Hwy 160, Walnut Shade. Indoor sale, solid wood. Priced to sell. 07/24 Dining room sets, dressers, bookcases, storage, queen headboard & frame. Dealers welcome. Preview items 7/23 8 am until noon.

bransonglobe.com CLASSIFIEDS OFFICE HOURS 9am - 5pm Monday to Friday HELP WANTED Branson Scenic Railway Accepting applications for full-time on-board train attendant. Will train. This is a smokefree non-tobacco use business. Pre-employment drug screening. Apply in person. No phone calls. 206 E. Main Street, Branson HELP WANTED ATTENTION ELECTRICIANS! Lightspeed Electric is hiring electricians for service work in the Branson area. Great troubleshooting/people a minimum 4 years experience required. Benefits. Bonuses. Company truck. 417-239-5050 Do you love NATURAL HEALTHCARE? Are you a person who has had a successful career and is ready for a change? Or are you great at your job but would like to own a business where you can control your time and the amount of money you earn? Are you a self-starter, who loves to lead and guide others? Would you like to help others achieve a lifestyle of wellness for the rest of their lives? If this is you, I’m looking for six individuals to give my time and resources to help you live a life you love. THIS COULD BE YOUR AD CALL (417) 334-9100! Here’s how to apply for a place on my Business Team: TEXT (417) 294-0805 with your name, cell phone and email address. Sales Position With Honey lease shop at Silver Dollar City. Sunday - Wednesday on days when SDC is open. Call 417-869-0233 or text 417-294-0805 APARTMENTS 2 BED/2 BATH FURNISHED condo (available Aug 1st) Fall Creek Area with golf course view. Remodeled/updated. Smoke free unit/no drinking/ parties or pot usage. $750 per month call or text 307-6307833. NEWLY REMODELED HOME on 2 Level Lake View Lots Table Rock Lake 3 BR, 2 BA. One story home, 413 Tina St. SEE on craigslist 9749 Spfg. 417-33907/17 1&2 BR APARTMENTS 1-1/2 BATHS, POOLS, REC. ROOM $525 MONTH & UP Furnished Units Available, Lakeviews Available CALL 417-546-3334 Shepherd of the Hills Estates www.soheapts.com HOME FOR SALE RENT TO OWN AUTOS LOW Down Payment NO Initial Taxes & License Fees NO Credit Check FREE One Year Waranty on motor & transmission RENT TO OWN YOUR AUTO TODAY 1119 E. State Hwy 76, Branson 417-335-5400 renttoownautosbranson.com skills and HELP WANTED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY! Furnished 1 bed 1.5 bath Apt. Call for details! No smoking. No pets. 417-546-3334 Shepherd of the Hills Estates www.soheapts.com RVS HOLLISTER-BRANSON full time or vacation home, 43ft. RV, 5 slides, large deck, gazebo, patio, washer/dryer, quiet area. $39,500. 417-213-1783. 07/19 VEHICLES FOR SALE COMMERCIAL FOR RENT OFFICE-RETAIL-FLEA mart-car lot Branson/Forsyth. Cabin w/bathroom, large parking area, Highway 160 frontage and signage. Great location & traffic. $450/mo. 417-213-1783. 07/19 July 12 - 14, 2020 • 25

26 • July 12 - 14, 2020 WORSHIP You are encouraged to worship with us! Worship Directory To advertise your church on our worship pages, please give us a call at the Branson Globe: 417-334-9100, or email info@bransonglobe.com. bransonglobe.com “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” (Jeremiah 29:11)

bransonglobe.com WORSHIP July 12 - 14, 2020 • 27 Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.… (Matthew 11:28-29)

28 • July 12 - 14, 2020 bransonglobe.com

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