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INSIDE...
June 28-30, 2020 • Vol. 1, Issue 104
Grand Opening:
Dave Roever to speak
at King’s Chapel. Pg. 5
Alarming:
Traffic deaths in the state
are up. Pg. 9
‘Piano Man Xperience’ opens July 1
Pianist David Brooks and his “Piano Man Xperience” band will take to the stage at 2 p.m. on July 1 in the Branson Star Theatre, 3750 W 76 Country
Blvd. (Photo by Marshall Meadows)
Boone Homestead:
Site hosts public information
meeting. Pg. 10
WEATHER...page 12
Highs around 90. Chance of
showers and storms through
Thursday.
By Branson Globe Staff
David Brooks, a name familiar
to area theater goers, has responded
with a “yes” to requests by friends
and fans wanting him to bring his
“Piano Man Xperience” to Branson.
Brooks and his ‘crew’ will take
to the stage at 2 p.m. on July 1 in
the Branson Star Theatre, 3750 W
76 Country Blvd.
“We will be doing three matinee
performances a week,” Brooks said.
“The show features music from
many piano entertainers along with
a few surprises. I talk about some of
my influences as well. Everything
from Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Elton
John and so many more. We will
also have a LIVE band. And, I’m
sure Jerry Lee will be making an
appearance.”
Brooks moved from Arkansas to
Branson in 2003 to join ’50’s At the
Hop’ and has been cast in numerous
other Branson shows since then.
A friend from a music website
told Brooks that ‘the Hop’ was
looking for a pianist so he came to
Branson, auditioned and got the job.
“I have been fortunate enough
to work in just about every show
I had the possibility of in the past
16 years,” He said. “From the
Haygoods to the Hughes Brothers,
Legends in Concert to #1 Hits of
the 60’s, you could have spotted me
anywhere.”
Entertainer Jeanna Kilbane was
in the cast of #1 Hits of the 60’s with
Brooks. She and he have maintained a
close friendship throughout the years.
Similarly, she has also been cast in
many of Branson’s shows and worked
on cruise ships.
“I’m really excited that David is
getting his own show here in Branson,”
Kilbane said. “David has a big
personality with big talent to go with
it. He promises a high energy show
that will please audiences of all age
groups.”
Music, as a vocalist and musician,
came natural to him even while he
was very young.
“I suppose I’ve showed an interest
SEE PIANO MAN, PAGE 2
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9ׁH !http://www.turtlecreekbranson.comׁׁЈנ^hR2W9n9{ǁ dA̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈ׉E
S2 • June 28 - 30, 2020
LOCAL
• PIANO MAN
Continued from page 1
in music right out of the womb,”
Brooks said. “I remember as a little
tyke rocking and bouncing to the
music from the car radio. I guess I
come by it sort of naturally. Both
of my parents play instruments and
sing. I had known about Branson
since I was a kid and my family
made trips up here periodically. I
guess I was around 6 years old when
I was put into lessons, after years of
watching my mom play (piano) and
I was banging around on it.”
Brooks was about 12 when his
mom took him to hear Gospel
legends The Kingsmen. It was a
focal point in his life.
”I watched the Kingsmen with Anthony
Burger playing (piano), and I
was dumbfounded,” he said. “I knew
I wanted to be able to play like THAT.
It was a show in itself.
Brooks said he was “honored” to
portray Jerry Lee Lewis for two years
in the Branson production of the musical
“Million Dollar Quartet.”
”You know, I still have people
coming up to me and saying aren’t
you the guy,” he said. “I take
pride in that.”
Brooks has garnered awards during
his time in Branson. Brooks has also
been awarded Piano/Keyboard Player
of the Year more than once.
In 2017 Brooks began performing
“Piano Man Xperience” around the
world. It was a show he created.
“I got to see some amazing places
and met some incredible people as
well over these last few years. But
there’s no place like home,” he said.
“Piano Man Xperience” features
music many piano entertainers
have made famous, along with
a few surprises.
“I talk about some of my influences
as well,” Brooks said. “Everything
bransonglobe.com
from Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Elton
John, to so many more. We will also
have a LIVE band. And, I’m sure Jerry
Lee will be making an appearance.”
Brooks describes his “Piano Man
Xperience” as “exciting, entertaining
and fun for everyone.”
As I say in the show “we’ll treat you
so many different ways you’re bound
to like...something. I can promise you,
if you know anything about me, you
know this will NOT be boring. I can’t
wait to see all my friends again and
share my show with them.”
Call the Branson Star Box Office
at 417-320-3418 for tickets and more
information.
The “Piano Man Experience,” with David Brooks, will feature songs
from Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Elton John and some Jerry Lee Lewis
moves. (Photo by Marshall Meadows)
Entertainer David Brooks says his show “Piano Man Experience,” that opens opens at 2 p.m. on July 1 in the
Branson Star Theatre, 3750 W 76 Country Blvd, “will be anything but boring.” (Photo by Marshall Meadows)
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LOCAL
Taylor, Hometown Daily News
Comments made at Branson’s
Board of Alderman meeting earlier
this week came to the attention
of the Harrison city officials who
asked for an apology for the comments.
At
the end of Tuesday’s Branson
Board of Alderman meeting,
City Administrator Stan Dobbins
made comments regarding reaction
to a video made during the
“Black Lives Matter” rally in
which a woman displays the Confederate
flag and makes inflammatory
comments. Dobbins, in
addressing the backlash that has
been directed at the City of Branson,
mentioned that his African
American son-in-law has never
had any issues in Branson which
led Dobbins to say, “...so it makes
me wonder where all the mouths
and voices come from that say ‘oh
my God, the City of Branson has
a problem’ when you can drive
30 miles down the road and be in
Harrison, Arkansas. If you want
to find the Ku Klux Klan, you go
to Harrison, Arkansas.” Dobbins
went on to say he is proud to live
and be a part of Branson.
Several Harrison city officials
including Mayor Jerry Jackson
were made aware of those reports,
with Mayor Jackson calling
Branson Mayor Edd Akers to
discuss it. Mayor Akers relayed to
Dobbins Mayor Jackson’s request
for an apology for the comments.
Initially, Dobbins declined
to
apologize, however on Friday he
changed his mind.
Hometown Daily News obtained
a copy of the email Dobbins
sent to Harrison Mayor Jerry
Jackson. In it, Dobbins says
he does not apologize for his
feelings towards racism and the
KKK, but does apologize for “doing
the same thing that is being
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 3
City of Harrison requests apology from Branson city administration
By Scott McCauley and Coleman
done to us. That is using a broad
brush when addressing a specific
problem.” Dobbins acknowledges
how Harrison has fought very
hard to overcome that reputation
and said his statement was not
meant to show the city in a bad
light.
You see Dobbins’ email in its
entirety and the response from
Harrison Mayor Jackson with this
story on our news site.
C of O appoints Bryan Cizek dean of Work Education Program
Submitted to Branson Globe
POINT LOOKOUT, MO. —
College of the Ozarks recently appointed
alumnus Bryan Cizek as
dean of the Work Education Program,
effective during the 2020
spring semester. He will continue to
serve as director of patriotic activities,
a role he took on in 2016.
Cizek is a graduate of College of
the Ozarks and earned a master’s degree
from Missouri State University.
Cizek joined the faculty in 2012
and soon thereafter took on a new
role for the College as director of
patriotic activities. In this role, he
has played a crucial part in the development
of Patriots Park on campus,
which consists of The Missouri
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, The
Missouri Gold Star Families Memorial,
The Korean War Memorial,
and The Global War on Terrorism
Memorial. He also led numerous
Patriotic Education Travel Program
trips, including two to Vietnam, the
Heilman Patriots Tour for a journey
of historical sites in Washington
D.C. and the American Northeast.
He also took 20 students for the
75th anniversary of D-Day to Europe
in June 2019 and accompanied
150 students to Washington, D.C.,
for the inaugural CitizenTrip™ in
September 2019.
Cizek comes uniquely prepared for
his roles at C of O, having served in
the United States Army for nearly five
years. He honorably served in the elite
Special Operations Community with
the 1st Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment
as an Airborne Ranger Team
Leader. Cizek conducted numerous
Special Operation missions in support
of both Operation Iraqi Freedom
and Operation Enduring Freedom. In
2009, he was honorably discharged
with the rank of Sergeant.
As dean of the work education
program, Cizek will oversee placement
of more than 1,450 students as
they serve in more than 100 workstations
on campus. Each student
works to offset the cost of their
education, which allows them to
graduate debt free. This fulfills an integral
part of the mission of College of
the Ozarks, to provide an opportunity
for those found worthy but without
adequate means to obtain a Christian
education.
Cizek also will train workstation supervisors
and ensure the Work Education
Program enriches the lives of all
involved. Students at C of O work in
all aspects of campus, from farming to
landscaping and The Keeter Center to
admissions. The College teaches that
all work is of value and builds character.
Students receive work grades for
their efforts, and these grades become
a part of their permanent transcript.
“The work program provided me
an opportunity to learn skills and work
alongside supervisors who genuinely
cared and who had a vested interest in
my success,” Cizek said. “It is a blessing
to serve now as dean of the Work
Education Program, where hard work,
determination, and grit are the keys to
success.”
During his time as a student, Cizek
worked in new construction and on
the beef farm.
Bryan Cizek.
Branson Globe)
(Submitted to
“I am blessed to have the opportunity
to serve here,” Cizek said. “I am
thankful for my amazingly supportive
family – wife Liz, twin daughters
Paisley and Railey, and son Henry.”
Ruger is a 12 week old mini
Meet RUGER,
Our June
Pet of the Month
www.turtlecreekbranson.com
Australian Shepherd. He has two
modes play,
play, play, or sleep. Ruger is very
smart, sometimes too smart for
his own
good. He loves most people and
kids but doesn’t quite know what
to think of other dogs yet.
info@turtlecreekbranson.com
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OPINION
Brett M. Decker, Opinion columnist,
USA Today
A statue of Ulysses S. Grant,
18th president of the United States
and victorious commanding general
of the Civil War, was torn down by
vandals in San Francisco on Friday.
In attacking Grant, those desecrating
our cities in the supposed name
of racial justice besmirched the
memory of one of the figures who
was most important for pushing the
nation forward on civil rights.
There was no mystery for Grant
why it was vital to defeat the Confederacy.
“[I]t bec[a]me patent to
my mind early in the rebellion that
the North and South could never
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
Opinion Writer
Rob Doherty
Account Representative
& Distribution Manager
(504) 583-8907
robd@bransonglobe.com
Karen Halfpop
Digital/Production Director
production@
BransonGlobe.com
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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
live at peace with each other except
as one nation, and that without
Slavery,” he wrote amid the fighting
in 1863, making clear that any earlier
ambivalence about the institution
was gone. “I would not therefore be
willing to see any settlement until
the question is forever settled.”
Anyone trying to characterize
the entirety of U.S. history as one
uninterrupted narrative of systemic
racism gives intolerably short shrift
to the colossal epic to end slavery
that was the Civil War, in which
as many as 850,000 soldiers were
killed in a country whose population
was only 31.4 million when the
conflict began in 1861. We surely
do not need Old Testament levels
of bloodshed today to earn national
atonement. We have been there and
done that.
Gen. Grant’s efforts to help deliver
a better life for African Americans
continued in his presidency,
during which the Fifteenth Amendment
to the Constitution was ratified
to extend voting rights to them.
Facing opposition in the southern
states, Grant deployed the U.S. military
to dismantle the Ku Klux Klan
and enforce new civil rights laws
instituted under his leadership.
Josiah Bunting III, former superintendent
of the Virginia Military
Institute and Grant biographer,
bransonglobe.com
Grant fought for racial justice: Vandals attacking monument need fuller view of history
called him, “the central force in the
achievement of civil rights for blacks,
the most stalwart and reliable among
all American presidents for the next 80
years.” Of this claim, The Washington
Post’s Jonathan Yardley wrote, “The
evidence leaves little doubt that Bunting
is right.”
One of the fundamental flaws
of contemporary virtue signaling
is it doesn’t recognize that the actual
attainment of virtue is part of
a process of intentionally trying to
become better. America, in both its
history and the ideals upon which it
was founded, has consistently engaged
in that process of conscious
self-improvement.
Does the United States still have
room for improvement? Of course.
Could Grant have acknowledged
the immorality of human bondage
earlier? Yes. However, both the
nation and the individual worked
to make serious amends for their
mistakes, including for the existence
of slavery and Grant’s brief
ownership of a slave he freed before
the war.
The chaos of recent weeks has
made it often hard to distinguish
between those who are marching
to bring about a better society and
those who are exploiting a tragedy
as an excuse to commit random violence
and destruction. One lesson
learned from the sins of America’s
past is that justice for some is compromised
if there isn’t justice for
all. Believing in such a view of
right and wrong includes defending
the reputations of national heroes
such as Grant.
@BransonGlobe
BransonGlobe
@BransonGlobe #Branson Globe
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LOCAL
Grand opening slated for
King’s Chapel in Branson
Submitted to Branson Globe
King’s Chapel will observe
their grand opening on Sunday,
July 5 at 10 a.m. with special
guest speaker Dave Roever.
royo’s family that they did not
have a medical explanation for
how he survived through his injuries;
it was simply a miracle.
Arroyo wasted no time sharing
his gift and miraculous story of
second chances. Using his life
as an example, he speaks to issues
and presents tangible solutions
to real life struggles.
King’s Chapel, which began
in Branson in 2014 as a home
Bible study, purchased and began
remodeling Music City
Centre. Pastored by Chris and
Melissa
Davis,
the
Branson
congregation is one of more
than 300 campuses of King’s
Cathedral and Chapels based in
Maui, Hawaii
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 5
Speaker Dave Roever.
(Submitted to Branson Globe)
Roever, a Vietnam veteran and
recipient of the Purple Heart,
served as a river boat gunner
in the elite Brown Water Black
Beret. Roever now travels the
globe, sharing his story of survival
with engaging humor and
hope in the face of insurmountable
obstacles. He tells his story
in churches, public schools,
business conventions and with
U.S. military forces stationed
around the world.
Joining Roever for a Freedom
Rally at 5 p.m., is John Arroyo.
Arroyo spit the majority of his
enlisted service as a Green Beret,
and is a survivor of the April
2, 2014 mass shooting at Fort
Hood, Texas. Doctors told ArSpeaker
John Arroyo.
(Submitted to Branson Globe)
Programming
for
children
through junior high is available
during the 10 am service. A
nursing mother’s room is available
during the 5 p.m. event.
For more information, see
www.kcbranson.com.
Help Support Branson local businesses
@bransonlocalbusinesses.com
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bransonglobe.com
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bransonglobe.com
LOCAL
Investment banking:
The C level executive
By Bob Hodgson
Maybe you are a “C” level executive
and know of a Branson
business owner wanting to exit
his business. If this is you then
you may have an opportunity of a
life time to acquire that business.
Leading investment firms
seek “C” level executives who
have the vision, passion and determination
to grow a company
through acquisitions, integration
and internal growth.
The letter “C” stands for chief.
They are the most powerful and
influential members of an organization.
These
executives set
the company’s long-term strategy
and vision. This includes CEO
(chief executive officer), COO
(chief operating officer or 2nd in
command), CFO (chief financial
officer) and other “C” level executives.
Some
people become confused
between a CEO and a president.
The president is below a CEO
and is oriented towards company
employees and micro decisions.
The president implements policy
and strategies to make the CEO’s
vision reality.
As a “C” level executive, you
have an opportunity to own a
company and aggressively build
your true wealth. An investment
firm will provide the required
capital for you to acquire a company
in your industry of expertise.
You must be able to make an
introduction of a company for an
investment firm to acquire. Providing
you qualify, you will be a
“C” level executive or the CEO
of the newly acquired company.
If the acquisition progresses to
completion and you do not qualify
for a “C” level position then
you will receive a generous fee
for your efforts.
A qualified “C” level executive
of the acquired company will
have an opportunity to build your
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 7
Bob Hodgson (FILE)
company in partnership with a
leading investment firm. This is
a great opportunity to build considerable
personal wealth.
If you choose to be the “C”
level executive, you will need
these qualifications:
• 10 years of experience as
“C” level executive in a
profitable company with
sales greater than $50M.
• 20 years of industry experience.
•
•
•
Significant
achievements
during up & down cycles.
Established network of industry
contacts.
Experience in defining and
executing a strategic vision.
There are approximately 3,000
investment firms available for
this type of transaction. The role
of an intermediary is to connect
two parties who have not figured
out that they need each other.
An intermediary with first-hand
knowledge of the investment
firms would be able to facilitate
this type of transaction according
to the industry and company
size.
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
^hR2W9n9{^hR2W9n9{
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bransonglobe.com
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STATE
JEFFERSON CITY—Despite
traffic volumes dropping dramatically
in 2020 because of
the impacts of COVID-19, Missouri
has actually experienced a
12 percent rise in roadway fatalities
over last year.
“We are alarmed by the increase
in Missouri traffic fatalities,
particularly since they occurred
with reduced traffic due
to the statewide stay at home
order,” said Gov. Mike Parson.
“Despite traffic volumes in the
state dropping by nearly 50 percent
for much of the year, traffic
fatalities in Missouri are up
12 percent compared to 2019.”
Already, 2020 has seen 402
traffic fatalities, an increase of
43 more lives lost compared to
the same time last year. And the
“100 Deadliest Days of Summer”
are just beginning. This is
the period covering the summer
travel season between Memorial
Day and Labor Day, one of
the deadliest time periods on
our nation’s roadways.
MoDOT
Director Patrick
McKenna said there are actions
drivers and passengers should
take to reverse this disturbing
trend.
“We’re dealing with a different
kind of public health crisis,”
McKenna said. “During
the pandemic, we see people
wearing masks and social distancing,
not only for their own
protection, but for the health of
others. We need a similar commitment
from drivers to buckle
their seatbelts, put their phones
down and slow down.”
Of the vehicle occupants
killed in Missouri traffic crashes
in 2020, 70 percent were
unbuckled. “Based on average
survival rates, if everyone
involved in these crashes had
been buckled, more than 100
people who were killed would
with rampant disregard for speed
reductions and lane restrictions. It
is imperative that motorists slow
down and focus on the road while
driving through work zones. It is
for everyone’s safety.
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 9
Governor Parson and state leaders alarmed at rising traffic deaths
Information on all MoDOT
work zone activities is available
on the department’s Traveler
Information Map at www.
modot.org. The map is available
as a free app for iPhone
and Android phones. Motorists
can also call MoDOT’s
24/7 customer service toll free
at 1-888-ASK-MoDOT (2756636).
Missouri
Governor Mike Parson.
(FILE)
still be alive today,” McKenna
said. “It’s the easiest, cheapest
and quickest way to save lives
on Missouri roadways.”
“One of the toughest jobs
for a Highway Patrol trooper is
contacting a victim’s next of kin
to tell them their son, daughter
or parent has been killed in a
vehicle crash,” Missouri State
Highway Patrol Colonel Eric
Olson said. “For three straight
years, troopers made fewer of
those painful visits with loved
ones. Drivers must observe the
speed limit, move over when
they see emergency responders
or work crews on the shoulder
and make safe decisions at all
times.”
Every driver in the state can
help by committing to four simple
actions:
• Buckle up.
• Put the phone down.
• Slow down.
• Never drive while impaired.
Summer
is also peak season
for highway work zones. We are
already seeing disturbing trends
in our work zones this summer
^hR2W9n9{^hR2W9n9{
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STATE
JEFFERSON CITY, MO,
JUNE 26, 2020 – Nathan and Olive
Boone Homestead State Historic
Site invites the public to an
informational meeting at 10 a.m.,
Saturday, July 11, in the parlor of
the Boone home. The public is
invited to share comments about
the historic site and its operations.
Staff will be on site to provide information
and answer questions,
and provide a tour of the Boone
homestead after the meeting.
Input from the public is important
to Missouri State Parks.
informational
meetings,
which are being held in all state
parks and historic sites, help create
two-way communication with
the public. The meetings give
staff the opportunity to let people
know the current status and future
plans for the parks and historic
sites, and they offer visitors the
opportunity to comment on the
facilities. For a list of scheduled
informational meetings, visit mostateparks.com/page/66611/informational-meetings.
The
public is strongly encouraged
to follow social-distancing
guidelines and be proactive in
bransonglobe.com
Nathan and Olive Boone Homestead State Historic Site hosts public information meeting July 11
These
protecting themselves and others
amid ongoing public health concerns.
Come prepared with hand
sanitizer and bottled water, avoid
large and congested crowds, and
please stay home if sick. Face
coverings are encouraged where
social-distancing
measures are
difficult to maintain.
Nathan and Olive Boone
Homestead State Historic Site is
located at 7850 N. State Highway
V, Ash Grove, northwest
of Springfield. For more information,
please
contact Nathan
Boone Homestead State Historic
Site at 417-751-3266.
The Boone Homesite is located near Ash Grove, 65 miles northwest of
Branson. (Photo courtesy Missouri DNR)
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STATE
LIBERTY, Mo. (AP) — As
coronavirus cases increase
across Missouri, city officials
are wrestling with how to slow
that rise when many residents
are resistant to more government
restrictions.
In southwest Missouri, where
some counties have become hot
spots for the virus since Gov.
Mike Parson allowed the state
to reopen for business on June
16, the discussion has focused
on whether to require citizens to
wear face masks.
The state health department
reported 19,421 confirmed
coronavirus cases as of Thursday,
an increase of 553 cases
from Wednesday, and a 9.5%
increase in the last seven days.
Department of Health and Senior
Services Director Randall
Williams said 13,000 test results
were reported to the state
in one batch for June 21 through
June 24, so reported test results
don’t represent a daily increase.
The Joplin
City Council
Wednesday voted 5-4 to reject
an ordinance that would
have required residents to wear
masks if they were within 6
feet of someone else in public.
The Springfield City Council
this week discussed requiring
masks, but no official action
was taken.
Joplin Mayor Ryan Stanley
voted against the proposal but
said he had mixed feelings and
that he believed people should
wear masks. The deciding factor
for him was the difficulty of
enforcing the ordinance, which
placed the onus on people, not
businesses, to report violators.
“I
envisioned a
Saturday
where police were getting 200
calls from people all around town
reporting someone not wearing a
mask,” he said. “How do you divide
that work and decide what a
true emergency is?”
The ordinance was first proposed
last week and drew intense interest,
with hundreds of emails and phone
calls to city officials and a four-hour
meeting before the vote.
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 11
Cities consider requiring face masks as virus cases surge
Joplin, a city of about 50,000
people, straddles the Newton/
Jasper county line. Stanley said
the two counties had confirmed
60 cases on June 3, but that total
increased to 814 by Wednesday.
“This is definitely a community
in crisis,” Stanley said. “It’s
very, very concerning where we
are. We do not like being a hot
spot.”
Williams said Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
staff will be in Joplin Thursday
and Friday to help track and mitigate
the spread of COVID-19.
Gov. Mike Parson said it is
up to local officials to decide
whether to require face masks,
and if citizens didn’t like the
SEE FACE MASKS, PAGE 13
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NATIONAL
Courtesy of US Dept. of Justice
A Houston funeral director has
been taken into custody on allegations
he fraudulently sought over
$13 million in Paycheck Protection
Program (PPP) loans.
Jase DePaul Gautreaux, aka Jase
Dixon, 38, is charged in a criminal
complaint, unsealed today upon his
arrest, with making false statements
to a financial institution, wire fraud,
bank fraud and engaging in unlawful
monetary transactions. He is
expected to make his initial appearance
before U.S. Magistrate Frances
H. Stacy in Houston at 2 p.m.
CDT today.
Gautreaux allegedly perpetrated a
scheme to file fraudulent loan applications
seeking more than $13 million in
forgivable loans. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) guarantees the
loans for COVID-19 relief through
the PPP under the Coronavirus
Aid, Relief and Economic Security
(CARES) Act.
The complaint alleges Gautreaux
allegedly submitted several fraudulent
PPP loan applications to federally
insured banks, including applications
on behalf of a business that
did not exist and other applications
on behalf of a business with which
he had no affiliation. In these applications,
Gautreaux allegedly falsified
his identity, misrepresented the
number of employees and payroll
expenses of the putative companies
and made numerous other
inaccurate statements. According
to the complaint, Gautreaux also
submitted falsified tax documents
and bank account information in
support of these applications. He
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Loving The Ozarks
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bransonglobe.com
Texas man in custody, charged with COVID relief fraud
submitted fraudulent applications
for over $13 million in PPP funds
and ultimately received over $1.6
million in PPP funds, according to
the charges.
The CARES Act is a federal law
enacted March 29. It is designed
to provide emergency financial assistance
to millions of Americans
who are suffering the economic effects
resulting from the COVID-19
pandemic. One source of relief
provided by the CARES Act is the
authorization of up to $349 billion
in forgivable loans to small businesses
for job retention and certain
other expenses through the PPP. In
April 2020, Congress authorized
over $300 billion in additional PPP
funding.
The PPP allows qualifying small
businesses and other organizations
to receive loans with a maturity of
two years and an interest rate of one
percent. Businesses must use PPP
loan proceeds for payroll costs, interest
on mortgages, rent and utilities.
The PPP allows the interest and
principal to be forgiven if businesses
spend the proceeds on these expenses
within a set time period and
use at least a certain percentage of
the loan towards payroll expenses.
A federal criminal complaint is
WED
THU
90 90 90 90
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70
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70
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70
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merely an accusation. A defendant
is presumed innocent until proven
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in
a court of law.
The Office of the Inspector
General (OIG) - Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation – OIG,
SBA – OIG and U.S. Postal Inspection
Service - Houston Division
conducted the investigation.
Anyone with information about
allegations of attempted fraud involving
COVID-19 can report it
by calling the Department of Justice’s
National Center for Disaster
Fraud Hotline at 866-720-5721
or via the NCDF Web Complaint
Form at: https://www.justice.gov/
disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.
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NATIONAL
• FACE MASKS
Continued from page 11
decision, they could respond
during elections.
Council member Anthony
Monteleone, who introduced
the ordinance and voted for it,
said he was concerned because
so many Joplin
residents
are
older or have conditions making
them susceptible to the virus.
He acknowledged that masks
are hot, uncomfortable and embarrassing
to wear, but doesn’t
see that as a good reason to refuse
to use them. The government
has mandated such things
as seat belts, vaccinations and
requiring shirts and shoes in
restaurants because those
actions
are good for the community,
he said.
“Convincing people to change
their attitude is difficult to do,”
he said. “Right now we need to
work on behavior and if the attitude
changes follow, that’s fine.
Let’s just get through this next
month and then deal with the
deeper issues.”
The council authorized the
city to buy masks to hand out
free to residents who want
them. And it planned to devise
an “education and encouragement”
campaign with business
leaders to encourage their use.
On Tuesday, the Springfield
City Council heard from health
officials during a discussion
about how to react to increasing
coronavirus cases in the city,
which is about 70 miles east of
Joplin.
Springfield officials did not
immediately respond to requests
for comment Thursday,
but council member Craig Hosmer
said during the meeting that
the council should look at some
requirement for masks, KSPR
reported.
“If we don’t do something
and there is a resurgence it’s
going to be tough and pull back
and close what we’ve already
opened,” he said.
Springfield-Greene County
reported 257 confirmed cases
Thursday, up from 198 on June
1.
Dr. Robert Trotman, of Cox
Health, said he had seen more
patients in the last two weeks
than any other time of the year,
leading him to believe masks are
an important tool for the public.
Even if they stop only 95% of
the cases, he said, “Right now
that would probably save lives.”
Support Our
Local Veterans!
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 13
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ENTERTAINMENT
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Amid
calls to change the Splash Mountain
theme park ride over its ties
to “Song of the South,” the 1946
movie many view as racist, Disney
officials said Thursday it
was recasting the ride based on
“The Princess and the Frog,” a
The character Brer Rabbit, from the movie, “Song of the South,”
is depicted near the entrance to the Splash Mountain ride in the
Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World. (AP FILE)
2009 Disney film with an African
American female lead.
Disney said the changes had
been in the works since last year,
but the announcement comes as
companies across the U.S. are
renaming racially charged, decades-old
brands amid worldwide
protests for racial justice after the
police custody death of George
Floyd in Minnesota last month.
“The new concept is inclusive –
one that all of our guests can connect
with and be inspired by, and it
speaks to the diversity of the millions
of people who visit our parks
each year,” the Disney post said.
The revamped ride will follow
the contours of the animated movie,
“The Princess and the Frog,”
in which actress Anika Noni Rose
voices the role of a 1920s aspiring
chef in New Orleans who kisses a
prince that has been turned into a
frog and becomes one herself.
With
racist
bransonglobe.com
Disney changing Splash Mountain, ride tied to Jim Crow film
stereotypes and
Old South tropes, “Song of the
South” is a mix of live action,
cartoons and music featuring
an old black plantation laborer
named Uncle Remus who enchants
a white city boy with fables
of talking animals.
Groups including the NAACP
protested the film’s initial release.
The film isn’t available
to the millions of subscribers of
the company’s new Disney Plus
streaming service, and it hasn’t
been released in theaters in decades.
“Disney
parks should be a
home for all to enjoy regardless
of race, age, whatever your background
may be,” said an online
petition asking for the ride to
be changed. “While the ride is
considered a beloved classic, it’s
history and storyline are steeped
in extremely problematic and
stereotypical racist tropes from
the 1946 film Song of the South.”
But Splash Mountain had its
supporters. Another online petition
asked that the ride remain in
its current incarnation.
“Many adults and children ride
this attraction because it brings
back childhood memories,” the
“Keep Splash Mountain” petition
said. “Disney already took
out the racist songs which was a
good move on their part.”
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ENTERTAINMENT
Country music reckons with racial stereotypes and its future
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —
When country singer Rissi Palmer
was working on her debut album,
she wanted a song like Gretchen
Wilson’s “Redneck Woman,” a
song that would introduce her and
tell her story to fans.
On her 2007 debut single, “Country
Girl,” she celebrated her country
roots while explaining that she
didn’t have to look or talk a certain
way to call herself a country girl.
“I said that I am not white in the
first verse, and the label was like,
‘No, no, no,’” said Palmer, who
then rewrote the lyrics to make it
feel more universal. “It was very intentional
when I wrote that song to
talk about all the women, or all the
people, that might not necessarily fit
in the box, but are still of the same
mindset.”
The country music industry has
long been hesitant to address its
long and complicated history with
race, but the death of George Floyd
in police custody and the protests it
sparked in the U.S. and around the
world became a sound too loud for
the genre to ignore.
Over the past weeks, country artists,
labels and country music organizations
posted about Black Lives
Matter on social media, participated
in the industry wide Blackout Tuesday
or denounced racism outright.
On Thursday, Grammy-winning
country group, The Dixie Chicks
announced it would drop “dixie’
from its name. The group said in
a statement that it wanted to meet
“this moment.”
But Black artists say the industry
still needs to address the systematic
racial barriers that have been
entrenched in country music for
decades. Stereotypes that country
music is just for white audiences,
written by white songwriters, and
sung by mostly white males are
reinforced daily on country radio,
playlists, label rosters and tour lineups.
In recent years, however, the
conversations about country music
have shifted to a broader acknowledgement
that non-white artists
have always been in the genre, even
if they aren’t always recognized.
Artist/scholar Rhiannon Giddens
received a MacArthur Foundation
grant for her work to reclaim
Black contributions to country and
folk music. And artists like Darius
Rucker, Kane Brown and Jimmie
Allen have all had No. 1 country
hits in recent years, while Mickey
Guyton just released an unflinching
song called “Black Like Me.” But
that ingrained culture of exclusivity
remains a struggle to change.
“You can look at the reviews of
my first album. I was called colored,
like, ‘I didn’t know colored people
like country music,’” said Palmer,
who had three singles reach the Hot
Country Songs Chart. “I used to get
messages all the time on MySpace,
saying, ‘I am so sick of you. Why
are you trying to be white?’ or ‘Why
are you trying to take over country
music?’”
Change hasn’t been easy. After
Grammy-winning country group
Lady Antebellum announced they
were changing their name to Lady
A, they later had to apologize to a
Black singer who had been using
that stage name for years.
Atlanta-based country rapper
Breland also wanted to address,
with a wink and a smile, country
music’s racial blinders with his TikTok-fueled
song “My Truck.” The
music video starts with a white guy
in a black cowboy hat singing as
smoke billows across a dusty landscape,
then Breland abruptly shoves
him out of the frame to announce,
“Don’t touch my truck.”
“I just felt like it was time for
people to change their perspective
on what country music is and what
country music can be, because there
is an audience of country music listeners
under 30 who believe Black
Lives Matter,” said Breland, whose
song reached No. 26 on Billboard’s
Hot Country Songs chart and has
been remixed with Sam Hunt.
Like Lil Nas X’s genre bending
“Old Town Road,” Breland playfully
fuses trap rhythms with country
tropes about horses, do-si-dos and
beer on his self-titled EP and sings
with country artists Chase Rice and
Lauren Alaina. Breland said country
music labels can’t just continue
to focus on one type of audience.
“There’s a group of country listeners
who love country music
because of the way it sounds, but
don’t love some of the politics that
they know are going on behind the
scenes,” he said.
Both the Academy of Country
Music and the Country Music Association
started diversity task forces
more than a year ago when country
music was being criticized for a
lack of female voices and women
were being left out of major categories
like entertainer of the year.
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 15
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SPORTS
The NFL still plans to hold
training camps on time beginning
in late July, though contingency
plans are in place.
Hours after the league canceled
the Hall of Fame game that kicks
off the preseason, the 32 team
owners on Thursday were updated
on a variety of issues, many
dealing with working through
the coronavirus pandemic. Most
notably, according to NFL general
counsel Jeff Pash, the owners
were told about plans to fully
reopen team facilities for training
camp next month.
“The clubs have been advised
that training camps are expected
to open on the normal schedule,”
Pash said. “The dates set forth in
the collective bargaining agreement,
for most clubs that would
be July 28. Obviously they can
bring in rookies and certain other
players before that.
“The
preseason number
games, we’re in active discussions
with the players association
on those issues, and will continue
at that and expect to have some
resolution relatively soon and
will advise the clubs at that time.”
Earlier Thursday, the league
and the Pro Football Hall of Fame
canceled the opening preseason
game between Dallas and Pittsburgh
set for Aug. 6. The hall’s
induction ceremonies set for Aug.
8, and for mid-September for a
special centennial
class, have
been moved to August 2021,
when the Cowboys and Steelers
will play in the game.
Team facilities were closed in
late March due to the pandemic
and have been reopened to limited
personnel. No players other
than those rehabilitating injuries
are allowed at those facilities.
Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief
medical officer, stressed that what
bransonglobe.com
NFL training camps still on original schedule for late July
of
the general public should be doing
during the pandemic is exactly
what the league and its players
should be doing.
“We remain in very active discussion
with the players association
on the protocols dealing
with testing and screening and
treatment, response and travel,”
Sills said. “And so we updated
the ownership about where we
stand with those issues and our
approach to that.
“We certainly
emphasized
through that that testing alone is
not going to be sufficient to keep
everyone healthy. It’s still vitally
important that everyone respect
physical distancing, the use of
masks when possible and overall
good health habits of reporting
symptoms and limiting contact
with individuals that may be sick
not only at the team facility, but
away from the team facility.”
Sills also noted that the league
and union are looking into the use
of personal protective equipment
by players. That includes modifications
to the helmet that may
provide additional risk reduction.
“Obviously we have to think
about any potential unintended
consequences of that modification.
So a lot of work is still being
done on that,” he said.
The NFL still plans to hold training camps on time beginning in late July,
though contingency plans are in place. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)
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SPORTS
Submitted to Branson Globe
The Missouri Golf Association
is conducting its 113th Missouri
Amateur Championship at
Ozarks National Golf Course in
Hollister through today.
This
year’s field is made up of 172
players from across the state,
all hoping to see their name engraved
on the Amateur trophy
among Missouri’s best players
including Payne Stewart and
Tom Watson.
This years Missouri Amateur
will be conducted for the first
time ever at the Coore & Crenshaw
designed course, Ozarks
National Golf Course in Hollister,
Missouri. The Missouri Golf
Association is excited to partner
with Ozarks National Golf
Course to crown a new Missouri
Amateur Champion.
The Missouri Amateur Championship
will have six past winners
in the 2020 field. Brad Nurski,
(St. Joseph) who is the most
recent 3-time champion (2010,
2017, 2018) along with Skip
Berkmeyer (St Louis 1999, 2009,
2011). Also returning to the field
are, Wayne Fredrick (Springfield
1996), Matt Murray (Overland
Park 1997), Sam Midgal (St.
Louis 2016), and 2019 champion,
Walker Kesterson (Ashland).
Walker Kesterson was asked
about his experience at the Missouri
Amateur, he said, “It’s a
fun week every time I go, they
choose the best golf courses
throughout the state, and it’s the
first big tournament that I get to
defend.” Kesterson also talked
a little bit about the grind of the
Missouri Amateur Championship,
he said, ”It’s a 7 day golf
tournament, the better you play,
the longer you stay and get to
play a cool golf course. It takes a
lot of stamina and concentration,
learning how to handle nerves
was one of my biggest takeaways
from last year.”
The youngest player that will
be attending the 2020 Missouri
Amateur is Max Bowman
(Springfield) at age 15. Bowman
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qualified for the Missouri Amateur
at Millwood Golf and RC,
where he shot a 74. The oldest
and long-time competitor at the
Missouri Amateur is Ron Eilers
of Columbia at age 69. Eilers
qualified for the Missouri Amateur
at Jefferson City Country
Club where he shot a 73.
Championship Sunday will
consist of the final two players
fighting for the title of MissouJune
28 - 30, 2020 • 17
Missouri Amateur Golf Championships finish today at Ozarks National
ri Amateur Champion through
36-hole match play round. Live
scoring will be available during
the entire championship online
and on Twitter to keep followers
up-to-date.
Dinner & Show for “TWO!”
Get your tickets early as we are responsibly following the
social distancing guidelines; as such seating is limited.
*Plus tax & service fee.
Exp. 6/30/20
*
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HISTORY
bransonglobe.com
Today in History: Movies, music and more
• 1389 Ottomans defeat Serbian
army in the bloody Battle
of Kosovo, opening the way
for the Ottoman conquest of
Southeastern Europe
• 1519 King Carlos I elected
Holy Roman Catholic Emperor
Charles V
• 1762 Russian Tsarina Catherine
II seizes power, declaring
herself sovereign ruler of
Russia
• 1770 Quakers open a school
for blacks in Philadelphia
• 1776 Final draft of Declaration
of Independence submitted
to Continental Congress
• 1778 Mary Ludwig Hayes
“Molly Pitcher” aids American
patriots
• 1820 Tomato is proven to be
non-poisonous by
Colonel
Robert Gibbon eating a tomato
on steps of courthouse in
Birthday Wish List Answer Key
E V O L G L L A B E S A B
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L Y
E D
R E Y A L P D R O C E R
A
A
I H O R S E S H O E S Y
N E S R O H G N I K C O R
S
E
T
N
S
E L
L L
L B
P P
U R
L I
L N
B C
A E
C S
C O L O R I N G B O O K S
C
U
G
G
Y
R D
A R
C E
E S
R S
A L P H A B E T B L O C K S
EXP 6/30/20
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Salem, New Jersey
HISTORY
• 1838 Coronation of Queen
Victoria in Westminster Abbey,
London
• 1894 Labor Day established
as a holiday for US federal
employees
• 1914 Franz Ferdinand, Archduke
of Austria and his wife
Sophie are assassinated in Sarajevo
by young Serb nationalist
Gavrilo Princip at 10.45,
the casus belli of WWI
• 1919 Treaty of Versailles,
ending WWI and establishing
the League of Nations, is
signed in France
• 1935 FDR orders a federal
gold vault to be built at Fort
Knox, Kentucky
• 1950 North Korean forces
capture Seoul, South Korea in
opening phase of the Korean
War
• 1964 Organization for Afro-American
Unity formed in
New York by Malcolm X
• 1965 1st US ground combat
forces in Vietnam authorized
by President Lyndon B. Johnson
•
1969 Police carry out an early
morning raid on gay bar
Stonewall Inn, Greenwich
Village, NY; about 400 to
1,000 patrons riot against police,
it lasts 3 days. Beginning
of the modern LGBT rights
movement
• 1976 1st woman was admitted
to Air Force Academy in
Colorado Springs, Colorado
• 1982 Prince Charles and Diana,
Princess of Wales, name
their baby “William”
Movies & TV
• 1951 “Amos ‘n’ Andy” premieres
on CBS TV
•
1996 “Nutty Professor” starring
Eddie Murphy opens in
theaters in the USA
• 2003 “Pirates of the Caribbean:
The Curse of the Black
Pearl”, directed by Gore
Verbinski, starring Johnny
Depp, Keira Knightley and
Orlando Bloom, premieres at
Disneyland
• 2017 “Spider-man: Homecoming”
directed by Jon
Watts starring Tom Holland,
Michael Keaton and Robert
Downey Jr. premieres in Los
Angeles
Music
• 1846 Saxophone is patented
by Antoine-Joseph “Adolfe”
Sax
• 1928 Louis Armstrong makes
78 recording of “West End
blues”
• 1978 UNICEF chooses rock
group Kansas as ambassadors
of goodwill
Sports
• 1939 Joe Louis TKOs Tony
Galent in 4 for heavyweight
boxing title
• 1957 Reds’ fans stuff ballot
box, electing 8 Reds as All
Star starters. Frick overrules
and names Stan Musial, Willie
Mays, & Hank Aaron to
team
• 1971 US Supreme Court (80)
overturns draft evasion
conviction of Muhammad Ali
• 1973 Black Sports Hall of
Fame forms: Paul Robeson,
Elgin Baylor, Jesse Owens,
Jim Brown, Wilma Rudolph,
Joe Louis and Althea Gibson
elected
• 1975 Reigning PGA Championship
winner Lee Trevino
and
playing
partners
Jerry
Heard, Bobby Nichols, Jim
Ahern and Tony Jacklin are
struck by lightning at Western
Open; suffer minor burns
Birthdays
• 1491 Henry VIII, King of England
(1509-47) who separated
the Church of England from
the Roman Catholic Church,
born in London (d. 1547)
•
1703 John Wesley, English
Christian
theologian
and
co-founder of the Methodist
movement, born in Epworth,
England (d. 1791)
•
1926 Mel Brooks, American
actor, comedian and director
(Get Smart, Blazing Saddles,
Spaceballs), born in NYC,
New York
•
•
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 19
•
1946 Gilda Radner, American
comedian and actress (SNL,
Haunted Honeymoon), born in
Detroit, Michigan (d. 1989)
•
1948 Kathy Bates, American
academy award winning actress
(Misery), born in Memphis,
Tennessee
1960 John Elway, American
NFL
quarterback (Denver
Broncos-Super Bowl 32/33),
born in Port Angeles, Washington
1971
Elon Musk, American
entrepreneur
and
•
inventor
(SpaceX, Tesla, Paypal), born
in Pretoria, South Africa
1986 Kellie Pickler, American
country music singer (Best
Days of Your Life), born in Albemarle,
North Carolina
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CLASSIFIEDS
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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
FREE ESTIMATES FROM
ground up remodels roofs, deck,
additions, pole-barns, flooring
and complete build 5yr labor warranty
417-699-1635
06/30
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 417337-3772
for an appointment.
2-3 people at a time. 06/30
ACE HOME IMPROVEMENT
Heating & Air HVAC Service &
Repair, Doors, Windows, Decks,
Fences, Pressure Washing, Int &
Ext. Painting, Siding, Roofing
Flooring, Tile & Drywall.
Handy-man Work!
Call Ryan
417-335-1347
06/30
DON’T PANIC
... SELL YOUR
STUFF!
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
06/30
VENDORS WANTED
VENDORS WANTED! Creekside
Antiques & Flea Market,
111 Saint James St.,Hollister,
MO 65672. Call Gary or Rea at
417-527-2956
VENDORS WANTED Vinbooths
tage
Chic Boutique in Forsyth,
has
available,
exp. 06/28
great
store, location, traffic and rent.
Call afternoons Tue-Sat
417-677-6673
HELP WANTED
STAY
CALM
AND
PLACE A
CLASSIFIED
AD.
HELP WANTED
Hiring Overnight
Oversite Staff
For more information,
call Kim Phillips at
417-320-6380
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CLASSIFIEDS
OFFICE HOURS 9am - 5pm
Monday to Friday
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION ELECTRICIANS!
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
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
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 307-630-7833.
skills and
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 21
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
HOME FOR SALE
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
1&2 BR
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
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
Spfg. 417-33906/30
VEHICLES
FOR SALE
RENT TO OWN AUTOS
LOW Down Payment!
NO Initial Taxes & License Fees
NO Credit Check!
FREE One Year Warranty on motor
& Transmission!
Nice Clean Automobiles
RENT TO OWN YOUR
AUTO TODAY
1119 E. ST. HWY 76, BRANSON
417-335-5400
renttoownautosbranson.com
APARTMENTS
CALL NOW 417.239.0951
SummitRidgeBRANSON.COm
THIS COULD BE YOUR AD
CALL
417-334-9100-!
HOMES - LEASE TO OWN
NOW OFFERING
LEASE TO OWN OPTIONS
55+ Gated Master-Planned Community
Located on Branson Hills Parkway in Branson, MO
• Maintenance Free Living
• Clubhouse
• Discounted Membership at
Branson Hills Golf Club
• Amazing Location
• Beautiful Valley Views
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WORSHIP
Worship Directory
You are encouraged to worship with us!
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)
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WORSHIP
June 28 - 30, 2020 • 23
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)
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bransonglobe.com
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P(,Volume 1, Issue 104 KBranson Globe, June 28, 2020. Your source for local news and entertainment.^g({l*ܻ