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Shelter Life Protects Like You Do ShelterInsurance.com 1-800-SHELTER Shelter Life Insurance Company Columbia, Missouri ds Life Insurance with Shelter Insurance® will help protect the financial security you’ve created for the people you care about most. Our dependable agents and the financial strength of our company means we’ll be there when you need us most. Call, click or come see us to find out how our shield can help protect you! H: 94° F L: 74° F Local Grain Board For up to date farm information and reports log on at: www.glasgowmfa.com H: 96° F L: 75° F H: 95° F L: 75° F Local Forecast - Glasgow, MO H: 91° F L: 69° F H: 93° F L: 72° F H: 92° F L: 71° F Glasgow MFA Phone: (660) 338-2251 Week of July 3 through July 9 Precipitation - .55” River stage forcast for Saturday July 14 - 11.5’ Grain Board - as of Tuesday, July 9 GRAIN BOARD BUY CITY PHARMACY $AVE ON PRESCRIPTION$ Ice Cream, Sodas. Coffee. Sandwiches, Breakfast all day, Lottery, Spirits, and lots of other great things! Daily Luncheon Specials Breakfast Anytime of Day Able to handle all Insurance and all Medicare ‘Part D’ Plans 529-2255 229 N. MaiN • Slater “Your Home Town Pharmacy!” The Glasgow Missourian FRIDAY, JUL7 13, 2012 6 Fri 07/13 Sat 07/14 Sun 07/15 Mon 07/16 Tue 07/17 Wed 07/18 Corn.......................7.44 Beans................15.95 Wheat.................7.86 Boonville Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.79 -0.50 Fayette Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.79 -0.50 Glasgow Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.86 -0.43 Salisbury Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.83 -0.46 Price as of 07/10/12 12:03PM CDT. Update From The Capitol PAUL QUINN State Representative District 9 JOHN SMITH, Agent Fayette/Glasgow Area Fayette, MO 65248 Office (660) 248-2525, Home (660) 248-3994 KEEPING YOU IN- FORMED - On the August 7 State-wide ballot there will only appear one issue and if passed would change the ex- isting provision of the Mis- souri Constitution relating to the free exercise of religion. I will attempt to give you the basics of what Amend- ment 2 seeks to do, along with relevant background and arguments both for and against. (The arguments for and against the Amendment are not my personal views – I am just giving you basic in- formation that I have found from various sources.) Although the Secretary of State’s office usually is re- sponsible for writing the ballot language of measures placed before voters, the Gen- eral Assembly exercised its prerogative under state law to write its own ballot question as part of House Joint Reso- lution 2. That ballot language says: “Shall the Missouri Consti- tution be amended to ensure: That the right of Missouri citizens to express their reli- gious beliefs shall not be in- fringed; That school children have the right to pray and acknowl- edge God voluntarily in their schools; and That all public schools shall display the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitu- tion.” Not a word of Article I, Section 5 has been changed in 137 years – since the adop- tion of the Missouri Constitu- tion of 1875 – and the existing language is strikingly similar to the free exercise provisions of the state constitutions of 1820 and 1865. Also, of the 29 sections of the state Bill of Rights that date to the Con- stitution of 1875, only three sections – those relating to grand juries, criminal indict- ments and juror qualifications – have since been amended, and those changes were made 112 years ago in 1900. Although Amendment 2 would add about 360 words to Article I, Section 5 and provide more specificity, it is unclear if it would actually grant Missourians any new or expanded religious rights since the activities enumer- ated in Amendment 2 are already protected by the ex- isting state and federal con- stitutions. However, there are some concerns that adding so much new language to a constitutional protection that hasn’t been changed in nearly a century and a half could yield unknown unintended consequences. ARGUMENTS IN SUP- PORT OF AMENDMENT 2 – Amendment 2 would clarify the rights of Missou- rians to freely exercise their religion without government interference. By specifically listing the religious rights that Missourians already enjoy, Amendment 2 could prevent unnecessary disputes over those rights from arising in the future. In particular, Amendment 2 would clarify that students can voluntarily pray in public schools and prohibit school officials from requiring a stu- dent to participate in class- room assignments that violate his or her religious beliefs. Amendment 2 is merely an affirmation of the importance Missourians place on the right to worship as they see fit. ARGUMENTS IN OP- POSITION TO AMEND- MENT 2 – The Missouri Constitution’s existing free exercise provision has suc- cessfully protected religious freedom in this state for 137 years, and there is no reason to amend it. Even when the state constitution was rewrit- ten in 1945, the drafters wisely didn’t tinker with protections for religious rights. Over the several years that the General Assembly debated this leg- islation before it finally won passage, supporters couldn’t offer a single concrete ex- ample in which Missouri’s existing free exercise clause failed to protect someone’s religious freedom. Amendment 2 is a solution in search of a problem. At best it would change nothing; at worst it could produce po- tentially dangerous unintend- ed consequences. GOVERNOR NIXON SIGNS JOB-TRAINING BILL FOR VETERANS Governor Jay Nixon has signed House Bill 1680 that will offer job training incen- tives for military veterans re- turning to the private sector. The legislation enacted Mon- day allows employers to be reimbursed for half the wages paid to military veterans dur- ing an on-the-job training pe- riod. It will tap into federal money to offset the part of the job training costs. The new law replaces a 2006 state initiative – called the “Hero at Home” program – that was intended to provide job training and other aid to National Guard and reserve members. Governor Nixon’s administration says the new program expands benefits to people whose military service recently ended. MISSOURI’S REVENUE UP – State Budget Direc- tor Linda Luebbering an- nounced today (7-3-12) that Fiscal Year 2012 ended with a new general revenue collec- tions increasing by 3.2 per- cent compared to Fiscal Year 2011, from $7.11 billion last year to $7.34 billion this year. Net general revenue collec- tions for June 2012 increased by 1.8 percent compared to those for June 2011, from $716.6 million to $729.2 mil- lion. To receive Rep. Quinn’s free electronic weekly news- letter or if you have concerns or issues, contact my office by e-mail at paul.quinn@house. mo.gov or by calling toll free (866) 439-1422. I encourage your calls, e-mails, letters or any form of communication with your concerns. HOWARD COUNTY REAL ESTATE AUCTION Saturday – August 4, 2012 at 10:00 AM AUCTION LOCATION: KC Hall at 707 First Street in Glasgow, MO 65254 PROPERTY VIEWING Sunday – July 22 from 2 PM to 4 PM Conducted on Farm One at the lodge. PREMIER PAPER & PACKAGING INC. FARM ONE: Located from Glasgow, MO go south 7 miles on Hwy. 87 to Hwy. K, turn right, go west 3 miles to the farm on the left OR from the north edge of Boonville MO, cross the Missouri River bridge and immediately turn left on to Hwy. 87 go approx. 15 miles to Hwy. K, turn left, go 3 miles to farm on left. 224 ACRES in One Tract, less than one mile from the Missouri River. The FSA shows 45.7 acres of cropland, the balance is timber, roadways, creeks and lakes. 2012 DCP is $774.00 This farm has been managed for wildlife habitat to raise trophy whitetail bucks and tur- keys. Tract has a 33’ x 105’ building that serves as a hunting lodge and storage facility, also a 21’ x 50’ storage building. COOPERS CREEK HOLDINGS LLC. FARM TWO: Located from Glasgow, MO go south 8.5 miles on Hwy. 87 to Howard County Road 314 (by water tower) turn right, go west 1/4 mile to the farm on the right OR from the north edge of Boonville MO, cross the Missouri River bridge, immediately turn left on to Hwy. 87 and go 13.5 miles to Howard County Road 314, turn left, go 1/4 mile to farm on right. 200 ACRES in One Tract, approx. 2.5 miles from the Missouri River. The FSA office shows 37.2 acres of cropland, the balance is heavy mature timber, creek, ponds and roadways. 2012 DCP payment of $177.00 This farm has been managed for wildlife habitat just as Farm One has. TERMS: 10% Down day of the auction, balance at closing in 30 days No survey of property, will be conveyed off existing legal description Seller will pay title insurance premium Seller will pay all 2012 taxes Possession given at closing on building and hunting ground Farm land possession given subject to current 2012 farm tenant rights SELLERS: Doug Stansberry and Ed Stansberry, co-owners For more information call Charlie Nordwald 636-795-4552 Wheeler Auctions Representative www .wheelerauctions.com 660-327-5890 or 660-327-1806 Howard County Prosecuting Attorney, Deborah K. Riekhof, has reported that the following people were sentenced to the Department of Corrections (DOC) on June 6th Circuit Law Day before Judge Scott Hayes: Crystal M. Hutchinson (Mis- demeanor Driving while Intox- icated and Speeding, October, 2011) Sentenced to 30 days jail, SES, 2 years probation, 50 hours community service. Barbara Jean Renfrow (Pos- session of Drug Paraphernalia, May, 2012) sentenced to 4 years DOC. On June 11th, during the Circuit Law Day the follow- ing people were sentenced by Judge James Tuthill Bellamy: Dale Minnis (Court I & II: Stealing, August, 2011) sentenced to 6 years DOC on Count I and sentenced to 6 Circuit Law Day years on Count II to run con- current with Count I and all other sentences. On June 20th during Circuit Law Day the following people were sentenced by Judge Scott Hayes: Christopher J. Davis (Driv- ing while revoked, July 2009) upon Prosecutor’s motion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 4 years DOC. William A. McDaniel (Providing Materials for the Production of a Controlled Substance, September 2011) upon the Prosecutor’s mo- tion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 4 years DOC. Christopher R. Flick (Pos- session of a Controlled Sub- stance, September 2005) upon Prosecutor’s motion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 7 years DOC. Glasgow Senior Center Menu Meals will be served from 11:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Monday - 7/16 - Baked ham, mixed vegetables, tossed salad, fruit- parsley butter potatoes Tuesday - 7/17 - Turkey salad/croissant, potato salad, beets, fruit - pea salad Wednesday - 7/18 - Sliced turkey, cooked cabbage, carrots, fruit - baked beans Thursday - 7/19 - Meat loaf, broccoli, spinach, fruit - baked potato Friday - 7/20 - Baked fish, green leafy salad, cauliflower with peas, fruit - scalloped potatoes

FriDAY, Jul7 13, 2012 Update From The Capitol Glasgow ...media.iadsnetwork.com/edition/2218/33250/5f53cf31-3571...the free exercise of religion. I will attempt to give you the basics

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Shelter Life ProtectsLike You Do

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Shelter Life Insurance CompanyColumbia, Missouri

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STATE REGULATIONS NOTE: All agents with an Arkansas license (whether resident or non-resident) are REQUIRED to indicate his/her Arkansas license number for Life Insurance.

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Life Insurance with Shelter Insurance® will help protect the financial security you’ve created for the people you care about most.

Our dependable agents and the financial strength of our company means we’ll be there when you need us most.

Call, click or come see us to find out how our shield can help protect you!

Shelter’s dependable agents and the financial strength of our company means we’ll be there when you need us most.

Call today for a free life insurance review.

Shelter Life Protects Like You Do

H: 94° FL: 74° F

Local Grain Board

For up to date farm information and reports log on at: www.glasgowmfa.com

H: 96° FL: 75° F

H: 95° FL: 75° F

Local Forecast - Glasgow, MO

H: 91° FL: 69° F

H: 93° FL: 72° F

H: 92° FL: 71° F

Glasgow MFAPhone: (660) 338-2251

Week of July 3 through July 9Precipitation - .55”

River stage forcast for Saturday July 14 - 11.5’Grain Board - as of Tuesday, July 9

GRAINBOARD BU

Y

City PharmaCy$ave on PrescriPtion$

Ice Cream, Sodas.Coffee. Sandwiches,

Breakfast all day,Lottery, Spirits,and lots of other

great things!

DailyLuncheonSpecials

BreakfastAnytime of Day

Able to handle all Insurance and all Medicare ‘Part D’ Plans

529-2255 • 229 N. MaiN • Slater

“Your Home Town Pharmacy!”

The Glasgow MissourianFriDAY, Jul7 13, 2012 6

Fri 07/13 Sat 07/14 Sun 07/15 Mon 07/16 Tue 07/17 Wed 07/18

Corn.......................7.44Beans................15.95Wheat.................7.86

Boonville Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.79 -0.50 Fayette Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.79 -0.50 Glasgow Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.86 -0.43 Salisbury Delivery Cash Basis #2 Y Corn Chart in house 7.44 0.20 Chart fall 2012 6.92 -0.30 #2 Soybeans Chart in house 15.95 0.00 Chart fall 2012 14.80 -0.60 #1 S. Wheat Chart 2012 crop 7.83 -0.46

Price as of 07/10/12 12:03PM CDT.

Update From The Capitol

PAUL QUINNState RepresentativeDistrict 9

JOHN SMITH, AgentFayette/Glasgow Area

Fayette, MO 65248Office (660) 248-2525, Home (660) 248-3994

KEEPING YOU IN-FORMED - On the August 7 State-wide ballot there will only appear one issue and if passed would change the ex-isting provision of the Mis-souri Constitution relating to the free exercise of religion. I will attempt to give you the basics of what Amend-ment 2 seeks to do, along with relevant background and arguments both for and against. (The arguments for and against the Amendment are not my personal views – I am just giving you basic in-formation that I have found from various sources.) Although the Secretary of State’s office usually is re-sponsible for writing the ballot language of measures placed before voters, the Gen-eral Assembly exercised its prerogative under state law to write its own ballot question as part of House Joint Reso-lution 2. That ballot language says: “Shall the Missouri Consti-tution be amended to ensure: That the right of Missouri citizens to express their reli-gious beliefs shall not be in-fringed;That school children have the right to pray and acknowl-edge God voluntarily in their schools; and That all public schools shall display the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitu-tion.” Not a word of Article I, Section 5 has been changed in 137 years – since the adop-tion of the Missouri Constitu-tion of 1875 – and the existing language is strikingly similar to the free exercise provisions of the state constitutions of 1820 and 1865. Also, of the 29 sections of the state Bill of Rights that date to the Con-stitution of 1875, only three sections – those relating to grand juries, criminal indict-ments and juror qualifications – have since been amended, and those changes were made 112 years ago in 1900. Although Amendment 2 would add about 360 words to Article I, Section 5 and provide more specificity, it is unclear if it would actually grant Missourians any new or expanded religious rights since the activities enumer-ated in Amendment 2 are already protected by the ex-isting state and federal con-stitutions. However, there are some concerns that adding so much new language to a constitutional protection that hasn’t been changed in nearly a century and a half could yield unknown unintended consequences.

ARGUMENTS IN SUP-PORT OF AMENDMENT 2 – Amendment 2 would clarify the rights of Missou-rians to freely exercise their

religion without government interference. By specifically listing the religious rights that Missourians already enjoy, Amendment 2 could prevent unnecessary disputes over those rights from arising in the future. In particular, Amendment 2 would clarify that students can voluntarily pray in public schools and prohibit school officials from requiring a stu-dent to participate in class-room assignments that violate his or her religious beliefs. Amendment 2 is merely an affirmation of the importance Missourians place on the right to worship as they see fit.

ARGUMENTS IN OP-POSITION TO AMEND-MENT 2 – The Missouri Constitution’s existing free exercise provision has suc-cessfully protected religious freedom in this state for 137 years, and there is no reason to amend it. Even when the state constitution was rewrit-ten in 1945, the drafters wisely didn’t tinker with protections for religious rights. Over the several years that the General Assembly debated this leg-islation before it finally won passage, supporters couldn’t offer a single concrete ex-ample in which Missouri’s existing free exercise clause failed to protect someone’s religious freedom. Amendment 2 is a solution in search of a problem. At best it would change nothing; at worst it could produce po-tentially dangerous unintend-ed consequences.

GOVERNOR NIXON SIGNS JOB-TRAINING BILL FOR VETERANS – Governor Jay Nixon has signed House Bill 1680 that will offer job training incen-tives for military veterans re-turning to the private sector. The legislation enacted Mon-day allows employers to be reimbursed for half the wages paid to military veterans dur-ing an on-the-job training pe-riod. It will tap into federal money to offset the part of the job training costs. The new law replaces a 2006 state initiative – called the “Hero at Home” program – that was intended to provide job training and other aid to National Guard and reserve members. Governor Nixon’s administration says the new program expands benefits to people whose military service recently ended.

MISSOURI’S REVENUE UP – State Budget Direc-tor Linda Luebbering an-nounced today (7-3-12) that Fiscal Year 2012 ended with a new general revenue collec-tions increasing by 3.2 per-cent compared to Fiscal Year 2011, from $7.11 billion last year to $7.34 billion this year. Net general revenue collec-tions for June 2012 increased by 1.8 percent compared to those for June 2011, from $716.6 million to $729.2 mil-lion. To receive Rep. Quinn’s free electronic weekly news-letter or if you have concerns or issues, contact my office by e-mail at [email protected] or by calling toll free (866) 439-1422. I encourage your calls, e-mails, letters or any form of communication with your concerns.

HOWARD COUNTYREAL ESTATE AUCTION

Saturday – August 4, 2012 at 10:00 AMAUCTION LOCATION: KC Hall at 707 First Street in Glasgow, MO 65254

PROPERTY VIEWINGSunday – July 22 from 2 PM to 4 PMConducted on Farm One at the lodge.

PREMIER PAPER & PACKAGING INC.FARM ONE: Located from Glasgow, MO go south 7 miles on Hwy. 87 to Hwy. K, turn right, go west 3 miles to the farm on the left OR from the north edge of Boonville MO, cross the Missouri River bridge and immediately turn left on to Hwy. 87 go approx. 15 miles to Hwy. K, turn left, go 3 miles to farm on left. 224 ACRES in One Tract, less than one mile from the Missouri River. The FSA shows 45.7 acres of cropland, the balance is timber, roadways, creeks and lakes. 2012 DCP is $774.00 This farm has been managed for wildlife habitat to raise trophy whitetail bucks and tur-keys. Tract has a 33’ x 105’ building that serves as a hunting lodge and storage facility, also a 21’ x 50’ storage building.

COOPERS CREEK HOLDINGS LLC.FARM TWO: Located from Glasgow, MO go south 8.5 miles on Hwy. 87 to Howard County Road 314 (by water tower) turn right, go west 1/4 mile to the farm on the right OR from the north edge of Boonville MO, cross the Missouri River bridge, immediately turn left on to Hwy. 87 and go 13.5 miles to Howard County Road 314, turn left, go 1/4 mile to farm on right.200 ACRES in One Tract, approx. 2.5 miles from the Missouri River. The FSA office shows 37.2 acres of cropland, the balance is heavy mature timber, creek, ponds and roadways. 2012 DCP payment of $177.00 This farm has been managed for wildlife habitat just as Farm One has. TERMS:10% Down day of the auction, balance at closing in 30 daysNo survey of property, will be conveyed off existing legal descriptionSeller will pay title insurance premiumSeller will pay all 2012 taxesPossession given at closing on building and hunting groundFarm land possession given subject to current 2012 farm tenant rights

SELLERS: Doug Stansberry and Ed Stansberry, co-ownersFor more information call Charlie Nordwald 636-795-4552

Wheeler Auctions Representative

www.wheelerauctions.com660-327-5890 or 660-327-1806

Howard County Prosecuting Attorney, Deborah K. Riekhof, has reported that the following people were sentenced to the Department of Corrections (DOC) on June 6th Circuit Law Day before Judge Scott Hayes:

Crystal M. Hutchinson (Mis-demeanor Driving while Intox-icated and Speeding, October, 2011) Sentenced to 30 days jail, SES, 2 years probation, 50 hours community service.

Barbara Jean Renfrow (Pos-session of Drug Paraphernalia, May, 2012) sentenced to 4 years DOC.

On June 11th, during the Circuit Law Day the follow-ing people were sentenced by Judge James Tuthill Bellamy:

Dale Minnis (Court I & II: Stealing, August, 2011) sentenced to 6 years DOC on Count I and sentenced to 6

Circuit Law Dayyears on Count II to run con-current with Count I and all other sentences.

On June 20th during Circuit Law Day the following people were sentenced by Judge Scott Hayes:

Christopher J. Davis (Driv-ing while revoked, July 2009) upon Prosecutor’s motion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 4 years DOC.

Will iam A. McDaniel (Providing Materials for the Production of a Controlled Substance, September 2011) upon the Prosecutor’s mo-tion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 4 years DOC.

Christopher R. Flick (Pos-session of a Controlled Sub-stance, September 2005) upon Prosecutor’s motion, probation was revoked and sentenced to 7 years DOC.

Glasgow Senior Center MenuMeals will be served from 11:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Monday - 7/16 - Baked ham, mixed vegetables, tossed salad, fruit- parsley butter potatoesTuesday - 7/17 - Turkey salad/croissant, potato salad, beets, fruit - pea saladWednesday - 7/18 - Sliced turkey, cooked cabbage, carrots, fruit - baked beansThursday - 7/19 - Meat loaf, broccoli, spinach, fruit - baked potatoFriday - 7/20 - Baked fish, green leafy salad, cauliflower with peas, fruit - scalloped potatoes