S . E B T

In God We Trust
ST. ELMO BANNER
Serving St. Elmo and Brownstown Since 1880
St. Elmo, Illinois - Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014
$
1
Check out our
Gift Guide on
page 7
Event
Calendar
Share the details of your organization’s meeting or event by
calling newspaper correspondent Anna Jean Rhodes
(618) 829-5488
Tuesday,
Nov. 18
5:30-6:30 p.m. -- “Gluten Free Fads and Facts”
class through the Vandalia Kaskaskia College
Campus in the Vandalia
Extension Office. There
is no cost for this course.
Pre- register for the class
by calling (618) 283-1780
or (618) 545-3255.
One year later
www.altnewsban.com
Volume 134 - Number 46
Tornado victims rebuild homes, lives
BY NATHAN SCHOLES
Leaning against a wheel
of Russell and Patricia
Booherʼs camping trailer,
rests a heart- shaped landscaping stone that reads:
"We may not have it all
together, but together we have
it all."
One year after a tornado
destroyed their home and
upended their lives, it is
great perspective to have.
The Boohers, as well as
their former neighbor Ina
Abendroth, were victims
of the tornado that touched
down in rural St. Elmo this
time last year. All three have
spent the past year dealing with the aftermath. The
Boohers are building a new
home on the same ground,
while Abendroth is living
just outside of Brownstown.
The storm
“I had been to church
that morning. I came home,
cooked dinner, washed the
dishes and had sat down
to read, when the noise
started,” Abendroth recalls.
“It was completely black,
so I went into the bedroom,
laid on the bed, and covered
myself under three pillows.
I was scared to death. I
thought I might die.”
The tornado ripped
through her home, making a
“terrible noise,” taking most
of the roof off and nearly all
the windows out. The only
room of the house that was
untouched was the bedroom
that Ina was bunkered in.
“It was the good Lord,”
she replies when asked
about the reason she was
unharmed.
Shaken up, Ina phoned
her son, Paul, who lives in
Altamont. At first not believing her, he was soon convinced of her emergency.
“He made it from his
house in Altamont to my
house in six minutes,” she
says with a smile.
She found temporary
housing with family member Lorene Abendroth.
For the Boohers, the day
of the tornado was much
different.
“We were gone, my wife
was at work,” Russell states,
adding that he was at a
friendʼs house. Soon after
the storm, he received a call
from a friend urging him to
return to his home.
“We went over there, and
from highway, I thought
ʻwell, the house is still there,ʼ
but once we got closer, I
•see TORNADO pg 9
Ina Abendroth sits in the living room of her new home.
She has struggled with anxiety and insomnia since surviving the November 2014 tornado.
Wednesday,
Nov. 19
1 p.m. -- Royal Neighbors of America November meeting at the Phillips
Building
1:30 p.m. -- St. Elmo
HCE meeting at the St.
Elmo Public Library
Thursday,
Nov. 20
Noon -- Exxon Mobil
Annuitants at the Vandalia Ponderosa
6 p.m. -- The Vit-Em-In
Sunday School Class of
the First United Methodist
Church Thanksgiving turkey potluck in the church
fellowship hall.
Sunday,
Nov. 23
1:30 p.m. -- The Historical Vandalia, Inc. second
event of the 6th annual
Season of Events will be
held in the Vandalia First
United Methodist Church
Wesley Hall.
Monday,
Nov. 24
10 a.m. -- The Fayette
County Home and Community Education Board
at the Vandalia Extension
Office
6 p.m. -- The St. Elmo
Lions Club at Mary Ann’s
Restaurant.
Tuesday,
Nov. 25
7 p.m. -- St. Elmo Masonic Lodge meeting
Russell and Patricia Booher have spent the past year building their new home, which
they hope to complete next spring. The far left and far right windows were salvaged
from their previous house.
This stone rests against the Booher’s camping trailer in
which they currently reside. The inscription serves as a
reminder of the blessings still possessed, despite all that
was lost.
St. Elmo VFW retires flags, honors vets
BY NATHAN SCHOLES
The St. Elmo VFW held
their annual flag-retirement
ceremony on Veterans Day,
Tuesday, Nov. 11. Due to
unseasonably cold temperatures and scattered rainfall,
the ceremony was held in
the Phillips Building.
VFW member Bob
Herckert led the event. The
various flags flying above
the city's veterans' memorial were returned to their
donors.
The flags and their donors
are as follows:
--Prisoner of War Flag,
St. Elmo Christian church
Reverb youth group
--United States Air Force,
David and Jeanne Guinee of
Marseilles, Ill.
--United States Coast
Guard, Grady Marchman, Jr.
in honor of his father, Grady
Marchman, Sr.
--United States Army,
David, Sally, Beth, and Mark
Sproat of Glen Ellyn, Ill. in
honor of Jack Sproat
--United States Marine
Corps, Sperry Service
--United States Navy,
Janet Eckhardt in memory of
her father, Charles Cothern
--American Flag, Fleeta
Guffey and family in honor
of Scott, Candy, and Sonny
Gallion
Saturday,
Dec. 6
VFW members Ernie Myers and Bob Heckert follow proper protocol for folding the
American Flag during the ceremony. The flag was donated by Fleeta Guffey and her
family in honor of Scott, Candy, and Sonny Gallion.
8 a.m.-noon -- Annual clothing giveaway at
Freedom Reigns in Christ
Church
Sunday,
Dec. 7
5 p.m. -- Christmas in
St. Elmo Lodge #769
Tuesday,
Dec. 9
Noon -- Golden Years
Christmas potluck dinner at northeast corner of
First and Division Streets
Bob Heckert presents the POW flag to St. Elmo Christian Church Reverb youth group representative at the St.
Elmo VFW Veterans Day flag retirement ceremony. The
youth group donated the flag that flew above the veterans' memorial this past year.
Ernie Myers and Chuck Bosomworth work together to prepare the flag for presentation
to its donors at the VFW Veterans Day flag retirement ceremony.