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			 Gass found a suitable building, the old train depot that was 
			being used for storage, and set to work restoring the building for 
			its new use as Emden’s first public library. The old depot had no 
			electricity and was filled with trash when she first began the 
			transformation. 
 When the library first opened in 2007, the shelves were filled with 
			four boxes of donated books. Today, the library is filled with books 
			and magazines, and offers summer events for children every Thursday.
 
 For her efforts, LaDonna Gass has been honored with many awards. The 
			mayor of Emden at the time the library project began, Ivan Rademaker, 
			was a backer of LaDonna’s idea. Mayor Rademaker nominated Gass for 
			the prestigious Studs Terkel Humanities Service Award, and she was 
			one of only forty-four recipients in 2009 in the State of Illinois. 
			But all of this is well known. This story is how one person’s idea 
			touched a community and the surprise that came about because of hard 
			work, vision, and dedication.
 
 In February of 2008, a small article appeared the Pekin newspaper 
			announcing that Earl Gass, LaDonna’s husband, had started a business 
			in his home of copying 8mm home movies to DVD’s. The old movie film 
			can grow fragile over the years and disintegrate. Families want to 
			preserve their movie memories, so converting the movies to DVD’s is 
			a move that will preserve them forever. An elderly resident of Pekin, 
			Gertrude Schrader, read the article and clipped it. She had a stack 
			of home movies from her life in central Illinois and thought it 
			would be a good idea to transfer them to DVD’s. She did not act on 
			her plans until August of that year.
 
 
			 
			Since she no longer drove, she convinced a friend to drive her to 
			Emden. When they arrived in town, Gertrude, Trudy to her friends, 
			had no idea where Earl Gass lived. Being a resourceful person, she 
			stopped at the Farmer’s State Bank to ask for directions. When she 
			inquired about Earl’s address, the bank employee gave Trudy and her 
			friend directions to the Gass residence. Ms. Schrader was not quite 
			sure they could follow the directions, so the bank employee said she 
			would take a few minutes off and show them personally where Earl 
			lived. Small town America really does exist where neighbors help one 
			another.
 
 LaDonna picks up the story from here. “It was a hot August day and I 
			had the front door of my house open to let a breeze blow through. I 
			happened to look out and saw this elderly lady walking up my front 
			walk carrying two huge shopping bags. She marched right up the front 
			steps of my porch. When I asked her if I could help her, she showed 
			me the two bags of home movies and said she had seen the article 
			about Earl and wanted her movies saved on DVD’s.”
 
 Recovering from her surprise, LaDonna explained that her husband was 
			not home, but would be happy to call her and discuss the project. 
			Ms. Schrader insisted on leaving her movies, telling LaDonna that 
			she was sure Earl could do the job. LaDonna could not dissuade her, 
			even suggesting that Gertrude keep the movies until Earl called, but 
			to no avail.
 
 Ms. Schrader plopped the two bags on the floor and prepared to 
			leave. LaDonna said “Don’t you want to know how much this project 
			will cost?” Gertrude Schrader’s response was a classic. She said, 
			“Oh, that’s ok. I’m sure he wouldn’t rip off an old lady.”
 
 With that, Gertrude and her friend turned and left. To say that 
			LaDonna was surprised at this incident is an understatement.
 
 When Earl got home that evening and heard the story and saw the pile 
			of movies, he was shocked! He had just started his movie conversion 
			business and had not even attempted a project of this magnitude.
 
 The two shopping bags contained reel upon reel of movies. LaDonna 
			and Earl went back and forth on what to do. Earl finally decided to 
			tackle the job.
 
 Converting this many old movies to DVD was not a simple matter. Some 
			of the ancient films broke when Earl tried to play them, then 
			requiring an intricate job of splicing. Earl also had to find a bulb 
			for his old 8mm projector. But through perseverance, a quality that 
			runs deep in the Gass family, the conversion got underway.
 
			
			 It was taking some time, longer than anticipated. One day, the 
			Gass family received a phone call from a woman in California who 
			identified herself as a relative of Gertrude Schrader, and inquiring 
			about how the job was going. It was coming up on October, and Earl 
			replied that he was almost done. Finally, after three months of almost daily work on the Schrader 
			movies, the job was done. Earl and LaDonna drove the movies and 
			DVD’s to Pekin to deliver them personally.  
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			 Gertrude was thrilled with the results. Earl had placed each 
				DVD in an individual jewel case with a photo he had taken from 
				the movies on the cover to help identify the contents. When they 
				played a DVD, Gertrude exclaimed how pleased she was with the 
				results. Earl had done a professional job and his client was 
				happy with it. 
 Still the question of a fee had not been discussed. Gertrude 
				stepped up and handed Earl three, twenty dollar bills.
 
 A glance between Earl and LaDonna seemed to say, “Oh well, Mrs. 
				Schrader is happy. That’s enough for us.”
 
 Much later, LaDonna said with a laugh, “I figured the $60 
				amounted to about a nickel an hour for all of Earl’s work.”
 
 Just as they stepped to the door, Earl mentioned the Whistle 
				Stop Depot Library and suggested maybe Gertrude would consider 
				making a donation to it. With no response, the Gass couple was 
				on their way back to Emden. LaDonna was not sure it had been a 
				good idea to mention the library. They never heard from Gertrude 
				Schrader again.
 
 Well, that’s not quite accurate. In February of 2014, the phone 
				rang in the Gass home. It was a law firm in Morton inquiring if 
				LaDonna was the contact for the Whistle Stop Depot Library. The 
				law firm said that a client had passed away and left the Whistle 
				Stop a part of an estate. Without identifying the client or 
				amount, the law firm said they would mail the necessary 
				documents for LaDonna to sign.
 
 After hanging up, the guessing game began. Who would have done 
				this, and how much was the bequest, probably just a small 
				amount, surely. Well, she would just have to wait for the mail 
				to bring the paperwork. It arrived a few days later, and when 
				LaDonna opened the envelope, she received the shock of her life. 
				This was truly an OMG moment. Someone LaDonna had never heard of 
				left the Whistle Stop $10,000. “My jaw hit the ground,” she 
				said. There was a name and address in the documents, but LaDonna 
				was unfamiliar with them.
 
 When Earl got home she showed him the information. He was 
				baffled also. Who was this person? Then a glimmer of a thought 
				came to Earl.
 
 He went back in his records and found the same address in his 
				files for the elderly woman in Pekin he had done the movie-DVD 
				conversion for in 2008. Gertrude Schrader had heard Earl’s 
				parting comment about the Whistle Stop donation and taken it to 
				heart.
 
 
			
			 
				After returning the legal documents to the lawyers, LaDonna’s 
				curiosity caused her to call the law firm and ask some questions 
				about Gertrude Schrader. She learned that Ms. Schrader was 105 
				years old when she passed on in 2013. That meant that when she 
				walked up on LaDonna’s porch carrying two shopping bags of heavy 
				movies, she was 99. She had been a resident of the Emden area 
				before moving to an apartment in Pekin, and was known as being 
				an able business woman even into her later years.
 
 Schrader’s will had been written in 2000, and had never been 
				changed except in 2008, the year Schrader added the Whistle Stop 
				Library to it. The call from California might have been a niece, 
				as Schrader never had children. She left the bulk of her estate 
				to organizations she supported, including one small library in a 
				small Logan County town.
 
 The gift from Gertrude Schrader’s estate arrived at an important 
				moment for the Whistle Stop. The small railroad station turned 
				library needs some extensive repairs to keep it going. An 
				exterior paint job is number one on that list. It also needs 
				volunteers.
 
 When LaDonna found the location of Trudy Schrader’s final 
				resting place, she drove there with a big bouquet of flowers and 
				said a prayer for her benefactor.
 
 So, you never know when a kind touch for another person will 
				lead to a pleasant surprise down the road.
 
			[By CURT FOX] |