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			 The 64-year-old small-business owner had the warning signs: tired 
			and easily winded, shortness of breath, minimal feelings of 
			discomfort around the heart. 
 Shuff, who is also director of the Logan and Mason County Salvation 
			Army, received life-saving care for his Oct. 5 heart attack at 
			Memorial Medical Center in Springfield. He then returned home to 
			Lincoln to start cardiac rehabilitation at Abraham Lincoln Memorial 
			Hospital.
 He’s already back to coordinating the annual kettle drive for the 
			Salvation Army this holiday season – this year with a new name: “A 
			Heart for the Kettles.”
 
			
			 
			“A ‘Heart for the Kettles’ came from doing my rehab program at ALMH,” 
			Shuff said. “The rehab staff has been very encouraging. I actually 
			feel better now than I have for some time.”
 Shuff is nearing the halfway point of a 12-week rehabilitation 
			program. He does one-hour workouts on five or six machines three 
			times a week. He's already noticed a change in his strength and 
			endurance, and his resting heart rate is adjusting to a more normal 
			level as well.
 The convenience of the hospital’s local rehab program is not lost on 
			him.
 
			
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“We get the kettles started at the crack of dawn, and they go until 9 p.m. each 
evening,” he said. “Being able to come in for rehab first thing in the morning 
is worth everything. And the quality of the program is top notch. They know what 
to test for in each individual and what to work on. That gives you a level of 
peace and confidence.”
 To help ring the bells or make a donation to the Salvation Army this holiday 
season, call 217-732-7890 and leave a voice mail. Shuff will be sure to call you 
back.
 
 “This community has a heart for the kettles,” he said.
 
				 
			[Michael Leathers, Memorial Health 
			Systems] 
			
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