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Lorena Reviglio visits with Les Boers at the Spring Valley Nursing Center Tuesday. It was Boers' 104th birthday. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)
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SPRING VALLEY — The year was 1909.

In Central America, Columbia recognized the independence of Panama, and the last American troops had left Cuba after being there since the Spanish American War.

And on Feb. 5, in a little old farmhouse north of Tonica, Leslie Boers was born.

“I had two younger brothers, all three of us were born in that house,” Boers said this week.

Boers, who is now a resident of the Spring Valley Nursing Center, celebrated his 104th birthday Tuesday with visits from loved ones and a large cake shared with the rest of the residents.

Boers said his father was a farmer.

“Our farm was two miles north of Tonica,” he said. “It laid alongside the Illinois Central Railroad. It was on the west side, and we farmed right up to the right of way.”

Boers attended the Hetrick School, located just north of his home.

Boers was 9 years old when World War I ended, and he remembers the day clearly. His father and several of the neighbor men were all about 35, and they were already to go fight.

“And then that freight train came north,” Boers said. “Mom woke me up pretty early in the morning, and they had the whistle blowing and smoke rolling out and the flags on the front of it.”

At first everyone thought there was something wrong.

“And then we could hear the Oglesby church bells and LaSalle church bells start ringing,” he said. “That was the end of the war.”

After graduating from the eighth grade, Boers left school to help farm with his father.

“I had four horses and a harrow and a cart,” he said. “I’d have to harrow half the field and then turn around.”

When Boers was grown, his father sent him to the barbershop in Cedar Point one evening to get a haircut.

In addition to the haircut, Boers also fell in love.

“Her dad wanted a haircut, and I was just about through in the chair,” he said. “I saw the most beautiful girl I ever saw.”

However, instead of going over, Boers paid the barber and left.

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