Gozgals
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Dec 31, 2006 9:46 pm US/Eastern
Fifth-Grader Helps Keep Soup Kitchen Open
Beaded Jewelry Sales Help Liz Feller Raise Money For Needy
(CBS/AP) PEEKSKILL A local soup kitchen was in dire financial straits and facing closure until fifth-grader Liz Feller showed up.
Starting with $60 she had received as a birthday gift, the 10-year-old Cortlandt girl donated $863, mostly from the sale of her handmade beaded jewelry.
It helped to put the kitchen back in business, according to the Rev. Douglas Leonard, pastor of the Reformed Church of Cortlandtown, one of 80 area churches that support the charity. About $34,000 has been contributed, nearly enough to run the program for a year.
Liz, who made the largest donation, said she decided that "since I like beading, it was something that would work well, especially since it's right before the holidays." She sold her handmade jewelry to her friends, her mother's co-workers and other members of her church.
Area churches prepare and donate the food, but a $20,000 annual grant from a big U.S. food and beverage company to St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Peekskill was recently terminated, creating a financial pinch.
Leonard told The Journal News for Sunday's editions that Liz's contribution "kinda puts us to shame, anybody who says they can't do much this year. If you have the will and the heart to do this, you can."
http://wcbstv.com/watercooler/local_story_365173012.html
(© 2006 CBS Broadcasting Inc.
What a giving gesture from this lovely child.:clap: :clap:
Gozgals
Fifth-Grader Helps Keep Soup Kitchen Open
Beaded Jewelry Sales Help Liz Feller Raise Money For Needy
(CBS/AP) PEEKSKILL A local soup kitchen was in dire financial straits and facing closure until fifth-grader Liz Feller showed up.
Starting with $60 she had received as a birthday gift, the 10-year-old Cortlandt girl donated $863, mostly from the sale of her handmade beaded jewelry.
It helped to put the kitchen back in business, according to the Rev. Douglas Leonard, pastor of the Reformed Church of Cortlandtown, one of 80 area churches that support the charity. About $34,000 has been contributed, nearly enough to run the program for a year.
Liz, who made the largest donation, said she decided that "since I like beading, it was something that would work well, especially since it's right before the holidays." She sold her handmade jewelry to her friends, her mother's co-workers and other members of her church.
Area churches prepare and donate the food, but a $20,000 annual grant from a big U.S. food and beverage company to St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Peekskill was recently terminated, creating a financial pinch.
Leonard told The Journal News for Sunday's editions that Liz's contribution "kinda puts us to shame, anybody who says they can't do much this year. If you have the will and the heart to do this, you can."
http://wcbstv.com/watercooler/local_story_365173012.html
(© 2006 CBS Broadcasting Inc.
What a giving gesture from this lovely child.:clap: :clap:
Gozgals