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Dateline: December
26,
2002
Spirit
of Christmas
By Carrie Helms, Clarendon Enterprise
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Lions
Bobbie Thornberry and Jimmy Johnson look over the 40 holiday food
baskets the Clarendon Lions Club delivered to local families last
week. The club was just one of several organizations and
businesses demonstrating good will toward their neighbors this year.
Enterprise
Digital Photo |
Every
child goes to sleep on Christmas Eve hoping that Santa will come down the
chimney with a big sack of goodies and fill the house with toys and gifts
for Christmas morning. But many children, even in Clarendon, wake up to
just a cold and hungry morning like any other.
Fortunately,
local businesses and organizations worked hard this holiday season to
ensure that no one went without this Christmas.
“Every
child should have something for Christmas,” said Linda Gray, General
Manager at Duckwall’s in Clarendon. “Toys for Tots is a great way to
benefit kids in the community.”
Toys
for Tots began seven years ago with Chamberlain Motor Company and has
become a yearly tradition to be carried on by Suna AutoMall.
“All
the toys go to kids in this community; that’s the reason we do it,”
receptionist Vicki Sloan said. “It makes children happy who wouldn’t
have Christmas otherwise.”
Duckwall’s
and Suna AutoMall collected the toys, and Panhandle Community Services
wrapped and delivered them to local children.
Panhandle
Community Services has sponsored an angel tree for children in the
community for almost ten years.
“We
put up the tree the last week of November,” Robbie Hill of PCS said.
“In two weeks, all 58 angels had been taken off the tree.”
Each
child, ranging in age from birth to elementary school, receives a new pair
of shoes, a shirt, and pants; and Lions Club members put together a basket
of food for their families.
“We
get the food for the baskets and the names of the families from PCS,”
Lion Jimmy Johnson said. The Lions Club buys a turkey for each basket,
then assembles and delivers them to families in need.
“All
the Lions deliver them to the homes,” Johnson said. “Most of the
people who receive the baskets are very appreciative.”
One
of those appreciative families is Larinda Brown and her three children.
“The
kids really appreciate the gifts,” Brown said. “It is nice that my
kids get to see the true meaning of Christmas and the spirit of giving.”
Keith
and Cherie Floyd of Floyd’s Motor Company and Body Shop have been busy
elves repairing old bicycles to be distributed to children in the
community.
“This
is the second year we have done this,” Cherie Floyd said. “Last year
we collected 20 or 25 bikes, and this year we already have more than 40
bikes.”
The
Boy Scouts volunteered their time to help get the bikes in working order.
“We
couldn’t have done it without the boys,” Floyd said. “Steve Carter
and Carl Draper have been a big help.”
Floyd’s
delivered bikes to a list of 15 or more children on Christmas Eve.
“We
deliver them on Christmas Eve so the parents can do what they want with
them,” Floyd said. “We have plenty of bicycles for any child who needs
one. Every child should have a bike.”
Children
are not the only ones in need this holiday season. Residents at the
Medical Center Nursing Home had a chance to have their Christmas wishes
fulfilled with the help of the Angel Tree at Duckwall’s.
“We
have been doing the Angel Tree for four years,” Gray said. “You take
an angel off the tree with that person’s specific needs written on
it.”
Duckwall’s
and the Medical Center Nursing Home handed out the gifts at their annual
Christmas party on Thursday, December 20.
“It
helps the residents because they cannot go shopping for themselves,”
Gray said. “They get so excited, and it is something easy that the
community can do to help make their Christmas special.”
Every
year the youth from the First Baptist Church in Clarendon fill shoeboxes
with gifts for children who visit the Ministry Center Clothes Closet and
Food Pantry on Saturday mornings.
“Some
kids who come in here probably don’t even have running water, much less
gifts under the tree,” seventh grader Austin Howard said. “It is
always good to do something nice for someone else, especially at
Christmas.”
Many
of these businesses and organizations work non-stop all year long to keep
the Christmas spirit alive.
Over
the last year, the Ministerial Alliance of Clarendon spent close to $4,000
helping people in the community with financial difficulties.
“We
help people pay for utilities and for their heating during the winter
months,” Alliance president Rev. James Ivey Edwards said. “Part of the
money was spent buying food and gas for stranded travelers.”
Panhandle
Community Services is active in four counties and involved in charitable
services including helping people in the community with rent, paying
utility bills, and weatherizing homes.
“We
provide transportation around town and take a bus to Amarillo three times
a week,” Hill said. “People can make donations of money or food or
volunteer to help all year long.”
The
Lions Club is a service organization that makes annual contributions to
many organizations including the Bronco Band, the Junior Livestock
Association, Girls Town, and Clarendon College. The club also has a
program to buy eye exams and corrective lenses for local school children
in need.
“People
can get involved by donating food or cash money,” Johnson said, “or by
joining in an organization like Lions Club.”
The
Ministry Center is open every Saturday morning from 10 to noon
distributing clothes and food and accepting donations.
“When
you clean out your closets and cabinets, please don’t throw it all
away,” Jean Ledbetter of First Baptist Church said. “We are always in
need of children’s clothes, coats, and shoes or canned food.”
The
Christmas Spirit is alive and well in Clarendon, especially for the
families who have received gifts of love from charities like these.
“It
feels good to know that there are people out there who really care about
families who need help,” Brown said.
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