home’s grown
The Difference You’re Making in Children’s Lives!
FALL 2018
A Second Chance at Life Dana Catania has been taking care of others her whole life. When her mother abandoned her and her three sisters when she was just 5 years old, she was forced into adulthood. She became “mom” to her younger siblings in her own mother’s absence.
a struggle for her aging grandparents to care for four growing girls, they made it work. Unfortunately, within a short time, they both became ill. As they realized they could no longer care for their four grandchildren, they found the Masonic Children’s Home.
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“My earliest memories include watching my mom’s stomach being pumped in the front yard,” she recalls. Her mother had suffered for decades from addiction.
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
As Dana reflects on her childhood, she believes, with the right support, children’s lives can be turned around.
Dana’s father was an overnight truck driver and didn’t have the means nor the interest to care for her or her sisters. The girls eventually moved in with their grandparents who took them in with open arms. While it was
“Before we left, my grandparents said to me, ‘You have to be brave for your sisters,’” Dana recalls. “At that point, I remember thinking, ‘This is it. We only have each other now.’ I was only 9 years old.”
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As time went on, Dana realized she was wrong. For the first time in her life, she was able to be a kid at the children’s home. She was able to laugh, play in the back yard, and sing and dance in the kitchen. She had her sisters and gained many more siblings. House parents asked her about her day, then actually listened. She let her fear go and worked to overcome her feelings of neglect. “At home, we were never not fed or clothed,” Dana said, “but we were told kids should be seen but not heard. We got used to being screamed at. At the time, I didn’t even know how much I needed the children’s home, but I did.” As Dana grew into a young adult, she
After graduating from the children’s home, Dana took advantage of scholarship opportunities sponsored by donors and earned her bachelor’s degree in communications from Central Penn College, where she met her husband, AJ. Now a mother of three, memories of Dana’s youngest years encourage her to be the best mom she can be. “My little girl is 5 years old, which is how old I was when my mom left, and I can’t imagine leaving her,” she says. “I love all my kids so much, and I want to spend as much time with them as I can. I want to listen when they speak, and I want to make sure they know what they have to say is important.” When Dana thinks back to the past, her heart breaks for the little girls she and her sisters once were. She realizes, without the children’s home, her life could have went in any direction, which is what haunts her most as an adult. In her home, framed and hanging beside her bed, is a letter one children’s home
“When I have fears that I will become my parents, I read that letter,” Dana says. “It reminds me that my life isn’t going to be a reflection of where I came from. That’s not who I am.” Dana finds the most joy when experiencing childhood through the eyes of her kids, including the things she missed out on during her own. “My son is 6, and he loves to sing, laugh and act out characters,” she says. “He reminds me of how happy I was at the children’s home. I even call my sisters, explain what funny or crazy thing he’s doing and say, ‘Doesn’t this remind you of every Saturday in our cottage growing up?’” Dana’s faith has also provided her with comfort and the ability to forgive. She serves as the children’s coordinator at her church, where she often teaches kids her favorite lesson: when it seems like the world is pushing against you, don’t give up. She credits that lesson and her passion for helping kids to the children’s home. Dana’s dream is to one day become a youth pastor, and she began taking courses online with the support of her husband.
“When I see my husband with our kids, I always think, ‘I would have given anything to have a dad like that,’” Dana says. “When I was a kid, the thought of having a picture perfect family was something I was always trying to hold on to, and now I finally have it. It happened decades later than I expected, but it’s everything I’ve ever wanted.”
Countless children’s home alumni like Dana have amazing stories of triumph because of your support!
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“My whole life, I wanted a normal family,” Dana said, “but I wouldn’t trade my children’s home experience for anything. They instilled determination in me, and they taught me to be an open and loving person, even with people who aren’t like me. It was the first place where I felt truly at home and relaxed.”
staff member wrote to her upon her graduation from the program. The letter reminds her that she is a good sister and friend and that she is capable of making her own future. It reminds her of the beautiful life she’s built, even after facing adversity. She glances at the letter nearly every morning before waking her children up, feeding them breakfast and homeschooling them throughout the day. It’s a letter to remind her that she’s not her past.
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
learned valuable life lessons at the children’s home, like the importance of hard work. She excelled academically, took a part-time job and worked to afford her first car, something she’s still proud of. Dana found a passion in cheerleading and was able to attend training camps and competitions, thanks to donor support. When she left the children’s home nearly nine years after first arriving, she was a changed person.
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donors provided Jessica with financial assistance as she attained a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and law enforcement at Penn State University. During her college years, Jessica also worked as a teller and was asked to join the company’s management training program — an opportunity she accepted. “It ended up being a wonderful decision,” Jessica said. “Twentythree years later, I am still with the same bank, and they have given me many opportunities along the way to grow in my career and education.”
Finding the Right Path This alumna credits the children’s home for her success.
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
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Surrounding yourself with good or bad company is usually a choice, and although it may not seem like it in the moment, it comes with a hefty price tag — your future.
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Jessica Malone grew up in Philadelphia in an unstable environment and began following the wrong crowd during her pre-teen years. However, with the guidance of her grandfather, a Pennsylvania Mason, and the children’s home, she was able to regain control of her life and find the company she needed. “I was 12 years old and had never seen a farm animal,” Jessica said. “On the drive to the children’s home, I felt like I moved to ‘Little House on the Prairie’ because there was only one traffic light in Elizabethtown at the time. It was so different than Philadelphia.” While Jessica admits she was initially frightened of what awaited her at the children’s home and wished she could turn the car around, it did not take her long to welcome the change
it offered and begin looking toward the future with more focused eyes. Some of Jessica’s fondest memories from her years at the children’s home include getting into youthful shenanigans with her friends, going on vacations and being surrounded by a close-knit group of like-minded children and houseparents who understood her struggles and helped her find her way.
“I am most grateful that I was provided with a second chance — an opportunity to recognize my potential and the resources to further my education,” Jessica said. Jessica’s past will always be a part of the journey that led her to who she is today, but the children’s home taught her that her past did not need to be a predictor of her future. Instead, it gave her the confidence to create a better life for herself. After graduating from high school,
Without the children’s home, Jessica is confident she would not be in the same place she is today, and she is forever grateful for the life it gave her. While Jessica never ended up in a criminal justice career, she gives back to society in her own way through her membership with the Masonic HomesPatton School Alumni Association’s scholarship review board. Jessica assists in the scholarship selection process to ensure deserving candidates receive financial awards to fund their post-secondary endeavors. “The mission of giving back to the community is embedded in me because I have witnessed firsthand the impact that charitable giving can have on people,” Jessica said. The children’s home is able to continue changing the lives of children in need because of generous donors who realize that a good childhood foundation, for many, equates to a prosperous life. “When one is fortunate enough to have resources to share, I think it is important to show thanks and pay it forward to others so they continue on similar paths,” Jessica said. “For children specifically, there is no greater gift than a chance to break the mold and achieve greater things. A gift to the children’s home provides this opportunity.”
A Future in the Making This young man is working on discovering himself and his future.
As he approached his teenage years, Mark grew bitter. He lost his lust for life and began skipping school. “I felt like I was never in school, and no one really cared or noticed,” he said. “I was reckless.” Mark fell behind academically. While he has only lived at the children’s home for two months, Mark can see many changes in himself. “This place is great, because it gives kids who don’t have the best home life a second chance,” he says. “I have grown up a lot already.” Not only has Mark taken advantage of the individual academic assistance available to him, but he was surprised to connect so closely with the once “strangers” who were his house parents and the other young men in his cottage. “All the guys I live with are cool, and the house parents are the best,” Mark says. “They’re fun to talk to, and some of them even like the same movies and comic book characters I like.”
“I could have ended up like the people who have disappointed me,” Mark said, “but now that I’m here, I know I’ll be fine.” When Mark envisions the next 10 years of his life, he sees himself in law enforcement for one simple reason: “I like to help people,” he says.
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“When I was 3 years old, my parents up and left,” Mark said. He is the youngest of five siblings, many of whom moved, along with Mark, to their grandparents’ home after they were left to their own devices. A few years later, both grandparents passed away within months of each other, and Mark’s aunt took over primary guardianship. However, “it was a lot for her,” Mark says.
He has expanded his hobbies since moving to the children’s home, including his love for reading and volunteering with a local church youth group. A few times, Mark has visited the young boys’ cottage to play football and basketball. Sometimes, interacting with the young boys reminds him of his childhood. “Kids are pretty resilient, but their situations can hurt them in the end,” he said. Mark says if he wasn’t at the children’s home, he’d be in foster care, or even worse.
While he can’t shoot spider webs from his wrists or detect danger with his “spider-sense,” Mark is learning he has one important ability – to make his own future, one that is void of his past.
While he came from difficult circumstances, Mark has the ability to re-write his own future, thanks to generous people like you. Please keep supporting children like Mark!
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HOME’S GROWN KIDS
Like his favorite fictional superhero, 10th grader Mark is witty, funny and loyal. Spiderman doesn’t buckle in the face of danger, and only gets stronger after each feat he conquers.
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An Unexpected Gift of Purpose
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
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This house parent feels he has found his true calling in raising and supporting young men at the children’s home.
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Often, it’s the opportunities you don’t see coming that have the biggest impact on your life. John Tracy’s unexpected opportunity was becoming a house parent of teenage boys at the Weller Cottage.
In many ways, the kids have brought an extra layer of color to John’s life as he watches them grow up from “little squirts” to fine young men, and he continues to find new sources of joy in his work daily.
After John graduated from college with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts, he started a graphic design company with friends. In the years that followed, while waiting for his company to take off, John decided to go back to school to earn his post-baccalaureate certification in art education.
Some of John’s common duties as a houseparent include cooking meals for the boys, cleaning the cottage, giving advice and arranging and keeping commitments like college visits or senior pictures. In general, John acts as a constant presence in the boys’ lives, there to guide and care for them through the highs and lows.
When John learned of a job opening at the children’s home, it piqued his interest. It was third shift and would allow him to work and go back to school, while also giving him experience working with kids. Working as a houseparent in Weller Cottage for the last nine years, John has found himself on a different career path than he initially anticipated. He has not said farewell to his artistic passions — he still crafts and sells expressionistic artwork in his free time.
“Sometimes you explore who you don’t want to be before you find out who you do want to be,” John said. “My job is to help these kids find their way through school and life.” Bonding with the boys is second nature for John, and he can sit with them and talk about sports, art — or anything, really — for hours. But like any parent, he has to find the balance between friend and disciplinarian.
listening to them and am always there for them no matter what. I want to orient them toward maturity and success.” The opportunity to help teach kids how to build a bright future for themselves has been humbling for John, and he believes his efforts are made possible by generous donors.
“I have to be a role model for them and make sure they are keeping up with their obligations and growing into fine young adults who represent our program well,” John said. Although disagreements are unavoidable in any family setting, as kids do not always see eye to eye with their elders, John follows the golden rule — treat others how you’d like to be treated — and asks for the same respect in return.
While John has taught many young men valuable knowledge that they will carry with them for the rest of their lives, they, too, have taught him a lot about himself and have given his life a newfound purpose. “Being a houseparent was an unexpected job for me, but the children’s home, in a way, has become my second home,” John said. “Yes, it’s a job where I clock in and out, but it’s a longterm investment for me, and I see it pay off every day with the kids’ successes and growth. I am certainly proud to be here.”
Make a Difference this Season
NEW ITEMS inside the 2018-2019 Giving Catalog Order catalogs: 1-800-599-6454 | View items and donate online: MCHGivingCatalog.org
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
SUMMER 2018
“I always want to respect each child’s experiences and truly listen to them, even when we’re in disagreement,” John said. “I think that builds respect. It lets them know that I’m
“Some of these kids have come from rough circumstances,” John said. “Getting to know the kids and gaining insight on their upbringings has been enlightening. I get to see how they have changed because of the security the children’s home and its donors provide.”
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Turn Your Required Minimum Distribution into a Qualified Charitable Deduction ARE YOU 70½ or older and: • Own an IRA? • Haven’t taken all of your required minimum distribution (RMD) this year?
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
FALL 2018
• Don’t need all or part of RMD to live on?
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• Hate to pay taxes? • Enjoy helping others?
THEN CONSIDER THIS! Give all or part of your RMD to the Masonic Children’s Home, and you will make a difference for a child in need.
ACT NOW! Call the Masonic Charities Office of Gift Planning at 1-800-599-6454 or complete and send the enclosed form to find out how you can: • Give part or all of your RMD to the Masonic Children’s Home • Avoid taxes on your RMD • Put a smile on your face!
This is a Great Year-End Gift!
Thank You ALL GIFTS GIVEN MARCH 1 - JULY 31, 2018
William Brady Christenson Investment Partners
HONOREE
DONOR
Causeway Capital
All of the Children
Wayne and Delores Laucks
Larry and Linda Brand
John and Barbara Kolchin
Kelly Ann Brown
Richard and Louise Brown
John Bukowski
Robert Zupanovich
Theresa Marek Joseph Wable
Ann Edinger
AUTHOR DONORS
John Filson
Judith Wolf
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Goldman Frederic and Barbara Glatter Allen J. Henninger
John and Barbara Kolchin
Cynthia Mahalick
John and Barbara Kolchin
Gregory A. Moore
Red Lion Lodge No. 649
Nestor Morales
Jerry and Cindy Kopenhaver
J.T. Mullins
Lewis Shaw
New Family of Children
William and Virginia Rice
WISH LIST CONTRIBUTORS
Nancy Segal
Andrew and Doris Zelez
Jack and Joan Kelley
Boyd Watterson Asset Management
Nate Shaw
Lewis Shaw
Reed and Kaila Terwilliger
Shawn Terwilliger
Glenn and Barbara Kurzenknabe
Christenson Investment Partners
Lodge No. 106
Wayne and Nancylee Garafola
Meyersdale Lodge No. 554
Ronald and Judy McKnight
Mill Creek Capital Advisors, LLC
Mill Creek Capital Advisors, LLC
Bill and Carla Fishel Robert Girling James A. and Doralice P. Hinton, CRUT Evelyn Hunter-Longdon
MENTOR DONORS Brad and Carol Moore
MEMORIAL GIFTS MEMORIAL DONOR Audell M. Adams
Donald and Barbara Redlich
Erla M. Beddow
Hugh Beddow
Marilyn Bennett
Harold Bennett
Daniel B. Breneman
Patricia Breneman
Barbara G. Brown
Virginia Schlegel
Ira M. Buckwalter
Ira Buckwalter, Jr.
Ida Bueki
Philip and Kristen Bueki
Vida and Harry Burchfield
John and Carol Bream
Bowman Burrier
Cora Burrier
Barbara Bush
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Peggy Whittington
Gaylon Cathcart
Michael and Barbara Cathcart
Luther and Kimberly Zarfoss
Carlos Chimcherian
John and Nancy Angeny
William E. Clark
William F. Clark
Charles and Mary Class
Richard and Susan Kirk
Seymour B. Cohen
Dorothy Cohen
Jeffrey W. Coy
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Bill and Jo Rotella
Julia H. Crouse
Carl Crouse
Richard Dome
Chris and Joan Reynolds
Katherine M. Dubbs
Wayne and Debra Dubbs
Armando M. Duran
Stacy Duran
Elizabeth J. Eakman
Betty Mrazik and Family
Bernard Thome
James M. Eakman
Betty Mrazik and Family
Kathleen C. Eckard
Norman Eckard
William and Marlene Moisey
National Investment National Investment Services, Inc. Services, Inc. Fred and Mary Jane Sample Polen Capital Herbert and Nancy Lou Ridyard John Savickas
Roger and Susan Wheeler
Jay and Nancy Smith
NEW CENTENNIAL SOCIETY MEMBERS
John and Jennifer Sweigart
Paula K. Kauffman
Janet Townsend
Theresa E. Marek
Marcia L. Zinkel
Financial information about Masonic Village can be obtained by contacting us at 1-800-599-6454. In addition, Masonic Charities is required to file financial information with several states. Colorado: Colorado residents may obtain copies of registration and financial documents from the office of the Secretary of State. (303) 894-2680, http://www.sos.state.co.us/. Florida: SC No. 00774, A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE, WITHIN THE STATE, 1-800-HELP-FLA. Georgia: full and fair description of the programs and activities of Masonic Charities and its financial statement are available upon request at the address indicated above. Illinois: Contracts and reports regarding Masonic Charities are on file with the Illinois Attorney General. Maryland: For the cost of postage and copying, documents and information filed under the Maryland charitable organizations laws can be obtained from the Secretary of State, Charitable Division, State House, Annapolis, MD 21401, (800) 825-4510. Michigan: MICS No. 11796 Mississippi: The official registration and financial information of Masonic Charities may be obtained from the Mississippi Secretary of State’s office by calling 1-888-236-6167. New Jersey: INFORMATION FILED WITH THE ATTORNEY GENERAL CONCERNING THIS CHARITABLE SOLICITATION AND THE PERCENTAGE OF CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED BY THE CHARITY DURING THE LAST REPORTING PERIOD THAT WERE DEDICATED TO THE CHARITABLE PURPOSE MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY CALLING (973) 504-6215 AND IS AVAILABLE ON THE INTERNET AT www.njconsumeraffairs.gov/ocp.htm#charity. REGISTRATION WITH THE ATTORNEY GENERAL DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT. New York: A copy of the latest annual report can be obtained from the organization or from the Office of the Attorney General by writing the Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271. North Carolina: Financial information about this organization and a copy of its license are available from the State Solicitation Licensing Branch at 1-888-830-4989. Pennsylvania: The official registration and financial information of Masonic Charities may be obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of State by calling toll-free, within Pennsylvania, 1-800-732-0999. Virginia: Financial statements are available from the State Office of Consumer Affairs, P.O. Box 1163, Richmond, VA, 23218. Washington: The notice of soliciation required by the Charitable Solicitation Act is on file with the Washington Secretary of State, and information relating to financial affairs of Masonic Charities is available from the Secretary of State, and the toll-free number for Washington residents: 1-800-332-4483. West Virginia: West Virginia residents may obtain a summary of the registration and financial documents from the Secretary of State, State Capitol, Charleston, WV 25305. REGISTRATION IN THE ABOVE STATES DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL OR RECOMMENDATION OF MASONIC CHARITIES BY THE STATE.
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Boyd Watterson Asset Management
EDUCATOR DONORS
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
SCHOLAR DONORS
HONORARIUM GIFTS
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Thank You
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
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MEMORIAL GIFTS
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MEMORIAL
DONOR
MEMORIAL
DONOR
Paul L. Edinger, Jr.
Ann Edinger
Kenneth E. Leister
Lawrence Large
Charles W. Elliott
Margaret Elliott
John D. Lucas
Shirley Lucas
James T. English
Margery English
Isabel Lynch
John and Nancy Angeny
Donald E. Eshelman
Norma Eshelman
Charles G. Maratta
Andre and Nancy Panneton
Mathias M. Fath
Richard and Louise Brown
Anna Dean Marvel
Garrett and Catherine Marvel
Father
Thomas and Bonnylin Taylor
Timothy O. Meckley
Carol Meckley
Calvin K. Flury, Sr.
Calvin and Pennie Flury
Anna Kolchin Mellin
John and Barbara Kolchin
Bill Gassman
Tracy and Sandra Miller
Al Meltzer
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Vera Gayman
James and Beverly Gayman
Joan M. Mezoff
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Joan Geary
Ralph Geary
David Minehart
Verna Minehart
Robert W. Gliha
Barbara Gliha
Richard A. Minehart
Verna Minehart
Billy Graham
Stuart and Barbara Brown and Helena Roberts
Vada M. Moore
Brad and Carol Moore
David R. Graham
Sharon Graham
Donald G. Muston
Eleanor Wolf
Hal Greer
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Kenneth T. Nagie, Sr.
Gail Nagie
Samuel Grossman
Geneva Grossman
James C. Nickle
Samuel and Laura McElheny
Evans Guequierre
Jacques Guequierre
Doris Ober
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Joan H. Hall
William Hall
Eleanor Wolf
Betty L. Hamsher
Dennis and Suzanne Hamsher
Ronald Oberholtzer
William Oberholtzer
Mahlon E. Hariu
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Thomas Oberholtzer
William Oberholtzer
Audrey Stroup
Gerard Olivieri
Carolyn Olivieri
Harold E. Hartdung
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Loved Ones
John Steinmetz, Jr.
Barry Lee Hassinger
Joan Hassinger
Kathy A. Peifer
Kenneth Peifer
Sidney S. Hersh
Joel Hersh and Cynthia Tyger
Albert Pirolli
William and Anna Clark
John T. Hiller
Florence Hiller
Paul D. Purnell
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Fred Hoffken
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Alexander Jesse Reeder
Jackie Hull-Reeder
Fredrick Hoffmann
Margaret Hoffmann
Joseph V. Reidinger
Mavis Reidinger
Melvin M. Hollenbach
Dale Hollenbach
Michael Scott Rice
Andrew and Doris Zelez
Doris L. Jenkins
Stuart and Barbara Brown and Helena Roberts
Julian A. Richter
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Dale Rissmiller
Marie Rissmiller
William H. Roberts, Jr.
Carol Roberts
Gerald Schuldt
Bruce and Joan Howarth
Brenda L. Thatcher Shetron
Norman and Anita Thatcher
Paul L. Shumate
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Jean A. Silvius
James Silvius
Scott Sinkler
Wendel Sinkler
John P. Snoke
Mary Snoke
M. F. Steiger
Mildred Steiger
Joan E. Stein
Stuart and Barbara Brown and Helena Roberts
Anna “Nancy” Stevenson
Richard Stevenson
Ulysses S. Strouss
Quentin Strouss
Henry E. Sulkowski
Margaret Sulkowski
George Boyd Tamski, Sr.
Darla Lee Tamski
Jay Tarnopolski
Philip and Kristen Bueki
Carolyn Sue Thatcher
Norman and Anita Thatcher
Irene L. Jochen
Albert Jochen
Albert Johnson
Mathew and Jessica Templin
B. C. “Red” Jones
Louise Jones
Dale R. Jones
Carol Jones
Barbara M. Jordan
James Jordan
Reed S. Kahley
Lovell Kahley
Peter Kelley
Joseph and Jean Seitz
Nicholas Kiefer, Sr.
Nick and Ellen Kiefer
Otto M. Kline
Janet Townsend
J. Walter Knobloch
Marilou Knobloch
Peter and Eva Kolchin
John and Barbara Kolchin
Charles Krauthammer
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Edith J. Kreider
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Matt and Jen Gerdes
Arlene Landes
David Landes
MEMORIAL GIFTS
Harold Tonkin
Frederick Tonkin
Samuel G. Toth
Wanda Toth
Charles M. Townsend
Darla Lee Tamski
Lloyd Forrest Townsend
Janet Townsend
Suzanne Tschudy
John Tschudy
Eugene Tubbs
Roland and Helen Turley
Royden Tyger
Joel Hersh and Cynthia Tyger
John W. Valiton
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Veterans
Barry Newstadt
Edward R. Walters
Dee Walters
Eugene D. Williams
Roland and Helen Turley
Joan R. Witmer
Stuart and Barbara Brown and Helena Roberts
Earl and Florence Wolf
Stewart Wolf
Frank Wolyniec
Joyce Wolyniec
Walter “Wally” H. Wright
Stuart and Barbara Brown
Gene and Nancy McMillen
Audrey Stroup
Frank Yarnall
Barbara Ruth Yarnall
To our generous donors, thank you for believing in our mission, and most importantly, our children. You have made a difference in the lives of children in need of a safe and loving home!
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DONOR
HOME’S GROWN KIDS
MEMORIAL
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MASONIC CHARITIES Office of Gift Planning One Masonic Drive • Elizabethtown, PA 17022-2219
Your support means the world to a child in need.