Radio mirror (Jan-June 1948)

Record Details:

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?>^t(^^ j£a^^%'C^ yii^ectJ Don MeNeill, as M.C of the Breakfast Club, is heard erery weiekdajr nutribing at 9 EST, on ABC network stations. her money, and didn't expect to live. Don investigated her case, and found that what she said was true. He had her taken to a sanitarium in Waukegan, and paid all her expenses — including several operations — for three and a half years. But the girl's condition became worse in spite of aU the doctors could do, and she passed away a year ago. I stiU have the bedspreads and tablecloths and other things she made for us while she was in the sanitarium. Now, Don didn't have to help that girl — and she didn't ask him to. He did it because he wanted. to help her. And when your husband does things for other people you simply can't help feeling good, and proud of him. I think another quality about Don I like especially well is that when he feels depressed or blue, as all of us do at one time or another, he doesn't try to "take it out" on the rest of us. Don just goes into his den, or his w^orkshop, and busies himself until he's chipper again. He regards personal worries and troubles as his own. For example, when Tommy went to the hospital with polio late last summer, few people knew about it — even those on the Breakfast Club staff. We all prayed by ourselves — and Tommy came through in good shape. On his first day home, we all had dinner