a CHILDREN $B By ANGELO PATRI CHECK UP NOW HECK up on your school child's | work. Study his latest report card, | Lf there are signs that he is falling ip ! a subject, If any of his marks are fall i Ing off, take up the matter at once. | Talk first to the child and remember | that your attitude on this is of first | importance. If you take the tone that the child | Bas neglected his work and disgraced | bimself yon won't get very far. Go | about it gently. Ask him where he | thinks the trouble is 1nd when he | says, “Aw, she never gives me a! chance,” don't fly up at, him and end i the conference in a tense situation. | Listen. Keep on listening. Let him say all be has to say In his own defense and question him further. By and by he will begin to disclose semething of his difficulty and that is what you | need. After you have talked to the boy go to see the teacher. Once more you | must go about your task tactfully and in the spirit of helpfulness. The teach- { er is your partner. your working part. | ner, and unless she is with yon | strongly you are not going to succeed. i Tell the teacher yon want to do all | yon can to keep the child progressing | steadily and ask her what yon can do. Then pian with her. Don’t be satis | fled antl] you can answer these ques | tions: Why is the child What must be done first to make up | the failing? How much more work | has he to cover before the term end? Can you see a way clear for bim to | accomplish it? Can you make =a schedule of work that will enable the | child to complete his work well within the time and allow him some time for | review and reorganization? | You see you have not only to bring | the child up to the standard just now i ¥ou have to plan to help him maintain | that standard Yon cannot do falling behind? | the | work for him but yon can so organize ! his work in co-operation with the | teacher that he can carry on for him | self. All you ean do. once you have | found the diffienlty, strengthened it. laid out the term plan, is to stand on the sidelines and coach and cheer. He | must do the rest, If sickness kept a child from | school and cost him his standing don't try to make it up at one bite, Talk | things over with the teacher. Seale | down the subject matter to the essen ! tials. It is how much | easier this makes the child's work Sometimes a special program enable a child to make op lessons This can usually be obtained by ask. | ing for it at the school. Drill will not help clear up misunderstood lessons Get the facts right, the understand ing ¢lear before you begin the drill » - * I LOST IT has surprising will | won where is your cap? “1 lost It.” “You lost it? Where?” “1 don’t know.” “You don’t know. Do you suppose | that all | have to do is buy you one | eng alter Now sou go look for that eap until yon find iL" “1 don’t know where to look.” “Neither do I. You lost it. You go | find it” After a brief interval Tom comes back. “Well, did you find it?” “No. 1 looked everywhere but it isn't there.” i “1 suppose so. I'll have to buy you | another cap. That makes five this | term. | don’t know what is going to come of you if you don't take care of | your things" Why buy him another one? It won't | nurt him to do without! his cap. Many | a boy never wears a cap, except on | very stormy days. Even if he has to go to church and Sunday school hat less, what of it? He doesn't wear a hat in church anyway. And if he real ly wanted a enp he wouldn't lose It so many times I believe that is true. If a child truly wants a thing he won't lose It save rarely. He Is conscious of the thing he wants to keep. He loses a thing he Is not consclous of wanting. The way to get him to keep his hat is te make him conscious of needing it. That you do by letting him go with out it That goes for other things that he loses and forgets. Do not replace it and make him go without until he re. places it if possible, A child forgets and loses the things he doesn’t want to keep In mind or pocket. The poor report is lost or forgotten. The good one, never. When you find that a child Is for. getting certain things, losing other things, habitually, consider the rea. son. Study why he wants to lose or forget. There is niways a reason. The child's mind Is always on his side. It helps him to forget and to lose unde. sirable thoughts. It closes them out with a finality that Is as complete as darkness at midnight. Find the rea. son. Don’t accuse the child of willfully forgetting. He does not willfully for. get or lose the unpleasing thing or idea. He Is unconscious of his desire to forget and to lose. Remove the cause of his desire and pit something desirable in its stead Give him ex periences that will make him econ scious of his need to remember and anther” © Bell Syndicate. ~ WNL Servies Y on, and he will do both, Iv Spots of Charm in “Bonny Scotia” Little Lossiemouth Among Others of Interest to Traveler. British Prime Minister MacDonald was referred to by many American newspapers, during his visit to Wash ington, as the “son of Lossiemouth.” A bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the Nutional Geo- graphic society, tells this little Scottish town and the country round about it, “Lossiemouth, the prime minister was born, and where he still spends his infrequent holidays, Is a tiny fishing village in northeastern Scotland,” says the bulletin. “It les on the southern shore of Moray firth, a long arm of the North which reaches westward to Inverness. On clear one can across the firth the blue hills of Cromarty and Dornoch, while beyond them rise the faint, jagged of remote high lands In Sutherlandshire. “The small Industries of the town are boat building and making, It also serves as the port for Elgin, a clean and prosperous little town, five miles inland on the Lossie river The ruins of Elgin cathedral are the most picturesque north of the horder It is called the ‘Lanthornp of 224, around rolling sands and Strong of where sea days see lines rope abbeys, the North, and dates from “Morayshire, the country Lossiemouth, low and by the white waters of the firth. from the North sea is bordered blae winds sweep across the wild heaths, covered with sturdy and heather, coarse grass, pric } ly heath such a three | | whin It that Machet 8 of Forres was on the to Forres? | it is only | L.ossiemouth through | the | is court. | into . i espeare made Banquo'e | ost appear before Macheth. the ancient | Sweno's “Forres Is one of most towns In northern Scotland. stone, oarved runic s of warriors, is with rece iter tle com | from the | th sen inl us. blue) west, | ing the | er Ness, | the spanned by four with ind erowded | i green igiefs i “Inverness traditional scene of the n of Duncan, has | nd rebuilt countless | times. It was ned by Donald of | the Isles, cantu by Bruce, i picid by “3 1 of Seots been dest: nye occu i seized by the Ja tes in 1715, and blown up by Prince Charlie Rebuilt one today as courthouse and government seat for Invernesshire. In the plaza before its gates stands a stntue of Flora MacDonald, maid of the lsles HO aided the fugitive Prince Charlie. esr the fle! thirty thousand pounds upon his head. “A single marks Culloden moor. near Inverness. where the prince ar in the rebellion of "45 e more, it serves | who gallantly ping to with Jeu price of cairn of stones wl 5.000 hungry, ili-clad met lasting defeat at the un hands of D000 British regulars, Rough i the names of the Maclachlan, Me clansmen des the duke of Cumber stones, earved with clans, MacLean, Gilllvray, mark the graves of the 1,200 Highlanders who fell. In an adjoining cornfield stands a tablet to the fifty Englishmen who were slain, “Inverness today is the distributing center for the Highlands. It Is here that the annuval sheep and wool mar kets are held. Industries include the manufacture of tweed, brewing and distilling, lumber manufacture, gran Ite cutting, and some shipbuilding. Climate and location have made it extremely popular for summer hol days. Shakespeare discovered that in Inverness, ‘the alr nimbly and sweetly recommends itself unto our gentle senses’ “A further attraction for tourlsts is the ‘Northern Meeting.’ or High: land Gathering held in September. Zz § Ed des £) rl 7 A 0 4) iN i f A) () $e Vie ke —_ ET ih Nr ert’ a 7H (I (5 Av H THE Athletes from all Scotland gather for games and contests, Men in kilts and tartan plaids crowd the narrow streets, and the ringing notes of the ‘pibroch’ echo from the castle walls,” Mourning Time Saved Mourning ceremonies shall now last three days Instead of forty In Abyssinia, according to a proclama- tion of Halle Selassie I, "Anointed of Ethiopia. A favorite daughter of his died recently. Furthermore, good Ethiopians may weep, silently their clothes, scratch but their faces, shall take they leap, Touches of Old Spain in City of Cartagena Arches, balconies and grills alr us any city of southern and make it one of the outstanding pleture towns of Ameriea. Crum. bling towers and faded plaster struc. tures attest the city's age, Miuny of the balconies exhibit fan ciful carving in stone and the grills are often of wrought iron in nra- besque designs. The doors and win dows which front on the narrow, dark, cobble-stoned streets, are heay ily grilled. Most of the older houses are bullt In square shapes around n patio or courtyard, where A grass grown plot, a well or fountain, plants, either hlack or yellow, 4 tree or two, and usually a gor $10 LT CAP on Co Hyg ig _— >»; § £, 4 7 Pg Ty vee” 7 PAs ay / ¢ & 7 og # Fd 4A A bo Pa 5 fl $ A 4 IAN > IS WITHSTAND Road Shocks 58 LONGER Firestone High Speed Gum-Dipped Tires (ag) oa, Gar oo ed InEve hold all w # delightful scene in this attractive | city, Wulls, in thick, cuelirele the some places 40 feet old town and re call the duyg when the city had the strongest the Bpanish | Main. Although are now dis- | mantled, several well preserved fort resses which dot the walls present a stern military aspect. | geonsty colored tropical bird, make 1 1 I | defenses on they Mass Meeting Tonight Orator young lady, make your husband vote the way yen want him to, Yong Lady—1'm not married yet, but I'll make my fiance vote my way. Lady Orator better walt tin | You have him In your power. ~ Brook. 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