All About Johnnie Jones by Carolyn Verhoeff
page 51 of 96 (53%)
page 51 of 96 (53%)
|
thing that did not please him, until at last it was difficult to live
with him. His father and mother were greatly distressed, and tried in every way to help Johnnie Jones. They told him that they were ashamed to have a cry-baby for a son, but that only made him cry more than ever. Finally Mother said that something must be done, for Johnnie Jones had reached the point where he was almost always crying. He would come home crying from kindergarten, he would come in from play with tears in his eyes, and worst of all, every few minutes, he would find some excuse for crying at home. "I think he must be ill," Mother said to Father, one day, "and I am so worried that I shall take him to the doctor." Father agreed, so in the afternoon, Mother and Johnnie Jones paid Dr. Smith a visit in his office. Dr. Smith was a great friend of Johnnie Jones's and was sorry to hear of the crying spells. He examined the little boy very carefully, but could find nothing wrong with him. Then he said that he was sure Johnnie Jones was not ill, and that he cried so often just because he had formed a bad habit. "It is a very disagreeable habit," he continued, "and I know you want to overcome it, so I'll write you a prescription for some medicine. Doctors usually do not prescribe for people unless they are ill, but I think if you take a spoonful of this medicine every time you cry, you will soon be cured of the habit. You try it, anyway." He gave the prescription to Mother, who, after thanking him, left the |
|