San Antonio Sunday Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 69, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 28, 1926 Page: 34 of 92
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6
THE POTTERS
PROLOGUE
Mr. Peter E. Potter
1515 Homewood Avenue
City.
Dear Mr. Potter:
Pursuing our ideal of Bigger and Better Service our Station
Y-A-W-P is desirous of enlisting your co-operation in a forth-coming
program.
We understand you are a proficient and pleasant teller of stories
for children and we are sure you will welcome this opportunity to in-
struct and entertain the countless thousands of children who comprise
our great bedtime story unseen audience.
So we feel sure you will be pleased to know that we have set
aside the time between 8:00 and 8:25 next Wednesday evening to be
known as Uncle Peter Potter's Story Hour. Wc would appreciate one
of your most recent photographs and a short sketch of your life to
be used in connection with the publicity in announcing this important
event.
With kindest regards and best wishes
Yours for bigger and better kiddies.
STATION Y-A-W-P
Per L. M.
Dictated but not read.
LM/ESG
SCENE ONE
It is the evening of the big event and we are looking down into
the jvell-known Potter menage. ... Pa and Ma are discussing some-
thing and Junior is giving it as much attention as possible without
appearing to do so.
MA: I think that’s the funniest thing I ever heard of. The idea of
you telling bedtime stories to children. Ha! Ha! Ha! If all the children
of the world had to wait until you got home to tell them bedtime
series.
PA: (Bristling) You’re jealous that's all. I suppose you are mad
because they didn’t write and ask you to broadcast your last club
paper on how to organize world peace or "Tonsils I Have Loved and
Lost."
MA: Is that so? Well I'm going to sit right here tonight and
tune in your bedtime stories. I need a good laugh. (To Junior)
Daddy is going to broadcast a bedtime story tonight Junior.
JUNIOR: (Calmly) Why?
PA: (Proudly) Because other little children aren’t as fortunate
as you are dear. They haven’t got a daddy who can tell them beauti-
ful stories.
JUNIOR: (With conviction) I like my stories better. Once upon
a time there was an old cow named Joseph. She gave butter and
eggs and milk and cheese and lived on top of the house. I will give
you three wishes said the fairy ...
PA: That doesn’t make any sense.
JUNIOR: That’s magic . . . And the cow said—Oh. fairy god-
bother I want a sausage growing out of my nose as long as your arm
and as broad as your arm and then there was three flashes of light-
ning and three claps of thunder and the butcher boy came up to the
Killing Gross Libel on Night Air I
p ro f fr p Harris 4
“pHE idea that night aid is bad i
* dies hard. There is a widespread
belief to the effect that night air M
not quite so wholesome as air in the
■laytime. Bat this- is a popular i
I'gend for which there is no scientific i
sanction. <
One reason for rhe supposed !nju--
iouaneas of night air was that at i
night “miasms" come up out of the <
ground. This dates back to the time t
when the cause of malaria was not 1
known and when as its Italian name r
indicates it was thought to be due s
to some sort of bad air (mal'aria*. t
DANGER EROM INSECTS.
Very laborious modern researches
earned out chiefly by Sir Ronald g
Roas have taught us that the mg?- i
quite which carries tha micro-organ- <j
ism of malaria feeds in the evening r
Thia “feeding” consists in sucking
blood from people. Hence it is so
dangerous in most warm countries
to go out after dark not because s
there is anything wrong with die airc
(BAYERj
ASPI RI N
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN”-
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross ’ on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by mil-
lions and prescribed by physicians over 25 years for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia * Toothache Rheumatism
F DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART I
-/ynAccept only ‘‘Bayer’’ package
which contains proven directions.
j Handy “Bayer” boxen of 12 tableta.
9 Alto bottles of 24 and JOO—DruggiaU.
*»wbia It u«a« mark of Bayer Meoufaeture of MoooacrticaHtkaur of EsikyhcacM
as tir but because flying in the a> I
is this pestiferous insect which while
feeding injects into the blood of Ls
host large numbers of the extremely (
mi on re Jtirasitcs malaria or argu-
But all this knowledge is quite r»- ]
cent.
But there waa another rnisapprebeu* i
•ion about the air which had refer- I
ence to the behavior of plants at ;
night. These innocent things were al- ]
leged to exhale carbonic acid gas at I
night and therefore since that gas
was thought to be poisonous vegeta-
tion must be bad for night air.
HOW PLANTS BREATHE.
Now as in all errors there is a
grain of truth here namely that at
night plants do give forth some carbon
dioxide gas. This is the breathing or
respiration of plants for plants as
well as animals bnathe in oxygen and
give out carbonic acid gas. riant* as
well as animal* do this by day as well
as by night but so far as plants are
concerned. the amount of carbonic acid^
]
top of the house and pasted a sausage on the cow’s nose ft is the old stories like Cinderella. Little Red Riding Hood The Three
charged he said somebody ordered it over the 'phone. Bears or shall 1 make up a story?
MA: (Gently) You mustn’t talk nonsense dear. MA: Well 1 think I’d stick to one of the old favorites. If you
JUNIOR: That ain't nonsense. Don’t you order sausage over the would get one with animals in it and make the animal imitations that
'phone? would sound good. . . . You know . . . “moo’’ . . . like a cow
MA: Sure ... Of course I do. ... and “quack” like a duck. . . . Children love that don’t they
JUNIOR: (Indignantly) Well can’t a fairy order sausage over Junior?
PA: (Bristling) Yon're Jealous that's all. I suppose you are mail because they didn't write and ask you to broadcast your last chib paper on
how to organize world peace or “Tonsils I Have Loved and Lost."
MA: Is that so? Well. I’m going to sit right here tonight and tune in your bedtime stories. I need a good laugh.
the 'phone if you can? A fairy could turn a telephone into a sausage.
PA: Hang up. . . . I’ve got to collect my thoughts if I’m going
to broadcast in a little while. (Glances at watch.) Ooh. look at the
time. I’m going to be late if I don’t hurry. (To Junior) Go on to bed
and tell the rest of that story to yourself.
JUNIOR: (Wearily) I want to stay up and hear you over the
radio.
PA: Well of course I can understand that and if you keep
quiet and don’t interrupt me you can stay up. Mother will tune in
Y -A-W-P for you and you will hear your father’s own voice speaking
to millions of children all over the world. What do you think of that?
JUNIOR: I know another good story. ... Do you want to hear
it? Once upon a time there was a garbage man who fell down an
elevator shaft. Ho! Ho! Ho! laughed the night watchman. . . .
PA: Another word out of you and you’ll go to bed. . . . (To
M«) I can’t decide what story to tell. . . . Shall I tell them one of
gas given out even in a long time is
very small.
This was the discovery as long ago
as 1779 by a Dutchman of the name
of Ingenboug (or Ingen-Hauss) a phy-
sieiAM who showed that the green
parts of plants (leaves) only do this
in the dark hut that those parts
which are not green do it in the day-
time as well as at night ho that In-
genhouz virtually showed that some
parts of plants are patting out car-
bonic acid gas all the time.
UNFORTUNATE STATEMENT.
In his "Experiments on Vegetables"
be unfortunately spoke of plants - as
•■injuring the air in the shade and sit
night."
This last statement is nonsense ; yet
it lias survived to our day; and you
will find hospital nurses for instance
carefully removing the growing plants
from rhe wards at night-time under
the impression that they are actually
“bad for the air.”
This error is bused on another
^namely that carbonic acid gas i- al-
ways and everywhere a jeiison. Now
it is perfectly true that pure carbonic
acid gun is a poison: but ve never
breathe it pure; it is doubtful if the
people who died in the Black Hole of
Calcutta breathed it “pure.”
AMOUNT IS MINUTE. /
It is all a question of quantity or
'oncentration to Im- more exactj a
teaspoonful of whiskey in a tumbler
p***********»* ************
i A Turkish Poetess i;
t ■» —************************* * * * ******«***********4
first meeting Halida Edib Ha*
f mng sweet
alert yet quiet one scarcely glimpses
in h<-r the strange and crowded pages
of her adventurous past. She is the
leading Turkish poetess but she is
more than a poetess—she is a politic-
ian an educator a reformer a scholar
a woman of the world.
This remarkable woman wan Kemal
Pasha's first Minister of Education.
She was a forceful influence in the
Old Turkey and she ha* been a power
in the new Turkey of Kernel and the
Angora Assembly. That she is now
mumly occupied in foreign travel 1“
due to the fact that she disagreed
with the methods nnd policy of the
Turkish dictator and said so in no
uncertain terms.
She ha« a very soft voice and is ex-
traordinarily young both in mind and
body. She has a liking for pretty
frocks too. which is something un-
usual in the earnest reformer.
Born in Constantinople some 37
Avars ago. daughter of an enlightened
official in the administration uf Sul-
| tan Abdul-Hamid otherwise A Mu I
the Damned she went to the Aravin
; girls' uchou* and became so proficient
in Englhlf and French that at 15.
she was translating novela in those
laiignages into Turkish. She was still
in her ’teerg when she took her B. A.
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
of water is not a poison but a turn- 1
bierful of whiskey is. It is the old •
question of dilution. The amount of
carbon dioxide which the trees and
plants exhale is so small when once it
is dispersed through the atmosphere
that it contributes a very small pro- t
portion of this gas to the air. s
In country air the amount of car-
bon dioxide is only four parts in ten
thousand—a quantity which is not
only not poisonous but as far a* 1
breathing goes is negligible. Became f
the gas as met with almost pure in a
brewer** vats and in depressions on r
the sides of volcanoes in rapidly pqi- .
►oned it does not follow that it is
jioisonous when diluted to the vast
extent we find it in ordinary air. <
-A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE.-* I
The whole idea that night air is {
bad for people is based on that "little
knowledge" which if not actually
“dangerous’’ is often very misleading. 1
There is nothing wrong with night ’
air and it is in point of fact purer j
■ than the air of the daytime. It has
■ for one thing less dust.
Of course air at night is usually
(not always) colder than the air hi ’
• the daytime end therefore people in 1
■ sufficiently clad are liable to get a 1
chill;; but that is a matter of the ;
loss <»f heat nnd has nothing to do j
' with the purily or otherwise of the (
i night air.
r Error dies hard.
I
■***************^********4
—the first Turkish woman to receive
such a degree—and began herself to
write poetry and fiction.
The old regime did not view her
with favor. She wrote constantly ou
a
the theme of the emancipation of the .
Turkish woman her object being to
reach the harem women and awaken
their minds to the possibilities of free- *
dom. She put her preaching in the f
form of novels because she realized (
that the three chief activities of those f
women consisted of listening to music
eating sweetmeats and reading novels t
The melody which has very com-
monly been sung to the words ‘‘For j
He’s a Jolly Good Fellow’’ and per- a
haps less generally to the words “It's ;
a Way We Have \t Old Harvard** is t
Ixdieved to be the very oldest in the a
world. It has been found without ex- I
reption to exist among the folk-songs
of all the western races. u
Pioneers in North America found I
that the red Indian knew it and that r
it was one of the cradle lullabys of h
the wjuaws. The native tribes of South L
America know it to this day as also c
do the Aborigines of Australia fin? j
Maoris and the Arabs. c
African explorers have beard thia t
melody chanted to the beating of tom- v
tome and visitors to l4i(Jnnd have
state* 1 that the mothers in that coun- :
try also use it. c
JUNIOR: No mother.
MA: He doesn’t know.
PA: But where would I get things to make noises I'ke cows and
ducks? . . . You have got to have imitation calls ... a cow calling
to its young ... a duck calling to its mate.
MA: Well I’ve heard them over the radio. They must have them
up at the station where you broadcast. Ask them when you get up
there.
PA: (Pacing up and down) Once upon a time the>e was a little
girl who went walking and she met a wolf and the woif said . . .
Are you Little Red Riding Hood? And Little Red Riding Hood for
it was indeed she said . . .Yes sir.
JUNIOR: (Softly) That’s my baby.
PA: (Coming out of trance.) Who said that? (Glares at Junior.)
You go to bed. (Glares at Ma.) Where’s my hat . . . where’s my
:Trained Flea Circus:
i fly Ar th at
mEW YORK. March 27.—1 am
lobl that the "Flea Circus” now
filling an engagement in one of the
museum* of this city has bean ex-
hilAted in various parts of the coun-
try. therefore th* new* that there is
such a thing may not come as a sur-
prise to some of my readers. I am.
however sure that to the vast major-
ity of mankind the feat of training
fleas to do anything more than hop
and bite must sc;nr. as it did to me
until yesterday an utter impossibil-
ity.
One naturally asks oneself. “How
could those liny little insects be
handled! im’i h * taught to do
things?”
Well. I have srun the process mid
am not sure which surprises me most
the : forma nee of the ileas or the
amaz patience that must have been
required of their exhibitor.
To as manj- of us as were able to
gather around a table in th* small
room where the performance took
place was iir>t handed a magnifying
glass through which we gazed at an
imprison'd fka around whose throat
(did you know a flea had a throatj
v ; a tiny chain. It was then ex-
plained that each of the flans which
we were about to behold was similar-
ly harnessed although the collar
would be invisible to the naked rye.
Upon a white mat on the center
of the table the exhibitor placed a lit-
tle gilt coach about the size of a straw-
berry and then from one of several
cotton-lined boxes lifted by use of
a slender tweeser two flees and placed
them in the position of horses. In-
stead of hopping away they waitel
while to the almost invisible cdlUrs
they were was attached the shafts of
the coach and then at a word ot
command began dragging it acrot*
the table. Th* team it was explained
to us were thus pulling 2<MX) times
their own weight.
It is perhaps unknown to you that
in its natural state n flea never walks
always jumi*. Its education for show
purposes therefore begins by the at-
tachment of a weight to the collar
around its neck. Jumping thereupon
becoming irksome it learns to walk.
From another cotton lined box was
next produced n flea which having
been allowed to retain its natural
means of locomotion had neverthe-
less in some seemingly impossible way
been taught to jump certain regular
distances and when commanded to
jump into n receptical about the size
of a thimble held a yard more di*-
tam from it actually did so. It also
was made to jump through a hoop.
A miniature merry-go-round hating
about the circumference of a large
orange was next set upon the tabic
and after half a dcnoii or more fleas
had been placed upon it was put in
motion by a truly Herculean member
of the era. v.iio. wa v.crc told was
thereby moving SUOO lime* its own
weight.
Other fleas juried balls v« ry much
larger than themselves and upon a
tiny revolving platform soverd of the
little creatures to whose bodies had
been attached little scrap* of colored
tissue paper that really did give them
the appearance of wearing old-fash-
ioned hnup-skirts bobbed up and down
in imitation of dancing.
But. c* I said before it was tin?
patience that r ust have Mtan requir-
ed from the trainer that excited my
wonder as much ns the result which
that patience had achieved. He de-
clares and there seems no reason to
doubt it that his are the only “edu-
cated fleas” in the world and that
he learned the way to train them
from his father who had learned it
from his grandfather. Hi* grand-
father. be says first exhibited trained
fleas in Paris at about the middle of
the Inst cen/jry.
But (and here is the awful pari
of it) be not only has to train these
fleas but feed Ihern as well. And
since their diet consists of exclusive-
ly of human blood he makes hi*
brawny left arm the pasture for his
flock and declares that he feels no
ill effect from it —the human flea
(Pulex I ritans > being he says a per-
fectly clean insect.
I inquired if fleas obtained from-
dogs and cats could not be trained
as well a* those that thrive upon
humans and was told that this was
made imposible by the fact that those
fh s were not sufficiently long lived
to be successfully trained. Even
among the longer lived ones he now
uses there has to be constant train-
ing of fresh ones to take the place of
those that die.
y V I
|Snakecharming{
That a power of hypnotizing their
prey really exists among snakes seems
fully proven by what takes place on
Elephanta Island near Bombay
where as is the case near other
Hindu temples snakes are tended and
reared by the priests. On this island
in the vicinity of the remarkable cave
temples—which are hewn out of the
solid rock—is a small lake contain-
ing quantities of water-snake* some
of which are about right feet in
length.
The neighborhood is also noted for
its bull frogs—so named from their
raucous voices and large proportions
—and the guardians of the temple ar-
range for a supjdy of these as food for
the sacred snakes. Numbers of these
miserable frogs may often be observed
squatting in dazed fashion on the
masonry steps around the lake wait-
ing for their turn to provide •ustm-
nnce for the cel-like monsters.
Tb<» frogs dearly are hypnotised
for th«y make no effort to escape.
By J. P. McEVOY
coat. (Grab hat and coat and dashes for the broadcasting station of
Y-A-W-P- to which we will now adjourn with mingled emotions.)
SCENE TWO
ANNOUNCER: Y’ou have just listened to The Dandy Dozen
play “That Certain Party” by Gus Kahn and Walter Donaldson both
members of our club who should know better and now you will havo
the ’pleasure of hearing one of our best known citizens doing a
specialty for which he is nationally famous. He is going to tell a bed-
time story. It is with great pride and joy I now turn over the micro-
phone to that peerless raconteur —Peter E. Potter.
(An awful silenc. comes over the studio and as Pa faces the cold
pitiless microphone his heart begins to pound and his bones seem to
soften under him. Far away there is a slow inexorable tick tock
tick tock. This goes on for months it seems to Pa before he can make
any sounds came out of his parched throat and then at last when it
seems as though all the world were waiting with bated breath he
hears a hoarse croaking noise. . . . He looks around in surprise
and is properly astonished to discover that he is making it himself.)
PA: My . . . er . . . great unseen audience ... er ... I
mean . . . Good evening little children . . . This is your . . . your
uncle . . . Mister ... er ... er .. . Pot ... I mean . . .
your Uncle Peter. Uncle Peter is going to tell you a nice little story
now about . . . about . . . (Paws rantically for his notes . . . they
are all mixed up) about Sleeping Beauty in the Woods . . . Once
upon a time there was a beautiful girl asleep in the middle of ths
woods and one day a prince came to look for her and he found a
little cottrge in which lived three bears . . . There was a great big
bear and there was a middle size bear and a teeny little bear. And
would you like to hear how the great big bear sounded? (Reaches for
bear imitation provided by broadcasting station. Y-A-W-P. Unfortu-
nately they were cut of bear imitations this evening and they substi-
tuted a cow call.) Well here’s how the great big bear sounded. (Pa
blows horn.) Moooo Moooo Moooo. (Regards horn with petrified as-
tonishment and realizes something will have to be done and done
quickly. Laughs heartily into microphone with simulated hilarity.)
Ha! Ha! Ha! dear children that’s where Uncle Peter fooled you. Well
the old bear didn’t show up tonight . . . that was Gloria Cow speak-
ing.
Well anyv/ay there was a sleeping princess in the weeds and ths
fairy came and said ... I will give you three wishes. (Wipes per-
spiration off brow paws frantically for notes and realizes with horror
that he is sunk. Cannot think of one wish let alone three. Flash of
inspiration coir.es in the nick of time.) Just then Outside the window
of the magic castle Cinderella saw a pond and on it was swimming
the ugliest duckling you ever saw . . . That’s w’hy it was called the
ugly duckling . . . Ducky Ducky Ducky she cried and the duckling
looked up and saw it was Cinderella and now you will hear what he
said. (Picks up second animal imitation with heartfelt prayer that
everything will be all right. Puts it to his mouth and plows on it.)
Moooo Moooo Moooo (Grabs table convulsively to keep from falling.
Looks around studio panicky and sees through glass partition radio
operator in hysterical convulsions. Makes spartan decision to finish
story if it kills him . . . Laughs hollowly into microphone again)
Ho! Ho! Ho! if it isn’t our old friend Gloria Cow again. What are
you doing here Gloria? (Reaches frantically again for animal call
and comes up with semelaing which he puts to his lips) Q-W-A-K.
Q-W-A-K (Recovers brilliantly) Ah there’s the ugly duckling.
Just then Cindarella ran down the stairs leaving her little glass
.lipper and outside the gate v.ho should she run right rmack into bu
the wolf. (Roaches for imitation tre. ting to luck. Uses it.) Cheen
. . . Cheep ... Twitter . . . Twitter. (Gulps convulsively and
goes on. This was a magic bird up in the tree and it was tyllinz
Cinderella how to find her way home.
The next day the prince came by on his big white hese . .
(Roaches blindly once more.) Moooo Moooo. Moooo (Throws «»:
fortunate call cn the <loor end jumps in it) and thet Pari* da; th.
were marfl4?FWTW<rTtepmly ?iW«#M.»And that’s the end of th ■
story. Good night dear children.
AND THAT’S THAT—UNTIL NEXT SUNDAY.
(Copyrtsht. 195 C Kian nclurts SymUcslr. Ml rlshtr. Incbidinc eramatle
motion picture nßCnvil hy the author.)
: Levity vs. Pity ■
t By X. P.
THAT any art or utterance of an
insane man should ns it to
often is be regarded ns amusing by
hi* fellow rrcaturcs is it KOeras to
a sad reflection upon the supposed
benevolence of human beings.
Arnone children it is of course only
natural ihat the antics or idiotic u’
teraners of a simpleton should ’»e
thought funny; but this is because
a* children they have no knowledge
or appreciation of the tarrible af-
fliction that has been visited upon the
person they find so amusing. As
children wc wore scarcely able to
comprehend the full significance oi
death—that total extinction of all our
faculties —how then could we under-
stand the gravity of those who men-
tally have approached a form of dis-
solution?
But that on arriving al maturity in
the full possession of all our senses
we should feel aught save pity for
the menially afflicted is indeed
amazing. The subject is brought to
my mind by something that recently
took place in the city of New York
and which seems to have been ac-
cepted without the protest it should
have aroused.
A poor deluded creature more
than a year ago believing that the
world was to come to an end on a
certain approaching date rid himself
nnd his family of all their earthly
possessions and calmly awaited doom.
As the doom failed to arrive be was
compelled to resume his occupation of
housepainter in order to support his
flock a task rendered more necessary
because of their having disposed of
the home in which they had lived.
Last month this delusion of n
world-end again occurred to the poor
creature convincing him that a bull
of fire was to descend nnd destroy
the city of New York as a preliminary
to universal destruction.
He felt it his duty to warn the
city's inhabitants of what was to be-
fall and lo urge them to flee to the
hills in time. Just in what way be
obtained jjermissiuii to issue this warn-
ing from one of the several broudenst-
ing stations of the city I do not linow
but it is perfectly evident that those
in control of the station felt and were
convinced that the radio public in gen-
eral would feel that this aerial of-
fering was sufficiently humorous to
be mingled with the jazz music and
other forms of light enU'rtainment that
make up their festive dinner hour pru-
* 4.
SUNDAY MARCH 28 1926.
Babcock
Of course it was not to be taken
seriously. It was tht utterance of a
deranged mind almost as comical as
the spectacle of an unhappy dog with
a tin run tied to its tail. There i*
to be sure ft possibility that the broa<’
castors hud in view the arousing of
;'uch public pity for the demented
prophet of doom us would lead to a
iibscription for his support in some
j.roper sanitorium but it require*
some stretch of my imagination to
take this charitable view of the mat-
ter.
No. the doing* and utterances of
Insane person* are. alas too often re-
garded with a levity that is inexcusa-
ble. If yoii will pause and consider
for a moment you will realize the
pagan attitude of those who find no
cull to pity in the presence of God's
creatures who from any caiue have
lost the use of that function which
chiefly raises mankind above the na-
ture of the beast.
zV s most ardent fedmirei* of Sir
William S. Gilbert who in conjunction
with Sir Arthur Sullivnn gave the
world an inexhaustible fund of melo-
dious comedy I have always regretted
that in the opera of Ruddigore he
should have included an insane woman
among the characters designed to
amuse and delight us.
t
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San Antonio Sunday Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 69, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 28, 1926, newspaper, March 28, 1926; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631548/m1/34/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .