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WO oast Guard Snaps $119 COLLISION COST Four Flying Saucersfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 23/Jamestown...

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MMHPVBMNP * WO oast Guard Snaps Four Flying Saucers Negative Shows Luminous Unexplained Round Objects Washington. (A.P.)—Coast Guard headquarters today made public a photograph of "unidentified aerial pheno- mena" taken by a 21 wear-old Coast Guard photographer. The photo clearly shows four round objects. Each ap- pears to have two identical shafts of light extending across its center and protruding at the forward and rear ends. The lights are in a "V" formation. The Coast Guard said it has**— f* no opinion as to the cause or' -, w i k i ^,lina hc ,h?n£^ i Saucers Not New, was releasing the picture only * because of the widespread pub- n P e r r ik p r l fpnturv lie interest in aerial phenome- I V e ^ C l l U G U VeniUiy The picture was snapped by AGO, EXDCTt jQVS Shell R. Alpert, Salem, Mass., J ' r / Air Station photographer. The Coast Guard' said Alpert sighted several brilliant white lights through the Air Station's photo lab window at 9:35 A.M., July 16. Alpert watched the lights, which "seemed to be waver- ing," for five or six seconds before attempting to photograph them. By the time he had focused his camera the lights were "considerably dimmed down." The Coast Guard, announce- Ithaca. IA.P.) — A retired Cornell astronomer contends "there is nothing new in the Flying Saucers.' ' S. L., Boothroyd, Professor Emeritus of Astronomy, said yesterday that Flying Sau- cers were reported in scien- tific publications a hundred years ago but were not tabbed with that name. Boothroyd said the publi- cations described "eerie look- ing lights, streaking across the sky at tremendous speeds and changing direction al- ^ JAMESTOWN (N.Y.) POST-JOtJBNAI^-Saturday Ewajag. Augurt 2. 1952 PET SNAKE CAUSES $119 COLLISION COST AIRLINES pilot S. C. Pier- man saw six "objects" at the same time the CAA radar did. men*, said Alpert, after sighting! most instantly. Today's flying saucer re- the lights, summoned Thomas Flaherty, 26, hospitalman 1st ports match this descriptor class. The two men immediate- ly returned to the photo lab. Lights Vanish After Photo the astronomer observed. The cause? % Atmospheric reaction similar to that which produces the Northern Lights, Noting that the lights were Auror * a Borealis, Boothroyd again burning brightly, Alpert SU g ge sted. snapped the picture. An instant; He said tne viv i d display later, there was a "momentary oi Aurora Borealis was credit- flash" and the lights disap- peared. , "There appeared what I thought to be a quick flash'' Flaherty told authorities. ! —————-— mmmm "•" "I actually could not say it c se Aa unbelievable was anything. It could have I an .r 0 „^i 1 been reflections from passing cars, or from the ocean Celler Wants Mac Arthur - To Quit Army New York. (A.P.) — Rep. Emanuel Celler, New York Democrat, demanded today that Gen. Douglas MacArthur re f sign from the Army and re- linquish his Army • pay and three-man military stalf now that he has a highly-paid ci- Alpert said that in the two withheld V1 "Unliss* he does so I will of - i satisfactorily explains away visu- ferTK? attS^tt s€aS% g s * htin * s absolutel y co » firmed Congress to force him to quit,"! D y [ aaar - ' Celler said in a statement sent'. Th L ls remarkable new chapter to the press | , n t n e we h*d flying saucer story ' MacArthur Thursday accept- was written' in the skies over ed the Board Chairmanship of (Washington for six hour before .Remington Rand, Inc., at a pay | dawn on Sunday, July 20, arvi suffering | wmc h Celler said would be again one week later. The details and implications of what took place are now confirmed by CAA The Congressman, chairman RADAR CONTROL ROOM of CAA at Washington airport tracked the strange objects on the large scope in center foreground. It shows position of aircraft with- in a radius of 70 miles. Radar Defies Debunking of Flying Saucer By DOUGLAS LABSEN NEA Staff Correspondent Washington. (NEA)—The fly- ing saucers are back. And their return to the head- lines has been the result of a startling new development: « For the first time, numerous and simultaneous visual sightings have .been positively confirmed by official Civil Aeronautics Ad- ministration' radar observations. This has happened twice under almost identical circumstances pn two successive Saturday nights. Up until now official- and un- official saucer debunkers " have produced credible theories to ex- plain away reports of visual sightings as natural phenomena. They have done the same for in- dividual radar sighting reports. But none* of this reasoning North Kingston, B. I. (A.P.)—Thomas E. Hurley's pet snake stuck his head out of the glove compart- ment of Ms car and it cost Hurley $119. Hurley was so startled We lost control of his car and hit another owned by Robert H. Ellen. Ellen in District Court yesterday waa l awarded $119 damages In his negli- gence suit against Hurley. "If a man puts a snake In his car, he does so at his own risk," said Ellen's counsel. The lodge agreed. Lake Superior ed generally to electrons and hydrogen nuclear protons spi- raling into the atmosphere from the sun, then ionizing. ! "substantially upwards of $100,- People much aroused and 000." worried. Respectfully—" Name Air Force spokesmen of the House Judiciary Commit- said | tee; said that while MacArthur brief elimDses he had he was Air *"»«* •p*ram«u &ouu.;tee: said mat wnne MacAnnur unship tn riptN-minP 'the size that nobody is going around j remains on active duty, but on and the Air Force. Since then the Air Force has quietly said it was closing to the press its special section' at Wright of the lights, their number, footing at strange objects in, a non-assignment basis, the Field in Dayton, O., which has altitude, speed, direction or ^ e sky but that Air Defense "U.S. taxpayers must allow him \ jhcen studying flying saucer re- shape. He said he heard no Command planes would attempt $19,548 Army pay and allow- port5 In addition, all information sound. destrov . anv al . r f raf t°J ob-lances." concerning that group's person- LABGE RADAR SCOPE at Washington National Airport presents a picture like this to CAA traffic controllers. Mystery pips wert tracked from midnight until dawn on the first night. moving around like that for-reluctant to discuss the subject about 15 minutes. It just disap-'with him on the radio, peared into the northwest sky."! The mystery of the flying sauc- There are no windows in thelers had its start on 1 June 24, center Barnes was operating. 1 1947, when a Boise, Idaho, busi- None of the eight men could j nessman, Kenneth Arnold, flew leave to go outside to try to: his private plane over the jagged check their own radar sightings!peaks of Washington's Mt. Ran visually As is normal at that time air ier. When he landed, he breath lessly reported having seen "a Alpert was quoted by Coast fcts definitely identified as Guard officials as saying that hostile and dangerous. because it was an extremely " perh,ps some - sort oi 200 Million Dollar refraction of ground reflections could possibly have accounted _, for the lights, but in my esti- P o t t O f l lank Job mation, this is an improbable eX |he na ^a n rdsman's report sa'id A w a r d e d tO AICO that both his camera lens and Schenectady. (A.P.) - The UMveraK""hS' reigned"after th u e : u W u lnd f W ^ •t creen tnrou S n American Locomotive Company entering-the political camoaign. which he took the picture were; announced today it had re-1 emenng ine P°*"*<-«" uini "" g "quite dirty," and adde^: ,ceived a 200 million dollar or- MacArthur's office had no comment. Under Federr*i law, Generals of the Army and Fleet Admir- als draw full pay for life re- gardless of retirement unless thev specifically waive it. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Republican candidate, drew his while president nel. activtities and budget is now strictly classified. Full details of what happened the first night are being revealed for the first time by NEA Ser- vice. These are the facts: traffic was very light. But at the; chain of nine saucer-like objects first opportunity an operator in playing tag at fantastic speeds." Barnes' office contacted Capital; Since then there have been Airi man Dams' Opening Floods Sault Relieving of Biggest Lake Spurs Protest From Lower Lakes Sweden Convicts - Six of Selling Secrets to Reds Two Get Life Terms, Others Less, and Girl Eight Months Stockholm. Sweden. (A.P.)— Six Swedish Communists were convicted yesterday of selling vital,defense secrets to Russia, and TWO were sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor. A seventh was acquitted. The Swedish government charged them with turning over to the Russians .full details of their country's northern defens- es against any Russian attack across neighboring Finland.' Frithiof Enbom. 33-year-old confessed master-mind of the Soviet spy ring, and his chief accomplice, Jugo Gjersvold, both drew life terms at hard labor. The ringleader's young- er brother. Martin Enbom, drew a seven-year sentence. Others convicted and sen- tenced were: Arthur Karlsson. 42, a Com- munist member of the Town Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. (A.P.) - Sauk officials expressed I £ = 1 , £ H 3 X O 2 In"'^uthTm alarm today after water in the Sweden. Karlsson. who ar- St. Mary's River rose more ranged the elder Enbom's con- than two feet in 24 hours, heavi- J*? . with s . ov * p t Embassy of- ly damaging shore properties. W ' ^ ^ S Z ^ ? * The water rose following the ; Fingal Larsson. 40, a railway opening of 15 to 16 gates in a worker, whom the government compensating dam holding back *"" se t d ft ?L2: ndin * re * ular re " «•», .-1*1 «*T i « . iPorts to Enbom on railway se- ine waters of Lake Superior. | curity measures. He drew five Ottawa officials said the dam years at hard labor. Lilian Ceder. 31. Frithiof En- bom's girl friend, who police was opened because Lake Su- perior had reached "dangerous- ! ^"i* d * l ""**™- a W P ° Jlce lv hi«?h IPVPIS" whirh thrMton^ charged, operated a short-wave LlS n i5I e if„_^ m 5 n ! hreatened . transmitter Enbom received Enbom received from the Russians. She was shore communities, roads and railways. •lines pilot Capt. S. C. Pier-, thousands of sightings all over g S a n t s a n . in Aa"™r nf * £ n shortly after he took off and the world, many obviously report- ? n a ^ m ft e " ts H are m dan * er o f b e ' ? e Q r i)n r 212.. the Wer ( & t a h h a s spent in custody since Lakes-Michigan Huron Erie,|her arrest would count*in this and Ontano-^where high water;period «"^*n mi* already has caused shore dam-i The seventh accused member a f. e nr^ S iS mated at more thano ' the ring, acquitted for lack *di,uuo,uou. jof proof, was Tage Wickstrom. George Nixon, Liberal mem-37, a clerk in the Army Forti- ber of Parliament for Algoma fication Construction Bureau - West, telephoned Ottawa to ask; The Enbom brothers and that more of the gates be Gjersvold confessed. The elder closed. Mayor C. Herb Smale Enbom, an editor and agitator, wired Resources Minister Win- said he had collected military ters in Ottawa asking that he and industrial information for intervene to close some of the tne Russians for six years, turn- gates. He said the city's sewage in S it over to Soviet Embassy system is being slowed and asked hint to look for the ob 'jects. ed by crackpots. But a substan- tial number have been so strange For about 14 minutes, Pier-.and reliably described, even the man was In direct, two-way com- Air Force has had to admit that muniqation with Barnes. While he was within radar range, Pier-j they were unexplainable. Many books have been written man was able to see six objects;on the subject. Hundreds of that "I cannot say in all honesty der f 0 r T-48 tanks and spare B i r t h ContrO at I saw objects or aircraft,; Da rts from the Armv. ;" , , I H W V " I U W I H»* merely some manner of lights." President Duncan W. Fraser fV«.^*»*;%#« AeVnA Alpert said his 4x5 camera^aid the, order raised the com- fL/ireCriVc M5KcU was set at infinity, 1-50 of a pany's backlog of defense work #Nr . . , —, second at F4.7. j to about 950 million dollars. Al- Or LutherQII (jTOUD Negative Not Touehed co currently is producing M-47] w ' fc •*•*"^ , ** ,, ^»vr« K Experts in photography said tanks, here for the Army. Hannover, Germany. (A.P.)— the negative shown to news-. The switch over to T-48 tanks A German woman welfare ex- men here showed no evidence,probably will be accomplished! pert appealed to the World Lu- of touching up—no'indication oi; early! next year, Fraser said, theran Federation Assembly to- having been touched by liquids. 1 The\ M-47 tank was the first day for "a special directive by The negative was clear and!new medium tank since World;the church in the question of unscratched. iWar jll. It was approved for j birth control erators'and technicians, manning Barnes coincided exactly with,has been written and officially the air route traffie control cen- the radar sightings, Barnes re~: reported on the subject points up ter in hangar No. 6 at National I ports. several unique aspects to the re- Airport. . tracked from seven to 1 Pierman is a 17-year veteran of | cent Washington sightings: ten unidentifiable and mysterious I commercial flying and is descnb It's the first time that three objects performing strange gyra tions in the skies in a 30-mile radius above Washington. Harry G. Barnes, who has been with CAA for nine years, .mostly in radar work, was in charge of the group. After making sure that the objects were.not known- air- craft and that the,radar was op- erating perfectly, he checked his findings with the radar opera- tors in the control tower. They officials in return for cash. He admitted giving the So- ing flooded. viets data on Sweden's strong- Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton ofi est modern fortress, near Bo- Canada, chairman of the Inter- 1 2 en> 75 mi,es from the Finnish national Joint Commission, said porder. Other information col- it sanctioned opening of the le ?, te d included maps of secret gates because Lake Superior le- P 1 "'tary roads, forts and field vels had climbed to a few hun-!i ortif,cations -. loca tions of trans- . dredths of a foot below the' Iorm ? r , stations, ammunition tre ftea maximum height allowed under K? < dum P s - and up-to-date lists of armaments and military eauipment. The Swedish Foreign Office ing trouble boarding ferries on t^SJaT^JSSSi I 3?. t # m ?r th the river and company officials i2.- R "f sl t l' p C fi*3S?VJ2iff ° fflC ' say the ferries will oe forced sVockholm had worked "wii'h conSLTo^lsT " thG * $ $ h clton.*°rr l .p^ a Canada-United States agree ment. Today automobiles were hav- ed by Capital Airlines officials separate radar sets have report as very level-headed and "taci-led identical sightings. turn." After he landed in Detroit; It's the first lime they have docks hurriedly moved h^lml^ag^cSvl^^n RZJI^ The Coast Guard said it is combat service by the Defense^ Dr. Antonie Nopitsch, director instantly confirmed what he saw, awaiting a formal request for | Department in April of this of the Evangelical Mother Ser the negative from the Air Force;year. jvice, said: . before turning it over to that! The T-48 "Patton" tank has) "Modern mankind must be service. many of the same components as I helped through the qualms of The display of the negative l the M-47. but has been de- j conscience on one side and followed an Air Force a nJ scriDed as radically different. | frivolity on the other by a lib- nouncement which-Mvhile it II has a newly designed hull | erating word which speaks of didn't say so in so many words wit h an elliptical shape and a [the gift of life as well as the —left the impression that fly- low silhouette. (fact that 'marriage does not ing saucers are becoming quite' A ] co d l d " ot say how many exhaust itself merely in pro- a nuisance. T * 48 tanks u W(A,ld produce. creation.' So much time is being spent and continued to do so. The two radars are completely separate units. Later the radar at nearby An- drews Air Force base also con- firmed, the sightings. When the center radar showed Pierman had this to say about; remained under observation in ment and supplies inland. Gra- the sightings: "In 1 my' years of flying seen a lot of falling or shooting stars—whatever you call them— but these were much faster than anything like that I've ever seen. They were moving too fast for that. They were about the same size as the brighter stars. And they were much higher than our 6000-foot altitude. I couldn't esti- mate the ipeed accurately. Please remember I didn't speak of them as flying saucers—only very fast moving lights." Charles Wheaton', first officer one area for so long a time I'veJ It's the first time so mi vel, sand and coal piles are being eaten away by water completely responsible meti, in- Steamshpvel and railroad tracks Russi% rejected the note, de- daring that its embassy here had no connection with the Swe- dish spy ring. She added that the charges were inventions aimed at deteriorating friendly eluding radar operators and pi- are submerged, lots, all observed and reported The Provincial Air Service the same thing at the same tim,c. j Base is using oril one of its relations between Russia* and with all reports checking so ac-| slipways. A further six-inch rise Sweden. curately. will flood its hangars. I The protest coincided with an- Both nights there were scores At Detroit, Bert Robb, direct- other sharp exchange of notes or of the Michigan Waterways!in which Sweden accused Rus- Commission, was bitterly criti- sian jet fighters of shooting of unofficial stories of persons in the area who claim to have moving about in the sky. Saul Pett. a news service re- porter in River .Edge, N.J.. wrote seen one or more strange lights .cal today of the action of the down two unarmed Swedish detailed story on one that he| add ^ d ; kv just b< 12 years of flying I appeared on International Joint Commission, planes within a period of two Robb said he was "totally!weeks over international waters surprised" by the action, and 0I the Baltic. Russia rejected jthat protest as well, adding a Lower learning that any foreign plane of the o„;'of",hr«nIden,ifW"d-ibJ^s in|o„;The «igh, 2 wj^ f ^ n s l S ^ JS on°'7he " A A ^TrM^reTs already haveut !™* ht s.rayi<* over So-vie.i ter- JS^SSLffl^ffir^l Bare-Chested Women rfe^^^CT^WMW *" L e»ers gence director, said. THBEE SEE 'SAUCER 1 SOUTH OF ST. LOUIS Syracuse. (A.P.) "Among many urgent ques- J £ £ ; U1V Cncklin who has been tions. it appears to us that the Ho ^ ard . *, in r h ° J? a ! question of 'birth control' needs ; vv >t. h CAA for five years, directive by the scribes it: a low position in the northwest j veteran of 12 years or riymg appeared on toe V*A i*um ^ extent ! rit ory would be driven off-by sky, the operators in the tower iconfirms pierman's sightings and screen at National Airport. H e , ^ j^on tnc^cnin^ to^tne^extent | gun{ire if necessarv .re the other night, I al- - » looked like a sphere. d & *™ W^ Watery and now discounted alleged_ flying deeply orange colored that it; £ P ^ K were able to see it. One of them, [adds: I said a special directive by church." ' Dr. Hans Meiser, Evangelical ^L Ar e»r Ur ^JJSsHii' ^Assem^vTa. TSSS^Si St. Louis. «A.P.)-An object,ftom the waist no. ' s , h .t d ', ?', "Vm„J , UU 1 with a greenish Hgh. was sight-' Tney whippcd on brassi eres,,SSh2 Veven years to com ed in the sky south ol St. Louis and observed that men rode 32» J last night by at least three | bare-chested. ^ n g S s:u h c°,r^ cribed " as a ^XTt 0 l^ tt ^ 1 mai, :Bigelow Carpet Co. P he h n7men r orab1«, Vi ; S , ' i nf l nu^ e s! Wil.is picked out as ^jR^pOrts Sd« LoM after a «timiliar ^aiitw" w ««l an anonymous letter from Aus- Amsterdam. (A.P.)—The Big-, reoorted directlv over Hot tin - Minn - : "•••I hope and pray elow Sanford Carpet Comnany, Sir?n^ Ark y th .at the women in every state I reported a loss of $1,806,000 on' ^MVT'EdwL Rosen said H S ^ l r o S l n ^ ^ S t S f J g ~" '^ ^ ~ 2Sl?h d .»n'pf^ n t diS K k ^^ri«»^tn?™w5St r o ai for UP it a ^ which appeared to be heading nnt w m n w •» south. She said it disappeared 1 "Before the other night, I al-{ "It looked like a sphere soj •-—TM de-.ways discounted alleged flyingldeeply orange colored that it ap- »g^? U McN?uSto^^aid at^t- Rome (A P T^T^t. saucers as atmospheric, phenom-; peared almost the rtmde of mf.\JJZ*' iTwouM be' 1 ' ''ma'ny JGo^Zmem ^annTunced "olil? good-sized light!yel-enon. But now I feel I have act- It was silent as death^ It was iweekfi ., before Lawer Lake Je .j that Eva Peron, in Death, Like Lenin To Lie in Glass Case Display Austria Asks U.S. Help Terminate Occupation Washington. (A.P.) —Austria has asked the United States in about five seconds^ Willis Cole said when he saw the object it was "due sputh, at a low angle in the sky, near C o n s o l i d a t e d Edison the hqrizon. As far. as I could tell, if was moving southwest." He said it was about the color couldn't be a i ar. There was no his wing, which showed up in mal.' McNaughton said the decision unusual high speed about its that position on the radar scope. He said it disappeared in tne !to incrPase sharply the flow of movements and at times it seem- Other pilots in the air that night, direction of Washington lLake Superior waters into the ed to hover. We could see ittBarnes reveals, appeared to be (Concluding Article on Monday) Lower Lakes had nothing to do with the end of the U.S. steel strike or movement of iron ore. This was in answer to unofficial reports from Sault Ste. Marie that the reason for opening the gates was to speed movement of iron ore to steel mills. net sales of $33,993,000 during] Rl .p n0 o Aires (A P )—Presl- 1 illustrious departed one." i"" """"" "! Robb declared residents of the first six months of 1952. as d " u TJL D peroiVs office to- 1 Two weeks before Mrs. Per- formally to help end its oc.-upa- it he Lake Superior area "should a result of price cuts and a dicated today that the body «of on's death the Argentine Con- ( tion by Russia and the Western:share our burden." He added hi* wife Eva mav be so em- gress appropriated two million powers —United States, Britain!that people along Lake Michigan and Lake Huron shores of Mich- igan "have had a whale of a lot of luck, despite their damage," that , they haven't had more high winds pile up water on the shores. um-seekers came in January, when 40 escaped "across the Yugoslav border into Italv. strike. TISrpJ 0U rU^ m *w«H ldn i t *^!i-S°««i a "SJ^^J^i[?j;5 h ^««IV e balmed 'that it can be placed pesos ($142,000) towards a mon- and France; Tle Weste rn pow- ticket. Deputy Willis forgot. |last year, the company report-. n . rmanpnf mjhiic view. ument to her. The Peron-domi- . _ . .:«*=_„ ZjJL (of i B f f i S ? $1 ' 543 M ° n ^ ^ 0 " In r a a Tmila U r bli ma V rr the °^™n7james D.Wise said i ?«*«?*. h Lenin-father of nated General Confederation ot ers have beGn negotiating with Labor called on its workers to Russia for five years on terms the Bolshevik Revolution-is on,put up 73 to 100 million pes.s for ending the occupation of Au permanent exhibit in Moscow |( five to seven million (A.PJ-A 200-ton!net sales of $17,150,000. com-i a " d former Bulgarian Premier;towards the same cause > vear , ( .permanent exhibit in Moscow j( five to seven million dollars) j stria and establishing its inde- o„i n ori 9 Premier towards . 'pendence. Only a few issues remains are) The government has an-;remain unsettled, but American nounced that military honors | officials doubt that Russia will Gets Huge Generator New York. (A.P.)—A 2CXK. of an acetylene torch flame, (generator was hauled through * pared with a profit of $659,000 Georgl Dimitrovs r The third witness was parked the city streets today and in-ion sales of $15.27.000 in the™ exhibit in Sofia). normally reserved fnr Ar^en-t i«?ree to surrendering ,ts ro near a golf driving range when stalled in the East River station corresponding") 1951 period. The announcement said^per-i " J ™ ^ - . I ^ - f f e a d \J° r J, ge e i n t S SmieV ncrinatFnn she saw a greenish object in of the Consolidated Edison Wise.blamed the loss chiefly• manent burial of Mrs. Peronj^e P re |Wents alone will b e ^ ^ ^ ^ j J ^ J S T & ^ the sky. "At first I thought it company. [on price cuts forced by compe- might be delayed for more than 1 aid to |M s. Peron on Aug. f of Au, a ? was a golf ball, but it had aj_The generator, built at thejtition and market conditions,!a year and that the body then CHICKEN DINNER TUESDAY . AUG. 5th 5:00 P.M. CHAUTAUQUA GRANGI MAYVILLE, N. Y. (OVHt lAKtl * COLTONI Adah* $1.25 CMWrwi 75c (undtr 12) VINTILATIP OININO ROOM tail and seemed to be moving slowly." AIR FORCE CAUTIONED NOT TO SHOOT SAUCERS Washington. (A.P.)—The fly- ing saucers have found a friend. The Air Force received this , telegram today frorA Cincln- kilowatts. nati: General Electric Company's land the eight-week-old strike! would be placed in a monument turbine plant at ' Schenectady,' against the company by CIO and 10. eral settlement Services originally had been East and West. between the was brought to Jersey City,'textile workers. N 5 J., by rail and taken by;P2 VH barge to Manhattan. ————————— The generator is 85 feet long, U , S . K o r e a n Battle 13 feet wide and 17 feet high. ~ ... . it will have a power of 175,000 Casualties Increase the heart of Buenos Aires, scheduled for last Tuesday, but in the heart oi cuenos r%.ucs. -— --— -~.-».. v , —- The phrasing indicated her re- were delayed to give the vast mains would be placed in a'army of mourners a chance to MANNING GETS VET JOB Albany. (A.P.) Thomas J. case. jview her remains on the or-, Manning of Rochester is the The statement said Mrs. Per- ^chid-banked bier in the Minis- new Albany area director for on's body will lie in state until * r y of Labor. On Aug. 9 the!the s'tate Division of Veterans Aug 10-15- days after death- hpdy will be removed to the!Affairs. He was aopointed to Washington. (A.P.) An- and" then it will be removed: Halls of Congress for the final.succeed the late Walter J. File nounced UtS. battle casualties from public view for one yearj da y °* mourning. in the $7.755-a-year post. m Korea reached 113,688 today, after a funeral service that " Urgently request reconsider- HOT IN SWITZERLAND ation of your order to destroy Basv>J. Switzerland. tA.P.)— an increase of 305 since last day. flying saucers. I July was the hottest month week. The defense department's The year period is necessary, "Remarkably advanced aero-[Basel has suffered since the weekly summary based on no- the statement said, "for -the dynamics indicate probably in- city began keeping tveather rec- tifications to families through work of conservation which tercelestlal origin. Interference ords 126 years ago. The aver- last Friday reported: will give it (her body) absolute without more cause than sauc-age temperature for the month Killed in action 17.915, wound- corporeal permanence thus rul- ers* friendly curiosity could was 71 degrees ed S3' 177 - and missing 12,576. filling the express wish of the Wh»t Mopp—| At Maw . . . THE COMMAND OF CHRIST AT THE LAST SUPPER. IS FULFILLED. % CATHOLIC INFORMATION CENTER 121 0-»,ww, AVMM, iaffaJ* 2. N. T. I fftjs« i«nd ma a HEE »«mohiat on Cathot.c laliaf. ( I » t . . . Mretl ma m tka FKSE Corraspendanca Cou-ia. NO OIU6ATIONS NAMt *P0»ES1 , 4 M 1-2-52 HOUSEHOLD SALE Samuel Provenzo Res. Tues. & Wed. Chant Blvd.—Lakewood, N.Y. Ana. 5 & 6 Dirt Read West of Big Tree 2 pc. i M * « rm. S-.t. n Hw4m I I . . (.Ik. a»w)-nit lock Una**** ctioir Vw ffc.u tow Mt«i»a< -*4 Tablaa Moajoriwa Rock—«ono * Boacli •pKl e«rta*»—Wolaat ($1S.00»—Studio Caocb ($10.00)—«oyo. T.V. 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Page 1: WO oast Guard Snaps $119 COLLISION COST Four Flying Saucersfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 23/Jamestown NY Post... · Four Flying Saucers Negative Shows Luminous Unexplained Round Objects

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oast Guard Snaps Four Flying Saucers

Negative Shows Luminous Unexplained Round Objects Washington. (A.P.)—Coast Guard headquarters today

made public a photograph of "unidentified aerial pheno­mena" taken by a 21 wear-old Coast Guard photographer.

The photo clearly shows four round objects. Each ap­pears to have two identical shafts of light extending across its center and protruding at the forward and rear ends. The lights are in a "V" formation.

The Coast Guard said it has**— f* no opinion a s to the cause o r ' - , w i k i ^,l inah c ,h?n£^ i Saucers Not New, was releasing the picture only * because of the widespread pub- n P e r r i k p r l f p n t u r v lie interest in aerial phenome- I V e ^ C l l U G U V e n i U i y

The picture was snapped by A G O , E X D C T t j Q V S Shell R. Alpert, Salem, Mass., J ' r / Air Station photographer .

The Coast G u a r d ' said Alpert sighted severa l brilliant white lights through the Air Station's photo lab window at 9:35 A.M., Ju ly 16.

Alpert watched the lights, which " seemed to be waver­ing , " for five or six seconds before a t t empt ing to photograph them. By the time he had focused his c a m e r a the lights were "considerably d immed down."

The Coast Guard, announce-

I thaca . IA.P.) — A retired Cornell astronomer contends " the re is nothing new in the Flying Saucers . ' '

S. L., Boothroyd, Professor Emer i tus of Astronomy, said yes terday that Flying Sau­cers were reported in scien­tific publications a hundred years ago but were not tabbed with that n a m e .

Boothroyd said the publi­cations described "eer ie look­ing lights, s treaking across the sky a t t remendous speeds and changing direction al-

^ •

JAMESTOWN (N.Y.) POST-JOtJBNAI -Saturday Ewajag. Augurt 2. 1952

PET SNAKE CAUSES $119 COLLISION COST

AIRLINES pilot S. C. Pier-man saw six "objects" a t the same time the CAA radar did.

men*, said Alpert, after sighting! most instantly. Today's flying saucer re-the lights, summoned Thomas

F laher ty , 26, hospi talman 1st ports match this desc r ip to r class . The two men immediate­ly re tu rned to the photo lab.

Lights Vanish After Photo

the astronomer observed. The cause? % Atmospheric

reaction similar to that which produces the Northern Lights,

Noting that the lights were A u r o r * a Borealis, Boothroyd again burning brightly, Alpert S U g g e s t ed . snapped the picture. An instant; H e s a i d t n e v i v i d display la ter , there was a "momenta ry oi Aurora Borealis was credit-f lash" and the lights disap­peared . ,

" T h e r e appeared what I thought to be a quick flash'' F l ahe r ty told authorit ies. ! —————-—mmmm"•"

" I actual ly could not say it c™seAa unbelievable

was anything. It could have I a n . r 0 „ ^ i 1

been reflections from passing cars, o r from the ocean

Celler Wants Mac Arthur -To Quit Army

New York. (A.P.) — Rep. Emanuel Celler, New Y o r k Democrat , demanded today that Gen. Douglas MacArthur re f sign from the Army and re­linquish his Army • pay and three-man mil i tary stalf now that he has a highly-paid ci-

Alpert said that in the two withheld

V 1"Unliss* he does so I will of - i satisfactorily explains away visu-ferTK? a t t S ^ t t s € a S % g s*htin*s absolutely co»firmed

Congress to force him to qui t , " ! D y [ a a a r - ' Celler said in a s ta tement s e n t ' . T h

Ll s remarkable new chapter

to the press | , n t n e weh*d flying saucer story ' MacArthur Thursday accept- was written' in the skies over ed the Board Chairmanship of (Washington for six hour before

.Remington Rand, Inc., at a pay | dawn on Sunday, July 20, arvi suffering | w m c h Celler said would be again one week later. The details

and implications of what took place are now confirmed by CAA

The Congressman, cha i rman

RADAR CONTROL ROOM of CAA at Washington airport tracked the strange objects on the large scope in center foreground. It shows position of aircraft with­in a radius of 70 miles.

Radar Defies Debunking of Flying Saucer

By DOUGLAS LABSEN NEA Staff Correspondent

Washington. (NEA)—The fly­ing saucers are back.

And their re turn to the head­lines has been the result of a startling new development: «

For the first time, numerous and simultaneous visual sightings have .been positively confirmed by official Civil Aeronautics Ad­ministration' radar observations. This has happened twice under almost identical circumstances pn two successive Saturday nights.

Up until now official- and un­official saucer debunkers " have produced credible theories to ex­plain away reports of visual sightings as natural phenomena. They have done the same for in­dividual radar sighting reports.

But none* of this reasoning

North Kingston, B . I . (A.P.)—Thomas E. Hur ley ' s pet snake stuck his head out of the glove compart­ment of Ms c a r and it cost Hurley $119.

Hurley was so star t led We lost control of his c a r and hi t another owned by Robert H. Ellen.

Ellen in District Court yes terday waa l awarded $119 d a m a g e s In his negli­gence suit against Hurley.

"If a man puts a snake In his car , he does so at his own r i sk , " said El len 's counsel. The lodge agreed.

Lake Superior

ed generally to electrons and hydrogen nuclear protons spi-raling into the a tmosphere from the sun, then ionizing.

! "substantial ly upwards of $100,-People much aroused and 000."

worried. Respectfully—" N a m e

Air Force spokesmen of the House Judiciary Commit-

said | tee; said that while MacArthur brief elimDses he had he was A i r *"»«* • p * r a m « u &ouu.;tee: said mat wnne MacAnnur unship tn riptN-minP ' the size t h a t nobody is going around j r emains on active duty, but on

and the Air Force. Since then the Air Force has

quietly said it was closing to the press its special section' at Wright

of the lights, their number, f o o t i n g at s t range objects i n , a non-assignment basis, the Field in Dayton, O., which has alt i tude, speed, direction or ^ e sky but that Air Defense "U.S . taxpayers must allow him \jhcen studying flying saucer re­shape. He said he heard no Command planes would a t tempt $19,548 Army pay and allow- p o r t 5 I n addition, all information sound. • [° d e s t r o v . a n v a l . r f r a f t ° J o b - l a n c e s . " concerning that group's person-

LABGE RADAR SCOPE at Washington National Airport presents a picture like this to CAA traffic controllers. Mystery pips wer t tracked from midnight until dawn on the first night.

moving around like that for-reluctant to discuss the subject about 15 minutes. I t just disap-'with him on the radio, peared into the northwest sky."! The mystery of the flying sauc-

There are no windows in thelers had its s tar t on1 June 24, center Barnes was operating.11947, when a Boise, Idaho, busi-None of the eight men could j nessman, Kenneth Arnold, flew leave to go outside to try to: his private plane over the jagged check their own radar sightings!peaks of Washington's Mt. Ran visually

As is normal at that time air ier. When he landed, he breath lessly reported having seen "a

Alpert was quoted by Coast f c t s definitely identified as Guard officials a s saying that hostile and dangerous. because it w a s an extremely

"perh,ps some-sort oi 200 Million Dollar refraction of ground reflections could possibly have accounted _ , for the lights, but in my esti- P o t t O f l l a n k J o b mation, this is an improbable e X | h e n a ^ a n r d s m a n ' s report sa'id A w a r d e d t O A I C O that both his camera lens and Schenectady. (A.P.) - T h e U M v e r a K " " h S ' r e i g n e d " a f t e r thue: uWu lndfW^ • t c r e e n t n r o u S n American Locomotive Company enter ing- the political camoaign. which he took the picture were ; announced today it had r e - 1 e m e n n g i n e P°*"*<-«" u i n i " " g

"qui te d i r ty ," and adde^ : ,ceived a 200 million dollar or-

MacArthur ' s office had no comment .

Under Federr*i law, Generals of the Army and Fleet Admir-als draw full pay for life re­gardless of re t i r ement unless thev specifically waive it.

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Republican candidate, drew his while president

nel. activtities and budget is now strictly classified.

Full details of what happened the first night are being revealed for the first time by NEA Ser­vice.

These are the facts:

traffic was very light. But at the; chain of nine saucer-like objects first opportunity an operator in playing tag at fantastic speeds." Barnes' office contacted Capital; Since then there have been Airi man

Dams' Opening Floods Sault

Relieving of Biggest Lake Spurs Protest From Lower Lakes

Sweden Convicts -

Six of Selling Secrets to Reds

Two Get Life Terms, Others Less, and Girl Eight Months

Stockholm. Sweden. (A.P.)— Six Swedish Communis ts were convicted yes te rday of selling vi tal ,defense secre ts to Russia, and TWO were sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor. A seventh was acquit ted.

The Swedish government charged them with turning over to the Russians .full detai ls of their country 's nor thern defens­es against any Russian a t t ack across neighboring F in land . '

Frithiof Enbom. 33-year-old confessed master-mind of the Soviet spy ring, and his chief accomplice, Jugo Gjersvold, both drew life t e r m s a t hard labor. The r ingleader ' s young­er brother. Martin Enbom, drew a seven-year sentence.

Others convicted and sen­tenced were :

Arthur Karlsson. 42, a Com­munist member of the Town

Sault Ste . Marie , Ont. (A.P.) - S a u k officials expressed I £ = 1 , £ H 3 X O 2 In" '^uthTm a la rm today after water in the Sweden. Karlsson. who ar-St. Mary ' s River rose more ranged the elder Enbom's con-than two feet in 24 hours, heavi- J * ? . w i t h s . o v* p t Embassy of-ly damaging shore propert ies. W ' ^ ^ S Z ^ ? *

The water rose following the ; Fingal Larsson. 40, a rai lway opening of 15 to 16 gates in a worker, whom the government compensating dam holding back * " " s e

td

f t ? L 2 : n d i n * r e * u l a r r e " «•», .-1*1 «*T i « . iPorts to Enbom on rai lway se­ine waters of Lake Superior. | curi ty measures . He drew five Ottawa officials said the dam y e a r s at hard labor.

Lilian Ceder. 31. Frithiof En­bom's girl friend, who police

was opened because Lake Su-perior had reached " d a n g e r o u s - ! ^ " i * d*

l""**™-a W E° • P ° J l c e

lv hi«?h IPVPIS" whirh t h r M t o n ^ charged, operated a short-wave L l S n i 5 I e i f „ _ ^ m 5 n ! h r e a t e n e d . t r ansmi t te r Enbom received Enbom received

from the Russians. She was shore communit ies, roads and rai lways.

•lines pilot Capt. S. C. Pier-, thousands of sightings all over g S a n t s a n . in Aa"™r nf * £ n shortly after he took off and the world, many obviously report- ? n

a ^ mf t

e " t sH

a r e m d a n * e r o f b e '

?eQ

ri)nr 2 1 2 . . t h e L ° W e r ( & t a h h a s spent in custody since Lakes -Mich igan Huron E r i e , | h e r a r res t would count*in this and Ontano-^where high water ;per iod «"^*n mi* already has caused shore dam-i The seventh accused m e m b e r a f . e n r ^ S i S m a t e d a t m o r e t h a n o ' the ring, acquitted for lack *di,uuo,uou. jof proof, was Tage Wickstrom.

George Nixon, Liberal m e m - 3 7 , a clerk in the Army Fort i-ber of Par l i ament for Algoma fication Construction Bureau -West, telephoned Ottawa to ask ; The Enbom brothers and that more of the gates be Gjersvold confessed. The elder closed. Mayor C. Herb Smale Enbom, an editor and agitator, wired Resources Minister Win- said he had collected mili tary ters in Ottawa asking that he and industrial information for intervene to close some of the t n e Russians for six years , turn-gates . He said the city's sewage i n S it over to Soviet Embassy system is being slowed and

asked hint to look for the ob 'jects.

ed by crackpots. But a substan­tial number have been so strange

For about 14 minutes, Pier-.and reliably described, even the man was In direct, two-way com- Air Force has had to admit that muniqation with Barnes. While he was within radar range, Pier-j

they were unexplainable. Many books have been written

man was able to see six objects;on the subject. Hundreds of

that " I cannot say in all honesty d e r f0r T-48 tanks and spare B i r t h C o n t r O at I saw objects or aircraft , ; D a r t s from the Armv. ; " , , I H W V " I U W I H»*

merely some manner of l ights ." President Duncan W. Frase r fV«.^*»*;%#« AeVnA Alpert said his 4x5 c a m e r a ^ a i d the, order raised the com- f L / i r e C r i V c M 5 K c U

was set a t infinity, 1-50 of a pany 's backlog of defense work # N r . . , —, second at F4.7. j to about 950 million dollars. Al- O r L u t h e r Q I I ( j T O U D

Negative Not Touehed co currently is producing M - 4 7 ] w ' fc•*•*"^,**,, ^ » v r « K Exper t s in photography said tanks, here for the Army. Hannover, Germany . (A.P.)—

the negative shown t o news-. The switch over to T-48 tanks A German woman welfare ex-men here showed no evidence,probably will be accomplished! pert appealed to the World Lu-of touching up—no'indication o i ; early! next year , F rase r said, theran Federat ion Assembly to-having been touched by liquids.1 The\ M-47 tank was the first day for " a special directive by The negative was clear and!new medium tank since World; the church in the question of unscra tched. iWar jll. It was approved for j birth control

e ra tors 'and technicians, manning Barnes coincided exactly with,has been written and officially the air route traffie control cen- the radar sightings, Barnes re~: reported on the subject points up ter in hangar No. 6 at National I ports. several unique aspects to the re-Airport. . tracked from seven to 1 Pierman is a 17-year veteran of | cent Washington sightings: ten unidentifiable and mysterious I commercial flying and is descnb I t ' s the first time that three objects performing strange gyra tions in the skies in a 30-mile radius above Washington.

Harry G. Barnes, who has been with CAA for nine years, .mostly in radar work, was in charge of the group. After making sure that the objects were .not known- air­craft and that the , radar was op­erating perfectly, he checked his findings with the radar opera­tors in the control tower. They

officials in re tu rn for cash. He admit ted giving the So-

ing flooded. viets da ta on Sweden's strong-Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton o f i e s t modern fortress, nea r Bo-

Canada, cha i rman of the In te r - 1 2 e n > 7 5 m i , e s f r o m the Finnish national Joint Commission, said porder. Other information col-it sanctioned opening of the l e?, t ed included maps of secret gates because Lake Superior le- P1 " ' t a r y roads, forts and field vels had climbed to a few h u n - ! i o r t i f , c a t i o n s - . l o c a t i o n s of t rans -

. dredths of a foot below t h e ' I o r m ? r , stations, ammunit ion t r e f t e a max imum height allowed under K ? < d u m P s - a n d up-to-date

lists of a r m a m e n t s and mil i tary eauipment.

The Swedish Foreign Office ing trouble boarding ferries on t^SJaT^JSSSi I 3 ? . t

#m ? r t h

the r iver and company officials i 2 . - R " f s lt l ' p

Cfi*3S?VJ2iff ° f f l C ' say the ferries will oe forced sVockholm had worked "wii'h c o n S L T o ^ l s T " t h G ™ * $ $ ™ h c l t o n . * ° r r l . p ^

a Canada-United S ta tes agree ment .

Today automobiles were hav-

ed by Capital Airlines officials separate radar sets have report as very level-headed and "taci-led identical sightings. turn." After he landed in Detroit; It 's the first lime they have docks hurr iedly moved h ^ l m l ^ a g ^ c S v l ^ ^ n RZJI^

The Coast Guard said it is combat service by the Defense^ Dr. Antonie Nopitsch, director instantly confirmed what he saw, await ing a formal request for | Depar tment in April of this of the Evangelical Mother Ser the negative from the Air Fo rce ;yea r . jvice, said: . before turning it over to that! The T-48 " P a t t o n " tank has) "Modern mankind must be service . many of the same components as I helped through the qualms of

The display of the negative l the M-47. but has been de- j conscience on one side and followed an Air Force a n J s c r i D e d as radically different. | frivolity on the other by a lib-nouncement which-Mvhile it I I has a newly designed hull | e ra t ing word which speaks of didn't say so in so many words w i t h an elliptical shape and a [the gift of life as well as the —left the impression that fly- l o w silhouette. (fact that 'mar r iage does not ing saucers a re becoming qui te ' A ] c o dld " o t say how many exhaust itself merely in pro-a nuisance. T * 4 8 t a n k s u W ( A , l d produce. creation. '

So much t ime is being spent

and continued to do so. The two radars are completely separate units.

Later the radar at nearby An­drews Air Force base also con­firmed, the sightings.

When the center radar showed

Pierman had this to say about; remained under observation in ment and supplies inland. Gra-the sightings:

"In1 m y ' years of flying seen a lot of falling or shooting stars—whatever you call them— but these were much faster than anything like that I've ever seen. They were moving too fast for that. They were about the same size as the brighter stars. And they were much higher than our 6000-foot altitude. I couldn't esti­mate the ipeed accurately. Please remember I didn't speak of them as flying saucers—only very fast moving lights."

Charles Wheaton', first officer

one area for so long a time I'veJ I t ' s the first time so mi

vel, sand and coal piles a r e being eaten away by water

completely responsible meti, in- Steamshpvel and railroad tracks

Russi% rejected the note, de-d a r i n g that its embassy here had no connection with the Swe­dish spy ring. She added tha t the charges were inventions aimed at deter iorat ing friendly

eluding radar operators and pi- a re submerged, lots, all observed and reported The Provincial Air Service the same thing at the same tim,c. j Base is using oril one of its relations between Russia* and with all reports checking so ac- | slipways. A further six-inch rise Sweden. curately. will flood its hangars . I The protest coincided with an-

Both nights there were scores At Detroit, Bert Robb, direct- other sharp exchange of notes or of the Michigan Waterways!in which Sweden accused Rus-Commission, was bitterly criti- sian jet fighters of shooting

of unofficial stories of persons in the area who claim to have

moving about in the sky. Saul Pett. a news service re­

porter in River .Edge, N.J.. wrote

seen one or more strange lights .cal today of the action of the down two unarmed Swedish

detailed story on one that h e | a d d ^ d ; kv just b<

12 years of flying I appeared on

International Joint Commission, planes within a period of two Robb said he was "totally!weeks over international wa te r s

surpr ised" by the action, and 0 I the Baltic. Russia rejected j that protest as well, adding a

Lower l e a r n i n g that any foreign plane of the o„ ; ' o f " ,h r«nIden , i fW"d- ibJ^s in |o„ ;The « igh , 2 w j ^ f ^ n s l S ^ J S o n ° ' 7 h e " A A ^ T r M ^ r e T s a l ready h a v e u t ! ™ * h t s . rayi<* over So-vie.i ter-

JS^SSLffl^ffir^l Bare-Chested Women r f e ^ ^ ^ C T ^ W M W *" Le»ers gence director, said.

T H B E E S E E 'SAUCER1

SOUTH OF ST. LOUIS

Syracuse. (A.P.) —

"Among many urgent ques- J £ £ ;U1VCncklin who has been tions. it appears to us that the H o ^ a r d . * , i n

r h ° J ? a !

question of 'birth control' needs ;vv>t.h CAA for five years, directive by the scribes it:

a low position in the northwest j veteran of 12 years or riymg appeared on toe V * A i*um ^ extent ! r i t o r y would be driven o f f - b y sky, the operators in the tower iconfirms pierman's sightings and screen at National Airport. H e , ^ j ^ o n tnc^cnin^ to^tne^extent | g u n { i r e i f n e c e s s a r v

.re the other night, I al- - » looked like a sphere. d & *™ W ^ Watery and now discounted alleged_ flying deeply orange colored that it; £ P ^ K

were able to see it. One of them, [adds: I said

a special directive by church." '

Dr. Hans Meiser, Evangelical

^ L A r e » r U r ^ J J S s H i i ' ^ A s s e m ^ v T a . TSSS^Si

St. Louis. « A . P . ) - A n object , f tom the waist no. ' s ,h . td ' , ? ' , "Vm„J , UU 1 with a greenish Hgh. was sight- ' T n e y w h i p p c d o n b r a s s i e r e s , , S S h 2 Veven years to com ed in the sky south ol St. Louis and observed that men rode 3 2 » J

last night by at least three | bare-chested.

^ n g S s : u h c ° , r ^ c r i b e d " as a ^ X T t 0 l ^ t t ^ 1 mai,:Bigelow Carpet Co. P he h n7men r orab1«, V i

; S, ' i nf l nu^ e s ! Wil.is picked out as ^ j R ^ p O r t s S d « L o M

after a «timiliar ^ a i i t w " w « « l a n anonymous letter from Aus- Amste rdam. (A.P.)—The Big-, reoorted directlv over Hot t i n - M i n n - : " • • • I hope and pray elow Sanford Carpet Comnany, S i r ? n ^ Ark y th .at the women in every s ta te I reported a loss of $1,806,000 on'

^ M V T ' E d w L Rosen said H S ^ l r o S l n ^ ^ S t S f J g ~" ' ^ ^ ~ 2 S l ? h d . » n ' p f ^ n t d i S K k ^ ^ r i « » ^ t n ? ™ w 5 S t r o a i f o r U P i t a ^ which appeared to be heading n n t w mnw •» south. She said it disappeared1

"Before the other night, I al-{ "It looked like a sphere soj • - — T M

de-.ways discounted alleged flyingldeeply orange colored that it ap- » g ^ ? U M c N ? u S t o ^ ^ a i d a t ^ t - Rome (A P T ^ T ^ t . saucers as atmospheric, phenom-; peared almost the rtmde of mf.\JJZ*' i T w o u M b e ' 1 ' ' 'ma'ny J G o ^ Z m e m ^annTunced " o l i l ?

good-sized l ight!yel-enon. But now I feel I have act- I t was silent as death^ It w a s i w e e k f i . , b e f o r e Lawer L a k e J e . j t h a t

Eva Peron, in Death, Like Lenin To Lie in Glass Case Display

Austria Asks U.S. Help Terminate Occupation

Washington. (A.P.) —Austria has asked the United States

in about five seconds^ Willis Cole said when he saw

the object it was "due sputh, a t a low angle in the sky, near C o n s o l i d a t e d E d i s o n the hqrizon. As far. as I could tell, if was moving southwest ." H e said it was about the color

couldn't be a i ar. There was no his wing, which showed up in mal . ' McNaughton said the decision unusual high speed about its that position on the radar scope. He said it disappeared in t n e ! t o i n c r P a s e sharply the flow of movements and at times it seem- Other pilots in the air that night, direction of Washington lLake Superior waters into the ed to hover. We could see ittBarnes reveals, appeared to b e (Concluding Article on Monday) Lower Lakes had nothing to do

with the end of the U.S. steel str ike or movement of iron ore . This was in answer to unofficial reports from Sault Ste. Marie that the reason for opening the ga tes was to speed movement of iron ore to steel mills.

net sales of $33,993,000 during] R l . p n 0 o Aires (A P )—Presl-1 illustrious departed one ." i " " " " " " " "! Robb declared residents of the first six months of 1952. as d " u T J L D peroiVs office to-1 Two weeks before Mrs. Per- formally to help end its oc.-upa- i the Lake Superior a rea "should a result of price cuts and a dicated today that the body «of on's dea th the Argentine Con- (tion by Russia and the Western :share our burden." He added

hi* wife Eva mav be so em- gress appropriated two million powers —United States, Bri tain!that people along Lake Michigan and Lake Huron shores of Mich­igan "have had a whale of a lot of luck, despite their d a m a g e , " that , they haven ' t had more high winds pile up water on the shores.

um-seekers came in January , when 40 escaped "across the Yugoslav border into Italv.

str ike.

T I S r p J 0 U r U ^ m * w « H l d n i t * ^ ! i - S ° « « i a " S J ^ ^ J ^ i [ ? j ; 5 h ^ « « I V e • balmed ' that it can be p l aced pesos ($142,000) towards a mon- a n d F r a n c e ; T l e W e s t e r n pow-ticket. Deputy Willis forgot. | last year, the company report-. n . r m a n p n f mjhiic view. ument to her. The Peron-domi- . _ . .:«*=_„ ZjJL

(of i B f f i S ? $ 1 ' 5 4 3 ' ° M ° n ^ ^ 0 " I n r a a T m i l a U r b l i m a V r r the ° ^ ™ n 7 j a m e s D . W i s e said i ? « * « ? * . h L e n i n - f a t h e r of

nated General Confederation ot ers h a v e b e G n negotiating with Labor called on its workers to Russia for five years on t e rms

t h e Bolshevik Revo lu t ion- i s on,put up 73 to 100 million pes . s for ending the occupation of Au permanent exhibit in Moscow |( five to seven million

( A . P J - A 200-ton!net sales of $17,150,000. c o m - i a " d former Bulgarian Premier ; towards the same cause > v e a r , ( . p e r m a n e n t exhibit in Moscow j( five to seven million dollars) j s tr ia and establishing its inde-

A« o „ i n o r i 9 Premier towards . 'pendence. Only a few issues remains are) The government has an- ; remain unsettled, but American

nounced that mil i tary honors | officials doubt that Russia will

Gets Huge Generator New York. (A.P.)—A 2CXK.

of an acetylene torch flame, (generator was hauled through * pared with a profit of $659,000 Georgl D imi t rovs r The third witness was parked the city s t ree ts today and in-ion sales of $15.27.000 in t h e ™ exhibit in Sofia). normally reserved fnr Ar^en-t i«?ree to surrendering ,ts r o

nea r a golf driving range when stalled in the Eas t River station corresponding") 1951 period. The announcement sa id^per- i " J ™ ^ - . I ^ - f f ead\J°r J , g e i£ e

i n t S SmieV ncrinatFnn she saw a greenish object in of the Consolidated Edison W i s e . b l a m e d the loss chiefly• manent burial of Mrs. P e r o n j ^ e P r e | W e n t s alone will b e ^ ^ ^ ^ j ™ J ^ J S T & ^ the sky. "At first I thought it company. [on price cuts forced by compe- might be delayed for more than 1 aid to |M s. Peron on Aug. f of Au, a ?

was a golf ball, but it had a j _ T h e generator, built at thejtition and marke t conditions,!a year and that the body then

CHICKEN DINNER TUESDAY . AUG. 5th

5:00 P.M.

CHAUTAUQUA GRANGI

MAYVILLE, N. Y.

(OVHt l A K t l * COLTONI

Adah* $1.25 CMWrwi 75c (undtr 12)

VINTILATIP OININO ROOM

tail and seemed to be moving s lowly."

AIR FORCE CAUTIONED NOT TO SHOOT SAUCERS

Washington. (A.P.)—The fly­ing saucers have found a friend.

The Air Force received this , te legram today frorA Cincln- kilowatts. nat i :

General Electr ic Company's land the eight-week-old str ike! would be placed in a monument turbine plant a t ' Schenectady, ' against the company by CIO

and 10. eral set t lement Services originally had been Eas t and West.

between the

was brought to Jersey City, ' texti le workers . N5J., by rail and taken by ;P2 VH barge to Manhat tan. — — — — — — — — —

The generator is 85 feet long, U , S . K o r e a n B a t t l e 13 feet wide and 17 feet high. ~ . . . . it will have a power of 175,000 Casualt ies Increase

the hear t of Buenos Aires, scheduled for last Tuesday, but in the heart oi cuenos r%.ucs. -— --— - ~ . - » . . v , —-The phrasing indicated her re- were delayed to give the vas t mains would be placed in a ' a r m y of mourners a chance to

MANNING GETS VET JOB Albany. (A.P.) — Thomas J.

case. jview her remains on the or-, Manning of Rochester is the The s ta tement said Mrs. Per- ^chid-banked bier in the Minis- new Albany a rea director for

on's body will lie in s ta te until * ry o f Labor. On Aug. 9 the! the s'tate Division of Veterans Aug 10-15- days after d e a t h - hpdy will be removed to the!Affairs. He was aopointed to

Washington. (A.P.) — An- and" then it will be removed: Halls of Congress for the final.succeed the late Walter J . File nounced UtS. battle casualties from public view for one y e a r j d a y °* mourning. in the $7.755-a-year post. m Korea reached 113,688 today, after a funeral service that " Urgently request reconsider- HOT IN SWITZERLAND

ation of your order to destroy Basv>J. Switzerland. tA.P.)— an increase of 305 since last day. flying saucers . I July was the hottest month week. The defense depar tment ' s The yea r period is necessary,

"Remarkab ly advanced aero-[Basel has suffered since the weekly s u m m a r y based on no- the s ta tement said, "for -the dynamics indicate probably in- city began keeping tvea ther rec- tifications to families through work of conservation which tercelestlal origin. Interference ords 126 years ago. The a v e r - l a s t Fr iday reported: will give it (her body) absolute without more cause than s a u c - a g e tempera ture for the month Killed in action 17.915, wound- corporeal permanence thus rul­ers* friendly curiosity could was 71 degrees e d S3 ' 1 7 7 - and missing 12,576. filling the express wish of the

Wh»t Mopp—| At Maw . . .

THE COMMAND OF CHRIST AT THE LAST SUPPER. IS FULFILLED. %

CATHOLIC INFORMATION CENTER 121 0-»,ww, A V M M , iaffaJ* 2. N. T.

I fftjs« i«nd ma a HEE »«mohiat on Cathot.c laliaf. ( I » t . . . Mretl ma m tka FKSE Corraspendanca Cou-ia.

NO OIU6ATIONS

NAMt

*P0»ES1 , 4 M 1-2-52

HOUSEHOLD SALE Samuel Provenzo Res. Tues. & Wed. Chant Blvd.—Lakewood, N.Y. Ana. 5 & 6 Dirt Read West of Big Tree 2 pc. i M * « rm. S-.t. n Hw4m I I . . (.Ik. a»w) -n i t lock Una**** ctioir — V w ffc.u tow Mt«i»a< -*4 Tablaa Moajoriwa Rock—«ono * Boacli

• p K l e«rta*»—Wolaat ($1S.00»— Studio Caocb ($10.00)—«oyo. T.V. Tobla—•»* Sk« I-OOJ oom .«a wl« ood— 7 pc wiVk tmmt, ChiM Closat, Drop Loaf Tobla ft 4 cko*i, ia a.eolloat . . . dWoa * »c orc.lv as.d—5 pc. Modora Wola.t ledroom Soilo—Moplo Jaaalo U«d lod ft %?mt a/ Orowor*— Sioqlo Mople lad lotbiaam Scolos—Moojc ! • * ' • ' • ? * - ¥ . " " • « * • • * • « . wH* Ooap ftnaaao Saoioad Ook •rovkfott U* -Wosk ao Mck—r\ assiao M - k . f o . U r > Ooamtof Estobliikmoa*— 1* Ik. low i*« *«N—tverytkiiifl clooa ft hi oacaltaaH caodftloa.

Coodactod by Mrs. 4 * *a r r Avo.

nwii* 22-210 — • to 5

Mrs. Horry Clott 23 SPTMP St.

VACATIONS DEMAND AN EXTRA PAIR.. .

Bring us the prescrip­tion from your aye doctor or lei ui gat the prescrip­tion of your glasses on our new Bausch and Lomb Ver-tometer. Doa't let your vacation be spoiled by the lots or breaking of your glasses,

W. W. B0ERST, omew 7 W. 2nd St Phone 55*101

fyli if I a

Husbands agree on the economy of our fine laun­dry service, and our modern methods are guaranteed to prolong the life of your finest clothes. Special at­tention is given every item to assure longer wear and truly satisfied customers.

CALL US TODAY.'

IDEAL PEERLESS FAMILY LAUNDRY

24 FOREST AVE. PHONE M i l « »-112 "Year O M Stop Laapdry oaf Dry

Cknwera tor 41 yeers." v

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com

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