Ligonier Banner., Volume 84, Number 28, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 July 1950 — Page 7
Thursday, July 27, 1950
« MAGAZINE PAGL -
BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET Saw Some Saucers, Says Roce; He Wasn't in His Cups, Either e o M RO s
At the risk of being laughed out of court and countenance, I'd ike to report that I've seen flying saucers.
It happened on a clear and moon-minus night two summers ago In Newton, Conn., on the lawn of the home belonging to Paul Osborne, the playwright. Among my fellow oglers were Paul and his wife, Director Josh Logan and his missus, and Author John Hersey and his. What’s more, none of us was in his cups the night we watched the flying saucery.
The show began about 10 p.m. while we were sitting outdoors, enjoying and shooting the breeze, and
the first thing we noticed were several searchlights some miles away poking their yellow fingers into the sky. A few minutes later, three bits of celestial chinaware skittered into view, und from then until midnight they skipped and scam-
pered above our bewildered heads. As nearly as I could-judge, these whatzises were at least 200 feet in diameter and were flying at an altitude of from 3,000 to 5.000 feet. Their edges gave off a ghostly glow, very much like blue neon tubing seen through a heavy fog. * & * WHEN THE SEARCHLIGHTS finally cut off and the discs got lost in the stars, we put what was left of our heads together and decided that what we had witnessed must have been some kind of hush hush military exercise. We also decided that, if we didn’t want a butterfly net slipped over our heads, it would be smart to keep our lips zipped about the whole thing. How come, then, that with my ‘bare face hanging out in print, I'm spilling the story now? Well, until recently the talk about the persnickety pancakes has been more loose than lucid—according to some writers, they were manned by Martins two inches tall; according to others, by Russians two droshkies wide. Recently, however, documentation bas begun to replace delirium, and it's becoming evident that the overgrown manbole covers are not only real, but, despite all denials, one of the topsecret weapons of our own navy . and air force. The most convincing testimony was offered April 3rd by Henry J. Taylor on a General Motors broadcast over the ABC network. Taylor, after treking all around the country and talking to people who had seen, “touched and even flown these cred-
HISTORIC MOMENT ~ Continued from Page 2 such preparation. It is better to spend a few billion dollars to stop a war than ten or twenty times as many billions —perhaps, even, all that we value in our civilization—to win a war.
We may look to the immediate future with sad hearts. How much more
MARY WORTH’S FAMILY
= . ARE YOU MEETING ANY { as UsUAL, AUNT /] {INTERESTING MEN AT THE /MARY, THEY'RE ADVERTI?\NG AGENCY, ¥ eiTHER lARRIED- - BRICK? e OR ELSE IT’ 4 . PAINFULLY EVIDENT | . WHY THEY'RE NOT! —— sl ! —— oo 1 N % % 6 \" | of- SNN g e’ > 21 4 BYRS -
KERRY DRAKE
___AND NOW FOR A LITTLE SWEET SENTIMENT, KIDS !.. OLE D.D-T. MAY. SOUND LIKE A BUG-SPRAY, s RUT HE'S REALLY A WEAVER OF gt PREAMS ! . JUST SHUT YOUR TIRED | ) _LI'L EYES, LADY-- AND LISTEN I T 0 A PLATTER OF "LONELY 4 BABY’S LULLABY”... af” . 1) ‘ f;"\s:i s \Sflk\ Yy KO ATN 5N\ BESE A& Q/ L\ g FSAOrI O TN 81 ) ) B ‘?é e ‘;fl ' ¢WS S / |
ulity-cracking craft, made the following flat and- unfrivolous statements about them: One type of saucer is the ‘“‘true’ disc, which ranges anywhere from 20 inches to 200 feet in diameler, is unmanned and generally guided by some form of remote control The other is a jet-driven platter which carries a crew and is capable of such supersonic speeds that lln flight it looks like a hundred-foét flaming cigar ! * * * FURTHERMORE, according to Henry J., a ‘'‘true” disc was actual ly photographed near Wildwoud. N. J.; another was found in the vicinify of Galveston, Texass and stenciled on its surfaoce was the following: : MILITARY SECRET QFE THERE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ANYONE DAMAM™G OR REVEALINGDESCRIPTION OR WHEREABOUTS OF THIS MIS SILE IS SUBJECT TO PROSECD: TION BY THE URNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. CALL COLLECT AT ONCE. (Then a long distance telephone number, and the address of aUS Air Base, and finally the words on the ‘‘saucer” in big, black letters: NON-EXPLOSIVE.) “I know what these so-called flying saucers are used for,”” Taylor concluded ‘‘When the military autherities are ready to release the information it will be a joy to tell you the whole story, for it is good news—wonderful news.” Well, 1 don't know what the saucers are for, but on the basis of this and other reports—plus the evidence of my own bugeyes — I'm convinced they exist and, praise the Lord and pass the ammunition, are ours. Moscow papers please copy. I wrote a column recently about the bureaucratic blabbermouths in our nation’s capital who, at the drop of a daiquiri, blurt out top military secrets to anyone who will listen. Well, 'm plenty happy to learn that—at least as regards one vital weapon—there are some folks in Washington who not only know their beans but can keep from spilling them.
R R B o e R Y R g Bt RS SR R N e e : %fc-"f’# 3 R Gkt R e, MG B R RS B ST R sl Billy Rose
cause for rejoicing there would be if the dispute between the two main systems of human society could be settled according to which could do the most for its citizens, which could house its people best, feed them best, make the best use of their energies and their initiative, raise _them to the highest levels of intelligence, enable them to live the most happily
THERE'S ONE ESPECIALLY ' IRRITATING SPECIMEN- -MIKE MASON «THE ACCOUNT EXECUTIVEL WORK WITH!-+-CONCEITED! -~ TIL BET THE RUG 15 THREADBARE. IN FRONT OF EVERY MIRROR IN HIS APARTMENT! M . b 2 ; 7” 3 Ty . Q . (] — 5 PR By, |
I'M SORRY YoU WERE Q¥ p.pl? werl Q. ANNOYED, CHIEF | SOME OF NAMED, SANDY / THE OFFICE HELP HAVE SLIPPED \HE CERTAINLY INTO THE HABIT OF LISTENING SOUNDS TO THAT DISC JOCKEY, DARRYL JPOISONOUS! DSVVDN_?EAAT T"?ERNER' OR .“_‘ll“3,"_[!,-‘.]‘.".;‘!3.!,-‘ , a PP.T., As HE CALLS | eTR () Tniels L(T T e . [Pt ) N et e B Tl — ean i g e ;;},...... \f/ 4“ r?"}’,’”Q&'*‘ }9“"5
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BY WALTER SHEPHERD (Walter Shepherd, a Detroit corporation lawyer, has found that his office attracts people with all kinds of problems. As guest-col-umnist, he writes about what is certainly ore of the most unusual hebbies in the world.) : ‘This isn’t my hobby. It’s the hobby of a friend of mine who wants to be a writer. He has fallen in love with Roget’s Thesaurus. In case you never heard of it, Roget’s Thesaurus is a sort of dictionary of words with similar
meanings. This friend of mine, in his passion to increase his vo‘cabulary, has memorized most of the words. I don’t know how his increased vocabulaxry has helped him,
B B B S SR SRR B e~ S B s A S DR LS B N R ”g-“?fizi;:;&:-z-é: : R . RS Begs Soa e B e SR s R L S . b R R Beo P ¢ ’f,'//f B S B R T R S ':';-g:;:-:- GR R S i S G R R R R s o e . S A SR - ::?:-.' e s x“f B R 5 7 B R s e 3:‘-';§¢:<':-':-':~':'- | 4’3::’::3.»::-:-':%1:2: e S O 115 = R R L et e oo A Walter Shepherd AR SR S
but it has certainly confused his friends. When he talks now, he sounds like a broken record. He says: :
“Isn’t this a charming, delightful, enchanting,. cheerful, gay, stimulating, titillating, refreshing, nice day ?”’ When he staried all this, those of us who sce him frequently thought he had gone mad.
We worried about his wife’s reactions to it all. She was quite philosophie.
“What can I do?” she said. “I just sit back and let him rave on. I've made a game of it. I anticipate his words and see if I can catch him leaving any of them out. The other day, he was ripping through ‘obtain.” Fe left out ‘glean,’” and [ told him. He was so crushed, he didn’t say a word for three hours. [t was sheer heaven.” ; I risked telling him the headaches he was causing, and I needed a double Sal Hepatica by the time he finished with:. | “How ean you censure, criticize, disapprove, denounce my efforts, attempts, endeavorg, trials, exertions to improve, lift, elevate, better advance myself ? I thought you were my friend, pal, chum, comrade, buddy, confrere, side kick, bedfellow, erony.”- . . All this has influenced his writing, and his sceripts are now five times longer than they used to be. They also come back from editors five times faster; and that, of ccurse, is very sad, unfortunate, reorvectable, lamentable, miserahle. But I’'m glad. . ,
and freely! We of the free nations would accept such a chalienge and glory in it! That opportunity is not offered us. . : : —New Y_ork Times. kK ‘ MUSINGS OF AN EDITOR: Continued from Page 1
I visited Mr. Koester’s miracle garden on Morrison Island last week and convinced
7 SRS HE'S A BIG PF.RFF_TLIAL“)J\ SOPHOMORE ,ONE OF THOSE LUSTY, GUSTY GUYS!++ < A RHINESTONE N THE ROUGH! THE ONLY WAY HE'LL EVER WIN A BRIDE 15 IN A RAFFLE! T 7| (= | R S b’“ lAT \K\\ & N fe ~ < | Fy "" ‘:‘,}E::: SN \\ & gl - F —fi i LA =
THE LIGONIER BANNER
SPORTS CQMPASS ST s A ¥
- National Press and Radio Sports Commentator
New York, N. Y.—The fellow who wields the most potent “bat” in baseball every year is none other than Father Time. His trusty schythe cuts just enough away from star veterans each succeeding season to make a shambles of pre-season predictions which fail to account for the relentless reaper. ~ :
“After you reach the age of 30,” Babe Ruth once muttered, “all basepaths seem to run uphill.” Another age-conscious figure is Braneh Rickey, baseball’s most successful practitioner, who makes a fetish of selling his star players right after their peak — Dizzy
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numerous blunders of a promising* rookie at any base than man that post with a fading veteran who could play the position “from memory”’ better than the floundering freshman. Says the Brooklyn brain-trust-er, “You keep banking on a veteran indefinitely, and he’ll play just well enough not to let you feel that he’s hurting theclub ... but he is! I call that type the ‘anaesthetic’ ballplayer. Stay with the anaesthetic long’' enough and you’ll find yourself amputated in time.” s At this stage of baseball’s pennant races, the most surprising teams of 1950 are the ones who went overboard for the youth movement, Reading from left to right, they are the Philadelphia
myself that organic farming has merits beyond all dreams. In my Ilimited ‘experience 1 have never seen a vegetable garden its equal. Next tc mine, it was particularly outstanding. I have no phosphate rock ,manure or composi to sell anyone so plugging this type of garden bears no selfish purpose, but I now strongly advise it. o % sk R All colleges are™not. poor, nor do they publish all sources of revenue as for example ‘Antioclr College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, who admittedly turns down three thousand applications. per year from which they have' collected a ten dollar fee“each that is not returned: - This represents a gross -profit of thirty-thous-and- dollars per year, which
~ BRING HIM OUT TO DINNER 50ME EVENING, MY DEAR!SINCE YOU'RE FALLING | N\ FOR HIM ,I'D LIKE TOSEE IF _4alattid HE'S GOOD ENOUGH ,_ Zaugh woumt o FOR YOU! W ~ SOl T & b ) P / VS r{s@.‘s‘f \ g ' il ‘}\ o ‘7“”"‘ ‘!L'l =% ~“’~’ N
Lf why, kerry Lame! '~/ eMO 1 THINK HE SOUNDS NICE !\ O-HCY " ="970, HIS VOICE SORTA--CUDDLES luarn_ UP.--TO A PERSON’S O EAR-.-! o ! ' g N g f b 7 BN "*“f‘ Rt -SEp 2oy i A 3 = N \ 1L TP em o S | ) ¥~‘ /; --f_:h » 1: & .’ y;“!‘! 4[, . Jic T | e Y O 1 ‘;‘.4“.:-%, e o g 0 ,;Qflngp'*\?’,* ¥ K?“, \ RRCPARR e fBT LY SRR g / SRS VR lal T »fif§ % gwf* f
Phillies, Washington Senators and Chicago Cubs. Here’s the story: (1) Phillies— Bob Carpenter, scion of the duPént billions, was himself a callow kid in his 20’s when he bought the bankrupt Philly franchise during the war. Realizing that youth is the only hope of the future, he dispatched gold-laden scouts all over the country to sign teen-agers. Curt Sim-mons-had hardly taken the ribbon off 'his high school diploma when a scout stuffed a $65,000 bonus into his pocket for a left-handed autograph on a Philly contract. Today, Simmons is recognized as the fastest southpaw in the league. (2) Cubs — Manager Frankie Frisch’s gout caused him no worse’ pain than his 1949 Chicago team’s own old-age affliction: veteranitis. So the famous Fordham Flash decided to make the 1950 Cubs live up to their young nickname. Hallowed veterans suddenly found themselves on the bench, holding Pepsi-Cola bottles instead of baseball bats. Press box critics made wisecracks about the sound of the new names. Commenting on the Cub rookies, scribes said that second sacker Wayne Terwilliger sounded like a character out of Charles Dickens.. . outfielder Bob Borkowski sounded like a mouthwash . .. and third baseman Ransom Jackson sounded more like the hero of a cowboy story. (3) Senators—Last Winter, Bucky Harris inherited a club well tabbed, “Washington: first in war, first in peace and last in the American League.” His managerial predecessor, Joe Kuhel, made this assay of the club when he was fired for finishing last in 1949, “You can’t make chicken salad out of chicken feathers.” But Harris swept out the remnants of the oldage home from Griffith Stadium. He traded relentlessly, always getting the edge in youth if nothing else.
Dean, $185,000; Joe Medwick, $150,000; Walker Cooper, $175,000; Kirby Higbe, $lOO,000 ete. Rickey’s teams are always loaded with youth. The Dodger pundit would rather take the
should make a tidy net sum. Frankly, it would be nice to have their turn-down business, wouldn’t it? -
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, We Have Them! FAIR ;' to SEPT. 4 SOUVENIR TICKET | e BOOKS A $5.50 VALUE . 3 s KETS sSION TIIC L 5 GENERAL ADMIDS e TICKETS \ oN ADM\SS\ v % 5 CON(ESS\ vor *Merry Widow” ‘! 1. Music in the R“d__‘w‘:\t \osr\nq" or*On the Town” -1 ‘u‘ ‘ 2.. Music in tln: R“:""“Cc::ws ‘ ' . Big Top—EvroPee” r Thrill Show rotel” R |7O L e o : : 5. lce Varieties— Fe° : ; S Your South Shore ticket i office has a limited supply of Chicago Fair ,' Souvenir Tickets. Get your books now, : while they last—and save money!...When : you go, take a convenient, speedy South : Shore train—practically to the gates of the Fair Grounds. : _f&i .SN e ' & DL -*—-————-———-—— CHICAGO SOUTH SHORE AND SOUTH BEND RAILRCAD
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