Thursday, January 13, 2022

Science Fiction: Saucers Before Saucers


Most early science fiction space stories involved earth voyagers traveling into space, but H. G. Wells’ War of the Worlds upended things by bringing the aliens to earth. The book had many imitators, but few of these resembled the later reports of flying saucers. Yet there were a few notable exceptions, and we will highlight two of them.


Ray Palmer and his work.

 

Raymond A. Palmer was the editor of science fiction magazine Amazing Stories, and it can be said he was in the UFO business well before the first flying saucer was seen. He became infamous for publishing Richard Shaver’s pre-saucer tales of ancient aliens living beneath the earth as nonfiction, "The Shaver Mystery" starting in 1945. However, even before that, he promoted the Charles Fort-derived notion of extraterrestrial spaceships visiting earth as reality.

Amazing Stories, July 1939

Below are two UFO-like stories set during World War II that Palmer presented three years before the coming of the saucers.


Intruders from the Stars 


Amazing Stories Jan. 1944, presented a pulpy space romance that’s included here due to the depiction of the threat of the extraterrestrial spaceship’s superior technological performance.


“Intruders from the Stars” by Ross Rocklynne tells of the arrival of an ancient race who came to conquer the earth with their giant cylindrical spaceship with disc-like weapons. Their invasion stopped “Hitler, Tojo, Mussolini.,” and due to a romantic plot twist, everything turns out well. Intrepid reporter, Bill van Astor-Smythe says that thanks to the aliens, “We’ve got a ship that no one on Earth can stand up against. ... The war’s over!”

 

The next story is far closer to flying saucer lore, but also plays on the military theme.

 


Star Base X

 

Amazing Stories Sept. 1944, had a patriotic gimmick: “Every story in this issue by a soldier.” Ray Palmer said in this editorial, “Pvt. Robert Moore Williams is in the air force, but has just come from 99 days in camp hospital with pneumonia. There's a guy with guts! His manuscript came in just the same!Robert Moore Williams' story was the cover feature, “Star Base X.”

The story opens aboard a US Army plane with a small crew carrying supplies to a remote base in the Antarctic. There’s suspicion a Nazi spy may be aboard, but it’s not what they think. There is an impostor aboard, and he causes their plane to crash in the Arctic wilderness, and he escapes the plane leaving behind tracks in the snow that look like hoofprints.

Searching for the escaped spy, the group of soldiers discover a secret underground base in a cave carved out of hill which contains a hangar for a huge glittering teardrop-shaped space ship (which they later learn is outfitted with advanced weapons and technology).

There are eight aliens inside, Aherned, hooved goat-like humanoids, described as looking like “Pan without the horns... no bigger than a boy of twelve.” They also have telepathy and hypnotic mental powers., which is how their agent Eldron had impersonated a crewman. The aliens abduct the meddling humans and hold them in an imaginary cage projected by their minds. We learn that the aliens use Earth as a base to facilitate their communication and travel between stars. The engineer Carson offers to work with the aliens in return for their technology, “We would welcome you, help you, provide you with supplies... I don't mind telling you how much a ship like that would mean to the human race.”


The aliens reject the suggestion of such a treaty, and Eldron says their existence must remain secret, as they are sure man would eventually use space ships for war against them. The Aherned intend to kill the humans to silence them, but before their mental powers can subdue them all, one pulls a pistol and shoots Eldron. This starts a firefight with the aliens, who return fire with their laser-like beam weapons, killing one man by burning a hole in his heart. The resistance takes the aliens by surprise, and they are forced to evacuate, taking flight in their spaceship.

As the Aherned ship departs, Carson thinks he can reverse engineer the aliens’ technology. “There are tools in that hangar, spare parts, enough equipment to… find out how that ship worked.” Unfortunately, the aliens bomb the hangar, leaving only charred wreckage. Later, a search team rescues the survivors, but Carson is still determined, and says, “Some day I’ll know how that thing operated. We’ll be building ships like that someday, now that we know they can be built.”

Fiction or Prophecy?



In Amazing Stories October 1946, Palmer’s cover story was The Green Man, a novel by psychic Harold Sherman. It was a prophetic tale that introduced Numar, a peaceful messiah-like messenger in a spaceship from another planet. It was very much like a prototype for the Contactee stories of Space Brothers coming here as celestial saviors. We’ll examine the legacy of The Green Man in future STTF article.

Ray Palmer is said to have believed the reason flying saucers were here was, “to make us think.” Part of our thought should focus on how science fiction influenced our beliefs about aliens and UFOs.



Thursday, December 30, 2021

1965: UFO Contact in California


Santa Cruz, California 1960: Daffy Don’s Furniture Outlet began selling televisions and home electronics, and on the second floor of their store, the service department was an affiliated independent business, Sid’s TV & Radio Service, owned by Sidney Padrick. Padrick was 40 years old, a family man, a private pilot, an Air Force reservist, and he had served during World War II. After leaving the military, Padrick became a repairman of radios and televisions, with the sales and installation of TV antennas as his top moneymaker.


Santa Cruz Sentinel ads for Sid’s TV & Radio Service, April 1960

Something changed in early 1965. Padrick said that on January 30, he’d been taken for a ride in a flying saucer at La Selva Beach with a spaceman named Xeno. The story had a religious element; one of the spaceship's rooms was a chapel.

Santa Cruz Sentinel, Feb. 21, 1965

Sidney Padrick called the Air Force on Feb. 4, 1965, to report his flying saucer experience. An appointment was made, and Major Damon B. Reeder flew from Hamilton AFB to interview Padrick. When he landed, he found Padrick was accompanied by a member of the local press. Shaking the reporter, Maj. Reeder had Padrick drive him to the sighting location, tell the story and make drawings of the flying saucer.

Padrick’s saucer sketch for Project Blue Book (1 of 3)

Maj. Reeder’s 7-page report of Feb. 10 observed that while Padrick told his story, “he frequently referred to type written notes.” Reeder noted that Padrick was “a glib talker,” and his Project Blue Book report concluded:
“Mr. Padrick alluded to the fact that he is going to write a book or magazine article about his experience with the spaceship. It is my opinion that this is not a valid UFO contact but rather an attempt on Mr. Padrick’s part to get the Air Force involved in order to lend his story some authenticity and credibility.” 
Less than a month after his alleged encounter, Padrick was giving lectures for Dan Fry’s flying saucer Contactee group, Understanding Inc. Fry’s newsletter carried a notice of Padrick’s lecture for February 24th the Santa Cruz #9 Unit, and closed with the line, “The New Age Press has contacted him to write his story.”

Santa Cruz Sentinel, Feb. 22, 1965


Here’s a summary of a lecture Padrick gave in Contra Costa County, California:

Oakland Tribune, April 22, 1965

The announcement for Padrick’s lecture for the Church of Religious Science discussed his many lectures and appearances in major media.

The Roseville Press Tribune, April 23, 1967 (photo from The Sacramento Bee)

One of Padrick’s interviews was recorded and appeared on the LP disc, File #733 U.F.O., 1966.

The UFO album by Jack Jenkins featured 4 tracks with Padrick telling his story. 
To hear it, click the link below to a recording on YouTube hosted by John E.L. Tenney:



The Career of a UFO Contactee

Many UFO organizations and publications became interested in the case. In the APRO Bulletin, May-June 1965, Coral and Jim Lorenzen reported, “Mr. Padrick received quite a bit of local attention from radio. TV and newspapers. APRO members who talked to him came away with the impression that he was sincere in his report.” However, the APRO editors felt that Padrick’s story of the aliens’ hidden planet was a product of his “unconscious mind,” saying, “It is suggested that Mr. Zno was a visitor from Mr. Padrick's private hidden world…”

Donald Keyhoe and the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) had an unfavorable view of Contactee tales, but their organization looked into Padrick’s the story. From NICAP Affiliate Newsletter, May 5, 1965: “PROBABLE HOAX… west coast claim in January, by Sid Padrick, investigated by California Unit #2. Witness reputation of story-teller.” (We’ll hear more about this investigation later from Data Net.)

The Little Listening Post, a Contactee and new age newsletter by Clara John published a special issue, an interview with Sidney Padrick, who they found to be “without guile.”  He recounted his story, including the details Padrick claimed the Air Force didn’t want him to talk about. 

Advertisement in the Reno Gazette-Journal, July 31, 1965

Meanwhile, Padrick was still busy giving lectures and appearing at UFO conventions. The official journal of the Amalgamated Flying Saucer Clubs of America, Inc., Oct. 1965 advertised:
"THE 9th ANNUAL NORTHERN CALIFORNIA SPACE-CRAFT CONVENTION will be held Sat. & Sun., Oct. 30 & 31 at the Claremont Hotel, Berkeley, Calif. Della Larson will again be official hostess and chairman . You 'll hear: Dr. Daniel W. Fry, Hope Troxell, Sidney Padrick, Dr. George King, Col . Arthur Burks, Gabriel Green, Lois Robinson, Clark L. Wilkerson, Dr. Frank E. Stranges, and Neva Dell Hunter."
Padrick also appeared at AFSCA’s own third national convention Reno, Nevada, in July 1966, and again at the 10th Annual Northern California Space Craft Convention in 1967.

Padrick’s story was popular enough he didn’t even to show up for it to be told at UFO gatherings.

The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY), March 29, 1966

Padrick’s lecture, “Outer Space Visitors to Earth” was given far and wide, from the Business and Professional Women’s Clubhouse in Los Angeles to Miguel’s Old Restaurant in Reno.

Advertisement from Reno Gazette-Journal, Oct. 28, 1966

Michael Jaffe published an article on Sidney Padrick in DATA-NET Report, Sept 5, 1967, based in part on the investigation of Jo Clark and Paul Cerny of NICAP. They had attended Padrick’s lecture on March 12, 1965, in San Jose and began a six-month investigation, and found his story full of discrepancies and contradictions.”

DATA-NET Report, Sept 5, 1967

One earthly contradiction was that Padrick denied taking money for the appearance, but it was revealed that he actually received 25% of the admission fees. Jaffe met with people who knew Padrick and they told him how he had begun “Telling strange stories and fantastic tales. His customers lost confidence in him.” Padrick neglected his home and declared bankruptcy. Shortly afterwards, Padrick came out with the UFO story, which he unsuccessfully tried to sell to national magazines. Jaffe found out that Padrick had moved since the sighting and located his new home, a ranch house in Monterey County. Padrick wasn’t there, but he spoke to his son, Dave, a young man who shared his interest in ham radio. When Jaffe asked him about the UFO story, Dave referred to it as “bullshit,” but couldn’t say why his father had made up the story, and he preferred not to discuss it. Jaffe said, “His personal feelings were that he was sorry about the whole thing.” Jaffe concluded, “Sid Padrick did in fact fabricate his story…”

About this time, Padrick dropped out of the UFO scene, but he left some unfinished business.

NICAP’s UFO Investigator, April 1971, reported the result of a recent case went before a judge in San Jose Municipal Court. The plaintiff complained that five years earlier Padrick had taken a loan of $1000 from him to produce a book on his UFO story, but nothing was ever produced. Padrick claimed the manuscript was complete, but it was lost when he let someone borrow it. The judge ruled that Padrick repay the $1000 with interest.

Over the years, Padrick’s story continued to circulate, given a boost his 1965 interview from The Little Listening Post was reprinted in Official UFO magazine, January 1978, as “A Probing Conversation With a Contactee” by Harold D. Salkin.

Decades later, Padrick’s story was still circulating, as seen in this article in his old local Santa Cruz paper.

The Californian (Salinas, CA), Aug. 9, 1991

Padrick himself was no longer talking about UFOs. However, in 1991 he sent a letter to a newspaper column disclosing that since 1940 or so, he had been having recurring dreams of taking strange flights. One version of the dream included an encounter with a famous and tragic religious cult.

Reno Gazette-Journal, Nov. 17, 1991

Sid Patrick’s story of outer space visitors never made much of an impact beyond the California Contactee scene, which was already fading when he entered the franchise. His time in the business was short, but his saucer story still spins. Sidney Padrick, passed away on September 30, 2012, in Marysville, California at the age of 93.
. . .



For Additional Reading

The Sidney Padrick Air Force case file from Project Blue Book

Patrick Gross has an excellent list of resources on the Sidney Padrick case at URECAT - UFO Related Entities Catalog

Thursday, December 16, 2021

A 1947 Pioneer of the UFO Extraterrestrial Hypothesis

 

Long before flying saucers, science fiction editor Ray Palmer had primed the pump for otherworldly spaceships in Amazing Stories by citing Charles Fort’s speculations about extraterrestrial visitors, printing sighting reports, and by presenting the Shaver Mystery as nonfiction. Fortean author John Keel was a reader of Palmer’s magazine and had observed the birth of the UFO era. Keel wrote that when the flying saucers of 1947 arrived: 

“Aside from Palmer's readers, two other groups were ready to serve as cadre for the believers. About 1,500 members of Tiffany Thayer's Fortean Society knew that weird aerial objects had been sighted throughout history and some of them were convinced that this planet was under surveillance by beings from another world ... The second group were spiritualists and students of the occult, headed by Dr. Meade Layne, who had been chatting with the space people at seances through trance mediums and Ouija boards. They knew the space ships were coming and hardly surprised when ‘ghost rockets’ were reported over Europe in 1946. Combined, these three groups represented a formidable segment of the population.”

John Keel, “The Man Who Invented Flying Saucers.” Fortean Times, Winter 1983: 52-57. 

We’ve previously written about The UFO Prophecy of Frederick G. Hehr, an occultist who since the 1920s had been writing about spaceships from other worlds coming to guide humanity. He was not alone. 

Ole J. Sneide

Ole Johannes Sneide (1886 - 1947) was born in Norway, and immigrated to the US in 1898. He was an accountant, and on his retirement, devoted his energies to the study of the occult. When flying saucers made headlines in 1947, Sneide was the first person featured in the newspapers to seriously state that the UFOs were actually extraterrestrial spaceships. 

Portrait of the occultist as a young man.

On July 3, 1947, a letter about flying discs by Sneide appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, which was subsequently reprinted by United Press for national distribution across the United States. The version below is from The Ford Islander (a Navy newspaper, Pearl Harbor, HI), July 21, 1947, and has paragraph breaks added for readability. 

Editor – Anent the speedy disk objects so many observers have seen crossing the sky off and on during the last 40 years, the latest being nine flying saucers reported by Kenneth Arnold, Pendleton, Ore., and a lone disk reported by Frank M. King and companions, San Leonardo. The first of these things, I recall were three similar objects seen at night out of Ely, Minnesota, over 30 years ago, crossing the entire sky from horizon to horizon in a matter of less than a minute. They were brilliantly lighted, but could not have been meteors, as the three traveled parallel to each other all the way, did not deviate from the path or burst up as meteors will do when they strike the atmosphere. Here is the romance of it: the flying disks are oblate spheroid space ships from the older planets and other solar systems.

Usually they travel in outer space with speeds approximating that of light by use of anti-gravity devices and hyperspace. In our space they travel much slower and, of course, become visible either by intent or by accident, for in their travels they use the invisibility screen. The space navigation has really been going on for millions of millions of years, these “Navo” having come into our galaxy originally from the Greater Magellanic Cloud via the Lesser Magellanic Cloud, 47 Tucanae, Omega and Alpha Centauri Clusters. Came to our solar system from the last-named place before our planet Earth was born. They have made a great many visits to our planet, mostly in hyperspace and so invisible to humans.

Their masters planted the original humanities here and which did not develop sui-generis. They made the cosmic astronomy of the painted and sculptured Symbol Rocks of the Castle Crags Monument, Dunsmuir, and to which I have the key. They have been absent from our planet since before the fall of the Roman Empire, when the Great Master left Earth for the outer galaxy by fohatic teleportation. He is now back, and what is going to be done depends upon mankind, but my advice is that physical man set up no belligerence, for a small concentration of these disks just beyond the range of our atmosphere could clean the surface of our planet completely in a matter of less than 24 hours.

Their present local headquarters is on the unseen side of the moon. I discovered this by teleportation visits hither and yon in and beyond our galaxy, where one travels in minutae with speeds far beyond that of light. Royce Brier et al. would not believe this, but mankind will just have to learn their physics all over again, someday, if they live. Ha! If they live!

San Francisco, Ole J. Sneide

The Cincinnati Enquirer, July 4, 1947

Sneide’s letter was widely quoted in newspapers, most frequently in stories featuring a wide range of saucer origin speculation. The Associated Press version of the Sneide story assumed he was writing “tongue-in-cheek,” but they were badly mistaken. See clipping below.  

The Paris News, (Texas) July 3, 1947. 

At least two national magazines noted Sneide’s pronouncement about the origin of flying saucers, Newsweek and Life.

Newsweek July 14, 1947

Spots Before Their Eyes

Perhaps the flying saucers were interplanetary space ships manned by two-headed Martians with radio antennas growing out of their head.  Perhaps they were the new secret weapon of an unnamed foreign power.  Maybe they were just the reflections of sunlight glancing off faraway planes, or a new American jet ship, or an advertising stunt ...  In the absence of evidence, those who believed the saucers were visitors from another planet felt reassured.  Ole J. Sneide of San Francisco announced the disks were "oblate spheroid space ships from the older planets." In San Diego, Mead Layne, publisher of an occult magazine, announced that he had received a message, through a medium, from one of the saucers. The people aboard it, he said, wanted to live in the United States for a while.  "They come with good intent," said Layne.

Life July 21, 1947 

A San Franciscan, Ole J. Sneide, explained that the saucers were space ships sent out by "The Great Master," who left the earth in disgust after the fall of the Roman Empire and now resides on the dark side of the moon. 

What the national news coverage missed was the illuminating follow-up piece by the San Francisco Chronicle, on Tuesday, July 8, 1947, a lengthy interview with Sneide where he elaborated further on flying saucers, extraterrestrial life, and the fate of Earth.

Thanks to Louis Taylor for the scan of this image.

The Sneide Letter

Occultist, Who Is 61 (Physically, That Is), Expands His Disc Theories

By J. Campbell Bruce

Perhaps the most startling and widely discussed theory advanced so far on the flying disc was the one set forth in the now-famous letter to The Chronicle’s Safety Valve by Ole J. Sneide. 

Sneide (rhymes with Friday) spoke of space ships, invisible screens, headquarters on the dark side of the moon. His letter was picked up by the newspaper wire services and reprinted over the Nation. It brought a flood of letters and telephone calls to The Chronicle. Sneide, overnight became famous. Just like the discs, he appeared out of nowhere and flashed across the horizon of headlines.  

Who is Ole J. Sneide? 

He's a retired cost accountant who has lived quietly in a cramped, dim, little room on the second floor above 1232 Market street. Until he wrote his letter to the editor, he had lived a serene existence, delving into the mysteries of the occult.

When he was interviewed yesterday, he had just come back from a quick trip into outer space. And he appeared a bit dejected.  

They Knew

He's gone all the way out there to pick up the straight dope on these flying discs - and he's been turned down flatly. “I projected myself into outer space,” said Sneide, speaking in a puckered sort of way.

“I didn't need to ask about the discs. They knew what I was after. They appeared in a blinding flash of light. And the answer was in two words: ‘Information refused’”.

Sad as he was about the failure of his mission, Sneide nevertheless had his own theories. The discs were, he felt certain, one of these: 

1- Nimbre A. Theatos apparently dropping Metaboblons here and there. (He’d gotten that much from an earlier flight.) 

2-  Enemy scouts from Asia - well, Russia, then. (“They've been experimenting with atomic energy for a long time.”) 

3- A prank being pulled by a branch of our own Army. (“If so it's foolish to fly them around like that and scare people.”) 

Continent of Mu

He even conceded that, lacking more definite knowledge, the discs might be piloted by wandering “dero” or survivors of the lost continent of Mu finally emerging from the depths of the Earth. But he couldn't be sure about that. 

Born in Norway and reared in Minnesota, Sneide attended the University of that State and his framed diplomas from an accounting school and the Chronological College of California (class of ‘04). He retired as a cost accountant and stenographer 11 years ago to devote his time to the study of the occult.

He conducts these studies in his one-room apartment which is almost removed from the worldly tumult of Market and illuminated by lightwell in the day and a frosted globe at night. The walls are covered with old prints by Charles Dana Gibson, Maxfield Parrish, Edward Penfield, A. B. Frost and a smiling photograph of Clark Gable.  

Physical Age

Sneide is 61 (“physically, that is”), is slightly pallid has blonde curly hair that is comb-resistant, wears is a Hoover-type collar, a stick pen and a lapel ornament which is “Ole” in a flourish of gold wire script on a on a slab of mother-of-pearl. His source of information is the Dhyanis, rulers of creation.

In his Safety Valve letter, Sneide mentioned his discovery of the headquarters of spacemen on the dark of the moon, whither he’d gone by teleportation. He amended that yesterday to say the dark of the moon was the “subsidiary” or branch office. He recalled seeing buildings and people they're not much different than San Francisco, but it wasn't too vivid, as he didn't stay long. 

One person wrote in to complain that Sneide had given away the ”Scarlet Secret of the Scintillating Saucers.” Another said he had difficulty with the fuel mixture and trying to get to the moon. “They don't make sense,” Sneide snorted. “Pure nonsense”.  

Under-Earth Dwellers

But his eyes lighted at mention of a communication by one Larry Sweet, 436 O'Farrell street, who theorizes the discs were tentated by people of Mu who have been living in secret recesses within the earth (except for those who “packed up and left for other galaxies” after that ill-fated continent sank. Sneide said Sweet might be right - he wouldn't know.

But Sneide was certain of one thing. You need to have no fear of the discs, “unless they're from Russia - and then there's plenty of peril.” If they’re Nimbre A. Theatos, everything's under control. 

“These,” he explained, “are scouts for spaceships. I don't know exactly what they're doing here, but they may be sent to do certain things before Armageddon, which should be in the offing anytime.”

“There are reports that small things were dropped from them. They would be Metaboblons, from the ancient archaic Greek. I wouldn’t know what they’d be, but maybe they’re dropped to protect certain areas – or if they’re from Russia, they may be bombs to be detonated at the proper time. But if some fell in the bay, as is said, then they are Metaboblons, which may be mechanisms to counteract atomic radiation. The Dhyanis a gave me the name.” 

Sneide saw no danger of the world’s end from all this. He predicted earth with last 6,000,000,000 years yet and “then probably be dissolved into thin air and started all over again in a fohatic whirlwind.”

(See the glossary after the article for some of the obscure terms used by Sneide.) 


Sneide’s Lost Legacy

Ole J. Sneide’s Market street residence was just less than a mile from the United Lodge of Theosophists on the same street. Unfortunately, there’s no evidence of his membership there - or to any other occult associations, but it’s clear he was well-schooled in Theosophy, and he was also familiar with fantasy and science fiction like the Shaver Mystery. 

The San Francisco Examiner, Feb. 26, 1938 

There’s no telling how influential Sneide might have become in the studies of aerial phenomena; his career as a ufologist was cut tragically short. Sneide died on August 31, 1947, barely 2 months into the flying saucer era. However, Sneide had a plan for his work to live on. In 1937 he set up a will with instructions and funds for his writings to be published. Sneide also left money for the construction of a statue of the goddess Aphrodite, whom the Romans knew as Venus.

The San Francisco Examiner, Oct. 10, 1947

Sneide also asked that his manuscripts on occult affairs in the vaults of the Bank of America be published at a cost of $3000 and that the title be "Heimrhibeat" (German meaning "homework"). Also that his ashes be scattered from the Golden Gate Bridge.  

Sneide may have been unaware, but the state law forbade scattering cremation ashes from the shore or even a bridge. His siblings had objections about other parts of the will. The San Francisco Deputy City Attorney, Lawrence S. Mana, sent a letter to the Art Commission of the City and County:

"Please be advised that the heirs of Ole J. Sneide on October 29, 1947 filed a contest of Will which contest is now pending in the Superior Court of the State of California... As a consequence of the filing of the contest, the Will has never been admitted to probate.” 


The money went to his relatives, and there’s no record of the publication of "Heimrhibeat." Apparently none of Ole J. Sneide’s wishes were honored; there was no book publication, no statue, and no scattering of his ashes. Except for his flying saucer letter, Sneide’s work has been lost. Sadly, he became another one of the many Ufologists That Time Forgot.

. . .

 

A Glossary, Notes, Sources, and Further Information

Many of Sneide’s terms and concepts were derived from Theosophy. The Theosophical Society was an occult organization founded in 1875 by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, a set of beliefs about the cosmic origins of mankind cobbled together from various ancient myths, religions and fiction. Theosophical concepts were very influential on many writers of early fantasy and science fiction such as H.P. Lovecraft and Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Fohatic - "a bit of theosophical bafflegab that appears in Madame Blavatsy’s The Secret Doctrine (1888) ... It has been described as a spinning electro-spiritual force, a sun-based holy energy, executed by Fohat, an agent of the Sons of God.” From Conflicting Drives: A Broken Promise in theFaith Why Science Should Study UFO Reports” by Martin S. Kottmeyer, SUNlite Volume 5 Number 1 January - February 2013

Dhyanis - is the plural of Dhyani, and seems to refer to the Dhyan-Chohans, as described by Helena. P. Blavatsky in Lucifer Theosophical Monthly September, October, 1894:

“... Dhyan-Chohan, a 'celestial Buddha,' or what a Christian Kabbalist might call a 'planetary spirit' or one of the Elohim... a class of the planetary spirits or 'devas'  ...so to say, the guardian angels of men...”

Metaboblons - Metabolon is probably what Sneide was talking about when he’s quoted as saying “Metaboblons." It was a term first printed in 1903 in relation to atom fragments and radiation.

Report on the UFO Wave of 1947 by Ted Bloecher, 1967, was one of the few UFO books to discuss material from Sneide’s 

Martin Kottmeyer, “Varicose Brains, Part 3: Headhunt.” (Originally published in Magonia 44, March 2007)

Allan G. Smorra, “Another San Francisco Original,” October 5, 2014

Maurizio Verga, “Ole Sneide,” Flying Saucers in the Sky - 1947: When UFOs Came from Mars, 2020

. . .


Thursday, December 2, 2021

Flying Saucer Clickbait from 1947


In the internet age we're familiar with "clickbait," but the concept was practiced in newspaper headlines and advertising long before the digital era. The collection below is of newspaper items published between July and September 1947, all using the popularity
 of UFOs as bait.

Flying saucers were frequently the topic of gags in editorial cartoons.



Newspapers would use any flying saucer element as a reason to print a novelty photo.



Also, see our previous article focusing on the exploitation of flying saucers and females for photos, The Saucer Pin-up Girls of 1947



Advertising is where things really wet wild. The words "Flying Saucers" would appear in an ad just to attract attention, no matter if they were selling shoes, insurance, or liquor. 

 Miscellaneous Classified Ads






Bicycles and Children's Shoes




Car Loans, Grocery Stores, Furniture, Underwear...





 Insurance



Restaurants and Liquor Stores


This advertiser was an early adopter of the consciousness movement in UFOs. Uncle Mike proposed that contact might be initiated by reaching an altered state.


Our earlier article on 1947 UFO exploitation featured a look at  promotional stunts where airplanes dropped paper plate "flying saucers" with advertising. In many of those campaigns the captured saucer had a message telling the finder to go to the business to claim a discount or prize. Be sure to read, When Flying Saucers Dropped on the USA



Right from the start, UFOs were commercialized, and it's not much different today. Merchandise, celebrities, and hucksters often command more attention than the mysteries over our heads. We need to stop, tale a breath and...

Watch the skies!






Disclosure and the Alien Cover-Up of 2001

  The notion of UFO “Disclosure” may have been born with Donald E. Keyhoe’s article in TRUE Magazine, January 1950 , “The Flying Saucers ar...