Northern Territory Times - Australia - February 28, 1928
MYSTERY PLANE
Cairns, Tuesday.
A mysterous high powered plane has
been seen by several residents flying over
Cairns at early hours on the last 3 or 4
mornings. There is much speculation regarding the identity and
mission of the machine. In some quarters its visit is
rumoured to be connected with the find of £1500 worth of opium near Fitzroy Island.
Davenport [Iowa] Democrat and Leader - June 11, 1928
STRANGE AIRPLANE
CUTS ANTICS OVER
DAVENPORT TODAY
A large airplane with engines roaring wide open
attracted much attention this morning as it cut all kinds of
capers at a low altitude over Davenport. Tho [sic] the plane did
not stop at either airport in the Tri-Cities[,] men at the
Davenport field identified it as one having a 12-cylinder Liberty
motor.
The pilot's favorite trick and one that caused the
loud roar of the motor was to climb at a sharp angle and then turn
his plane almost directly to the ground tearing earthward at a
tremendous speed.
A story from FATE Magazine - Oct 1973, pp. 127-8:
A 1928 UFO
One morning in August 1928 my father and I left our home in Tulsa, Olka.,
before daybreak to drive to Norman. Our Willys Knight car was performing
smoothly until we were about 50 miles west of Tulsa when it started to miss
and backfire. I suspected dirt in the fuel line and as the motor coughed and
died I coasted to the shoulder of the road and stopped. Dad suggested that
the filter might be dirty and that I should clean that first.
In those days we were not prepared for any roadside
repairs (primarily because of our lack of mechanical ability). Under the
circumstances we just hoped for the best. I lifted the hood, hoping that the
cowl light just behind the windshield would provide enough light to see the
motor. As I started to look under the hood, suddenly the whole area was
illuminated by the brightest light I have ever seen. It flashed by about 150
feet overhead. It was primarily a white light but as it faded it seemed to burst
into many colors like a fireworks spectacle. Then darkness closed in again.
Dad and I stood like statues -- speechless. Then we both blurted almost simultaneously. "What was that?"
For the next 15 to 30 minutes we stood there trying to understand what had occurred. No other traffic passed and as the first light of dawn began to break we were able to determine there were no farmhouses nearby -- just open country. There were no clues to explain this puzzling phenomenon.
The filter bowl in the gas line was clean so I didn't
tackle it. At Dad's suggestion I tried to restart the motor. It started immediately
and we had no further trouble on the rest of our trip.
The county sheriff, the highway patrol, newspaper
editors and several astronomers from larger observatories could give us
no explanation for the occurrence. I can only conclude it was a
1928 UFO. -- Aaron C. Stern, Pine, Colo.
The above report illustrates the problems with EME [Electro-Magnetic Effect] reports. Were the effects and the UFO sighting related? Here we could say that the motorists had car trouble, and they saw a bolide.
It is possible with electrical and electromechanical systems to have
problems which seem inexplicable. The source of the trouble is not known. Maurizio Verga has reported that some motorists claimed problems with their cellular telephones during a recent bolide sighting. This is not unheard of. I believe the Rand Corporation did a study of communications interference caused by meteors. William R. Corliss has a few examples of meteors and EMI in his books.
Maybe in the above case just letting the vehicle sit for a short time fixed the problem. However, had this been a modern report the two events the car stopping and the "UFO" would have been connected.
In very few cases has equipment been checked after an EME report. The
BUFORA study details the examination of a vehicle after such a case. The Condon Committee retained some automotive experts, and they did examine one vehicle for residual magnetic effects. In that case the examination of the vehicle proved inconclusive. However, the engineers "knew" what they were looking for, and they worked backwards from there. (BTW, these people were not skeptics. They were very interested in investigating these types of cases, and came away from the Colorado study very interested in UFO reports.)
The Condon Committee's automotive engineers thought the only way a vehicle could be stopped was with a strong magnetic field which would leave residual magnetism. - J.L.A.
The Argus - Melbourne, Australia - October 22, 1928
LIGHTS IN SKY
Probable Distress Signals.
(British Official Wireless.)
LONDON, Oct. 20.
A wireless message from a ship in the
Western Atlantic brought news last night
that may be connected with the missing
British airman, Lieut.-Commander MacDonald, who left Harbour Grace,
Newfoundland, on Wednesday in an attempt to
fly across the Atlantic in a small
Moth aeroplane. A Lloyd's message
from Portishead wireless station states
that the following message was received
at 5 minutes to 7 o'clock yesterday morn-
ing from the steamer Mirach: --
"The Mirach sighted on October 17, at
half-past 11 o'clock in the evening, lights
most probably resembling an explosion."
The position indicated in the message is
about 500 miles east of MacDonald's
starting point, and he would have been in that
area at half-past 11 o'clock on Wednesday
evening [October 17], six and a half hours after
he left Newfoundland. There could have been
no explosion in his aeroplane then, however,
as he was seen at half-past 12 o'clock on
Thursday morning, an hour later by the
Dutch steamer Hardenberg. It is suggested that he had already
found himself in difficulties, and was throwing out Verey
lights as signals of distress. Such lights
dropped from a height would be visible at a
great distance. The mysterious point, if
this happened, is that he should have been
seen flying an hour later, apparently
all well.
(Australian Press Association.)
The passengers and crew of the Canadian Pacific Railway Co.'s steamer
Montclare, when on their voyage across the
Atlantic to Liverpool, eagerly watched for
signs of MacDonald, and they report having seen a strange light in
the sky astern at half-past 0 o'clock on Thursday evening,
when the Montclare was 150 miles west of Tory Island light. Later
the light was seen to drop from the sky with a streaming
tail.
The Gleaner - Kingston, Surrey, Jamaica - November 7, 1928
A Strange Phenomenon.
The Editor.
Sir. - On last Saturday morning a
strange phenomenon appeared about
7 - 7.30 in the heavens, and at about 9,
it was three-quarters the sky. Its brightness
would eclipse the rays of the sun. I
have never seen anything so bright, and it
went about twelve times faster than the
sun. It was not an airship, for no airship
could fly so high and live. It could be
seen far away in the ethereal sky. Has the
astronomer any light on such a phenomenon?
Eight of us saw it. What can it be?
I am. etc.,
F. Hall
126A King Street,
Kingston,
November 5, 1928.
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