SUBJECT: HORSE-SAUCER MYSTERY GETS EVEN WEIRDER              FILE: UFO3055





Appearing in the San Francisco Chronicle, Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1967, page 12
(following a week of cattle mutilation reports):

`` [ UPI wirephoto labelled "Duane Martin Tested the Horse for Radioactivity"
    and subtitled "Mrs. Berle Lewis and Leona Wellington examine the corpse"]


                  HORSE-SAUCER MYSTERY GETS EVEN WEIRDER


       Alamosa, Colo. (AP)

       An autopsy on a horse, believed by its owner to have been killed by
       inhabitants of a flying saucer, has revealed that its abdominal,
       brain and spinal cavities were empty.

       The pathologist, a Denver specialist who wished to remain anonymous,
       said the absence of organs in the abdominal cavity was unexplainable.

       Witnessing the autopsy Sunday night at the ranch where the carcass
       was found were four members of the Denver team of the National
       Members Investigating Committee on Aerial Phenomena.

       The team included Dr. and Mrs. Ken Steinmetz, Dr. Herb Roth and
       Captain Dick Cable of the North American Air Defense Command Center
       in Colorado Springs.

       When the pathologist sawed into the horse's brain cavity, he found
       it empty.  "There definitely should have been a good bit of fluid in
       the brain cavity," the pathologist said.

       "This horse was definitely not killed by lightning," the pathologist
       said.  That was the official conclusion of Alamosa county authorities.

       The Appalcosa's owners said they believe the horse was killed by
       occupants of a flying saucer.  Several others in the San Luis Valley,
       where as many as eight sightings of unidentified flying objects have
       been reported in one evening recently, have said they agree.

                          -- DISPUTE --

       The controversy over Snippy, a 3-year-old gelding, began September 7
       when the horse did not return to the Harry King ranch.

       Two days later, King went looking for Snippy and found him dead about
       a quarter mile from the ranch house.  The ranch is 20 miles southeast
       of Alamosa in desolate mountain country.

       All the flesh had been stripped from the horse's neck and head and
       only bones remained.

       King called the owners of the horse, Mr. and Mrs. Burl Lewis, and
       together they investigated the area in which the horse had been killed.

                         -- HOLES --

       They said they found areas where the chico brush had been squashed
       to within 10 inches of the ground.  What appeared to them to be 15
       circular exhaust marks were found 100 yards from the horse.

       Another area was punched with six identical holes, each two inches
       wide and four inches deep, they said.

       The investigating committee Sunday measured markings on the ground
       and found the largest to be a circle 75 feet in diameter.  Several
       smaller areas where the chico brush had been flattened were 15 feet
       in diameter.

       The committee returned to Denver on Sunday night with several samples
       taken from the horse and an object, presumed to be a tool, Mrs. Lewis
       said she found September 16.

       Mrs. Lewis said she found the object on her second visit to the site.
       It was covered with horse hair and she said when she tried to wipe
       the hair off, her hand turned red and began to burn.  The burning
       persisted until she washed her hands, she said.

       The Denver pathologist remained at the King Ranch Sunday night.  While
       there, the group stood on the ranch-house porch and watched two
       unidentified flying objects pass over the house, King said.
''

{end of article}


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