Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 158, February 11, 1920 by Various
page 13 of 57 (22%)
page 13 of 57 (22%)
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Saturn, which, in spite of its great distance from the earth, is just as
likely to wish to communicate with us as any other planet. Yours faithfully, DIOGENES DOTTLE, F.R.S. II. Mr. Dottle's remarkable letter, published in our issue of yesterday, suggesting that inhabitants of Saturn have been endeavouring to communicate with the earth by means of wireless telephony, has created profound excitement in scientific and other circles. To a representative of _The Daily Mandate_ a number of well-known men expressed their views on the matter, which will undoubtedly stimulate further investigation into the momentous possibilities of this epoch-making revelation. The opinions advanced, which are, on the whole, highly favourable to Mr. Dottle's theory, are as follows:-- _Sir Potiphar Shucks, the famous astronomer_: "The possibility that Saturn is inhabited is one that, in the absence of incontrovertible evidence either way, should not lightly be set aside. Assuming that it is inhabited, that its people are skilled in the use of wireless telephony and that it is possible to set up waves of sufficient intensity to travel all the way from Saturn to us, I see no reason why communications of the nature suggested by Mr. Dottle should not at some future date become an accomplished fact." _Mr. Artesian Pitts, the well-known imaginative historian_: "I have long held the belief that Saturn is inhabited by a type of being possessing a cylinder-like body composed of an unresisting pulp, a high dome-shaped head |
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