1 - 1v I , : i I t - N0 RECORD OF RUINS Mystery Cloaks 'Ghost City' Buried Deep in Jungle By HAROLD GUARD London UR In the dense jungleland of Kenya Colony there is a "ghost city" of unknown origin which the Colonial Office said may soon become a tourist attraction in East Africa. Gedi, the mystery city of Kenya, was discovered 25 years ago. It was overgrown by a tangle of dense tropical Jungle. No reference to it exists ir.x the historical records of the Ken va coast. But officials of the colonial government here re counted how they visited the mini ton vparx nan at a RDot about one and a half miles in- lhat traders from Malaya were On Way to Court Henry M. Blackmer (right), 80-year-old oil millionaire, enters an elevator in the U. S. post office building, in Denver, Colo., en route to a federal court room where he Dlead guilty to income tax charges. At the left is ' his son, Myron, and in the background the elder Blackmer's wife. Blackmer spent a quarter of a century in self-imposed exile in Europe after fleeing the country to avoid testifying in the Teapot Dome oil scandal. (AP Wirephoto) Plea of Guilty By Blackmer Denver, Sept. 27 P) Aging Henry W Blackmer, who fled to Europe to escape testifying in the Teapot Dome oil scandal, pleaded guilty in U.S. district court today to an indictment charging income tax evasion. District Attorney Max Bulk ley then moved that four per jury indictments pending against the 80-year-old millionaire oil man be dismissed because of in sufficient evidence. But Circuit Judge Orrie L. Phillips declined to go along with arrangement Immediately. He said he would make a thor ough study of the case to "sat isfy my own Judgment and con- The Atlantean Research Cen ter said all their available data indicated that Gedi was a city of Malay origin. "We have records which show land and ten miles south Malindl on the Kenya coast. science" before dropping the perjury cases. He deferred sentencing on the income tax plea and released Backmer under $5,000 bond. The defendant's attorney, Har old R. Roberts, said Blackmer could not remain in Denver's mile-high altitude because of the condition of his heart. Blackmer was charged with income tax evasion and perjury in tax returns filed from 1920 through 1923. He has paid $3, 670,784 back taxes and penalties. Body Identified Ocean Lake, Sept. 27 P) A body washed ashore here has been identified as Willard E. Linn, 31, Boring, Ore., one of three victims in a Sept. 11 acci dent off Pacific City. The widow identified Linn yesterday. Mrs. Linn was one of six survivors of the capsizing. They said that African tribes men shunned the area in the belief that it was haunted and gave it the name snauri Aine- va ' which literally means "Bad Show." Colonial officials said investi gations and conservation of Gedi are now being planned by Prof. J. S. Kirkman, warden of Kenya's historical sites. "The city covers about a hun dred acres," according to coloni al officer Antony Haler. "There are five mosques, a ruler's palace and a number of large houses, one of which might have been a school Among the ruins have been found jars and pottery from China. Siam and Annam. Tree? were growing through the roofs of the temples and there were ghostly sounds and an errie at mosphere all about." It is thought that Gedi may have been an Arab town be cause there were many built in the 12th century when Arabs migrated from southern Arabia. But unlike all Arab cities in East Africa, Gedi is not on the sea coast. The Kenya government plans to take over the area as a na tional park. "There is a terrific fascination about the place," an official said. "It could be made into a wonderful tourist attrac tion. It has never been estab lished how the place originated or why it was deserted. "It may have been deserted be cause of plague or possibly costal raiders drove out the in habitants away. It may be 300 year old or possibly 3,000. There are absolutely no records even of its existence today but we all know it is there off the beaten track, overgrown by jungle and an aura of mystery." of going to East Africa in the year izuu. Hie curator of the muse um in Nairobi has minutely de scribed the pottery found in the ruins of Gedi which provided eidence that the city was occu pied by traders from the East. The architecture indicates they were Mussulmans. They may have been Islamic but the fact that the city is not on the seacoast is contrary to Arab traders' practice," the Research Center said. Vandenburg to Enter Hospital Washington, Sept. 27 flJRi Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg. (K.Mich.), is planning to enter a hospital shortly for tests to determine whether he must submit to a major operation for a lung lesion. His physicians were reported to have urged him for months to take the step. He has de ferred action because of the pres sure of senate activity. Most key foreign affairs measures in which he played an Important part now have cleared the sen-1 ate. ' He was expected to enter a. hospital at Ann Arbor, Mich.,1 probably sometime this week. Capital Journal. Saiem. Oregon, Tuesday, Sept. 27, 1949 19 Civil War Cruiser Goes to Junk Pile Gets New Workers Slayton Jesse M. Boothe, who has been with the Pendleton woolen mills for the past 22 years, will be the new overseer of weaving at the Paris woolen mills in Stayton. Also coming to the local mills to assume his du ties Monday, is E. G. Stephens who has been assistant superin tendent of the Portland Woolen mills for a number of years. and the boat was turned over to k salvage company si Erie, Pa. The boat was built in 1843 and christened the U S S. Michi gan. During the Civil War, the Mirhipan ctnnrl inmrH ntn inkn. Cleveland. UP Efforts by the iTOn's isiand jn L-,ke Erie and foiled an attempt to liberate over 5,000 Confederate officers. The ship was considered for scrap in 1942 when scrap metal was being collected. However, President Roosevelt said. "Mem orials such as the Wolverine (Michigan) constitute a distinct Western Reserve Historical So ciety to save the old U.S.S. Wolverine, the only armed cruis er on the Great Lakes during the Civil War, have failed and the vessel has been scrapped. The society tried for several years to raise a fund that would Ua ..kin k t,... - i monument ' to the navT forces l'l whc? .'. f greater -t .u. ii. u . value than the tntnl ui nit: iivu ci i . uuwfrr, iiui enough money was subscribed Mt. Angel Dairy Herd Gels Reclassification The registered Ayrshire dairy herd of the Stephen Hemshorn estate, Mt. Angel, was recently reclassified for type by Offi cial Judge E. W. Van Tassell of Wenatchee, Wash., who gave the herd a score of .842, placing it among the top 10 per cent of the breed on type characteristics. According to an announcement made by the Ayrshire Breeders' association executive secretary, C. T. Conklin of Brandon, Vt.. the herd of 23 purebreds includ ed 12 'Very Good' females, which is the second highest rating given any Ayrshire; 7 'Good Plus' and 4 'Good'. There are now over 30.000 herds of Ayrshires in the United States and at least 717 of these have the distinction of being classified. The Hemshorn Ayr shires comprise one of 11 classi fied herds in this state. Woodburn Smith's Corner Grocery at the intersection of Harrison street and Settlemier Avenue here has been leased to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andresen Miss Gladys Smith and her bro ther, Pete Smith, have operated the store for about three years. They have no defini'e future plans. 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