Youth Admits Killing Mother, Brother
. PORTLAND, Main (UPI)-An
AWOL tailor who replied "hell,
no" when asked if he felt remorse
for killing his mother and younger
brother and critically wounding
his father was extradited to Mas
sachusetts today to face prosecu
tion for murder.
: Crew-cut Stanley N. Garfield,!
IB. of Framingham, Mass.,
Vvaived extradition in municipal
court a few hours after he was
seized at a police roadblock in
South Portland.
Garfield, dressed in tight-fitting
dirty white trousers and open
neck blue shirt, spoke out in a
loud clear voice during the seven-
minute appearance before Judge
Millard E. Emmanuelson.
Asked by the Judge whether he
would waive extradition, Garfield
(Ml i v ' rn fA vUft '
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LAST 2 DAYS
W Ship M
STARTS SUNDAY
UNBELIEVABLE!
said "That's what I wish to do.
I talked this over with the Maine
state police." He was arraigned
on a fugitive from justice charge.
The tanned, slender - fingered
teen-ager chatted willingly with
newsmen as he stood guarded but
unmanacled in the courtroom.
When a newsman asked him
why he strangled his mother,
Garfield answered, "That's not a
sensible question. I don't know,
Perhaps something snapped."
To a question as to whether he
was sorry for the killings, he
snapped, "Hell, no, 1 don't feel
regretful. There's no reason to re
gret It."
He said he did not know why
he went AWOL from the Navy
He said he considered himself
"religious" person.
Police said Garfield readily con
fessed he strangled his mother,
Mrs. Ruth T. Garfield. 43, and
his brother John, 9. and that he
shot and wounded his father, Rob
ert T. Garfield, 43.
Maine police said the youth de
scribed the violence as "some
thing that has been coming to a
boil for a long time." A family
dispute apparently had been fo
mented by his marriage to a
teen-age sweetheart.
Slayings Follow Argument
The youth told police he stran
gled his mother during an argu
Gate Open 7:00
Starts Sunday
"IT COULD BE THE MOST i
TERRIFYING PICTURE 'ft
I HAVE EVER MADE I" j-.V.
v k t- 7 fa
ALFRED HITCHCOCKS
"TheBirds"
itonfc TECHNICOLOR"
ROD TAYLOR JESSICA TANDY
1 SUZANNE PLESHETTE
TIPPi HEDREN
jf A UNIVERSAL KUASE
ivri
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TWIIKOOAI.. .JK
ment a few hours after he ar
rived home from California
where he was stationed at Port
Hueneme Naval Base.
He said he choked his little
brother a short while later when
the youngster returned from a
neighbor's. Garfield then waited
with a 22 caliber rifle to ambush
his father when he returned from
work, police said. The elder Gar
field, an executive with the Po
laroid Corp., was shot In the
chest. ,
Death Takes
Cartoonist
In England
LONDON (UPI) - Sir David
Low, the cartoonist who created
the world-famous symbol of Brit
ain s "Colonel Bump," died
Thursday night. He was 72.
He had been ill for some time.
Low, whose cartoons won him
a knighthood last year, ended his
career with the Guardian of Man
chester. But he spent 23 years,
from 1927 to 1950, with the Lon
don Evening Standard, owned by
Lord Bcaverbrook.
Beaverbrook gave him com
plete independence, even to the
point of allowing Low to draw a
cartoon showing "The Beaver'
himself as a witch on a broom
stick, spreading a mulch of "news
for simple minds" through the
newspapers.
Beaverbrook supported the Con
servative party, but Low fired
barbs at all targets and made
"Colonel Blimp" a symbol of all
he derided in British conserva
tism, military - mindedness, im
perialism and insularity.
A Conservative once asked
Beaverbook why he did not fire
Low.
"f have often," the Beaver an
swered, "but he won't go."
In 1950 Low, often dubbed a
"radical puck with a pen,"
moved to the more politically
conRcnial atmosphere of the Lon
don Dally Herald, a Labor party
newspaper. He left shortly after
for the Guardian, which supports
the Liberal party.
PETERCUSHING
YVONNE BOMAiN
Klamath Fan ortftm
Published dally (axcapt Sat.) and Sunday
larvina seuinarn uron
and Norihtrn California
BY
Klamath Publlthina Company
Ma'n nt Esplanade
Phent TUxado 4-1111
w ft. twHilinil. Puhlfthir
Cnlartd as tacond-clais matttr at tht
poil off lea at Klamath Falls. Oron,
an Auausl 30. 10. undar act af Can-
grass. March J, 187". Stcond-clasa post-
aia pais ar Kiimnn ranir uraur
ana ar aaamonai maiirng oniwi
Carrlar
1 Month f I.7S
4 Months 1.Si
1 vaar ui.oa
Mall In Advanca
1 Month t 1-H
4 Months
1 Yaar lll.M
Carrlar and Daalors
Waahday, Copy, lc
Sunday. Copy . .15
UNITBO PRBSS INTi P. NATIONAL
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION
Subscribers not rocalvinaj daiivary af
ftiair HaraM and Naws. alaasa phana
TUxado 4-1111 baforo 7 ojn.
Delay Cited
In Probate
Of Estates
2-Man Presidential Team Will Try
To Restore Peace In Birmingham
PORTLAND (UPD - Chief
Justice William M. McAllister of
the Oregon Supreme Court com
plained Thursday of what he
called "shocking delay" in proJ J',0eJ,
bate of estates in Oregon.
McAllister spoke at the opening
session of the 28th annual Oregon
State Bar convention.
He said reports by county clerks
show that many cases of delay in
probate cases are inexcusable.
However, he added that judges
are making an effort to eliminate
the delays and urged attorneys to
cooperate.
He said statistics show criminal
cases generally are disposed o(
quickly and the median civil case
in an Oregon court is not more
than 12 months old.
Two Orefon newsoaoermen re
ceived Oregon State Bar press
awards at a luncheon meeting.
flobert W. Chandler, editor of
the Bend Bulletin, was cited for
the best editorial on legal matters
in the past year.
Chandler's editorial exnlaincd
the death sentence given Jeannace
June Freeman after a life sen
tence had been handed out to
Mrs. Gertrude Jackson mnlher ol
two children the woman had slain'
in Central Oregon.
William Sanderson, a reporter
for the Portland Orcgonian, won
the award for the best news story,
a series on the public defender
system.
By United Press International
A two-man presidential team
will attempt to restore racial
peace in troubled Birmingham,
Ala.
lary Kenneth Royall and ex-West
Point football coach Earl (Red)
Blaik, was appointed Thursday by
President Kennedy as his person
al representative to Birmingham.
kennedy later met with seven
Negro leaders and refused their
demand that federal troops be
sent to the Alabama city.
Negro leader Martin Luther
King Jr., said he assured the
President of his group's desire
to work With 'Royall and Blaik.
Birmingham Mayor Albert Bout
well said his city welcomes the
team. Kennedy agreed to meet
Race Tracks
Deny Charge
PORTLAND (UPI) - Managers
of three race tracks in the Port
land area denied today that wel
fare checks had been cashed
there.
They were answering A. W.
Gustafson, a Gresham attorney,
who said he had reasons to be
lieve welfare recipients had cash
state checks at local tracks. He
indicated he may seek a writ of
mandamus from the State Su
preme Court ordering check re
cords opened for inspection. "
Weather Roundup
Temperatures d u r i n g the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT today.
High Low
Astoria 74 50
Baker 7fi 43
Brookings' fi8 53
Medford 87 53
Newport fin 49
N. Bend 65 54
Pendleton 77 51
Portland 78 52
Redmond 75 44
Salem 79 54
The Dalles 85 50
Chicago 85 62
Los Angeles 74 62
New York 87 M
Phoenix 94 67
San Francisco 75 57
Washington 87 61
Portland- Vancouver: Scattered
low
showers; high Saturday 70
tonight 54.
Western Oregon: Increasing
clouds, chance showers Saturday;
highs 65-75; low 45-55.
Eastern Oregon: Increasing
clouds with chance showers north
Saturday; high Saturday 68 - 75;
low tonight 35-50.
Northern California: Occasional
rain extreme north.
Five Day Weather
Western Oregon: Highs mostly
in 60's except mid-70's southwest
part; lows in 40's; rain about nor
mal, mostly Saturday and Tues
day and Wednesday.
Eastern Oregon: Highs mostly
in 60's and 70's, lows in 40's and
highs 30's; more than normal pre
cipitation southeast Oregon.
with the group of white Birming-
ham leaders at the White House'
Monday to hear their side of the
issue.
Birmingham remained uneasily
quiet and Alabama state officials
announced that 500 National
Guardsmen called to standby
duty following the church bombing
that killed four Negro children
last Sunday have been released.
Elsewhere In the nation: . . .
Petersburg, Va. With heads
bowed about 700 Negroes, most
of them wearing black armbands,
marched through downtown Pe
tersburg Thursday in protest of
racial violence in Birmingham.
Montgomery, Ala, A federal
judge has ordered written briefs
to be submitted by Sept. 27 on
a petition by a Negro to gain
entrance to the Auburn Univer
sity graduate school.
Jackson, Mlts. The state fair
will be open to white persons only
this year. In previous years, the
fair has run a week for whites
and part of the following week
for Negroes. But integrationist
groups boycotted the fair in 1961
and 1962 as a protest to the seg
regation and the fair lost money
on its Negro run during the boycott.
Norfolk, Va. About 2.400 Ne
gro high school youths deserted
classrooms Thursday for about
three hours to march in protest
of overcrowded conditions. There
were no incidents.
Nashville, Tenn. Federal Dis
trict Judge William E. Miller has
ordered the admission of 12 Ne
groes to three desegregated Wil
son County schools.
Concord, N.C. Mayor J.G.
McCachern has dissolved this
city's bi-racial committee because
Friday, Sept. 20, 196 Page 2-A
Herald & News Klamath Falls
of repeated Negro demon
strations.
Syracuse, N.Y. Twenty-three
persons including two Syracuse
University professors were ar
rested Thursday after a new dem
onstration protesting alleged ra
cial discrimination in the city's
urban renewal project.
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