‘ bammorrea An ‘avioory ccbnantties’ eave was re- ported to be studying a graduated state income tax plan featuring a rebate rather than elimination: of the state eae ees elena. reveene tax plan would refund $9 to the taxpayer and each of his dependents to compensate: for money paid in state sales taxes for food. ‘State Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R-Tipton), chairman‘of'a), legislative committee direct-+- ing the tax study, confirmed! that the plan was “on the agenda” at one time. baie he added: kt kw ok “No-one can say at this time whether there will be a flat rate Eisenhowers All Together for Holiday AUGUSTA, Ga. {(AP)—A_ joy- would be ff we recommend one:""/ous reunion of grandchildren and ' grandparents—tha agen olen The formula, the article said, is supposed to be kept secret until the big committee meets next week t’s the familiar American family setting this Thanksgiving day at the vacation retreat of President and Mrs. Ei- senhower, : «The four. young Eisenhower's flew in from Washington Wednes- day night with their parents, Ar- my Maj. John Eisenhower and his wife Barbara. They probably will pa a the weekend, *~* * The children are David, 10, Bar- bara Anne, 9, Susan, 6, and Mery Jean. This evening, with the Presi- dent at the head of the table, the entire family will have turkey dinner at the temporary White House—the white frame cottage known as ““Mamie’s Cabin’ at the am, None in County Bad Weather Causes First Fatal Accidents, Many Minor Collisions Michigan headed into the long Thanksgiving Day holiday weekend today with two traffic deaths.— but Oakland County law en- forcing officers reported a fatal-free count so far. Sheriff deputies, township and city police throughout the county said most roads were crowded with vacation-bound motorists, but the fact that a threatened snowstorm bypassed the county probably helped. keep serious accidents down. Last night's brief snow caused a rash of bumped fenders in spots and a few accidents which sent some to hospitals. E The first traffic death in Mich- igan and the nation was timed by Michigan State Police at.6:04 p.m. W when Lloy F. Blon- shine, 64, of Lowell, lost control of his car as it skidded on M21 east of Grand Rapids and collided with a truck, Across. the nation the traffic Pontise Press Photo frome tiie’ tenet A coehibielie te toce: Dackey, who, of course, will be the center of attraction as families sit down to their Thanks- me Augusta, Na Galt Ci The/start of the hliday period ‘at 6 COOKING TURKEY WILL BE BRIDE'S TEST — Mrs. Ed- : pound was Supp p.m count continue mund C. White of 115 State St., like many other August brides, nil Proposed pages gy Beng Turkey Revers rs America. | midnight Sunday. today is facing her supreme test in the kitchen. She's preparing The rate would then be Sper In advance of dinner, weather The other Michigan fatality | her first Tharksgiving dinner. About to peck out a favorite menu giving dinners. cent for the next $2,000; 4 per |permitting, the President and his aes cones 0 Oi cent for the next $2,000; 5 per |son hoped ‘to get in a round of| Miles west. of mann ca tna |p sastarases | Watchman Foils| J deni mid continue upwards to a/| Eisenhower holes » if t ied yg Cres laa Be PE Ok Gem helene Weleetaeae oe che ara ay "ag ams Pooper se Burlay Try on "Chars ws districts could add another .5 per|“hilly weather. Marilyn Atwood, 9, of East Lan- cent to the state tax under the =. & * sing: was’ killed while she was at plan, thé fleey: wad. Friday Eisenhower will confer|play on a hillside. A car skidded] Pontiac Man Wounded ee ag here with Secretary of Defense/on a viaduct off U.S. 16 in Meridian by -Shotaun in.Alleced HILLSDALE « — Moody, | * Diatraught and with Blood on he After «-worker’s actual tax bin|Neil H. McElroy, Gen, Nathan F.|Township of Ingham County,| OY otgu in AN@GeC \icoking Patrick John Flannery,|shirt, young Flannery appeared at is figured, the taxpayer would be| Wining, chairman. of the Joint) smashed a guard rail, and} Ortonville Break-In aie mutes tee ie te cetnle oop oe toy syteal angers 4 alowed fo dedoct $8) tor each| Hels of, Stath, Budget Director struck the Gr ot his closest college chum.” | "I did: something bed. T Killed dependent and the $9 defund for| Maurice H. Stans; and other gov- , 38, of Grand i alahi webditein senveh Guill 1s T thing ra re each member of the family ertiment officials on military|Rapids was Killed when his oF nt | ‘ Fa | Oity police brought the formal my roommate,” police said he If the deductions exceed the tax|SPending. on_a rural ‘Kent County|stot last night as be sopped an ctiarge against the Hillsdale col. |!€™. owed, the taxpayer would get.a| And on Sunday. the Presidentjroad near Grand Rapids and col-/@leged burglary attempt by 2 lege freshman in the death of | About the same time the body cash rebate of the $9. will meet at the club with Secre-|lided with a truck. Pontiac man as he attempted 10) weemmas Netiling, 2i, of Teemm. | of Neitling, hie head crushed by the rebate would-be applied to the |@*¥ of State Dulles to discuss the = rte ili whatagredt. pan sch, upperciassman beaten to | biows from the stock and barrel worker's tax bill ae ee | ee Another N eager County shet dept! death with o shotgun at thelr of 2 was found in the * * _ problems. ry An r Name ties moe , pete ee rooming house. youths’ room above a restaurant An example of the plan, figured a ‘| KNOXVILLE, Temn:<(UPD — ! y one a Police said the slaying followed in Hillsdale. on m worker with three dependents,! Guest Editorial Today. | Sheritt E. B. Bowles said no | Suse single barrel shotgun was |. rane played on Blannery. | Flannery, a. star high school who. earns $5,000 a.year: when: newiplidinsed beer’ dealer Herbert Lester Bailey; 38, of 58 ult oe aus | Wile, Poge m8 | tous near See ae | fot cote tenn | ey and $80 on the idditie ‘age name store for the | Ona: with wounds in ' 3 : (Ae . ! ‘Snow Flurries Forecast (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) sheriff. * Prince to Marry Commoner leg and face. Bailey, an ex-convict, was shot by Annibale Beltrachini, about 60, who makes his home at the Owens gas station at the northwest cor- ner of M15 and Grange Hall road. Deputies Donald W, Fauser and Robert Bloom said Bailey told them his.car had broken down shortly after midnight and went to the station to look for a telephone. Beltrachini, who was sleeping in a car parked in the station, was awakened by the sound of breaking glass. As he moved to the front of the station to investi- . gate, he noticed Bailey standing in front of the front door which had the glass panel smashed out of it. The two officers said Beltra- chini told them he then: grabbed) his shotgun, standing in the corner of the station, and pursued Bailey who had started to run when he Spotted the watchman. The single blast struck him as he was about 60 feet down M-15 from the build- ing. Beltrachini then forced him at gun point back to the station ~|from where he called the sheriff's office. Deputies said the station is a popular visiting spot for burglars, and that two men are awaiting trial for reportedly breaking into it last month. [Airline Strikes Add to Travel Confusion oe boo tyre since last ge _ ‘The International Assn. of Ma- chinists struck Trans. World Air- lines last. Friday, with TWA | living (and the fears it may go Alf jing table costs a little less With Low of | Partly cloudy, cold and a few snow flurries with the temperature sliding down to a frosty 16 degrees is the forecast for tonight by the day’s high will be near 26. ’ Chilly winds from the north blew snow flurries over 16 Degrees U.S. Weather Bureau. Fri- while the Upper Peninsula reported snowfall of more than seven inches. Snowdrifts along some: Upper Peninsula Highways unofficially were reported at three feet deep. State Police throughout the Low- er Peninsula warned that snow flur- ries might freeze and cause roads to become exceedingly slippery, while Thanksgiving motorists in the Upper Peninsula gazed at countryside which looked like Christmas. most of the state today? Weather forecasters said little respite from chilly temperatures would be available for the shiv- ering state. High in the lower portion of Michigan was not expected. to ex- ceed 28 degrees, while the low in the Thumb was to hit 15 and dipjof below that Straits. The mercury dropped to a freez- ing 17 degrees in downtown Pon- tiac at 8 a.m., the lowest record- ing of the season. Atyl p.m. the reading was 23. figure above. the for ‘Free City |Andre of West Berlin perce Six Menta to Work Out Status of Demilitarized cnc MOSCOW (The Soviet” Union today declared void the four-power occupation agreement for West Berlin and offered in its place the creation of a demilitarized “free city” of West Berlin, Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko handed U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson Jr. a 24-page note proposing a six-month period for negotiations to arrange the new status fox West Berlin. The. Russians suggested that the United Nations act as watchdog of West Berlin's freedom, saying, “The Soviet government does not object to the United Nations par- ticipating in observing the status of the free city of West Berlin.” The note said during the six- of im links over which the Allied garrisons in West Berlin are supplied, *But if no agreement is reached athlete in ‘Berkley, who attends Hillsdale College on an - athletic ] “t ‘don't know why I did it,” Sgt. John Ware said the youth told him. , Flannery told’ of finding his clothes strewn about a hallway ‘but that. Neitling denied. having -had anything to do with this. Within hours after his appearance! in Detroit, Flannery was returned to Hillsdale though his technical custody rests at least in part in Detroit. There is to be hearing for him in Detroit Friday on a writ of habeas. corpus. The first degree murder com- plaint here was brought by Hills- dale Chief of Police Harold Caulkins. Arraignment may be Friday in justice court. If con- victed. of the charge Flannery Berlin, its capital, troops are there by a 1957 agree- ment between the East German nes a free city, they intend for East Germany — it completely — to control traffic to and from. “It is envisaged that the (East) German —— Republic must fully control. questions af- fecting its space, i.e. exercise her sovere on land, on water and in the air. “At the same time there will be an end to all contacts still main. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) would get life imprisonment, Neitling’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Leo Neitling, saw his body at a funeral home. “This is a terrible thing," said Mrs. Neitling, mother of two sons. “But think of how awful it must be for the Flannerys.” * *« Flannery is one of four children the family of C. Patrick Flan- nery and his wife Juanita. The college, a school of about 70 enrollment, was shocked at the ineident. Wayne Gray, assistant to the president, termed it ‘‘tragic.” “We just can't understand it,” he Rivets’ Coming | : A dog with heart on his whisk- ers — that’s *Rivets,"* And the lovable, laughable, wistful little wire-hair will ee your heart in his doghouse if you follow his antics regularly in The Pontiac Press. “Rivets” comes to the comie section next Monday with a thousand expressions on his face, a hundred wiggles in his body and a chuckle a.day for you. said. Don’t miss our néw comic strip “Rivets.” By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—You can find] plenty to be thankful for on! Thanksgiving if you try. Look over the business scene and just for one day at least put aside worries about the queasy stock market, the disturbing world trouble spots in Berlin or Quemoy or the Mideast, the high cost of burdensome tax- ae pow aed the hard-core Pe ree a es (and the th go higher still), punanirs: ae ae hew mach Bet ter a at ‘baer dae today | cine 4 wh aes bo ee ae ee this year than last. And the govern- ment says food pricés may ease ante be svete eae We eet index on the same even flight operations halted Monday... Fears of further inflation, espe-| cially of the runaway kind, are) easing.a bit now too. * * * They are based largely on ex- pectations of continuing federal deficits and of still. more twists in the wage-pricing spiral. But Washington now tells us that ris- ing tax collections next year and the government’s new determina- tion to hold down spending should keep the coming year's | lower wong first feared. wp. Theyre mit back to de i raed be tare oe | ree a as good or better. ‘ 1 * * * % Kee! it. has held since way: look safer and the returns spans | Corporations have learned cost- paring tricks that partly offset rising wage scales. This can hold down prices or steady profits or both. + * *- Industrial output has been ris- ing, bringing some of the jobless back to work and lengthening the work week for others. The govern ment says manufacturers’ new orders are gaining, promising still greater industrial activity — Much to Be Thankful for Today year, which in time will whittle at the total of the jobless. Most individual incomes have held high, Strikes have pulled the — total down a bit, but as they are — si hene es civiee ekg eR eee E SHEE Eee . s is ——< eo *