Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1946 — Page 9

1G. 6, 1046

'y Whitney has 's Chestertown,

nother of the ites owned by Longwood, Fla, following, probe entiment. in 1936 passed the mow. ice of the 1938 en Ben White filly he had pre- ; son, to triumph

ohasized the par more than the 933, when Browa y Fred Eagan, a nod from the at and race te ered by the same iver to score four

ent luck will be 1is year’s fixture ips starting gate, es all starters am

art they'll be om

jain Sout

sa junior heavye lake up where he ts ago when the llides with Mike -anciseo, in the night's outdoor 2-event wrestling n 11 straight here ped recently by pion “Wild Bill” is slated for twe with a 90-minute

‘erre Haute vetIndio Yaqui, of the semi-windup, e, of Manchester, ny Ross of Portypener. clashes are for carry 30-minute ss-La Due scuffle at 8:30 o'clock.

dded

Roster ., Aug. 8 (U. P). former Long Ise , has been added r of the Buffalo je National bas-

reraged 19 points s freshman year sophomore meme 3 L. I. U. team ames out of 30 regarded as the | leading poing high school basyotham, SS ————

by the

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STARS

SAUNDERS, ST.

IDIAN JIRCLE

| | Merle D. Cummins, Indiana region-

Gl INSURANCE RULES | EASED,

| c on version, Ton Beneliciary) Regulations Changed.

Indianapolis war II today were informed by

_ lI

veterans of world

al manager of veterans’ administra tion, that President Truman has signed a bill extending and liberalizing the benefits of the national service life insurance act of 1940. Mr. Cummins said policy holdexs will be given the opportunity to take advantage of the new benefits as quickly as present procedures and forms can be adapted to the

TUESDAY, AUG. 6, 1048 _ he

>

THE INDIANAPOLIS S TIMES >

People. of Trinidad Take Their Woes to Leader of HomeRale Fight

By ERNIE HILL Times Foreign Correspondent PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, Aug. When the natives of Trinidad

eo in trouble, they look up Albert.

{Gomes and unload their woes on him, Mr. Gomes is the man to find if they are broke, if ‘someone is sick, of if they are in trouble with the British colonial authorities. The hour is never too late, Their problems are never too big or too small for him to sit down and try to help.

amendments. Designed to make the insurance | more attractive in peacetime the

changes were: ONE A provision for endowment |

HIE

is permitted to change to this type of plan even if he already has converted his term insurance to one of the previously authorized plans. TWO: Removal of all restrictions on the choice of beneficiaries. The veteran now may designate = any person or persons, ary in tel or his estate. as beneficiary in the policy. THREE: An option under which =

the insured may have his insurance =

48 paid in a lump sum to beneficiaries, | ‘3 or may elect that payments 'be| made in equal monthly installments | ranging from 36 to 240 months in| addition to the original forms of settlement. FOUR: A new feature to permit payment of benefits to an insured who is totally disabled for as long as six months. These payments; are made at the rate of $5 per month for as long as the disability exists. The insurance itself is not affected by these payments so that “B beneficiaries %€njoy the full {face ie Yalue of the policy upon the death ; the insured. « ne Voiding restrictions limiting veterans who now apply for the insurance to the amount they had) 3 while in service;- Applicants may |

now carry up to $10,000 insurance. |Z SIX: Validation of applications |= for insurance which were rejected |= solely for health reasons between = Oct. 8, 1940 and Sept. 2, 1945 in|= cases where the applicants were killed or totally disabled in line of

of the insurance has not started; permission of present beneficiaries | under insurance on which payments started before Sept. 30, 1944, to select refund life income payments instead of former modes of settlement, and authorizing suits in

there claims.

is any disagreement

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and has in the past few years. A colonial governor is now on his way to London after tangling' with Mr. Gomes. He once defled a police chief to eject him from a council meeting. He was carried out bodily but won his demands for free speech,

Albert Gomes, 35 years of age, a

father of nine, and a Portuguese, is an advocate of immediate self-gove-ernment and mass education for Trinidad’s 500,000 residents. He is a justice of the peace, a newspaper ‘columnist, an elected

Mr. Gomes will tackle anything— |memoer of the island’s impotent but

noisy legislature, a ledder of the federated trade workers union, and father confessor to anyone in trouble. Mr. Gomes believes that U, 8. military bases in the Caribbean islands will help his campaign. for self-government and better living conditions, “The bases,” he said, “have forced wage increases, payment of overtime and general improvement of working conditions, We look to Washington to help solve our problems, : “Our greatest enemies are middle-

class, white-collar workers, sent here from _¥ondon for minor administratfon jobs. They are more British than the British and more

{empire-minded. :

“We have oil companies syphoning wealth from the island without contributing to its welfare. We have food shortages, because influential people get theirs first. We have a prefabricated form of government superimposed upon us. It is much like governments in occupied enemy areas in Europe.” Rough and ready Mr. Gomes says that the islanders still believe that

000

the British labor : government in London will ‘fulfill its promise of self-government—although some believe that pspgress in this direction has been slow during the past year. Mr, Gomes attended the University of the City of New York about 10 years ago.” He and his Venezuelan wife have just returned from New York where he gonferred with members of the West Indies self-government organization and visitéd his young daughter at.a hospital on Long Island.

Copyright, 1046, by The IndianApolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine,

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