The Laws of Texas, 1934-1935 [Volume 29] Page: 1,856 of 2,086
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FORTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION. 1293
JOINT SESSION OF LEGISLATURE TO HEAR ADDRESS OF
HONORABLE MARTIN DIES.
H. C. R. No. 93.]
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, The Honorable Martin Dies, Congressman from
the Beaumont District is now in Texas to consult with the Cotton
Growers and cotton interests of Texas relative to which of the
several bills now pending before Congress should be passed;
and
WHEREAS. Many Cotton Growers in this part of Texas would
like to hear Mr. Dies discuss the bill he has introduced in Congress
and compare its provisions to the provisions of the other
bills pending in Congress on the subject of growing and marketing
cotton; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED by the House of Representatives, the Senate
concurring, That a Joint Session of the two Houses be held
Tuesday April 23, 1935, at 1 o'clock p. m. for the purpose of hearing
the Honorable Martin Dies discuss said cotton bills and that
the Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives wire Mr. Dies
of our desire to hear him at that time and that all farmers in
Texas who may desire to hear Mr. Dies be invited through the
Press to be present at said time.
Filed in the Department of State, April 22, 1935, with the
Governor's signature.
DESIGNATING J. M. (TEX) MOORE AS "COWBOY ARTIST
OF TEXAS."
H. C. R. No. 48.]
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, J. M. (Tex) Moore was born on a ranch near
Ft. Worth, Texas, November 24, 1865, and followed the life of a
cowboy in Texas for many years, later serving the Lone Star
State as a Texas Ranger and Scout in the Second Geronimo
Campaign in Arizona against the Apaches being at the present
time a resident of Henrietta, Clay County, Texas; and
WHEREAS, The above experience equipped J. M. (Tex)
Moore admirably to pursue his God-given talent of painting, in
which paintings he has perpetuated and glorified the achievements
of the Western Cowhand to the exent that he could be
called the Dean of all Western Landscape Artists. As a young-
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Gammel, Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen. The Laws of Texas, 1934-1935 [Volume 29], book, 1935; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth17292/m1/1856/: accessed May 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .