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the road job, Harvey Wilson, another football great from Tulahe and a good friend, got me a job as heavy equipment foreman at the Shushan Airport. We graded and built the runways and warm-up aprons. My job paid $150.00 per month, a very good wage in 1933. I served as an official during the Pan American Air Races, an event held to dedicate the airport in 1934. I was privileged to meet such aviation greats as Jimmy Wedell, Walter Wedell, Art Davis, Michele De Triotay, Clem Sohn, and Jimmy Doolittle.
In 1933, I took Fran to Dr. C. Jeff Miller, famed obstetrician, who confirmed her pregnancy. As Dr. Miller had then limited his practice to abnormal cases and office consultations, he recommended his associate Dr. Curtis Tyrone, who some years later became the head of obstetrics at Oschner Clinic. Dr. Tyrone was a Mississippi boy, from Mount Olive, in Covington County.
At this juncture we moved to another cottage in Gentilly, on Clover Street, in order to be closer to my new job. The cottage was unfurnished and we thoroughly enjoyed selecting and purchasing the items necessary to make our house a home.
In April of 1934, our son, Robert Henry True, was born. Dr. Tyrone ordered Fran to stay in bed two weeks after Bob's arrival. During that time I was able to procure a registered nurse to visit our home each morning and give Fran and our little boy a bath and change the bed-linens. The other problems I took care of myself, the worst of which was washing diapers. One day my boss came to see me about the job. When nobody answered the front doorbell he walked around to the rear of our house and caught me washing diapers. What an embarrassing moment! He was decent enough not to mention this to anyone on the job. My brother Jack was having a pretty rough go of it at this time so I managed to get a laborer's job at the airport for him which tided him over until he went to work for the William B. Riley Company, Luzianne coffee manufacturers. Jack became a crack salesman for them under Emory Graves, sales manager, even during the remaining years of the Depression.
Oh, that Depression! President Roosevelt fooled most of the people most of the time but I for one had his number. I remember when he refused to meet with President Hoover, a gentleman and
a victim of the International Bankers, to discuss Hoover's plan to end the Depression. Roosevelt deliberately waited until he was inaugurated before taking action and ignored Hoover's invitation. He wanted full credit for himself first and for the Democratic party second. Roosevelt, the egotist, used the Depression to scare a weak Congress into giving him all the emergency powers he needed to steep the United States into insurmountable debt to the International Bankers, due to the war initiated by them. Deficit spending, and the "elect, tax, spend" theory followed.
I remember Roosevelt's silver-toned radio voice, "I hate war, Eleanor hates war, Falla (his little dog) hates war." And "Never shall a son of yours set foot upon foreign soil." Less than six months later he declared war! The power he strove for ended up into the hands of the criminal conspiracy that controlled him! A conspiracy guided by the Bilderbergers, a group of bankers and their stooges who met in secret annually in order to plan the world's destiny. A destiny that is always aimed at enriching their cartels. A majority of citizens from the United States attending are members of the Council of Foreign Relations, a group organized to formulate and control our foreign policy. (See the Invisible Government by Dan Smoot).
Zionist Ishmel Rothschild once said, "Allow me to control a nation's money, and I care not who makes its laws." Zionist Paul Warburg told the United States and congress, "You will have a one-world government whether you want it or not." We moved into the era of captive presidents with Wilson whose chief advisor was Zionist Mandel House. Then came Harding who tried to save our nation from the bankers but died suddenly. He was in perfect health in San Francisco. Captive Coolige couldn't do anything, and the International Bankers ushered Hoover out when they created the worst Depression in the world's history. Franklin D. Roosevelt had the advice of Zionist Bernard Baruch, internationalist. And Alger Hiss, convicted perjurer and communist spy.
In the spring of 1935 the Orleans Levee Board cut all salaries in half and early in '36 they tallied each employee as to the number of votes he had in the family, or controlled. Those with the most votes stayed on the job, regardless of ability. Having only two
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True, Jim Yours Truly-023
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