■ yppAy NOVEMBER. 10- 1932 THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT Page Three SL<-r egp J^ardiaa^J^,^aEiaaEaaaSia¡aiaia^,a^’iu^,'9!PlSliafMíiiffWW5Uffiinawwi^ - 3S1S ■ COMMENT more to build roads and link up the county systems. Tennessee, is voting on a seventy- five dollar bond issue and has spent $8X3.000 in the last few months. Good roads spell prosperity in cap­ ital letters. The trivial amount of extra taxation involved is not wor - thy of consideration spread out as it always is over so many years. It would be well if the town and village officials in every community were to get inspiration from what the southern counties and states are doing, and begin work of local road improvement. Certainly wisdom calls for local authorities to ask half a dozen of the most intelligent and interested citi­ zens to act as a planning commission whose duty it shall be study the local situation and to lay plans anti make recommendations for road de velopment. Once the people see what improved streets will do for them and learn how they can be financed with slight burden they win get behind the movement. Every foot of improved street is an itisur- anct policy guaranteeing the in­ •i-iised value of estate a v.. . ririr.ciple was shewn! -aiid himself; first by! iai: of the religious ques | 11 primaries, and next by) hi. in < lor abuse of his oppon- •eni " I i entered pi to Illi but the two mentioned abo1. ry likeiy what put the presei mor into the discard. People 't ie not antagonistic to the Kepu mean party; they were again-t the leaders of that payty. and showed it. I’lie large sums of money that w, re evidently spent to retain holt in the statehouse bad v' ■ II» effect where public senti went >s aroused. lepubllcan party may well study ... lesson derived from this eln tii Clean house. SCHOOL MEASURE TRIUMPHANT Wyoming 12. late the best example of si sftil county- wide drive --'i • <. ■ - i-'ii on'in steubrr, Cmui Y. During a period of 19 days •el ■ • 11 SPENDING MILLIONS FOR ROADS Whiis the palamity howlers are •■Joying thi msejves in other parts of the >ntry, the South is making ttrtdt "a league boots, laying 'h* su foundation for future de­ ’■Hopment- good roads. Kor Carolina has voted seventy- fire t. '■¡•lior. dollars and Alabama fire n Billion. Fl- r1a ’ackled the job by court- Ues Three counties have voted six Hare and enterprising bus- 'i en are asking five million I ■ 1'1 I: , , I The Scio milk condensery pays $700 in premiums to continuous pa­ trons. Oregon has swung toward the 81 measure making education in the Public schools compulsory by a Ter>' 1 - ■ margin. It is the sover­ eign will of the people of this state that very child shall gain his first schoi 111,4 under state supervision. It is safe to predict that, within ’-n years, over half of the state of die I nion will pass similar laws. Oregon has been the pioneer in the man. ,f compulsory education just as -1> was the pioneer in many movenit nts that have become nation "illt It has been said that the censer tives are the people that are Prartn ,.g tijp th[ngS that were ad- y°cat<- i few years ago |,y tjje rarj icals Time takes the sharp points Rom such things and makes people wonder why they never could see ’he go. ,| jn them before. It will be 'hp > ine way with the schoolbill. uny years no one in Ore­ gon w. :1|,| w-ant t0 gee the school *<"' npARD OIL COMPANY 1 CaLfortua) when you start an account with us. Your interests will be protected and you will be assured of OUR Friendship in return for your Confidence. ■«»- «z». member SYSTEM John Morg.lt A. W. Bunn Henry Roger.' r g-xxi fi-r • anti iuLri- f- -rteC’iy jn zero aer — p oteti the bearings — in.-rea^c the power .d fiexibiLty of yo*’? engine o QUICK ■ i 1