CENTRAL AND WEST TEXAS SECTIONS MARKED On to San Antonio federal standard roads prevail. Two years ago people traveled all sorts of ways between Houston and Ban Antonio. Two years ago. also, any old road was used from San Antonio to El Paso—roads such as they were. Now that COO ms. is made in three and four days. All those sections are marked and the people are putting road-building projects thru. Texas is delivering her thousand miles of main line roads. Over the Divide between Kcrrville and Junction, heretofore avoided, today Kimble County stands completed with a splendid federal standard road and Kerr County is under construction. THE MEXICAN EXTENSION Out of San Antonio east an west on the Main Line paving is being extended, also southward toward Brownsville and Mexico. November 1st was that meeting at Alice, Texas, where the plans were formulated for carrying the OST 300 ms. south from San Antonio to Brownsville, thence to continue to Tampico and Mexico City. To-day SO per cent of that trunkline is financed or assured for paving. Again the people have caught the-spirit of-the Old Spanish Trail. It is a wonderful record, that a new trunkline could be laid 300 ms. thru a pioneer country, and the word go out for a paved road and in three months show such a record of county election calls, campaigns and votes. This extension of an OST trunkline to Mexico is the beginning of the Texas part of that other dream of the Old Spanish Trail of a. trunkline around the Gulf from Tampa to Tampico. Responsibility in the East falls to Florida. WEST TO THE PACIFIC Vice-President A. H. Gardner. Tombstone. Arizona, reports the highway practically complete as a federal standard road from El Paso to Buckeye, 32 ms west of Pheonix. The road from Pheonix to Yuma, about 200 ms., is planned to be complete in 2 years. Those South Arizona counties voted something like $12,000,000 total to carry the highway across Arizona. The work they are doing is making Arizona famous. There are a few unfinished sections but those Arizonians are road builders, and travelers will revel in the joy of fine driving. It is the only winter road into California. The celebrated Tombstone Divide is an easy grade and never closed. Travel go5ng west should see Mr. Gardner at Tombstone, for on westward are points not yet constructed and travel should choose routes as the season suits. CALIFORNIA Ed. Fletcher, OST Councilor. Pan Diego, reports on the A*o route from Tucson. This cuts across the bend south of Phoenix, thru the cactus forest. 00 ms. are built westward from Tucson and the financing of the remaining distance to Yuma, tlie California gateway, is progressing. From Yuma to San Diego, 1S2 ms., over 100 ms. of concrete is built or under contract, and the er.tiro distance from Yuma to San Dicgc is financed and under order r.ot to stop until completed. A HIGHWAY OF ACHIEVEMENT It has been said the Old Spanish Trail would be the first paved read across the continent—paving is coming fast. It has been raid the Old Spanish Trail has greater construction activity than any transcontinental highway —that is probably true for immense works arc financed or under way. The Old Spanish Trail is the one great IPghway that is driving its way thru as future travelers would have it in spite of fearful physical harriers. It no longer a single highway, but a spstem of highways, for the people are seeking to open the way to every alluring or historical spot along the Southern Borderlands. 1600 ms. of trunklines, tributaries and tourist loops are marked. The people should go the limit to get the marking done, for it means a lot to them and to the traveler even if the road is still unimproved. A car and crew also are far less expensive if kept in service and men cannot ho employed on this sort of work on part time. ROA RSIDE BEAUTIEYING From different sections comes word the women are beginning to think and work for roadside beautification. In the Rio Grande Valley a woman’s club is urging an Avenue of Palms. The Old Spanish Trail can be made an avenue of flowers, shrubs and palms; the highway thru a Flowery Kingdom. This is the remedy for so much way-side defacement. The women, too, can go to their county commissioners and demand the removal of the horrible s'gns that are put on trees and fences. Those officials control the roadway to the fence line. The emblem for members should he ready this month write for the CAMPSITE circular— your town should have a good Camp for the traveler. Help distribute the History Booklets—Wh)^ Not advertise your own City by issuing* 5000 of these Next month the year book should be ready. THE HIND WE DON’T WANT. MOBILE LAKE. ( IIARLES LA. Mobile is another city of great possibilities, shut in and cramped because the channels of service have been insufficient. When her highway program is completed j she will rise like giant unshackl'd. Her people are alive and ready to do things. Mobile Bay is now the only great waterway (except the Mississippi River) between the Atlantic and the Pacific on the Old Spanish Trail that i is not bridged or financed. S. H. Peck, OST Director at 1 Mobile, is a leader in the work to bridge Mobile Bay. THE MISSISSIPPI GULF COAST From Pensacola thru Mobile and to the Mississippi-Louis'ana line the OST passes thru a country of many attractions. Us hays and coves invite the hunter or fisherman, summer or winter. Pensacola and Mobile have harbors of importance. The highest coast country between the Navesink Highlands of New Jersey and Corpus Chris-ti. Texas, are in this section. In Mississippi the OST skirts the Gulf and great live oaks and pecan trees are close to the water’s edge. Summer and winter the people make these shores their rest-in;; and sporting retreat—the Riviera of America they call it. When the day comes that Pensacola, Mobile and j New Orleans are hound together by a completed Old j Spanish Trail the North will find winter pleasures here i beyond its dreams. The eastern county in Mississippi is Jackson, with I Pascagoula and Ocean Springs its towns. It is financed for a paved road. The paving too will go thru Biloxi, Gulfport and Pass Christian. Then in the westward coun- I ty comes Bay St. Louis waiting for Louisiana to bring the highway from New Orleans to the line, then she too will ! pave. Bay St. Louis is another spot to lure the traveler ’ or the sportsman. At the other side of Louisiana, near the Texas lino, is the good city of Lake Charles, for years a leader and exponent of good roads. Her clean, prosperous appearance reflects the wisdom o.' her policy. Louisiana and Texas are separated by the Sabine River. Lake Charles (Calcasieu Parish) has most of h'-r road paved, but at the river approach is another se