Answer:
C. 1910 – 1930
Explanation:
According to the Oklahoma Historical Society, as the Automobile Age progressed the number of cars and trucks went from 15,000 in 1914 to 127,000 in 1918 to 500,000 in 1926.
This fast growing required actions and they were taken in the state by constructing highways and roads from one state to the other and making improvements on the roads that already existed before then, this action would also help with the tourists that would go on roadtrips and would need to use highways and roads across the state.
Thus, Oklahoma begin to undertake significant road improvements between 1910-1930 as a response to the popularity of automobiles.
Answer:
First question: He had no other option. Japanese forces were so good at prolonging U.S. Troops advancement that if he hadn't dropped the bombs the war could go on for months possibly years. He didn't want to drop them, but it was pressure from his advisers that it was a better option than losing anymore American lives. Second question: His other option was to continue what they were already doing, taking as much ground they could inch by inch until they took the country's capital. Third question: The Emperor of Japan hesitated thinking we couldn't possibly have a second bomb, which prompted the U.S. to drop another.
Where are the answer choices? :^)
Interstate compacts, <span>the most important are those for sharing water rights.</span>
The first one is Political Speach