Burma, Important British Colony, Provides ‘Back Door’ to China CHINA “BACK DOOR” OPEN. Map shows the route of the recently completed highway running from Rangoon, Burma, to Chungking, capital of war-torn China. Because many of China’s eastern sea ports are blockaded by the Japanese this route has become an important life line for the forces of Chiang Kai-Shek. Recently Completed High way Used for Shipping War Supplies. Prepared by National Geographic Society. Washington. D. C.-WNU Service. Burma, where demands for independence are reported to be growing steadily more in sistent, is an important link in ttye British Empire chain. Efast of India, Burma tou/ches on the north the hor de!' of Tibet; on the east that of China proper, French In d'o-China, and Siam. With fl’ ngers of land thrust into the Bay f jf Bengal, Burma stretches south far down the west coast of the Ma lay peninsula, to share with Siam the narrow and strategic land bar to the China sea which culminates In the Malay States and England’s naval base of Singapore. From Burma runs the recently completed highway that is China’s vital back door entrance for sup plies, now that many of her eastern ports are closed by Japanese occu pation. Connecting Rangoon—half way down the long coast of Burma —with the Chinese provisional capi tal of Chungking, in the heart of that war-torn country, this route covers in all more than 2,000 miles, twist ing a tortuous motor path over Chi na’s high western plateaus, dipping deep into rugged gorges and rising high over mountain passes. Burma Route by Rail. The Burma section of the route, about one-third of the entire dis tance to Chungking, is mostly by rail, which provides communication between Rangoon and Lashio, near the western border of China. On the way the railway passes the town of Mandalay, of Kipling romance. Through Rangoon, as capital and chief port of Burma, flows most of the country’s foreign trade, now re ported to include incoming trucks, gasoline, machinery, and munitions destined for the Burma-China road as a result of the war in China. All together, Burma's import-export business was estimated for the last fiscal year at more than $278,000,000. Rangoon, accessible to river nav igation 900 miles inland, is also known in the international transport field for its excellent airport, where three major lines converge. So many ’round-the-world aviators and air-minded travelers come this way that it has been predicted that Ran goon will become to the air lanes what Singapore is to sea lanes—a "crossroads of the East.’’ Burma is strictly agricultural country with rich soil and plenty of rainfall. It is more fortunate than many of its oriental neighbors; for with little more than 14 million people to support in an area of about 261,610 square miles, there is an adequate food supply of the East’s chief staple—rice. More than two-thirds of all cultivated land in Burma is devoted to rice production, which provides a large exportable surplus sent not only to populous India and other Far Eastern coun tries but also to Europe. A largely one-crop economy, how ever (of secondary importance are other products such as peanuts, cot ton, millet, sesame seeds), presents problems of its own. There is need for new industries to provide more diversity and help solve the unem ployment problem. Of Burma's millions, less than 90,000 now are employed in industry. After farming, the famous teak industry is Burma’s next best means of livelihood. Without Caste System. The Burmese have developed into a group different from either Indian or Chinese, yet with traces of the in fluence of both. They are without the caste system and their women go unveiled. Although their main religion came from India, their dia lects are related to those of the Indo Chinese. Most travelers agree that the people of Burma are easier to understand than other Orientals; for while their manners are those of the East, they have also a frank ness and direct sense of humor akin to that of the Westerner. Yet despite geographic, racial and other differences that set it apart from India, politically Burma was divorced from the larger country only two years ago. Today this coun try, as a crown colony of Great Brit ain, has its own senate and house of representatives, although the legis lation of these bodies is subject to veto by the English governor who also controls national defense and foreign relations. Odd Regulations Give Protection To Auto Driver Traffic Safety Rules Vary On Highways of Foreign Nations. Prepared by National Geographic Society. Washington, D. C.-WNU Service. While many traffic safety regulations are similar the world over, some countries have evolved unusual and even comic measures for the safety of their people. Though comic many of these rules are none the less effec tive. In England there is no speed limit on highways ex cept in the congested areas. In Bucharest authorities have re cently instituted a drive for pedes trian control A special court has been set up to try offenders. This safety regulation has been success fully used in other European and American cities. The traffic board of Calcutta not long ago passed a rule banning ra NOISELESS COP. You can’t blow your automobile horn in Rome, and the traffic cops don’t have any whistles, but they stand on a pedestal in the middle of the street. So the old excuse about not having seen them doesn’t go at all in traffic court. dios or phonographs In automobiles as distractions to motorists and therefore traffic hazards. Officials of Riga, capital of Latvia, quieted traffic by prohibiting the unneces sary tooting of horns and ordering that all milk cans be silenced by wrapping them in sacks or straw. Americans visiting large European cities often are amazed by the lack of traffic noise due to such "non-tooting” regulations. Several countries have adopted the use of posters as a means of reducing accidents. In Sweden post ers are used to combat jaywalking. One Swedish sign warning pedestri ans against jaywalking shows a hen scuttling precariously across a busy street. The sign reads: “Don’t be a Laura!” Flashing red and green signals are the usual world-wide traffic symbol denoting stop and go. How ever, Uiere are found many and amusing variations in style and col or. In Lisbon, on narrow streets, policemen hold up paddles painted red on one side and green on the other. In Singapore the traffic “cops" have a long horizontal, white board attached to their backs. To regulate traffic, the policemen turn not a light, but themselves! NATIONAL AFFAIRS Revitwed by CARTER FIELD The temper of the peo ple of the United States is decidely against participa tion of any kind in a Euro pean war . . . Conditions vastly different from those at the time of the World war ... “Big business” con fers on plan to bring about a big boom in business be tween now and January in hopes of refuting Roose velt's dire predictions. WASHINGTON.—The greatest dif ference of opinion about any one important question in this country today is whether the United States can keep out of war in Europe. There is no doubt about the tem per of the country. If a referendum could be held tomorrow, nearly all astute politicians believe it would go overwhelmingly for remaining neutral—or, as most people put it, minding our own business. Moreover, there is no such ele ment in this country today as there was immediately after the invasion of Belgium in 1914, which kept in creasing until, in 1915, when the Lu sitania was sunk, it reached a for midable crest. On the other hand, there is no such division of sentiment in this country as there was from 1914 to 1917. In many states the German population openly sympathized at that time with the central powers, particularly in the upper Mississippi valley, which, as one old political leader remarked at the time, is more Teutonic than Anglo-Saxon. Minnesota, for instance, contrary to the belief of most Easterners and Southerners, has more Germans than Swedes, more Germans than Norwegians, though of course if the Scandinavians are considered as one racial group, they outnumber the Germans. Wisconsin, Nebraska and Missouri, not to mention Illinois, have huge German populations. But today there is not much sym pathy for Hitler among these Ger man segments of our population which were so fervently pro-German in 1914-1917. Most of them still love Germany, but they do not like Hit ler. There are plenty of exceptions, of course, as becomes apparent when one starts to canvass the situ ation, but it is very obvious that in stead of the German-Americans be ing a solid pro-Hitler bloc they would show a substantial majority against him. Most German-Ameri cans today would be pleased at the news of a political turnover in Ger many, which would throw Hitler and the Nazis out of power. Most of them would even prefer the return of the Hohenzollerns to continuance of the present regime. Neutrality Laws Would Not Keep Us Out of War All of which is cited to show that this country does not have to travel as far now in order to reach the point where it would plunge into the war on the side of Britain and France as it did in 1914-1917. Yet, although President Wilson was re elected in November, 1916, on a "kept us out of war" issue, the coun try was in the war just five months later. So it may be wiser to be conservative in assumptions as to this country's remaining out of war in Europe. Very few people think that the present neutrality laws, or for that matter any variation of them which anyone has suggested, would keep this country out of the war. As a matter of fact, the present law is very much misnamed. It provides against the shipment of "arms, am munition and the implements of war" to belligerents. Yet it has never been applied to the present conflict between Japan and China. The answer is simple. The ad ministration believes that to recog nize that a state of war exists and consequently to impose an embargo would benefit not China but Japan. The government at Washington sympathizes, quite openly, with Chi na, not Japan, as the Nipponese are wrathfully aware. So it ignores the spirit of the law, though observ ing the letter. Nobody kicks much, because the whole country is al most a unit in sympathizing with China. There is no doubt that the sym pathies of the administration will be even more strongly and actively on the side of Britain and France against Germany. Hitler will know that. Plan Boom in Business to Refute F. D. R.’s Predictions Half a dozen conferences of men whom the New Dealers would call "big business" have been held in the last few days on an agenda look ing to a sharp revival of business between now and January, when congress meets again. The idea is to cause such a re vival of business, and such an in crease in employment by private employers, that the dire predictions of President Roosevelt growing out of the defeat by congress of the spend-lend bill will be made to look ridiculous to the returning law makers. It would be little short of a mira cle if anything came of the con ferences. If business revives and employment increases, it will not be the result of them. Despite the pet theory of certain radicals, busi ness is not such a cohesive unit in its operations. As a matter of fact no big corporation, even acting alone, is ever inspired by political motives in deciding on an enlarge ment or curtailment of its opera tions. When business expands it is al ways for one reason, and only one. The same is true when it contracts. There is never any doubt about the motive, whether it be based on sound or poor judgment. The mo tive is always profit. When busi ness sees a chance to make a profit it expands. When it fears losses if it continues the present scale of op erations, it contracts. It may make a mistake in either direction, but there is never any question about why it was done. New Dealers Needn't Worry; Nothing Will Come of It So while gentlemen with imposing names really have been conferring on this question of a manufactured boom in order to thwart the Presi dent, no New Dealer need be wor ried. Nothing will come of it If the management of any particular corporation decides that by expand ing it can make another 20 cents on each share during the next six months, that corporation will ex pand its operations. If it figures that it will lose money by continu ing the present rate of production, it will begin laying off men. One of the few exceptions in his tory happened in the early days of the Hoover depression, in the spring of 1930, when President Hoover in duced a number of railroad and big business executives to continue just as they were going, when all the executives wanted to cut down. But that exception only made the “rule of profit’’ motive surer be cause of what happened then. Ev ery corporation that took Mr. Hoo ver’s advise on that occasion suf fered terribly as a result. Mr. Hoo ver will always believe that what he induced these big employers to do softened the blow—cushioned the decline. But no business man wants to offer his own surplus to be used as a cushion. Predict Real Market Boom Following Outbreak of War New York stock market gyrations perplex most outsiders, and the per plexity increases if one attempts to get an explanation from shrewd market operators. Never was this more forcibly dem onstrated than by what the market has been undergoing in the face of repeated war scares. Every time there is a scare the market dips. Sometimes it almost crashes. Ex perts agree that when war really breaks out in Europe there will be a real crash. But the same operators will tell you that not very long thereafter there will be a real boom in the market, with a crop of “war babies’’ not unlike those of 1915, though the names of the companies may be dif ferent. Moreover, the same shrewd opera tors will tell you that the rise of these war babies will merely be a wave on top of a tide, which will sweep the prices of most sound cor porations upward. The tide will be the inevitable result, they say, of business conditions in the United States which will be brought about by the war in Europe. Almost re gardless of any details with regard to what nations join in the conflict. Their logic is something like this. The United States will be the only country in the world capable of ex porting many needed products in any quantities. This goes especial ly of course for manufactured goods, rather than raw materials, though the demand even for some raw ma terials will be prodigious. See Increased Demand for All Kinds of Supplies As a result of this certain spurt in manufacturing, there will be in creased demand for electrical en ergy, for coal, for all sorts of things necessary to the manufacturing processes. This will spell enormous ly increased buying power on the part of a very large percentage of the whole population, including coal miners, oil workers, textile workers —everyone who participates in the production of materials not only by the factories which do the exporting, but those which supply them. With so many lines busy, of course, the buying power of all these employees will in turn spread the prosperity into lines having no con nection with the supplying of export trade materials. In short, the coun try will have a huge boom, very much like the one it began to enjoy in 1915 as a result of the World war. Moreover, the world demand for all sorts of United States products will be much greater than it was then because of one important change in the world situation. Dur ing the World war, the other big manufacturing country that profited enormously was Japan. It is true that Japan was on the Allies' side during the World war, but actually it did very little fighting. After its successful raid on Shantung and the German-owned islands in the Pacif ic, Japan virtually forgot about the war, settling down to making goods and selling them at a profit to the Allies and the rest of the world. This time Japan will not be able to take advantage of the same op portunity, whether or not she joins with Germany and Italy in the war. (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) (-AUTUMN SPORTS Football Is Serious Business But Here’s the Funny Side Each autumn, at risk of smashing their cameras, sports photog raphers get a classic assortment of pictures from the gridiron. They catch beautiful action plays, freak accidents, fumbles, penalty plays and quite a bit of rough stuff generally. The above pose, for example, is not one of endearment. Jack Williams of Santa Clara is merely using a high tackle to down St. Mary's giant, Mike Klotovich. Jack is probably saying, ",Beg your pardon, Mike." And Mike answers, “Not at all, Jack" . . . maybe, but we doubt it. There are many variations of the fum ble, but one variation is as costly as the next. The felloiv below must feel rather foolish having his arms tucked nicely away—and lo, no ball! HI huff and I'll puff and I'll shove—and blow your ballplayer down. This is one way to break up a passing attack, but don't try it while the referee's watching. The trick, preserved for posterity by your photographer, cost Georgetown a neat 15-yard penalty in its game with Hampden-Sidney last autumn. Yes, Sylvia, it's against the rules. But Georgetown won 51 to 0, anyway. To prove footbalFs a rough game: Left: This | chap just collided head on with a brick wall of the grandstand and is being carried off the L field with severe head L lacerations and a frac B tured wrist. No, Came ■ lia, we don’t know why 9 he did it. Right: Spectators get |f it, too. Here is Miss m Thelma Quinn, Ten nessee cheer leader, §ij after being k. o.'d when \ she got mixed up with a bunch of players in last year's Orange Bowl game. Verily, it's a great game, but keep off the field. This Neui York Giant is soaring through air. His name: Hank Soarl WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK I I By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK.—On his record, it would appear that Gen. Ed ward Smigly-Rydz, Poland’s strong man, might be more inclined to fight Germany with Polish Leader out Russia’s aid Started Career t^ian wit^ He r;„i,;_c .• m. made his career Ftghtmg Soviet flghting the Bol. sheviks, and news dispatches of the last few weeks have hinted that he has been considerably embarrassed at being drawn into the new appar ently broken fellowship with Russia. It has been clear that being saved by Russia was the least and last of his ideas. He is beyond doubt the ablest of Poland's military leaders, and, once the bell rings, there is no question that he can and will fight, as he proved in the campaigns to free Poland and in his forays against early-day Bolshevik Russia. He never has quite come through as a dictator. In 1936 there was one of those “ideologi cal’’ build-ups in which he was to emerge as the head of re constructed Poland. Handsome and imposing, of dominant bearing, he looked the part, but he couldn’t seem to manage the big talk necessary for the Job. The best they could get out of him was something to the gen eral effect that nobody would ever be allowed to take a single button from Poland’s robe. On August 6 of this year, when it appeared that Germany might just take the robe and leave the button, he was expected to make a sizzling speech at Cracow. His audience was howling for a knockout punch, but the speech was mostly shadow boxing, with nothing specific about what he proposed to do about Danzig. Fifty-four years old, with an engaging personality, he has been a popular dinner guest and holds the honorary presidency of the Polish academy of letters. The old Marshal Joseph Pilsud ski, nearing the end of his life, anointed the general as his suc cessor. He has been supremely efficient in his army job, but, as a strong man, has been somewhat overshadowed by the showier, more facile and adroit Josef Beck, the foreign minis ter. But fighting is his main business and knowing observers figure that, talking little, he is more apt to fight. A MICHIGAN friend of this writ er reports that Gov. Luren D. Dickinson's war on sin may turn out to be good political medicine out there. War on Sin While big-town May Be Very political leaders Cate Politics somewhat ^em barrassed by the aged governor's alarmed discovery of wickedness in high places, the word is that his forces have been intrenched and widened since he let loose about the drinking and dancing orgies of the Albany conference of governors. His Bible class at Eaton, Mich., is crowded to the doors and he is besieged with requests for lectures and participation in revival cam paigns. Currently he tells a gather ing of Chicago and Detroit “pupils’' that this Albany conference was pretty much like Belshazzar’s feast and that our Babylonian wastrels will drag us down if we don’t mend our ways. For 25 years, Mr. Dickinson has held in fee simple the anti sin vote of Michigan. It has held steadily around 200,000 votes, undivided in its allegiance in his repeated forays against evil, chief of which has been his still continuing prohibition bat tle. He is a spare, bald evangel of righteousness, his friendly eyes glinting behind his octag onal rimmed glasses when he is aroused, his meager frame shaken with pietistic fervor. He employs much of the lexicon of the late Dr. Parkhurst of New York, in assailing sin, and some of his phillipics seem to voice again the pious horror of the author of "New York by Gas light," written 60 years ago. He is a native of New York, born near Lockport in Niagara county. His parents removed to Eaton, Mich., when he was a small boy. There he still lives, happily en gaged with his Methodist church Bible class, and, more recently, with the state of Michigan and, un happily for his peace of mind, in a bout with evil which he never knew existed before. Shays’s rebellion of 1786 jolted the big-town politicians with a reali zation of what a mixture of agrari an discontent and old-time religion may amount to. In Governor Dick inson’s compact voting phalanx, things are something like that. His allied conservative Republican or ganization appreciates all this. (Consolidated Features—WNU Servic«.>