- 18 Oct 2024 12:40
#15327445
October 18, Friday
Britain opens route to China, defying Japanese threats
The first trucks to bring war supplies along the re-opened Burma Road—closed three months ago by agreement between Japan and Britain—arrive in Kumming, China, this evening from Lashio, Burma. Drivers report an uneventful journey free from the air attacks threatened by Japan against the Chinese section of the road.
Sixty trucks arrive in the first convoy and another 2,000—given a banquet send-off in Burma—are expected tomorrow. Waiting at Rangoon are another 500,000 tons of war supplies, including planes and munitions. On the return leg, the trucks will carry tungsten, wood, tin, oil, and pig bristles for export to the US.
City children flee the Blitz once again
A second evacuation of the half a million children in the London area is underway. Under a “trickle” evacuation scheme, they are leaving in small parties at the rate of 2,000 a day—over 20,000 left in September. A further 89,000 mothers and young children are being assisted in leaving this month.
When the heavy bombing began on September 7th, thousands of East Enders fled from the devastation. Some 5,000 trekked to Epping Forest and camped there. Others took lorries to the Kent hopfields, where they bedded down on straw in the hop-pickers’ huts. About 10,000 Londoners and local people are now living in the Chislehurst caves in Kent. They are equipped with electric light and a canteen and sick bay. Families have taken over individual caves and installed beds and furniture.
Some 25,000 went to Paddington and took trains to places such as Reading, Basingstoke, and Oxford, which alone have billeted 15,000 refugees. Most of these “trekkers” have now returned. East Enders clearly hate leaving their familiar neighborhoods or being placed in West End billets—even when they are bombed out.
Britain opens route to China, defying Japanese threats
The first trucks to bring war supplies along the re-opened Burma Road—closed three months ago by agreement between Japan and Britain—arrive in Kumming, China, this evening from Lashio, Burma. Drivers report an uneventful journey free from the air attacks threatened by Japan against the Chinese section of the road.
Sixty trucks arrive in the first convoy and another 2,000—given a banquet send-off in Burma—are expected tomorrow. Waiting at Rangoon are another 500,000 tons of war supplies, including planes and munitions. On the return leg, the trucks will carry tungsten, wood, tin, oil, and pig bristles for export to the US.
City children flee the Blitz once again
A second evacuation of the half a million children in the London area is underway. Under a “trickle” evacuation scheme, they are leaving in small parties at the rate of 2,000 a day—over 20,000 left in September. A further 89,000 mothers and young children are being assisted in leaving this month.
When the heavy bombing began on September 7th, thousands of East Enders fled from the devastation. Some 5,000 trekked to Epping Forest and camped there. Others took lorries to the Kent hopfields, where they bedded down on straw in the hop-pickers’ huts. About 10,000 Londoners and local people are now living in the Chislehurst caves in Kent. They are equipped with electric light and a canteen and sick bay. Families have taken over individual caves and installed beds and furniture.
Some 25,000 went to Paddington and took trains to places such as Reading, Basingstoke, and Oxford, which alone have billeted 15,000 refugees. Most of these “trekkers” have now returned. East Enders clearly hate leaving their familiar neighborhoods or being placed in West End billets—even when they are bombed out.
Society cannot exist, unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without.
—Edmund Burke
—Edmund Burke