JOHORE
1257
at Johore Bahru on May 11th, 1916. More recently, His Highness has been decorated with the Order of the British Empire in further recognition of his services during the Great War. Since 1910, the Sultan has had the services of an officer of the Straits or F.M.S. Civil Services as General Adviser, and other members of these services are seconded to control various departments, with the result that the government is now on a better footing and the finances have materially improved. The country has made great progress in material prosperity, and its orderly condition has attracted a good deal of European capital, invested in planting enterprises.
The revenue for 1927 amounted to $18,239,023 against $18,781,565 in 1926, and the expenditure to $15,348,473 in 1927 against $18,099,232 in 1926. Improved methods of collection and administration and the expansion of the agricultural and tin-mining industries are factors in the increase of revenue. Surplus assets at the end of 1927 amounted to $20,826,058. The railway, which connects Singapore with the F.M,S. system, was completed in 1909, and its construction has already given a great impetus. to the opening up of this fertile State. Along its 120 miles it provides access to the extensive areas of valuable forest land not conveniently reached by the natural waterways. It is operated and leased by the F.M.S. Railway Department, which now controls the whole of the railways in the Malay Peninsula. A causeway has been constructed over the Straits of Johore, between the mainland of Johore and the Island of Singapore, carrying a railway track and a roadway. It was opened for passenger trains on 1st October, 1923. The roadway was opened to vehicular traffic on 28th June, 1924. The State owns a light railway in Muar, but this has now been closed to passenger traffic, the opening up of a road system making the district more accessible.
Ninety-nine schools are maintained by the Government, and four of these are English Schools passing boys through the Cambridge School Certificate Examination. A Training College for Vernacular Masters was opened in April, 1926, and forty student teachers are in residence.
The capital is the town of Johore Bahru, or new Johore, as distinguished from Johore Lama, or old Johore, the former seat of the Sultans of Johore, which was situated a few miles up the wide estuary of the Johore river. The new town is a flourishing little place on the nearest point of the mainland to Singapore island, and lying about 14 miles to the north-east of Singapore city, in 1° 26' N. It contains some 15,000 inhabitants, mostly Chinese. Public Works have received a good deal of attention in recent years and $5,291,011 was spent on them in 1926. There are now over 600 miles of roads in the State, and new roads are being constructed.
The population of the State at the census in 1921 was ascertained to be 282,234 (as compared with 180,412 in 1911), of whom 618 were Europeans, 157,852 Malays, 97,253. Chinese, 24,180 Indians, 183 Eurasians, and 2,148 others. The Chinese are chiefly found as cultivators of gambier and pepper, and are spread over the range of country in the extreme southern end of the peninsula, nearest to Singapore, but there is also a large Chinese population on the Jemaluang tin-field near Mersing.
Imports Exports
1926 .$35,782,758
.139,261,451
$175,044,209
1927
$39,422,852
88,317,154
$127,740,006
European pioneers have, in the last few years, taken up large areas for planting, chiefly rubber and coconuts. Gambier and pepper cultivation is on the decline; the export of tapioca was 130,275 piculs in 1927, as compared with 154,287 piculs in 1926, and the values were $534,700 and $796,203 respectively. The export of rubber in 1927 amounted to 825,258 piculs, valued at $69,084,686, against 1,010,685 piculs in 1926, valued at $119,580,069. A remarkable feature of the rubber industry in this State is the large amount of land taken up by Japanese. In 1927, 532,068 piculs of copra,. valued at $5,499,841, and 171,966 piculs of areca nuts, valued at $1,247,676, were exported.
At the present time the principal exports of Johore are the carefully cultivated rubber, copra, gambier, pepper and areca nuts, and the natural products of tin, timber, rattans and damar. For almost all such produce Singapore is the port of shipment.