7 A ' "iV ' -" unirnr theory nr Villejean, French Expert, Barry Pain Says It Involves! m EXPLAINS REGENT j EXPLOSIONS BY j FORCED MpHli WRITER DECLARES I ; . - -mmi it T I 1 Believes m ueronauon by Influence. ' . ' 1 (Special Dispatch.) PARIS. Saturday. Vast Expense, Fraud, For-: .-"'jji gery and Other Troubles. nr vflIeJea1i-4nsPector the Explosives Department - as a pupi1 of ?reat cfiemist Berthelot. was iniciv.v- - . : i respondent concerning the origin of the CP1U - v. Aoth and destruction in the rear of , p armies ;ji o i.m ucina" .i-n. Villejean appears to have a very plausible theory, namely, that the stupendous forces bottled up. so to speak, in the receptacles nade for them by modern hands exercise 1 h.oi ottracfion. the. vehicle of whirh a mum44 - is the "emanation from the substances em ployed." In the case of the Halifax dis- more effective and more angercms me- j dlum-petrol. . J I do not Deiieve m sporaaneous expio-; do believe in detonation or explosion 'brought about by inflr.ence." This remark Tvas made by Dr. Villejean when asked for his opinion on the frequent explosions that have occurred in munitions and chemical factories, m America, d ranee, ningiand, Germany and Austria, as -well as m the formidable explosion of the munitions ship that wrecked Halifax. Explosion by Shock. "Most high explosives are detonated by shock." said Dr. Villejean. "The shock of collision between the two steamships in Halifax Harbor was not the cause of the explosion, as that occurred twenty-five minutes later. The petrol that was carried on deck appears, however, to have been a contributory cause. It is probable that among the cargo of high explosive shells there "was also a certain amount of amorce' or percussion material; this being the case, when the petrol caught fire some of it filtered into the holds and the heat disengaged produced a gas, which combin ing with the oxygen of the atmosphere ex oloded with sufficient violence to detonate the percussion materiaTTwhich in turn de tonated the rest of the cargo of munitions. I put this forward as a hypothesis, for to reach a more exact opinion It would be necessary to have a detailed description of the ingredients of the explosives used in the manufacture of the munitions in ques tion. One conclusion may safely be drawn: that is. that it is most imprudent to carry any inflammable liquid on munitions ships. It is true that under other circumstances the petrol could have caught ,fire and no explosion have followed. But as it is im possible to foresee circumstances too- many precautions cannot be taken where ex- nlosives and such explosives as are now employed are concerned." The Swpe of Knowled?.-; "Have you any hypothesis to advance. Dr. Villejean, to account for the explosions that have occurred in so many munitions and chemical factories within the last two years? Do you think the chemists are combining different products, the effects of which are clearly known up to a certain point, but that beyond this their knowledge may sun te deficient? -No; i do not think so. I believe the greatest care is taken in the develoDmenti of these explosives. Every step is tried and tested before another is taken, as well as every precaution that certain ingre-' dients are not brought into close proxim ity. But what does happen, I fear, is !mprudence a momentary imprudence, if vou will, but one which is often attended with disastrous results. "The destruction of the great -German chemical factory at Griesheim could easily have been brought about by the imprudence of a member of the staff in bringing two substances into too close proximity, causing a local explosion which could be sufficiently intense to detonate all the other explosives in the place by 'influence.' , . Another Theory. . : "There is also another hypothesis that is worthy of consideration and study by experts tbat is, the action of 'les ondes flectriques,' or emanations from, sub stances employed in the manufacture of explosives. Such action might also be he cause of local explosions under cer tain conditions which might or might not be the influencing cause of others of a more serious nature. That many ' of the explosions during the last two or three years Tv-ere due to malevolence is certain inere have been others, however, in which malevolence had no part, but where imprudence was the contributory cause of ueionation by sympathy 'detonation par miluence.' To guard -against this latest uanger too much care cannot be exer cised." Japanese Ships for World Trade In order to compete for the world'sf trade auer the war Japan is actively engaged n building shins. According to JaDanese newspapers, she now has 113 shipbuilding f ,. owned by forty-two different ship building firms. In each a ship of 1.000 ions can be built Sixty-seyen ships have been completed and nineteen now are, in urse of construction. It ds estimated hat within a short time Japan will have inree times as many shiysras she owned "mre the war. The Japanese Steamship Company, Ja nan s largest maritime corporation, which now has nonS' has increasedTts capital to $50,000. 0. which is S23.P"0.000 more than three years a!?0- Fiftv lare-p steamships will be built without delay, adding ;.400";000 more wnnage to the fleet. All .this is to prepare trade after the war. Direct service between .Tanan and Ger jnany by way of Italy is suggested, as a j-usAiDinty after peace is declared. Fur tnermore. the. enrntwriv Vina ri(oiri(f1 to ran 1 the line operating to Europe by the pe or Good Hope and to start a new -rvice to Europe through the Panama Ihe first eto'irviesV.lr i-n "Wfa nA-nr Mlltfl .'uuiotu - ,11 111 w iivi. i e Tatsuno Maru, already has started on pe voyage. The ships will stop at San urar153sco or some other American port on Pacific coast for coal. They will take argo anrl Passengers direct to an English YrV The steamships may call at New ork fof further ioa(iing before starting across tho bpuie line through the Panama Canal will wni,rate(i during the coming year and m bring New York into' direct steamship ecuon with Japan. - CS t Mg1" 4 1 QNE of these little trench mortars can do B & S& - ' tremendous damage to an enemy position, g ! $ z- JiliSli- ' ne pieces are so light one. man can easily i ; - ,v -tl - H - - handle them, and battle tactics now make m ,p Iggg5 ! them a -part of the equipment of troops in 1 an advance. They come up;' with the support 1 ?m M fv'-- r Une. - ' ' " I ABOVE is a long II ; "M -V: H ' I range French gun 1 1 k 1 ' f Wh - "V I 1 1 on arailroadcarwhich CU lM WRik M h" A4 F J carries its camouflage Ig U V f ft) WuSQfW ffi CuSsSK IllV J0$p "S-rf Itioned at many points fii S of" the western front I Sf Jl If jSfY VL '".t 14 and can be shifted rap- J f$H klfl Jf -If fel p, idly wherever rails are .; l; fcS f S v'r !laThe picture at the ? f ' fW A : ; V right was taken seventy Jr V, 4' " : LUt i V XW I -et .below ground in a II k AifflA'ii dugout used as a tele- , . 11 PSP SI I 1 first Une. Some of the II 1 I J LV -fc fil?-f' ?;: :Vf5? I I creature comforts have 1 ft - 7 ft' ' g t 2 1 I found their way to the -l! iJhV,, l!!5?, I 1 subterranean shelter. II 14- . (1 1 P j jp - s . P TEUTONS IN GREAT GAMBLE TO BEAT ALLIES IN (Special Dispatch LONDON, Saturday. Lovat Fraser, writing in the Daily Mail on. the German threat on tne wesieni front, says: "The Germans are declaring that they mean to try to break the allied line in the west. . The elimination or the Russian army has restored the waning military strength of both Germany and Austria, It has also confounded those of our experts who present war to us as a page of sums rather than a contest of brains as well as muscle. "We need not.be prematurely alarmed' by. the threats of the. enemy,, but it Is not wise to ignore them.. If the. Germans and the Austrians propose to engage in the most colossal gamble in history, we had better consider our prospects of success. And first, why does the alleged intention of the enemy amount to a gamble? Be cause they are like a gambler who after heavy losses comes into a big legacy and risk's9 the whole of it on a single throw It is aamble because up to now the chief military lesson of the war in the west has been that on the whole, and until new de vices and methp'ds are found, modern arms confer an advantage on the defence. Both sides have proved two things at great cost to themselves. ' Strength of the Defensive, The first thing -is that the initial stages of an attack almost lnvanaDiy succeed. The second thing is that hitherto it hasp been impossible to develop on a sufficient scale the advantages won in the first rush. The Germans demonstrated this at "Ver dun, the French in Champagne in 1915. We need not multiply examples. There is no reason to suppose that the enemy will now succeed in rebutting these conclusions, and that i3 why their attempt, should they now make it," will be a gamble on an un precedented scale. Next, it' may. be noted that the great amount of drum-fire in the enemy press is very unusual. The German newspapers have not as -a rule announced military plans in advance. Perhaps the enemy are trying to frighten nervous people into join ing the ranxs of our wobblers. Perhaps they have some entirely different object in view. Perhaps they are telling the truth for once, and calculate that they may not be believed. The only possible course for us Is to look at the probabilities. . The Germans and Austrians cannot entirely strip the Rus sian front, but .they can leave it very thinly held. Here ISrnay say that I Can see no present prospect of an improvement in Russian conditions, I can find nothing in history to show that the Cossacks have ever exercised a determining influence upon the destinies of Russia. They arc only a drop in the ocean of Russian hu manity. Advises Against Traitors. 1 And may I add that I do not understand the suggestion that we should talk benev olently to the people- who have seized power in Russia?. Treaty breakers look alike to mejwhether they-are "friends" or foes. I can see no moral difference be tweeh violating the treaty about Belgium and breaking the Pact of London. The one act has enslaved a nation, the other has betrayed the Western Allies, who are fighting alone to-day for the cause upon which Russia's future depends. We can not fight because one treaty has been broken and then condone the breaking of another. I know all the specious argu ments about throwing Russia into the arms of Germany, but depend upon it. the simple rule for nations as well as indi viduals is to have nothing to do with traitors. That way lies the ruin of our cause. To return to our main theme. It Is prob able that the enemy "will do the obvious thing, which is to concentrate in the west. They can only do so gradually, and though they already have drawn upon their East ern front for heavy drafts and many guns it seems extremely unlikely that they will attack, so to speak, to-morrow morning. This is the biggest thing they have ever undertaken, and they will not launch their blow' until they are fully ready. I shall not attempt to quote from the many esti mates of their strength which are being published. It Is enough for us to know that by the spring at the latest they can count upon a sufficiently formidable addi tion to their numbers. Austrians of Less Moment. The bulk of their reinforcements cannot be of the first quality. We. need not be disturbed about the statement that Aus trian divisions may be put into the line in France. The Austrian army seems to be like the widow's cruse, for it never runs dry; but the Austrian troops to-day are believed to be very . much . below what they were in 1914. In this war they nave never yet had to face British, and French artillery and British and French infantry in the mass, and whatever may happen to our line we need not worry about the sectors where Austrians attack. As for the enemy's guns, it has to be remem bered that although they will have more guns in the west than ever, it is by no means clear that "they possess shells in sufficient quantity. The available evi dence seems to suggest that the enemy are probably rather short of matter for making shells. v I am not belittling the menace which may confront us, but am trying to reduce it to its correct proportions. I believe the line in France and Flanders should re sist any attack which may now be directed against us. It i3 true that the Germans broke our Une at Gouzeaucourt the other day. and that they have since seized two small sections of trench near Riencourt and at Polderhoek, as we have done times without number. But when all is said It would seem that at Gouzeaucourt the enemy did pretty badly. We talk of a surprise, but nobody seems to have been more surprised than the Germans, who failed to reap the full profit from their stroke. I suspect tnat some searching in quiries are In "progress on the other side of No Mali's Land as well as on our own. I should-say that at the moment the real danger spot is Italy rather than France. Our turn may come, but the highly efficient Germans have an awk ward habit of cleaning up jobs as they go, which is also our own practice on oc casion. Having got Russia and Roumania out of the way for the time being,, it; is natural that they should turn next to Italy and endeavor to overwhelm, her while she is still reeling under a sore blow. The Italian army has fought one of the most magnificent fights of the THE WEST whole war and has stemmed the tide of invasion with marvellous fortitud-. but the issue still hangs in the balanc and we must not deceive ourselves.. Th- Ions pause was dictated by military necessity. Italian OntloolE Uncertain. All those masses of Austro-Garman men and guns on the Sette Comuni Plateau tail between the Brenta and the Piave are not there for nothing. They do not mean to winter amid the hills if they can help it. Valstagna appears to be the vital point' through which they hope to debouch into the plains, and if they dispose of Italy while rehearsing Armageddon in the .west it will suit them very well. The outlook on the Italian front is hopeful for the Allies, but by no means certain. .The best experts assure me that there is no likelihood of a thrust at Salonica until the spring. "When the trees bud" is an old war motto in the Balkans. The surrender of Jerusalem is a great political and historical event, but from the broad military point of view our forces in Pal estine cannot now materially affectf the main course of the war unless they can reach Aleppo, vhich is more than three hundred miles farther north. Falkenhayn is the mystery of the moment. I think he is. in Mesopotamia, and should he heard of soon with his two German divisions; but with the bulk of the Germans and Austrians streaming westward Bagdad has become a side issue. ;We have, a tough time ahead, yet If yre face the facts, abstain from adven tures, and Intern our bell ringers, we ought to pull through. The fate of the Empire may depend upon the decisions to be taken this week regarding the" allo-i cation of the balance of our man power; but this is a contest of brains as well as men, and both on land and sea we must not let ourselves be beaten in brain power. 1 (Special Dispatch.) ' r:W; ; LONDON. Satnrtf.ivl;: Barry Pain, writing on the psychology pt &f: the food problem and the ration table, j i,;; says In the Daily Chronicle: '..' "r." '.. Many years ago public opinion put an end f - i to intoxication as a national habit." To-Uty ; the formation of the necessary public opto-. ,. ion the control ,of the general mental attt-,l tude would settle the food mestion. - !-C We have, enough, but nothing to spare, and we wish to prevent people from taldn - too much. On-the face of it it might seemt ; that this should be easy. But our attempts -in this direction have failed, and have de served to fail; the psychological factor, trat , for some crude advertisements, seems '10 utLve uccu . . Will Involve Vast -Expe? 'ji Continued failure will result in-AoinpuU' sory rationing. Compulsory rationing IH: i .ita Vi a f visva heenfre quently mentioned it will involve -Yart'exji.j Dense, the . employment of labortnat;U .-1; j wanted for other purposes, difficulties :,5Qi;' 'J organization, fraud ana lorgery. u o t win tiavA another result it wiu wond s . v ; the just pride of every decent man, wpmatti ; ' What .has psychology to do with fOOdT.,f The brain is the director general of func-.. tion. Through the brain appetite may ba- ; stimulated or lessened and. digestion may be promoted or Inhibited. XThe brain laf influenced by suggestion. The quack knbwac? this, and in consequence sometimes euecwft', cures. It is not his pill which cures; it;iti the suggestion in the advertisement of tbal pill. It is not only in the hypnotic state, f that suggesUon Is effective. It Is alwaw ; at work on people in a perfectly normal -M condition. The Povrer or. snsrste-cio- . j, ' Now let us suppose that a man Bees oa j a hoarding the appeal, "Eat less bread.':: J j Tjn daoo it fnAntlv on other hoardings1 -1 and-In many newspapers. This should in-,1-; (: fluence him, more or less according to nw s n,..Tfihiifir toward moderation ., to..- t susc e p u uin i,y , wniuu w .w-. .,, .. . bread eating. But ft does not inflaencer him. How should it? A suggestion cannot f work when a stronger, suggestion is op--4 posed to it For every once that he has;t'; seen that advertisement he has -i'Meni twenty times or more a lavish display the windows of bakers' shops or teashops. r . The suggestion of plenty Is stronger no- f mericaUy than the suggestion that econ-H omy is needed. It also is stronger in j nnfliitv. for the , real thing is more .op-JJ nruiM than the name of it. The t actr-f - " ' ' i- " . . i.x ..i HnAtUii 3 i tfmm It that It IS UnCOUSCiUUO augscswu w -r? an additional power. And, lastly, sight of good food is to the normal -aan;; directly provocative of appetite. The- ex- hibition ef any kind of food In .a saopi window should be forbidden. The "sug gestion that it makes is dangerous' and" erroneous. The shopkeeper no longer., rh quires that kind of lure. . . ' Then there is the suggestion of the tasn-' I lonable restaurant. The restannt;Prp-ii j prietors have been vexed with rescinded r j j orders, and every rescinded order weakens 7f 1 ..i. . ... ' authority. They are willing ana'ii no;; they can be compelled to fall in wtth'aSay, nf economy, but their boslness'ls to sell as much as possible for a much aV tney can gci, wiu is uu muoihv, The atmosphere of luxury creates luxuri- ousness. , - - r Ch61ce el Viands Too Wide. The cooking Is too good. The choice- of inj viands is too wide. It is useless for them fj, to plead that by some conjuring trick'thelrjfq chefs keep a man within his rations while V giving him the impression that he has fed " I without stint.' The whole point isthaj they have given the man that topressibn ' and sent him away with a disposition . j toward extravagance. They are out 'of M tune with the conditions that prevail to- day- . 'iS-wi' It would probably surprise the Food Con- J trol to find how many people could not jC; repeat their ration table correctly, c An : I . official statement is always so dull that it makes a small mental Impression. A;news paper is read quickly and then discarded. 2 Careful people may cut out a passage to which they will want to refer., but more content themsei. with' intending to cut - , it out The table of rations should . be v nrinted in bold type in every daily -paper three times a week. The remafadef-should be constant. . . A'.-t'-.-.'i':' ' .. Too much has been made of the diffl-'J rultyxnnd consequently of the virtue. 6fv" keeping within rations.' All the talk of. rr "srivin:; uo" and "self denial" is dispropor- A tionate. What is asked of us 1 not self ' denial in the war meaning of the tenn..'.A- ' man leading a sedentary life does . not i really need as much as he Is allowed. There may be a little trouble at first from, thi as sociation of ideas. ' J.' Associate Heat with Brea&T '' s.'iH We must from habit associate taieat with'f j bread, for instance, or porridge with mllk:.' but meat without bread Is fairly easy., and "1 p-en porridge without milk can be attained nJ And as a rule it is no hardship to a man to ' leave sugar for women and children; - Food'"" economy is a matter for interesting experi--" ment, and should .have' been so expounded 15 "j "from the first .V;.- . And now we are to join the Leasrue .of il National. Safety, sign the declaration and wear the badge, described u af imall anchor. Perhaps. But in this connection certain thoughts occur to one. - - . t The first thought is that the food bog (who. one may mention incidentally, should -.v have his mouth sewn up) will probably wear that badge. -He will think a lying' declaration an attractive price for a"e0n ?. slderatfcn to which he Is not entitled. . . The second thought is that some people ' who have observed the voluntary rations i would just as, soon wear a badge to show The third thought Is that these civilian badges are just a little frequent. Cannot we think of some ether way of rtt v i soldiers' laugh? " 1 ;1 II I 775 -: --i J t "? 4 7