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and Special Correspondents. DR. BUENZ TO0 ILL Exercises Before Large Replica of Liberty Bell” TOBE AT HEARING: “tee. Llt City Hall Park at Opening of the Loan Drive COURT SUSF SUSPICIOUS; Judge Howe fast A Says Atlanta Is a Fine Place for an “Invalid” to Recuperate. Dr. Karl Buenz of the Hamburg-| LAGE PE SHE LTHHOITHIDIIOD <4 American Line, former Consul Gen- | eral in New York, and personal friend | of the Kaiser, was unable to appear| » me Judge Hyland B. Howe, t 1, strict Court, to-day while his at torneys were making a last desperate | fight to save the aged German, mil-| ltenaire from serving his sentence of eighteen monthy in Atlanta Prison Dy. Buenz was convicted of making false manifests to furnish fuel to Ger- man submarines. His counsel told the court his con-! dition was such that it would be dan- serous to his life to force him to ap- pear. Judge Walt C, Noye and Ed- ward Sandford appeared for Dr. Buenz, Judge Howe deci: pictous of this particular {ilne: “He tried to fool us at the time of | he trial in a similar way,” the court! said. “I would like to know when! and how many times this defendant | has been out of his room and about! town In the last few weeks.” Turning to Dr, Emanuel Baruch, | personal physician of Dr. Buenz,| Judge Howe said "You remember when you and two! other gentlemen came to my hotel! ast night to tell me Dr. Buenz would | not be able to attend this hearing to-day, you told me the doctor was (Continued from First Page.) eve eedeees ed he was su >: Chairman: Mrs, Lyttleton Fox, Mrs. n the habit of disobeying your orders | — Mrs. ee ah a va y als : 5 : : hi s. I told you) sq be e ea, 4, ufus and leaxjng. his room: oy | Started with a bang promptly at (he) Patterson, Mrs. Joseph A. Flannery, | pockor ho fitted it over the knob of f he was sent to prison you would] stroke of 8, New York realized the! Mrs ; not have to worry further about such! Irs, Lawrer nce Keene and the Misses, the City Hall great drive was on, and every man,| Marjor Curtis, Estelle 0° id | went to f ust night matters, at least, Atlanta is a nice woman, boy and girl in the town Jexsia ann second b wis made ; is ittle village, and I expect there are} tinea himself behind it. A short speech Mayor! front door of John D some pretty fair doctors down there, men perfectly capable of looking after his health.” A suggestion by Judge Noyes that| Dr, Buenz be sent to a hospital and kept there for a definite length of time to ascertain his exact condition physically was refused by Judge Howe. “I don’ see why this court should treat this man any different from any COMMITTEES AND THEIR STAFFS | wherein he formally accepted the| house, and the third went PARADE, [pledges of the Women's Committee | Morgan ‘Tho big events of the day were the|for yeoman work during the cuming|_ Another Liberty Loan parades of the commit-|month's ca id: Nye eaten pend tees and their staffs of workers, both| the s of the lig seinen he in Manhattan, the Bronx and Brook-|Then the women's driv lyn. These ceremonies, together The first bond sold from the Liber with the launching of the women’s | Bell in City Hall Park went to May campatgne in various parts of the| Hylan. His daughtey, Miss Virginia | elty were designed to give tbe tre- | Hy mendous labors of the coming month | @ aign was fo! king was on. “a Buy Li ty n, Was the sulesw It wa F tu un will sit figure how many ) bond. one cise charged with a eimilar Of | 9 oper wend-oft |REOPEN THE MADISON SQUARE, “*%,,{, fiuring injunctions ty fense,” he said. Br downtown never ha LIBERTY BANK Ot AOGY sritama Ree tise phe fle Dr. Baruch said in his testimony: i ‘ been flagged as it wa "The 1 saw Dr. Buenz yesterday and: again this morning. He is suffering heart affitetio: 3 of stars QUOTA BEFORE START. from a serious 8 writhing in the narrow Before the campaign ft His blood etrouls very en the walls and flaunting pened t y ' poor. I consider BAT | tn fen baiee tho h pital s s of the enthusi In addition to this he has a bad di- | ‘6 Peaks of tho highest buildings ap- pu Government's th stion and suffers from kidney | peared a resth fiery sea, under bil r campaig Fou up rouble, Since his trial Dr, Bueng which the Loan Committee marched | opening ceremonies were held State cities had already informally has suffered a stroke of apoplexy and | from its headquarters at Nu. The Metrono! . y | filed claims tor honor tlags signi Prsthga sor gpd at up| The Metrop n Band first swung | At any tine may crop deed L708 |to the City Hall, jinto,the stirring strains of the “Star, (mitan ap ihe irene thice. rape | saw him I afd not know whether| A Platoon of mounted police led the! Spangled Banner," while thousands | doubie th nounts, and it ts ne would survive, I know he could | parade, followed by the police band.|of volces from the crowd packed tn! lieved to the Empire State will go the vot Stand « vere Bane + would be} THeh_ OM standards abreast rode tie the squa honor of having Han ater oe Judge Howe ordered, if 3 1a "a ee shah ; ay n the Nat ‘ormal f ‘sible, to furnish the Court with | Liberty Loan fiag and the Stars and) ‘Then M Aims was completed at 9 A. M e records of the daily health of Dr, | Stripes. Benjamins took up the refrain ‘ortlandt Dixon B rong, head hairman of the Metropolitan Divis- t determination of th Buenzg. : | the Central Comm: with his com- ion of the Women's ty Loan workers t ¢ half the to ‘I can't say just now,” was the re-| mittee members about made up|Committee, raised Stata “and this dis wus announc ply. ‘I may be able to do so, but do} |), ha sa Ma elena PON x ‘ bolts wee | Benjamin oe hairman of the not know that such a record has| the flrat cohort of workers. Followed) Str © staff above the white! District Committe ho said to the been kept every Say. the Distribution Committee, tho, portico of the bi With her in th al chairme Women's Committes, the Pub: officlal con were Mrs. Coffin’) "rh 2 Second Federal Reserve Distriet , He ; 1 andard in. pa $ and FIRST ROLL OF OF HONOR Committee, the Speakers’ Committ Van Kensselacr, Mra. Edward Mes should maintain tt tn this loa king and the Metropolitan Canvass Com- Vickar, Mrs. Dinn Barber, Mrs, Hun- | 088-halt the sam asked for by the Go 1 b t id roiment, In erder to do tht. very com A hundred soldiers and ax the Mis Riau Watmora ann Ma continue its efforts without rela T aninhas of matic a Missa Baud and Maud inti the subscriptions close on May ‘ Jup before the City sal steps, also Dr, William our army, the people of our own coun Addresses by the . British |, Manning, rector of sions and the Lib- | Mo _ try and our allies as a huxe over \ity Church; | scription.” John P. Chidwick and ndicatiuns of the unusuai enthus oun representatives of the Fi WASHINGTON, April 6.--Towns | and Ita an Commi: whose reports of over-subscriptions erty Loan Chotr of sixty voices. The} it Nathan Krass followed, jasm had not a litte to do with Mr were received at the Treasury within | crowd that packed ubout the steps! eo Met n Division of ee ae, eat a fu hew five minutes after 9 o'clock were flowed back to ajl the avenues L ane Mane ot citeady Far Rockaway, N. Y., quota $339.- | of Park Row Re eit ss. | scribed 1 000; subscriptions, $1,050,000, Led by the band, tie crowd sang|sumed charge in the 200 booths erect. |", New 9 rada Twin Valley, N. ¥., quota, $92,000; | “America.” "After an invocation by ed in departme ‘ , res- [this basis, besides the fonr towns subsoriptions, $117,000, Chaplain Bo; addresses were ations |New York State, Larchmont, N. Y., quota $123,000; made by Mayor Hylan and Martin |atis. 1 on OuMns Be thin It became neces. subsoriptions, $126,000. Vogel. The ceremony closed with the 86 raitire Shoat i Pearl River, N. Y., quota $25,000; singing of “Star Spangled Banner Io Brookivn the w ened their | spect f © to subscriptions, $40,000, TOLLING OF BELL OPENS Pela ve with a ro n front of | take this wor E Bernardaville, N. J. quota $116,000; subscription, $221,000. Pompton Lake, quota $81,000; sub was Fs ‘ants WOMEN'S DRIVE, | Uorourh Hall, Uniformed members vell which Rear Admiral Nathaniel | ot the Nationa! Leag Woman's Da scriptions, $101,000, 2. Ushe nished to the Mayor's|Service and Red Cross nurses para , aged on Cranford, N. J. quota $134,000; | fi v™mler furnished be May Aiea tein anne Oe eaenes subscriptions ied ‘by. a ‘committees 0 omen, an nich | ¢ > the hall and assisted in the reorporat unk subscriptions, $220,000. aaa Thane ; bo Ronerve - t t Elmer, N. J» quota $67,000; sube io. awiy trom the t eH sal subser ne ired ions, $68,000, eb igt - by the Chairman e i wen anes 8 ubscriptions more /°!t Bell in front of City Ha 4| 1,000,000 LIBERTY BELLS APPEAR | piittme and filed. w ¢ Honor | cele Maes the formal opening of the women's! OVER NIGHT. Division.” Tho instructions sent ou MRO eee tne onan drive | A round mil t Liberty Bela |@0g! se ane tocol Among oth ommuntties | Phe veil weighsa ton and } made thelr mysterious appearance | Be talented i whose reports of c subscriptic 3 gas pal ; may be rejected by the re filed before # o'clock were: jwhich goes booming over all the}over nig t door knobs | piv ‘f there 4 Wake Sue ri downtown district, A marine to strike |of Greater New as if@ finan-!the full subsert ; Oldemar, Fla. ne clapper went with the bell, wi Santa © ad made a mid. | t€" banks or 1 th Greene County, Ark ‘sa rae an honor fag 1 iw the Rear Admiral’'s apliments, oto ¥ . Pe ee P ae K Whiting, Ind. : ; i ‘ 1 Ce, The huge replica of the famous | hou. ple of the c r hes oer, Ne 4 aberty Bell, which was built und No work honor flag plan requ jatasauqua, Pa ne direction of the May Comm! ousew © door to get button of the bonds am: Bedford, Pa. “ h i people of the whole commun Leeann ee of Women and which is an exact | morning's wapaper could | fect that oommentie con tai 7 “4 ia reproduction of the Nation's sacred| dodge the gnificunt appeal these | a flag.” be ranges a : n Philadelp! hough many |cardbo All New| ‘The biggest war poster in the wor roupe County, Ga mes as large as the or knew the great Liberty drive |#? 0 In Ninsty feeb Leng. Fawngrove, P |twenty t ign, ¢ t modelled around the fountain be FIRE IN NAVAL OFFICE, ‘i*,P2"00 of the City Hai. 1 eet high and 50 feet in clr facade of the ‘Treasury Bulld It is in tw bowing ning a more than Mysterious Blaze Destroys Papers, ce at the ba menced the r Span naltein ’ in Washin After the rece and over all t Wyeth and the 1 WASHINGTON, April 6.—Fire of of the Liberty Loan Central the bells continued ‘ I Henry J ia unknown origin last night destroyed) mittee, following the parade up| midnig et 1 . com. |The poster was painte the upper fi of a building near t Broadway from the Committee's! prising 10,000 m« 1 the b a pay great State, War nd Nayy Building, | :eadque ters, Mayor Hylan ste ped | bone 5 H ree sola occupied by the Navy Bureau of|over to the side of the Liberty Bell. |remaining iF setonal te Construction and Repair and the!There Mrs, W Ls bade ing tt ‘i camouflage sertion ant wee Bourke Cockran, | among Boy r organi Some supplies and papers were). an of the Women's Committees fons. an arieeeegeeee burned, but the damage !s sald to ba 12 charge%pf the bell, received him.! May , Ar b Uemen Ail insig@tficant. With her were Mrs, J, Stewart, Sub-' bell $n the home of old Pa Knicker ALBANY, April 6.—A prociamat f | \ _THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1918. PON DOOT4 DDI SOD H EHO ® | at ninety FED 99OOOD | Whitman urging citizens to door before he Third Liberty Loan The | Was made p te to do his duty ‘und by tubseribe i Loan prove | nt that we are Governor WASHINGTON nehes Property Custodian Palmer to-day Invest in * 5000 HEAR UBER LOM PLEA FROM STEPS FOUR UP-STATE CITIES EXCEED for Opening ot One of Biggest Created by the War. for thelr ful) awarded of the held on the s told a crowd 5,000 of y upturned face, » grim with d n till the crowd be Mena mente cheer greeted ev ning bars of tt Hugle Corps, e singing of the horas lared to the Ii ki and in blue close of the campaign so that pasage can bo flashed the battlefields message of May fourth a m es LOAN BOOMS IN SOUTH. in the South THE EVENING WORLD in Reporting the War Has the News Service of the Associated Press, the United Press No Other Evening Paper in New York Has a News Service So Complete __{TENUBOATS SUNK Honors of Recent Suc- cessful Attacks | cerning the destruction recently craft, aight seaplane described as follows: marine elght miles away | the path of an oncoming convoy | exploded on the conning tower. type, carrying two guns.” BY BOMBS FROM ss» BRITISH AIRCRAFT 2.2 Seaplanes and and Dirigibes Share LO" ON, Aprils 6—Detalls con- ton German submarines by naval air- others by dirigibles, have been ob- | “While ot patrol in the Engilsb Channel a seaplane sighted a sub- directly in of {merchant ships. ‘The seaplane dived jes an hour, ‘The sub- |marine attempted to escapo by sub- merging, but waa just awash as the| soaplars reached a bombing position and released two bombs, one of which “Tho seaplane dropped two more| ot New York, now serving bombs into the midst of the air | ant to Henry P. Davison, ( bubbles from the collapsed sub- | a | marine, which was of the largest | take a place on the staff of Gen. Per- | | The second case: “At dawn a noa-| Plane sighted a large submarine on| WILSON REVIEWS 12,000 TROOPS AT BALTIMORE | Speaks To-Night on Liberty Loan in Armory Where He Was First Nominated. tod |tintng the atreets along which the drafted army detachment of 12,000 men from Camp Meade were to parade this afternoon in colebration of the opening of the Third Liberty Loan campaign and the anniversary of America’s entry into the war. ‘The procession was to be reviewed by President Wilson, who will to-night de liver an address at the “Over There of Liberty Loan Cantonment in the Fifth Regiment Armory, at which place he was nominated for the Presidency in and the wi. ‘Two battalions of the Second Maryland Regiment were assigned as the Presi- tained by the Aasoctated Preas from @ent's escort. After the review, the Admiralty repotts. The first cave is President and Mrs. Wilson will be driven to the home of @ personal friend for dinner and @ rent before proceeding to the armory. MARTIN EGAN TO HEAD New Yorker st Probably Will Be| Commissioned — Major Palmer Expected to Remain Censor. WASHINGTON, April 6 Martin Dean an asalat~ the Red Croas War Council, is soon to shing, commanding the American troops in France. It 1s expected that he will be com- miastoned, probably aa a Major in the {the surface, with @ member of tho| Adjutant General's Department, and crew standing by the gun. The aea-| will assume the general duties of plane dropped a bomb on tho tall of | @ Haison officer, keeping Gen, Perahing graphed the bow, and the U boat collapsed.” The third cave: “Two #eaplanos | attacked a large submarine traveling | War Department h, on the surface at fourteen knots, | {with two men in the conning towor. |#or on loded close to the} jconning tower, and the submarine began to sink stern first. A bomb from @ second seaplane completed the | A bomb was work." ‘The fourth case Three patrol 1 a large submarine as pg, and dropped two Allen| bombs close to the conning tower, '-) causing the submarine to turn turtie| appear in a masa of oll and planes sight tt was subm wreckage: ‘The fifth ouse: "A seaplane sighted two submartr us ineffective, but the both ends in the air The sixth case; “A seaplane eaw |the track of @ torpedo fired ut a} merchantman, It dived toward the| surface and sighted the black whadow of the submarine, well be- two! low the eurface. It droppe: | to the submarine, resulting tm kage, | U-boat, wh yy | stern. Flin the cent of the sw ao bel ing the U-boat. ‘The eighth case: “A seaplane | the U boat and afterward photo. inking submarine, with big hole in its deck. A second bomb was dropped close to the submarine’s | formally announ 8 close to the surface | ‘opped two bombs, One bomb ther hit the deck fairly amidships, ‘The sub- was hidden by the smoke of OF SUB-TREASURY i:.cca'tivo 0” woot was sinking, with | osion, and when the smoke eo seventh case: ‘I'wo seaplanes | uted a U-boat on the surface and dropped a bomb each, The first [bomb caused @ heavy Het to the ewan to sink by the second bomb exploded dermolish- and his Staff in touch with world events. The appointment. made at et of Gen. » re- av rshing, has not been d, and the details of |the work the General expects Mr, Egan to perform are not fully known to the It ix belteved at the department, however, that Major Frederick Imer ‘will con . Pershing’s staff ‘Taylor Dive « ameaia in We: CHICAGO, April 6.—Mra, Hobart ©, ciety leader, died tust night in Santa! Barbara, Cal, Bhe had been recen' gall stones, and pneu sped, Mr, Chattleld-Tay’ bombs, which both exploded close | «| quantity of oil, bubbles and NATION'S LEADERS —Baitimoreans| began | PERSHING NEWS STAFF | airman of | 0 as cen! Chatfeld-Tayler, widely known — a0- | ~ e START LOAN DRIVE TOWARD SUCCESS Wilson Goes to Baltimore for Address and Cabinet” Members Speak. e 1 WASHINGTON, April 6.—Amerioa’s third giant drive for Liberty dollars opened throughout the nation to-day. President Wilson was the principat speaker on the day's programme. He is to go to Baltimore for an evening | address «! unusual importance, con- ing the big part American arm- out to p les a in France, and other international phases of the war altuation. Secretary McAdvo went to Philadel- phia to speak at the unveiling of « H iberty statue and ‘to review a parade | ef 7,000 marines and soldiers and 1,200 | young vor singers. Vice President Marshal to speak at St. Louis 41.1 Secrstary Daniels at Cleveland, In the Atlanta and Dallas districts, war trains with special exhibits and, men from the French, British or ## American Armies helped boom the loan. Mary Pickford, Marie Dressler, Charite Chaplin and Douglas Fatr- banks, movie stars, furnished a dl- version on the south front of the State, War and Navy Building In Washington, selling bonds from booths, ” Meanwhile, at the Gove ment Bureau of Engraving and Printing here, thousands of crtsp new bonds were being rushed from the giant presses for immediate distribution to strategic subscription centres. More than 200,000 will be completed by the close of the week, The Federal Reserve Board, in its April bulletin issued to-day, warns of undue reliance on the banking insti- tutions | period financing. It appeals to the | “rank and file” of American citizen- |ry to “loosen up" and absorb every Liberty Honda px means of sustaining long natble | AMERICA’S INTERNED ALIENS By RICHARD LINTHICUN Staff Correspondent of The World Series of Articles Under the Authorization of the War Department OW does the United States treat its interned civilian enemy aliens and dropped a bomb on @ submarine just | emerging, aud the U-boat disap- peared with a heavy list to port, ‘The | | pilot dropped a second bomb Into minutes later | *la patch of off 150 feet long and |twelve feet wide appeared on the the swirl, and a fe surface.” The ninth case; “A at midday sighted # susp! f the ofl, The airship dropped indicating that the damaged sud- marine was moving slowly away un de water, Several mo bombs were dropped in the path Indicated initl satisfactory evidence was ob- tained of the ny destruction,” The tenth case; “An airship dropped two bombs over a sub rine which was engaged in Cc this ce ONLY ONE SHOT IN 10,000 ere damage, plete by dep BRINGS DOWN AN AIRPLANE ins Can Onl High, but F ighting Machine Are Effective. ITH THE AMERICAN ARMY BW, March 21 One of the rarest in the war ‘s for an ant! raft gun to bring down an @ Statisticians have figured that alrpline ts just one eho thousand best anti-at an do en fly t 8 Aiffion It's tho fighting planes whic} > meet the anamy that bring 'm down, val airship rus patch ¢ olf and cireled it in an effort to ascertain the cause, Buddenly a peri- scope broke the surface in the midst » close to the periscope and a series of bubbles began appearing, attacking merchant- hes of ol] and bub Keep Them Flying an in roraft keep the enemy no that obperva- its military prisoners of war? How are they quartered and fed? What labor are they required to doP What recreation and amusement are pro- vided? What privileges do they have? What are the exact facts concerning the daily routine of their lives in the internment camps? What if any truth is in the charges i occasionally made that they are better fed and cared for than United States troops in cantonments and that they are given speci | privileges and even luxuries out of keeping with their character as prisoners of war? To get the truthful and detailed answers to these questions, The World, with the consent of the War Department, sent a staff correspondent to vi sit the two most typical war prison camps in the United States—one at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., where only civilian enemy aliens are interned, and the other at Fort McPherson, Ga., where only military prisoners are interned. SERIES OF ARTICLES BEGINNING IN fTHE WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL §