naturalized between 1918 and 1933.
The Official Gazette, in a subsequent list, announced eighty-four more names stricken from the list in Berlin.
Nazi speakers at a meeting of farmers at Heppenheim urged the farmers not to sell their products to Jews but to see that they reached their city markets through German hands.
Nuremberg.—Julius Streicher addressing a mass meeting promised legislation to end forever Jewish influence on Germans and to settle finally the Jewish problem.
A minor official in Langelheim, Brunswick, was dismissed from his post for displaying ordinary kindness in letting a Jewish drummer leave his heavy sample case in his home every evening. The disciplinary court found kindness to a Jew a grave offense, inexcusable because the official did not charge the Jew money for the service.
Cologne.—Gauleiter Grohe addressing retail traders at the Cologne Spring Fair described it as “treason” to buy from Jews. It is the duty of Germans, he said, to finish off the Jewish concerns as quickly as possible.
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The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.