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tives for foreign newspapers together to give them the confidential information that the rise of Nazidom is as epochal in world history as was Luther’s Reformation.
Immediately thereafter a terrific crush was noted in the city’s telegraphic offices, as correspondents rushed to flash this news to their editors.
Speculation was rife when Hitler mounted the rostrum tonight, as to whether he will choose the present congress as an occasion for naming his political heir.
Although reports recently have been current that Rudolf Hess, leader of the Storm Troops, will be invested with the Chancellor’s blessing as his first deputy, a strong feeling prevailed tonight that the toga will be placed on the shoulders of General Werner von Blomberg, Minister of Defense and Reichswehr leader, who is participating in the convention.
There are many other burning questions the Nazi forces would like to have answered during the coming week, but there is no assurance that any of them will be taken up, since the gathering is more in the nature of a festival than a deliberative session. Deliberations and discussions are activities alien to the Nazi credo, which is based on the major premise that Hitler, the all-highest, does all the “thinking.”
Some indication has been made that among the Reichsfuehrer’s pronouncements will be an expression of his views on Germany’s reentrance into the League of Nations and of his stand on the coming Saar plebiscite, which he confidently hopes will end in annexation of the district to the Reich.
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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.