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GERMAN NEWS.

WHIT li-WAS KING Til IA J

[iiy tui. Eon .uni—run press association.]

BERLIN, Feh

When the Court, which was trying Lndendorlf and others resumed, no announcement was made with regard to the admission of the public. A noticeable feature is the friendly atmosphere in which the proceedings are conducted. None of the accused appear to take the affair very seriously. The President of the Court made a Statement sympathetically stressing Hitler’s war career. A snow!all in the morning sufficed to keep the people away from the vicinity of the Court house. The citizens of Munich are little interested in the trial, because it is already clear that the case will provide no sensations, nor will it- have any serious consequences to Ludendorff and Hitler, a fact of which they are probably aware. One of the accused, Weber (1 resident of the Nationalist Oberlsud Bund) in a statement to-dav explaining the aims of the Bund, which m chiefly to tear up the Versailles Treaty and create a new German Fatherland, cave an account of Ids conversations with Von Kahn and Von Lossow. Clue of the Bavarian Police, and Von Scissor, showing that all three approved of the revolt.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19240228.2.21

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 28 February 1924, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
199

GERMAN NEWS. Hokitika Guardian, 28 February 1924, Page 3

GERMAN NEWS. Hokitika Guardian, 28 February 1924, Page 3

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