I was somewhat taken aback. As I was now informed that the
actual 'national chairman' had not yet arrived, I decided to wait
with my declaration. This gentleman finally appeared. It was the
same who had presided at the meeting in the Sterneckerbrau on
the occasion of Feder's lecture Meanwhile, I had again become
very curious, and waited expectantly for what was to come. Now
at least I came to know the names of the individual gentlemen.
The chairman of the 'national organization' was a Herr Harrer,
that of the Munich District, Anton Drexler.
The minutes of the last meeting were read and the secretary was
given a vote of confidence. Next came the treasury report all in
all the association possessed seven marks and fifty pfennigs
­p; for which the treasurer received a vote of general
confidence. This, too, was entered in the minutes. Then the first
chairman read the answers to a letter from Kiel, one from
Dusseldorf, and one from Berlin, and everyone expressed
approval. Next a report was given on the incoming mail: a letter
from Berlin, one from Dusseldorf and one from Kiel, whose
arrival seemed to be received with great satisfaction. This
growing correspondence was interpreted as the best and most
visible sign of the spreading importance of the German Workers'
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