THE JUDGE VISITS GERMANY - highlights [paraphrase] from THIRTY YEARS A WATCHTOWER SLAVE, by W.J. Schnell, 1956, pp. 50, 51.
Instead of the Princes, the Judge:
The Watch Tower predicted and raised expectations about the end of the world and the appearance of the princes in 1925. In place of the princes, however, appeared Judge Rutherford in Magdeburg, Germany. With American dollars in hand from contributions for books, he bought land, buildings and machines. The director of the German branch asked Rutherford for another rotary press. The Judge replied, "I will buy you the press if you take that thing off," pointing to the director's beard. Anything reminiscent of Charles Russell had to go! The director shaved his beard, saying that he preferred the rotary press to his beard so as to advance kingdom interests. The author claims that the beardless one showed later on that his declaration was not genuine. Schnell states that Rutherford got the minds of Brooklyn and German Bethels off the end of the world and fixed on the emerging Watch Tower Kingdom.
The Magdeburg Convention:
Rutherford was in Germany during the Magdeburg convention, whose conventioneers numbered 3000 more than registered [12,000]. Tents with plumbing were set up as well as a cafeteria serving hot meals. "This was the first cafeteria ever organized in Watch Tower circles, and so successful was it as a money maker that the Society has adopted it long since as a regular feature for its conventions and circuit assemblies throughout the world." Another first was the signing up of rooms in private homes for delegates, selected by canvass in a town not equipped with traditional facilities for so huge a crowd.
At this convention Joseph Rutherford proclaimed to the 15,000 assembled the idea of an international preaching campaign and building program, the recording of their time in field service as well as reporting the number of literature placements. Rutherford was viewed as a benefactor - he fed the assembled throng hot dogs and potato salad - so much so that for years later this meal was what delegates fondly remembered. The author muses, however, over what really happened: the loss of individuality and personal freedom, the loss of congregational autonomy and the enforcement of reporting time.
Next: The Judge's vow to the Lord, should he ever be released from prison in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.