Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 221, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 September 1919 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Announcement Extraordinary IK GUCAGO MIT NEWS 1 • ‘ • .r * • * ; , J / ’ ' -■ • • • ' * / _ . o has secured the exclusive Chicago rights of first newspaper publication of ■ —--- --r-: ■ “ t ‘ ’ \ »*- •- * 1 ~ * • • . . ' " . . • General Ludendorff’s Confession of HOW GERMANY LOST THE WAR

This sensational revelation of the German effort to dominate-the world, as told by the one ifian best qualified by reason of his intimate knowledge of the situation from the inside to tell the story, is an historical document of world-wide interest and consequence. It is the first time in the history of journalism that a great and epoch-making historical work has been first published in the daily press, and The Chicago Daily News has secured it for its readers. .-V-;; It will be published simultaneously throughout the country, appearing in the New York World, the Philadelphia Public Ledger, the Boston Post, the Baltimore Evening News, the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times, the Cincinnati Enquirer, the Louisville Courier-Journal, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Minneapolis Tribune, the —O- «ah a World-Herald, the San Francisco Examiner, and other leading newspapers. It will give the world the first comprehensive understanding of Germany’s plans and expectations in her audacious ambition to dominate the world; The German side of the war has been largely shrouded in mystery, and up to the present time no one who knows has spoken. Now Ludendorff—the man who conceived, planned and carried out the most colossal military cam--paigns, and who directed the most stupendous military machine in the world’s history—tells the whole story. . . ' ; _; - . _ Shortly after the signing of the Armistice, General Ludeirdorff went to Sweden, taking with him a tremendous jjf ■- - —— mass of records and a large staff of assistants. From these records and his own knowledge and experience he has produced this amazing document. 'm y We know so much about our own defeats, and Germany was so silent about hers, that it seemed at times as if the

Tell your neighbor about the Ludendorff articles.