PUBLICATIONS

Austrian Terrorism in Bohemia. Introduction by Thomas G. Masaryk. 12º. 38 pp. Chap. I., The Political Murder of Dr. Kramář, reprint from The New Statesman. London. June 17, 1916; Chap. II. and III., reprint from articles in La Nation Tchèque. Paris. May 1 and June 15, 1916. Czech National Alliance in Great Britain. Printed by J. Truscott & Son. London. 1916.

Bailey, W. F. The Slavs of the War Zone. 8º. 266 pp. Illustrated. Chapman and Hall. London. 1916.

Beneš, Edouard. Bohemia’s Case for Independence. Introductory by Henry Wickham Steed. Map and bibliography. 129 pp. George Allen and Unwin. London. 1917.

Beneš, Vojta. A Memorial (appeal) to the International. Pp. 3-8. Signed: Bohemian Section of the Socialist Party in America. In Russian, French, English, German, Bohemian. Chicago. 1917.

Brown, Charles L. Our Fellow Citizens—The Bohemians and Slovaks. 8 pp. Address delivered at Philadelphia, Apr. 14, 1917.

Čapek, Thomas. Austria-Hungary and the Slavonians. 22 pp. Written in commemoration of the Mass Meeting of citizens of Slavic origin, held at Carnegie Hall, New York City, December 14, 1912, for the purpose of protesting against Austria-Hungary’s unjustified interference with the Balkan Slavs.

—— Bohemia Under Hapsburg Misrule. A Study of the Ideals and Aspirations of the Bohemian and Slovak Peoples, as they relate to and are affected by the great European War. Articles by, Thomas Čapek: Have the Bohemians a Place in the Sun? and, The Slovaks of Hungary. Bohumil Šimek: Why Bohemia Deserves Freedom. H. A. Miller: The Bohemian Character. Will S. Monroe: Place of Bohemia in the Creative Arts. Leo Wiener: The Bohemians and the Slavic Regeneration. Emily G. Balch: The Bohemians as Immigrants. Edited by ——. 8º. 187 pp. Fleming H. Revell Company. New York. 1915.

Chéradame, André. The Pangerman Plot Unmasked. Berlin’s Formidable Peace-Trap of the Drawn War. With an introduction by the Earl of Cromer. Maps. 235 pp. Charles Scribner’s Sons. New York. 1917.

Curtin, D. Thomas. The Land of Deepening Shadow; Germany-at-war. 8º. 337 pp. Police Rule in Bohemia, pp. 194-201. George H. Doran Company. New York. 1917.

Czech Hatred of Austria Grows. Reprint of an article in the New York Sun. 4 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. New York. 1917.

Gayda, Virginio. Modern Austria; her racial and social problems. Czechs, pp. 66-89. Dodd, Mead and Company. New York. 1915.

Headlam, J. W. The Dead Lands of Europe. 31 pp. Bohemia, pp. 13-18. George H. Doran Company. New York.

The Independence of the Czecho-Slovak Nation. Quotations from Wilson, Viviani, Balfour, Palacký, Masaryk, Seton-Watson and others. 20 pp. Printed for the Czecho-Slovak Arts Club of New York City. Feb. 26, 1918.

Kelly, R. J. Bohemia and the Czechs. 12 pp. Illustrated. Dublin. 1915.

Kratochvil, Slavomír, editor. The Voice of Freedom (Revoluční Výzva.) English issue of the Czech-Slovak monthly. Pp. 153-92. New York. Oct., 1916.

Lowell, A. Lawrence. Governments and Parties in Continental Europe. 2 vs. Bohemia, chap 8. Houghton Mifflin Company. New York. 1896.

Mamatey, Albert. The Situation in Austria-Hungary. 16 pp. Reprint of an article published in the Journal of Race Development. Worcester. Oct., 1915.

Marchant, Francis P. Bohemia: Her Story and her Claims. 15 pp. Czech National Alliance in Great Britain. London. 1917. Reprint of an article in the Asiatic Review. London. 22:147-62. Aug., 1916.

Masaryk, Thomas G. The Problem of Small Nations in the European Crisis. Inaugural Lecture at the University of London, King’s College. 32 pp. Council for the Study of International Relations. London. 1916. Condensed in Times Current History Magazine. New York. Dec., 1915.

—— The Slavs among the Nations. Reprint of an article from La Nation Tchèque. Paris. May 15, 1916. Lecture delivered by —— Feb. 22, 1916, before the Institute of Slav Studies in Paris. 38 pp. Czech National Alliance in Great Britain. Printed by J. Truscott & Son. London. 1916.

—— Declaration of the Bohemian (Czech) Foreign Committee. Comments of London papers. 14 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1915.

Memorandum submitted by the Bohemian (Czech) Presbyterians to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. at Dallas, Texas. 4 pp. May 17-25, 1917.

Namier, Lewis B. The Czecho-Slovaks, an Oppressed Nationality. 24 pp. Hodder and Stoughton. London. 1917.

—— The Case of Bohemia. 10 pp. Czech National Alliance in Great Britain. London. 1917. Reprint from The New Statesman. London. Dec., 1916.

Pergler, Charles. Bohemia’s Claim to Independence. An address delivered before the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives of the United States, February 25, 1916. 12 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1916.

—— Bohemian (Czech) Hopes and Aspirations. A lecture delivered before the State University of Minnesota, March 28, 1916. 19 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1916.

—— An Open Letter to Miss Jane Addams and Other American Advocates of Peace. 2 pp. Signed: Bohemian National Alliance in America. 1916.

—— The Bohemians (Czechs) in the Present Crisis. An address delivered on the 28th day of May, 1916, in Chicago, at a meeting held to commemorate the deeds of Bohemian volunteers in the Great War. 23 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1916.

—— The Heart of Europe. An address delivered in Washington, December 11, 1916, at a Conference of oppressed or dependent nationalities. With a foreword by Alois F. Kovářík. 39 pp. Bohemian (Czech) National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1917.

—— The Bohemian Question. 6 pp. Reprint from Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. Philadelphia. 1917.

—— Should Austria-Hungary Continue to Exist? 14 pp. Reprint from The Yale Review. New Haven. 7:308-21. Jan., 1918. Yale Publishing Association. New Haven.

Prochazka, J. Bohemia’s Claim for Freedom. Edited by ——. Introduction by G. K. Chesterton. Illustrated. Map. 12º. 66 pp. Chatto & Windus. London. 1915.

Recht, Charles. Bohemia and her Position in the War. 14 pp. Map. 24º. Czech Relief Association. New York. 1915.

Schierbrand, Wolf von. Austria-Hungary: The Polyglot Empire. Map. 8º. 352 pp. Frederick A. Stokes. New York. 1917.

Seton-Watson, Robert William (pseud. Scotus Viator). The Future of Austria-Hungary and the Attitude of the Great Powers. 8º. 77 pp. Archibald Constable & Co. London. 1907.

—— German, Slav and Magyar. A Study in the Origins of the Great War. 198 pp. Maps. Williams and Norgate. London. 1916.

Smetanka, J. F. The Position of the Bohemians (Czechs) in the European War. 40 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1916.

Steed, Henry Wickham. A Programme for Peace. Reprint from the Edinburgh Review. London. 24 pp. Bohemian National Alliance in America. New York. 1916.

Toynbee, Arnold J. Nationality and the War. With many colored maps. Tchech (Czech) and German in the New Austria, pp. 261-72. J. M. Dent & Son. London. 1915.

The Voice of an Oppressed People. 48 pp. Two maps. Articles by T. G. Masaryk and Jaroslav F. Smetanka. Bohemian National Alliance in America. Chicago. 1917.