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.