The Czechoslovak Review/Volume 2/Number 11-12

The
Czechoslovak Review
Official Organ of the Czechoslovak Board of America
PUBLISHED MONTHLY
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
“No lapse of time, no defeat of hopes, seems sufficient to reconcile the Czechs of Bohemia to incorporation with Austria.”
Entered as second class matter April 30, 1917, at the Post Office of Chicago, Ill., under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
List of all articles in the issue (not listed in original)
- Wanted: A Russian Policy
- Bloodless Revolution in Bohemia
- Uhro-Rusins Join Czechoslovaks
- Czech Women Real Patriots by Olga Masaryk
- The All-Slavs Hymn, “Hej Slovane”, transl. by Francis P. Marchant
- Sonnet to Czechoslovak Independence Day by Theodore L. Clemens
- Slovakia Rises by Joža Žák–Marusiak
- Story of a Czechoslovak Private by Demitry Chaloupka
- Current Topics
- The Declaration of Geneva
- President Masaryk started for Bohemia
- With the Czechoslovak organization in America
- Czechoslovak day in Camp Meade
- The new republic on Masaryk
- Slovaks of America send message to Slovakia
- To our readers!
- An arraignment of Magyar oligarchy
- American Commanding General one of our readers by Alleyne C. Howell
- Of all the Slav races, that of the Czechoslovaks is...

Czechoslovak Review
Official organ of the Czechoslovak Board of America.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE BOHEMIAN REVIEW CO
2324 South Central Park Ave., Chicago, Ill.
SUBSCRIPTION, ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR
Jaroslav F. Smetanka, Editor
Entered as second class matter April 30th, 1917 at the Post Office
of Chicago, Ill. under act of Congress of March 3rd, 1879.
Czechoslovak Organizations in America:
American-Czechoslovak Board
Prof. Bohumil Šimek, President
Vojta Beneš, Secretary,
3734 W. 26th St., Chicago
Bohemian (Czech) National Alliance
Dr. Joseph P. Pecival, Acting President
Vojta Beneš, Secretary,
3734 W. 26th St., Chicago
National Alliance of Bohemian Catholics
Rev. Father Innocent Kestl, President
Frank Šindelar, Ex. Secretary,
3207 W. 22nd St., Chicago
Slovak League of America
Albert Mamatey, President
Jan Janček, Jr., Secretary,
524 Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1931.
This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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