Young India (October 1919)
The October 1919 issue of Young India (Vol. 2, No. 10), subtitled the "The Aftermath Of The Punjab Tragedy," contains writing by Lajpat Rai, Sarojini Naidu, D.S. Rao, and H.M. Hyndman, as well as several news items and editorials.
Young India (November 1919)
The November 1919 issue of Young India (Vol. 2, No. 11), subtitled the "Burdens of Civilization," contains writing by Lajpat Rai and several news reports. A handwritten note on the cover reads, "Friends of Irish Freedom, Bhagwan Singh, Lajpat Rai, Hardiker."
Young India (December 1920)
The December 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 12), entitled the "Tagore Number," contains writing by S.K. Ratcliffe, J.T. Sunderland, on Rabindranath Tagore, as well as several poems and writing by Tagore.
Young India Pamphlet
Pamphlet advertising Young India. The pamphlet contains testimonies from several Congressman and editors, including Oswald Garrison Villard, Francis Hackett, John Hayne Holmes, among others.
Young India (January 1919)
The January 1919 issue of Young India (Vol. 2, No. 1) contains writing by Lajpat Rai, N.S. Hardiker, Mrinalini Sen, and Ananda Coomaraswamy, book reviews, and several news items. The issue also reports on the League of Small and Subject Nationalities session, held on December 14-15, 1918.
Letter from Clara B. Spence to Dr. Marshall
Letter dated November 16, 1905 by Clara B. Spence, addressed to Dr. Marshall at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, requesting Dr. Marshall to accept an enclosed check to pay an outstanding debt and add credit to the account of Chumpa Sunthanker, one of the first women from India to earn her degree in medicine in the United States.
India's Freedom in American Courts
Published by the Friends of Freedom for India, "India's Freedom in American Courts" was a pamphlet that described court cases in which Indian anti-imperialists and other allies in the U.S. were put on trial for violating "neutrality laws," and threatened with deportation. The case involved Ghadar activists Sailendranath Ghose, Taraknath Das, Bhagwan Singh, as well as Agnes Smedley, Mr. and Mrs.