The Non-Violent Army of Satyagraha
Essay by Haridas Mazumdar on Satyagraha, non-violence, and resistance to conscription. Mazumdar writes, "100,000 young men between the ages of 21 and 35 can bring about a profound non-violent revolution in the United States of America and, indeed, in the whole world."
Basic Facts about India
Pamphlet printed by the India League of America titled "Basic Facts About India." Contributors are listed as Anup Singh, H.W. Boulter, and Hemendra K. Rakhit, members of the Research Bureau of the India League. The pamphlet also includes a list of all the other pamphlets published by the India League of America.
Self-Determination for India
Booklet titled Self-Determination for India, published by the India Home Rule League of America. The booklet includes several political cartoons by Herbert Cole, dated 1918, and a long essay on the cause of Indian self-determination.
Forty Thousand Followers of Gandhi in Prison
Booklet published by the India Information Bureau of America titled Forty Thousand Followers of Gandhi in Prison. Issue includes a membership form.
India's Revolution: Its Challenge and Meaning
Booklet titled India's Revolution: Its Challenge and Meaning by Lillian Symes, published by the U.S. Socialist Party. The booklet contains an advertisement for The Call, the official weekly newspaper for the Socialist Party.
Telegram from U.S. Attorney in NYC to U.S. Attorney in San Francisco
Telegram from US Attorney Francis Gordon Caffey in New York to US Attorney John W. Preston in San Francisco. This telegram is associated with the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.