ABBREVIATED CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF THE 



MORE IMPORTANT SCIENTIFIC AND HISTORICAL 



WRITINGS OF HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS 



Field Notes of a Naturalist (with over two hundred original draw- 

 ings), 1877-1880; Nesting Habits of the Ruffed Grouse, 1881; Prairie 

 Life and Prairie Seasons, 1881; A Plea for the Better Observance 

 of Medical Ethics, 1884; Modern Philosophy, 1885; Idealism, 1886; 

 Check List of Iowa Birds, 1887; On a Case of Shock, with Observations 

 in the Vaso-Motor System, 1889; The Encephalic Circulation and Its 

 Relation to the Mind, 1889; The Treatment of Haematoma Auris, 

 1889; Some Psycho-Somatic Base Lines, 1890; Molecular Dynamics of 

 the Encephalon, 1890; The Dream State and its Psychic Correlatives, 

 1891; A Modern Form of Insanity, 1892; General Paresis, 1892; The 

 Philosophy of Bird Life (2 vols.), 1892; The Prairie Hen and Its 

 Enemies (illustrations by the Author), 1892; A Modern Angelo, 1892; 

 The Lesson of Heredity, 1892; Can the Criminal be Reclaimed? 1893; 

 Shall We Look Forward or Backward in Dealing with the Criminal? 1894; 

 The New World of the Microscope, 1895; A New Form of Radiation 

 (Roentgen Rays), 1896; Science at the Close of the Eighteenth Cen- 

 tury, 1897; The Progress of Chemistry in the Nineteenth Century, 1898; 

 The Progress of Physiology in the Nineteenth Century, 1898; The Prog- 

 ress of Medicine in the Nineteenth Century, 1899; The Story of Nine- 

 teenth-Century Science, 1900; The Literature of Science, 1901; The 

 Marine Biological Laboratory at Naples, 1901; Ernst Haeckel and the 

 New Zoology, 1902; Low-Temperature Researches, 1902; The History 

 of the Art of Writing (4 vols.), 1903; The Royal Society, 1903; The 

 Influence of Modern Archaeological Research on the Scope of World 

 History, 1903; The Historians' History of the World (25 vols., edited 

 with the cooperation of many specialists), 1900-1905; Prehistoric 

 Science, 1904; Galileo and the New Physics, 1904; A History of Science 

 (5 vols.), 1904; The Conquest of Nature, 1905; The Conquest of Time 

 and Space, 1905; Tribute from the Vegetable World, 1906; Tribute 

 from the Animal World, 1906; The Science of Happiness, 1907; Alcohol 

 and the Individual, 1908; Alcohol and the Community, 1909; The 

 Scientific Solution of the Alcohol Problem, 1909; Every-Day Science: 

 The story of man's application of organized knowledge to the needs of 

 practical life (n vols.), 1909; How the Body Fights Disease, 1910; 

 Civilization (article in "Encyclopaedia Britannica"), 1910; The Wonder- 

 Working Electron, 191 1 ; To- Day's Science in Europe, 191 1 ; The Wonders 

 of Science in Modern Life (10 vols.), 1912; Miracles of Science, 1913; 

 Metchnikoff and the Search for the Philosopher's Stone, 1913; Mastering 

 the Microbe, 1913; Adding Years to Your Life, 1914; The Life and Work 

 of Luther Burbank (12 vols.), 1914; Painless Childbirth, 1914; The 

 Mechanism of Immunization, 1914; Better Brains for the Race, 1914; 

 Race Breeding, 1914; Mental Obliquities, 1914; The Protein Treatment 

 of Cancer in the Light of the Proteomorphic Theory, 1915; Detective 

 Work in the Blood Stream, 1915; Modern Warfare, 1915; The Proteal 

 Treatment of Cancer: A New Therapeutic Method as Interpreted in the 

 Light of the Proteomorphic Theory, 1916; Medicine as a Machine 

 Process, 1916; The Proteal Treatment of Rheumatism, 1917; Science 

 and Progress, 1917; Why Die Before Your Time? 1917; The Proteomor- 

 phic Theory and the New Medicine, 1918. 



