BOOKS BY HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS 



THE STORY OF NINETEENTH CENTURY 

 SCIENCE. Harper & Bros., 1900. 

 " He must have a dull mind indeed who can read 

 this book without fascination." Christian Register. 

 THE HISTORY OF THE ART OF WRIT- 

 ING. (Four massive portfolios with 200 fac- 

 similes in tone and color). 



" One of the most superb examples of book- 

 making in America since Audubon's masterpiece." 

 Rupert Hughes in the Marconigram. 

 THE HISTORIANS' HISTORY OF THE 

 WORLD : A Comprehensive Narrative of the 

 Rise and Development of Nations. (25 vols. 

 with about 3,000 illustrations.) Edited with the 

 collaboration of many specialists, European and 

 American. 



" A work of epoch-making importance compar- 

 able in scholarship and authority to La Grande 

 Encyclopedic, the Dictionary of National Biography, 

 the New English Dictionary, and the Encyclopaedia 

 Britannica" The Times, London. 

 A HISTORY OF SCIENCE. (5 vols., fully illus- 

 trated.) Harper & Bros., 1904. 

 " At once a source of information and an inspira- 

 tion." Prof. Louis G. Nolte. 



ALCOHOL: How it Affects the Individual, the 

 Community, and the Race. The Century Co., 

 1909. 



" By your clear and dispassionate presentation 

 of this subject you have earned the respect and 

 gratitude of a generation, and have done the good 

 of an average life time." Letter to the Author. 

 EVERY-DAY SCIENCE: A Record of the Evo- 

 lution of Ideas, the Development of Ideals, and 

 the Application of Organized Knowledge to the 

 Needs of Practical Life. Profusely illustrated. 

 The Goodhue Co., 1909. 



For illustrated booklet describing the last named work 

 write The Goodhue Co., 36 E. 23rd St., N. Y. 



