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 WRITING. (Four massive 

 portfolios with 200 fac-similes in tone and color.) Merrill & 

 Baker, 1902-1903. 



"One of the most superb examples of book-making in America 

 since Audubon's masterpiece." Rupert Hughes in the Marconi- 

 gram. 



THE HISTORIANS' HISTORY OF THE WORLD: A Compre- 

 hensive Narrative of the Rise and Development of Nations. (25 

 vols. with about 3,000 illustrations.) Edited with the collab- 

 oration of many specialists, European and American. The Out- 

 look Company, 1904-1905. 



"A work of epoch-making importance comparable in scholar- 

 ship and authority to La Grand Encyclopedic, the Dictionary of 

 National Biography, the New English Dictionary, and the En- 

 cyclopaedia Britannica." The Times, London. 



A HISTORY OF SCIENCE. (5 vols., fully illustrated.) Harper 

 & Bros., 1904. 



"At once a source of information and an inspiration." Prof. 

 Louis G. Nolle. 



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 lifetime." Letter to the Author. 



RACE CONQUEST; OR THE LESSON OF HEREDITY: A 

 Study in Eugenics. The Goodhue Co. In press. Based on a 

 series of lectures delivered at the Hartford School of Sociology. 

 "I am glad to learn that Dr. Williams' highly important theories 

 of racial development are at last to be given to the world in 

 permanent form." J. M. Keyes, M.D. 



THE SCIENCE OF HAPPINESS : An Optimistic Study of the 

 Art of Living. Harper & Brothers, 1910. 



"Better than medicine for patients of a certain class." Dr. 

 Walter M. Seward. 



EVERY-DAY SCIENCE: A Record of the Evolution of Ideas, 

 the Development of Ideals, and the Application of Organized 

 Knowledge to the Needs of Practical Life, u vols., profusely 

 illustrated. The Goodhue Co., 1910. 



"I have examined advance sheets of Dr. Williams' new book 

 with great interest. There is certainly no work closely com- 

 parable to it in any language with which I am familiar. It will 

 surely have enormous influence for the advancement of scientific 

 education and of general culture." -Geo. H. Casamafor, C.E. 



