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Titles
- The Croonian lecture: on the adjustment of the eye to see objects at different distances1
- The adventures of Mrs. Tend----: being an impartial answer to a letter to her friend : in which are exhibited some remarks worthy the attention of the curious, her conduct with that of Tend----'s fairly laid open, the injured characters vindicated, and submitted to the public : also letters which passed between them, with some moral reflections1
- The case of John Ames Andrews, of Shooter's Green, Abbot's Ripton, in the county of Huntingdon: to which are added some observations on the unfortunate case of Robert Bond of Huntingdon1
- The cook's pocket-companion and complete family-guide: being a collection of the very best receipts1
- The cure of the miliary fever: to which is annex'd, advice to the apothecaries1
- The doctrine of inflammations founded upon reason and experience: and intirely cleared from the contradictory systems of Boerhaave, Van Swieten, and others1
- The family's best friend, or The whole art of cookery made plain and easy: together with a complete system of brewery ; the management of malt liquors ; the distillery of simple and compound waters, family cordials, &c ; and instructions for the cultivating of the fruit, flower, and kitchen garden ; the whole being calculated for the preservation of heath, and upon the principles of frugality ... ; the result of forty years practice and experience, together with great assistance in every branch ; embellished with cuts, for trussing fowls, game, &c ; to which is now added, Mons. Millien's famous discovery for preventing either steel, brass, or any other metal from taking rust or canker ; an infallible remedy to prevent persons from taking the small-pox, or any other epidemical disorder ; a certain cure for the bite of a mad dog ; and a variety of other choice nostrums of equal value1
- The following account of the progress made in rebuilding the College of Edinburgh is extracted from the Medical commentaries for the year 17901
- The fourteenth edition of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders, commonly called the king's evil: deduced from long observation and practice : with additions : and above sixty cases : the remedies in them used, and occasional remarks : to which is prefixed a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root : published for the good of mankind, particularly the common people1
- The inefficacy of all mercurial preparations in the cure of venereal and scorbutic disorders, proved from reason and experience: with a dissertation on Mr. de Velnos's vegetable syrup, which radically cures every species of the above disorders ; and an accurate analysis of that medicine ... ; to which are added, a refutation of Dr. Burrows's late scurrilous pamphlet1
- The modern cook: and frugal housewife's compleat guide to every branch in displaying her table to the greatest advantage1
- The modern family physician: being Dr Green's treasure of health, or, cabinet of cures unlock'd ; in which all his public medicines are made known ... ; to which is prefixed, a new treatise on the various diseases incident to children1
- The new dispensatory: the whole interspersed with practical cautions and observations1
- The progress of physic: a poem ; with notes and observations from antient authors1
- The statutes of the General Infirmary at Chester1
- The twelfth edition of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders, commonly called the king's evil: deduced from long observation and practice : with additions : and above sixty cases : (some never before publish'd) : the remedies in them used, and occasional remarks : to which is prefixed a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root : published for the good of mankind, particularly the common people1
- The virtues of common water, or, The advantages thereof, in preventing and curing many distempers: gathered from the writings of several eminent physicians, and also from more than forty years experience : to which is added some rules for preserving health by diet1
- The whole of Aristotle's compleat master-piece: in three parts : displaying the secrets of nature in the generation of man : regularly digested into chapters and sections, rendering it far more easy than any yet extant : to which is added A treasure of health, or, The family physician : being choice and approved remedies for all the several distempers incident to human bodies, and containing many new recipes, not inserted in any other edition of this book1
- The young surgeons dictionary; or, Pupil's instructor: wherein their terms are explained from the best Greek authors; and an introduction to anatomy, by inserting the definition of the structure of man. To which is prefixed, a catalogue of drugs, chemical and Galenical, in Latin and English: together with rules for chemical experiments, and a table of all the characters used in surgery and physic1
- Three remarkable and scarce trials1
