« Previous
Next »
Titles
- Ten letters to Dr. Joseph Priestly, in answer to his Letters to the inhabitants of Northumberland1
- The act of incorporation and laws of the Philadelphia Medical Society1
- The anatomist's vade-mecum: containing the anatomy and physiology of the human body1
- The beauties of the healing art by the celebrated Col. John Wabash: containing numerous medical receipts, which have oft times been the means of saving many lives, cures chiefly performed from the virtues of the vegetable creation1
- The decimal system of writing prescriptions1
- The eye and its diseases1
- The family physician1
- The family remedy, or, Perkins's patent metallic tractors: for the relief of topical diseases of the human body, and of horses1
- The hospital pupil's guide through London, in a seres [sic] of letters: from a pupil at St. Thomas's Hospital to his friend in the country ; recommending the best manner of a pupils employing his time, and interspersed with amusing anecdotes relative to the history and oeconomy of hospital's1
- The midwives monitor, and mothers mirror: being three concluding lectures of a course of instruction on midwifery ; containing directions for pregnant women ; rules for the management of natural births, and for early discovering when the aid of a physician is necessary ; and cautions for nurses, respecting both the mother and child ; to which is prefixed, a syllabus of lectures on that subject1
- The nurse, a poem1
- The physical or immediate cause of the death of Christ1
- The proper definition of the word cure, as applied to medicine1
- The prudent housewife, or Compleat English cook: being a collection of the newest and least expensive receipes in cookery ... ; and new and infallible rules to be observed in pickling, preserving, brewing, &c ; to which are added, a treasure of valuable medicines, for the cure of every disorder1
- The word of the Lord, concerning sickness1
- Theory and practice of the movement cure1
- Therapeutics, or the art of healing1