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Titles
- Bacchus: an essay on the nature, causes, effects, and cure of intemperance1
- Baisō gundan1
- Ballston Springs1
- Banning's common sense on chronic diseases: a rational treatise, condensed from his course of popular lectures on the use and diseases of the lungs and heart, curved, weak, and diseased spine, dyspepsia and other affections of the stomach and liver and digestive organs, diseases of women and of the visceral organs generally, with their sympathetic influences1
- Barn-yard rhymes: showing what opinions the turkey, the cock, the goose, and the duck entertain of allopathia, homopathia, electro-galvanism, and the animalcule doctrines1
- Bathing and the bath: simple and medicated : its history, effect and mode of application, with a particular description of the patent "toilet bath"1
- Beauties of flora, and outlines of botany: with a language of flowers : a perennial offering1
- Beck on the statistics of the deaf and dumb1
- Bewährte patentirte und Haus-Arzeneyen: berühmt für die Heilung der mehrsten Krankheiten, denen der menschliche Leib unterworfen ist1
- Biographical notice of (the late) James Gardette, surgeon dentist, of Philadelphia: written at the invitation of Dr. C.A. Harris, for a "dental dictionary" he is about to publish1
- Biographical notice of the late George McClellan, M.D1
- Biographical notice of the late J. Greely Stevenson, M.D1
- Biographical notice of the late John Ruan, M. D: read (by appointment) before the College of Physicians of Philadelphia1
- Biographical notices of physicians in Kingston, N.H1
- Biographical sketch of Dr. Boylston1
- Board of Aldermen, August 1, 1836: the following communication was received from the Water Commissioners1
- Board of Aldermen, December 19, 1836: report of the Committee on Laws, &c. on the communication and draft of a law from the Water Commissioners with amendments1
- Board of Aldermen, February 15th, 1836: the following communication was received from his Honor the Mayor, enclosing a communication from Stephen Allen, Esq., Chairman of the Water Commissioners, and from D.B. Douglass, Esq., Chief Engineer, N.Y. Aqueduct, in relation to the practicability and probable expense of forcing by steam engines a sufficient quantity of water from the North or East River to a reservoir to be erected on Murray Hill, in aid of the present means for extinguishing fires, which was referred to the Committee on Fire and Water1
- Board of Aldermen, February 16, 1835: the following report was received from the Commissioners appointed, pursuant to a law passed by the legislature, on the 2d of May 1834, in relation to supplying the City of New-York with pure and wholesome water, which was referred to the Committee on Fire and Water1
- Board of Aldermen, February 27, 1837: report of the select committee, to whom was referred so much of the message of his Honor the Mayor, as relates to furnishing a supply of water for the extinguishing of fires, and laying additional pipes1