- Prescriptions1
- Price and dose labels of drugs and preparations generally kept in a retail pharmacy: including, besides those officinal in the last revision of United States Pharmacopoeia, many other new and rare drugs and chemicals, with the Latin, French and German synonyms1
- Regimen sanitatis Salernitanum =: Code of health of the School of Salernum1
- Robb & Co.'s family physician: a work on domestic medicines, designed to show how to have health, which is equivalent to time and money1
- Salus Populi Suprema Lex: Source of the Southwark Water Works1
- Selections from the scientific correspondence of Cadwallader Colden with Gronovius, Linnaeus, Collinson, and other naturalists1
- Sepia officinalis: Cuttle fish1
- Student's notebook1
- Sus scrofa =: The hog1
- Tabaco or Henbane of Peru: Tabaco of Trinidada1
- Tegeneria medicinalis: Spider, house-spider1
- The Aphorisms of Hippocrates: from the Latin version of Verhoofd : with a literal translation on the opposite page, and explanatory notes1
- The Aphorisms of Hippocrates: from the Latin version of Verhoofd, with a literal translation on the opposite page, and explanatory notes1
- The anatomy of melancholy: what it is, with all the kinds causes, symptomes, prognostickes, & severall cures of it : in three partitions, with their severall sections, members & subsections, philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened & cut up1
- The carrion crow =: Vultur Gallinae Africanae facie1
- The druggist's manual: being a price current of drugs, medicines, paints, dye-stuffs, glass, patent medicines, &c. : with Latin and English synonyms, a German, French, and Spanish catalogue of drugs, tables of specific gravities, &c. &c., and a variety of useful matter1
- The medical works of Edward Miller, M.D: late professor of the practice of physic in the University of New-York, and resident physician for the city of New-York1
- The nervous and vascular connection between the mother and foetus in utero1
- The pharmacopoeia of the United States of America: 18201
- The sentiments of the professors of physick, in the foreign universities: concerning the operations and method of curing the diseases incident to the eye, as practised by John Taylor, doctor of physick, surgeon, oculist to his Majesty, and Fellow of several Colleges of Physicians in foreign parts1