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Titles
- Testimonials, submitted to the consideration of the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania1
- The American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy: together with the natural, chemical, pharmaceutical and medical history of the different substances employed in medicine; illustrated and explained, according to the principles of modern chemistry : the arrangement simplified, and the whole adapted to the practice of medicine and pharmacy in the United States : with several copperplates, exhibiting the new system of chemical characters, and representing the most useful apparatus1
- The American domestick medicine, or, Medical admonisher: containing some account of anatomy, the senses, diseases, casualties ; a dispensatory, and glossary ; in which the observations, and remedies, are adapted to the diseases, &c. of the United States ; designed for the use of families1
- The Aphorisms of Hippocrates: from the Latin version of Verhoofd, with a literal translation on the opposite page, and explanatory notes1
- The Edinburgh new dispensatory: containing I. The elements of pharmaceutical chemistry. II. The materia medica, or the natural pharmacuetical and medical history, of the substances employed in medicine. III. The pharmaceutical preparations and compositions : including translations of the Edinburgh pharmacopoeia, published in 1805, of the Dublin pharmacopoeia, in 1807, and of the London pharmacopoeia, in 1815 ; illustrated and explained in the language, and according to the principles of modern chemistry ; with numerous tables and plates of pharmaceutical apparatus1
- The London dissector, or, System of dissection, practised in the hospitals and lecture rooms of the metropolis: explained by the clearest rules, for the use of students : comprising a description of the muscles, vessels, nerves, and viscera, of the human body, as they appear on dissection : with directions for their demonstration1
- The charter and by-laws of the New-York Dispensary: instituted, 17901
- The charter and bye-Laws of the Vermont Medical Society: also a sketch of the proceedings of the Society ; together with a list of officers for the present year1
- The family adviser; or, A plain and modern practice of physic: calculated for the use of families who have not the advantages of a physician, and accommodated to the diseases of America1
- The following papers, stated to have been mislaid, having been returned, on the 13th of August, by the Rev. Dr. Wilson, in whose possession they were, they are now printed in confirmation of Dr. Cooper's claims as a physician1
- The house surgeon and physician: designed to assist heads of families, travellers, and sea-faring people, in discerning, distinguishing, and curing diseases : with concise directions for the preparation and use of a numerous collection of the best American remedies : together with many of the most approved, from the shop of the apothecary : all in plain English1
- The ladies medical companion: containing, in a series of letters, an account of the latest improvements and most successful means of preserving their beauty and health ; of relieving the diseases peculiar to the sex, and an explanation of the offices they should perform to each other at births ; with engraved figures explanatory ; also, the best means of nursing, preventing and curing the diseases of children1
- The life of that wonderful and extraordinarily heavy man, Daniel Lambert: from his birth to the moment of his dissolution ; with an account of men noted for their corpulency, and other interesting matter1
- The maternal physician: a treatise on the nurture and management of infants, from the birth until two years old : being the result of sixteen years' experience in the nursery : illustrated by extracts from the most approved medical authors1
- The nurse's guide, and family assistant: containing friendly cautions to those who are in health : with ample directions to nurses and others, who attend the sick, women in child-bed, &c1
- The philosophical monitor: being an investigation of the causes, which diminish the moral and physical perfection of human society : in which many hereditary popular customs, generally supposed innocent, are shown to be productive of indigence, disease, and premature termination of life1
- The practical horse farrier, or, The traveller's pocket companion: shewing the best method to preserve the horse in health, and, likewise, the cure of the most prominent diseases to which this noble animal is subject, in the United States of America : the whole being the result of nearly forty years' experience, with an extensive practice1
- To the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania1
- To the members of the Magdalen Society1
- Tribute to the memory of the late Caspar Wistar, M.D: professor of anatomy, &c. in the University of Pennsylvania, president of the American Philosophical Society for the Promotion of Useful Knowledge, &c1