| The accomplish’d lady’s delight in preserving, physick, beautifying, and cookery           | 
                                                                                         [author not specified]           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The antivenereal apozem. A pleasant liquor, which in thirty days (without any other assistance) perfectly…           | 
                                                                                        Arthur Noy           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The disease of London: or A new discovery of the scorvey. Comprizing the nature, manifold…           | 
                                                                                        Gideon Harvey           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The excellency and nature of the true spirit of wormwood           | 
                                                                                         [author not specified]           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The history and mystery of the venereal lues, or, French disease, running of the reins…           | 
                                                                                        Everard Maynwaringe           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The potable balsome of life· Being a collection of the choicest preservatives that are extant…           | 
                                                                                         [author not specified]           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The practice of physick, reformed: wherein is described the nature and cause of most diseases…           | 
                                                                                        Jeremiah Love           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The practice of the most successful physitian Paul Barbette, doctour of physick. With the notes…           | 
                                                                                        Frederick Dekkers           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The Queens royal closet, newly opened. And the art of physick discovered. By that most…           | 
                                                                                        R. Boules           | 
                                                                                        1675           | 
              
          
                                                                                        | The universal scorbutick pills, and radical purifier of nature. Operating by purgation and urine, with…           | 
                                                                                        E. M.           | 
                                                                                        1675           |