APA Citation

My friend, a. p. (1757). Poison detected: Or frightful truths; and alarming to the British metropolis. In a treatise on bread; and the abuses practised in making that food, as occasioning the decrease and degeneracy of the people; destroying infants; and producing innumerable diseases. Shewing also, The virtues of Good Bread, and the manner of making it. To which is added, a Charge to the confederacy of bakers, corn-dealers, farmers, and millers; concerning short weight, adulterations, and artificial scarcities; with easy methods to prevent all such abuses. By my friend, a physician. London: printed for Mess. Dodsley, in Pall-Mall; Osborne, in Gray's-Inn; Corbet, in Fleet-Street; Griffith, in Pater-Noster-Row; and James, at the Royal Exchange.

Chicago Style Citation

My friend, a physician. Poison Detected: Or Frightful Truths; and Alarming to the British Metropolis. In a Treatise On Bread; and the Abuses Practised in Making That Food, As Occasioning the Decrease and Degeneracy of the People; Destroying Infants; and Producing Innumerable Diseases. Shewing Also, The Virtues of Good Bread, and the Manner of Making It. To Which Is Added, a Charge to the Confederacy of Bakers, Corn-dealers, Farmers, and Millers; Concerning Short Weight, Adulterations, and Artificial Scarcities; With Easy Methods to Prevent All Such Abuses. By My Friend, a Physician. London: printed for Mess. Dodsley, in Pall-Mall; Osborne, in Gray's-Inn; Corbet, in Fleet-Street; Griffith, in Pater-Noster-Row; and James, at the Royal Exchange, 1757.

MLA Citation

My friend, a physician. Poison Detected: Or Frightful Truths; and Alarming to the British Metropolis. In a Treatise On Bread; and the Abuses Practised in Making That Food, As Occasioning the Decrease and Degeneracy of the People; Destroying Infants; and Producing Innumerable Diseases. Shewing Also, The Virtues of Good Bread, and the Manner of Making It. To Which Is Added, a Charge to the Confederacy of Bakers, Corn-dealers, Farmers, and Millers; Concerning Short Weight, Adulterations, and Artificial Scarcities; With Easy Methods to Prevent All Such Abuses. By My Friend, a Physician. London: printed for Mess. Dodsley, in Pall-Mall; Osborne, in Gray's-Inn; Corbet, in Fleet-Street; Griffith, in Pater-Noster-Row; and James, at the Royal Exchange, 1757.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.