The Disobedient son, and cruel husband. : Being a full and true account of one Mr. John James, a gentleman's son in Wiltshire, whose father left him an estate of twenty hundred pounds a year, and married a lady of great fortune in the same place; but being reduced to poverty and want with riotous living, he killed his wife and children, and afterwards hanged his mother on a tree in the orchard, with the last dying words of this wretch, who was hanged before his mother's door. : To which are added, The wild rover and The humours of whiskey.
MLA
The Disobedient son, and cruel husband. : Being a full and true account of one Mr. John James, a gentleman's son in Wiltshire, whose father left him an estate of twenty hundred pounds a year, and married a lady of great fortune in the same place; but being reduced to poverty and want with riotous living, he killed his wife and children, and afterwards hanged his mother on a tree in the orchard, with the last dying words of this wretch, who was hanged before his mother's door. : To which are added, The wild rover and The humours of whiskey. Dublin [that is, Philadelphia?]: : Printed by W. Jones ..., January, 1796.
APA
(1796). The Disobedient son, and cruel husband. : Being a full and true account of one Mr. John James, a gentleman's son in Wiltshire, whose father left him an estate of twenty hundred pounds a year, and married a lady of great fortune in the same place; but being reduced to poverty and want with riotous living, he killed his wife and children, and afterwards hanged his mother on a tree in the orchard, with the last dying words of this wretch, who was hanged before his mother's door. : To which are added, The wild rover and The humours of whiskey. Dublin [that is, Philadelphia?]: : Printed by W. Jones ....
Chicago
The Disobedient son, and cruel husband. : Being a full and true account of one Mr. John James, a gentleman's son in Wiltshire, whose father left him an estate of twenty hundred pounds a year, and married a lady of great fortune in the same place; but being reduced to poverty and want with riotous living, he killed his wife and children, and afterwards hanged his mother on a tree in the orchard, with the last dying words of this wretch, who was hanged before his mother's door. : To which are added, The wild rover and The humours of whiskey. Dublin [that is, Philadelphia?]: : Printed by W. Jones ..., January, 1796.