Pages 318-319 of Practical Points in Nursing for Nurses in Private Practice (1896) which holds recipes for gruel and beef broth/stocks to feed to the sick or invalid.
Page 441 of Gunn's Domestic Medicine (1839) where Gunn describes the popularization of Seneca snakeroot by a doctor who learned it from the Seneca indigenous people.
A scan of two pages which depict the Seneca snakeroot, polygala senega, as shown in the second volume of Jacob Bigelow's American Medical Botany (1818).
Engraving. Scene of a man with his arm in a cast sitting down, being tended to by a standing woman who holds a flask and is raising a glass up to the man's face.
Ex Libris which depicts a man holding a flask with a book, hourglass, and skull on the table. Alchemy symbols are on the arc above him and an owl rests on top of the scene. Grapes, foxglove, and poppy are incorporated into the border.