209 résultats
18203738Berlin 1820. Soft cover. Very Good. Scarce and curious little book having to do with ressurection. 32 pp. Plain contemporary blue wraps. <br/><br/> paperback books
19052316New York: Marston Remedy Company 1905. Revised Edition. <br /><br />16mo 6 3/8 x 4 1/2 inches; 162 x 113 mm 32 pages in stapled wrappers soft cover. <br /><br />Pamphlet from a company offering "medicated" suppositories and contraptions that purportedly treat men's sexual nervous and urinary disorders. <br /><br />One "treatment" involves cocoa butter. "The suppository now glides into the rectum with the most perfect ease by means of a little pressure from the finger and which is often important this method of rectal treatment leaves no traces to excite the curiosity of servants or others." page 10. <br /><br />While most of the "treatments" involve suppositories of one kind or another the company also offers devices to relieve men's suffering illustrations helpfully included. There's "Dr. Curling's Varicocele Truss" which supposedly treats pain in the scrotum. This we're told is preferable to surgery. "Several surgeons have been assassinated by patients whom they have thus made hoplessly sic impotent." page 23. <br /><br />There's also Marston's Urethral Tapers pencil-like devices that "soothe heal and at the same time destroy all germ life. They medicate the entire canal never stain the clothing and are rapid in action." So convenient you can carry them in your pocket. page 27. <br /><br />Marston Remedy Company was a defendant in a number of court cases. "Marston Remedy Company was owned by H.D. Van Leuven of New York. The company's advertising methods proved so outrageously fraudulent -- even for the period -- that in September 1906 the Postmaster-General denied the company the use of the U.S. mails." An Annotated Catalogue of the Edward C. Atwater Collection of American Popular Medicine and Health Reform Vol. III Supplement A-Z page 479. <br /><br />OCLC shows a single institutional holding of this pamphlet at the University of Rochester home of the Atwater Collection the Atwater copy appears to have been published earlier than our copy. Yale has a copy under the same title but by a different publisher and with double the page count of our copy or the Atwater copy. <b>RARE</b>. <br /><br />CONDITION: Light soiling to wrappers and heavy toning to pages. Very Good overall. Marston Remedy Company paperback books
186147078Boston: Ticknor and Fields 1861. 1st Edition Cordasco 60-0955. INSCRIBED PRESENTATION copy to John A. Lowell Esq 'from the author'. Original brown publisher's cloth with gilt spine lettering & boards stamped in blind. Slight lean. Only light wear to binding. Bookplate. Small abrasion in center of front gutter. Withal a pleasing VG copy. xii 179 3 blank pp. 12mo. 7-1/2" x 4-5/8" <br/><br/>Jackson a prominent early 19th c. physician who was 'one of the first in America to investigate vaccination in a scientific spirit' and was '. largely responsible for founding Massachusetts General Hospital.' DAB. Lowell a prominent Boston businessman & philanthropist as well as the second trustee of the famous Lowell Institute. Ticknor and Fields hardcover books
174548528London: Printed for John and Paul Knapton in Ludgate Street 1745. 1st Edition. Disbound now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Half-title leaf with browning to lower right portion otherwise a solid VG copy. 8 47 1 publisher advert pp. Fold out diagram prior to B1. 8vo. 7-1/2" x 4-1/2" <br/><br/> Printed for John and Paul Knapton, in Ludgate Street unknown books
183548254Boston: J.Q. Adams 1835. New edition. 12mo 15cm. Original brown linen boards with printed paper spine label; 216pp. Binding unevenly sunned at spine and board edges; moderate foxing to contents. Ownership signature of Caleb Pratt / Charlestown to first flyleaf; later bookplate of Walter Merriam Pratt inside front cover. Early edition of this much-reprinted popularization of the theories of the autodidact herbalist and medical doctor Samuel Thomson. J.Q. Adams unknown books
022677Corry PA: Oregon Indian Medicine Co. Trade Card. 9 x 9 inch cardstock with gold red black and blue inked design advertising Oregon Indian Medicines with two moveable tabs which allow for a perpetual calendar. Card is moderately soiled and lightly creased. Verso has pencil writing likely from previous owner. Fully operational and functional calendar. Printed by the Herald Lithography Company of Erie PA. Card advertises various quack medicines including Worm Eradicator Catarrh Snuff Woman's Friend and the always vital Tape Worm Secret. Ka-ton-Ka was a patent medicine of the Oregon Indian Medicine Company manufactured of course in Pennsylvania. Despite the claims of being a secret formula for healing from an Indian Tribe in Oregon Ka-ton-Ka was composed of sugar aloes baking soda and alcohol. The advertisements claimed it was a cure for all blood diseases stomach and liver difficulties plus cured Dyspepsia; Biliousness; Syphilis; Scrofula; Salt Rheum; Erysipelas; Catarrh; Liver Complaint; Rheumatism; Enlargement of the Liver; and Diseases of the Kidneys! A really nifty artifact of the patent medicine craze in a large moveable trade card. . Oregon Indian Medicine Co. unknown books
16672Women in Science Medicine Original Gelatin silver print photograph of a Rustic pharmacological laboratory with female technician c. 1910. Three individuals pose amongst dozens of glass vials containing medical powders and remedies. 3.5 x 5 in. Original black and white photograph. Two figures wear white aprons or smocks indicating their important role in mixing and measuring different medicines. The first university Pharmacology department was established in 1847 and thus began the formalization of this field of scientific research as the 20th century witnessed a steady increase in the number of new drugs that would improve the human condition tremendously. Verso inscription in pencil and pen in European language. Very good condition. unknown books
16875Vaccines Women in Medicine Original silver gelatin print photograph of a Vaccination clinic in rural European village. 1922. size is 3.5 x 5.5 in. Outdoor vaccination clinic administered by women who are cleaning and preparing the equipment. Six figures stand around a table filled with glass vials test tubes and a makeshift hand-powered centrifuge seated woman holds straps which rotate mechanism. Two clean-cut men in dark overcoats stand among the women; they could be medical specialists from a nearby city overseeing the clinic. While women faced discrimination in pursuing formal medical training to become doctors they took part in many informal yet critically important roles in which they could support public health initiatives. Small loss to bottom left corner not affecting any figures. Very good condition. Exceptional early photograph of a rustic vaccination clinic. unknown books
16209Autograph letter signed from a male doctor E. C. Houston practicing out of Memphis TN to a woman doctor Lydia Bailey located in Philadelphia. 6 pages 7 ¾ x 5 in. Houston addresses the letter "Dear Doctor" and goes on to write about his interest in finding a wife who is "educated in the same profession" as himself. He writes that believes that he "could love her better" than one who didn't share his medical background. He goes on to list basic facts about himself and inquires about her background and physical qualities such as her "height weight and measurement around hips waist & chest". Very good condition with two worn horizontal fold lines in letter pages. Papers are separating at edges of fold lines sheets 2 and 3 have minor tape repairs. Light soiling from handling but overall clean and clear script. Includes original envelope Houston's calling card listing him as a medical doctor and a blank prescription sheet that lists his medical credentials. An interesting letter that demonstrates a unique social situation that educated professional women could face in the late 19th century. unknown books
1964M5849Rome: 1964-1966. 1964. 298 x 220 pp. Folio. 193 5; 180 4; 172 2 pp. Illus. Quarter gray cloth cloth corners patterned paper over boards blue cloth spine labels gilt spine. Ownership rubber stamps on titles. Fine. 1964-1966. hardcover books
1880WRCAM56371New Haven: Hoggson & Robinson Steam Job Printers 1880. Broadside 9 1/4 x 5 3/4 inches. Minor creasing and edge wear light soiling. Near fine. A rare broadside touting the healing powers of Dr. S.A. Tanner who promises to "give the locations and symptoms" to any disease "WITHOUT ASKING ANY QUESTIONS." Tanner asserts that he uses natural "Indian Vegetables composed of Roots Herbs Barks and Buds" and specifically states that they would heal "lameness hip and spinal diseases." He offers free consultations and house calls as well. Dr. Tanner claimed an office at Apothecaries Hall in New Haven a long-running pharmacy and office building for area physicians. Dr. Tanner's services have the ring of medical quackery one of the defining characteristics of which was the absolute talent to cure any disease with Native American medicines. New Haven was a locus for purveyors of such miraculous "Indian" remedies. Hoggson & Robinson, Steam Job Printers unknown books
1919M8116Washington D.C.:: Government Printing Office 1919. 1919. 267 x 190 mm. Tall 8vo. 446 pp. Color frontis. extensively illustrated with photographs of aviation equipment in use physical examinations of flight candidates and test equipment constructed to test the physiological effects of flight conditions tables 1 folding index. Gilt-stamped navy cloth; rubbed inner hinge cracked. Very good. Government Printing Office, 1919. hardcover books
1919M8115Washington D.C.:: Government Printing Office 1919. 1919. 267 x 190 mm. Tall 8vo. 446 pp. Color frontis. extensively illustrated tables 1 folding index. Gilt-stamped navy cloth; rubbed. Very good. This extensively illustrated manual for the medical personnel of the United States Air Service contains numerous figures and plates including photographs of aviation equipment in use physical examinations of flight candidates and test equipment constructed to test the physiological effects of flight conditions. Government Printing Office, 1919. hardcover books
177525679London : np 1775. First Edition. Disbound. Very Good. First Edition. 1-4 pp. 8vo. Extracted from a bound volume with offsetting on the last page indicating it was bound opposite the September 1770 issue title page of Gentleman's Magazine. Small marginal hole not affecting text. Disbound. Caption title from page one. English Short Title Catalog N12918. Blake J. NLM 18th cent.; p. 488 both copies at NLM are extracts. While well represented in digital form this title is only found at the National Library of Medicine from what we have been able to determine which guesses that the publication date is 1775. Our copy with the offsetting from a September 1770 title page may help in further scholarship on the date of publication. np unknown books
187060219Mobile AL: np 1870. 9 by 6 in. Approximately 450 words. Some loss of lettering along folds not affecting readability. The poem includes a line about not giving your children calomel and later talks in the text of it being injurous. Calomel had been widely used as a treatment both as a purgative and to kill bacteria. Recognition of its toxic effects led to its use being curtailed during and after the Civil War. <br/><br/> np unknown books
180924165Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by James Humphreys 1809. 1st edition thus American Imprints 17774; Austin 943. Period dark brown full sheep. Maroon gilt-lettered spine label. VG slight splay to boards/minor binding wear/period pos of 'Noah Stone'. 347 pp including index. 12mo in 6s. 7-1/8" x 4-1/4" <br/><br/> Printed and Sold by James Humphreys hardcover books
189063182Chicago IL: np 1890. Broadside 12 x 4 1/2 in. approximately 40 lines of text 200 words illustrated with 2 portraits one of Rolling Thunder and one of his wife and business manager. "Known to his family as Belmont and to the public as Chief Rolling Thunder Louis Belmont Newell was born around 1858 to Thomas Newell and Marie Parsons of Indian Island Old Town Maine. Newell appears to have married several times and his first daughter Blanche was born to Victoria Tahamont around 1886. It is around this time that Newell is first referred to as Chief Rolling Thunder and that his company the Kiowa Medicine Company begins touring. The show was comprised of "moral" entertainment and lectures given on the customs habits manners and religion of tribes. Newell would also sell "traditional Kiowa" medicines and give out health guides. It is uncertain when the company was actually formed and though Newell claimed that he was a descendent of the First Chief Medicine Man of the Kiowa Nation Teet-Toot-Sah this was most likely just for his public image. It is much more likely that his parents were Penobscots from Maine. Newell married Louisa Stump of Iroquois descent in 1891. Louisa was an expert shot and travelled with the Kiowa Medicine Company for some time. In 1894 Newell married his fourth wife Jeanne "Jennie" Congleton who served as business manager for the Kiowa Medicine and Vaudeville Company for many years. Newell died December 1 1933 and was buried in Randolph NY. More information on L.B. Newell has been compiled by descendants of Newell and can be found on Ne-Do-Ba a geneological website for the Wabanaki people." see the Smithsonian Institution SOVA site. <br/><br/> np unknown books
188427017Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office 1884. 226 pages. The material in the reports and papers includes updates from: Ship Island the country's first quarantine station; the Sapelo refuge station; a report on the origin of the yellow fever epidemic in Pensacola Florida in 1882 which is illustrated with a folding architectural plan of medical care facilities along with a Map of Pensacola that shows locations disease spread in red among the neighborhoods with ship names personnel names and various local populace; another folding chart shows ship locations in the harbor and docking facilities at the time. Also reports on New Orleans & Memphis operations; immigrant-inspection services in several large U.S. cities; laws relating the National Board of Health; consular and miscellaneous reports including on cholera in Japan distoma ringeri and parasitical haemoptysis in Hong Kong China; Filaria disease; probabilities of cholera in Europe in Shanghai; the epidemic of typhoid in Liege; treatment of leprosy at Maracaibo; Beri-beri in Ceylon; chemical treatment of sewage in Berlin; and other reports. A folding map offers the General Track of Epidemics in Eastern Asia; another folding map printed in tints shows the course of the epidemics of 1877 & 1879 in Japan and ".the Severity of the Epidemic." compiled by D.B. Simmons M.D.; folding charts printed in red and black track meteorological data during the epidemic and other charts depict filaria data and parasite illustrations. Title page with the small very faint owner name-stamp of collector George R. Brush M.D. U.S. Navy; in service as a surgeon & medical inspector from 1861-1894. Approx. 6" x 9 1/4"size; bound in the original sober governmental dark brown cloth; bronze-gilt spine titles. Some edge tips wear and dustiness to the boards; contents clean and in very good condition. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. Government Printing Office hardcover books
189621778Chicago: Fred Klein Co 1896. First edition. Full Calf. Very Good. Full red morrocco binding. All edges in gilt. Satin moire endpapers. 618 pp. Nearly 175 illustrations provided by C. Everett Johnson. This copy labeled "Author's Edition". INSCRIBED by the good Doctor and dated in 1898. A very good copy overall with some spine darkening and light wear to spine tips. Internally clean. Publisher's summary descriptive sheet laid in. Comes in a supplied hard slipcase which is very worn and chipped but has protected this volume quite nicely. <br/><br/> Fred Klein Co unknown books
180547010Worcester MA: Isaiah Thomas Jun 1805. First Worcester edition. 6 copperplate engravings. 694 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary sheep which has been wrapped over the original leather binding with the inner flaps crudely sewn together. Signatures. Some light foxing else very good. First Worcester edition. 6 copperplate engravings. 694 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. The Edinburgh Dispensatory was used widely throughout England and the United States and received its first printing in the latter part of the 18th century. This edition was compiled by the title's third editor following in the footsteps of William Lewis and Andrew Duncan Sr. and ran throught several editions between 1803 and 1830. S & S 8374 Isaiah Thomas, Jun unknown books
1829533Lancaster Pa: Gedruckt und zu haben bey H. W. Villee 1829. 12mo. 170 x 105 mm. 6 ¾ x 4 inches. 192 pp. Illustrated with two woodcut vignettes in the text. Contemporary leather spine over decorated paper boards; spine worn away marbled paper rubbed away leaving paste paper boards exposed; signatures sprung but still intact. Paper stock is brown with age and is partially water stained. This copy with ownership signature reading "Henry Kauffman / his book it was / bought for 50 cents / 1833." With faults a complete copy of a fragile but scarce book in the trade. Second edition originally published in Carlisle in 1826. Contains remedies for most aliments that cause sickness and pain to humankind including herbal tonics and salves. The book includes a useful glossary of German terms translated into English and an index. Shoemaker Checklist of American Imprints 40361. Arndt German Language Printing 3025. Gedruckt und zu haben bey H. W. Villee unknown books
183219132Columbus O.: Published by Pike Platt and Co. M. L. Lewis.Printer 1832. An early edition of this popular work. Some light wear and some foxing; small ink stain to a few leaves; a very good copy. 12mo contemporary likely original tree calf red morocco label gilt lettering 206 2 pages edges sprinkled. First published in 1829 in Columbus O. based on a series of lectures delivered in Cincinnati and the earliest known work in support of the populist Thomsonian botanical medicine system. Evidently expanded over the earlier 162-page editions. Atwater 2991 this edition; Morgan Ohio Imprints 178; Cordasco 30-0766. Published by Pike, Platt and Co., M. L. Lewis......Printer, unknown books
175727045Venetiis: Laurentium Basilium 1757. 22 536; 591-621 pagination mis-numbered content consecutive 1 pages Catalogus Laurentium Basilium. Frontispiece portrait illustration of the author; woodcut title chapter & tailpiece ornaments. Latin text with occasional Greek. The works of Hermann Boerhaave 1668 - 1738 Dutch physician associated with the Univ. of Leiden; appointed ".the chair of practical medicine and in this capacity he had the merit of introducing the modern system of clinical instruction. Four years later he was appointed also to the chair of chemistry." see Encyc. Brit. 11th ed. Including: Institutiones medicae; Aphorismi de cognoscendis et curandis morbis; Libellus de materie medica; De lue aphrodisiaca sive venerea; Atrocis nec descripti prius morbi historia; Atrocis rarissimique morbi historia altera; De fabrica glandularum in corpore humano; De mercurio experimenta; Orationes octo; De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum; Introductio in praxin clinicam; Praelectiones de calculo; De distinctione mentis a corpore; Horti Ludguno-Batavi descriptio. Title page with the owner name-stamp of collector George R. Brush M.D. U.S. Navy; in service as a surgeon & medical inspector from 1861-1894 and with his small number-ticket on front endpaper. Approx. 7 1/4" x 9 1/2" size bound in later 19th century marbled-paper covered boards dark brown leather corners & spine gilt fleuron decorations & titles marbled endpapers. A little edge tips wear and rubbing to the binding; frontispiece illustration laid-down; first few leaves with a few tiny wormholes no loss to text; front endpapers with surface paper scrapes at bottom edges; an ink name below the portrait; block strongly bound; in very good condition. . First Edtion Thus. Leather. Very Good. Laurentium Basilium books
193052156Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1930. First Edition. Inscribed on front endpaper of first volume: "Mr. Malcolm B. Stone / with much appreciation of his interest in the work in tropical medicine / from Richard P. Strong" dated in year of publication. First printings. Two large octavo volumes 27cm; publisher's maroon cloth boards lettered in gilt on spines and front covers; xxvi1-568; ix569-1064pp; illus. Mild lean to text block of second volume else a tight Near Fine set lacking the dustwrappers. A major work in the history of public medicine. Strong 1872-1948 was the first professor of Tropical Medicine at Harvard and the foremost American authority on the subject. This important two-year expedition to Liberia and the Congo led by Strong in the company of seven fellow Harvard scientists was the first full-scale attempt to document the etiology of a variety of tropical diseases as well as documenting existing sanitary conditions in Liberia and colonial West Africa. The mission also collected a wealth of zoological and anthropological data that would inform various fields of Africa Studies for decades. Harvard University Press unknown books
190660235Chicago IL: np 1906. Black lettered pink paperwraps stapled. 8vo. 7 pp. Signed on the front wrapper "with the compliments of author." OCLC lists one copy at College of Physicians of Philadelphia. The author who lives in Citronelle Ala. focuses a good part of this pamphlet on Citronelle known at the turn of the century for its healing waters and herbs. <br/><br/> np paperback books