Puck (66:1710), page 8-9, centerfold of complete issue. Scenes include thought cure, mental cure, mind cure, germs, sterilized, nurse, ambulance, doctor, flies and Dr. Wiley. Hansen database #992.
Harper's Weekly (22:1123), page 528. Full-page, Thomas Nast. "Not by Landseer," two dogs with beer barrel with "Beware of the Hydrophobia Spitz" written on the side. Copy 2. Hansen database #400.
Harper's Weekly (24:1204), page 53. Full page political cartoon about Garcelon of Maine, only relevant for its connection to two other cartoons showing him as a quack doctor. Compare to Harper's Weekly of January 17, 1880, and April 3, 1880. Hansen database #102.
Police Gazette (39:223), cover illustration of a complete issue. "How the legal spouse of a fashionable physician expressed her disapprobation of the course of treatment her husband subjected his pretty patients to; N. Y. City." He's in fancy dark suit (no medical items present) caressing the chin of a fancy young lady with feathered hat and long train, while his wife is behind him ready to crown him with a skull (cranium and face without lower jaw). This image reconfirms that physicians were not yet distinguished visually by any accoutrements. Related story is on page 7. The Police Gazette was a "sporting paper" for young male readers, with scandal and sensation, but sometimes it commented on medical and scientific items repeated from general newspapers. Also includes half page story on Guiteau on page 6. Hansen database #2814
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper Supplement ( :2415). Large double page black and white painting or watercolor "Drawn by Charlotte Weber, Suggested by the celebrated painting of Luke Fildes." Hansen database #4415.
Puck (12:309), page 353, cover. By F. Graetz, man seated in wooden chair has connected himself to guns, cannon, knives, charcoal fire, 5000 lb. weight, poison, and dynamite. A note reads: "Dear George, I can not marry you. Carri." Text on page 2: "The luxury of suicide is forbidden under the new penal code...We regard this as rather an interference with the rights of the citizen. If a man wishes to throw his life away, he ought to be permitted to do so. Lives that are thus carelessly disposed of are rarely of much value to the world..." Hansen database #176.
Judge (29:733), page 284-285, center. By Gillam, a drowned Tammany tiger from a wrecked ship is laying over a barrel labelled "The Rum Question." A paper on the ground says "Drowned in the tidal wave of 1894." Dana from the New York Sun tries to give the tiger a spoon of "N.Y. Sun Cholera Mixture" while politicians and publishers give advice. Hansen database #42.
Judge (68:1735), single sheet. Color cartoon signed by "L. Fellows," illustrates a humerous short story by J. A. Waldron. Shows elegant lady patient in bed with bon bons and rubber hot water bottle, and seated doctor holding a thermometer. Hansen database #2902