Whats the video chip sets part number?
Looks like there's OS/2 and NT4 drivers available.
You can try the SVGA driver from WfW 3.11
That might work. The card is coming with an Intel-IBM ActionMedia II Digital Video Interactive (DVI) video capture and playback set. That Dolch card appears to have been designed to work with the ActionMedia II with a special ribbon cable DVI connector to the DVI board. I got one of the very ActionMedia II sets that were made back in the late 1980's and used it to create early prototypes of embedded video in electronic books about three years before the debut of the Web, mosaic, and HTML (I was a GML/SGML geek at the time). The ActionMedia II was one of the first cards that could digitize video on an IBM PC; it was jointly developed by IBM and Intel and wasn't heavily marketed. About that time the Mac was far more popular and superior at the time for video production, but the i750 Intel DVI processor was a real break through providing clean 30fps digitized video., although the DVI format would never catch on.
I am VERY jealous. Please post a video on youtube of the DVI stuff encoding and playing back a video if you could when you get it. I've always wanted to see what the result was. The first digitization gear I could get my hands on was a Pro Movie Spectrum in 1992, it encoded to 160x120 @ 30fps or 320x240 @ 15fps with hardware encoding to MSV1 (based on MotiVE, a vector quantization codec which Microsoft licensed from Media Vision).
I'd love to know what the DVI codec details were. There are some details at http://www.manifest-tech.com/dvi/dvi_chron.htm but they don't go into too much depth.
Native Windows 3.1x drivers for the C&T video chipset should be out there somewhere. They were fairly common in laptops, and the Apple DOS Compatibility Card used a C&T 65XXX series chip as well. Windows 9x should have it built in too.