The Journal of the Allied Societies, Volume 7Allied Societies, 1912 |
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abscess Academy of Dental acid alcohol alkaline anesthesia anesthetic believe bicuspids Boston buccal cast cause cavity preparation cement cent cleaning clinic color condition crown cuspid cusps decay dental caries dental law dental nurse dental profession Dental Science dentin dentist dentistry discussion disease dispensary essayist examination extraction fact fermentation filling giant-cell give glands grooves gutta percha important impression incisors injection inlay interest irritation lesions lingual local anesthesia malocclusion Mass Massachusetts Dental Society mesial method molar mouth mucin nerve neuralgia nitrous oxide occlusion operation oral organic orthodontist Ottolengui pain paper patient plaster porcelain possible practical practitioner precipitated present professional pulp racemic acid radiograph removed rickets root saliva salivary salts sepsis solution surface tartaric acid teeth things thyroid tion tissue tooth tray treatment trigeminal neuralgia unerupted upper York
Popular passages
Page 518 - Manual of Chemistry. A Guide to Lectures and Laboratory work for Beginners in Chemistry. A Text-book, specially adapted for Students of Pharmacy and Medicine.
Page 218 - The prayer that has been mine for twenty years, that I might be permitted in some way or at some time to do something to alleviate human suffering has been granted! A thousand Happy New Years. Hark, there go the twenty-four buglers in concert, all sounding "Taps
Page 294 - Private in the service of the United States in the war of the rebellion, and served at least ninety days, and was honorably discharged at Knoxville, Tennessee, on the day of August, 1865.
Page 90 - A regular meeting of the American Academy of Dental Science was held at Young's Hotel, Boston, February 7, 1906. President William H. Potter in the chair. The subject for the evening was: "The New Silicate Cements, or Artificial Enamels.
Page 129 - MEMBERS OF THE FIRST DISTRICT DENTAL SOCIETY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK IN SERVICE Eugene J.
Page 128 - Bar and whose passing we mourn, be it RESOLVED that this memorial be entered upon the records of the Cleveland Bar Association...
Page 408 - York. (FROM THE LABORATORY OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, AT THE...
Page 55 - LISTEN, my children, and you shall hear Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere, On the eighteenth of April, in Seventyfive ; Hardly a man is now alive Who remembers that famous day and year. He said to his friend, " If the British march By land or sea from the town to-night, Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch Of the North Church tower as a signal light, One, if by land, and...
Page 398 - Hcilkunder. intensity are capable of being " selected," and give rise to secretions of saliva differing widely in character and amount. 3. That practically all the normal constituents of saliva are, if present in sufficient amount, of value and importance in protecting the teeth against the occurrence of dental caries, and in maintaining the health of the oral mucous membrane. 4. That acids, and particularly the natural...
Page 401 - That in order to prevent the retention of fermentable carbohydrates on and between the teeth, and so eliminate or very considerably reduce the carbohydrate factor in the production of caries, starches and sugars should on no account ever be eaten alone, but should in all cases either be combined with a substance having a distinctly acid taste, or they should be followed by such substances as have been shown to have an "alkaline potential" ; and the best of these are, undoubtedly, the natural organic...