. Dental ethod platingsolution. After shaping the blades the heads are cut off and abroach holder is used for a handle. They are used for placingsmall quantities of cement just where it is wanted when liningcavities and setting inlays; for placing devitalizating paste; forplacing cement in the enlarged pulp canals when setting post crowns—for this purpose the narrow sharp-pointed ones are used. A wispof cotton wrapped about the blade of one that has been gold platedmakes a most excellent carrier for medicines that are to be appliedto the gums around the necks of teeth. The stiffer on
. Dental ethod platingsolution. After shaping the blades the heads are cut off and abroach holder is used for a handle. They are used for placingsmall quantities of cement just where it is wanted when liningcavities and setting inlays; for placing devitalizating paste; forplacing cement in the enlarged pulp canals when setting post crowns—for this purpose the narrow sharp-pointed ones are used. A wispof cotton wrapped about the blade of one that has been gold platedmakes a most excellent carrier for medicines that are to be appliedto the gums around the necks of teeth. The stiffer ones bent tothe desired shape may be used for trimming the margins of freshlyinserted alloy fillings. In the laboratory they are used for placingthe borax paste when soldering; for working invested material intothe little places where one wants it to go; for removing wax thatgets between the teeth when doing plate work; and for many otherpurposes that suggest themselves from time to time.—Mark Hayter,Dallas, Insomiiia and Nerve .Strain—By Henry S. Upson, M. D., Professor of Diseases of the Nervous System in the Western ReserveUniversity, Attending Neurologist to the Lakeside Hospital,Cleveland, Ohio. With skiagraphic illustrations. G. P. Put-nams Sons, Pub., New York, 1908. This is a little book of 142 pages, but full of interest tothose who wish to study pathological processes underlyingpainful and other functional nervous and mental disorders. The author says: No attempt is made in this small workto collocate the material available for a study of the objects only have been kept in view; to put on recorda few observations as material for reconstruction of a columnlong since fallen and neglected by recent workers in thisfield, and in what measure may now be feasible to supply themost solid of all building materials, a working theory to bindthe swaying fabric of the structure. In his preliminary remarks, the author speaks of dentaldisease as one cause of
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookiddent, booksubjectdentistry