A practical treatise on mechanical dentistry . the denture in place. The parallelism of the tongues permitstheir ready removal from their sockets, no matter how much awrythe supporting teeth may be. The bearing of the denture uponthe cap crowns admits of the contact of the denture with thegum on which it rests but cannot be pressed into because of the BRIDGE DENTURES. 62CJ cap crown supports. The original denture, of which this is a dupli-cate, is now in satisfactory use. Fig. 635 represents the articulated cast of a case for which asimilar tongue and clasp vulcanite denture was made. This is


A practical treatise on mechanical dentistry . the denture in place. The parallelism of the tongues permitstheir ready removal from their sockets, no matter how much awrythe supporting teeth may be. The bearing of the denture uponthe cap crowns admits of the contact of the denture with thegum on which it rests but cannot be pressed into because of the BRIDGE DENTURES. 62CJ cap crown supports. The original denture, of which this is a dupli-cate, is now in satisfactory use. Fig. 635 represents the articulated cast of a case for which asimilar tongue and clasp vulcanite denture was made. This is illus-trated in Fig. 636, which needs no description. Fig. 637 showsthe denture in place, the original having been made for and placedin the mouth of a patient exhibited at the clinic of the Odontolog-ical Society of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, in December, 1888. These are simple examples of a class of work having a wide rangeof application and capable of construction without the trouble andcost of all-gold plate-work. The sockets and spri


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdentist, bookyear1903