Greene brothers' clinical course in dental prosthesis : in three printed lectures; new and advance-test methods in impression, articulation, occlusion, roofless dentures, refits and renewals / by Jacob W. Greene.
- Greene, Jacob W. (Jacob Wesley), 1839-1916.
- Date:
- [1914], ©1914
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Greene brothers' clinical course in dental prosthesis : in three printed lectures; new and advance-test methods in impression, articulation, occlusion, roofless dentures, refits and renewals / by Jacob W. Greene. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University Libraries/Information Services, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University.
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![a practical start that will be unquestioned and satisfactoiy. [Here she is made to chew on both sides at a time until she is satisfied.] Now, Mrs. Jones, you have chew^ed several minutes without trouble. Xext time it will be easier; and the next time still easier; and so on until you '11 forget that your teeth are shops made, at all. Your teeth, at first seemingly naughty and worrying, will in time behave admirably from your persistent, but serene, will-power. Your eyes will renew their suasive dancing. Your cheeks and features will regain their full- ness and flush of the sweet ago—^^as much as the Goddess of Duration thinks best for you. And even your inartistic friends will ad- just themselves to your regenerated looks and feelings of sweetness. But, finally, ]Madam, I beg and implore you not to accept tliis extra fine, artistic set of teeth merely on financial account. In such a case, money is vulgar. I 've taken all these pains for your happiness and my own glory/' NO=BlTE OF A PLAIN UPPER CASE. iBeing through with a plain full double set, we '11 now take up this single, simple, up- per, toothless jaw, articidating with a toothful loM'cr one. If, however, a few lower teeth were lacking, the bite would be similar. We manage a similar case one way, and a good way, in our advertiser's quick-step. (Index A.) And another in the Greene quick- step. (Index G.) Xow we'll have two more ways; the first one being my own once regu- lar way. T have it here on this same old*fashioned articulator with anatomical attachments. But](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21220621_0221.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)