Dr. Cooke:—I have never tried the vaseline. I have a rather interesting case, an extensive piece of bridge and crown work which the patient received some years ago from a firm who make a specialty of this work. The bridge on the right side had broken away, several abscesses had formed, and the condition of the mouth was far from satisfactory.
Dr. Smith:—Mr. President, right here, after Dr. Cooke's remarks in presenting this case of bridge-work, and knowing that he himself has performed some operations in bridge-work, I would like to ask if the result of his experience places him on record as universally condemning bridge-work.
Dr. Cooke:—Far from it. I simply presented that as a specimen of bridge-work as performed in the nineteenth century. It was done by a firm that makes bridge-work a specialty.
Dr. Meriam:—These instruments, I think, have never been made in America. I had them copied by Mr. Schmidt. I present first the set of groove cutters or chisels for molars and bicuspids. I think you will find them about page 122, Appendix to Ash's Catalogue, 1886. They are of the well-known chisel form, and I will send around with them two made on my own curve. I like the Whitten Approximal Trimmers very much as a trimmer and also as a scaler, but I wanted something with a little suggestion of Dr. Lord's added to Dr. Whitten's, and in these the blade is flat and passes easily between the teeth.
While I am on the subject, I will show some of Dr. Lord's excavators that I have had made quite small, smaller than he has made himself, and for a simple proximal cavity where only one instrument is to be used, I think they are admirable. Dr. Lord only orders them in hatchet forms. Here are some hoes that I directed Mr. Schmidt to make for me; some of them have been rubbed down thinner.
H. L. Upham, D.M.D.,
Editor Harvard Odontological Society.
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