President’s Address, Section XIV*

President’s Address, Section XIV*

Proceedings o f the Seventh International Dental Congress lies in the character o f our national constituency. “ It is the distinguishing happiness o...

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Proceedings o f the Seventh International Dental Congress

lies in the character o f our national constituency. “ It is the distinguishing happiness o f our governm ent that civil order should be the result o f choice and not o f necessity, and the common wishes o f the people become the la w o f the lan d ; their public prosperity and even existence very much depend upon the suitable fo rm in g o f the minds and morals o f its citizens.” T h is is the task o f education. I agree w ith P rofessor H olland o f the U niversity o f Nebraska: “ M en are

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becoming more humane, more benevo­ lent and sympathetic, m ore re g a rd fu l o f the rights o f others, more sensible o f a common bond o f h u m anity; and a l­ though the paths are still toilsome and o f times discouraging, the race o f man is constantly reaching a higher level by rising to higher conceptions o f duty which in due time w ill find expression, embodiment and glorious fru itag e in the still higher and better la w o f the fu tu re, built upon a firm foundation o f equity and u tility .”

PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS, SECTION X IV * By ROBERT T. OLIVER, D.D.S., F.A.C.D., D.S.M., New York City

T A K E pleasure in extending a hearty w elcom e to all members and guests o f Section X I V , M ilitary S u r­ gery. M ay the deliberations o f its ses­ sions in professional, m ilitary and scientific subjects be fra u g h t w ith signal success, prove o f appreciable value to the cause and develop a spirit o f fe llo w ­ ship and m utual respect among the m ilitary men o f the w o rld . T h e Seventh International D ental Congress, an activity o f the Sesquicentennial held in celebration o f the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary o f the signing o f that great human document, T h e A m erican D eclaration o f Inde­ pendence, promises to m ark an im por­ tant epoch in the history o f dentistry. In the midst o f these shrines o f patriotic devotion, at the very threshhold o f L iberty, our hearts and our minds are filled w ith varied emotions. W e th rill w ith adm iration at the mental vision o f that wondrous day— the as-

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* Section on Military Surgery.

sembled patriots w aiting turn to step up and affix their names to the docu­ m ent— tense m om en ts, those— dedicat­ ing their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to the cause; yet, with happy repartee, relieving the situation and preserving the charm o f perfect dignified self-possession. T h e n : the rapid strident clatter o f the bell, peal­ ing fo rth that God-ordained message, molded around its flange: “ Proclaim liberty throughout a ll the land, and to a ll the inhabitants th ereo f.” Y o u , m y con freres fro m fo reig n lands, w here ere you be, who catch the spirit o f such contagious sentiment, join w ith us in mental review o f those momentous hap­ penings, that a ll may m arvel at the wonders w rou gh t on that occasion, which so w e ll have reawakened the w o rld , made incomparable changes in this fa ir land and given unheard o f op­ portunities fo r advancement to its people, w ithin so short a period. R ecalling our truant thoughts to the

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duties at hand, let us consider the char­ acter o f dentistry available in this country one hundred and fifty years ago. Such as was offered was found in the larger cities, w ith a scant fo llo w in g o f itinerants in the lesser communities. A s to type, those practitioners w ere o f fo u r general varieties— the sturdy, honest artisan who handled mechanical dentistry as a sort o f side line to his regular trade, as the silversmiths and jew elers; barber surgeons or barber dentists, leaches and tooth-pullers, who still practiced in this f a r aw ay land even though the royal edicts o f both Louis X V and George I I I had already separated the respective vocations; the carvers o f ivory and bone, w ith their ingenious artistry in attaching to bases the carved reproductions o f teeth, or reset human teeth, w ith the retention o f dentures by curved spiral springs; and lastly, the charlatan whose raucous voice proclaimed his superior skill in extracting and transplanting teeth, and whose handbills offered to pay 4 guineas each fo r good sound live teeth, “ to be implanted in the jaw s o f the gen try.” D uring the R evolution, dentistry fo r both the patriots in the field, officers and men, and those le f t at home, con­ sisted m ainly o f sim ple professional at­ tendance fro m medical men fo r the quick alleviation o f sufferings, a service in which the lancet and the modified pelican or the early type turnkey largely figured. A m erican dentistry may be called a heritage o f w ar, its advent occurring during the R evolution, on the arrival o f French convoys at N ew port and Providence, in 1 7 S 0 - 1 7 8 1 . W ith these troops came tw o surgeons o f the French navy, Joseph L eM a ire (N ew p ort) and Jam es G ard ett (P ro vid en ce), both edu­

cated medical gentlem en o f the period, G ard ett a graduate o f the R oyal M edi­ cal School, Paris. O ne o f the required qualifications fo r a surgeon o f the French navy at that time was the knowledge and a practical application o f dentistry. L e t us rem em ber that France then led the w o rld in the science and art o f dentistry. T h e doctrines o f Pierre Fauchard, which constituted the first scientific treatise on dental surgery, as revised in 1 7 4 7 , w ere then in vogue. T his volum e set a higher standard fo r dentistry, which, claim ing ju st recogni­ tion fro m medicine, resulted in a course o f dental instruction being included in the curriculum at the R oyal M edical School. T hus, Jam es G ard ett’s de­ barkation at Providence heralds the ar­ rival o f the first m edically trained dentist on A m erican soil. T h e frie n d ly association o f these two compatriots, m utually interested in dentistry, and their desire to improve health situations under their observa­ tion, moved them to undertake the in ­ struction o f a num ber o f bright, intelligent young C ontinental soldiers, am ong whom was Josiah F lagg , the brightest, and hence the most favored , pupil o f the group. T h is sm all class, m arking the first instance o f dental instruction in A m erica, places Joseph L eM aire, its dom inant figure, as the first A m erican dental preceptor, Josiah F lagg, the first student, and the N ew ­ port camp the site o f the first dental clinic— an item o f special interest to M ilitary dental men. Such records serve to establish the facts that A m erican dentistry, chal­ lenging alike the adm iration and re­ spect o f the entire w o rld , is, a fte r a ll, the precocious offspring o f m ilitary

Proceedings o f the Seventh International Dental Congress

dentistry, born in a w a r camp o f the R evolution, suckled at the breast o f patriotism, reared under service condi­ tions and a perturbed post-w ar read­ justm ent, trained under years o f harsh experiences, yet alw ays holding a lo ft the traditions o f its ancestry, until fin ally it blossomed fo rth into fu ll manhood, w ith a higher self-respect, greater importance to mankind and larg er recognition as a w o rth y and a n eed fu l profession. Such f u ll stature was obtained only through its own declaration o f independence, made sixty-three years a fte r the signing o f the original document, which brought complete severance fro m medicine, the establishment o f its own school and the creation o f its own degree. O f Horace Hayden it may be said that his was the honor o f “ bearing the torch o f know ledge” fro m his illu s­ trious preceptor, Jo h n G reenw ood, a patriot o f the R evolution, contem porary o f Josiah F lagg, and later the dental practitioner to President W ashington, down through the years to 1 8 4 0 ; there to im plant it as an everlasting shrine w ithin the edifice o f his creation, the first dental school o f the w o rld , an in­ stitution which served definitely to es­ tablish dentistry as a profession by proving to the w o rld its f u ll intent and its m anifest preparation fo r perpetuity. I t may be observed that the basic principles o f that initial class at N ew ­ port, w e ll grounded upon the theories o f Fauchard, and taught through the generosity o f L eM aire and G ard ett, w ere destined to become a large part o f the very foundation o f dental edu­ cation, this again inviting to our atten­ tion the kinship o f A m erican dentistry to its humble m ilitary progenitor. D urin g the next fifty-e ig h t years

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fro m the date o f the separation, we find a period o f gradual transition o f dentistry fro m the status o f a trade or vocation to that o f a recognized pro­ fession. W o n d e rfu l developm ent in professional attainments occurred during this period, abreast i f not in advance o f those in the other professions, in the active industries, or in the country it­ self. T h e organization o f schools throughout the land, the creation o f state law s and governing bodies fo r the practice o f dentistry, the increasingly broader professional education, with higher prelim inary education as a re­ quirem ent f o r entrance, and the change fro m the one and tw o year courses o f instruction to the universal three year course, all w ere im portant factors to such development. A l l such changes had the tendency to attract greater num ­ bers o f desirable young men to a career in dentistry, u n til, in 1 9 0 0 , we had approximately 3 0 ,0 0 0 practitioners w ithin the U nited States. D uring the Spanish-Am erican W a r, in 1 8 9 8 , the last w a r fo u g h t by volun­ teers, w e find large numbers o f dentists in the ranks serving in grades from company officers dow n to privates— there w ere no opportunities fo r serving in any m ilitoprofessional capacity. T h e presence o f these representatives in the service, in addition to the fa c t that our dentally educated people early realized the dental needs o f the mobilized arm y in the several training camps o f the country, led to a reaw akening o f the dental profession to its long established ambition o f providing a corps o f dental surgeons fo r the A rm y . T h e National D ental Association seriously took up this question at its annual meeting in 1 8 9 8 and appointed a special legislative committee to represent its interests in

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the m atter, to d ra ft a b ill and to under­ take its passage through Congress. A void ing details, it may be said that the efforts o f the legislative committee in securing early enactment o f their measure in time fo r service during that w a r were unsuccessful. T h e m ilitary campaign lasted too short a time to secure such special legislation, in the face o f other more im portant m ilitary legislation. W ith commendable zeal, the legislative committee continued its efforts through the sessions o f 1 8 9 9 and 1 9 0 0 , which culm inated in the passage o f the bill, som ewhat modified, it is true, w ith the general reorganization act o f the A rm y , passed and approved, Feb. 2, 1 9 0 1 . T h e advent o f the A rm y D ental Corps marked an epoch in the history o f dentistry. Its vast importance as a health service was quickly demonstrated in the m ilitary establishment. T he presence o f our sm all arm y o f more than 6 0 ,0 0 0 in the Philippines, operat­ ing against insurgents, an arm y to which a m ajority o f the n ew ly appointed dental surgeons were tran sferred , and the type o f prim ary dental service there rendered fo r the re lie f o f pain and suffering readily accounts fo r the early and keen appreciation o f this special service o f the medical department. T h a t the wisdom o f its creation was proved many times over during the first three years o f its service stands an un­ refu ted fact. Consistent e ffo rt was made by the N ational D ental Associa­ tion fro m year to year, a fte r the w orth o f m ilitary dental service had been fo rm a lly established, to secure fu rth e r legislation that w ould give fu ll rights and privileges o f commissioned officers to the A rm y dental surgeons. I t was ten years before this was accomplished,

by the A ct o f M arch 3, 1 9 1 1 , which granted commissions in the grade o f first lieutenant to all dental surgeons then in the service. T h e advent o f the N avy D ental Corps in August, 1 9 1 2 , may be re­ garded as but a natural sequence, ex­ pected alike by the N avy, the profession and the citizens o f our country. T he m anifest health benefits accruing to the m ilitary establishment, observed by higher ranking naval officers, ably as­ sisted by the w e ll organized activities o f the N ational D ental Association, easily account fo r the lessening diffi­ culty o f convincing Congress o f its necessity. Provisions fo r promotion o f den­ tal officers came w ith the reorganization bill o f Ju n e 3 , 1 9 1 6 , which gave the grade o f captain to those officers long­ est in the service with a promise o f one extra grade under certain more or less discouraging provisions. It again re­ quired serious interference by the N a­ tional D ental Association to secure equal rights fo r its dental representa­ tives in the m ilitary service. This culm inated as w ar-tim e legislation, on O ctober 6, 1 9 1 7 , and imm ediately granted absolute equalization to dental officers in regard to rank, pay a llo w ­ ances and the rights o f retirem ent. T h e influence o f the A rm y D ental Corps on our profession and our N a­ tion has been alike beneficial. It has brought a greater recognition o f den­ tistry and made fo r the popular appre­ ciation o f the profession. It has proved the fo reru n n er to and a strong facto r in all subsequent organizations o f indus­ trial dentistry and in institutional clinics (schools), in oral hygiene, both endowed and m unicipal, and, later, in the organization o f dental service in

Proceedings of the Seventh International Dental Congress

the U nited States Public H ealth B u­ reau. I t was the pacemaker fo r o r­ ganized m ilitary dental service in the armies o f other nations. In general, it m ay be said that a ll such organizations have proved beneficial to dentistry as shown by the universal recognition o f its importance as a health-conserving service by governm ent agencies, state boards o f health, the medical profession and civil communities. T h e service o f dentistry during the W o rld W a r is one in which w e a ll have an unbounded pride. T h e call o f 6 ,0 0 0 dental men to the colors, under the provisions o f the A c t o f O ct. 6, 1 9 1 7 , is the first instance in our history o f dentists responding to the call o f their country and accepting commissions in the m ilitary service as dental officers, in the various grades o f rank. T h e estab­ lishm ent o f such an agency through which dental men o f the nation could give f u ll expression to their patriotism and render special m ilitary service dur­ ing a national emergency was o f itself one o f the most beneficial acts o f leg­ islation ever coming to any profession. I t marks an epoch in the history o f dentistry. T h e com m ingling o f dental w ith medical officers as professional brothers in arms brought closer understanding, m utual respect and increased benefits. T h e professional cooperation necessary in the great w a r hospitals brought higher appreciation o f both the m ilitary and the professional value o f the dental officer, as did their special surgical services rendered w ith face and ja w casualties o f battle. Im provem ents in the understanding o f each other’s value also was augmented when medical and dental officers became brother students at the several schools in the A . E. F .,

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and later in the home cou n try; partic­ u la rly so at the M edical F ield Service School, C arlisle, w ith the assignment o f a dental officer as a teacher in the A rm y M edical School and the organi­ zation o f the A rm y dental school ( 1 9 2 1 ) , in which equal numbers o f medical and dental officers constituted the fa c u lty, w ith a curriculum arranged to embrace dental, medical and scien­ tific subjects. Since the W a r, we may trace the serious beginning o f a general trend, the d r ift o f dentistry back to the m other profession. It may tru th fu lly be said that the A rm y D ental School stands out prom inently as a high beacon light serving to attract attention and as­ sist in directing the return o f dentistry to the great professional highw ay common to all branches o f the healing art. M edicine, surgery and dentistry belong alike to the health conserving service and to each other, i f they are to confer the greatest benefits on m ankind. H ar­ monious cooperation, close affiliations, complete understanding o f each other’s value and m utual appreciation are the prime essentials to such a coalition. A t the time o f the separation, a chart would have shown the rather abrupt line o f divergence fro m medicine, fo l­ low ed a little later by a change o f direction, to a line exactly p arallel to that o f medicine, a route which it has traveled fo r approxim ately sixty-seven years. T h e present tendencies indicate a convergence o f that line back to the mother groove, w here it n atu rally be­ longs. O bjection to such m erger may be expected, possibly fro m both profes­ sions. From the dental standpoint, any act o f recession fro m its splendid inde­ pendence, having a tendency to cramp its style, w ill prove distasteful, and the

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The Journal of the American Dental Association

age-old tradition o f resentment tow ard the sister profession, fo r indifference and condescension in past years, w ill have to be overcome by unmistakable evidences o f am ity and good w ill. T h e great strides made by the younger profession in higher educa­ tional refinem ent, technical application and scientific study have been accom­ plished alone and unaided, and since it has reached the fu ll stature o f an hon­ orable, able, respected and necessary health serving profession o f scientific attainm ent, and recognized as such by our G overnm ent w h o lly on its own merits, quite n atu rally it looks with some degree o f skepticism on any plan fo r coalition in which any compromise o f its rights m ight be expected. Those men o f both professions who believe in m edically trained dentists must be pre­ pared to encounter such opposition in addition to another equally important one economic in character— the increase in both years and fees necessary to the acquirem ent o f a double education. Should the one degree be contemplated fo r one extended profession, the con­ tention w ill concern a menacing loss o f f u ll technical education, and the pos­ sible degeneracy o f art and fin g ercraft, a ll o f which have served to make den­ tistry famous. R e fe rrin g to the m ilitary service, it m ay be said that until the great day arrives w hen, i f ever, medicine and dentistry w ill actually coalesce and the dental corps possibly become a group o f oral or dental specialists o f the medical corps, it w ill be necessary fo r each, the medical and the dental corps, to operate more or less separately under the super­ vision o f their respective heads, subor­ dinate to the Surgeon G en eral o f the A rm y , director o f the entire medical

department. I t fu rth e r may be said that only w ith a ch ief o f its own kind, under the supervision o f the greater ch ief, the Surgeon G eneral, complete autonom y under a protectorate (to bor­ ro w terms fro m the diplomatic service) and a personnel, both commissioned and enlisted, adequate to the fu ll needs o f the A rm y , can the dental corps ever be able to exploit modern dentistry satis­ fa cto rily in the service during peace­ time or to reorganize its activities best fo r w ar. Such an ideal organization w ould o f course require legislation affecting the entire medical department, as it w ould mean a t least its partial reor­ ganization. Speaking only o f the den­ tal corps organization in such a plan, it w ould require a c h ief o f the D ental Corps selected fro m the senior officers o f the corps, holding the grade o f brigadier general (as w ould both the M edical and the V eterinary Corps under such a plan o f departm ent reor­ gan ization ), the ch ief o f corps to be vested w ith fu ll authorization o f law fo r the autonomous control o f his corps under the protectorate o f the Surgeon G eneral and governed by specific in­ structions pertaining thereto covering every activity o f his official adm inistra­ tion. Some such organization w ith a chief and an adequate personnel is bound to come in time, and it is hoped that our present Surgeon G en eral, M a jo r G en ­ eral M . E. Irelan d , alw ays a strong partisan fo r the dental service, may have both the opportunity and the great pleasure o f celebrating its accomplish­ ment. In closing, I desire to express great appreciation o f the m anifest interest shown in the w e lfa re o f Section X I V , M ilitary Surgery o f the Seventh

Proceedings o f the Seventh International Dental Congress

International D ental Congress, by the attendance and cooperation o f the splendid men o f our sister nations and the equally representative men o f A m erican dentistry. M y best wishes go out to our con freres present in the m ilitary dental service o f their respec­ tive countries, w ith the hope that all they may seek in the w ay o f im prove­ ment in such service m ay graciously be granted them. DISCU SSIO N

R odriguez Ottolengui, N ew York C ity: It is indeed most interesting, and to many it w ill prove enlightening, to learn that our American dentistry practically had its origin in tw o military men, Joseph LeM aire and James Gardette, both o f the French Navy, who came over with the allied troups o f Louis X V I, bringing with them the accepted knowledge o f modern dentistry. Particularly does it appeal to those o f us who recall the events and who participated in the great struggle to introduce regularly organized den­ tal service into our Arm y and Navy. H aving come out o f the military service, how strange it seems, in retrospect, that subsequently it required so much energy to make dentistry an integral part o f our great military depart­ ment. Colonel Oliver recalls the period be­ tween 1898 and 1901 when the National Dental Association was urging the creation o f a dental corps in our Arm y. He touches lightly on the provisions o f that bill as finally passed, and naively adds, “ somewhat modified it is true,” but he fails to mention the fact that we were obliged to accept the so-called Contract Dental Corps, the active members o f which had no standing as regular officers; a condition which was not corrected until 1911. There is a fact in connection with this state o f affairs which should become a matter o f permanent record. T he creation o f a contract dental corps, in­ stead o f an officered dental corps, was largely due to, let us say, the fear am ong military medical men that the dentist w ould not prove himself fitted to hold rank. It was, therefore, tremendously fortunate that such men as John S. Marshall and Robert T . Oliver should have been selected to serve as the first nominal heads o f the newly organized Contract Dental Corps. Both o f these men

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were W ar veterans and held medical degrees, I think, and both had already distinguished themselves in the field o f oral surgery and as educators. W hat more splendid links could have been forged to unite the existing medical corps with the apparently insignif­ icant little group o f men known as the Contract Dental Corps. A nd what did these men do? Far from failin g to conduct them­ selves in a manner befitting a soldier and an officer, it soon became apparent that they w ould not only grace such positions and ren­ der valuable service, but that, without rank o f some sort, their usefulness in the Army would be greatly limited. M en in the ranks readily recognize their superior officers and take orders from them, but unless the soldier had been made to see that his dentist was, in a sense, his superior, whose orders and instructions must be obeyed, dental service never w ould have achieved the results that were obtained. T h e medical officers early recognized this fact, and themselves provided a remedy, through regulations, without wait­ ing fo r further action o f Congress. I well remember an incident during1 a visit to West Point: while walking from his quarters to the Academy Headquarters, at the side o f Colonel, then plain D octor, Oliver, I noticed that every soldier that we passed saluted him. This surprised me, and then fo r the first time I observed that Dr. Oliver wore shoulder straps. I inquired about this and was told that the straps did not carry rank insignia but merely the letters, “ D . C .” meaning Dental Corps, which, to the minds o f the soldiers, converted the wearer into an officer, o f sorts, and at once commanded respect. Not only these facts: the conduct o f all these “ hired dentists” was so correct that they were admitted to officers’ messes and social entertainments, and to fu ll companionship, showing that they were w ell received on a basis o f social equality. There is no doubt that the splendid conduct o f these pioneers o f the dental corps helped to pave the way and make it possible f o r them to receive higher recognition and regular rank. I here appeal to you all to place the names o f Marshall and Oliver side by side in dental history, with those o f LeM aire and Gardette. The latter brought dentistry out o f the military service, and the form er again established it in the service, on an organized and highly respected basis. M ark L . Finley, W ashington, D . C .:

The

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exigencies o f war have always led to de­ velopment and to progress, in spite o f the horrors that accompany its campaigns. In dentistry, the late W ar has developed skilful methods o f treating m ajor breaks o f con­ tinuity in the facial, maxillary and oral regions, the marvelous results obtained ex­ citing the wonder and the admiration o f all professional observers. In consequence o f my own activity in the earlier efforts to secure legislation f o r placing the dental sur­ geon in the military service, I have watched with jealous eye, the record being written, and I am fu lly satisfied that dentistry has played its part well through the men who have conducted its great perform ance tests through the years. I pay my respects to our presiding officer, Col. Robert T . Oliver, and to others who have written fo r our pro­ fession a record commensurate with the pro­ gress o f human effort and advancement in other activities. H enry S. Dunning, N ew York C ity: I wish to compliment Colonel Oliver on his collection o f these most important data re­ garding the practice o f military dental sur­ gery. I was one o f the members o f the B. P. Club o f the A . E. F., and feel that we members o f the m axillofacial section o f the A rm y owe Colonel Oliver a great debt for all that he did f o r us, in the early days o f our w ork in France. Perhaps some o f you present are not fam iliar with the B. P. Club o f the A . E. F. T h e members o f this Club landed in France prior to the com ing over o f our Chief, General Pershing, and laugh­ ingly form ed a little club we called the B. P. Club, meaning Before Pershing. We saw the A . E. F. grow from a handful o f men that didn’ t know what it was a ll about into a mighty organization o f trained sur­

geons, dentists and other specialists, and incidentally combatants, who had gained much experience from our allies on many fronts. Colonel Oliver was always a tremendous help to members o f the m axillofacial section, and more than once my Chief, Colonel Blair, and I went from our headquarters in N euf Cha­ teau to Colonel O liver’ s headquarters in Tours to ask his advice and help, which was always cheerfully and enthusiastically given. The cooperation that was shown between the den­ tal section o f the A rm y under Colonel Oliver and our special branch o f the surgical sec­ tion was w onderful and I believe opened the eyes o f the medical men in the armies o f our allies to a great extent. T he m axillo­ facial teams were worked out to a logical conclusion chiefly through the efforts o f C ol­ onel Blair and Colonel Oliver, and I think that, had the war lasted a little longer, we w ould have had the pleasure o f showing many more w onderful results through the repair o f the terrible facial wounds that the late war brought about. This section o f the International Dental Congress is a most useful one, and I hope it w ill be perpetuated and the members’ enthusiasm w ill continue, at least until the next war. It would be too bad if , during peace times, we lost track o f the wonderful lessons that we learned during the time o f stress and i f we allow ed our interest to lag to such an extent that these lessons that were so painfully learned by bit­ ter disappointments had to be learned all over again by the com ing generation o f younger men who w ill carry this w ork on. In other words, I hope that we can keep up at least a skeleton section, with our re­ cords and data obtained during the W ar, fo r future needs, and be prepared to carry on where we left o ff in 1918.

PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS, SECTION X V * By ALFRED P. LEE, D.D.S., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania M e m b e rs and. G u ests o f the Seven th In te rn a tio n a l D e n ta l C o n g r e ss:

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present dental Congress.

A s stated in

our fo rew o rd to the printed prelim inary program , this section makes its initial bow at this Congress. M an y o f the

T is w ith feelings o f peculiar pleas­ ure that we address you on the open­ ing session o f Section X V o f the

subjects to be treated in these sessions

♦Section on History, Science and Libraries.

have appeared in programs o f previous