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Celebrate This Holiday With A Smile.
LIQUID SMILE.
by Anonymous
Dental Arts Offers State-Of-The-Art Teeth Whitening Process
by Anonymous
Dental Implants: Teeth That Look and Feel Like Your Own
by Anonymous
Tobin Enterprises will give you your BRIGHTEST and WHITEST teeth EVER!
by Anonymous
Management of Dental Trauma in Children
by Anonymous
Medical breakthrough product SAVE-A-TOOTH saves teeth, saves worry, saves thousands of dollars.
by Anonymous
What Are You Putting On Your Teeth? How To See Beyond The Marketing Hype
by Anonymous
HAPPY TOOTH LOGO IS A "GOOD NEWS" SYMBOL
by Anonymous
Act professional, handshake like a professional, supreme smile like a professional!
by Anonymous
Xlear, Inc. Expands its Xylitol-Rich SpryTM Dental Defense System with
New Infant Tooth Gel
by Anonymous
London, 5 Februar 2004 — Thane Direct UK, the international arm of world-leading TV, internet and direct mail retailer Thane, Inc., announced today the launch of www.rapidwhite.tv, the first UK consumer site specializing in tooth whitening by Natural White..
by Anonymous
Downtown Spa Offers Teeth Whitening Services On-Site by Leading Dentist
by Anonymous
Simple home test can help prevent tooth & gum decay
by Anonymous
Monster Shark Tooth Found
by Anonymous
Ten Tooth Brushing Tips for Tots
by Anonymous
Dental Fluorosis: Just a Cosmetic Effect?
by Anonymous
Have you ever wondered how the Elizabethans cleaned their teeth over 400 years ago? There were no Dentists to offer crowns, bridges, braces or other teeth whitening wonders; no toothbrushes or mouthwashes, no injections to kill pain and no false teeth if you lost the one's you were attached to. All there was on offer to the every day Elizabethan man, woman or child, was a dirty rag to be taken out of drawer or cupboard, and a healthy sprinkling of salt from the salt cellar or if you put your hand up the chimney you could bring down some soot, which was also considered to be beneficial! This is how the poor cleaned their teeth. For the rich Lord or Lady of Elizabethan Times, there was Sir Hugh Platt's recipe for clean teeth! Sir Hugh Platt offered the hopeful recipient a concoction of honey, wine and vinegar, which read thus: "Take a quart of honey, as much vinegar, half so much wine and after they have been boiled together, then wash the teeth therewith now and then!" Presumably they still used a rag to administer the concoction. Whether this recipe for clean teeth worked or not, one thing is certain, there was no Colgate toothpaste in Elizabethan days. Toothpicks were also advocated and very popular although they were mainly available in gold and silver rather than the wooden toothpicks we know today.
"The King's Quinto: The Life and Times of Sir Walter Raleigh (1552 - 1618) by Barbara O'Sullivan ISBN: 1413708285
by Anonymous
Fluoride Causes Cavities?
by Anonymous
Diabetic Creates the only 2 Carb, Sugar Free Smoothies to Cure Sweet tooth
by Anonymous
The Natural Way To Whiten Teeth
by Alicia Caldelas
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