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Page 20 text:
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work of demonstrating porcelain and gold in- lay technic. This he continued until 1914 and for the ensuing four years was Chief Demon- strator of Operative Dentistry. In 1919 he be- came lecturer on Oral Surgery. Subsequent to the death of his father he was elected by the faculty to an associate professorship, and as- sumed the chair of Operative Dentistry. ation for his work, in his wide study of its sub- jects and in the competent presentation of his teaching, he has shown himself the worthy son of his father, and every student of the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery knows that such a testimony is not an empty compliment but a sincere tribute of honor, esteem and affection. We may say that the subject of this sketch was born to the profession and has con- scientiously and capably lived up to the require- ments of his ancestry. In his thorough prepar- He was married November 14, 1914 to Sara Dulany Porter. He has had three child- ren, two daughters and one son, the son now being deceased. His home address is 416 Bret- ton Place, Baltimore. 12
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Page 19 text:
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RROR B. Holly SmitK, Jr., A. B.. D. D. S. Dr. B. Holly Smith, Jr., was bom August 21, 1885, at 926 Madison Avenue, Balti- more, Maryland, and is the son of the late B. Holly Smith and Francis Gist Hopkins Smith. His father, B. Holly Smith, born March 17, 1858, died, January 22, 1920, was graduated from Baltimore College of Dental Surgery in 1881 and from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1882 at which time he became a demonstrator in our Alma Mater. In 1889 he was appointed lecturer and in 1891 entered the chair of Operative Dentistry as a full professor. This position he held until the time of his death. On June 8, 1914 he was elected to the presidency of the College and died incumbent. B. Holly Smith, Jr., commenced his schooling in the public institutions of Baltimore and entered Lambs School in 1891 where he completed his primary education in 1899. He prepared for college in Tome School, Port De- posit, Maryland, which he attended for three years. He entered the academic department of Johns Hopkins University in 1903 and was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1906. A year before the completion of his course in the university he entered the Balti- more College of Dental Surgery and was grad- uated in 1908 with the degree of Doctor of Dent- al Surgery. In furtherance of his education he pursued a special course in bacteriology, ana- tomy and histology for one year at the Johns Hopkins Medical School. It was then that he entered the office of his father and began the active practice of Dentistry which he now continues at 405 North Charles street, Baltimore. In 1909 he returned to Baltimore Col- lege of Dental Sin-gery, but in the capacity of Assistant Demonstrator of Operative and Mech- anical Dentistry, which service he rendered until the fall of 1910 when he entered upon the 11
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Page 21 text:
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The 1922 Mirror N this dissertation THE MIRROR BOARD extends its greetings to the STUDENT BODY with the hope that these pages merit the spirit shown for its success. The 1922 Mirror has thrown its reflections throughout the four classes. They were all gradually saturated with the proper MIRROR SPIRIT. In its strength of penetration it seeped into all their understandings. They came to realize the value of its rays. It enveloped them with folds of flimiest texture that were of incalculable worth yet materially of no comparable cost to them. They saw how far reaching its inherent intentions were. There were platitudes and dissuasions, under- ratings and deterrents, attempting in peculiar ways to dim its lustrous beams. They, for whom its radiance hved, were the happy media for the prolongation of that existence and through them it con- tinued its luminosity, bolstered and abetted by their spirit. They did not in any way permit recalci- trants if there had been any amongst them to waiver, to cease their proper MIRROR SPIRIT functioning; to lose faith in their MIRROR ' S dependability and uprightness. They were with it wholeheartedly and it did not phantomose. It is now as much a part of them as their senses So it continued till its rays concentrated and through that concentration came this THE 1922 MIRROR. It is the MIRROR SPIRIT not miracular, not by chance, but of solid foundations set by earnest co-operation that brought about this only one culmination of concentration. J. Harrington Moss, Business Manager.
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