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| Bensalem Dentists | | Everytime you smile at someone, it | | Tooth decay was a perennial |
| Bristol Dentists | | is an action of love, a gift to that | | national problem that meant a |
| Langhorne Dentists | | person, a beautiful thing. | | mouthful of silver for patients, and |
| Morrisville Dentists | | | | for dentists a pocketful of gold. |
| Philadelphia Dentists | | Everyone smiles in the same | | |
| Willow Grove Dentists | | language. | | Adam and Eve had many |
| Yardley Dentists | | | | advantages, but the principal one |
| | | Before you put on a frown, make | | was that they escaped teething. |
| | | absolutely sure there are no smiles | | |
| | | available. | | Too many of today's children have |
| | | | | straight teeth and crooked morals. |
| | | A smile appeared upon her face | | |
| | | as if she'd taken it directly from her | | If suffering brought wisdom, the |
| | | handbag and pinned it there. | | dentists office would be full of |
| | | | | luminous ideas. |
| | | Today, give a stranger one of your | | |
| | | smiles. It might be the only | | A man loses his illusions first, his |
| | | sunshine he sees all day. | | teeth second, and his follies last. |
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| | | If you smile when no one else is | | We do have a zeal for laughter in |
| | | around, you really mean it. | | most situations, give or take a |
| York Dentists | | Wear a smile and have friends; | | |
| Reading Dentists | | wear a scowl and have wrinkles. | | Some old women and men grow |
| Easton Dentists | | | | bitter with age; the more their teeth |
| Harrisburg Dentists | | Beauty is power; a smile is its | | drop out, the more biting they get. |
| Bethlehem Dentists | | sword. | | |
| Reading Dentists | | | | Some tortures are physical And |
| Johnstown Dentists | | Wrinkles should merely indicate | | some are mental, But the one that |
| | | where smiles have been. | | is both Is dental. |
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| | | It takes seventeen muscles to | | Dentist: a prestidigitator who, |
| | | smile and forty-three to frown. | | putting metal into your mouth, pulls |
| | | | | coin out of your pocket. |
| | | The robbed that smiles, steals | | |
| | | something from the thief. | | Every tooth in a man's head is |
| | | | | more valuable than a diamond. |
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