Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . mme-diate maternal grandfathers were New England physicians. He marriedin 1885, Miss MacDonald, of Washington City, and has four sons. was educated at the University of the South, and at the University in 1 8 9 3. served sixmonths as seniorclinical assistantin the CentralLondon Throat,Nose, and EarHospital, assist-ing LennoxBrowne, and Dun-das Grant. Later,he was appointedto a similar posi-tion in the Lon-don Throat Hos-pital, as assistantto EdwardWoakes and Ed-ward Law. Afterleaving Londonhe attended opera-tive courses inVienna. H


Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . mme-diate maternal grandfathers were New England physicians. He marriedin 1885, Miss MacDonald, of Washington City, and has four sons. was educated at the University of the South, and at the University in 1 8 9 3. served sixmonths as seniorclinical assistantin the CentralLondon Throat,Nose, and EarHospital, assist-ing LennoxBrowne, and Dun-das Grant. Later,he was appointedto a similar posi-tion in the Lon-don Throat Hos-pital, as assistantto EdwardWoakes and Ed-ward Law. Afterleaving Londonhe attended opera-tive courses inVienna. He wasone of the dele- ofMississippi. Heattended medicallectures at TulaneUniversity andJefferson,graduat-ingatthe latter in-stitution in 1884,and locating inWashington Cityin 1885. After de-terminingtomakea specialty of thethroat, nose, andear, he took thecourse of the NewYork Polyclinic,and the Metropol-itan Throat andEar Hospital, andattended thecourse in diseasesof the throat, noseand ear at theLondon Post-Graduate SchoolAmerican Medical. Fayettk Clay Ewing, 1) gates from the Association to the eleventh International MedicalCongress, Rome, 1894, and is a fellow of the British Rhinological,Laryugological and Otological Association, being one of two Americanshaving that honor. After returning to America he located in St. Louis,seeking a larger field for special work. Dr. Ewing is a polished writerand contributes liberally to the journals. He is a man of varied reading,who believes that general literary culture is not inconsistent with highprofessional attainment and success. 380 The Spirit of Beauty—Cooper. THE SPIRIT OF BEAUTY. By William Colby Cooper, of Cleves, Ohio. From Dr. Coopers recently published volume of Essays, Sketches and Poems,entitled: Tethered Truants. 0Y\, wr^at is trie spirit of beauty Icried Iri a passionate, puzzled despair,Rs I gazed in trie skies or] a sweeteventide,And trjougrit of trie rnysteries tl|ere. That instant a fragrance fellover trie r\\qY\t


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