Accession: 371.49.006
Editorial Title: Clara A. Beecher to Calvin A. Frye, September 13, 1886
Author: Clara A. Beecher 
Recipient: Calvin A. Frye 
Annotator: Mary Baker Eddy 
Date: September 13, 1886
Manuscript Description: Handwritten by Clara A. Beecher on lined paper from Chicago, Illinois.
Archival Note: This letter includes a notation in the handwriting of Mary Baker Eddy.
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371.49.006
-
Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library
Mr. Frye
Dear Sir,

Yours receivedAs Written:rec'd- I should be most happy to enter the Normal Course, if Mrs. Eddy is willing– I have practiced As Written: practised quite successfully since last winter, and since Belle took the Normal Course, have treated as she learned then– against sin– I am very anxious to enter a class this Fall, and hope I may be able to do so- We have some very interesting cures among absent patients - one young man has been cured of epilepsy in about a month– He & his mother both write the most grateful letters - His spells used to last half - an hour– In about two weeks, he was relieved almost entirely of them - the last one did not last but five minutes - The Doctors had said there was no hope for him–

A lady who had been ill for 20 years, with indigestion, neuralgia et ceteraAs Written:&c – wrote the second week- "I am almost too happy to live - I have been entirely free from pain for four days– for the first time in 20 years–" These are some of the most rapid cures– there are several who are gaining steadily under absent treatment– One man has lost his taste for tobacco entirely – without any special treatment in that direction either -

Hoping I may be able to take the next Normal course – I am

Yours truly -
Mrs- C. A- Beecher.

Belle & myself both send much love to Mrs. Eddy.

Handshift:Mary Baker EddyYes but She must run the risk of examination
371.49.006
-
Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library
Mr. Frye
Dear Sir,

Yours rec'dExpanded:received- I should be most happy to enter the Normal Course, if Mrs. Eddy is willing– I have practised Corrected: practiced quite successfully since last winter, and since Belle took the Normal Course, have treated as she learned then– against sin– I am very anxious to enter a class this Fall, and hope I may be able to do so- We have some very interesting cures among absent patients - one young man has been cured of epil [?] Unclear or illegible epsy in about a month– He & his mother both write the most grateful letters - His spells used to last half - an hour– In about two weeks, he was relieved almost entirely of them - the last one did not last but five minutes - The Doctors had said there was no hope for him–

A lady who had been ill for 20 years, with indigestion, neuralgia &cExpanded:et cetera – wrote the second week- "I am almost too happy to live - I have been entirely free from pain for four days– for the first time in 20 years–" These are some of the most rapid cures– there are several who are gaining steadily under absent treatment– One man has lost his taste for tobacco entirely – without any special treatment in that direction either -

Hoping I may be able to take the next Normal course – I am

Yours truly -
Mrs- C. A- Beecher.

Belle & myself both send much love to Mrs. Eddy.

Handshift:Mary Baker EddyYes but She must run the risk of examination
 
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