Accession: L02489
Editorial Title: Mary Baker Eddy to Clara E. Choate, September 30, 1881
Author: Mary Baker Eddy 
Recipient: Clara E. Choate 
Date: September 30, 1881 - archivist estimate
Manuscript Description: Handwritten in ink by Mary Baker Eddy on a postcard.
Related Topic: 025A.10.014Click link to view 025A.10.014 document in new window
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L02489
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Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library

I shall call on you tomorrow if it is pleasant In the P. M. I think. Thanks for your letterEditorial Note: This may be a reference to Choate’s letter to Eddy dated September 19, 1881 (025A.10.014). I have cause for joy and you are one of the causes Press on to the high standard of Christian Science and all will be well with you

Ever Lovingly
M B G E


Mrs. Dr. ChoateEditorial Note: Clara E. Choate. Choate did not have a medical degree, but in the nineteenth century, persons practicing various “healing arts” were often called “doctor.”
6. Milford St. Boston
Mass
LYNN MASS. SEP 30 10-1-81
L02489
-
Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library

I shall call on you tomorrow if it is pleasant In the P. M. I think. Thanks for your letterEditorial Note: This may be a reference to Choate’s letter to Eddy dated September 19, 1881 (025A.10.014). I have cause for joy and you are one of the causes Press on to the high standard of Christian Science and all will be well with you

Ever Lovingly
M B G E


Mrs. Dr. ChoateEditorial Note: Clara E. Choate. Choate did not have a medical degree, but in the nineteenth century, persons practicing various “healing arts” were often called “doctor.”
6. Milford St. Boston
Mass
LYNN MASS. SEP 30 10-1-81
 
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This may be a reference to Choate’s letter to Eddy dated September 19, 1881 (025A.10.014). Clara E. Choate. Choate did not have a medical degree, but in the nineteenth century, persons practicing various “healing arts” were often called “doctor.”