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Updated: June 19, 2025
Bill Crowell of Swarthmore, later a coach at Lafayette, is another official who has had curious experiences.
"Crowell is writing them off," was the reply. "He'll have them in half an hour or so." The senator drew out his watch, a huge thick-crystalled time-piece dating back to the range-riding period. "As matters have turned out, I shall be going to the city before long," he said.
Then Eunice said, with no trace of anger or excitement, "You mean some intruder was concealed in there when we went to bed?" Crowell turned on her a look of undisguised admiration. More, he seemed struck with a sudden joy of finding a possible loophole from the implication he had meant to convey. "I never thought of that," he said, slowly, piercing her with his intent gaze; "it may be.
After it had gone through its paces, Miss Crowell and I leaned confidingly against its side, patting it and praising its beauty, and the horse seemed to enjoy our attentions. We bought it then and there, drove it home, and put it in our barn; and the next morning we hired a man in the neighborhood to come over and take care of it. He arrived.
"All right," said Winnie, "I'll fix it up with Edith Crowell, and if she can't go, I'll ask her to recommend somebody. Shall I send her there to-day?" "Yes, as soon as she will go. And let me know telephone the office about noon." "Yep," Winnie promised, and I went away, my head in a whirl with the various and sundry matters I had to attend to.
While they thus bandied the matter to and fro, one of the company asked the rest if any of them knew who this young man was, and whither he was going; whereupon the constable to whom I had given both my name and the name of the town where I dwelt, told them my name was Ellwood, and that I lived at a town called Crowell, in Oxfordshire.
William Crowell, of Waterfield, State of Maine, printed a Thanksgiving Sermon of the same kind, in which he calls upon his hearers not to allow "excessive sympathies for a few hundred fugitives to blind them so that they may risk increased suffering to the millions already in chains." The Rev. Dr.
King, $2.00 by subscription. Courtney, The Literary Man's Bible. Crowell, $1.25. The above are but a few of the many collections of biblical material. IV. Topics for Discussion What are the conditions which seem to make the reading of the Bible different from other reading? Is there a sense of unreality about it as a book? What are the causes?
Colonel John A. Crowell, agent for the Creek Indians, sent a letter to the secretary of war, in which he declared that the treaty was in direct opposition to the letter and spirit of the instructions to the commissioners; but the treaty was sent to Washington, and was ratified on the 3d of March, 1825.
Captain Crowell, instead of resenting my defiance of his ruling, helped to reconcile the divided factions in the church; and though, as I have said, twice afterward I submitted my resignation, in each case the fight I was making was for a cause which I firmly believed in and eventually won.
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