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Updated: June 19, 2025
"I'd like to see her," said Aunt Lucy." All you've said about her, Winnie, makes me a bit curious." "So you shall, Auntie, some time. She's a real friend of mine now, and even after Edith Crowell goes there as secretary, she says I must often go to see her as her friend." "She's charming," I declared. "Every time I see her I'm more impressed with her gentle dignity.
Crowell was now walking up and down the room. He was a restless, nervous man, and under stress of anxiety he became almost hysterical. "I don't know!" he cried out, as one in an extremity of uncertainty. "It must be poison it must have been murder!" He pronounced the last word in a gasping way as if afraid to suggest it but forced to do so.
Hendricks looked at him with a slight touch of contempt in his glance, but seeing this, Dr. Harper interjected: "The Examiner is regretting the necessity of thrusting his convictions upon you, but he knows it must be done." "Yes," said Crowell, more decidedly now, "I have had cases before where murder was committed in such an almost undiscoverable way as this.
"He won't listen to reason nor to bribery and corruption " this last was said openly and with a smile that robbed the idea of any real seriousness. And then Dr. Crowell again lifted the telephone and called up Headquarters. Of the two detectives who arrived in response to the Examiner's call, one almost literally fulfilled Eunice's prophecy of a rude, unkempt, common man.
I want to help you, not annoy you." Impressed by his magnetic manner and his encouraging handclasp, Eunice melted a little and her look of angry scorn changed to a half-pleased expression of greeting. "Miss Ames my aunt," she volunteered, as Dr. Crowell paused before Aunt Abby.
The list of her books includes, besides her collected poems, "America the Beautiful and Other Poems", published by the Thomas Y. Crowell Company, volumes on English and Spanish travel, on the English Religious Drama, a Chaucer for children, an edition of the works of Hawthorne, and a forthcoming edition of the Elizabethan dramatist, Heywood.
When he called the parsonage, however, Maria Price answered the phone and informed him that Helen was spending the evening with old Mrs. Crowell, who lived but a little way from the Snow place. The captain promptly called up the Crowell house. "She's there and she'll stop in here on her way along," he said triumphantly. "And she'll back me up you see." But she did not.
"Stop!" she cried, fairly beside herself with fury. "You shall not!" Both Elliott and Hendricks sprang from their chairs, and Dr. Harper rose to take care of Eunice as an irresponsible patient, but Crowell waved them all back. "Sit down, gentlemen," he said; "Mrs, Embury, think a minute. If you act like that you will you inevitably will draw suspicion on yourself!"
The score was eight to two in favor of Wyndham when the 'Porters began connecting with Newbert's twists, and they hammered in three earned runs before the shift was made. Twitt Crowell was sent in to save the day, but if he hadn't had luck, they'd kept right on. It was his backing that checked the stampede." "The Clearporters always have been heavy batters," said Eliot.
Crowell was an especial friend of Governor Clarke, and was influenced by his party feelings of hatred to Troup in his opposition to a treaty, openly declaring that Georgia should never acquire the land while Troup was Governor. He was an unscrupulous man, of questionable morals, and vindictive as a snake. The persevering energy of Troup, however, prevailed.
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