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Another pupil of Muhlenberg was Jacob van Buskirk. H. Moeller, D. Lehman, and others had studied under J. C. Kunze. Jacob Goering, J. Bachman, C. F. L. Endress, J. G. Schmucker, Miller, and Baetis were pupils of J. H. Ch. Helmuth. H. A. Muhlenberg, who subsequently became prominent in politics, and B. Keller were educated in Franklin College.

She tried to be tender and affectionate to Nancy; but the poor lady didn't know how. The girls had a nice time about Malden, however. Nancy took her chum to the millpond, where the water-lilies grew, and showed her where Bob Endress had come so near being drowned in the millrace. Jennie grew very romantic over this place. "Just think, Nance!

"Not one!" "Isn't it horrid of him?" cried another. "I'll wager the old doctor has a channel sawed through the ice at the bend here before he lets the boys out," declared a third. "I did want so to see Bob Endress," Grace Montgomery complained. "I want him to bring a lot of nice boys home from the Academy at the holidays, so as to have them at my party."

It struck Nancy that she had heard this Bob Endress spoken of before; but she had no idea that there was any reason why she should be interested in him. The girls came in from the ice half an hour before supper, cold, tired, but merry. Nancy ran up to tidy her hair and wash. She found two of Cora's chief chums in Number 30; but Cora herself chanced to be out.

This was the evening marked for the spread in Number 30. "I do not see that I have done anything to you girls," said Nancy, with some warmth. "I happened to know Bob Endress " "How did you come to know Bob? He never said anything about it," snapped Cora. "Well, I can assure you we were acquainted." "It's certainly very strange," said the other girl, suspiciously.

So she borrowed her fare of Madame Schakael and took the first train home; and Pinewood Hall never saw her again. Indeed, the girls she left behind scarcely heard of Grace Montgomery. She never wrote to Cora, even; and had Bob Endress not come over from Cornell for the New Year dance, Nancy and Jennie would not have heard much about her.

Nancy did not tell her that the twenty dollars had paid for the supper Grace and Cora and their friends were enjoying in Number 30 at that very moment. "But I tell you what," said Jennie, after a bit, and speaking reflectively. "Yes?" "Just give Bob Endress the tip to say nothing to the other girls about how he first met you." "Oh!" "Don't you see?

In the Proceedings of the General Synod, 1827, Lochman and Endress are spoken of as belonging to "the Fathers of our General Synod, and able ministers of the Lord Jesus," as the "oldest and most respected members" of the Synod of East Pennsylvania, as "men who were among the brightest ornaments of the Lutheran Church, and whose departure is lamented no less by the synods in general than by that to which they more immediately belonged."

"I'll ask after you to-morrow over the 'phone," declared Bob. "I hope you won't get cold." "Oh, goodness me! don't ask," cried Jennie. "Then we will have to explain the whole business. And I don't want to go before the Madame." "That's right, Jennie," agreed her chum. "Please don't ask after us, Mr. Endress." "Then let me know how you get along through Grace. I see her a lot," said Bob.

Endress, nodding kindly to Jennie, too, "before fall. We are not so very far from Holleyburg, you know. Ah! here come Grace and the Senator." Nancy and her chum fell back. A tall man dressed in a gray frock coat and broad-brimmed hat the garments so often affected by the Western politician was pacing slowly up the aisle with Grace and Cora.