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Updated: June 28, 2025


Suppose, years and years from now, after you've finished at college, and Bob Endress has got through college, too, you should come here to see Miss Trigg, and he should come here, too, and you should meet right here walking in this path. "Wouldn't that be just like a storybook?" "Nonsense, Jen!" exclaimed Nancy, laughing. But sometimes, after all, the story books are like real life.

Dr. C. F. Endress, a pupil of Helmuth, a leading spirit in the Pennsylvania Ministerium and most prominent in the unionistic transactions with the German Reformed Church, declared his theological position as follows: "We have the Formula Concordiae, in which expulsion, condemnation, anathema, were, in the most liberal manner, pronounced and poured forth against all those who were of a different opinion, which, however, thank God, was never received universally by the Lutheran Church.

Extra gym work was denied her, and when the other girls ran with their skates to the river after release from studies, she could only go to Number 30 and mope. Nancy could not see Bob Endress again. That was something beside a mere provocation of spirit. The girl felt that it was serious. As Jennie had suggested, she wished to warn Bob to say nothing about where he had met her before.

She worked the cousinly relationship to the limit. And after the exercises, when Bob came down from the platform particularly to lead Nancy and Jennie to his parents and introduce them, Grace and Cora went away in anything but a sweet frame of mind. Mr. and Mrs. Endress spoke very kindly to Nancy.

From this report it appears that the members of our committee were not all present; that the joint committee did actually prepare a plan; that the printing of the same was entrusted to Revs. Endress and Hoffmeier, but that this duty was not attended to. Dr.

Endress!" exclaimed Nancy, recognizing the boy from Dr. Dudley's Academy. "What?" shouted Bob Endress. "Is it Nancy Nelson?" "And Jennie Bruce. We lost our boat. It sank," explained Nancy, breathlessly. "Each of you grab the gunwale of my canoe. Easy, now!" admonished Bob. They did so, one on either side, astern. "Now I can paddle you to shore. Just let your bodies float right out.

She told Jennie about Miss Prentice and about the long, tedious vacations with Miss Trigg, even down to the last one when she had helped save Bob Endress then a perfect stranger to her from the millpond. "And he knew you right away on the ice to-day? I saw him! Good for you! He's the most popular boy in Clinton Academy," declared Jennie with conviction.

I know that girl," a cheerful voice declared, and the next moment the speaker, bending low, and racing like a dart, reached Nancy's side. "Hold on! Don't you remember me?" he exclaimed. Nancy looked at him, startled. His plump, rosy, smiling face instantly reflected an image in her memory. "I'm Bob Endress," he said.

"You'd better let Bob Endress alone, then," cried Cora. "Why! how meanly you talk," said Nancy, fairly white now with anger. "Well! there's something very strange about how you took him right away from us " "If you don't stop talking like that," Nancy answered, her eyes blazing, "I shall not speak to you at all." "Well, you've got to explain to Grace, then." "I will explain nothing to her."

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