Word: freni
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...following men were chosen to active membership in the Sodality: E. C. Acomb '35, A. O. Allen 2G, W. S. E. Baer '34, R. F. von Briesen '35, R. S. Chafee '36, F. F. Conant 1G., Ed., L. A. Cook, Jr. '34, F. R. Dickerson 2L, D. R. Freni '36, R. S. Greene '34, E. S. Holden '34, H. J. Kumin 1G. Edward Meilman '36, J. R. Pappenheimer '36, Jacob Patt '36, R. B. Preble '83, F. G. Ross 1G. Michael Sarapoff 4E.S. D. A. Sistare '86, I. A. Stone '86, A. R. Sweenwy, Jr. '35, B. K. Therogood...
...Duffey of Arlington, Francis G. Dunlevy, West Roxbury, Walter W. Dwyer of Cambridge, Edgar I. Epstein of Brighton, Roberts Mck. Fish of Cambridge, Maurice Fishman of Cambridge, John F. FitzGerald of Newton, John B. Ford of Methuen, Clark W. Freeman of Cambridge, Ellis J. French of Danvers, Dominic R. Freni of Boston, Gerald F. Gilmore of Wayland, Milton J. Goldwasser of Cambridge, Richard S. Green of Somerville, William A. Greene, Jr. of Cambridge, William G. Hanson of Cambridge, John M. Hartwell, Jr. of Belmont, John B. Hawkins of Worcester, Gorge A. Heald of Roslindale, Sibley Higginbotham of Wollaston, Michael...
...shore of Lake Lavigne, Ontario, one Albert La Frenière told last week the story of a picnic...
...their two children, and his sister-in-law, Léonie Sylvestre, received an invitation from the Rev. J. B. Dubuc, parish priest of Lavigne. Would they come, the priest enquired, to have supper with him? Afterward, perhaps they would all go boating on the lake. So Albert La Frenière and the rest went to supper with the priest and later, in a gasoline launch, out across the close darkness of the lake. It was a warm, calm evening; everyone was apparently in the best of humor; no accident occurred to mar their merriment until when they...
Albert La Frenière was the only one who succeeded in reaching the shore. When he was revived and informed that the others were certainly drowned, he told a story which made it appear that none of the great legends of the death of captains or of the heroism of priests surpassed the way in which Father Dubuc had conducted himself at the end of his picnic. After the explosion, said Albert La Frenière, Father Dubuc stood up in the stern of the boat and, while his clothes blazed brightly, lifted his crucifix and granted absolution...