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Men, blinded by these passions, have “repudiated the laws of God” in loosing the horrors of war, he said. In approving canonization of the two saints, the Pope appealed to them to intercede with God on be- half of mankind for the restoration k| of unity, concord and “the counsels of peace.” A French nun and an humble Ital- ian girl were the first persons to be canonized by Pope Pius XII. The sainted women were Marie Euphrasia Pelletier, who founded the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, and Gemma Gemma Galgani, who was noted for her reported stigmata, or marks cor- responding to the wounds that Christ received when crucified. Five Others to Be Sainted. The canonizations preceded a se- ries of beatifications, preliminary steps toward sainthood, for five other persons which will take place dur- ing the next two months. Among the beatifications will be that May 12 of another French nun, Mother | Philippine Rose Duchesne. She in- | troduced the Society of the Sacred | Heart in the United States and died at St. Charles, Mo. The great church of St. Peter’s | sparkled with the brilliance of thou- sands of electric candles for today's ceremony. Twelve thousand lights : | glistened in 600 chandeliers hung in the naves, while other thousands shone from 170 immense candelabra. Thousands of nuns, priests and laymen crowded the basilica to see the Pope enter on the sedia gesta- toris, or portable throne. Six silver trumpets heralded the approach of | | the pontifical procession, in which marched cardinals, bishops and uni- formed officers of the papal guards. Gives Apostolic Blessing. Seated on a throne near the cen- tral altar, the Pope was approached | by a cardinal and two other priests who thrice petitioned him to declare the blessed pair saints. On the third request the Pope rose, put on this three-tiered crown and pronounced in Latin the words that created St. Marie Euphrasia and St. Gemma. After mass the Pope bestowed his apostolic blessing on the congregation, the trumpets sounded and he was borne to his apartments. Marie Euphrasia Pelletier was | born in 1796 at Noirmoutier, France, and joined the order of “Our Lady of the Charity of the Refuge” at 18. Some years later she was superior of the house at Tours, then founded | |a chapter at Angers and petitioned the Pope to make it the mother- house of the whole world. She was accused of disobedience, ambition and innovations, and al- though ' upheld by the Pope was forced to found a new order, the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, which spread throughout the world and was introduced in the United States in 1843. She died in 1868. Gemma Galgani, the daughter of 8 pharmacist, was born in Lucca, Italy, in 1878, and was reported to have had heavenly visions as a child. Her biographers relate that the stig- mata appeared in her side, hands and forehead in 1899. She died in 1803, and has been known since then as the Virgin of Lucca. Both women were beatified by Pope Pius XI in 1933 on the basis of healings attributed to their inter- cession. ’ . Spee’s Sailors Reported Enjoying Free Rein By the Associated Press. SAN DIEGO, Calif.,, May 2.—Pas- sengers arriving yesterday from South America on the McCormick steamer West Ira reported that Ger- man sailors from the scuttled Grat Von Spee were walking the streets in Buenos Aires in uniform and ap- peared Dplentifully supplied with money. William R. Burke, retired lumber- man, said there was no indication the Argentine government had taken measures to send the sailors into the interior. “It was reported in Montevideo,” Mr. Burke said, “the hulk of the Von Spee had been sold to & syndi- cate for $100,000. By the Associated Press, BUENOS AIRES, May 2.—Minis- ter of the Interior Diogenes Taboada was reported today to have accepted in principle the German Embassy’s suggestion that the more than 150 members of the crew of the Graf Spee now quartered in the naval arsenal here be distributed among German business concerns which have offered to employ them. The crew members would be placed in groups of from 20 to 30 each among German-owned factories, but Taboada was said to be insisting that no dismissals be made to make room for the Germans. Hudson Shagl Take Largest Since 1890 By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 2.—A record shad take of 324,000 pounds for one day’s fishing was established yes- terday in the Hudson, the Bureau of Fisheries reported today. It was the largest since 1890, when the bureau’s records were established. The shad run up the Hudson, which usually starts about the middle of April and was delayed this year because of cool weather, suddenly broke yesterday. 2 Because of the unusual size of the run, fishermen said, it probably would last only about two and one- half weeks instead of a month. ‘Misplaced’ Church PUEBLO, Colo. (#)—Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Vine live at. nearby Vineland and J. D. Jackson and Frank Jack- son lives on Jackson street, but the Lake Avenue Baptist Church in Pueblo isn't on Lake avenue. It's on Van Buren street. Sparrows did over $32,000,000 dam. age in England in the last year. 4 i Czech Pary Planning Revolt Against Hitler By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 2—Bedrick Stampher, refugee Czecho-Slovak editor, asserted yesterday he and his associates in the Social Democratic party of his now extinct native land were planning a revolutionary move- ment against Adolf Hitler. In the United States for three months of soliciting financial and moral help from labor groups affli- ated with the American Federation of Labor, he said he addressed the Pennsylvania convention of the A. F. L. in Pittsburgh and received assurances of support in an attempt to revive the trade union movement in Germany and the countries Ger- many has taken over. “We intend to prepare the revo- lution against Hitler, he said, de- parting from La Guardia Airport on the Yankee Clipper en route to Lisbon after a three months’ visit in this country. “Nobody can tell when it will come, but it may be after the first military defeat the Nazis suffer.” Stampher said a large part of Ger- many was hostile to Hitler and that “the peoples of the various countries eaten up by the Germans will prove to be indigestible.” Woman Dies Few Months Before 113th Birthday By the Associated Press. TAMPA, Fla., May 2—"Grandma” Martha Weeks, who would have been 113 years old in August, died at_her rural home yesterday. Her age was verified by the State Welfare Department when she came to town three years ago to “sign up” for a pension. With her first $7.50 check, she went on a shopping “spree,” buy- ing a flashlight, a dress and a new briar pipe to replace the corncob she had smoked for years. Mrs. Weeks was born in St. Augus- tine in 1827. Menfolk of her family went off to four wars in her life- time, Argentina has made its Price Con- trol Committee a permanent organi- zation. MAY 2, 1940. GO TO IT, LADIES! Get plenty of SweetHeart Soap. The sensational 1¢ Sale is on! And while it lasts, you get one cake of SweetHeart for only 1¢ with every three at the regular price. You save almost 250},! THIS BARGAIN IS A BONUS! SweetHeart’s 1¢ Sale is a great big “THANK YOU” to the 5,000,000 folks who changed to SweetHeart in the last two years. It’s also the chance of a lifetime for new friends to try SweetHeart Soap. YOU'LL LIKE SWEETHEART SOAP because you'll appreciate its purity that insures gentle cleansing. And you'll thrill to SweetHeart’s thoroughness that wins the war on dirt and grime. Ladies love it. Men enjoy it. And children say it’s swell. If you like gentle thoroughness plus delicate fragrance—yow'll like SweetHeart too! GET YOUR PENNIES, LADIES, AND GO! First come, first served and the late ones are the losers. Go to your favorite store and meet all your friends at the SweetHeart 1¢ Sale! The “WORD-HUNT” is on— peaple trying to find new and fancy ways to say that an ale or beer isgood. Yet 100 years ago, Peter Ballantine said it all when he discovered that every good quality of an ale or beer could be ex- pressed in just three words—PURITY—BODY—FLAVOR. 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