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Show TEMPERATURES PARTLY CLOUDY a Easter with considerablt snow ' north half of stata Sunday morning morn-ing and snow- showers in afternoons. after-noons. . " . ' - - - V IttUii Mas MlaSUttea Max Mia 44 Sl'Saa . . . Salt Laka Of tea ... BoU . . . . Ban .... I Partus . Seattle ... 5 43 J4;La Aacelet-44 4 3 2S,Lm Vegas St 44 ZS DtBTtr . . . 31 tl Chfcaga 31 43 New York. S3 4iAUaata ... SI X? S 33 53 43 54 St PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, : SUNDAY, APRIL VOL 24, NO. 45 PRICE FIVE CENTS Delinquency Hit As Growing Evil By LDS Speakers Stronger Guidance Of Youth Is Urged By m Bishop Wirthlin; Richard L. Evans, Mark i2. reiersen apeaK ai Aiiernoon session By MURRAY M. MOLER Utnted Press Staff Correspondent . SALT LAKE CITY, April 5 (U.R) A spirited attack on "general delinquency" featured addresses at this after-. after-. noon's session of the-117th annual conference of the Latter-day Saints church in the historic Salt Lake City temple. tem-ple. The attack was made by Joseph L, WirtI n, first counselor coun-selor in the LDS presiding bishopric. He particularly decried de-cried the "increasing numbers" of books and magazines 13 Soviet Staff Members Return With Rodionoff ATHENS, Greece, April 5 U.R Thirteen members of the Soviet embassy staff in Athens are re turning to Moscow with Soviet Ambassador Admiral Konstantin Rodionoff, who was recalled by his government Wednesday, the Greek foreign office announced today. - Th Dnnminfomont caiif Ha LdV had been issued for three secre- k ' A J 1A ll . f . 1 lanes una iu uiuir sum memoers in addition to Rodionoff. Eighteen other 'members of the embassy will remain here with charge d' affairs Tschiernitchef. Departure of the Russians is dependent upon transport facili- ties and has not yet been announced. an-nounced. Some reports said the ambassador and his group were scheduled to leave tomorrow, date of the funeral of King George II of the Hellenes. James Dunn, American ambas- sador to Italy, arrived here yesterday yes-terday to represent . tha United y?.watafes fiWtho. funeral of the-late, 'j-king. Dunn today visited Premier Demetrios Maximos and Foreign Minister Constant in Tsaldaris. It was believed their talks concern ed the proposed American aid to Greece. mum uc was uisappoimeo. I But he probably will expect even .nvnoM . . mBi Tv.Jmore during the next century i??.?"1. ("-? ! the second for the Mormons in .!. ported from Athens today that 90 guerrillas have been killed recently re-cently in fighting with government govern-ment forces in eastern and western west-ern Macedonia. The dispatch quoted a Greek source as saying that a detach ment of British troops was attack ed in Macedonia last Thursday by guerrillas, but gave no details, general manager of the Deseret Sixty guerrillas were killed In (News, said his heart was touched western Macedonia when a band j by the stories of world-suffering of 1,000 attacked the town of J told at the conferen6e by leaders DeskaL the dispatch said. Thirty j0f LDS missions in foreign lands, others were killed in the region) i wonder sometimes if we ap-of ap-of Cavalla in eastern Macedonia. 1 nreciate what we have in thic Four Killed In Tornado POTEAU, Okla., April 5 W Four persons were killed and an undetermined number injured today when a tornado slashed through a sparsely settled area in the hills near the Arkansas The twister leveled three residences resi-dences near the Glendale settle ment and seriously damaged 25 more, Red .Cross officials and 'against Hall following Louis j occupied by MGM Displays, Inc.. highway patrolmen reported, j complaint yesterday through his in the mid-city jobbing and Three persons were seriously in-j manager, Marshall Miles, that he j warehouse district, jured. .gave Hall the money to fina-.cej The flames broke out on the The destructive wind came un-!!? all-star football game last Jan.j first floor at 5:05 p.m., spread expectedly on the heels of a vio-j12-, rapidly to the second floor, and lent rain and hailstorm. Two oth-; Miles said Hall promised to re-; one hour later still defied the et-er et-er damaging windstorms werelturn tne money if he failed to. forts of firemen to control them, .reported in Oklahoma during a; contract army's touchdown twins,) The four alarms were turned in night of thundershowers and'fe" ancnara ana ienn uavis, eiectrical storms. . Persons living in some homes in the path of the tearing wind had fled to storm cellars and escaped es-caped injury. Army Plane Hits Hill; Four Killed f ' DECATURVILLE; Tenn., April . 5. (U.R) An army C-47 twin-en-gine plane shattered against a wooded hill during a rainstorm seven miles southwest of here today to-day and an examination of the wreckage indicated that four per-- per-- sons died in the crash. r The lone witness, Mrs. Lee Dyer, said the plane exploded as it struck the ground 100 yards from her home. Wreckage of the plane and the badly-dismembered ; bodies of its passengers were scattered several hundred yards V around the scene of the crash. " After an examination of, the re-mains-. Dr. H. L. Conger said he 'was convinced that at least four persons were killed. The plane was flying southwest r and apparently was headed - for the Memphis, Tenn., airport. deal largely with sex and crime. wirtnnn also Diamed the na tion s moral condition on some sensational newspapers which he said played up the "sordid side of life" even "in their so-called comic strips." ine Mormon leader said a recent re-cent survey showed that 40 per cent of the nation's middle class homes did not possess a Bible and pointed out that this nation "spends more money on intoxi cation that it does on education. Infedillty, Divorce Cause "This all adds up to general delinquency, not only of youth but of adults," he said. "This is illustrated by the fact that 90 per cent of our many divorces are caused by infidelity another term for immorality." Wirthlin advocated stronger guidance of the nation's youth by the parents too many of whom, he said, were leaving the moral guidance of their children up to the schools. He also urged a more careful study of the Bible and other religious works. Richard L. Evans, member of the first council of seventy and spokesman for the famed radio program broadcast each Sunday from: temple square, said growth of the church to a membership of years aEas story." . v- ,v "The Lord expected a great deal of the six men who organized organiz-ed the church 117 years ago." I Evanf. .ld he conference. "I do Salt Lake valley. Evans said the church's missionary mis-sionary system faces a particular challenge because of the constant increase in the world"s popul- ation. He said the net daily gain! throughout the world is 30,000 to 50.000 persons. Mark E. Petersen, member of the nnm-um nf 12 annti nnH country," Elder Petersen said. 'and if we appreciate our duty (Continued on Page Two) Promoter Sought In Swindle Case in Viuiflfl A TafA III JtflllUIC VQJW LOS ANGELES, April 5. (U.R) ; Deputy sheriffs todav soueht Dro- 1 moter Harrv Hall for dIIpHIv! bilking heavyweight boxing jcnampion Joe iouis 01 $ojuu in a football promotion scheme. Grand theft charges were filed lthat t l a,luz- ! areas of firemen and numerous Neither of the two all-Ameri-' pieces of fire apparatus to the cans showed up, but the game! scene. Tons of water were being fell through and Hall pocketed poured into the building from the the money j Louis charged. ' 'front and rear. Dubious Peace Marks Easter Holiday Time In Jerusalem JERUSALEM. Palestine. ADril 5 (U.R) Christians celebrate the chre is slowlv succumbing to enrtion Qf Alsace. There will be joyous feast of Easter in this time. It has withstood arson and?" military parade in the after-ages-old holy city tomorrow in an 'earthquake since the era of thejnooiv atmosphere of dubious peace. j Crusaders. The ancient walls: But what Strasbourg and the Worshippers, including uni-!look as though thev are crumbl-l French nation are fully interest-formed interest-formed and armed members of ing, threatening to bring the lof- ed in is the speech that De Gaulle British troops here, will flock ;ty basilica and roofing crashing 1 win make Monday from the bal- through the barbed wire lanes leading to the time-blackened walls of the old city. The pilgrims pil-grims will wind their way through the narrow, tortuous! streets to the holiest shrine of Christendom Golgotha, situated: within the ancient walls of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. j Here, they will celebrate the resurrection of Christ. ; 1 ne cnurcn win De tnrongeu ; with worshippers adhering to the western (Latin) and easter (Greek Orthodox) churches and visitors from other Christian sects. Truman Speaks Out In Jefferson Day Talk Against Aggression By FRANK ELEAZER United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON,-April 5 (U.R) President Truman told his countrymen coun-trymen tonight they must take positive and prompt action to block international aggression. He also spoke out against tax cuts now and asserted that Re- Dublican proposed cuts in the domestic budget can be "an invi tation to disaster. At the same time, Mr. Truman warned business against going Truman Boom Launched At Party Dinners WASHINGTON. April 5 U.P. Democrats at Jefferson day din ners throughout the nation join ed tonight in the, booming, "Harry Truman in '48." The president' himself was the star at the party's $100-a-plate show window banquet in the swank Mayflower hotel in Wash ington as Democrats turned their annual fund-raising parties into an occasion for "launching his campaign to succeed himself in the White House. Mr. Truman's speech steered clear of personal politics. But other -party orators felt no : inhibitions. Speaker after speak- er pointed out that although the Republicans had triumphed in last November's election and taken control of congress, public opinion polls now show Demo cratic popularity on the rise. No where did the oratory roll more sonorously than at the Mayflower. And some Democrats even favored adopting the Republicans successful November slogan: "Had enough?" was seated at the atf-sparigled head table with such party bigwigs big-wigs as Gael Sullivan, executive director of the Democratic national na-tional committee, and George Killion, treasurer of the committee. commit-tee. Conspicuously absent from the head table was Hent .Wallace, the former secretary of commerce fired by Mr. Truman for citicizing administration foreign policy. Missing also was Robert E. Hannegan, chairman of the Demo- cratic. national committee. Han- negan. who is recuperating irom a serious operation in Florida, sent a message saying that the people of America were behind Mr. Truman as he guides the nation na-tion "on the straight course of her high destiny." Sullivan told the 1,800 guests who had eaten some of the fanciest fan-ciest food served in Washington since before the war that Mr. Truman is a leader "tested and triumphant." "He is prepared to meet the challenge of abundance in our atomic age confident because of (Continued on Page Two) I- A I f-- rOUr-MIUriTI Tire . . DrCQKS Ullt 111 . . WnrohnilCO Aran PHILADELPHIA, April 5 (U.R) IA four-alarm fire broke out to- idav in a four-storv brick buildinc y.ithin an hour, bringing hun- The church of the Holv Senul down upon heads bowed in prayer. The beauty of the Romanesque facade has been marred by steel scaffold in erf-tH rocontlv in iheln sunnort the rrumhlinir haiI- ica. Easter crowds will be heavily ; guarded by strong detachments of police and Scottish Highlanders, Easter ends the Christian- Holy week and is the joyous termina tion of ceremonies held here dur ing the past few days commemorating commemor-ating the sentencing, crucifixion and death of Christ nearly 2000 years ago. "whole hog for profits." He said high prices must be brought down. Freedom from price con trols, the president said, , cannot be abused with impunity. The alternative, he warned, would be economy-wrecking inflation. The president was the key speaker at a SlOO-a-plate Jeffer son Day dinner in the Mayflower hotel here at which Democratic party orators like their colleagues col-leagues at other fund-raising ban quets all over the country boomed out the refrain: "Harry Truman in '48 The president, however, did not join this chorus in his broadcast address. He had other things than his own political destiny to talk about, among them the dangers of aggression. Without identifying any aggressor, ag-gressor, Mr. Truman said: -We like Jefferson, have witnessed atrocious violations of the rights of nations . . . We must take a positive stand. It is no longer enough merely to say ' we don't want war.' "We must act in time ahead of time to stamp out the smoldering smol-dering beginning of any conflict that may threaten to spread over the world." Mr. Truman disclosed that the government for the first time in years wil wind up the fiscal year June 30 in the black and with a surplus in the treasury. He demanded that a start be made toward reducing the $2,000-per-person national debt before taxes are cut. He promised "at the proper time," however, to support tax adjustment measures. He is on record against the GOP congressional con-gressional plans to reduce personal per-sonal income levies this year by 10 to 30 per cent. Mr. Truman said America is enjoying unprecedented prosperity. pros-perity. But further price rises, he warned, would be disastrous. I "The main factor hat .can weaken our economy at this time is our own selfishness the kind of selfishness which is now ex pressed in the form of unneces sarily high prices," Mr. Truman said. "These prices must be brought down if our entire economy is not to suffer." The president said the alternative alterna-tive is inflation, and a condition in which industry will be priced out of a market and men priced out of their jobs. In a speech that normally keynotes key-notes party policy. Mr. Truman steered clear of politics as such. He did not mention the Republican Repub-lican party by name. He was silent on Democratic prospects for 1948 and made no mention of his own undoubted candidacy to succeed himself in the White House. Mr. Truman keyed his foreign affairs statements to a quotation from Thomas Jefferson. He said Jefferson wrote President Monroe that atrocious violations of the rights of nations must be sharply protested by this government. He said Jefferson was the em bodiment of the spirit of freedom. which he added shines even more ionvinuea on rage two) American and French Flags Flutter In Strasbourg As City Celebrates Liberation By HERBERT G. KING De Gaulle "will attempt to dem- Dllit.e5.re?" SUff Correspondent ;onstrate that the present regime andca fodahaf tv Dredna8rqeUdarJo SliSluSTS?-llJ'Sl1.. SliSluSTS?-llJ'Sl1.. presidency it established and the rnrf ti s a " k' ! !; t.7" and U. S Ambassador Jefferson; Caffery for tomorrows celebra- tion of its liberation. ! Thousands of neonle from the countryside went to Strasbourg for the celebrations. With them minified hundreds of American troops and WACS, on pass frommore so as his the American Zone of Germany. De Gaulle will arrive in Strasbourg Stras-bourg tomorrow morning by automobile. He and Caffery will take part in the unveiling of a plaque in the cathedral for Amer cian soliders who died in the lib cony of the city hall De Gaulle is expected to attack at-tack the constitution and political politi-cal institutions of the fourth re public, announce his personal program for constitutional re- jform and appeal to Frenchmen to neip- nun get n aoopteo. It would mean, in effect, that De Gaulle would have Injected himself again into French polities, from which he retired In January, 1940, after aeveral rows with the communists. The newspaper L'Epoque said Communists In China (ill RveMarines Sneak Attack Staged By-Communis Troops Most Serious Clash By ANTHONY ULLSTE1N United Press Staff Correspondent PEIPING, China, April 5 (U.R) United States Marine planes today were reported to have caught up with and ma chine srunned the Chinese! Communist soldiers who, kill ed five marines and wounded 16 others in a pre-dawn sneak attack on an ammunition dump near Tangku. Marine headquarters announced announc-ed that planes had joined ground forces in pursuit of the fleeing Communists. The reports that the planes had strafed them were, however, unofficial. In the heat of the pursuit, the marines had not yet reported how many casualties they had inflicted on the Communists. Some were killed, however, during dur-ing the four-and-a-half-hour battle bat-tle over the ammunition dump. It was from papers found on the bodies of these attackers that the Marines established that they were Communists. It was reported that most of the casualties were caused by an ammunition explosion set off by Communist demolition dem-olition charge. If this charge were set off under the ammunition ammu-nition Intentionally, It put a' different light upon the situation. situa-tion. In that case, the attack would be a purely vicious assault upon a lightly-guarded American installation, in-stallation, without what might be considered the mitigating motive of intending to steal ammunition. in any event. Marine head quarters said the Chinese had gotten away with little or no ammunition. While the pursuit went on, Marine officers con ducted an investigation at the scene of the attakThe naTner iotT the Marines killed or. wounded will not be announced until their next-of-kin are notified. The wounded were flown out to Tient sin. (The Marine Corps in Wash ington identified the five dead as: Pfc. Savatore L. Di Nenna, Dorchester, Dor-chester, Mass.; Pfc. John T. Poloro, Bloomfield, N. J.; Pvt. Joseph D. Powroznik, North Jackson. O.: Pfc. Alford E. Perl Key. Mullens. W. Va.. and Pvt. Frank C. Spencer, Norwood, N. Y. As new reports trickled in, it became obvious how carefully the; Communists had planned the at tack on the dump at Sutaochiao, five miles northwest of Tangku. They knew it was lightly guarded, but that 1,000 men of the first bat-talian bat-talian of the Fifth Marine division di-vision were stationed at Tangku and could be quickly thrown against them. About 100 times as many Chinese Chin-ese Communists as there were Marines on guard; sneaked up on all sides of the triangular dump and attacked. Other forces, mean-! while undertook to stop Marine; relief coming from Tangku. 1 Two columns of Marines lefti Tangku for the dump as soon as (continued on page two) fact that it gives the country what ( t one.house national ?"'r.,!V" " legislature. -Le Crauile will make a series 01 speeches against the constitution Communist and labor reaction has been violent and will become campaign pro- gresses, There were rumors that the communist party had intended to stage a counter demonstration when De Gaulle made his Strasbourg Stras-bourg speech, but that it abandoned aban-doned the idea in view of De Gaulle's popularity in Alsace. Levis Laughing at Government, DENVER, April 5. (U.P.) Mine owners in Colorado tonight generally gen-erally expressed the belief that John L. Lewis was "laughing at the government' for its efforts to prevent him from calling a nationwide na-tionwide strike of the ' United Mine Workers (AFL) organization organiza-tion which he heads. They also asserted that Lewis' latest action, in seeking to prevent-the reopening Monday of all but two of the nation's bituminous bitumin-ous mines until after they undergo under-go reinspection by government inspectors, was "not popular" Demand. Strike Phone Strike Appeals To Telephone Workers Not To' Tump. The Gun' In Strike By CHARLES H. IIERROLD WASHINGTON, April 5 (U.R) Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach said tonight he hoped to avert the nntinnwirfp fplonVmrvo friL- scheduled for 6 a.m. Monday. He appealed to telephone workers not to jump the srun by quitting work before the deadline. dead-line. Schwellenbach said in a statement state-ment that some progress had been made at today's conferences here and throughout the country on local issues. He said "Anything can happen between now and Monday morning." morn-ing." "I am asking all telephone employes to remain calm and to keep on working until they learn the results of these 11th hour discussions," he said in a statement. "The labor department has not given up hope of settling this dispute. "We hope that as the deadline approaches the realization of what the strike will mean to the - GmAprll 5. (U.R) The Southern Federa-ation Federa-ation of Telephone Worker broke off negotiations tonight to-night with the Southern Bell Telephone Company because of "an eleventh hour sandbagging sand-bagging move" and federation feder-ation leaders said a scheduled schedul-ed strike for Monday- was "certain" barring any government gov-ernment decision. workers, to the companies, ana. to the public will lead both sides j to open their minds and take 1 more reasonable positions than they .have so far. huIl0nhach'!C annual was more an attempt to avert any; gun-j umpina ..hy3ittexy wnrkrs than a request to postpone the strike. His appeal recalled that a year ago there was disruption of service serv-ice when a. settlement was reached reach-ed only 25 minutes before the strike deadline. Schwellenbach's statement was (Continued on Page Two) Salt Lake, Ogden Not Affected By Telephone Strike SALT LAKE CITY, April 5 (U.R) The telephone strike scheduled for next Monday will paralyze local phones in all cities but Ogden and Salt Lake City, Orson John Hyde, manager of the Utah division of the Mountain States Telephone Tele-phone and Telegraph company com-pany said here today. Salt Lake and Ogden will not be affected because the cities use dial phones, he pointed out. However, if line trouble should develop, there will be no labor available to repair the damage. However, he said, if a strike develops, such cities as Provo, Logan, Farmington and the whole of southern Utah will be affected. Hyde expressed some hope that a strike will not be called and that'some form of agreement between the company com-pany and the union can.be reached. The union has agreed to keep a few operators oper-ators on duty for emergency calls, only. with rank and file UMW members. mem-bers. .. Virtually ay mine operators refused re-fused to talk ft or the record" for fear of aiiehitinylheniselves with their miner.? However, C Anderson, of Denver, who operates oper-ates a, mine near Ludlow, Colo., pointed out that . his .. miners wanted .to return to work. He termed' Lewis action as "merely "an extension of the memorial holiday as he planned it" - "Lewis just simply pulled strike as he had planned to do this month," declared Anderson, Schvellenbach Hopes to Avert TV TO; v VX Mm u TP TT Asks; Preparedness: "U. S. must perfect its machinery for total mobilization so that it can go into operation in the first shock" of any future war. Vice Admiral Forrest Shetmin (above), deputy chief of naval operations, told Senate Armed Services Commission. Sherman gave Army-Navy unification bill his full support as insuring this instantaneous mobilization in time of danger. Bills Propose Injunctions To Half Strikes WASHINGTON, April 5 (U.R) The senate labor committee is drafting legislation which would permit the government to obtain court injunctions to enforce stop i gap "cooling off" periods in labor I disputes in Vital industries, it: , .was learned tonight. ii The measure would provide ai 'means of dealing temporarily! ;wnn threatened wamouts in sucn fields as coal, 011. transportation, steel, communications and power. It would not, however, per manently prevent strikes in those; industries. Senators advocating the plan stressed that the injunctions ' wouia DC issueu lur a uiuiicu time only. They would be designed de-signed to give the government an opportunity to conciliate or mediate medi-ate disputes. The injunction could lapse or conciliation break down, in which case a strike could he called. But while In force, the injunction in-junction would give labor and management time to cool off and the government a chance to settle the dispute. Committee Chairman Robert A. Taft told reporters that the injunction in-junction legislation may be included in-cluded in a general labor bill he now is drafting. It will be presented pre-sented to the Ohio Republican's group some time next week. The senate legislation would differ radically 'from an emergency emer-gency injunction bill approved last week by the house labor committee. The house measure is aimed specifically at the nationwide nation-wide telephone strike scheduled Monday at 6 a.m. The house bill would authorize the president to seek court injunctions in-junctions against any strike that imperils the public health and safety. It would set up complicated compli-cated mediation and fact finding machinery but if the machinery broke down the injunctions would continue in force. TURKEY REINSTATES AMERICAN REPORTER I ANKARA, Turkey, April 5. (U.R) The government press department depart-ment today reinstated "provisionally" "provision-ally" Arslan Humbaradji, New York Times correspondent whose press card was revoked for "repeated "re-peated tendencious reports wilfully wil-fully misrepresenting conditions in Turkey." whose mine . employes approxi mately 100 UMW worker. "Lewis has made a farce of the holiday he called after the Centralia, 111. disaster." Anderson pointed out that the safety record of his mine was "above average,'! and recently was awarded ther Holmes safety medal for an entire year's oper ation without an accident. Yet, they've closed us down, too," he said. Another mine owner asserted that his miners were "ready to sro back to work Monday, and didn't welcome the latest order of their chieftain." . r-'-T-A y.-y-.y - 4. w.v. y v. i. - - - J WKt . VI....-- . . ,. v'? - f . V . --;'i I J Say Owners Q JJ, ililV4stJ121,VW Minerson t Hefurn Until Pits Are Safe Stoppage Will Be Carried Over Into AlVSafety ShutDoyvn" By LAURENCE GONDEs United Preas Staff CorresiNin4ea. WASHINGTON, April. S (U.R) Th OYvimmfn night bluntly rejected John L.' Lewis's demand that the nation's na-tion's soft coal mines be kept VV ... VAHWIUU J 1CU" era! .inspectors and found safe. But it was apparent, despite the government's action, that the stoppage called by Lewis as a memorial to the 111 miners kill ed at Centralia, I1L, will be carried car-ried over into a "safety shutdown" of indefinite duration when the mourning period ends at midnight Sunday. Reports from West Virginia In the soft coal Industry's largest district said the 35.00 miners there will not g back to work until the mines are found safe by federal Inspec tors. From Virginia came a similar report. inf next movi nntr om in wa up to the United Mine Workers-" chieftain. His aides, throughout 4.1 AS . . , 3 a uie naiion were interpreting nis request to the government-that the nation's soft coal mines be re-inspected before they are reopened re-opened as an order to stay out of the mines. Lewis excepted only two mines. ' The days developments were a new phase of a bitter running battle between the government and Lewis which had been more or less quiescent since the mine chief was set back by the U. S. supreme court March 6 ruling upholding his contempt conviction for not calling off a strike last fall. Coal mines administrator N. H. Collisson said Lewis' mine clo- I sure request was "arbitrary." There was no official comment i , . . mine worker headquarters. But. a source close to the Lewis high command said Collisson was try ins to pass the buck back to the miners. The coal diggers, he saidy would go back to work only in. those pits declared safe by the federal bureau of mines. Collisson threw back at Lewis, a recent statement by the YMW chief that the "rule of reason should prevail in determining what mines should be worked. Before a congressional committee, com-mittee, Lewis had been asked ask-ed whether the men would return to the only two mine . In the nation certified as fally safe. To this Lewis replied that the "rale of reason en- ' -ten into It." Collission said that, according- ly, he would allow to reopen -only those mines not on a list of 518 mines named' by Secretary of Interior 'J. A. Krug as' "hazard-. Russians Declare Interview False LONDON, April 5 (U.R) Radio Moscow said today that the Soviet ambassador to Greece, Odm. Konstantin Kon-stantin Rodionov, was recalled to Moscow because of publication in the Greek government press' of a' spuriuui iiucrvjcw. ucgcutjr vu. tained with Premier, Josef Stalin." Radio Moscow said the: inter- -view was ah untrue- report "hostile "hos-tile to the Soviet Union." The interview in-terview BDoeared oricrinallv in the Salonika newspaper Macedonia Mace-donia and was republished . by four government newspapers in Athens. Macedonia claimed that the interview in-terview was obtained by the United Press in Moscow. No such interview was obtained or distributed dis-tributed by the United Press. The' United Press has denied that any such- interview exists and has asked that this denial be distributed dis-tributed in Greece.' -"A to' the contents of this in terview, it follows the usual lines' of other untrue reports hostile to the Soviet Union which from time to time appears in papers close to the Greek government. "Considering; such behavior in-admissable, in-admissable, the Soviet government . hold the Greek government -responsible for dissemination .of the above-mentioned false interview , la the Greek press. J - |