T-Sgf. Jotfiph jMlt; 8oimoei«,of^ t. A*H, Of AlflMfl #lt;M(* PfcatNsgrooo by mt VIotor H. OtmeUd knd f^... ...^ v *■■'■' -yrrr: :i ivf«5;¥ V AT■? V**;W .A.'= p*o •.:!';. W^BSBAISEN, June 15 CAP}—Do.ftodlng of enormous quantities M the new Jypo poison gas feaog Aft; Rreenilngthreft^ thereisto u^ lfc agajaat lho Russians WWaa£ • '■'^w- -.■■» » ... ?r -We^raAHlWk i-- •,,-.•••te;: the ^Ricsii of Gen. Jacob L. Detoerft gttttf; jpemieal warfare expert®, 'if it# useeverwak ohntpmn. JatoS by Hitler, he wm restrained by -'taw- German*-. general: staff.There were two occasions when the Germans could have- used gas with devastating effect—on O-Day when masses of men were concentrated'00 .beaches, and'at the Re-magen bridgehead across the Rhine when five full infantry - divisions were crammed into a small area.A; €WC:mMmmm , admitted the. Aijas jtfnrtfeaity abandoned their atl-gas equiiaaenb dating the last months of the war.Anthony p* Sa®§te*; Hartford, Conm, and Pfc FrtdW.Kiu*-• ; . 'VPhotbs ' h^?—‘rr** ■■ ’’RivieraRestees t N!ne Tu»s f Bread DallyI Mine thousand two-pound loaves of bread, hot and fragrant, slide but of the ovens of a model bakery, near Nice every 24 hours, ready for the mess halls- and restaurants of the U.S. Riviera Recreational Area, -Supplying bread for the sharpened appetites of restees is a round-the-clock job for the 1250th Labor SiipesyiMon Co,. Bakers, of -an Itah vm service -unit work two 12-hour shifts daily, supervised by Capt. Connor Maguire, of Roxbury, Mass., and .seven American enlisted men.The bakery unit arrived in southern France last August, and set up field ovens under’'canvas. It furnished bread for the men who swept up the Rhone Valley into Germany.Now located in a former machine shop the bakery contains a huge room with 32 ovens and - another where bread is. stored. Smaller rooms are usedforstoring supplies, mixing dough and repairing equipment. ' ■MaJ. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory, Army quartermaster general, recently' described the setup as -the best-looking bakery inIIPIHLADELFHIA, June 15 (AMS) —More than 500 German prisoners of war have been put to work to relieve an acute labor shortage at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.Prisoners 'brought' here in two groups from an undisclosed eastern camp are being used on salvage work for which civilian labor could not be obtained, an Army spokesman said. Hie prisoners will be under Army guard.Housed in barracks at the yard, the Germans will be paid 80 cents a day in scrip which they may spend in their canteens. The Army receives the regular rate of pay from the Navy and turns the difference over to the Treasury, the spokesman said.Germans Melt ad Cathedral SellsHAMBURG* June 15 (AP)—FUed in 1 junkyard a the outskirts of. Hamburg are' 300 statues, nearly 5,001 cathedral bells-.anda collection of bronae memorial plaque?*