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Show V The rour THE Subscription Rate OP in $2.00 per year, payable - A. B. GIBSON - E. GIBSON - Editor-Manage- Wt 'INGUSH CHANNf I TO YOUH SAI10R 7f in Publisher J? r Oouimk. t in... n O"'" ,ui OmkaK Ckouv,n Vr AX"4 A-- "V tytjfof S cm o .' f f f Ml''' im0t "V " """"" " tSH ''. ' I J MtifftlV tA mill 111 11 I ' - ' Beaches like these were first military objectives. This poster "Fire Away" shows a scene aboard the U. S. Submarine "Dorado." The artist, the celebrated American painter Georges Schreiber, has caught the action during the very tense moment before the passing craft Is identified as friend or foe. The painting is authentic m every detail for the artist was actual! aboard the Submarine at sea. He ate and slept with the crew. He workec with the men and stood watch with the officers. A short time after leavin t SabKitsriM, it was lost with all hands. LJ vi U VJ U7 LrLiVS EJ " -- -rr' ' .Cit"rJ,NVIlu rVi.. r mi .- 'ki'X StOWx Wt!WP'' the-pas- f UVLJU iiiijii - " swiiuwww flf ' The area indicated in white on the above map is the Nazi defense zone. Continued bombing of key communications lines complicated the enemy's transportation problems and months of hammering t nt the German Luftwaffe so weakened that unit that the Allied air force dictated terms on which they should meet. Several weeks ago it was reported that Field Marshal Erwin Rommel had moved approximately quarter of a million men to that area. J i I advance Nephi, County 8eat of Juab County, is known as "The It is noted for Friendly City at the Crossroads of Utah". y near-bwheat-raisin- g it for deposits Its extensive territory, It Is located on highway of gypsum and for Its hospitality. 91, with a Junction of highway 189 and alternate route of U. S. highway 6. Nephi owns Its electrio light and water post-wa- r systems, and is building towards a prosperous Boost Nephi! future. Shop and Save In Nephi. Buy, Build, ,Mmn Thursday, June 22, 1944 , Nephi, Utah s, TIMES-NEW- S Published Every Thursday at Nephi, Juab County, Utah. Entered as Second Claw Matter at the Post office at Nephi, Utah, under the act of Congreee of March 3, 1879. .ROY Times-New- v,' ' i, jn.ii f qj.,,..., .mu.i..n.i..alu. I P' - - t ii E U . - BONDS OVER AMERICA Post Chapel .r- - vr ''":"A Near the little Gersettlement of Selma, Texas, is man Randolph Field, one of the largest mili- tary airdromes in the world, training center for the Army Air Corps. Here at the Post Chapel men of all faiths attend divine services. War Bonds Flean Freedom From Want Wliy a Similar chapels in Europe are deserted, some reduced to rubble. Freedom of worship is gone. To keep the Four Freedoms here, buy War Bonds. Farmer Should Buy and Keep War Bonds by W. E. Grimes Head, Dept. of Economics and Sociology Kansas State College, Manhatt-n- , Kansas farmers, more than tioning of scarce AMERICAN business of V-'- - ' group, typify American freedom and American democracy. The farmer of America has the right and exorcises that right to conduct his business and live his life as he chooses. He mus. and does accept responsibility lor the success or failure of his business and the g of h:s family. The production of his farm, in large measure, is a reflection of hi3 a'iluy and ingenuity and initiative under our system of free enterprise and individual freedom. This is the essence of American democracy. American democracy did not just happen. It was established by long and constant struggle against the forces that would have prevented it It is a heritage from our forefathers who fought for it. It can be maintained only by continuing the fight for it. This fight goes on whether we are at war or in peace. It is the constant struggle to make democracy work. To make It work, every citizen must do his part as a member of a freedom loving, freedom acting people. Democracy works if we make it work. Today there are forces that would destroy the freedom of the American farmer and his family and the freedom of every other person who loves and chcrii.hes our democracy. These forces stem from three sources. First are those outside the borders of this country that are attempting to tear away the very foundations of our democracy and to make farmers and all other businessmen the henchmen of dictatorial powers. Under such a rule the job of the farmer would be to carry out the orders of the dictator. It is to prevent this that the boys from our farms and cities are fighting on farflung battlef ronts throughout the world. This answer to this threat Is it shall not oeme to pass. Within our country, forces are ever seeking to undermine the democracy which permits freedom loving farmers to conduct their farms in peace and with profit. These are the forces which encourage Inflation with its soothing but deadly effects. Price controls, ra well-bein- fc' FROM General Bradley, leading the ground forces, righi through every rank, American men now face a brutal, desperate, able enemy. For this invasion has only begun before our fighters lies a hard and bloody task, one that demands all their courage, backed by all your faith in their ultimate victory. That faith will be tested many times in this invasion in grim struggles, set-back- s, possibly even temporary defeats. It will be up 10 you to remember that early victories usually only mean more savage opposition from a foe made mere bitter, more ruthless as the shadow of his doom grows up to you to keep that faith in larger days and nights of gloom as well as in hours of triumph. There is little that you can do to show that you realize what they must face, perhaps for many months. But one thing you can do back the attack with every dollar you can spare! Let the Bonds you buy in this greatest of Drives be the measure of your belief in their ultimate victory! V IA 1 4 mVi. Jim-- ' w'n r 1 A . BUY YOUR INVASION BONDS TODAY! tUiUlauHll goods, limitations credit, repayment of debts, and the purchase of War Bonds are some of the weapons being used against these enemies that strike from within. These are the weapons of the home front. The third source of forces that tend to destroy American democracy are those which undermine the stability of our farms and other businesses which typify so well the exercise of American democracy. Our democracy can be no stronger than its component parts. If the business stability of American farms is impaired, our democracy totters. Under our system it is the responsibility of the farmer to maintain his own business, and most American farmers do so. They are repaying debts, avoiding new excessive debts, and buying War Bonds from their incomes. The Income to American agriculture in 1943 was more than nineteen billion dollars the hieh-ein all history. Income in 1944 probably will be equally as large. It is to be expected that a sizable proportion of this hinh Income will be invested in War Bonds invested in the democracy which makes It possible for the typical American family farm to exist. American farmers have been buying War Bonds and they will continue to buy them and to hold them after they are bought. They appreciate democracy. The American farmer is deeply and practically patriotic. His patrio'm is the kind that says little but does things. He has a vision of the day when the boys will return from foreign batUefronts, when the threat of foreign dictatorships is wiped out for keeps, and when stability within our country is assured. And he realizes that the financial stability of his own farm business plays an important part In this struggle to defend, to maintain, and to strengthen democracy. So he buys Bonds and holds them pending the day when the purchasing power which they represent can be usctf. to further strengthen the American farm of which he is a part, and thus his farm may play its part in maintaining a strong and vigorous democracy in the America he loves. st V. S. Trtaiury Dtpmrtmini 1 |