 The United States bombers take off from bases in the Arctic to blast the remaining Japanese on Kiska Island in the Aleutians. Tons of huge projectiles drift lazily to Earth, guided to their mark by the famous American bomb site. When the big eggs land, they explode like clouds, and one more Jap base is wiped out. Somewhere in China, another American Air Force under General Cheneau maps a raid on Japanese-held Hong Kong. The planes escort the bombers as the squadron flies high over Asia, the Kowloon Naval Base. The Chinese cameraman who made these pictures knows it well. Hong Kong is his native city. Now he returns to help rid it of the Japs. Defense out, American pilots get a warm welcome. They blasted the Japs from Hong Kong to Kiska. The United States Coast Guardsmen get their first lessons in seamanship and navigation. How to hoist the sails of a square rigger as she races before the wind. Wooden ships helping train iron men to handle vessels of steel. Criotic citizens are giving their blood to save the lives of their soldiers and sailors. One half million pints have been donated, and the Red Cross blood bank is accepting voluntary contributions at the rate of two million a year. One gunner's mate, whose own life was saved by eight transfusions, insisted on repaying the bank for a part of the life blood he borrowed. Here is real patriotism, his life and his blood for his country. Workers of Canada hold down the jobs of their men who have been called to war. Here in the world's largest munitions plant, 18,000 French-Canadian women are breaking all records in the manufacture of ammunition. By the millions, bullets for rifles, automatics and machine guns, braids its own kitchens, employs experienced housewives to help prepare nourishing home-cooked food. In the lunchroom, 1,500 girls are fed in 15 minutes, where artillery shells up to 18 pounders are checked before shipment, and every day they test the quality of their work with point-blank fire on the proving grounds. New tonnage being rushed to completion. Today, this great South American nation arrays not only its arms, food and ammunition against the axis, but takes its place as a formidable sea power in the navies of the United Nations. Every warship refitted, re-armed to meet the test of modern war. Sleaving on patrol, depth charges lash to the stern, death to U-boats, aims to protect the harbors, and mine layers to guard strategic coastal waters, in dynamite to snare any raiding enemy submarine. Brazil, with 3,600 miles of open coast, is on guard. Prepare for a daylight raid on Nazi-held territory in Europe. A picture of their objective, made by reconnaissance planes before the flight. Off for one of the most daring attacks of the war, they roar over the treetops, they speed across the countryside. Their objective, the enormous Phillips radio works at Aindhoven in the Netherlands, a factory which supplied much of the radio equipment used by the Nazi army. While it sights the target dead ahead, the largest radio plant in Europe. Remarkable pictures of the RAF bombing the Nazis in broad daylight. The successful raids of the war. Some were hit by anti-aircraft fire, and one barely made the field. The official picture after the raid. A huge Nazi war plant wiped off the map in less than four minutes.