 United States Vice President Wallace, through seven cheering Latin American Republics, is a significant triumph for the good neighbor policy of the Western Hemisphere. Thusiastic throngs wherever he appeared, Mr. Wallace is hailed as a man of the people. This they say is the Yankee farmer who speaks our language, who comes to cement the ties of lasting friendship. This pays his respects to Bolivia's President, Penaranda, President Roosevelt's historic visit with President Camacho. Ladies of the two nations meet, as for the first time in 34 years, a United States President stands upon Mexican soil until six hours before his arrival did Monterey know of Mr. Roosevelt's coming. Immediately, the streets were bedecked in his honor. Loot the distinguished visitor as units of Mexico's regular army pass in review. A significant and impressive display of America's allies, being to fight the Axis, typifies the spirit of free people throughout the world, bears embarking for Tunisia. Already with strong units of fighting French, they're moving up with the British Eighth Army in the drive to crush Rommel. One by one, the armies of a people who will never bow to the Axis yoke are reforming to march with the United Nations. After day, from Britain, from Canada, from America, fresh contingents of combat troops are pouring into North Africa. Enormous supplies, equipment, assembly lines spring up in the open, trucks, motors, parts, moving into place with all the efficiency of a modern factory. Here on the Tunisian front, fleets of mighty tanks advance across the open plain. Allied tanks and allied guns moving up for the final show. Armies of the United Nations are on the part of a task force steaming into Japanese waters is now revealed as the secret base from which American planes first bombed Tokyo, that secret airfield. 16 B-25s, twin-motored Army bombers, lash to the Hornets flight deck. The dramatic saga of a combined Army Navy mission that brought panic to Japan and stirred the world for its brilliance and daring. A major general assembles his 80 volunteers before the flight. Not until this moment is their objective reveal. The heart of the island empire, a fitting touch. Japanese medals awarded United States officers for humanitarian aid to the Japanese people are returned attached to 500-pound bonds and heavy seas, some 800 miles off Japan. Enemy patrol boats are sighted and sunk. Purs are picked up and put aboard a cruiser. Fearing they have radioed Tokyo a warning, Doolittle decided to take off 10 hours ahead of schedule. Bonds are changed on an hour's notice. Motors begin to warm up. Never before have big loaded bombers been launched in such numbers from a carrier at sea. For months they've trained secretly. Now for the test. Doolittle's plane is first down the runway. The commander leading the flight, who heavy seas, one bomber after another soars from the flight deck. Pointed for Japan. Washed by the raiders in Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe, and Osaka, it adventure. Fuel gone, 15 of the planes are wrecked as their crews are forced to bail out over China and Japanese occupied territory. The Japanese government flatly admits that of 8 uniformed fliers captured, some have been executed. This inflagrant violation of all international law. 64 of the 80 men who took off were rescued and most of them have returned to duty. Captain Chongking, Madame Chiang Kai-shek honored Doolittle and his gallant men for a raid that did much to shake the complacency of the Japanese warlord.