 of the British General Montgomery's Eighth Army move over practically non-existent roads in their relentless drive to throw the Nazis out of North Africa. Restored to the French is only a few miles from German positions. As these films are issued, the British were attacking the entire Marathon line with tanks and big guns. Nazi prisoners are rounded up. 1,400 were taken in a single day. Casserine pass in Middle Tunisia, scene of bitter fighting as the Allies hammer Rommel on three fronts. General Henri Giraud and his staff visit French troops now fighting with their traditional allies. The commander-in-chief, American General Dwight Eisenhower, discussing plans for the final offensive. Always to be found where the fighting is heaviest, General Eisenhower has won the admiration and respect of his officers and men. Here is a general trained to fight a mechanized war. Already, the Wiley Rommel has felt the power of his arms. Expert United States Army Air Force instructors, they learn to fly every type of combat plane. Learn to handle everything from training ships to the biggest bombers. Graduation. And to these eager young men of China, graduation means more than official recognition of ability. It means that finally China, their China, is prepared to meet the Jap invader on even terms. From Major General P.T. Mao, Vice Commissioner of Aeronautics for China, cadets receive their wings, become full-fledged officers in the Chinese Air Force. Salute for the graduating class from a squadron of fast P-38s. Eminence salute from modern daughters of the new China. This, say the boys, is worth working for. Invasion of a Japanese-held island by United States Marines. Pacific Fleet Commander comes to personally congratulate the officers. Lieutenant Colonel Evans Carlson, famed throughout the South Pacific as leader of Carlson's Raiders, and Lieutenant Colonel James Roosevelt, eldest son of the president, his second in command. Our attack, which wiped out the entire Japanese garrison, including planes and gunboats. A two-handed Jap sword is brought back as a souvenir for the admiral. His casualties were few. And they all island by island, base by base. America is increasing her blows against the Japanese cars. America's newest and most flexible of mechanized equipment. Enforce across streams and rivers at incredible speed through the water. Glitz buggies from America to smash the axis. Unition factory, one of hundreds engaged in turning out the millions of rounds of small arms ammunition needed by the United Nations. Unition for planes fitted onto machine gun belts and packed ready for instant use. Pitted messengers of death from America to smash the axis in the arsenal of democracy. Here, the powerful new tank destroyers are forged in numbers that would stagger the enemy, testing ground. Faster than the tank, the M10, as the army calls it, is capable of destroying the heaviest armored vehicle yet seen in the field. Speeding weapons and supplies from inland factories to the coast, destined for some far-flung fighting front. Vasion barges rolling from plants in the interior over high-speed highways to the sea. Tons of supplies, food, equipment. All United States transportation mobilized to smash the axis. In the field, artillerymen test the powerful new 240 millimeter howitzers. Some of the heaviest weapons in service and carefully concealed positions, the big birthers of the army speak. 300-pound projectiles, many miles with amazing accuracy. Tons from America.