21 FEBRUARY 1941, Page 5

Mr. Harry Hopkins has lost no time in putting President

oosevelt in possession of all the facts and impressions he cquired during his stay in this country. What his dominant pression was is certain. Like Mr. Wendell Willkie, he onceived an almost limitless admiration for the Prime Minister s a war leader. He saw much of Mr. Churchill, visiting many its of England and Scotland in his company. Mr. Willkie pent a week-end with him. Neither of them could find 'ords quite adequate to express their sense of Britain's raculous good fortune in possessing such a leader at such a me. No one will differ from them on that. But many people ould be happier if they saw anywhere in the offing a second tring with a tenth of Mr. Churchill's qualities.