• U.S.

Bundles for a Briton

2 minute read
TIME

When the U.S. people like a man, they show it, and they like Winston Churchill. They are showing it by sending him letters, telegrams—and presents.

In the halls of the British Embassy the presents piled up: crates of eggs, of oranges, mince pies, pecans, a box of onions, a bag of lima beans, two bottles of Napoleon brandy, 5,000 cigars, a set of corncob pipes, catnip for the Churchill cat, a field hat worn by Prince Otto von Bismarck, a wool afghan, a Shriner’s hat, silk scarves, gloves, ties, socks, a sweater, a towel bearing the Union Jack, a framed list of U.S. Presidents, a copy of George Washington’s will, a painting of the Great Seal of Ohio, a pair of spectacles, a textbook on navigation, a lawbook, The Book of Mormon, a set of Indian arrowheads, a turkey’s wishbone (the V-symbol), an autographed picture of Jack Dempsey and a carton of skin lotion, a couple of soap dishes, a portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt done on a typewriter.

Some admirers wrote to say that they had named their baby for Mr. Churchill. One namesake: Winston Churchill Hayashi, son of a Japanese couple in Victoria, B.C.

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