Dollar Tree shoppers can choose from two patterns.
One version features a red truck parked outside a barn in a snowy setting.
It includes the phrase “Have yourself a merry little Christmas” in cursive.
For those who don’t celebrate Christmas, there is also a winter style available.
It features a white snowflake on a red background with the words “Winter wishes” in cursive.
Each towel measures 12.5-inches by 6.2-inches.
IN THE COMMENTS
The festive hand towels have received an average rating of 4.4 stars out of five.
Dollar Tree shoppers shared their thoughts on the product in the review section.
“They were a great addition to your Christmas stock. Glad I could order these online,” wrote one buyer.
“All very neat and well packed, all very beautiful and super quality,” said another customer.
“I really like the pattern on these towels,” commented a third Dollar Tree fan.
Another person shared the DIY project they had planned for the hand towels.
Dollar Tree pricing
Despite the name of the store, Dollar Tree recently added items that cost more than $1 to its inventory.
Most items at the store cost no more than $1.25, but items in the Dollar Tree Plus section cost up to $5.
Dollar Tree introduced Plus aisles to 100 locations in 2019 as part of an effort to diversify its products.
By 2022, Dollar Tree had added the items to over 1,500 locations.
“We believe testing additional price points above $1 for Dollar Tree products will enable us over time to expand our assortments, introduce new products and meet more of our customers’ everyday needs,” president and CEO Michael Witynski said in a statement.
“Our brand promise is that customers get great value for what they spend at Dollar Tree. We will continue to be fiercely protective of that promise, regardless of the price point.”
“I had seen on Pinterest towels sewn together to make a pillow case and I thought it was perfect,” said another shopper.
“A snowflake and red and white snowman is my theme this year.”
“I LOVE my snowflake towels. They’re very soft and durable. I wish they would make washcloth ones too,” said another person.
One buyer described the products as “Christmas towels that look fabulous and soft, love them.”
“NICE! Wash and dry great. Super soft quality for $1.25!” wrote another customer.
Plus, a new beauty brand hit Dollar Tree shelves and fans are scooping up all the products.
Shoppers are also obsessed over Dollar Tree’s $1.25 Kylie lip kit dupe.
2 days agoUSA UpdateComments Off on No one is safe from Putin – world order is collapsing before our eyes, warns Ukraine’s top human rights lawyer
VLADIMIR Putin will attack Europe in the next wave of invasion and seize territory if he wins the bloody Ukraine war, a top human rights chief has warned.
Nobel Prize winner Oleksandra Matviichuk told The Sun that the world order has begun to collapse and Europe is only safe until Kyiv continues to fight against Russian aggression.
A human rights chief has warned that Vlad will not stop in Ukraine if he wins the war[/caption]
Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses an expanded meeting of the Defense Ministry Board at the National Defence Control Centre in Moscow[/caption]
Human rights defender Oleksandra Matviichuk spoke exclusively with The Sun[/caption]
One of the biggest features of Putin’s rule in Russia has been his expansionist attitude towards Europe.
And it’s feared the megalomaniac dictator may not stop at Ukraine and could attack European countries, which could draw the West into a direct war and plunge the world into a crisis.
Oleksandra Matviichuk, who won 2022 the Nobel Peace Prize as the head of the Center for Civil Liberties, said Europe needs to get “real security guarantees” to prevent a potential attack from Russia.
She told The Sun: “People in the European Union are safe only because the Ukrainians continue to fight and resistance against the Russian aggression.
“Empires want to expand and Russia is no different. There are a lot of talks about possible peace agreements because of Donald Trump.
“But we know for sure that Russia doesn’t want peace. Russia wants to achieve its geopolitical goal.
“So we need to get real security guarantees, which will deter Russia from the next wave of invasion.”
The human rights defence revealed how the Russians have begun to envision a future where they attack and capture other independent nations.
She added: “I interviewed hundreds of people who survived Russian captivity. They were told by Russians, ‘First, we occupy Ukraine and then together with we go to conquer other countries and enlist Ukrainians in the Russian army.'”
Matviichuk thinks that it is time for the West to take responsibility for the Ukraine war and to act more.
She said: “The world order as we know is collapsing before our eyes.
“UN bodies like the Security Council have failed and can’t protect people against the libertarians and the wars.
“So in times of crisis, when the international system is not working, the individual leadership, individual courage, individual responsibility matter, and it’s time to take it.”
General David Petraeus, who served nearly four decades in the US military, previously told The Sun that Ukraine’s allies in the West must do more to help win the war against Putin.
The Retired four-star US general added that Putin “won’t be satisfied to stop with Ukraine”.
He said: “The Ukraine war could expand in the region if Putin succeeds in Ukraine.
“He wouldn’t be satisfied to stop with Ukraine. Moldova clearly would be next.
“After that, it might be Lithuania or one of the other Baltic states.
“He’s been very clear and I think it’s also clear in hindsight that we should listen to this individual. He tells us what he believes.”
To defeat Vlad, the West must do “everything humanly possible” to help Ukraine, Petraeus urged.
Russian service members undergo combat training at a firing range[/caption]
Service members of pro-Russian troops drive tanks near the settlement of Olenivka in the Donetsk region[/caption]
NEXT STOP EUROPE
Keir Giles, Russia expert at Chatham House, said he is convinced Putin will not stop at Ukraine and will threaten to attack the West in the next five years.
Mr Keir, who has authored Who Will Defend Europe, said: “It is striking that the assessments of Putin’s next moves that we hear from defence ministers, chiefs of defence, and intelligence chiefs across Europe and the US all say Putin will look to attack the West.
“If the situation in Ukraine is resolved or becomes more stable, whether it’s through Russian victory or potentially even a ceasefire, then Putin’s next target is one of the NATO countries and the timescales that have been put on that range between one and 5 years.
“Putin’s future is war with NATO, for which, of course, he’s spent his entire time in office preparing.”
He said the “first targets” of Putin’s mission to rebuild the Soviet empire would be to conquer Moldova and the Caucasus and Central Asia regions.
This sweeping Hitler-style land grab could include countries such as Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia as well as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan – all of which are sustained targets of Russian influence.
The security order of Europe will be threatened for “years if not decades to come,” Rinkevics warned.
He previously told The Sun that Putin’s war against Ukraine – and potentially Europe in the next few years – marks his attempt to “revive Russian imperialism”.
CRIMINAL PUTIN
Matviichuk has been documenting international war crimes under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
When the large-scale war started in Ukraine, Matviichuk and her team united their efforts with dozens of organizations from different regions.
So far, she has documented more than 80,000 episodes of Russian war crimes.
Matviichuk said: “I prefer to see Putin in the Hague. Because when authoritarian regimes collapse, the leaders who see themselves as untouchable can appear under the court.
“Dictators, when they have the power with all this repressive state machine, they look powerful. But when they appeared under the court, they looked miserable.
“And I think that we deserve to see the real face of Putin when he faces the criminal accountability.”
Who is Oleksandra Matviichuk?
Oleksandra Viacheslavivna Matviichuk is a Ukrainian human rights lawyer and civil society leader based in Kyiv.
She heads the non-profit organization Centre for Civil Liberties and is a campaigner for democratic reforms in her country and the OSCE region.
The activities of the Center for Civil Liberties are aimed at protecting human rights and establishing democracy in Ukraine and the OSCE region.
The organisation is developing legislative changes, exercises public oversight over law enforcement agencies and judiciary, conducts educational activities for young people and implements international solidarity programs.
After the beginning of new armed aggression in February 2022, Matviichuk together with other partners created the ‘Tribunal for Putin’ initiative to document international crimes under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in all regions of Ukraine which became the targets of attacks of the Russian Federation.
Center for Civil Liberties, which Matviichuk is head of, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2022.
The human rights defender says more needs to be done to protect the West[/caption]
2 days agoUSA UpdateComments Off on Queen Elizabeth disapproved of Meghan ignoring long-standing royal protocol on her wedding day, book claims
MEGHAN Markle “annoyed” the late Queen on her wedding day by breaking royal protocol, it is claimed.
The monarch – who died in September 2022 – allegedly disapproved of the Duchess of Sussex, 43, opting to wear a veil at her wedding to Prince Harry in May 2018.
Meghan and Harry during their wedding in 2018[/caption]
Harry removes Meghan’s veil during the service[/caption]
The couple share a kiss after tying the knot[/caption]
Harry and Meghan with the Queen[/caption]
Writing in his book, Revenge, royal author Tom Bower said: “The Queen also questioned why Meghan needed a veil for the wedding, given it was to be her second marriage.”
The late Queen was also allegedly taken aback at divorcee Meghan’s choice of a white bridal gown.
The Duchess was previously married to Hollywood film producer Trevor Engelson between 2011 and 2013.
In contrast, Queen Camilla, who had previously been married to Andrew Parker Bowles, stuck to tradition and didn’t wear one for her wedding to Charles in 2005.
Meghan’s 16ft-long veil was trimmed with lace depicting flora from each of the 53 Commonwealth countries for the service at St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle.
Her £100,000 dress was designed by Clare Waight-Keller, then of Givenchy.
The fashion designer said she wanted to make something “timeless” but also “convey modernity”.
She said: “In contrast, the delicate floral beauty of the veil was a vision Meghan and I shared, a special gesture embracing the commonwealth flora, ascending the circumference of the silk tulle.”
The gown and veil took 50 people 3,900 hours to complete.
The veil was held in place by Queen Mary’s diamond bandeau tiara, made in 1932 and lent to the Duchess by the late Queen.
Describing the dress, Meghan previously said: “I had a very clear vision of what I wanted for the day and what I wanted the dress to look like.
“So what was amazing in working with Clare [Waight Keller] is that sometimes you’ll find designers try to push you in a different direction.
“But she just completely respected what I wanted to see for the day, and she wanted to bring that to life for me.”
Lady Elizabeth Anson, a close confidant of the Queen’s, told royal author Ingrid Seward that she made only one remark to her about Meghan and Harry’s wedding, which was that the bride’s Givenchy wedding gown was “too white”.
She wrote in her February 2024 book My Mother and I: “In the monarch’s view, it was not appropriate for a divorcee getting remarried in church to look quite so flamboyantly virginal.”
Ms Seward also claims Prince Phillip was “one of the few wary” of Meghan and thought it was “uncanny” how much she reminded him of the socialite and divorcee Wallis Simpson.
Ms Simpson opted not to wear white when she married King Edward in 1937.
The Queen was also said to have felt regret that Meghan hadn’t made up with her estranged father Thomas Markle prior to the wedding.
At short notice, it was decided Charles would walk her down the aisle.
Royal author Katie Nicholl, in her book The New Royals, said the monarch had concerns grandson Harry had never even met Thomas.
Ms Nicholl said the Queen made a point to speak to Harry and Meghan about the situation with the latter’s father.
“She thought the whole thing could have been better handled,” she wrote.
2 days agoUSA UpdateComments Off on Germany in shock after new deadly Christmas market attack
Germany reeled Saturday from the shock of a new deadly attack on a crowded Christmas market where Chancellor Olaf Scholz was to visit the scene of the carnage.