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WOMAN'S PAGE. Halloween Party, Witch and Ghosts BY LYDIA LA BARON WALKER. GROUPS INTO GHOST: Decorations for a Halloween enter- | tainment are of a definite kind. It is | in the selection and arranzement of the motifs that diversity is secured There should be at least one large pumpkin jack-o™lantern, and if there are several rooms. one in each is ad vised. Lights made somewhat dim by shades of pumpkin-colored crepe paper | alone or ornamented with black cats,) witches on broomsticks, jack-o'-lantern faces, etc., give an air of mystery to an otherwise usual room. The eyes of cats and witches can appear to| glow and glare if covered with circles | of burnished gilt paper. Candle light makes flickering shadows. Com- bine these motlfs and ideas with Au-| tumn leaves in large s s and al lightly glued to tape and festooned | to appear to be falling and you will have the rizht sort of atmosphere in an original way Summoning the Witch. This is a good game with which to | start, since the names of all guests are disclosed. Cover a door with a length of black cambric with a yellow circle in the center. Provide guests with | witches' brooms. Each one of the three needed is maude by cutting -2-inch strips of black cambric into 41z-inch lengths and sewing each to a broom #haped plece of orange cambric to form handles. These pieces are then seamed together except at the top of | the handle. Beans or dried peas are | then poured through this opening before it also is sewed up. Each per. son takes a turn at throwing the three brown bean-bags, trying to hit the orange knocker and saving his or | her name. Considering the name to be John Smith, here is the form: John Smith summons the witch to appear. | Since the name has to be given three | times, once each time a bag is thrown, | the company learns each player's | name, and this is fmportant for the | following game: The keeper of the | door holds up a wand whenever the | knocker has been struck three times and says, “Wlitch, come forth!” Then | the witch in costume opens the door, pushes aside the black coverings shows her head and shoulders, und | instantly withdraws and closes the do in. The game proceeds until the knocker is hit three times again. While the names of the company | are fresh in the minds of all it is a | hidden by FOR THE GALLERY good time to have the ghosts’ statue gallery. The company is divided into two equal groups, preferably all men |in one and all women in the other, | though when One this is possible only numbers of each are the same. group withdraws at a time to the gallery while the other waits to be summoned to inspect the statuary. The hostess provides one sheet for each statue, and either a white mask or a piece of white cloth with slits cut for eves to look out from. These cloth masks should have elastics at- tached as do regular masks, so that they will be held in place securely. ch player swathes himself or her- self completely, so that the eyes are visible, and assumes some pos typical of a statue. These line the walls of the room before the Bost usks the visitors to inspect the lery.” at the same time handing each a sheet of paper with a vertical list of numbers, but otherwise blank. These numbers correspond with num- bers on the statues: Ghosts Discovered. The object of the “exhibition” is the correct listing of the names of pe; posed. Guessing is done in two ways, first by the eves, and second by voic for whenever the hoste: a whistle all exclaim in unison. ha, Aha, A-hal" three times. While voices may De disguised, and the more sepulchral they are the better, they do aid in identifying persons. After each sroup has posed and been exhibited, the hostess reads aloud the numbers and the correct names, and the person in each group who has the list right or nearest right receives a prize. Ghosts for Prizes. Iandkerchief ghosts make fine prizes. Glue a strip of cardboard, bent 1o stand upright, in_the center of a disk of cardboard. Tie a corner of a white handkerchief into a knot around the top of the upright strip. Tuck the end down, %o that a round part is left for a head. Conceal the rest of the strip by wrapping it about with the remainder of the handkerchief to resemble a ghost. The disk should be the handkerchief. Beads may be sewed on for eyes, and white rdboard hands may be sewed where rms would end. A man’s handke: chief would, of course, make a larger “ghost’'s statue” than a mouchoir. BEDTIME STORIES Preparing for Winter. His life full long will be and sood Who always eats the proper food —OId Mother Nature. In his interest in getting acquainted with Ruddy the Red-backed Mouse over In the Green Forest, Peter Rabbit had forgotten that he had started out to find out how many of his friends and neighbors really looked uhead and prepared for the Winter. He was reminded of it one day when he had stopped to pass the time of day with Rudd; “Can’t stop to talk this morning, Peter,” declared Ruddy. b o | 3 ~ \ 4 P2 “WHRERE SUPPLIES QUIRED PETER V] “Why not?” demanded Peter. | “Too busy,” replied Ruddy. | “Busy?"’ sald Peter. “Busy about | what?” “Getting ready for Winter,” replied Ruddy. “You getting ready for Winter! How do you get ready for Winter?” in- quired Peter. “The same way that all thrifty peo- ple do,” retorted Ruddy, “by laying up a supply of food.” “Not all folks lay up food in the same way,” said Peter. “I've found that out.” “Of course they do,” retorted Ruddy. “They all store it away where they can get it.” “What_about Johnny Chuck?” de- manded Peter. “What about Buster Bear?" “Oh, they don't store up food,” said Ruddy. “Huh!" exclaimed Peter. “If you should see Johnny Chuck now 1 guess vou'd think he stores up food. He's got so much of it stored under that skin of his that I hardly dare go near him for fear he may blow up. Buster " Bear’s storing food the same way. He spends-all his time eating.” DO YOU PUT YOUR FOR WINTER?" IN-| BLUNTLY. | | | stores of food,” protested Peter. BY THORNTON W¥. BURGESS y. “I never thought of that said he. “What is it you never thought of?” demanded Peter. “I never thought of that being one way of laying up food,”. said Rudd d hate to lay up food for all Winter vay. But then, of course, sleep most of the Winter suppose that means that don't sleep,” said Peter. “No more than I do in Summer," replied Ruddy. “I sleep when I'm sleepy, that's all.” “Which reminds me,” said Peter, you seem to be out in the day- time a great deal of the time. “Certainly,” said Ruddy. not? 1 know there are some mem- bers of the Mouse family who seldom come out until after dark. Daylight or darkness makes no difference to me. I come out when I feel like it. I'm just as much at home in the light of day as I am in the darkness of night. In fact, I rather like daylight. At this season of the year when one must get ready for Winter it is very handy to feel equally at home in day- light or darkness.” “Where do you put your supplies for Winter?” inquired Peter very bluntly. " Ruddy chuckled aloud. It was pleasant, squeaky little chuckle. such questions ‘as_some people k" he exclaimed. “If you really want to know, Peter, I'm going to teil vou. I put them where they will do me the most good when I need them.” “Oh,” said Peter and grinned. “If I want to find them I suppose that is where T must look for them.” xactly,” replied Ruddy. “Like my house, my’ storehouse is my own se- cret. Now I've stood here talking to u too long already. I must store me of these beechnuts, and there e some seeds that I must gather | while I can get them.” “But if you don't sleep all Winter and are running about I don't see why it i3 necessary for you to lay up any Y don’t do it.” “That’s all right,” replied Ruddy. “Next Winter after the first hard ice storm, when you can't get around to get anything to eat, just think of me, Peter, comfortably eating whenever I am hungry, and not having to go out in bad weather to get my food.” Waffles V—Ivith Ene Egg. Beat one tablespoonful of butter and one tablespoontul of sugar to a cream. Add ene egg well beaten, one tea- spoonful of salt, two cupfuls of milk, two cupfuls of flour and two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder. Stir lightly and cook on hot, greased waf- fle irons. They are equally good using part water and part Jilk. woman'’s | “Why | THE EVENING SUB ROSA . BY MIML A Male Protest. E. K. writes, in part: “I agree with the recent article you wrote about breaking off a love affair when it has | become ~ tiresome wherein you tell i members of the fair sex how to end | things with their sheiks when the lat- ter have become boring. I agree that { the best and quickest way is to writ |a short note. But look at it from our | angle. When we want to break things | oft ‘we encounter tears, hysterics and | dire threats of self-destruction. Does | the girl have to go through all this | when she wants to give a fellow the |air? No! "He gets himself another | &irl and it's all in the day's work with Lim. \Why not give us men a little | dope on how to give a burntout flame the gate, gracefully and without the theatricals usually attending this per- formance?—E. K. In the first place, E. K., there is no such thing as a clean break. One party or another always provides the tears and hysteric: There isn't any known recipe for avoiding this sort of thing when it comes time to break things off. But don't for a moment believe that the girls are the only ones who de- {light in great emotional scenes. Any girl who has tried to ease out quietly { with a brief friendly note can tell you just how difficult it is. She sends her short apology, hoping that the recipient will have the good sense to take the hint and depart for- ever. Five minutes after the “turn-down suitor gets his dismissal, he is on the phone talking sternly to his faithless sweetheart: “Oh look here, Jean, you can't really mean that. You're just | nervous and tired and don't know | what you're saying. I know what it is—you're sore because I flirted with | Peggy the other night. Well, honest- lv she doesn't mean a thing to me,” ete., ete. As soon as his business hours per- mit he tears down to the poor girl's {home to straighten things up. He | believes that a_tew comforting words will put everything right. He nearly” wears her nerves out talking—talking to her, to her family, to her friends—to every one who will listen, and finally after five weeks of jarguing, he demands incredulous “Do you mean to you don’t want to see me any more?"” Oh no, you can't get away with the statement that girls have no trouble in ending everything. It is true that the falr sex does a good deal of emoting when the erst- while suitor shows a desire to fade away. But the determined male is just as much of a nuisance when he finds himself minus a sweetheart | The best wav to end things, as I've | said before, is by means of a short | note—and then after yom've sent the only thing to do is to sit tight and pray that the jilted party will have he is beaten. | COLOR CUT-OUT JOAN OF ARC. | Before he King. It was a very perilous journey that Joan undertook to reach the king, over half of the way leading through the enemy's territory. When she finally reached the king more diffi- cultles awaited her. She was made to wait two days before shejwas finally admitted to the castle. ‘When Joan entered and knelt be- fore Charles he pointed to a richly dressed lord, saying: “That is the king, not 1.” But Joan could not be tricked. “In God's name, Gracious Prince,” she answered, “you are he and none other.” Then she repeated the words which had brought her safely thus far. “I am Joan the Maid, sent by God to save France.” Here is the Dauphin Charles, who is soon to be crowned king. Make his hair golden brown. His suit should be bright blue bound in orange. 1 Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused: Discriminate in the use of “discover” and “in- vent.” We discover something which previously existed. We invent a thing for the first time. Columbus discovered America. Edison invented the phonograph. Often mispronounced: Detail. cent last syllable. Often misspelled: Glycerin. Synonyms: Sin, crime, offense, gullt, delinquency, iniquity, vice and trans. gression. Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Imminence; the state of impending danger or evil. “The imminence of battle was in the very air.” Ac- They suy our hardships Reenllent o R . e us & and wise, But if there’s one thing I dislike It's blessings n disguise. the good sense to know when she or | STAR, WASHINGTON Balancing the Budget BTEDLY, matrimony has NDOU! U | a wife was a chattel who stayed put adjust their finances and their ind way they have been unable to free traditions. By this I mean that while the ma: earner, he feels that book and that she desiring to follow a gainful occupation to accomplish this gastronomic feat quarrelings. This difficulty is going to increa average young man to get married, another thing, housewife, for she makes a home for purely domestic woman. Offhand, an outsider would say In innumerable instances the wives turn slackers and let Sally do { they dole out to the women who have fit. In other cases, the wives are the be called upon to contribute to the uy the home in proportion to their earni The {dea that a man shou: based on the theory that she gave when she goes outside of the home supported. On the other hand, the addition to her other work contribut. | Such a couple might well establ | account preferably, for the common & | some money that they can do { interference from the other. wit it | (O)F course, it is a noble gesture for each to say works out satisfactorily i but I At lease, she has | enforce somehow this seldom ) far as women are concer technical claim on her hust That is why women are wise they earn it. dollars of it as if it had come out of } Certainly, it is going to be diffic reconcile himself to the thought of him and having a right to the money for a woman to realize that she can't But all that is needed to smooth out and justice. Sentimentalists might say that th between & husband and wife who love and always will be. household, and it will be lessened, n frankly business proposition, instead panhandling, and petty larceny, the past. Shawls Are Now fore—that is in the early nineteenth century—they stayed there for nearly three-quarters of a century. A pretty long time for one fashion to remain good, yvou will agree. repeats itself, then we need have no fear that the present vogue for shawls will soon wane. The fact is that we are just on the fringes of the fashion. Mayhap before many vears have passed shawls will be worn for street wraps, as they were 80 years ago. But of course that's IN THE CENTER IS A WHITE CASHMIR SHAWL EMBROIDERED IN BRIGHT COLORED WOOL, WITH WHITf WOOL FRINGE. AT THE LEFT IS A GREEN AND BROWN WOOL SHAWL FOR SPORTS WEAR, AND AT THE LOWER RIGHT-HAND CORNER IS A SHAWL OF BOIS-DE-ROSE VEL- VET PRINTED IN GOLD, WITH GOLD FRINGE. just the conjecture, The important thing is that shawls are very gener- ally worn in the evening now, and | some women make use of a sports shawl. At Deauville last Summer the fash- lon for shawls received a great boost. Exquisite examples of Spanish shawls were nightly displayed at the Casino there. There were also mar- velously embroidered Chinese crepe shawls and some prominence was given to the shawls of purely modern Inspiration. Seemingly the essential thing about the modern evening shawl is the fringe. The shawl would be far less tempting if it were not for that. To be sul silken fringe Dorothy Dix] When Both Husband and Wife Are Wage-Earners Both Should Contribute Toward Home Ex- penses in Proportion to Their Earnings. parlous, equal-rights-of-the-sexes times than in the obsolete old days when And among the greatest of these compiications is the problem of how the woman who continues to work after she is married and her husband should | curlously enough, while meeting modern conditions in one w: « husband, he has entire right to carry the pocket hould give him all she makes. a wife, her husband should support her. In a word, both want to have their cake and eat it, too. one thing, the high cost of living has made it virtually impossible for the dowry or who continues to be a mone nearly every girl nowadays has been profession or trade and has made her o very few women who have known the joy of having their are ever satisfied to give them up and become financially dependent again. E have, then, thousands of young couples in which the wife keeps on with her job after marriage and who superimposes upon that the labor of paragon as a wife—one who could help provide the dinner and cook it, too- should be only too happy te make good on his marriage vow, “With all my worldly goods I thee endow,” but such seems to be far from the case. men who have married these go-getter use all the money they make in gratifying their extravagant personal tastes. | g support his home and his wife entirely w 1 of her time and labor to her family, and | record would be | for happiness and peace in a family for both the husband and wife to h nd that she gets out of it only what he in the great majority of on to their own money with a death grip, whether they inherit it or wheth; Their husbands don’t often mean to cheat them out of it, b once a man gets possession of his wife’s money, he regards it as absolute his own, and he feels that he is being just as generous in giving her a few | cult for the hust @ wife being financially he earns, and it is going to be difficult as wives have mostly (Copyright BY MARY MARSHALL. When shawls came into fashion be-| So it history | , D. C, MONDAY, OC TOBER 26, 1925. Gives Sound Advice on Matrimonial Finances ‘. many more complications in these wherever her husband set her down. vileges. For, in the other themselves from the thralldom of old dividual rights and pr n is willing for his wife to be a money And the woman, while outside of her home, still feels that, as And the attempt gives rise to ‘endless bickerings and se, rather than decrease, because, for unless he marries a girl who has a arner after marrlage. And, for trained to some wn living before she was married, and own pockethooks he her husband just as much as does *hie that any man who had that sort of | t. In many other cases, the husbands | demand that their wives turn over their entire pay envelopes to them, an earned them such pennies as they see grafters, and feel that they should not i keep of the home, but have a right to | When the husband and wife are both money-earners, T think that the [a T : to settle the matter is for them both to contribute toward running |Or anvthing rather than engage in a |3 ngs. | to work she forfeits the right to be | woman who does her housework 1| es at least the wages of a maid and | housekeeper to the common good, and that should be taken into consideration ‘ in adjusting the household financial budget. | 1 savings | it makes h a joint bank account, od, but beyond that I think a h as they and without any | please . | All that I have in actual ned. For a wife finds out that hand's purse, it is one that she chooses to give her. | yours," { e | | es, in hanging 1is own pocket nd of the future to independent of be both a parasite and a wage getter the situation is a little common sense | ere should be no question about money each other, but there always has been | It is at the bottom of nine-tenths of the friction in every | it Is settled as a and jollying, and had to settle it in DOROTHY DIX. | sed, when chicanery, ot incre: of by 1925.) Gaining Ground has a maddening way of catching on | beaded embroidery, metallic lace or | bugles, but this must be put up with| when $uch trimmings and shawls are |in the limelight at the same time. A number of women have taken | to collecting fine shawls, but bear in | mind that it requires a large bank ac- count to support such a hobby. Sometimes the purchase of a lovely shawl solves your problem of suitable attire for some special occasion better | than & new frock could do. For an interesting shawl may be worn over a frock so as to give it an entirely new aspect, and can be used again and again without fear of going out of style. The same shawl may be given entirelv different aspects by | wearing it with different frocks and | by draping it differently. No woman's wardrobe is quite com. plete nowadays without at least one fine embroidered shawl. The white cashmir shawl In the cut is worn on a triangular fold with ends drawn around to the front, where they are | either left to hang or wrapped one over the other. This shawl is em. broidered in bright colored wools and has a long white fringe. Beneath it in the sketch is shown a shawl that is very, very new. It is of bois-de-rose velvet printed fn gold with gold fringe. At the upper left-hand corner is shown a green and brown wool shawl of the sort that women carry motoring or for sports. (Copyright. 1925.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was thinking to himselt with his feet up, and ma sed, Wy do they allow sutch men to go about among decent peeple, thats wat I wunt to know. Id like to heer the anser to that myself, wat man do you meen? pop sed. He's a cheet and a fraud, and if I had my way he’d be in jale rite now, and wen he got out he'd be deported, ma sed. I can see you dont wish the poor fellow eny hard luck, who is this crook enyway? pop sed. Crook is the proper name for him, he’s as crooked as a pigs left leg, the big chéeter, they use to hang men like him back in historical times, ma sed. I sippose thats wen his ancestors ‘were hanged, who did you say he was? pop sed. He's that froot and vegetable man erround the corner and he wont get eny more of my trade in a hurry, the man must have absilutely no con- science, ma sed. Jest lissen to wat he did, he had some lovely looking pears out frunt marked 3 for a quarter, wich seems good and plenty for eny kind of pears considering the way they grow free on trees, but enyway I told him to give me 3, and just then I terned my back a moment to look at Mrs. Clarker going by in her new Fall coat, although its not werth looking at if you wunt my unadulterated opinion, and wen I got home and looked at m: pears they were all soft and specked and mizzerable looking, the common robber, thats all he is, but I got even ‘with him, ma sed. How? pop sed, and ma sed, I had a counterfeit dime in my bag and I dis- covered later that it was amung the change I paid him with, and serve him jest rite too, the portch climber. Help ald sucker, pop sed and he litt & cigar and got behind the sporting page. 4 itold and heeded. What TomorrowMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. The unfavorable planetary aspects | that assert themselves this afternoon continue in force during the early part of tomorrow, and the signs denote that any excursion into fields of new en- deavor will not meet with that success which would probably be vouchsafed if a more propitious occasion were chosen for their initiation. In the ly part of the afternoon conditions change, and while not actively auspi- cious the influences will be benign and tranquil. This will be very strongly felt in the emotions, and there will be sensed a strong stirring of the better impulses. Such a condition always in- dicates reciprocity in love's interests, and little fear of the outcome need be entertained if the *old, old story” be Children born tomorrow will enjoy, according to the signs, remarkable freedom from sickness during infancy. They will, however, be subject to a serious illness in their teens. This, if proper care be given, will not militate against their attainment of physical ley. Temperamentally they will ather wayward and captious, There will, however, be such a prodi- gality of demonstrative affection in thelr make-up that these faults are likely to be overlooked rather than corrected. These children will be very largely creatures of impulse, and it behooves those responsible for their training to see that they are not left rudderless on the sea of life. If tomorrow is your birthday annt- u are sympathetic and reliable friend and a faithful lover. You have no very great ambi- tion and are easy-going and content— so much so that your life is often con- | red by others a somewhat drab | stence. Your one great weakness s | lack of decision, or what {s more collo- quially known not knowing your »wn - mind.” are swayed too easily by the 1astons and argu ments of others, and fall to exercise your God-given right to express and | hold an opinion of your own. You are | cifist, and will agree with any on ou conflict. 1If it were always safe to | judge persons by their friends, vour a high one. It some- times is more expedient to judge peo- | ple by the enemies they have made, and in this respect no judgment of you | would be possible Well known persons born on th: iate are Whitelaw Reid, joursalist and diplomat; John D. Long, Governor of Massachusetts; Eugene A. Smith, geol- ogist; Kenyon Cox, artist; Theodore Roosevelt, twenty.sixth President of | the United States, and Edward M. ut, lawyer and polit n. (Copyright. 1925.) i “PUZZILICKS” {———— Puzzle-Limericks a young lady of — Who w But Later And e on the Canadian border. ely proud. root of 8. range of one's vision. deranged. 1 3 4 ote—The state of mind of the lady from the northern part of | the United States was really most un- | fortunate, as will be found when the | complete limerick is formed by plac- | the correct words, indicated by ! numbers, in the corresponding | spaces. The anewers and another | “Puzzlick” will appear tomorrow.) (Copyright, 1825.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Until we saw this Louls XVI bergere with its quaintly ruffled squab cushion we had never realized how essentially feminine a single piece of furniture could be. The frame is pale walnut and the uphol- stery an ivory grounded glazed chintz, patterned gafly in lilac, pale old rose, green and black. One can magine this chair furnish- ing inspiration for a luxurlous lady's bedchamber. The walls would be bis- cuit color, the floor completely cover- ed with a deep-pile carpet of soft gray-green. Draperles of llac-col- ered taffeta would have a formal val- ance of gray-green velvet, and un- dercurtains of pale old-rose silk net. The bedspread would be pale green taffeta, ruffied in lilac, and the lamp- shades of green georgette bound in rose and black. (Copyright, 1925.) ‘ READY to US!S CHOCOLATE chocolate, strained honey, crystal sugar syrup and finest malt, scientifically blended (from a French formula) 140! in liquid form ready to use for all chocolate drinks, and as a topping for ice cream and desserts. Rich in vitamins, highly nutritious and easily di- gested. Use it just as it comes from the tin. Children love it and thrive on it. Mode in the millon dofler Movis plons ot Boitimors, Wl FEATURES. Cohering masses. ‘Wrath. Short poem. ‘Atmosphere. River in Wales and England. Peruse. “leared away. xisted A flax fiber. Rested. Vehicle Ourselves. Old horse. Flog. Mixed type. Detace. Cooked in an oven. ecentric rotating plece. Run away. At hand. Spiritual essence in modern oc- cultism. Grow dim. Voluble. Bucket. South African leglslative y. Southern State (abbr.). Myself. . Disturbance. Measure of length. iving of false testimony. ar's title. ver (Archaic). Equivalence. Opponent of Ostris. Man's nickname. Merriment. Increase. Be ill. Egyptian divinity. Pay for refreshments, Recent intelligence. Bronze (Roman). Minced oath. 26. Cat cries 28 30. 3 f a Rough ropean river. 34. A Prohibit Armed strife 41 42. assem- Toward, Head of a Malt beverage. French unit of square mead Greek letter. Channels; openings. Kitchen utensil Ornamental greenish silicate Affirmative. ecretion from inflamed tissue Useful metal. Clenched hand. Dry. Mend a stocki Mother of C: Ocean. Greek letter. Afternoon me: Gained. Street (abbr.). Physician's E[!BIII L€l A] (Als | (TIAMIE JP o) O] [EMI1{GIRIAITIIIOIN] [SHloTi [A] jAlo/pIrIEIS]S JNTS ] W O OEE0 0§ [Rlo[r [S[EISIEINIS [E] [wiE] [BIE[D] [AlajFioloTINGIolA 1 |F| [Rlofo/FIlim/ANEKI [R]E] [FIR0[G]s ] [TIU[R]NT1 INTG] B [El0N] oA} 5] 0] Parking With Peggy “‘Sally says her allowan but ‘spin’ money. It all goes for traf | fic fines. | O Prices realized on Swift & Comypany sales of carcass beef in Washington for week ending Saturday. Octobe: on shipments eold out. ranged f-o 13 told out.”fanced ] Sir Thomas J. Lipton grows on his renowned Ceylos tea estates the finest tea in the world. So peerless is its quality that at the great exhibi- tions in Ceylon and India Lipton-cultivated tea has been awarded both the first prizes and gold medals. Not an iota of its marvelous richness, bouquet and flavor is lost in transit! It’ssealed in—sealed in for you to enjoy to full zest and taste. Always look for this famous signature — argest sale in the world