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LUNCH BOX ioPACK? I Tok* HOT DAN'S Tip* Try this wonderful new Mustard Butter. Soften I cup butter, blend in VS to IS cup French’s Mustard. Delicious inste plain butter for wiches of meat or cheese. Try em-salad sandwiches with French’s Mus tard added to the mayonnaise. So smooth and creamy it blends per fectly! SMOOIHER CXEAMIfR -2§f /VOTOm fWwwWw ml WAR TAKES MONEY! America needs yours. Buy War Stamps and Bonds today and every day you can at your nearest bank • or post office. Tampax Brings New wmnort lo women In Summer Months Summer is very often a chafing or deal for women who wear sanitary pads. Whether you are a housewife or a girl working in an office — whether strap - hanging, typing, climbing stairs or hanging over a stove, it's the same story . . . But with Tompax no such chafing is possible and there's no bulging bulk to remind you. No pins, nq belts, no odor—that’s Tampax! ... Perfected by a doctor. Made of pure surgical cotton. Comes in dainty one-time-use applicator. Easily disposable. So compact a month's supply fits in your purse . . . Tampax is worn internally— cannot show under a swim-suit You don’t even remove it in tub or shower, bullions have found it marvelous. Three sizes. At drug store and notion counters now. "FURLOUGH WEDDINGS" War brings huirisd marriages. They «" be nice ones, loo these wartime marriages which one correspondent appropriately dubs ‘‘furlough weddings.” The problems are many and varied. Here, for example, is a wedding where the ceremony is to tair» place at the end of the regular Sun day morning service at whatever date John, the bridegroom, can get home. The questions asked are: May Mary, the bride, and John go to the morning service together and at with her mother and father, whose own pew that day will be exchanged for the clergyman’s front one? Or should John sit with his parents? Or should neither of them appear until service is over? Should Mary enter the church with John or with her father? These answers depend, first of all, upon whether Mary is wearing ordinary clothes or bridal dress and veil. In the first case, she and John may perfectly well sit with her parents. Thenmt the dome of the service, when the strangers hmve left, mfew hereof the seed ding mmreh ere ptmyed, mnd the bride mnd bridegroom tmhe their pieces before the clergy men. Hie beet men mnd her msudof honor follow them end stand mt either aide. From hia own piece mt the end of the front pew, her fmther will go forward to giee her mtamy. On the other hand, if Mary is wearing bridal dress, neither she nor her father should appear until morning service is over. But John and his best man may have sat with hia parents throughout the service. Otherwise, they arrive a bit early and wait in the vestry. In either case, the beginning of the wedding march is the signal for John, with his beat man, to take his place and for Mary, pre ceded by her maid of honor, to walk up the aisle with her father. other new problems one of the most difficult is that of the bride who is obliged to go for her wed ding to wherever the bridegroom is statiooed. Her family should pay her traveling, as well as other ex penses, and. if humanly possible, go with her. If neither of these is possible, and if the bridegroom's parents are able to do so finan cially, they may pay her expenses. But if they do not know her really well, she should not let them as sume any of the expenses she incurs before she is their daughter-in-law. If neither her family nor his can be present at the marriage, then ob viously the bridegroom will arrange far the ceremony to take place immediately after her arrival. un-aomnn uvitatiomi When the date of the wedding cannot be decided until the last minute, the invitations should be prepared with the date line left blank — to be filled in by hand. Then the date can be written in. To a bride who is having a big wedding at home and sake how mixed civilian and mili tary clothes, and also mixed ranks, can look alike, the an swer is: They can’t! For example, at a fashionable wedding the other day the bride groom eras a lately enlisted Pri vate, his best man an Ensign. The ushers included an Ensign, a Cor poral, and four civilians in cut aways—three of these, older friends, substituting for soldiers who could not get leave. In a situation like this — con trary to what is described above — the civilians should wear dark blue suits with blue ties, small boutonnieres and no gloves. In fact, these are the clothes of safety for all civilians at semi-military weddings unless the bridegroom ushers are in the Navy and are wearing whites. Then civilians might wear white, too. A most disappointing answer to have to make is that the arch of swards under which the bride and bridegroom descend the outside steps of the church is out of ques tion unless the bridegroom and hia ushers are commissioned officers — and have swards! net way to engrave the name of a bridegroom, below the rank of senior officer, on the wedding invi tations or the announcements: Mr. George Highseas Ensign US. Navy "Mr." precedes the name of a junior officer, since he is addressed as Mister and not Ensign. In the Army, junior officers are permitted to prefix Lieut, or 2nd Lieut, to their names. The name of a non com or C.P.O. or enlisted sailor or soldier, isengraved Mr. John Strong, with Signal Corps, US. Navy; or Chest Artillery, US. Army; or whatever designation is hia, in small type on the line beneath. Hslsasad by Tbs BsU Syndtaau, Inc. SweetHeart »» Real beauty-lather from a soap I that's made to lather! I ^■P 4 Enjoy daily «1——fog fl r» 4V with pure, mild I p BweetHeartSoap. I F r> i. - Only a few B I Vyve“r^eArt eentsacahe! I L THE SOAP THAT AGREES WITH YOUR SKIN