The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Come to our wedding; be sure to enclose the requested fee

- — Lois H., Fort Wayne, Indiana Write to Heloise at P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000; Fax 210-HELOISE; or email Heloise@heloise.com.

I know the times change, and so do many of the customs and manners that we’ve all observed over time. My husband and I are invited to the wedding of my niece and her fiance next month, but we are not going. In fact, most of the family will not be attending. Apparently, my niece and her fiance are charging people to attend their nuptials. They requested that people send them $300 for a single person and $500 for couples. In place of a wedding gift, they also want a donation to their honeymoon.

My niece is a college graduate and lives on her own. She said that with paying off college loans and normal living expenses, they can’t afford the dream wedding they’ve always wanted. When I suggested they have a small family wedding and give up the idea of charging people to come to her wedding, she pitched a fit. When her mother refused to pay

DEAR HELOISE >>

$16,000 for a wedding dress, she really came unglued!

Is this something new with modern weddings? I find it crude and rude to charge people to attend a wedding. People attend a wedding to help celebrate a new beginning for a couple.

Apparently, out of 210 invitation­s, only a handful are attending, and so far, no one has sent them a dime. What are your thoughts on this practice of charging someone to attend a wedding? Is this the way things are done now?

— Angry Aunt in Arlington, Virginia

I’m with you. I never understood why a wedding must be lavish to be meaningful and memorable. Smaller weddings are usually more intimate, less stressful on the bride and groom, and allow the newlyweds to save money for a house or have a very nice honeymoon.

If it’s of any comfort, every spring, I get many letters from people concerning

DEAR ANGRY AUNT >>

unusual or outrageous requests from brides. Just say, “Sorry, I can’t (or won’t ) do that.”

DEAR HELOISE >> I am 90 years old and grateful for your hint column. My hairdresse­r gave me this hint: I had ink on my lightly colored slacks, and she said that hairspray would take the stain off. And it did!

Hairspray also takes off blood stains after the item gets sprayed and washed.

DEAR LOIS >> Yes, that’s one of my all-time favorite hints. Thank you for your letter and for being such a faithful reader for so many years. My mother first tried that hairspray hint when my dad came home with an ink stain on his shirt after a pen had leaked in his pocket. It worked like a charm.

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