Patent Publication Number: US-10759616-B2

Title: Storage and organizer-integrated sheet dispensers

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     The present application is an U.S. national stage application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/US2012/023795, having an international filing date of Feb. 3, 2012, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/439,304, filed Feb. 3, 2011; U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/479,298, filed Apr. 26, 2011; U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/541,995, filed Sep. 30, 2011; and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/578,874, filed Dec. 21, 2011. The contents of these applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. 
    
    
     FIELD 
     The present invention relates generally to a system and method for dispensing sheet material. More specifically, the present invention relates to systems and methods for dispensing sheets of material such as a sheet, facial tissue, wipe, towel or similar type sheet material. In a particular embodiment, the sheet material is dispensed as a single, discrete sheet. 
     BACKGROUND 
     This section is intended to provide a background or context to the invention recited in the claims. The description herein may include concepts that could be pursued, but are not necessarily ones that have been previously conceived or pursued. Therefore, unless otherwise indicated herein, what is described in this section is not prior art to the description and claims in this application and is not admitted to be prior art by inclusion in this section. 
     It is generally well known to provide dispensers for sheets of materials (such as tissues and wipes), where the sheets are folded and interleaved to permit pop-up dispensing by manually pulling each sheet individually from a stack of sheets retained for storage in a container (such as a box or the like). However, one disadvantage of such known dispensers is that the top wall, because of the opening disposed thereon, can not be used in full because of the opening disposed thereon. 
     Another disadvantage is that the next to be dispensed sheet is always exposed to the environment, hence collecting dust and other particles, until it is pulled for use. By the time it is used it may have been exposed for a prolonged period of time so as to compromise its cleanliness relative to the sheets still retained inside the box. 
     Typically, in such known pop-up dispensers the next to be dispensed sheet is maintained in a position protruding from the box for ease of removal from the box. To achieve this, a plastic covering is employed over the opening in the top wall which covering contains a slit to help prevent the tissue from dropping back into the tissue box. Even with the use of such a slit, it is common for a large portion of the next to be dispensed sheet to protrude beyond the slit. Moreover, even with use of such a slit, it is not uncommon for the next to be dispensed sheet from falling into the box. 
     Another disadvantage in the prior art tissue boxes or tissue dispensers is that they are designed for use horizontally, i.e., a tissue dispenser or a tissue box is placed on the surface horizontally, for example, on a desk surface, a counter top in a kitchen or bathroom, etc., and the tissues disposed in the dispensers or in the boxes when used are pulled upward. The placing of the tissue dispensers on a horizontal surface as mentioned takes away the horizontal space that would otherwise be used for placing or storing other items whose access to is more important to a user. To be sure, for house and office uses recessed tissue dispenser has been made to solve this horizontal storage problem. Inserted into a vertical wall, recessed tissue dispenser is designed to position a tissue box whose top wall, which is the wall having an opening for tissues to be dispensed, is flush with the vertical wall. For dispensing, a waiting tissue is pulled straight out of the top wall following by the next waiting tissue, which is partially protruded out of the box. One drawback of the recessed tissue dispenser is that a hole must be made inside a wall, which is at least equal to the dimension of the top wall of the tissue box, hence damaging to the wall in which the tissue dispenser is inserted. Another draw back of the recessed tissue dispenser of\the prior art is that a recessed area is not reversible without some minor, if not major, repairing to the wall if the user no longer desires to position a tissue box at that location. Another drawback of the recessed tissue dispenser is a requirement of the vertical wall having a depth at least equal to the depth of the tissue box housed inside the tissue dispenser. Another drawback of the recessed tissue dispenser is that it requires a user having some handyman skill and the right tools in order to drill a hole and properly attach the hardware associated with the setup. 
     Tissue box and tissue dispenser are also used in a car. Tissue box is generally disposed on a seat inside a car, mostly on the front, passenger seat, on the front dashboard, on the back area behind the back seats, and on the floor. The prior art also discloses attaching tissue dispenser to several locations inside the car in order to solve the storage and access problems. For example, the prior art discloses the use of the space or location within a car to hold a tissue dispenser, including the visor area, the cup holder area, the dashboard area, and the glove box&#39;s interior. A drawback to these tissue dispensers is that they take away space or employ important space that is designed by car maker for a specific purpose, for example, the glove box&#39;s interior is used for storage personal items; the cup holder is for holding beverages for the convenience of driver and the passenger; the visor for blocking the sun and the dashboard not to mention safety issue from having a tissue dispenser thereon. 
     Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide one or more systems and methods for dispensing sheets of material that overcomes one or more of the drawbacks of the conventional devices for dispensing sheets of material. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     In one embodiment, provided is a system for dispensing a sheet or sheets of material, in particular sideways dispensing or dispensing sheets in a direction approximately parallel to the axis of the dispensing wall, from a container, which system comprises a first container with a first opening and a second container with a second opening, wherein said first and second openings are sized and shaped to allow the sheet(s) to be pulled through and are non-aligned to each other and wherein the sheet from the container is withdrawn through the first opening then exit out of the system through the second opening and a portion of the sheet immediately follows it is protruded out of the second opening. 
     The two openings of the two containers are considered as non-aligned to each other when (1) the sheet to be dispensed can not be pulled upright at 90 degrees, with respect to the surface of the wall on which the first opening is disposed, but must bend at an angle as it leaves the first opening, for example more than 90 degrees or less than 90 degrees, in order for it to go through the second opening so it can be removed completely from the first and two containers, and (2) the sheet following the dispensed sheet is retained in full or essentially full, for example, more than 60%, more than 70%, more than 80%, or more than 90% of the sheet, in the space provided by the first container and the second container. 
     The first container is usually disposed with the sheets, for example, a prior art tissue box. The second container may include but is not limited to: a container having an opening that houses the first container and has a second opening for dispensing; a sleeve that wraps around the first container and which has an opening, i.e., the second opening; and a lid disposed on top of the first container and which has an opening disposed thereon on its horizontal wall or vertical wall, which may be fully opened or partially opened as long as the sheet can be pulled through, etc. Inversely the second container can be configured to be disposed underneath the first container with the dispensing wall now to be the bottom wall thereof. In this configuration the top wall of the lid now can serve as the bottom floor over which the sheet is dispensed inversely out of the first container. 
     In one aspect of the embodiment, the portion of the sheet protruding out of the first opening is contained within the space formed by the first and second containers. In another aspect of the embodiment, less than about 1%, less than about 5%, less than about 10%, less than about 15%, less than about 20%, less than about 25%, less than about 30%, less than about 35%, less than about 40%, less than about 45%, less than about 50%, less than about 55%, less than about 60%, less than about 65%, less than 75% of the portion of the sheet protrude out of the space formed by the first and second containers. In another aspect, more than about 50%, more than about 55%, more than about 60%, more than about 65%, more than about 70%, more than about 75%, more than about 80% of the sheet to be dispensed next is contained within the space formed by the first and second containers. 
     In another aspect, the system comprises a first container with a first opening and means for covering said opening when said container is not is dispensing mode. 
     In another aspect the system further comprises a glider disposed in the same plane of said first opening, over or under said first opening, or adjacent to said opening. In another aspect said glider is disposed above the sheet or sheets of material in said container and is glided over by a portion of the sheet that is being withdrawn and a portion of the sheet that immediately follows said sheet being withdrawn and wherein a portion of the sheet that immediately follows said sheet being withdrawn is disposed on said glider after the sheet being withdrawn has been completely removed from said container. 
     In one embodiment, an improvement over the tissue box or tissue dispenser of the prior art having a first opening disposed on a top wall thereof is provided. The improvement comprises disposing on said tissue box or said tissue dispenser a second container having a second opening, wherein said first opening and said second opening are non-aligned to each other and wherein the sheet from the tissue box is withdrawn through the first opening and a portion of the sheet immediately follows it is protruding out of the first opening and retained in the space provided by the top wall of the tissue box and the second container. 
     One embodiment relates to a system for dispensing sheets of material, including but is not limited to facial tissues, and includes a container, either made with a soft material such as paper or card board or hard material such as plastic, glass, tin, steel, for storing a supply of individual sheets and an opening in a wall of the container for dispensing the sheets individually and sequentially therethrough. The opening may be a side opening disposed on a substantially vertical sidewall of the container to permit stacking of other objects on a substantially horizontal top wall of the container. In one aspect of the embodiment, the opening is kept out of sight of the user, for example, disposing it on the side wall most distal to the user or to the front area of the design. In another aspect, the opening is covered with for example a flap disposed over the side wall containing the opening. The flap can be easily flipped to access to the waiting tissue. 
     The opening may be a top opening disposed in the top wall of a first container, for example, a paper tissue box, and the first container may be disposed within a second container having non-aligned openings such that the majority of the next to be dispensed sheet protruding from the first container is maintained within the second container. In one embodiment, this can be achieved with a side opening in a sidewall, so that the sheets of material may be dispensed through the top opening of the first container then through the side opening of the second container, and to permit stacking of objects on a top wall of the second container. 
     Alternatively, the opening may be a top opening in the top wall of the container and the container may further include a cover spaced above the top wall by one or more spacers, so that the sheets of material may be dispensed from the top opening and guided laterally outward by the cover. The opening may be a top opening in the top wall of the container and the container may further include a glider disposed proximate the top opening, so that the sheets of material may be dispensed from the top opening and guided laterally over and against the glider (e.g. in the manner of a pulley or roller or the like), or in the case when the same container is used in an upside-down position, for example, the wall having the opening is the bottom wall, the sheet of material may be dispensed from the bottom opening and guided laterally under and against the glider. In an aspect of the embodiment, the glider is a hollow tubing which is rollable along the direction of the dispensed tissue as the tissue glides over, or underneath, against it. 
     The opening may be a top opening in the top wall of the container and the container may further include a cover spaced above the top wall by one or more spacers, and a glider disposed proximate the top opening, so that the sheets of material may be dispensed from the top opening and guided laterally over the glider and laterally outward between the top wall and the cover. The opening may be on a bottom wall of the container and the cover, spacer and/or glider may be disposed beneath the container. 
     The opening may be on both a top wall and a bottom wall of the container and a cover, spacer and/or glider may be disposed above and beneath the container for two-sided dispensing. The objects that may be stacked upon the top wall or the cover may include a second container for dispensing sheets of material or a receptacle for containing used sheets of material or other waste items. 
     Alternatively, the container may be two or more containers disposed adjacent to one another (vertically or horizontally) and may share a common cover, spacer and/or glider in a dispensing configuration disposed above or below the containers. 
     The container with a cover, spacer and/or glider may be configured to fit within a receptacle (e.g. door pocket, console pocket, instrument stack pocket, etc.) of a vehicle. The container may be configured in any suitable orientation, including horizontally upside-up or upside-down and vertically with the wall having the opening or facing the user or positioned at an angle, for example 90 degrees, with respect to the user. 
     In one of the embodiments, a tissue dispenser comprising (1) a housing having four side walls, one which is considered as the front wall over which the tissue travels and the top of which is lower than the other three side walls thereby creating a second opening to the system to allow tissue to be dispensed out of the dispenser; a bottom wall; no top wall, or the top wall is essentially opened and functions as an opening for tissue dispensing, (2) a glider disposed inside the housing but above the top sheet of the tissue clip and aligned approximately in the middle of the second opening so that the first tissue rests over the glider and is ready to be pulled through the opened top wall then through the second opening for dispensing, and, optionally, (3) a sleeve that wraps around the bottom wall, the two side walls parallel to the bottom wall and the opened top wall. When the tissue dispenser does not wear the sleeve the opened top wall can be closed out by contacting it against an external wall, e.g., a side of a car door pocket. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box or tissue dispenser is provided comprising (1) a housing having four side walls, one which is considered as the front wall over which the tissue travels and the top of which is lower than the other three side walls thereby creating an opening of the dispenser to allow tissue to be dispensed out of the dispenser; a bottom wall and a top wall which is closed. The tissue is dispensed sideways through the opening on the front wall. Alternatively, the dispenser may not have the top wall or its top wall is opened, and contains a sleeve that wrap around the dispenser. In one aspect of the embodiment the distal end of the bottom wall of the dispenser may be opened to allow the distal end of the tissue clip to be protruded out, especially if the length of the dispenser (e.g., 4 inches in length) is less than the length of the tissue clip (e.g., about 8 to 9 inches in length). In another aspect of the embodiment the dispenser with its bottom wall distally opened may be disposed in a plastic bag, e.g., a zip lock bag so that the tissue can be kept clean inside the bag and is ready to be dispensed when needed by unzipping the bag and pulling the waiting tissue out of that opening. 
     The glider may be impregnated or otherwise configured to impart a substance to the sheets as they are dispensed from the container. The glider may be disposed with the substance as a reservoir of the substance and infuse the sheets with the substance as the sheets glide over or underneath it. The glider may be configured to route the sheets through a reservoir of a substance to infuse the sheets with the substance as the sheets are dispensed. Alternatively, the substance may be a lubricant such a talc, corn starch or other materials to facilitate the gliding capacity of the gliders. 
     Another embodiment relates to a method of dispensing sheets of material from a container and includes manually withdrawing the sheets from the container using any one or more of the features of the systems described herein. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser system comprising a case or an outer shell which is provided to enclose and protect the tissue housing. The case is made of materials which allow the shape of the case to be tightly adapted to the shape or contouring of the cavity, e.g., inside a pocket of a car door which depends on the types of car and car models is not exactly a square or a straight rectangle, in which the dispenser is disposed in order to allow the tissue dispenser system to tightly fit inside the cavity to prevent it from being pulled along with the tissues when the tissues are withdrawn by force. At least a portion of the case is opened so at least a portion of the tissues can be protruded out for easy access. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser, for example a cubic shaped dispenser, comprising a means to hang the tissue stack inside said dispenser at a position that allows the essentially complete placement of the tissue stack inside said dispenser and allows the tissues to be dispensed either upright, through the opening on the top wall, or sideways, through the opening on any side wall of the dispenser. In one aspect of the embodiment the hanging means include but are not limited to a rod, a bar, a roller, etc. in round, squared, triangle, or in other shapes, which are disposed from one wall to the opposite wall using, for example, anchors disposed for said means. In one aspect of the embodiment, the tissue clip, normally disposed inside a cubic paper container, which in turn is housed in another container made of more permanent materials, for example, ceramic, plastic, metal, etc., for dispensing, is instead hanged on said hanging means, therefore eliminating the need for a paper box that is as taught in the prior art. In a further aspect of the embodiment, the hanging means is reversibly anchored to one or both walls of the dispenser so that the user has an option of either using the tissue clip as “naked” inside a more permanent dispenser or as housed in the paper dispenser. In a further aspect of the embodiment, a glider is provided in addition to the hanging means to the dispenser which is disposed in such a way to enhance or to smoothen the movement of the tissues out of the dispenser. In another aspect of the embodiment either or both the hanging means and the glider are made integrally to the dispenser, by making a blank capable of formation of such when folded. In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided, for example, a cubic tissue dispenser, which essentially keeps the waiting tissue out of exposure to the exterior of the dispenser in order to keep it clean and away from dust. In one aspect of the embodiment, the wall on which the opening of the tissue dispenser is disposed, for example, the top wall or one of the side wall is disposed thereon about the edge of the opening a flap which can rest thus close off the opening, or is recessible into the cavity of the dispenser in order for it to tuck the waiting tissue inside the dispenser. In an embodiment, a tea bag releasing a fragrance can be added to all the tissue boxes which can be configured to close or partially close. To prevent loss of fragrance use the material that is non absorbent to the fragrance such as tea bag, coffee, perfume, menthol, etc., for example glossy surface. The tea bag is disposed on top of tissue stack so that the would be leading tissue is in contact with the bag. When cubic box is used wherein the tissue clip is folded having the two longitudinal ends of the clip the tissue is dispensed from the concave side of the folded clip so that the tea bag is in direct contact with the would be leading tissue. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which is disposed with an opening on a top wall or a sidewall for dispensing tissue. The opening is partially perforated along its perimeter surrounding the opening. In one aspect of the embodiment the perforation line is incomplete so that when the user tears off along the perforation line to provide an opening through which tissues in the box are dispensed, the torn part is not removed from the box but is still attached to the box and acts as a lid to close off the box when tissues are not in use. The non-perforated part is disposed along the edges of the box, for example, along the longer side or shorter side. The non-perforated part may be also disposed transversely that connects from one corner of the box to the opposing corner of the box. 
     In another embodiment, the tissue dispenser further comprises a closable space in which the leading tissue with or without the next-leading tissue are kept out of exposure to the exterior of the tissue dispenser. The space or a pod for said leading and next-leading tissue is disposed next to the wall over which the tissue is first pulled over or through an opening therein, by extending from said wall or by attaching a separately made box-like container, which serves as the space or pod, to said wall. The space or said pod is closable with closing flap, which is made to be long and wide so that a user can use to wrap and guide the next leading tissue back inside the space or the pod without touching the tissue by hand. In one aspect, the flap comprises at least three components: a first component extending from one of the wall of the dispenser which would form the closing wall upon closure of the space, a second component extending distally from the first component which optionally comprises collapsible part therein in such a way it allows the second component to be as long as possible but can be collapsible when the entire flap is being folded to close the space or the pod; a third component extending from the second component which can be used to catch the tissue and folded to close off the space. The flap may further comprises additional components which respectively extend laterally from the first component and/or from the second component to help reach out to close the tissue part at a wider angle. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided comprising a glider disposed above the tissue clip but on the same plane as that of the top wall, or under that of the top wall or, when the tissue dispenser has no top wall, under the plane of the top surface defined by an imagining surface which is formed by joining the two side walls at their highest position. In an aspect, the plastic slit which is disposed on a tissue box, which serves to prevent tissues from “fall back” may be modified to serve as a glider. Said plastic slit is first lengthened to about the same length of the width of the tissue clip or to about the same length of the opening of the box. The two ends of the lengthened plastic slit may be further slitted forward, for example, about 0.125 to 0.25 inch clipped toward the direction of the tissue pulling, so that when a tissue is pulled the front part of the slit can be moved accordingly or can be curled toward the same direction, providing a smooth surface on which the tissue glides over. The opposing or the back part of the plastic slit may be slitted in the same fashion so that gliders are present on both sides of the opening. The tissues in such dispenser can be dispensed sideways over a wall having its side parallel to the longitudinal axis of the glider. In one aspect of the embodiment the top wall of the tissue dispenser covers only the part of the top surface which is posterior to with or without including the space over the glider. In one aspect of the embodiment the tissue dispenser further comprises a flap extending from the wall over which the tissue is dispensed. The flap is used to guide and help keep the exposed tissue to the inside of the tissue dispenser. The flap is long enough to guide the exposed portion of the leading tissue back inside the dispenser but is not too long so that it can be disposed inside the dispenser after it has guided the tissue back inside the dispenser. In one aspect of the embodiment, the flap may comprise at least a portion thereof which is collapsible, for example, configured to be collapsible in an accordion fashion. In another aspect as disclosed in the instant application, the dispenser may include a sleeve or an outer box which is slideable back and for the to partially open and completely close the dispenser. The sleeve or the outer box may be disposed with a lid at one wall thereof which is in alignment with the non-dispensing wall of the dispenser, i.e., the wall opposite from the wall over which the tissue is dispensed. The space between the said interior, closed end of the sleeve and the exterior, closed end of the dispenser can be used as a disposal for used tissues, which is optionally disposed with a plastic liner or provided with a zip lock for sanitary reason and ease in emptying the disposal area. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which is capable of upright and sideways dispensing and of keeping the leading tissues from exposed to the exterior until the next use thereof. In one aspect, the tissue dispenser comprises a box sized and shaped to receive a tissue clip for dispensing, a glider disposed over said tissue clip which is parallel to the dispensing wall and is away from the top wall so that leading tissue can be configured over said glider for dispensing sideways, an opening on the top wall for upright dispensing, a flap to close said opening to keep the leading tissue inside said dispensing, optionally a plastic slit to keep the leading tissues in the upright position when not being kept inside the dispenser, an opening on a side wall of the dispenser where the tissue is being dispensed sideways, i.e., being pulled out through opened side wall, said side wall cable of being closed, for example, using Velcro to attach the opening part to the closed part of the side wall. In one aspect of the embodiment, the dispenser further comprises space beyond the length of the tissues so that the leading tissues can be tucked inside said space. In another aspect of the embodiment, the tissue clip can be housed in another tissue box or dispenser having a top opening, which is housed inside the outer tissue dispenser having a top opening, a glider, and a side dispensing wall which are similarly configured so that it can be used to dispense upright or sideways. In another aspect, the tissue box or tissue dispenser, which for example houses a tissue box inside thereof, further is disposed with an object which provides a weight to the dispenser so that when tissues are pulled out, in particular sideways, the tissue dispenser remains stationery. Such weighing objects may be disposed on or as part of a wall of the dispenser, which includes but are not limited to, a heavy metal plate, a flat bag of sand or pebbles, a thin stack of note pad or papers, etc. Furthermore such weighing object may further be disposed with a fragrance or fragrance-releaser agent, for example, pleasant odor, menthol, etc. so that the tissues disposed on top thereof can be infused with such fragrance. A tissue weight may also include a compartment or package containing household items such as cotton swab, napkins, etc. For example, a product may comprise a tissue clip disposed in a housing and a cotton swab package having a dimension substantially the same as said housing, said cotton swab package is disposed on top and its bottom in contact with the top of the tissue clip, wherein upon said disposition a vertical space is formed between an edge of the swab package and an inner wall of the tissue housing, said space is sized to allow tissues to be dispensed therethrough and said cotton swab package having a weight sufficient to allow only a single, leading tissue to be dispensed when it is pulled. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided having an opening on the top wall thereof, wherein a space which is closeable is disposed on top of said opening providing a pod for the leading tissue to remain inside said pod thus keeping it from exposed externally until it is dispensed. In one aspect of the embodiment said space or said pod is disposed over the top opening of the prior art flat tissue box, cubic tissue box, oval tissue box, or tissue box of any other shapes. 
     In another embodiment, a container of tissue is provided for dispensing wherein the tissue container contains no top wall. In one aspect of the embodiment, the tissue container comprises (a) a bottom wall and the side walls which together define a box without a top wall, and (b) at least one line disposed over the opened top extending from one side wall to the opposite side wall, or extending from one corner to the opposite corner. When there is only a single line, the line may be made of an elastic and friction-causing material, such as a rubber band. The single line is elastic so that it can be easily stretched from one end to the other and friction causing to prevent the tissue that follows the leading tissue not to advance too much outside the perimeter of the box when the leading tissue is pulled. In another aspect, there are two lines which are extended in the same fashion as the single line, which two lines may or may not be parallel to each other. The two lines may be made of elastic or elastic material and may be a thin line such as a string or a band of fabric. Tissues may be dispensed out of the box through the space formed between the two lines, or through the space formed between one of the line and the closest side of the box. Hence the tissue container having two lines disposed over the opened top may be dispensed through at least three areas defined by the space between the two lines or by the space between either of the lines and the sidewall closest to it. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser which is shaped like a “stick” or elongated rectangular box is provided for mounting on a dashboard in a car similarly to radar detector or mobile device using e.g. “rocket fish” device (found, for example, at www.mountingdepot.com). The holding device comprises a base which is attached to the surface of the dashboard and a mounting device attachable to said base which clasps the tissue dispenser at both of its sides. In one aspect, the same mounting device can be attached to an equipment or a furniture using a different base which can be attached to said equipment or said furniture and the same mounting device which is attached to said different base. Said equipment or furniture includes but is not limited to a tubing on a bicycle, a frame on a chair such as a picnic chair, an umbrella support, a beam disposed on a shading device, stroller, crib, car seat, grocery cart, etc. 
     In one embodiment, provided is a system for dispensing a sheet or sheets of material, said system comprises a tissue dispenser adapted for mounting to a vertical surface and/or for vertically hanging onto an object for tissue dispensing. Said surface includes but is not limited to a wall, a door, a board, and a desk. Mounting of the tissue dispenser is reversible by using for example railing system, in which tissue box is adapted to be able to slide into said system, Velcro system, and low-tack adhesive, which does not cause much damage to the mounted surface after removal. Said object includes but is not limited to a doorknob, a hook disposed on a door or a wall, a chair, a car seat, the back side of the headrest of a car seat, and a rod. The tissue dispenser can be filled with non-boxed tissue stack or is adapted for inserting therein a conventional tissue box, including flat tissue box or cube tissue box. 
     In one aspect, a storage is disposed on the non-dispensing walls, including, side wall(s), the wall opposite the dispensing wall, for example, a storage is disposed on the bottom wall if the top wall is used for dispensing, and vice versa. 
     In another embodiment, provided is a wall protector system comprising a box, for example, a tissue box or a tissue dispenser, said tissue box or tissue dispenser capable of dispensing tissue when used as a wall protector. In one aspect, a box used as wall protector has a depth, which is about the length of the doorknob of the door on which the box is disposed, or sufficient depth that prevents the doorknob from contact with the wall when the door is fully opened. The depth according to this aspect is the length of the box measured from the wall of the box to which is attached or the wall of the box which is closest to the door on which the box is disposed. Depending on the length of the door knob, the depth may be 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 all in inches, or greater, in particular between two inches and five inches. 
     In one aspect of the embodiment related to a wall protector box, a tissue box is provided which is a cubic tissue box which is adapted for attachment to a door wherein the opening of said cubic tissue box faces downward. In this configuration a tissue stack or tissue clip may be disposed in such tissue box in such way that the concave side of the stack or the clip facing the opening of the tissue box for tissue dispensing. When a cubic tissue box is disposed on a door with its opening for tissue dispensing facing up, a tissue stack or tissue clip can be disposed in said tissue box having either its concave side or convex side facing the opening for tissue dispensing. In another aspect, the opening of the wall protector cubic box may face to either or both sides so that tissues can be dispensed to one side and both sides, respectively. When both sides are used for dispensing, tissues disposed inside the box can be pulled from the concave side of the tissue clip to dispense out of one side of the box and from the concave side of the same tissue clip to dispense out of the other side of the same box. In another aspect, more than one tissue clip, which may be disposed in the cubic tissue box with their convex or concave sides facing the same direction or opposite directions. Because of additional space needed to accommodate more than one conventional tissue clip, which usually contains about 50, 60, 70, 80, and 100 tissues, the tissue box is no longer in cubic shape but rectangular shape. In another aspect, a box or a formerly used tissue box having other types of paper products such as paper towels and wipers such as Kimwipes, and other types of materials or fabrics which are interfolded are also configured and used in the same manner as disclosed herein, such as for dispensing and/or wall protecting. 
     In another embodiment a dispenser for interfolded paper towels is provided. The dispenser comprises a housing for said paper towels, which is a flat top box which is similar in dimension and shape of a prior art flat top tissue box. The paper towel stack however is housed into the container of the system with its top and bottom facing the side walls of the container, i.e., the top and bottom faces of the paper towel stack are perpendicular to the front (viewed when the container is positioned vertically) or top (viewed when the container is positioned horizontally) wall. In one aspect, the top end of the paper towel stack is disposed to lean toward the side having the dispensing opening so that as paper towels are dispensed out opened space is formed inside the contained, which allows the remaining paper stack to lean toward the side or the area having the opening. In this configuration the remaining paper towels can be dispensed more efficiently. In one aspect, the stack of the paper towel is slanted forming an angle of less than 90 degrees with the bottom wall. In another aspect, the paper towel stack may be disposed with a plating which is used to guide the remaining paper towel stack toward and closer, for example, making the paper stack to form almost a triangle comprising the bottom (horizontal side), the side wall (vertical side) and the plate (transverse side) to the opening for a more efficient dispensing. Said plate is disposed with an opening for the paper towel to be pulled through prior to dispensing out of the container. 
     The container containing the paper towel stack is disposed thereon an opening in the bottom wall (viewed when the container is positioned vertically) at one or both of its ends. The opening(s) have a dimension, shaped and sized to allow the leading paper towel to be pulled out of the container leaving the waiting paper towel exposed for the next use. The area on the wall to be removed to create an opening may be perforated for the user to remove. 
     In another embodiment provided herein, a box has a stack of interfolded paper towels, said stack when housed in a cubic box (for example having similar dimension to the prior art Kleenex and Puffs facial tissue cubic boxes) is bent like facial tissue clip that is housed in said Kleenex and Puffs box but having the concave side of the bent stack facing the opening through which it is dispensed, i.e., the tissues are pulled from the concave side of the interfolded stack. In another embodiment a towel paper dispensing box is flat box shape having a length which is less than up to 50 percent of the length of the paper towel stack, for example, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40% less, so that when the paper towel stack is housed in the flat box it forms a gently bent shape, for example a curve shape or an inverted U shape, with the concave side facing the opening of the flat box through which the towel is pulled. The purpose of having the bent shape instead of straight stack, as disclosed in the prior art, is to form a space between the paper stack and the wall having the opening, which helps reduce the tension and weight exerted onto the wall having the opening thus allowing a smoother pull and less weight exerted onto the box, especially if it is lightly mounted onto a wall. 
     In another embodiment, a system for dispensing facial tissue and paper towel is provided, said system is used further as a wall protector when mounted on a door which is adjacent to wall. Said system comprises a stack of interfolded facial tissues and a stack of paper towel housed in two adjacent containers, one of which for housing the facial tissue stack and the other for housing the paper towel stack. The facial tissue stack is housed in a container in a configuration that is similar to the prior art tissue box, i.e., a box having an opening on one of its walls (e.g., top wall) which has the top side of an interfolded tissue clip facing the opening for dispensing. The facial tissue container is optionally further disposed with a cover on the wall having the opening to substantially keep the waiting tissue covered. The paper towel is housed in a flat top box that is similar in dimension and shape to a prior art flat top tissue box. The paper towel stack however is housed in the container of the system with its top and bottom facing the side walls of the container, i.e., the top and bottom faces of the paper towel stack are perpendicular to the front (viewed when the container is positioned vertically) or top (viewed when the container is positioned horizontally) wall. The container containing the paper towel stack is disposed thereon an opening in the bottom wall (viewed when the container is positioned vertically) at one or both of its ends. The opening(s) have a dimension, shape and size to allow the leading paper towel to be pulled out of the container leaving the waiting paper towel exposed for the next use. The area on the wall to be removed to create an opening may be perforated for the user to remove. In another aspect, a system comprises a single container which is divided into at least one section for housing and dispensing. 
     In another aspect of the embodiment, the wall or the side of the tissue box or tissue dispenser that is used to attach the tissue box or tissue dispenser to a glass door or see-through door, for example in a retail setting or in an office setting, is decorated so that when mounted said wall or said side can be seen by a person approaching said door when it is closed or partially closed. For example, said wall or said side can be disposed thereon with contact information or promotional information for the business, the name and title of the person occupying the office having said glass door. 
     In another aspect of the embodiment related to a wall protector box, a tissue box is provided which is a flat tissue box adapted for attachment to a door wherein the opening of said tissue box faces up, down, toward either side of the box, or straight away from the door. 
     In one embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which houses a flat tissue box or contains a tissue clip without a box. The tissue dispenser is capable of dispensing tissues toward the longer side of the dispenser, and/or toward the shorter side of the same dispenser. In one aspect, the tissue dispenser is further disposed thereon a cover on top of the opening which is closeable. In another aspect, the tissue dispenser is further disposed thereon a glider which is parallel to the longer side of the tissue dispenser and/or a second glider which is disposed parallel to the shorter side of the same tissue dispenser. In one aspect, the glider is externally added to the dispenser, for example, a bar, a tubing such as a straw, a box cover flap, for example, a flap of a second dispenser housing the first dispenser or a tissue box which is folded back at its free end, to provide a smooth angle over which a tissue is pulled, and disposed on top of the first dispenser or a tissue box, etc., in such configuration that when a tissue is pulled out of the tissue box it glides on top of the glider for a smoother tissue dispensing. In another aspect, the glider is built into the tissue box or tissue dispenser, for example, by using part of the area of the tissue box or tissue dispenser that is to be removed, as taught in the prior art, from the box to provide an opening through which tissues are pulled out. In making this internal glider said part is not detached from the box or dispenser but is folded back toward the direction which is the same as the tissue pulling direction, said folded part disposed either about the plane, above or below the plane of said opening. In another aspect, an internal or integral glider is formed by converting part of area removed for opening by curling back or folding back the detached area while having the adjacent area still attached to the box. So long the curled back or folded back area or flap provide a smooth surface on which the pulled tissue travels. The folded back flap can be reinforced by inserting it through a slit located on the side of the fold direction. 
     In another aspect of the embodiment the dispenser is disposed thereon a reversible closure means, for example, a door, which is disposed over the opening of the tissue box disposed inside the dispenser to allow a user to reach into the tissue box or tissue clip to manipulate tissues if needed. 
     In one embodiment, there is provided an attachment system disposed onto the external wall of the car&#39;s glove box door. Said attachment system comprises a means for attaching an object, such as a tissue box, onto the glove box door allowing the user to easily access to using said object. In an aspect, said attachment means includes but is not limited to a string, a strip, a band, a box-like storage, etc. that expands from the bottom or underneath the bottom to the top or over the top of said door. Said means has a width of at least 1/16 inch, at least ⅛ inch, at least ¼ inch, at least ½ inch, at least 1 inch, at least 1.5 inches, at least 2 inches, at least 3 inches, at least 4 inches, etc. and up to the full width of the glove box door. Said means may originate from anywhere on the inner wall of the glove box door, on the inner wall but near the top of the glove box door, anywhere on the outer wall of the glove box door. In one aspect, said attachment means is disposed entirely onto the glove box door, for example, a strip having an one-inch width completely disposed onto both inner and outer parts of the glove box door. The attachment means is reversible so that it can be released at at least one end, for example, the top end, so that it can be inserted into the interior of an object, for example via the space formed between a wall of a tissue box and a wall of a sleeve disposed onto said tissue box. In one aspect, the attachment means which is exposed outside of the glove box is further disposed thereon a second attachment means, for example, a Velcro system, a low-tack adhesive, a hook or a plurality thereof along the vertical length of said means, which is used to attach an object to said means. In one aspect, either or both ends of the attachment means is disposed onto the glove box door by using Velcro system or low-tack adhesive, or clip. In one aspect, the attachment means is composed of paper, plastic, rubber, for example rubber band, or any materials that are soft but sufficiently sturdy. 
     In one embodiment, there is provided a tissue box or tissue dispenser which is adapted for use in a car by attachment thereof to the external wall of the glove box door. In one aspect, said tissue dispenser has an extension which is insertable inside the glove box and stably remaining therein when the glove box is closed or opened. In one aspect, said extension is attached to the inside of the glove box door by adhesives or Velcro or the likes. In one aspect, said tissue dispenser can dispense tissues from any walls thereof except for the wall that is attached or disposed onto the glove box door. Tissues can be dispensed out of, with respect to the position and view of the passenger, the top wall, the front wall, either side wall, and/or the bottom wall. 
     In one embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which is capable of allowing tissues to be pulled downward or sideways, said tissue dispenser having a slanted wall on which an opening for dispensing is disposed, said slanted wall forming an angle with the horizontal space and wherein the tissue stack inside the tissue dispenser is positioned inside the tissue dispenser at about the same degree with said angle. Said angle ranges from greater than zero to less than 90 degrees, in particular, at least about 10, about 15, about 20, about 25, about 30, about 35, about 40, or about 45 degrees. 
     In one embodiment a box is adapted for use as a stand (“box stand”) for a computer tablet, said box may contain tissues, wipes, etc. and other computer accessories such as sound system, book, storage space for personal items such as cell phone, etc. Said box is adapted for dispose on the upper back of said tablet where it does not cover the rear camera or interfere with other buttons for operating said table. In another aspect, the box can be made to be collapsible when it is empty. For example, the side walls of said box have equally spaced horizontal scores alternately on the inside and outside around the perimeter of its ends and side walls, then collapsed in accordion fashion, such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,869,192. In another aspect, there is further provided a means, for example a frame or a box with the wall contacting the tablet at least partially opened, providing a space positioned between the back of the tablet and the box, so that the heat released from the back of the tablet can escape hence reducing the accumulated heat when the tablet is in use. In one aspect, the box can be disposed on said tablet and positioning the tablet in a landscape view position at an angle. In another embodiment a mounting means for said box is provided, for example, a “skin” which tightly wraps around the edges and back of the tablet, said skin is disposed thereon a compartment in which said box is disposed. In another embodiment, a computer tablet or a computer monitor is provided which is adapted for mounting said box thereon, or said tablet or said monitor which is disposed thereon on the back side a box. 
     In one aspect, the box stand is further disposed thereon at least a leg to allow positioning the tablet at a different angle, which leg can position the tablet at an angle in a landscape view position. Another leg can be further disposed on said box stand to allow positioning of the tablet in a portrait view position. The leg(s) can be folded and extended. 
     In another embodiment, a product comprising a wrapper or a sleeve for a hand held electronic device is provided, said device is generally classified in trademark international class 009, and attached thereto or integral thereto a component for storing an object, said component serves as or comprises a stand for said device in either or both portrait and landscape views. In one aspect, the device is a tablet. In another aspect, the device is a smart phone such as an iPhone. In one aspect, the wrapper is a skin that is disposed on the back of the device and on the front along the edge or the borders of said device. In another aspect, the wrapper or sleeve is disposed thereon a dispenser for sheets for example facial tissue, wipes, etc. In another aspect, the wrapper or sleeve further comprises a screen protector for the front panel of said device. The screen protector can be either transparent for viewing or for protecting the device in whole which may or may not include the storage component. In another aspect, the box is adapted for attaching to the back of a lap top monitor, a stand-alone monitor, and a TV flat-panel monitor. 
     In one embodiment, a tissue box or a tissue dispenser is adapted for disposal in a location in a car, said location includes but is not limited to: door of glove box; back of driver or passenger seat; head rest; area between head rest and back of seat; front and back of passenger seat; on a seat belt which is in a the closed or opened position, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,017,787, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety; on the dashboard, using for example a box holder attached on the dashboard for example as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,834,773; on the inner wall of car door(s); inside the car door pockets; underneath the roof of the car or on a visor so long the position and using thereof does not obstruct the front and rear view of the driver. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box or a tissue dispenser is adapted for disposal on an entry door or a door to a room, on a cabinet door, under the cabinet, back, side or leg of a chair, under a table or desk, under the bottom part of chair seat, a book shelf, side of a desk, side or back of a computer monitor, back and/or side if a hand held device such as a tablet and s smart phone, on top, side or bottom of a box storage box or organizer box or fixture, a hat or a cap. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box or a tissue dispenser is provided which is adapted for attachment thereof or mounting thereof on a part of a subject, said subject is a human or an animal. In one aspect, said part includes an arm or part thereof of said subject, a leg or a part thereof, a thigh or a part thereof, the back or a part thereof, the waist, a shoulder, back of the neck, upper buttock area, etc. In another embodiment, a tissue box or a tissue dispenser is provided which is used as a wall protector against a door knob. 
     In another embodiment a tissue box or a tissue dispenser which is provided is attachable to the outer surface of a car glove door for use inside a car. 
     In another embodiment, a stand for an electronic device such as an Apple iPad or a Blackberry Playbook is provided, said stand comprises a tissue dispenser which is a part of said stand configuration. 
     In another embodiment, a back pack is provided having a compartment disposed therein which is capable of dispensing tissues from a tissue box disposed therein at an angle which is about perpendicular to the top wall of said tissue box. 
     In another embodiment, a tubular tissue dispenser is provided which comprises a first compartment for housing a tissue clip vertically and a compartment for keeping waiting tissue inside thereof, said first compartment is optionally disposed therein a wall configured such that it provides a separate compartment for storage or housing a second objects, such as, pen, straw, etc. and such that it does not take much tissue space from the first compartment. In an aspect, the wall for said second compartment is formed so that one side of said wall it makes a circular or curvy wall around which a tissue clip can be folded and disposed wrapping around said circular wall, and the other side of the wall a compartment is made for storing other materials such as pen, straw, etc. 
     In another embodiment, a product is provided which is capable of positioning a towel paper roll and a tissue dispenser. In an aspect, said product comprises a base and at least two vertical extensions from said base, one is for inserting the paper towel roll and the other for inserting a tissue dispenser, both in vertical position. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box or tissue dispenser is provided which is configured to hide or minimize the view of waiting tissue. In one aspect, the tissue box or tissue dispenser comprises at least two opposing vertical walls, one is higher than the other, and is configured or designed such that the higher vertical wall is or comprises the front face of said box or dispenser, and an opening for tissue dispensing which is located behind said higher vertical wall. In another aspect, an organizer or a storage comprises such tissue dispenser or a configuration similar thereto. In another aspect, said tissue box or tissue dispenser comprises two opposing walls and a wall disposed between said vertical walls joining said two vertical walls. One of said opposing walls is higher than the other, and upon close proximity to one another, for example, having a part of their vertical edges attached to each other, they form an opening through which tissues exit from the tissue box or tissue dispenser. The front face of said tissue box or tissue dispenser may be configured to be or to comprise the higher wall. In another embodiment one or both the verticals are bent at an angled to greater than or less than 90 degrees with respect to the bottom of the dispenser. In one aspect said bent walls are almost parallel to the horizontal plane of the tissue clip disposed in the dispenser so that tissues can be dispensed sideways and the now-parallel surface of the upper wall is free for use to display, storage, or stacking, etc. in a similar fashion as shown for example for dispenser shown in  FIGS. 2 and 8 . 
     Various embodiments also provide for a tissue container, a tissue box, a tissue dispenser, or a tissue box cover, which is disposed thereon a masking means or a masking device, said device minimizes or prevents the exposure of the waiting tissue to view, in particular when viewed by a viewer at a distance in front thereof. In one aspect, the masking means or masking device comprises a flap or a piece of material which is disposed over or in front of the area where the waiting tissue rests after trailing the leading tissue which is pulled from the tissue clip. Said disposal includes but is not limited to the use of adhesives, stapling, for example to attach said masking material onto the tissue box, or by extending a flap near the waiting tissue to a length which is at least about the length of the exposed portion of the waiting tissue. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box, a tissue dispenser, or a tissue box cover is configured for disposing vertically, for example, on a wall surface or in mid air, and tissues therein are dispensed by a downward pulling direction. Said downward pulling direction does not need to be deviated because the tissue is dispensed entirely out of the bottom end of the configuration. In an aspect, a kit is provided comprising a board which is disposed thereon an opening so that it can be hanged on or off and parallel to a vertical surface such as a wall, and which comprises a portion thereof having a sufficient dimension so that a conventional tissue box, such as a flat box or a cubic box, can be completely disposed thereon, said tissue box when disposed as such is capable of dispensing tissue without being wobbled or twisted. In one aspect, said board comprises a holding slot in which a tissue box can be inserted and tissues can be dispensed therefrom either upward, downward, or at an angle therebetween. 
     In another embodiment, an organizer box for mobile use is provided, comprising at least a first compartment for storage of personal items, a second compartment having an opening on one of its wall for housing a tissue clip, and a third compartment disposed parallel to the second compartment and in communication with the second compartment via said opening so that tissue can be pulled out of the second compartment and then exited out of the third compartment. In an aspect, said mobile organizer further comprises a fourth compartment for storing or used as trash receptacle. 
     In another embodiment, an attachment device to attach a tissue box or a mobile organizer beneath a shelf surface is provided, said device comprises a member which can be removably attached to the shelf surface, a member forming a cavity for inserting a box therethrough, and a member which exerts pressure upon the inserted box and is adjustable in a up and down directions. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue box, a tissue container, or a tissue dispenser which is displayed on a board which can be hanged vertically is provided. In yet another embodiment, a vertical display of tissue boxes via said board is provided, said display comprises at least 1, at least 2, at least up to 5, at least up to 10, at least up to 20 units, each of which is a tissue box, which are arranged in row and are parallel to each other. 
     In another embodiment, a method for loading a tissue dispenser onto a hanger for hanging the dispenser vertically is provided, said tissue dispenser is capable of dispensing tissues contained therein vertically by having the waiting tissues be pulled straight down along the y axis without the need for going off said axis to keep the tissues from being torn by the downward pulling force. In one aspect, the hanger comprises a first end which can be attached to the tissue dispenser on any parts thereof, including any of the four side walls and the two end walls thereof, or a combinations of said walls, a second end which can be attached to a support member which has a portion where said tissue dispenser can be attached which results in a having the end of the waiting tissue exposed from the tissue dispenser to be at least four feet, at least 5 feet, at least 6 feet, at least 7 feet, at least 8 feet, or at lease 9 feet from the ground, or at least at a height where users can reach and pull down the waiting tissue. In one aspect, said tissue dispenser is made of a material which is transparent, for example, plastic, clear Plexiglas, etc. and the tissues disposed inside thereof is either white or in other colors. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which is pre-disposed with said hanger by having one end of said hanger attached to a portion of the tissue dispenser in such way that when said hanger is pulled up vertically the attached tissue dispenser is configured vertically with the bottom end wall facing the ground. 
     In another embodiment, a board is provided for use to set up a tissue dispenser for vertical use, said board comprising a sheet of a material having an opening sized to snuggly dispose a conventional tissue box therethrough. 
     In another embodiment, a wall frame in which or onto which a tissue dispenser can be disposed for tissue dispensing when said wall frame is attached to a wall is provided. In one aspect, said wall frame comprises a front panel or front compartment which looks like that of a typical photo frame, on which a sheet of material or an object can be disposed thereon or therein, and a compartment disposed behind said front panel or front compartment for housing a tissue dispenser which is capable of dispensing tissues downwardly. The wall frame has a thickness sufficient to hold a tissue dispenser, for example between one and five inches, and length sufficient to accommodate the length of the tissue dispenser, for example, at least 8 inches for housing a flat top tissue box, or at least 4 inches for housing a cubic tissue box. When part of the wall frame is also used to provide function such as masking the waiting tissue, its height is increased accordingly, for example, adding about three more inches to the bottom part thereof. In one other aspect, the wall frame is further disposed on its bottom wall an opening sized and shaped sufficiently for a tissue to travel through, said opening does not affect the secure disposal of a tissue dispenser on said bottom wall. In one aspect, a wall frame is pre-disposed with a tissue dispenser. In another aspect, a masking means or masking device is disposed so that it covers the exposure of the waiting tissue to the viewer when said viewer stands directly in front of said wall frame. In another aspect, said masking means is formed by having a non-housing tissue space behind said front panel or front compartment, which is disposed between the bottom wall of the tissue dispenser and the bottom meal of the wall frame. A waiting tissue thus in this configuration is hidden inside said wall frame behind the front panel or front compartment. In one aspect of the embodiment the opening disposed on the tissue dispenser through which tissues exist therefrom faces the ground. In another aspect, said opening is perpendicular to the ground or in parallel to the front panel of the wall frame, wherein there is a second opening out of said tissue dispenser which faces the ground, said first opening and said second opening forms route for tissues from the inside of the tissue dispenser to travel out of the first opening and then out of the second opening to exist the tissue dispenser. 
     In another embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which can be used as a stand for displaying an object, including but not limited to a message board, a photo, an electronic tablet. The tissue dispenser is capable of dispensing tissues therefrom in the presence of said object so configured on said tissue dispenser. In one aspect, a tissue dispenser is disposed on a dispensing wall thereof a spacer, said spacer is a single block having a dimension of about 0.5 to about 1-inch cube. In another aspect, said spacer has a rectangular shape and may be hollow or solid, having a thickness of about 0.5 to about 1-inch thick and a length that spans at least a third of the depth of the tissue dispenser when configured to be parallel to the dispensing opening of said dispenser. In another aspect, the spacer is made of a material including but not limited thereto wood, metal, glass, wine bottle cork, which may be lined with or included magnetic material for use with dispenser which is made of metal material. In one aspect, said tissue dispenser comprises a plurality of spacer, for example, at least two spacers or a single spacer which is capable of providing a balance, stabilized support for an object disposed thereon. 
     In one embodiment, a tissue dispenser is provided which comprises a spacer which can also be reconfigured for use as a lid or an organizer on top of the opening of the tissue dispenser. In one aspect, the spacer is an extension of the side walls of the tissue dispenser to height sufficient to allow it to close off the opening of the tissue dispenser (function as a lid) when it is folded down, at the intersection of the edge of the top wall and the side wall, toward the top wall thereof. In another aspect, said extended side wall is folded down at a position on the spacer so that when folded over the top wall the spacer still can serve as a spacer, i.e., still can support the placement of object thereon without affecting the movement of the tissues pulled out underneath thereof. In another aspect, the spacers are disposed thereon an organizer which can be used when the spacer is in the unfolded or folded position. In another aspect, the tissue dispenser can be used in a horizontal, upside-up position; horizontal, upside-down position; vertically by sitting on one of the spacer/sidewall panel, for example, along books on a shelf. 
     In another embodiment, a system comprising at least a compartment which is for use of tissue dispensing is provided. The use comprises inserting a conventional tissue box or tissue dispenser into the cavity of said compartment in a configuration such that the opening for tissue dispensing of said tissue box or tissue dispenser faces upward and that there is a space between the top of said tissue box or tissue dispenser and the bottom side of the compartment top wall, and pulling the leading tissue sideways, for example horizontally toward the front of the tissue box or tissue dispenser in the space formed between the top wall of said tissue box or tissue dispenser and the bottom side of the upper wall that forms the upper boundary of said compartment. In one aspect, said compartment is disposed therein a glider which is configured to be disposed on top of said opening. In one further aspect, said use comprises a further step of pulling said leading tissue over said glider toward the opening of the compartment. In one aspect, said system comprises of one upper compartment and one lower compartment, both said compartments are enclosed except the one side thereof, said one side which is not closed of the lower compartment is the front side. In one aspect, said system is part of an multi-compartment organizer, which is configured for use on a table or a desk, or configured for wall use. In one aspect, said system is used in conjunction with a TV, a computer, a make-up station, or any household furniture or work station where tissues are in need. 
     In another embodiment the invention provides a tissue box cover which is made up of at least two side walls and a top wall which is (1) disposed therein an opening for tissue dispensing and (2) disposed thereon a spacer which functions (a) as a “hand” or a plurality thereof to support the placement of an object on top said wall without affecting tissues dispensing from aside tissue box cover and (b) as a “foot” or a plurality thereof when said tissue box is inversely positioned for use as a container instead of a tissue box cover. In one aspect said foot or said plurality of foot of said tissue box cover is configured to be placeable on top of a tissue box or another tissue box cover that has no spacer disposed thereon, said configuration allowing tissues in said tissue box or said another tissue box cover to be dispensed sideways. In another aspect of the invention, the tissue box having said “hand” or “foot” is further provided with a cover to cover the opening in said top wall. In an aspect said cover has a dimension in width and depth which is about the same s the top wall. In another aspect aside cover further comprises extension that lines up against one side wall, two side walls, three side walls, or four side walls. In another aspect of the invention said cover is an integral part of the tissue box cover, being extended from one of said side wall, said extension is from the edge of said side wall having a length that spans the height of said side wall and the depth of said top wall, said extension is foldable into a flat configuration along the inner side of said extended side wall. In another aspect of the invention the tissue box cover further comprises a bottom wall, said bottom wall is removable from said tissue box cover and can be fitted onto the inner part of the top wall to cover said opening when the tissue box cover is used as a container. 
     In one embodiment the invention provides a tissue dispenser having two walls that are parallel to a vertical surface such as a wall, one of said wall having an opening for a user to access inside said dispenser in order to manipulate to configure the leading tissue to be positioned over the glider. In other words the wall without having an opening or a door disposed thereon is configured or designed to be the front face of the tissue dispenser when it is used in a vertical position, i.e., the side having no opening is faced toward to wall, or when it is used in a horizontal position, i.e., the side having no opening is the top of the dispenser. 
     The invention also provides a tissue dispenser comprising at least one stabilizer flap which is used to stabilize the position of the dispenser when used vertically or horizontally on or off a surface. In one embodiment said stabilizer flap comprises a flap which is part of the flaps used to close an opening on a side of a dispenser, for example, a flap that is extended from the side opposite the dispensing side. When said dispenser is positioned to stand on said side, said flap is positioned perpendicular to the vertical axis of the dispenser, i.e., disposed horizontally on the surface on which said dispenser stands, and may be disposed thereon an object which adds weight to the flap so that when tissue is pulled upward from said dispenser, the dispenser is prevented from moving because of said weight disposed on the flap. Alternatively said flap may be attached to said surface using an adhesive or glue. Similarly the same stabilizer flap may be used to hang the same dispenser adjacent a counter or table surface, by attaching the same to the surface and have the dispenser hang off the surface in a position which is perpendicular to the stabilizer flap. Similarly the same stabilizer flap may be used to stabilize the same dispenser when the dispenser is used horizontally for sideways dispensing. In this configuration the stabilizer flap and the bottom of the dispenser both are in contact with the surface. A weight may be disposed on said flap to prevent said dispenser from moving when tissues are pulled sideways. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       The disclosure will become more fully understood from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements, in which: 
         FIGS. 1A-1D  are schematic representations of a prior art dispenser for sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 2A-2D  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a first exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 2E  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a second exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 3A  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a third exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 3B  is a schematic representation of a dispenser sleeve for sheets of material according to a variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIG. 3A . 
         FIG. 3C  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIG. 3A . 
         FIGS. 4A through 4I  illustrate various embodiments. 
         FIGS. 5A and 5B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a fifth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 6A and 6B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a sixth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 6C  (sleeve) and  6 D (tissue box disposed with the sleeve of  FIG. 6C ) are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIGS. 6A and 6B . 
         FIG. 7A  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a seventh exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 7B  is a schematic representation of a dispenser sleeve for sheets of material according to a variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIG. 7A . 
         FIG. 7C  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIG. 7A . 
         FIG. 7D  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another variation of the exemplary embodiment of  FIG. 7A . 
         FIG. 8A  is a schematic representation of a prior art flat box cover. 
         FIG. 8B  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to an eighth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 9  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a ninth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 10A and 10B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a tenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 11  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to an eleventh exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 12  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twelfth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 13  is a schematic representation of a sheets of material which are folded according to a thirteenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 14  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a tenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 15A-C  (sometimes collectively referred to as  15 ) are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a tenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 16A-C  (sometimes collectively referred to as  16 ) are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a sixteenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 17A and 17B  (sometimes collectively referred to as  17 ) schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a sixteenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 18  is a schematic representation of a blank for folding into the dispenser for sheets of material according to a third exemplary embodiment as shown in  FIG. 3A . 
         FIG. 19  is a schematic representation of a blank for folding into the dispenser for sheets of material according to a ninth exemplary embodiment as shown in  FIG. 9 . 
         FIGS. 20A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a sixteenth exemplary embodiment ( FIG. 20A ) and a blank for folding into said dispenser and a sleeve with dimension for use with said dispenser ( FIG. 20B ). 
         FIGS. 21A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a seventeenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 22A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to an eighteenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 23A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a nineteenth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 24A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twentieth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 25A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty first exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 26A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty second exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 27A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty third exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 28A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty fourth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 29A-E  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty fifth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 30A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty sixth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 31A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty seventh exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 32A-F  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty eighth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 33A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty ninth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 34A-B  are schematic representations of an organizer comprising a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirtieth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 35A-E  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty first exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 36  are schematic representations of an organizer comprising a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty second exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 37A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty third exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 38A-M  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty fourth exemplary embodiment. 
         FIG. 39A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty third exemplary embodiment. 
         FIGS. 40A and 40B  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty third exemplary embodiment B 
         FIGS. 41A-F  are schematic representations of using a box or a dispenser for sheets of material on a door as a wall protector. 
         FIGS. 42A-C  are schematic representations of an attachment of a dispenser for sheets on the door of the glove box in a car. 
         FIGS. 43A-H  are schematic representations of using a dispenser for sheets of material as a stand for a held hand computer tablet. 
         FIGS. 44A-I  are schematic representations of a tissue dispenser which is disposed on a mobile consumer product. 
         FIGS. 45A-J  are schematic representations of tubular tissue dispensers. 
         FIGS. 46A-D  are schematic representations of tubular tissue dispensers. 
         FIGS. 47A-D  are schematic representations of tubular tissue dispensers. 
         FIGS. 48A-B  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 49A-F  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 50A-E  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 51A-I  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 52A-G  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 53A-D  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 54A-F  are schematic representations of a dispenser of sheets of material. 
         FIGS. 55A-D  are schematic representation of a process for making a dispenser according to  FIG. 51E . 
         FIGS. 56A-D  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to a particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 57A-D  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 58A-E  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 59A-F  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIG. 60  is a perspective view of a schematic representation representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate and comprises a clear plastic material. 
         FIGS. 61A-B  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 62A-J  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 63A-H  are various views of schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 64A-C  are various views of schematic representations of various dispensers for sheets of material according to another particular embodiment, where the dispensers are made of a soft substrate such as carton paper. 
         FIGS. 65A-E  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a relatively hard substrate such as wood, metal, hard plastic, etc. 
         FIG. 66  is a schematic representation of a dispenser for sheets of material according to various embodiments, where the dispenser is made of a relatively hard substrate such as wood, metal, hard plastic, etc. 
         FIGS. 67A-J  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another embodiment, where the dispenser is made of a relatively hard substrate such as wood, metal, hard plastic, etc. 
         FIGS. 68A-C  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another embodiment 
       FIGS.  69 A 1 -E are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another embodiment 
         FIGS. 70A-E  are schematic representations of a dispenser for sheets of material according to another embodiment 
     
    
    
     APPENDICES 
     Appendix A provides additional pictorial images of products according to the various embodiments of the systems and methods for dispensing a sheet of material. Various embodiments of the invention may include those that are photographed and disclosed in the Appendix A. 
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Referring to the FIGURES systems and methods for dispensing sheet materials, for example individual sheets, are provided according to various exemplary embodiments. The systems include a variety of combinations of structural features of a container, opening(s) in the container, cover(s), spacer(s) to provide a covered space, and/or glider(s) for improving the ability to conveniently dispense the sheets in a wide variety of configurations that permit improved utility of the container (or the space around the container). The method includes manually withdrawing the sheets from the container using any one or more of the features of the systems described herein. Accordingly, although shown and described according to the illustrated embodiments, the system and method for dispensing sheet materials is adaptable to any one or more of a wide variety of sheet material types and containers for storing the sheets of material to be dispensed. Although the embodiments are described by way of convenience with reference to a top and bottom and side walls of the container or box, it is understood that the container may be configured in any of a variety of orientations including horizontally upside-up or upside-down and vertically regardless of the direction of the wall having the opening—all such variations are intended to be within the scope of this disclosure. 
     Referring further to the FIGURES, the exemplary embodiments illustrate systems and methods for dispensing sheets of material (e.g. tissues, wipes, towels, etc.) from a container or other suitable receptacle for storing the sheets of material for dispensing therefrom. The embodiments are shown generally to use a space above the opening with or without a glider, which makes the sheets glide out easily regardless of the pulling direction and, in certain embodiments, cover at least a portion of the next to be dispensed sheet. According to one embodiment, the portion of a dispensing opening, which is usually cut out before use, as in the prior art, is optionally retained to help position the tissue forward toward the intended pulling direction. These elements are also intended to allow the dispenser to be used in any position: upside up, upside down, vertically, etc., as long as there&#39;s sufficient space above the opening for the tissues to be pulled out. According to other embodiments, a hard dispenser is shown having the opening out of the wall which is perpendicular to the axis of the bottom wall, rather than from the top wall or the wall which is parallel to the axis of the bottom wall. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 1A-1D , a prior art dispenser  1  for a sheet of material is shown by way of example. It has a top wall  2 , a bottom wall  3   a  or a base  3   b  is this needed, and the side walls  4  joining the top wall and the base, the top wall has disposed thereon an opening  5  through which the sheet  6  is removed. The top wall  2  can be a part of the entire dispenser ( FIGS. 1A and 1B ) or it can be made as a separate part  7  which is joined with the bottom  3  or base part of the dispenser ( FIGS. 1C and 1D ). One disadvantage of the prior art dispenser is that the top wall, because of the opening disposed thereon, can not be used in full because of the opening  5  disposed thereon. For the same reason the dispenser is not stackable and operable via the top wall. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 2A-2D , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a first exemplary embodiment, which is shown to include a dispenser  8  which houses a tissue box  9  of the prior art, which contains an opening  5  on its top wall. The dispenser has a top wall  10  free of any opening so that it can be used in full space for storing or for organizing objects on the dispenser. The dispenser  8  has an opening  11  on at least one of its sidewall  12 , which is perpendicular to the axis of the base  13 . The tissue box housed in the dispenser  8  can be configured to have its top wall  2 , hence its opening  5 , in the upright position which is parallel to the axis of the top wall  10  of dispenser  8  (as shown in  2 B- 2 D) and the first tissue  14  is configured to dispose through the opening  11  of the dispenser ( FIG. 2B-2D ), or configured to have its top wall  2 , hence its opening  5 , in a position which forms an angle with the top wall  10  of dispenser  8 , for example, 45 degrees, 90 degrees, and the first tissue is configured to dispose through the same opening  11  of the dispenser. Top wall  10  may be disposed, reversibly or irreversibly, with an object. The object include but is not limited to toys, Lego assembly, musical device, phone, religious or history figures or events, promotional materials, brochures, plants, seasonal display such as for Martin Luther King&#39;s Holiday, President&#39;s Day, Valentine&#39;s Day, Mother&#39;s Day, Father&#39;s Day, Memorial Day, Fourth of July, Memorial Day, Veterans&#39; Day, Columbus Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year&#39;s Day, Tet, Autumn Festival, etc. The top wall may be made in a design such that it allows a secure placement of these objects thereon, for example the top wall and the base supporting the objects can be made in a lock-and-key fashion or designed complementarily, for example the wall having a protruding portion onto which a portion of the objects can be securely fitted and disposed onto the top wall. 
     Referring to  FIG. 2E , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a second exemplary embodiment, which is shown to include a dispenser  15  similar to the dispenser shown in  FIGS. 2A-2D  except that the dispenser can be essentially closed when tissues are not needed. A tissue box  16  is housed inside dispenser  15  which has a closable wall  17  or lid  17  having a closing flap  17   a . The dispenser has at least two openings through which the tissue are pulled out: a first opening  18  disposed on flap  17   a  and a second opening  19  disposed on wall  20 . The dispenser may optionally contain a closing means disposed thereon at any location which allows the closing or plugging of the combined openings, for example, closing means  21  which is disposed on the same wall having the opening  19 . The first opening  18  and second opening  19  may be similar in size and shape. In one embodiment, they are aligned with each other such that when the dispenser is in the close position  23 , openings  18  and  19  form a single opening or combined opening  22  through which tissue  21  is pulled out and that the single opening  22  can be closeable with a single closing means, for example closing means  21 . For aesthetic presentation, the wall having the combined opening  22  may be designed or positioned such that it is not in view to the user or part of the frontal design. In other words the tissue box dispenser is disguised as a decorating box or a displaying presentation. Again the top wall of the dispenser is available for use, for example, displaying promotional materials on top of wall  17 , for example, a CD cover of Taylor Swift recording, an iPod, a calendar, etc. The dispenser  23  may also include an additional opening on another sidewall, e.g., the sidewall opposite the wall having a second opening on wall  20 . A tissue clip in a U-shape can be dispensed from both its concave (or back) and/or convex (belly) sides of the clip through the combined opening  22  and through the additional opening on the wall opposite the wall having the combined opening  22 . 
     Referring to  FIG. 3A , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a third exemplary embodiment, which is shown to include a paper tissue box  24  which is disposed on its top wall an opening  25 , a spacer  27  which together with a space cover  28  provides a closed space  29  above the opening  25 . The tissue  26  from the tissue box can be withdrawn through the opening and because of the closed spacing is kept pointing toward the pull direction. The spacer can be integrally made to the tissue box or can be externally added to the tissue box by using an attachment means  30 . 
     Referring to  FIG. 3B , a variation of the third embodiment which provides the same function as the tissue box shown in  FIG. 3A  is shown to include a sleeve  31  for putting on a tissue box  35  (which has an opening  36  on the top wall) as shown. The resulting sleeved tissue box  37  functions similarly to the tissue box of  FIG. 3A , as it now has a closed spacing disposed above the opening through which tissue  38  can be pulled and because of the covered space are kept point toward the pulling direction. 
     Referring to  FIG. 3C , another variation of the third embodiment is shown to include a spacer  39  which can be reversibly attached to space cover  40 , which can be disposed on the top wall  42  of a tissue box  41  making it functionally as those represented in  FIGS. 3A and 3B . The advantage of this configuration, as represented in  FIGS. 3A-3C  is that it allows tissue to be dispensed “sideways” or toward the side of the puller, in contrast to the mostly upright pulling as with conventional tissue dispensers. Another advantage is that these tissue boxes are stackable due to the presence of the spacer and the sideways dispensing of the tissue. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 4A and 4B , a prior art tissue box is shown illustrating the pulling direction that usually results in efficient ( FIG. 4A ) and non-efficient ( FIG. 4B ) dispensing of tissues.  FIG. 4A  depicts a prior art tissue box  43  having a top wall  44  and disposed thereon an opening  45  for dispensing tissues. The arrow and arrowhead depicts the pulling direction of the tissues, for example, the pulling direction at 90 degrees ( 46 ) and 45 degrees either inward ( 47   a ) or outwardly ( 47   b ) or other spatial orientations, with respect to the top surface  48  of the top wall  44 .  FIG. 4B  depicts the pulling direction that are less than 45 degrees, e.g., 0 degree ( 49 ), less than 30 degrees ( 50 ), etc, and 90 degrees ( 51 ) at the junction of the top wall and a side wall. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 4C and 4D , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a fourth exemplary embodiment, which is includes a device  52  for the pulled tissue  55  to glide along, over and/or against, hereafter referred to as glider. A glider  52  can be disposed on a tissue box along the longer side  53  (see  FIG. 4D ) or the shorter side  54  of a rectangular tissue box (see  FIG. 4C , or any configuration, on the tissue box as shown in  FIG. 4D . In any position the glider  52  helps the tissue to be pulled out of the box more efficiently compared to in its absence, in particular at a pulling angle that is less than about 30 degrees or horizontally pulled. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 4D-4I , different aspects of the fourth exemplary embodiment are shown relating to the spacer and glider and combination thereof which can be disposed on a tissue box or dispenser to improve dispensing.  FIG. 4D  depicts the shape and dimension of a glider  52  (first column) and a spacer (second column) and a spacer/glider (same member which can act as both spacer and glider; third column). The glider  52  may have a shape identical to or similar to those shown in members  52   a - 52   h  all of which may be used to help tissue  57  to glide out when pulled. Spacer  27  may have a shape identical to or similar to those shown in members  27   a - 27   g  all of which may be used to create space above the opening of the tissue box. The space over the top wall having the opening needs not to be covered in full; it is sufficient to cover only the space that is directly above, or near the perimeter of, the opening.  FIG. 4E  depicts different configurations  58   a - 58   f  of glider  52  and different configurations  59   a - 59   c  for spacer. The perspective view of each configuration is provided in the first column. The front view, side view, top view and back view are provided in columns 2-5, respectively.  FIG. 4F  depicts a dispenser  60  having lid  61 , which is disposed with three gliders, two of which  62   a  and  62   b  are disposed on the inside of the lid and a third one  63  is on top of the front wall  65 . The first tissue  67  from the tissue box  65  is configured to be between gliders  62   a  and  63   b  then rest on glider  63  with a portion of said tissue exposed beyond the plane of the front wall  65 . The lid  61  has a flap  61   a  which may contain a horizontal slit  61   b , which aligns with front wall  65  providing a slit opening across the front wall  65  when the dispenser is closed position  66 .  FIG. 4G  depicts a dispenser  68  having an opening  69 , a glider  70  and a compartment housing a tissue box  71  having a tissue  73  to be dispensed under glider  70  then through opening  69 .  FIG. 4H  depicts the same dispenser as in  FIG. 4G  except that the opening  69   a  is in a lower position than that in  FIG. 4G , e.g., mid level, and that tissue  73   b  glides over glider  70   a  when the leading end  73   c  is pulled.  FIG. 4I  depicts the same dispenser as in  FIG. 4G  except that the tissue box is positioned on one of its sidewall  74 , opening  69   b  is positioned at a position higher than the opening  72  of the tissue box, and that tissue  73   b  glides under and against glider  70   b  when the leading end  73   c  is pulled. The height of opening  69   b  can be as small as to the thickness of the tissue being used; opening edge (especially the lower edge) can be made to be slippery by adding glossy material (e.g., clear tape) or coating. 
     Referring to  FIG. 5A , an upside-down dispensing system for sheets of material is shown according to a fifth exemplary embodiment, which includes a dispensing system  75  comprising tissue clip  77 , which may or may not be housed or disposed in a container  76 , a mouth plate  78 , which may be a flat object, a thin wall or a thin plate or a box or box-like container having an opening  79  proximal to the dispensing compartment  80 , and a dispensing compartment  80 , which comprises a space  82 , a glider  81 , and optionally a front covering  83  or a tray  83  for said dispenser compartment. A tissue clip  77  is disposed on top of the mouth plate, its first tissue  88  configured through the opening  79  and under glider  81  so that it can be dispensed, upon pulling at its end  88   a , through the space  82 . The dispensing compartment may be closed to keep waiting tissue from exposing to the outside, by closing covering  83  against the open, front side of the dispensing compartment. 
     Referring to  FIG. 5B , another aspect of the fifth exemplary embodiment is shown to include a receptacle compartment  84 , which is lined with disposable bag inside the compartment, to receive used tissue  86 , in addition to the tissue housing  76  and tissue dispensing compartment. It may have a lid  85  to keep the compartment covered. The receptacle can also be disposed below the dispensing compartment; its opening can be positioned in opposite to the front of the dispensing compartment to further prevent user exposed to used tissues. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 6A and 6B , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a sixth exemplary embodiment, which includes a tissue box  89  having an opening or mouth  91  on its bottom wall  90  and disposed thereto a space  93  with spacer  92 , and a glider  94 . As in the embodiment of  FIGS. 5A and 6B , the tissue is withdrawn from the bottom side of the tissue box  89  instead of from the top wall of the tissue box  89 . In addition, the tissue box of this embodiment is further disposed with a tray or an openable door  96  at the bottom of the box to keep the tissues clean and the tissue box can be closed when not in use. Furthermore the tray or door  96  may also include a means  97  to keep the waiting tissue  95  from being pulled into the dispensing compartment in particular if the tissue has a short length. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 6C  (sleeve) and  6 D (sleeved tissue box), another aspect of the sixth embodiment is shown to include a sleeve to be placed on a tissue box, resulting in essentially the same tissue box as shown in  FIG. 6A .  FIG. 6A  depicts a sleeve  98  having four sidings  98   a - 98   d , a spacer disposed proximate to side  98   d  having a receiving means  102  for glider  101  to attach to. The receiving means may allow glider to  101  spin along the direction of the tissue  105  gliding thereon.  FIG. 6D  depicts a tissue box which is disposed with the sleeve of  FIG. 6C . Tissue  105 , when pulled, glides out of the tissue box mouth  104  and under and against glider  101 . 
     Referring to  FIG. 7A , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a seventh embodiment, includes a dispensing system  106  for use with at least two cubic tissue boxes, cube  107  and cube  108 , which is similar to the embodiment shown in  FIG. 6A , except that it has two dispensing systems having a plate  109  with a first mouth  110   a  and a second mouth  110   b  for dispensing tissues  111  and  112  from tissue box  107  and tissue box  108 , respectively, each dispensing different or different type of sheets, for example, soft tissue for use to wipe nose and less expensive tissue for area of the body with non-sensitive skin, e.g., hand, tissues or same type of tissue having different quality. Alternatively the tissue clips in cube  1  and cube  2  may be contained box-less in the housing compartment  113  of dispensing system  106 , i.e., the tissue clips are placed directly into the housing  113 . The clips may be disposed as a U-shaped stack and the tissues may be dispensed by peeling out from the concave side of (or the back of) the U-shaped stack or may be disposed as an inverse U-shaped stack and the tissues may be dispensed by peeling out from the concave side of (or the belly of) the inverse U-shaped stack. Alternatively two tissue clips may be disposed in housing  113  standing up as a straight clip having one end proximal to the mouth  110   a  and  110   b  and the respective other end proximal to the top of the housing. Two tissue clips may be disposed in housing  113  independently with respect to the tissue clip configuration. 
     Referring to  FIG. 7B , a sleeve is shown which can be used to accommodate two cubic tissue boxes and operate in a similar way to the embodiment of  FIG. 7A .  FIG. 7A  depicts sleeve  115  which has four siding used as attachment means  116  to attach the sleeve onto two cubic tissue boxes similar to  FIG. 7A , three spacers  115   a ,  115   b  and  115   c  which provide spacing  116  below the two openings of the cubic tissue boxes, and a glider disposed in front of the spacers so that when tissues from the tissue boxes are pulled they glide under the glider and out of the sleeved boxes. 
     Referring to  FIG. 7C , a dispensing system  117  is illustrated that is similar to that shown in  FIG. 6A , but has more than one tissue housing units  118  which are stackable on top of one another. In addition to the housing units  117  the dispenser can be assembled with or added to with an organizer or storage contained sized and shaped to fit onto the dispensing system. 
     Referring to  FIG. 7D , a dispensing system is illustrated that is similar to the embodiment shown in  FIG. 6A , except that the lid covering the tissue housing is openable upward to provide easy loading of tissue clip into the housing. The configuration of this dispensing system is similar to a record or LP player having a transparent three-sided lid (tissue housing lid) and a base component consisting of a base for playing the record (dispensing component for dispensing tissue comprising a mouth  121  disposed on a plate  122 , a glider  123  and a space  124 ). 
     Referring to  FIG. 8A  a prior art flat box is shown having a tissue box cover which is a top wall, a bottom wall or a base and four sidewalls joining the top wall and the base, an opening disposed on the top wall or the lid of the dispenser which is aligned with the opening of the tissue box. One disadvantage of the illustrated flat box container is, similar to the cubic tissue box cover, that the top wall is not totally free for designing, providing space for storing or organizing thereon.  FIG. 8A  depicts a flat tissue box cover  125  having a lid  126  disposed thereon an opening  127 , a bottom wall or a base  129  and four side walls  128 . According to the prior art usage of this dispenser, a flat tissue box  130  fittable into dispenser  125  having tissues  131  popping out of the top wall thereof through opening  131   a . The tissue box  130  is placed inside the dispenser  125  resulting into a filled dispenser  132  having tissue  131  popping out of its lid through its opening  127 . 
     Referring to  FIG. 8B , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to an eighth exemplary embodiment, which includes a dispenser for use with a flat tissue box. The dispenser  133  includes four sidewalls and a lid or top wall  134 , which may be separated (shown) or joined at the back side wall, providing housing for a flat tissue box. The front of the lid or top wall  134  has an opening  136  through which the tissue is pulled out leaving the exterior surface  138  of the top wall  134  or the outer surface of the lid free of space for design  139 , storage or organizer thereon. As it apparent, in this embodiment, opening  131   a  is not aligned with opening  136 . Another advantage is that additional tissue box or tissue dispenser can be stacked via the top wall  134 . Additionally dispenser  133  may further contain a glider  137  configured inside said dispenser to provide dispenser  140  in such way that when tissue  131  is pulled, it glides over or under glider  137  and out of the dispenser. 
     Referring to  FIG. 9 , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a ninth exemplary embodiment, which may include spacers and glider.  FIG. 9  depicts a dispenser  141  comprising spacer  142 , glider  148 , a flap  143  having the same or similar in shape and dimension to the opening  147  such that flap  143  defines an opening non-aligned with the opening in dispenser  141 . Flap  143  may be created by not tearing out the portion making up said opening  147  but leaving there with at least one side of the perforation intact. The flap  143  may be pressed down onto the trailing end  146   a  of the tissue  146  by disposing on top thereof a bar  149 . Tissue  146  can be pulled from its leading end  146   b  out of the corner  147   a  of opening or mouth  147 , gliding over glider  148  toward the shorter sidewall  145  of dispenser  141 . Dispenser  141  may have a dimension of about 6 inches (wall  144 ) by about 4 inches (wall  145 ) by about 2.5 inches (height  145   a  of wall  145  plus about 0.5 inches from the height of spacer  142 ). Spacer  142  may have a length approximately the same as the length of wall  144  or shorter. If shorter than the length of wall  145  it may be disposed along the edge of wall  145  in such a way that it still provides a spacing to the dispenser which still allows tissues to be sufficiently pulled out. For instance the spacer  142  may be disposed proximal to the exterior face of wall  145 . The shape of spacer  142  may be a long square bar, which may be made hollow or partially filled inside. The square may have a sidewall having about 0.15 to 1 inch, and in certain embodiments from about 0.25 to 0.5 inch. When the dispenser is inserted into a cavity, having the direction of the tissues pointed out (if inserted horizontally such as shown in  FIG. 10A ) or pointed up (if inserted vertically such as shown in  FIG. 10B ) the spacer may be squeezed such that its height is reduced to allow the dispenser to be fitted inside the cavity in which it is disposed. A sleeve having a dimension that fits the dimension of the dispenser  141  may also be used to wrap the four sides of the dispenser especially to keep the sides of the dispenser tight and to provide a closed space above the dispensing area. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 10A and 10B , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown according to a tenth exemplary embodiment, which includes a tissue box for use in a car in a cavity in the front panel (see  FIG. 10A ) or in the pocket on the inner side of a car door (see  FIG. 10B ). Tissue boxes, as an example as shown in  FIG. 3  or in  FIG. 6A , can be used accordingly. One advantage is that it uses the space in the car that is not usually needed for other functions, such as a cup holder, a visor, dashboard, etc. that are taken up by the prior art tissue boxes designed for car use. Furthermore the tissue box used in a car can also additionally be disposed with an organizer to keep personal items at close while driving.  FIG. 10A  depicts the front console of Acura MDX 2001, typically containing a navigator  158 , stereo system  159 , ashtray  160  and a cavity  151 . A tissue dispenser  152  is designed to fit and operate inside cavity  151 . Dispenser  152  comprises a body  161  in which disposed tissues for dispensing, spacer  154  (or spacer/feet  155  if used inversely as shown), glider  157 , and an organizer  153  disposed on the wall opposite the dispensing side or wall of the dispenser, comprising vertical slots  162  for driver to place cell phone, pen, notes, etc., for easy and convenient access. Dispenser  152  may be made of paper such as those used to make prior art tissue box or made with harder material for long-term use with refill. A tissue box according to various embodiments can also be disposed on the front or the side of the passenger car seat, inside car door using car window clip which can be attached to the inside of the car door, or against the glove compartment using a clip that can secure it to the glove compartment, etc. 
     In one aspect, at least one tissue clip, for instance, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, etc., may be provided as a package with any tissue dispenser, including but not limited thereto all the embodiments disclosed herein. The tissue clips in the package may have same or different number of sheets, which may be same or different in quality, types colors, anatomical use (e.g., for the nose, for eyes, for hands), uses (e.g., as a wiper for glasses, eyeglasses, lens, devices having glass surface, etc.). The number of sheets range from 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70, 75, 80, 85, 90, 95, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, and upward accordingly. The tissue clips may be packaged in a paper material in such way that the leading end of the first tissue is available for easy grasp by the user so it can be configured for dispensing. The tissue clips may be packaged individually in plastic or paper material and configured such that when opened by the user is ready to be inserted into the dispenser for use. 
       FIG. 10B  depicts a tissue dispenser which is disposed and operable in the pocket  163  of the car door. The tissue dispenser  163  is the same as that depicted in  FIG. 9C . 
     Referring to  FIG. 11 , a dispenser for sheets of material is shown to be configured for use according to an eleventh exemplary embodiment, which is intended for applications including on a desk or countertop ( 164 ,  166 ,  167 ), with the top wall used for tissue dispensing (upside up) ( 167 ), or the bottom wall used for tissue dispensing (upside down) ( 164 ,  166 ), underneath desk, table or countertop ( 165 ), vertically by being hooked on wall ( 168 ), hanged over a wall, e.g., a divider wall of a cubicle or over a door ( 169 ), vertically disposed on bookshelf along with books, with its side wall having no dispensing opening facing out ( 170 ). A single tissue dispenser may also dispense two different types of tissues by dispensing one type out of one wall and the opposite wall another type ( 171 ). 
     Referring to  FIG. 12 , a dispenser  172  for sheets of material is shown according to a twelfth embodiment, which includes a tissue housing  173 , an opening  175  connecting said housing  173  and dispenser compartment having two gliders  174   a  and  174   b  and a spacing system as previously shown. In addition to providing gliding function the gliders can be used as a reservoir of a substance  179  can be made with porous material to allow communication between the reservoir and tissue as it glides under and/or and over gliders  174   a  and  174   b , respectively. Substances include those disclosed in US 2010/0243668, herein incorporated by reference in it entirety. The tissue box can also further include a tray  177  underneath the space for containing the same or different substances to further enhance to impregnation of the tissues. The substances of particular interest are fragrances. The term “fragrance” includes perfumes, scents, odours and other volatile substances which can be distinguished by their smell. Essential oils (volatile oils which occur in plant and provide the plant with its characteristic odour, flavour, or other such property) are useful fragrances. Examples of fragrances include but are not limited to: ajowan, almond, allspice, aloe vera, ammivisnaga (khella), amyris, angelica root, angelica seed, anise, apricot, absolute arnica, avocado, balsam, basil, bay laurel, bay leaf, bees wax, benzoin absolute, bergamot, birch, borage, boronia, buchu leaf, cajeput, calamus, calendula, camellia, cannabis, caraway, cardamom, absolute carnation, carrot seed, cassia, cassis bud (black currant), castor, catnip, cedarleaf, cedarwood, celery seed, chamomile, champaca, cilantro, cinnamon, cistus, citronella, ciste, artificial civet, clary sage, clementine, clove, cocoa, cocoa butter, coconut, cognac, combava, coriander, cornmint, costus, cumin, cypress, davana, dill, dill weed, elemi, erigeron (fleabane), eucalyptus, fennel, fenugreek, fir, frankincense, galbanum, garlic, genes, geranium, ginger, ginseng, grapefruit, grapeseed, hazelnut, helichrysum, hemp, absolute honeysuckle, hyssop, absolute immortelle, fragrant aster inula, Jamaican gold, jasmine, jojoba, absolute jonquille, juniper berry, lanolin, lantana camera, laurel nobilis, lavender, lavendin, lemon, lemongrass, lime, litsea, lotus, macadamia, mace, mandarin, manuka, marigold, marjoram, massoia bark, melissa, mimosa, monarda, mugwort, musk seed, myrrh, myrtle, absolute narcissus, neroli (orange blossom), niaouli, nutmeg, oakmoss, olibanum, absolute opopanax, orange, wild West Indian orange, oregano, orris root, osmanthus, palm, palmarosa, paprika, patchouli, peanut, pecan, pennyroyal, pepper, peppermint, pet perfume, orange leaves, pine, evening primrose, ravensare, redberry, rosalina, rose, rosehip seed, rosemary, rosewood, rue, sage, sandalwood, seabuckthorn berry, sesame oil, shea butter, spikenard, spruce, St. John&#39;s wort, styrax resin, tagetes, tangerine, tarragon, tea tree, thuja (cedar leaf), thyme, mixed tocopherols, tofu balsam resin, tuberose, tumeric, valerian, vanilla, vegetable glycerin, verbena, vetiver, vitex, violet leaf, walnut oil, wintergreen, wormwood, yarrow, ylangylang and combinations thereof. The substance  176  may also be another volatile material, such as an insect repellent (e.g. DEET or citronella), bactericide, virocide, anti-fungus, anti-flu, and essential oils (e.g. anti-stress, expectorants). 
     Referring to  FIG. 13 , sheets of material are shown according to a thirteenth embodiment, which illustrates a process of folding and interleaving to create a tissue clip made up of triangular shaped folded tissues  180 . The steps of folding are illustrated in steps 1 through 10 as shown on the  FIG. 13 . The advantage of this shape allows the tissue to be presented at one of its corner, rather than the side as with the prior art tissue clip, so that when pulled out the user can easily grasp one of the other corners, folded it in half and use it to cover more of his or her face in one motion. 
     Referring to  FIG. 14 , a dispenser is shown according to a fourteenth embodiment. The tissue box or tissue dispenser  181  is shown to contain a housing  182  for tissues  183  folded in a V-shaped clip, as taught in the prior art, a compartment where tissue  183  is pulled out of the box  181 , which is defined by side walls  185   a  and  185   b , which serves as spacer creating space  187  in which tissue  183   a  to be pulled out from the interior  186  first through an opening  184  then through an opening  188 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 15A-C , a dispenser is shown according to a fifteenth embodiment for end opening dispensing.  FIG. 15A  depicts an empty dispenser box  189 , which has a compartment  191  for housing tissues  196 , an opening  194  disposed close to the opening  195  of the box, an area  195   a  to keep leading tissue not exposed to the outside especially when the box is closed with lid  193 . The box  189  also includes another lid  192  at the opposite end of lid  193  for loading tissue clip  196  ( FIG. 15B ) into housing  191 . When box  189  is filled with tissue  196  ( 189   a ), the tissues can be dispensed through opening  194  and out of the box through opening  195 . The tissue clip is disposed in housing  191  in a position which is parallel to the axis of the opening  194  or along the axis of the four walls  191  defining the box  189 . When the leading tissue is pulled out for use, the tissue that follows, i.e., waiting tissue, is kept inside the box in the area  195   a ; the lid  193  provides further protection from exposure of the waiting tissue to the outside. The dispenser box  189  can also be made as tube or tube-like box and the plate having opening is round or made accordingly to fit the dimension of the tubing box. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 16A-C , a dispenser assembly comprising a dispensing means  197 , which comprises a spacer  198 , an opening  200 , a glider  199  ( FIG. 16A ); a housing  201  for tissues having at least three walls including side wall  207 , a front wall  202   a  and a rear wall  202   b  with the front wall  202   a  having a height less than that of the rear wall  202   b . The opened front  203  of the box not covered by front wall  202   a  is used to dispense tissue  204  out of the dispenser assembly.  FIG. 16C  depicts a filled dispenser which now includes dispenser compartment  197  disposed in the housing  201  in a configuration that allows the leading tissue  206  to glide over glider  197  when the tissue is pulled. This assembly can be used horizontally as depicted or vertically with the front or dispensing opening facing upward, e.g., when inserted into a pocket of car door. The assembly can also be inserted into a sleeve or enclosure  208  for securing the assembly and also for decorative purpose, e.g., different sleeves can be decorated accordingly and used and exchanged without having to purchase another tissue box having a different design pattern. The sleeve may be made to cover the full length of the assembly or a portion thereof. In this aspect a package comprising a dispenser assembly according to  FIG. 16  and a plurality of sleeves each of which is different in designing pattern or materials (e.g., leather, plastic, paper, elastic band, etc.). The dispenser assembly according to  FIG. 16  may have at least two housing  201  as a way to keep a spare tissue housing or use the spare tissue housing to increase the overall thickness of the dispenser assembly so that the assembly is better fitted into a cavity, e.g., a pocket in a car door. Conversely the housing  201  can be made having a reduced thickness, e.g., 1 inch, so that the assembly can be fitted into a smaller cavity. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 17A  and B, a tissue dispenser shown according to a seventeenth embodiment that appears like a shoe box when not in use. The shoe box-like tissue dispenser  217  comprises a tissue housing or a prior art tissue box  214 , which has an opening  215  and optionally a plastic slit  215   a  (the plastic slit  215  can be removed as it is not essential when used in a manner as taught by this embodiment), and a tissue dispenser compartment  209 . The inside of compartment  209  has a inner space  209   a  defined by four walls or sidings two of which are front  210   a , which is openable at one of its side to allow tissue to be pulled out of dispenser  217 , and rear  210   c , and two walls  210   b  which are parallel to each other  210 . The inside of the compartment is fittable onto the top of tissue housing  214  when disposed thereon via the opened wall on one side of said space  209   a ; the other side of said space  209   a  comprises a wall  209   b  having an opening  211  disposed thereon for tissue  216  through which tissue  216  can be pulled out of said housing  214 , i.e., tissue  216   a . On the other side of wall  209   b  is disposed a glider  212  over the space of the opening  211 . Glider  212  can be disposed onto walls  213 , which is continuous with wall  210   b  but on the other side of the wall having said opening  211 , in a configuration that allows tissue  216  to glide over it after being pulled out of the tissue housing  214  then out of the box  209  with wall  210   a  opened up. When not in use the shoe box like dispenser  217  can be closed using via  210   a  to keep the waiting tissue inside the box until the next dispensing need. Dispensing compartment  209  may be reversibly attached to tissue housing tissue box  214  by, for example, a strap or a sleeve, full or partly covering the dispenser, that wraps around the four sides of the dispenser  217 . 
     Referring to  FIG. 18 , a blank for folding into the dispenser for sheets of material according to a third exemplary embodiment ( FIG. 3A ) is shown. The blank is folded according to the broken lines and closed into the dispenser structure using flap members  222  and  222   a  and by applying glue on the other side of member  218  that comes in contact with member  221  to seal the junction between  218  and  221 . Tissue clips can be loaded into the dispenser by unfolding flaps  222  and  222   a  at either end. The perforation outlining opening  25  is shown as  25   a . The blank provides a means to form spacer  27  by providing member  27   a  which can be folded along the lines  219  into a square shaped bar as described for  FIG. 3A . The sides of the square are depicted as member  220 . Optionally a covering may be provided to be disposed over opening  25 , for example, a sleeve that completely wraps around the spacer spanning the top wall, the side walls and the bottom wall of dispenser  24 . The sleeve may be provided with a width that is sufficient to cover the opening  25  for sideways dispensing. With this width the sleeve can be moved forth along the spacers toward the front wall to cover the opening  25  for sideways dispensing, or moved back to the rear wall to uncover the opening  25  to allow upright dispensing, as desired by the user. Alternatively instead of a full-wrapping sleeve, a covering may be provided with a dimension and function similar to the sleeve as just described but the covering is disposed onto the dispenser, for example, like a roof-like structure that spans the top wall, edging along the top and outside surfaces of the spacers  27  and the two ends thereof are tuck between flap, and secured by tucking the two ends of the covering into a tight space between flap member  222   a  and the bottom surface of the top wall right underneath the spacers. 
     Referring to  FIG. 19 , a blank for folding into the dispenser for sheets of material according to a ninth exemplary embodiment ( FIG. 9 ) is shown. The blank is folded according to the broken lines and closed into the dispenser structure using flap members  223 ,  223   a  and  223   b  and by applying glue on the other side of member  223   b  that comes in contact with member  224  to seal the junction between  223   b  and  224 . Tissue clips can be loaded into the dispenser by unfolding flaps  223  and  223   a  at either end. The perforation outlining opening  143  is shown as  143   a . The opening is made by tearing along the perforation but the torn portion is not removed from the dispenser. As shown in  FIG. 9 , this portion provides as flap  143  which is used to bias the direction of the waiting tissue toward to proximal end of the dispenser. Optionally flap  143  can be helped pressed down by disposing a means, for example, a bar  149  as shown in  FIG. 9 , over and in contact with the flap  143  by securing the bar into the openings  149   a  as shown in  FIG. 19 . The blank provides a means to form spacer  142  by providing member  142   a  which can be folded along the lines  225  into a bar  142 , having a square-shaped bar as described for  FIG. 9 . The sides of the square are depicted as member  226 . The spacer-forming means  142   a  is disposed thereon an opening  148   a  and, optionally  149   a  (as described above), which is used as a means for a glider, for example glider  148  as shown in  FIG. 9 , to be secured onto. Glider  148  is disposed underneath flap  143  such that when a sheet is pulled it glides over the glider but stay underneath flap  143 . A covering is provided to be disposed over opening  143 , for example, a sleeve that completely wraps around the spacer spanning the top wall, the side walls and the bottom wall of dispenser  141 . To secure the dispenser as folded, a sleeve or a wrapping mean is used to wrap around the dispenser. The length of the sleeve can be as long as the dispenser, for example, same length as that for member  223 , or is shorter as long as it is able to secure the folding of the dispenser, for example, having a length from the proximal end of the dispenser to the end of the opening  143 . Alternatively instead of using a sleeve as described above, the dispenser can be secured by gluing members  223   a  to the bottom side of the top wall. Prior to gluing, a tissue clip is loaded into the dispenser. The gluing can also be undone to load a tissue clip or to refill the dispenser and reglue or using a sleeve to secure the refolding. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 20A-B , a dispenser for sheets of material according to a sixteenth exemplary embodiment ( FIG. 20A ) and a blank for folding into said dispenser and a sleeve with dimension for use with said dispenser ( FIG. 20B ) are shown.  FIG. 20A  shows a blank which can be folded along the dotted lines to provide a dispenser  228  as shown in  FIG. 20B . Dispenser  228  is disposed thereon an opening  225 , which is made from tearing along the perforation  225   a , a space  224  defined at least by walls  228 ,  230 , and  229   a . A sheet or tissue from clip  226  can be withdrawn out of opening  225 , into space  224  and out of the dispenser. Above the space  224  can be disposed a covering, for example a sleeve as described for dispenser  141 , to secure the folding of flaps  230 . For example, a sleeve of dimension 2.5 inches in height, 6 inches in length and 4 inches in depth, as shown in  FIG. 20B , can be used with dispenser  224 . The sleeve may be disposed thereon on the interior of its sidewalls a glider  232  such that when the sleeve is disposed onto the dispenser the glider  232  is configured to be above the opening  225  to allow tissues to glide over it when being withdrawn. Tissue clip  226  can be loaded into the dispenser by unfolding these flaps and folding them back and securing as described. The compartment of the dispenser defined by wall  227   a ,  227  and the distal portion of  229 , because it has a height at least 0.5 inch higher than the proximal portion, where the opening  225  and space  224  are disposed for dispensing, allows more tissue capacity than if it has the same height as the proximal portion. The distal portions of the tissue clip can be curved up into the upper space of this compartment to allow more tissues to be packed into the dispenser without affecting the dispensing function thereof. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 21A-B , a dispenser for sheets of material according to a seventeenth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 21A  shows a tissue box or a tissue dispenser  227  having a tissue clip  228  folded and hanged on hanger  229  inside said tissue box or tissue dispenser. The two ends of tissue hanger  229  are disposed in or on anchors  229   a  having a adjustable positioning in the vertical and/or horizontal directions. The position of tissue hanger  229  thus can be adjusted vertically and/or horizontally along the anchors  229   a . The leading tissue  232  is disposed over glider  230  and through opening  233  for tissue dispensing. The two ends of tissue glider  230  are disposed in or on anchors  230   a  having a adjustable positioning in the vertical and/or horizontal directions. The position of tissue glider  230  thus can be adjusted vertically and/or horizontally along the anchors  230   a . Box  227  also is disposed thereon a door or flap  231  which serves to keep leading tissue with minimal exposure to the outside. For illustrative purpose herein leading tissue  232  is shown to be exposed outside of box  227  but it can also be kept within said box inside opening  233  and closed to exposure outside by engaging flap  231  with opening  233 .  FIG. 21B  shows a similar tissue box or tissue dispenser  234  having a similar configuration as box  227  except that no glider is used and that opening  233  is on a wall  235  below the top wall  237 . Part of the front face of box  234 , which is formed by the joining of at least walls  235   a ,  235   b  and  236 , forms a cavity in which leading tissue  232  is kept therein after traversing through opening  233 . The cavity is closed up when flap  238  is closed. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 22A-B , is a dispenser for sheets of material according to a eighteenth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 22A  shows a blank  240  for making tissue box  22 B having an integral glider, which is made by folding parts  243   b  underneath  243   a , and an integral tissue hanger  242 , which is when folded is configured below glider  243   a / 243   b . Glue is applied to the shaded area to either member of pairs  244   a / 244   b ,  245   a / 245   b  and  246   a / 246   b . Although the shaded area is indicated on the same side of the blank the glue can be applied to the reverse side of the blank to one member of the pair, for example, glue is applied to the reverse side of  245   a , which is when folded is in contact with member  245   b  to secure the folding at that location. Inversely glue is applied to the side as shown to member  243   a , which is when folded is in contact with the reverse side of member  243   b  to secure the folding at that location. To prepare for dispensing a tissue clip is folded and hanged over hanger  242  and the leading tissue thereof is disposed on top of glider  243   a  and pulled to rest behind lid  241 .  FIG. 22B  shows an outline  239  of the box that would result from proper folding of blank  240 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 23A-B  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a nineteenth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 23A  shows a blank  247  for making a square tube tissue dispenser which is similar to that shown in  FIG. 15 . The blank when properly folded provides a lid made up of flap having members  248   a ,  248   b ,  248   c  and  248   d , which is designed to be oversized, claw-like fashion so that it can capture and/or guide, without using the user using his or her hand to manipulate the tissue (for sanitary reason), the exposed part of the leading tissue and tuck it inside the tubing. Blank  247  when properly folded also provides a space or pod defined by the proximal portion of  249  for the leading tissue to rest inside the tubing when side walls  254   a ,  254   b ,  254   c , and  254   d , and member  250  are folded and attached to each other via glue portions  253   a ,  253   b ,  253   c ,  251  and  252 . Upon folding an opening for dispensing is formed having a width defined by  250  and a height defined by the gap between  252  and sidewall  254   d . Blank  247  also provides upon properly folding a lid defined by members  255   a ,  255   b  and  255   c  to close off the non-dispensing end of the tube dispenser. Optionally this end of the tube dispenser may be used to form a receptacle for used tissue by disposing a barrier wall between the end of the tissue clip and the space to be used for the receptacle. Further more the opening to access to the receptacle can be made on any of the four side walls of the tube.  FIG. 23B  shows an another design to manipulate and tuck in the leading tissue, which is box-like having at least one member which is not completely attached to the rest of the box-like structure. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 24A-B  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twentieth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 24A  shows an assembly  256  comprising a base  263  which is disposed with slots  262  for holding dispensers  257 . The slots are sufficient to hold and retain the dispenser against pulling force when tissues  259  are being pulled out when the lid is in open position  258   a . Tissues are kept inside the dispenser in the space or pod  260  when the lid is in closed position  258   b .  FIG. 24B  shows an assembly  260 , which includes base  262   a  with slots for container  261  for storing personal bathroom items such as toothbrush, soap dispenser, cotton swab, etc. along the side with a tissue dispenser  258  having a lid  258   a  and tissue  259 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 25A-C  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty first exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 25A  shows a cubic tissue box  263  comprising a tissue housing compartment  267   a  which is disposed with an opening  267   d  for dispensing tissue  266 , and a tissue cover  265   a  which creates a pod in the closed position to keep the tissue not exposed to dust and particles.  FIG. 25B  shows an oval tissue box comprising a tissue housing compartment  267   b  which is disposed with an opening  267   e  for dispensing tissue  266 , and a tissue cover  265   b  which creates a pod in the closed position to keep the tissue not exposed to dust and particles.  FIG. 25C  shows a square tissue box comprising a tissue housing compartment  267   c  which is disposed with an opening  267   f  for dispensing tissue  266 , and a tissue cover  265   c  which creates a pod in the closed position to keep the tissue not exposed to dust and particles. The tissue boxes disclosed herein can be in any dimensions or shapes as long as the opening and the leading tissue are covered so as to prevent the opening and the leading tissue from being exposed to the dust and particles when the tissues are not being dispensed. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 26A-B  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty second exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 26A  shows several iterations of a tissue box having a wall  268  on which is disposed a perforation  269  which is when torn off said perforation line would create an opening  269   c  having a lid  269   b . Lid  269   b  is used to cover opening  269   c  after the leading tissue is tucked inside the box sanitarily or non-sanitarily. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 27A-C  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty third exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 27A  shows a blank for making a tissue dispenser as shown in  FIG. 27B  (in closed position) and  27 C (in opened position). 
     Referring to  FIGS. 28A-C  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty fourth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIGS. 28A, 28B and 28C  show dispensers  271  having a glider  274  disposed inside the tissue housing compartment, a pod  275  for housing the exposed part of leading tissue  275 , and a lid  273 . A sleeve  270  is also provided to provide function as a closing member for tissue dispenser  271  and also for decoration purpose. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 29A-E  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty fifth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 29A  shows a tissue dispenser  276  which comprises a topless housing  277  and a tissue weight  279  which is disposed on top of the tissue clip  278 .  FIG. 29B  shows several shapes and designs of tissue weight for use with tissue dispenser  276 .  FIG. 29C  shows a dispenser  276   a  which is similar to tissue dispenser  276  but additionally comprises an openable top  280  and the tissue weight is kept stationary by attaching it to members  279   a , which has a length sufficient to fix the location of tissue weight  279 . Members  279   a  can radiate from a tissue weight in any direction, starting from any position around the vertical side of the tissue weight, and ending up against anywhere on the inner vertical walls of the tissue housing. FIG.  29 D 1  shows a dispensing according to prior art: a ring member  281  is disposed on top of a non-housed tissue clip  281  tissue clip, a tissue therefrom when dispensed through the ring would leave a leading tissue  282 , which is lined up around the inside parameter of ring  281 , having horizontal length  282   b . FIG.  29 D 2  shows a similar tissue dispensing system but ring member  281  is modified to further comprise member  281   a  which is anchored to member  281  via member  281   b . When tissue is dispensed from tissue clip  282   a  it will go through both ring members  281  and  281   a  but leaving the leading tissue  282  to have a small width  282   c  and more upright than that in the prior art system.  FIG. 29E  shows a dispenser  285  which comprises a housing  286  in which a tissue clip  282   a  is disposed. The tissue clip is topped with a top wall  287  having an opening for tissue dispensing, top wall  287  having a sufficient weight toe resist against the pulling force of the tissue during dispensing and not being irreversibly housing  286 . The wall member  287  moves down freely in accordance with the thickness of the tissue clip as tissues are being dispensed out. To provide a pod or space inside the housing to keep leading tissue from exposed to the exterior of the housing there an initial tissue clip should have a thickness that would leave a space between the top surface of the movable top wall  287  and the top plane of the container with or without lid  284 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 30A-C  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty sixth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 30A  shows a tissue box having a band or string  290  disposed across the top area of thereof which is configured in such way to dispense tissue from tissue clip  289 , which is hanged on a hanger  292 . When a tissue is pulled from tissue clip  289  the band  290  keeps the remaining of tissue clip  292  inside the box but allows the leading tissue  289  a to remain upright for the next dispensing. Lid  291  can be closed in position  291   a  to keep the tissue box in closed position.  FIG. 30B  shows a dispenser having a band or string which is recessed inside the housing ( 293 ) or on top of the housing ( 293   a ). When tissues are dispensed the band  293  or  293   a  prevents the tissue clip from being outside of the box and also keep the leading tissue  289   a  ready for the next dispensing. Lid  294  can be provided to close of the dispenser. Lid can also be made integral to the tissue dispenser, for example, by attaching it to one of the vertical walls.  FIG. 30C  shows a similar dispenser having two bands or strings  294  disposed for use. The spacing between the two bands can be adjusted in the dispensing of tissues to lessen (by having a larger space between them) or to increase (by having smaller space) friction exerted on the dispensing tissue as it passes through the bands. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 31A-B  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty seventh exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIGS. 31A and 31B  show a tissue dispenser  295  comprising a container  298  and a lid  296 , wherein the underside of the lid  296  is disposed thereon a tissue box or a tissue clip  297  for tissue dispensing. When the lid is opened as shown in the  FIG. 31A  it exposes a tissue box for dispensing if desired and when it is closed, as shown in  FIG. 31B , it keeps the tissue box  297  inside the container  298  in a way that it does not affect the function of the container as a storage or any other functions. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 32A-F  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty eighth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 32A  shows a system for dispensing tissues, comprising a housing  300 , which has at least a back wall  300   b  and a front wall  300   a , a partial top wall  301  on which disposed an opening  302  for tissue dispensing. The top wall  301  is also attached thereto a glider  306  using attachment  305 , an organizer  308 , which may be as part of the top wall  301  or externally added to the housing  300 , and optionally a compartment  309  next to the back wall  300   b , which may be used as a storage or organizer or a trash receptacle, etc. When tissue box  307  is loaded onto housing  300 , the opening  307   a  of the tissue box is parallel to the front wall and the leading tissue  303  is configured such that it passes under glider  306 , rises along the space  304  formed between the inside wall of the front wall  300   a  and the vertical wall of the tissue box in this configuration, and finally through opening  302  for tissue dispensing. 
       FIGS. 32B, 32C, 32D and 32F  show different configurations similar to that in  FIG. 32A  but having the glider attached to the housing differently as shown. The glider position can be adjusted along the vertical path  310  and/or horizontally along  310   a  toward or away from the front wall. Referring to  FIG. 32B , tissue  303  may also be dispensed out of housing  300   b  without going under glider  306 . Referring to  FIG. 32F , members  305   a  and  306   a  are extended from the bottom wall of organizer  308  beyond the perimeter of the top wall of tissue box  307  and downward in front of tissue box  307  so that when tissue  303  is withdrawn it passes under glider  306  then upward to escape housing  300   b .  FIG. 32E  shows a dispenser system which can be used to dispense interfolded napkins from a napkin holder  313  having two side walls  311 , which is adapted to dispose thereon a glider  306 , for example using the two partial walls  312 . Napkins stack  307   a  can be disposed vertically ( 307   a ) or horizontally ( 307   c ) onto the base of holder  313 , as long as the width of the base is sufficient to fit the napkin size for the latter situation. The leading napkin is passed under the glider  306 , rises up along the inner surface of wall  311  and rest thereagainst for the next dispensing. Referring to the dispensers shown in  FIGS. 32A, 32B, 32C and 32D , a method or components are provided for use to keep dispensing box from moving when tissue is pulled sideways, by for example, attaching to back of tissue box a means and secure it to an object to keep the box from moving when tissues are being pulled for dispensing, i.e., dragging. The back of the tissue box or the tissue dispenser in which tissues or a tissue box are housed is disposed with a space defined by at least three walls forming an opened or closed compartment in which an object having a weight sufficient to prevent the dragging may be disposed or attached by clipping for example to a wall of the back compartment. Alternatively the weight can also be disposed on the bottom of the box, for example, below the tissue stack or having a wall separating the weight from the tissue clip, or anywhere on the dispenser which is near where tissues are pulled for dispensing to counter the tissue pulling force more effectively. The back compartment may also serves as a storage area for personal items, a cell phone, a Post-It note, pen, etc. Furthermore the back wall of the tissue box or tissue dispenser having the back compartment may also be disposed with a second opening as an alternative route for dispensing through the back wall. The location of the said opening may be at any location along the vertical length of the wall, for example near the bottom or top of the wall, the midpoint, etc. A glider may be used to facilitate with this dispensing in particularly when the location of the second opening of the tissue dispenser is not aligned with the location of the opening of the tissue box disposed inside. Irrespective of whether the locations of the opening on the back wall of the outside dispenser and the inside tissue box are aligned to each other the tissues from these configurations having at least a back compartment and a side opening are first pulled out of the tissue box sideways them upright out of the back compartment, heretofore referred to as “sideways-upright” dispensing. In this configuration the top surface of the tissue dispenser is still be available for use e.g. storage, and the front wall or front face of the tissue dispenser is free for use for decorative or for messaging. The back compartment maybe also disposed on a paper tissue box having an opening on the top wall for tissue dispensing to keep it more stationary when tissues are being pulled up for upright dispensing. Furthermore a tissue box having or not having an opening on its top wall and having at least one back compartment may be disposed on its back wall a second opening or the only opening, respectively, so that tissues can be pulled through the back opening and dispensed through the top opening of the back compartment and in doing so may keep the leading tissue more vertically than in the absence of the back compartment. The top wall of the type of tissue box is therefore free for use other than for dispensing e.g. storage, stackability, displaying, etc. The front wall is therefore free for use for decoration, messaging, etc. 
     A tissue box or tissue dispenser having at least one back compartment and the sideways-upright dispensing means may also comprises further compartments, which may be disposed abutting the front wall and/or at least one side wall. When one sidewall is used the other side wall may be configured for loading tissue clip or tissue box. Even if side compartments are added to both the side walls, tissues or tissue box are still can be loaded through at least one side compartment that can be made or converted to be in communication with the cavity of the box or dispenser, for example by having the side wall attached to the box but movable. If all vertical walls are not available for tissue loading tissues or tissue box can be loaded through the bottom wall or the top wall of the tissue box or tissue dispenser. Even though the description refers to front or back side of the tissue box or tissue dispenser it is for illustrative only. Thus the “back compartment” as referred in this section may also be interpreted as the front compartment, depending on the design and/or the perspective if the user. Furthermore the side wall as referred to herein may also be considered as front or back side of the box or dispenser. Thus any of the vertical walls defining the box or dispenser or container can be considered as the front, side, or back of thereof. In one embodiment the tissue box or dispenser is disposed with an opening located on any vertical walls and a flap attached to said box which is disposed in front of said opening, wherein there is a space between the opening and the flap so that a tissue from the box can be dispensed in a sideways-upright fashion. One advantage of having sideways-upright dispensing is that the conversion from a sideways pulling to upright pulling according to various embodiments results in less dragging, since the user, instead of pulling the tissue sideways, is pulling the tissue upright. 
     Other ways to prevent dragging include but are not limited to the following means: attach the plastic wrap which is already used in prior art tissue boxes to wrap tissue box e.g. Kleenex cubic box, to the desk for example; attach suction cup feet to bottom or back of tissue box; dispose it in an anchor, e.g., heavy box having slot for tissue box such as a heavy or secured desk organizer. The bottom of the box can also be applied with an adhesive strip which is covered and removed by user to attach box to surface. Adhesive may be reversible having sufficient force to retain box on site but light enough for ease of remove from surface without damaging surface. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 33A-C  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a twenty ninth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 33A  shows a tissue dispensing system  314  which is wall less, comprising a base  315  on which disposed at least two legs  316 , a hanger  320  on which tissue clip  319   a  is hanged, a glider  317  which is attached to the legs via attachment  318 , which is movable back and forth and its position lockable. An enclosing case  321  may be provided to house the system and may remain partially opened (for instance, only the top part is opened) or entirely opened during dispensing.  FIGS. 33A, 33B, and 33C  show different configurations that can be made for use according to that shown in  FIG. 33A . For example, by changing the angles of  316  and/or  318  toward front  323   a  or toward back  323   b  of base  315 , or by disposing double gliders  317   a  and  317   b  which are configured to sandwich tissue  314  for dispensing. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 34A-B  an organizer comprising a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirtieth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 34A  shows an organizer  314  comprising a compartment  315  to house a tissue box  318 , the tissues from which can be dispensed from an opening on said tissue box  318 , from the middle (denoted as “B” in the drawing), or the edge of the top wall (denoted as “A”), or from the upper top of the vertical wall (denoted as “C”), or from the middle part of the vertical wall (denoted as “D”). Tissues from tissue box  318  may be dispensed out of the box through the aforementioned areas of the tissue box  318  then through the space  318   e  or  318   d , which is defined as the space between walls  316   a  and  316   b  and between walls  316   c  and  316   b , respectively. When tissues are dispensed from “A” the organizer  316  has a dimension of between  316  and  316   a  (or shown as “i” in  FIG. 34B ). When tissues are dispensed from “B”, in the middle of the tissue box and the organizer  316 , the organizer  316  has a dimension of between  316  and  316   c  (or shown as “iii” in  FIG. 34B ). When tissues are dispensed from “C” or “D”, the organizer  316  has a dimension of between  316  and  316   b  (or shown as “ii” in  FIG. 34B ). Organizer  314  comprises organizers  317  and  317   a  flanking compartment  315  and optionally more compartments as indicated by wall  319 .  FIG. 34B  illustrates how tissues  318   a  are dispensed from tissue clip  319  out of tissue box  318  through its opening  318   d  and in turn out of compartment  315 . For the “B” configuration a top-front view is shown to illustrate a walled opening  320  disposed inside the organizer  316  for tissue  318   a  to leave compartment  315 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 35A-E  a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty first exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 35A  shows a tissue dispenser device for  321  for use with a prior art tissue cover, i.e., a tissue container made of a more permanent material having a top opening which is to cover a paper tissue box containing a tissue clip for tissue dispensing. Device  321  comprises an organizer or a storage space  322  having four walls two of which having means for hanging objects when configured vertically (see  FIG. 35C  showing side configuration as shown to hang objects  331 ), an opening for use as a handle and as an opening to access to the storage even when it is used as a base for a tissue container (see Bottom configuration in  FIG. 35B ). Device  321  also comprises a spacer  325  having an opening  326  for tissue dispensing when adapted onto a tissue box. Organizer  322  may also have lid  323   a , which is lockable with lock  323   b , to close the organizer and also to use as a base when the device is used in an inverse direction (as in bottom configuration as shown in  FIG. 35B ). Spacer  325  has at least one side wall (as seen in the upright position as illustrated in the “top” configuration) opened so that when it is configured vertically onto a tissue container the opened wall provides a top opening for its use as a vertical storage or organizer (as shown used to store object  330 ). Device  321  further comprises an attachment means which is capable of fitting device  321  onto any walls of a tissue container, in any configurations: on top, on the side, or on the bottom of the tissue container  329 .  FIG. 35B-E  show the use of device  321  in different configurations and for different purposes: On a top position ( FIG. 35B ) it allows sideways dispensing of tissue  328  from an upright tissue container having its opening  328   a  on its top wall; or for upright dispensing of tissue  328  out of opening  328   a  (provided it has an opening  329   a ) ( FIG. 35E ), with wall or without wall, inside the perimeter of organizer  322 . When configured on the side of a vertical wall (side configuration,  FIG. 35C ) it provides a vertical storage space, which includes both hanging (as with objects  331 ) and bottom support (as with object  330 ). When used as a base via attachment to the bottom wall of container  329  ( FIG. 35D ), it also provides storages  330   a  and  330   b  disposed beneath the bottom wall, which can be accessed via handle  324  and opening  326 , respectively. 
     Referring to  FIG. 36  an organizer comprising a tissue dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty second exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 36A  shows an unit  332  served as an organizer having a top compartment  333 ; three vertical compartment surrounding the two side walls  335   a  and  335   b  and the back wall  334  of unit  322 ; a base  337   b , a drawer  337   c  having knob  337   d  for pulling drawer  337   c ; and a front door  337  on which disposed a receptacle for tissue  338  which is dispensed from a tissue box disposed in cavity  332   a  behind door  337  then through door opening  337   a . Receptacle  336  is for parking leading tissues before they are used. Objects  339  such as cell phone, sanitizer bottle, keys, accessories, etc. can be stored in or on any of these compartments. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 37A-C  a tissue dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty third exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 37A  shows a tissue box  340 . The flap of tissue box  341  is partially opened in a curled back position to provide an opening  342 , through which tissues  343   a  are dispensed in a direction as shown by arrow  343 . In this configuration curled back flap  341  acts as a glider that is integral or internal part of tissue box  340  providing smooth dispensing of tissues  343   a .  FIG. 37B  shows another tissue box  344  having curled back flap  345  and opening  346 . The direction of tissue dispensing  347  for dispensing tissues  347   a  is different from that as shown in  FIG. 37A . While direction  343  is toward the smaller side of tissue box  340 , direction  347  is toward to longer side of tissue box  344 .  FIG. 37C  shows another tissue box  348  having four sidewalls including wall  348   a , and flaps  349  and  350 , which are used to close off box  348 . Wall  348   a  is broken at ninety degrees toward the back side of tissue box  348  to provide top wall  352 , which is fastened to sidewalls  348   b  at the area which is continuous to wall  348   a  and curled from its end to provide an internal glider  352   a  for tissues  354   a  to travel out of opening  353  when pulled and in the direction as shown with arrow  354 . Space  351  provides a pod for waiting tissues so it is not exposed to the outside when box  348  is closed. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 38A-M , a plurality of dispenser system for sheets of material according to a thirty fourth exemplary embodiment are shown.  FIG. 38A  shows a dispenser  355  comprising side walls  356  and  359 , a bottom wall  356   b , a top wall  356   c , a side wall  357  and a lower top wall  358 , both of which help keeps stationery tissue clip  358   b , or alternatively a tissue box comprising said tissue clip, disposed inside said dispenser between top wall  358  and bottom wall  356   b . Top wall  358  is disposed therein an opening  358   a  about the central area of said top wall through which tissues from said tissue box or said tissue clip are pulled for dispensing, and disposed on said opening an internal glider  369 . Tissues, when pulled, travel through opening  358   a , over glider  369  and through space  361  for easy dispensing. Top wall  356   c  may also have a lid disposed thereon right above opening  358   a  to help manipulate tissues, for example, configuring the first tissue to be disposed over glider  369 .  FIG. 38B  shows box  362  that is similar to dispenser  355  except that it does not have top wall  358  and external dispensing plate  368  comprising an opening  370  and glider  369  for use with tissue dispensing. Box  362  instead has a railing system comprising at least a pair of railings  366  having extensions  363  and  364  along the length of said box providing a slot  367  for plate  368  to be inserted into box  362 . Dispensing plate  368  has an opening  370 , a glider  369  and a thickness  370   b  which may be the same as that of a cardboard, fluted corrugated paper, plastic board, a metal sheet, etc. Thickness  370   b  may range between about 1/16 th  to about ¼ th  inch, depending on the materials used to make said plate. Glider  369  may be made as integrally or from part of the plate, or maybe added onto said plate. Dispenser  371  is formed upon the insertion of plate  368  into box  362 .  FIGS. 38C-L  show different designs of glider to be configured onto the external dispensing plate to allow tissues to be dispensed to different, or multiple directions as indicated by arrowhead  372 . Figure M shows a side view of another external dispensing plate  365  which is disposed thereon gliders  369   n  and  369   m  and opening  370   m . Plate  365  is further disposed thereon a housing  374 , for example a roll, a tubing, a pad, etc., which comprises substance  375 , for example a menthol, an aroma such as tea or herbal, for releasing it into the space which is similarly configured as space  361  of dispenser  355  or administering substance  375  onto tissues as they cross over glider  375 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 39A-C , a dispenser system for sheets of material according to a thirty fifth exemplary embodiment are shown.  FIG. 39A  shows a dispenser  376  for sheets of material comprising a first top wall  377  and a second top wall  379  for dispensing tissue  378  toward a direction as indicated by arrow head  381  using glider  380  which is made out of wall  379  to provide said glider  380  and also an opening for tissue dispensing. The wall which is headed to by arrowhead  381  is partially opened on the upper area to allow tissues to be dispensed out.  FIG. 39B  shows a dispensing system  382  which is made externally to a tissue box  385 . Dispenser system  382  has an opening  383   b  and an internal glider  383   a  to allow tissue  387  when pulled out of box  385  travels through opening  386  of tissue box  385 , through opening  383   b  of dispensing system  382  then through opening  383  as indicated by arrow  390 . Upon configuration onto tissue box  385  dispensing system  382 , it is provided as indicated by arrow  387   a  a dispensing system/tissue box configuration  388 . The system can be secured by fastening  382  and  385  together using for example fastening means  389 .  FIG. 39C  shows a dispenser for sheets of material  391  comprising box having flaps  392   a ,  392   b  and  392   d . Flap  392   b  further comprises an extension  392   c  which forms an angle with flap  392   b  so that it rests on tissue box  393 , which is disposed inside of box  391 , across opening  394  of tissue box  393 . When tissues are pulled out they travel through opening  394 , over extension  392   c , which now acts as a glider for tissues to smoothly travel out of the box, and over the surface of flap  392   b . Flap  392   a  can be closed and the same dispensing mechanism is operated by having part of the waiting tissue exposed out of the box for pulling access. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 40A and 40B , a dispenser system for sheets of material according to a thirty sixth exemplary embodiment is shown.  FIG. 40A  shows a dispensing system  396  which includes dispenser  397  and sleeve  403 . Dispenser  397  comprises lower compartment  399   a , which may be opened or closed, an upper compartment  399   b , which is opened at either or both ends, a lid  399  disposed on the top wall to provide access to upper compartment  399   b  to manipulate tissues over glider  398  to guide tissues under said top wall. A tissue box  400   a  comprising tissue  401   a  which is part of a tissue clip disposed inside said box, or a tissue clip  400   b  comprising tissues  401   b , can be inserted as shown by arrow  402  into the lower compartment  399   a  so that the top of the tissue stack or tissue clip is exposed to the opening  398   a . Sleeve  403  comprises at least four side walls including side wall  405 . A flap  404   a  is provided off side wall  405  and a flap  404   b  may also be provided to the side wall opposed wall  405 . Upon the insertion, as shown by arrow  406 , of the sleeve  403  into the dispenser  396 , which is now filled with tissue box  400   a  or tissue clip  400   b , a complete tissue dispenser system  407  including tissues is formed as pointed by arrow  408 . Flap  404   a  is opened to provide exit to tissue  401   a  toward the direction as shown with arrowhead  409 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 41A-F , a wall protector including box or dispenser system for sheets of material according to a thirty seventh exemplary embodiment are shown.  FIG. 41A  shows an entry door  411  disposed next a wall  411   a  for use to close entrance  411   b . Shown on door  411  is knob  412  which extends at distance  412   a  from the door surface. Disposed on the wall of the door  411  is box  413  for dispensing a sheet of a material  414 , for example, a facial tissue. When door  410  is fully opened which brings its edge  411   c  closer to wall  411   a , as in position  416 , the thickness  413   a  keeps door  411  from contacting wall  411   a  because the length of the depth or thickness  413   a  is greater than distance  412   a  of knob  412 . The knob  412   b  on the other side of door  411  may or may not have similar distance  412   a , unless door  411   b  is also configured to swing to the opposite direction, in which case another box similar to box  413  can be disposed on the other side of door  410 . Box  413  can be made of any materials as long as the materials are sufficiently strong to provide resistance to force and to not break when the door is closed, especially when it is slammed against the wall. Such materials include but are not limited to carton paper, corrugated paper, hard plastic, polymeric materials such as PVC, hard aluminum, stainless steel, and light metal.  FIGS. 41C-F  show different types of box or objects which may be used in a similar fashion as that with box  413 .  FIG. 41C  shows a simple box  413   c , which may be hollow or solid, or as a storage container.  FIG. 41D  shows a tissue dispenser  413   d  dispensing tissue toward the user.  FIG. 41E  shows a tissue dispenser  413   e  dispensing tissue upward.  FIG. 41F  shows a tissue dispenser  413   f  dispensing tissue rightward. Sheets of materials dispensed from wall protector box include but are not limited to facial tissue, paper towel, wipes, wet wipes, and baby wipes. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 42A-C , an attachment system disposed on a glove box door in a car for use to attach a dispenser for sheets of material according to a thirty eighth exemplary embodiment are shown.  FIG. 42A  shows a front view of glove box  418  having an upper part  418  and a door  419 . Door  419  is attached with straps  420 , extending from top to bottom along the vertical length of door  419 . The top  420   a  and bottom  420   b  parts of straps  420  can be secured to door  419  by being attached to the inner surface of door  419 , for example by adhesive, reversible low-tack adhesive, Velcro, clips, etc. Straps  420  can be made of materials including but not limited to plastic, hard paper, carton paper, corrugated paper, other soft materials that are safe to the passenger. Straps can be for example one-inch wide, like a band, ⅛ th  inch, like a string, box-like strips, tubings, etc.  FIG. 42B  shows side view of the glove box  418 . Shown in  FIG. 42B  is a tissue dispenser which is attached to door  419  via strap  420 . Strap  420  can be inserted inside dispenser  422  and run along the length thereof and extending out at both ends, the top end  420   a  can be secured with attachment means  420   c  inside the door, and the bottom end can be secured with attachment means  420   d  at the bottom of door  419 . Tissue  422   a  can be dispensed from dispenser  422  in an upright position, as shown, or in a frontward or sideways direction (with respect to the passenger).  FIG. 42C  shows same as in  FIG. 42B  except that door  419  is in opened position having its lock  419   a  released from the glove box lock system as indicated by arrow  423 . Even when door  419  is in opened position tissue  422  can still be dispensed from dispenser  422 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 43A-H , a box or a dispenser for sheets of material for use as a stand for an electronic tablet according to a thirty nine exemplary embodiment are shown. Figures A-F shows a stand on which disposed a tablet having a diagonal length of about 10 inches, having its two shorter sides almost substantially similar to the longer sides of a conventional flat tissue box, for example, the iPad 1 and iPad 2 manufactured by Apple Corporation, the Galaxy Tab manufactured by Samsung Corporation. Figures G and H show a stand in which disposed a tablet having a diagonal length of about 7 inches, having its four sides substantially similar to those of a conventional flat tissue box, for example, the Blackberry Playbook, which is manufactured by Research in Motion, or the 7-inch Galaxy Tab manufactured by Samsung Corporation.  FIGS. 43A-C  show a configuration for landscape viewing.  FIG. 43A  shows a tablet/box setup  423  comprising box  424  which is attached to back  426  of a tablet  425  allowing the tablet to stand at 90 degrees with respect to horizontal surface  423   a .  FIG. 43B  shows tablet/box setup  423  now at slanted position with an angle alpha  1  having less than 90 degrees. Setup  423  is positioned at alpha  1  angle by resting it on the bottom edge  425   a  of the tablet and an edge  424   d  of box  424 . Tissue  424   a  can be dispensed from box  424  in this configuration.  FIG. 43C  shows tablet/box  423  now at another slanted position with an angle alpha  2  which has a smaller angle than alpha  1 , providing a deeper slanted position. Setup  423  is positioned at alpha  1  angle by resting it on the bottom edge  424   d  of box  424  and a leg  425  which is attached to the back of box  424 . Leg  425  is extended from box and held in place by means  425   a . Tissue  424   a  can be dispensed from box  424  in this configuration.  FIGS. 43D-F  show a configuration for portrait viewing. In this portrait configurations tissue  424   a  can be dispensed sideways from box  424   b  through opening  424   c .  FIG. 43D  shows a tablet/box setup  423  comprising box  424  which is attached to back  426  of a tablet  425  allowing the tablet to stand at 90 degrees with respect to horizontal surface  423   a .  FIG. 43E  shows tablet/box setup  423  now at slanted position with an angle alpha  3  having less than 90 degrees. Setup  423  is positioned at alpha  1  angle by resting it on an edge  424   d  of box  424  and leg  425   a  which is extended from box and held in place by means  425   a .  FIG. 43F  shows tablet/box  423  now at another slanted position with an angle alpha  4  which has a smaller angle than alpha  3 , providing a deeper slanted position. Setup  423  is positioned at alpha  4  angle by resting it on the bottom edge  424   d  of box  424  and a leg  425  which is bent to fold  425   a  part thereof hence reducing its height. In addition to tablet  425  and box  424 , setup  423  can include another compartment disposed between the back of the tablet and the contact side of the box. This compartment can provide an opened space between the back of the tablet and the box so that heat generated from the back of the tablet can be released. The additional compartment may also serve as storage space for, for example, Smartphone, notebooks, personal items, etc.  FIGS. 43G and 43H  show a side view  427  and a front, right side  433 , respectively, of a stand in which is disposed a 7-inch tablet  428 . Shown are an edge  428   a  of tablet  428 ; part of attachment means  428   b , which functions to attach tablet  428  to box  429 ; waiting tissue  431 ; space  430  between tablet  428  and box  429 ; and surface  432  on which the stand/tablet is disposed. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 44A-I , mobile storage consumer products, such as back packs or trash/tissue container products for car use by attachment to the back of a car seat, having a storage compartment and disposed thereto a second compartment for dispensing sheets of material such as facial tissues according to a fortieth exemplary embodiment are shown.  FIGS. 44A-C  show such a mobile storage consumer product  434  having a storage compartment  435  having a lid  436 , a strap or attachment means  437 , a pocket  436   a , and a compartment  439  for disposing tissue box for dispensing. Compartment  439  may include an opening  440  for providing easy access to manipulate tissue sheets over glider  441 ; which opening may be removably covered with a flap. Disposed inside compartment  438  by attachment to the side walls of compartment  439  is glider  441 , which is attached to compartment  439  via attachment means  442 . A space  438   a  is provided between glider  441  and wall  438  having a width sufficient to allow tissue  444  to be pulled out without being jammed between said space. Said space has a width for example at least about 1/16 th  inch, at least about ⅛ th  inch, at least about ¼ th  inch, or at least about 0.5 inch. When glider  441  is not disposed on compartment  439 , for example, when a tissue box having a glider is already disposed thereon around its opening, a space  438   c  between tissue box  437  and wall  438  is provided for tissue  444  to be withdrawn. Clamp  443  is optionally attached to glider  441  or to glider attachment means  442 , for use to clamp the tissue box in place.  FIGS. 44D  and E shows a similar storage consumer product  445  which is disposed thereon a glider  441   a  which is composed of a flexible material so that it can be bent or collapsible or not broken when said product is folded. For example, glider  441  is made from the following but is not limited thereto: flexible tubing, soft metal wire which is wrapped with a smooth skin, a string having a diameter of about ⅛ th  inch, a string of a material which is same as used in the storage bag. When tissue box  437  is disposed in compartment  439 , glider  441   a  becomes a straight and firm glider  441   b  as a result of said disposal.  FIG. 44  F shows a similar storage container  446  having the compartment  447  for tissue box disposal which is configured differently from that shown in  FIGS. 44A-E . Instead of dispensing tissues in the upright direction as shown with tissue  444 , tissue  444   a  is pulled toward sideways from tissue box  437   b .  FIG. 44G  shows a similar storage container  448  having the compartment  439   a  configured so that tissue  444   b  can be dispensed toward the user.  FIGS. 44H  and I show two additional glider configurations: two gliders which are parallel ( FIG. 44H ) or perpendicular ( FIG. 44I ) to each other. Parallel gliders  441   c  are disposed on either sides of tissues  444   c  while perpendicular gliders  441   d  and  441   e  allows tissues to be dispensed in two different directions, upright as shown with tissues  444   d , and sideways as shown with tissue  444   a . To accommodate tissue dispensing using perpendicular gliders  441   d  and  441   e  compartment for disposing tissues, for example compartment  439  is disposed with two openings, one on top and the other opening on one of its sidewall. It would be within one skilled in the art to manufacture such configurations for use with the instantly disclosed gliders. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 45A-J , tubular dispensers for sheets of material according to a forty first embodiment are shown.  FIG. 45A  shows a tubular container  450  having an inner compartment  450   b  having on opening  450   a  disposed inside thereof. Tissue clip  451 , having a length of about 8 inches and a width of about 4 inches, is folded about the outer perimeter of inner compartment  450   b  with its length running about the length of the inner compartment  450   b . In this configuration tissue dispenser  449  not only provides a tissue container and dispenser functions but also further provide a storage compartment therein which can be used to store additional objects such as pen, pencils, make up pen, decorative items such as a flower, etc. Inner compartment  450   a  when made to be completely insulated from the larger container which holds tissues may also be used to contain beverage for drinking with a straw. The same tissue clip may also be configured to be wrapped and used around an inner compartment such as a round can of wet tissues. In this configuration, the tissue clip is may be wrapped around the perimeter of the inner compartment, which has a diameter which is about the length of the tissue clip. In this configuration the same container is used to dispense both dry tissues and wet wipes which are dispensed from the outer and inner compartments, respectively. Shown in  FIG. 45B  is an illustration of such configuration. An inner compartment  454   a  is surrounded by horizontally-folded tissue clip  453 , as depicted by double head arrow  453   a . Tissue clip  453  is in turn covered by an outer layer or an outside container  454 .  FIGS. 45C-F  shows different shapes of such dispenser similar to that shown in  FIG. 45A .  FIG. 45C  shows a tubing  455  which comprises an outer compartment  456 , which is disposed with tissue clip  451 , and an inner compartment  456   b  having an opening  456   a  and tissue clip  451 , from which tissue  451   b  is dispensed.  FIG. 45D  shows another tubular container  457  which comprises an outer container  458  which is shaped like a cup and adapted for fitting into a car cup holder  459 , which is anchored by base  459   a . Container is disposed with tissue clip  451  and an inner compartment  458   b  having an opening  458   a . Also shown is lid  458   c  for fitting onto the top of container  458  to prevent the tissue clip and objects stored inside container  458   a  from exposed to the outside environment when they are not needed.  FIG. 45E  shows a tubular dispenser  460 , which comprises a bottle-shaped container  461  in which is disposed an inner compartment  461   b  having its opening  461   a  disposed off a shoulder of the outer container. Tissue clip  451  is disposed inside container  461  by inserting the lip from the bottom  461   d  of container  461 , which bottom is closed off using for example cover  461   e . Container  461  further comprises an opening  461   f  for tissue dispensing and a cap  461   c  to close off opening  461   f . Opening  461   f  should have a diameter large enough to allow tissue  451   b  to be pulled through without tearing. Said diameter may be at least about 1 to 3 inches. When a larger diameter is used, for example 3 inches, asset of double gliders can be configured across the opening, but inside the container, so that tissues would travel a short distance as a result of friction exerted upon them caused by the small gap of the glider set.  FIG. 45F  shows another tubular tissue dispenser  465  having an outer container  464 , an inner compartment  464   b  having an opening  464   a , and a tissue clip  451  disposed inside of container  464 . Shown also is a cover  462  for container  465 . Cover  462  is disposed thereon at least two openings  463   a  and  463   b . When disposed on container  465  opening  463   b  provides an opening through which tissues from tissue clip  451  are dispensed, and opening  463   a  provides access to the inner container  464   b . Both openings  463   a  and  463   b  may also be disposed with a cover for each so that the entire tissue tubular system is closed off until use. For example, a flap attached to opening  463  may be used to cover said opening when tissues are not needed. To control the travel distance of waiting tissue out of the container when the leading tissue is pulled is to use a lid having a flap exerted downward to mostly cover the opening leaving a small gap between the mouth of the opening and the edge of the flap through which waiting tissue is exposed. When the waiting tissue is pulled the flap would be opened up due to the force of pulling the tissue.  FIG. 45G  shows another tubular dispenser  466  similar to that shown in  FIG. 45F , which is oval in shape. It has an oval container  467  which is disposed with an inner compartment having an opening  467   a , which contains objects  467   c . A lid that fits into oval container  467  having siding  468  is shown to contain two openings  468   b  and  468   c  to provide tissue dispensing and access to storage compartment  467   a , respectively. A covered tubular dispenser  466   a  is also shown in  FIG. 45G , showing how tissue  469   a  is dispensed and through opening  468   b .  FIG. 45H  shows a triangular shaped tissue dispenser  470 , which comprises a housing defined by at least walls  472  and  473 . An inner compartment  473   b  is disposed inside said housing, which is rested on by a folded tissue clip  474 . Compartment  473   b  may be used for storing objects  473   c  as desired by the user, and when wall  473  is closed the objects can be accessed to by opening  473   a  disposed on wall  473 . Tissue  474   a  is dispensed through opening  471   a , which may be covered with an attachable flap  471 .  FIGS. 45I  and J show the formation of tissue dispensing system at the opening of tubular tissue systems  474  and  478 , respectively. In Referring to  FIG. 45I , system  474  comprises a container  475  which has an opening  475   b  and also an inner compartment having an opening  475   a . A band  476  is configured across the diameter of opening serving as a wall to keep the tissue clip remaining in the container when leading tissue  477   a  is pulled out. System  478  shown in  FIG. 45J  has a container  475  which is disposed at its opening  475   b  a double-glider system having gliders  476   a  and  476   b  forming a gap through which tissue  477   a  is dispensed. Additionally, gliders  476   a  and  476   b  keep the remain of tissue clip  477  from being pulled out of container  475  when leading tissue  477   a  is pulled out. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 46A-D , additional components may be used with the tubular dispensers according to a forty second embodiment are shown.  FIG. 46A-B  shows a tissue pod  488  for use with dispenser  489 , which dispenser comprises a body  496  and an inner compartment with an opening  496   a , in which objects  495   a  as desired by the user are disposed. A tissue pod  488  comprises a body  491  having a hollow area with a diameter substantially same as that of body  496 , a covering  490  without any opening attached to the top portion of body  491 , a bottom part  491   a  thereof for fitting onto body  496 , and at least one opening  492  for tissue to be pulled from within body  496  and optionally a second opening  493  for accommodating or access to objects  495  disposed on the bottom wall  491   b . Bottom part  491   a  can be made to fit tightly into the inside of body  496  or tightly around the exterior top of body  496 , so that when tissue  494  is pulled the tissue pod remains in place.  FIG. 46B  shows a closed dispenser system  489   a  when covering  488  is disposed onto container  489  and fitted thereon by part  491   a , forming a closed tissue pod to keep tissue  494  from exposed to the outside. In this configuration a user can get access to tissue  494  and if needed objects  495  by lifting up covering  490   a . Figures C and D shows a configuration  497  which comprises a container  499  and inner compartment  498   c  which is not integral to container  497 . Inner compartment  498  is disposed thereon an opening  498   b  for storing objects  498   c  and also a handle  498 , which is used  498   a  to lift by hand  500  and to remove inner compartment  498   c  out of container  499 . With this configuration, different shapes and lengths for inner compartment  498   c  can be made to adapt to the types of objects that will be stored in inner compartment  498   c . A similar system for dispensing tissue from container  499  as shown in  FIGS. 45I-J  can be used with dispenser  497 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 47A-D , a vertical tissue dispenser is used in conjunction with a paper towel dispenser according to a forty third embodiment is shown.  FIG. 47A  shows a stand  479  comprising a base  481 , a means  480  for disposing thereon and dispensing paper towel roll  483  and a second means  482  for disposing thereon a vertical tissue dispenser, for example, a tubular tissue dispenser similar to those shown in  FIGS. 45 and 46 , except that the inner compartment now is used to anchor the tubular tissue dispenser to stand  482 . Specifically,  FIG. 47B  shows a tubular tissue dispenser having a body  485  a covering  485   d  to cover the top of the body, a tissue clip  486  with leading tissue  486   a  exposed, an inner compartment  485   b  having an opening at both the top  485  and bottom  485   c  of said compartment for second means  482  to be inserted therein.  FIG. 47C  shows stand  487  which now has both paper towel  483  and a tubular tissue dispenser  484  disposed thereon. The top of dispenser  484  may be configured as shown in  FIGS. 45I-J  to dispense tissues.  FIG. 47D  shows the same stand configuration when lid  485   d  is disposed as shown by  485   e  onto the top of body  485 . The length of means  480  and second means  485   b  can be enlarged along any portion thereon in order to create tightness when paper towel roll  483  and inner compartment  485   b  is respectively disposed thereon. The tip of the second means  482  can be enlarged to prevent tissue dispenser  485  from being pulled when tissues are pulled. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 48A-B , a dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty fourth embodiment is shown.  FIG. 48A  shows a flat tissue box  501  having side walls including side wall  502 , and top wall  502   a , spacers  505   a  which are connected to flaps  505  which are in turn connected to glider  506 , which is disposed over opening  503  of dispenser  501  to provide path for tissue  504  to travel when pulled. Spacers  505   a  allow an object such as plate  507  to be disposed on top of dispenser  501  without affecting tissue dispensing. Object  507  may function as a storage or organizer, or for displaying an object  507   a .  FIG. 48B  shows that a unit comprising spacers  505   a , flaps  505  and glider  506   a  when lifted can be used as a handle to carry by hand  508   a  tissue dispenser  508 . The width of glider  506  can be made to sufficiently cover opening  503  when tissues are not being used. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 49A-F , a dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty fifth embodiment is shown.  FIG. 49A  shows a dispenser  509  comprising two components, lower box  510  and upper box  513 . Box  510  is shown having walls including wall  510   d , which can be considered as a back wall if the opposite wall thereto is facing the user or is designed to be the front of dispenser  509  or can be considered as a front wall if the design of dispenser  509  is reversed with respect to its front, side wall  510   e , a tissue waiter comprising a head  510   c , which is contact with waiting tissue  519  to position said tissue upward ready for the next dispense, connected to body  510  which is connected to a means for attachment thereof to wall  510   d . Tissue waiter may be made in size and shape to function similar to the tissue waiter as shown in  FIG. 49 , for example, having a plate-shape object which extends along the top edge of the bottom box, a box-shape object which is disposed in the opened space that is not occupied by the top box as long as its disposition does not affect the operation of tissue dispensing. Box  510  is disposed in its cavity  511   a  tissue clip or, as shown, a tissue box  517  having an opening  518  through which tissue  519  is dispensed. When a leading tissue is pulled the waiting tissue, which immediately follows said leading tissue, is kept in a standing position by tissue waiter head  510   c , which is passively rested on wall  513   b , or can be made to exert pressure upon the waiting tissue as far as the pressure is sufficient to hold the waiting tissue yet not preventing the tissue from being pulled or reaped when pulled. Upper box  513  is shown having wall  513   b , which can be considered as a back wall if the opposite wall thereto is facing the user or is designed to be the front of dispenser  509  or can be considered as a front wall if the design of dispenser  509  is reversed with respect to its front, side wall  514   a , bottom wall  514   b , a bottom wall  514   b , and a cavity  513   a  whose size and shape are determined by said walls, which can be used as storage, organizer or display objects such as object  520 . Box  513  is disposed on top of box  510  and in contact with each other by edges  514  and  512 , respectively. When box  513  is disposed on box  510 , they form a gap having a distance  515   a  between wall  513   b , of the upper box, and wall  510   d , of the bottom box. The space above this gap is where tissues are dispensed and waiting for next dispensing. Furthermore, the outer edge  515  of box  513 , which is formed from intersection of wall  513   b  and bottom wall  514   b , can be served as a glider for tissues to travel smoothly out of tissue box  517 . Thus said edge can be further refined to effect its function as a glider, for example, making it curvy or rounded shape along its length in particular at part where tissues glide against. Said edge can also be made to contain and release smells from aromatics as tea extract or other herbals unto the tissues as they travel thereon or thereagainst. Different views of dispenser  509  are shown in  FIGS. 49C  (front view),  49 D (back or rear view),  49 E (side view). With respect to mechanism to hold waiting tissue upright for the next dispensing, using as an example tissue waiter head  510   c  as shown in  FIGS. 49A , B and E, another means to so achieve is to dispose an additional wall so that the waiting tissue is kept between said additional wall and the back wall  513   b  of upper box  513 , as shown as wall  510   e  in  FIG. 49F . The additional wall can be extended from wall  510   d , or it can be configured onto said dispenser as disclosed using part of the upper box and/or the lower box, as long as it does not interfere with the traveling path of tissues from tissues disposed in cavity  511  and loading of said tissues into said cavity. The configuration for dispenser  509  can be provided using two separatable components such as shown in  FIG. 49B , or it can be made as a single unit as shown in  FIGS. 50A, 50B -C, and  FIGS. 50D-E . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 50A-E , a plurality of dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty sixth embodiment is shown.  FIG. 50A  shows dispenser  521 , which is a similar in configuration to dispenser  509 , except that (1) both upper box and lower box are made as a single, inseparatable unit, and (2) wall  510   d  can be opened as shown with arrow  521   a  so that in that position  5173  a tissue clip or a tissue box (as shown) can be disposed therein. Figures B-C show another configuration for dispenser  522  which is similar to dispenser  509 , except that the upper box and the lower box are linked to each other through means  523 .  FIG. 50B  shows an opened configuration of dispenser  522  and a tissue clip  517   c  having tissues  519  for insertion into cavity  511 , while  FIG. 50C  shows a closed configuration ready for tissue dispensing.  FIGS. 50D-E  shows a tissue dispenser  524  which comprises a body  526  having walls to provide a cavity  527 , for storing objects such as object  520 , and another cavity  528   a  having a depth  528   b  as defined by the distance between the front wall  526   a  and the inner wall  528 . A box or drawer  525 , which is sized and shaped to fit into said cavity  528   a  and to accommodate dimension of a tissue clip, or, as shown, tissue box  517 , comprises side walls  525   c , front wall  525   a , a cavity  525   b  for storing tissues, and a tissue waiter head configured on said front wall  525   a , for example, on the top of said front wall. Dispenser  524   a  is ready for use in the same manner as described for the previous tissue dispensers after drawer  525 , loaded with tissue box  517 , is inserted into cavity  528   b  leaving gap  515   a  in its closed or operational position, as shown in  FIG. 50E . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 51A-I , a plurality of dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty sixth embodiment is shown.  FIG. 51A  shows a dispenser  529 , which comprises continuous sheet, for example, a sheet of thin wood, a thin sheet of metal such as stainless steel, aluminum, chromium, which is bent and shaped so that it provides a body  529  in which a tissue clip  533  can be inserted and dispensed therefrom. Said body or tissue dispenser  529  comprises a higher about vertical or vertical wall  532 , an about horizontal or horizontal wall  530 , a lower about vertical or vertical wall  530   a , a bottom wall  530   c , and a rear wall  531 , which runs approximately along the plane of wall  532  and thereby provides cavity  530   b  where a tissue package such as a paper box, a plastic package having an opening thereon for tissue dispensing, or as shown, a tissue clip  535  is disposed. The positioning of top portion  532   a  and  533  of the front wall  532  and back wall  531 , respectively, forms an opening  534  through which tissue  535   a  travels when dispensed or pulled from tissue clip  535 . The width of opening  534  is sufficient to allow tissue  535   a  to pass through without tearing and allows waiting tissue to be kept and rested there until the next dispensing. The outer edges of the opening  534  can also be attached with each other resulting in the reduction of the length of said opening accordingly. Body  529  is configured to balance so that it can stand up as a stand-alone product, or it can be attached to or disposed in a stand support such as a box in which body  529  is snugly fitted and cavity  530  is covered by the box. Furthermore, if a light material such as paper product or light metal is used to make body  529 , a weight can be added inside cavity  530   b  for example a flat piece of metal is disposed on top of bottom wall  530   c . Alternatively a box which is sized and shaped to be fitted in cavity  530   b  can be inserted in said cavity; said box can be used to dispose tissues therein and may be further disposed therein aromatics such as tea or other herbal extracts or menthol to infuse the disposed tissues with the smell of said aromatics. Alternatively, said box  529  may be removably attached to a supporting surface such as a table or desk by for example using a clip to clip it to the edge of said table or said desk. Different views of dispenser  529  are shown in  FIGS. 51B  (front view),  51 C (side view), and  51 D (rear view).  FIGS. 51E  (side view) and  51 F (perspective view) show another dispenser  536  having a height  540 . Said height ranges from about 2 inches to about 10 inches, in particular 5 inches, 6 inches, 7 inches, 8 inches. The height depends on where dispenser  526  is intended for use, in particular where the space is more vertical than horizontal. If it is intended for use inside a purse, for example, a woman&#39;s purse having a dimension of 12-in length×10-in height×7-in width, then it would have a length  536   c  of about 8 inches, a height  540  of about 8 inches and a width  536   b  of about 2 inches. Similarly if the dispenser is intended for use in a door pocket of a car, it can be made to fit into the cavity of said pocket. Dispenser  536  is similar to dispenser  529  except that it is bent and shaped more vertically. Dispenser  536  comprises a front wall  528  having a top portion  537 , a bottom wall  538   a  (including a part thereof that is in contact with surface  541 ), a back wall  539  having a top portion  539   a , and a cavity  536   a  in which tissue clip  535  is disposed. The positioning of top portion  537  and  539   a  of the front wall  538  and back wall  539 , respectively, forms an opening  537   b  through which tissue  535   a  travels when dispensed or pulled from tissue clip  535 . The width of opening  537   b  is sufficient to allow tissue  535   a  to pass through without tearing and allows waiting tissue to be kept and rested there until the next dispensing. The outer edges of the opening  537   b  can also be attached with each other resulting in the reduction of the length of said opening accordingly. Wall  538  may be optionally disposed thereon a pocket  538   b  or the like to store another object  538   c  such as make-up wipers together with facial tissues. The inner of the walls making up dispenser  536  may be lined with a thin material such as plastic or wrapping paper in a shape of a bag or similar shape as the dispenser in which tissue clip  535  is disposed. Said bag or container thus comprises at least one of its walls adhered to the inner wall of the dispenser and an opening disposed thereon above the tissue clip for tissues to exit. Optionally, as shown in  FIG. 51I , the top portion  537  can be made to be bent toward top portion  539   a  and rest on top of top  539   a  as folded top  537   a .  FIGS. 51G-H  shows a dispenser  542  which is similar to dispenser  529  except that it is made by joining two separate dispensers  542   a  and  542   b  each of which having half the width of dispenser  542 . Dispensers  542   a  and  542   b  each of which has vertical walls  543   c  and  543   d , respectively, horizontal walls  543   a  and  543   b , respectively, back walls  543   d  and  543   f , respectively, all of which walls are aligned with each other at position  542   c  to form a unit dispenser  542 . Tissue clip  535  is disposed in a configuration that spans both dispensers  542   a  and  542   b , so that tissue  535   a  are pulled through an opening similar to opening  534  of tissue dispenser  529  ( FIG. 51A ).  FIG. 51H  shows a front view of dispenser  542 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 52A-G , a plurality of dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty seventh embodiment is shown.  FIG. 52A  shows a tissue box  544  which comprises a plurality of walls including side wall  551   a , bottom walls  551   b , and top wall  551   c . Tissue clip  535  is disposed inside the cavity of tissue box  544 . Tissue box  544  further comprises additionally at least two substantially vertical walls  551   d  and  551   e  that runs along the axis of the longer side of said tissue box. The top of wall  551   d  is higher than the top of wall  551   e . Said vertical walls may be extended from the top wall  551  on both sides of the vertical wall unit, or may be attached to the opened edges of the top wall. The top parts of the vertical walls  551   d  and  551   e , i.e., exit-forming vertical walls (or “EFVWs”) when configured to be close to each other form an opening or exit through which tissue  535   a  pulled from tissue clip  535  exits. The vertical sides of  551   d  and  551   e  are attached or glued to each other to still form said opening  551   f  albeit with its length reduced accordingly and to close off the tissue box. Part  551   d  may be folded onto  551   e  to close of the opening and also to push down the waiting tissue out of view, when the viewer is on the same side as wall  551   d . Shown in  FIG. 52A  is a schematic diagram showing a longer vertical arrow  551   d  which is depicted of wall  551   d  and the shorter vertical arrow  551   e  which is depicted of wall  551   e , and line  551   c  as depicted of top wall  551   c .  FIG. 52B  shows a tissue box  545  which is similar to  544  shown in  FIG. 52A  except that the vertical walls  545   d  and  545   g  run along the axis of the shorter side of tissue box  545 . Tissue box  545  comprises top walls  545   c , side walls including wall  545   a , bottom wall  545   b , and VFVWs  545   d  and  545   f , which forms opening  545   g  through which tissue  535   a  pulled from tissue clip  535  exits. Also shown in  FIG. 51B  is a schematic diagram showing a longer vertical arrow  545   d  which is depicted of wall  545   d  and the shorter vertical arrow  545   f  which is depicted of wall  551   e , and line  545   cc  as depicted of top wall  545   c . Shown in  FIGS. 51C-E  are different configurations with respect to the positions and angles of the EFVWs: at or near the edges of the tissue box, either along the axis of the longer side (left side) or shorter side (right side) where the EFVWs are perpendicular to top wall  545   c  or  551   c  ( FIG. 51C ), where the EFVWs are positioned at an angle to top wall  545   c  or  551   c  which is less than 90 degrees, for example 45 degrees ( FIG. 51D ), and where the EFVWs are positioned at an angle to top wall  545   c  or  551   c  which is greater than 90 degrees, for example 135 degrees ( FIG. 51E ).  FIG. 51F  shows a dispensing systems  549   a  and  549   b  which are also used as a stand for an objects such as an electronic tablet, a photo, or a promotional product. System  549   a  comprises a front base  553   a  and a back base  553   b , both of which are attached to a front wall  554  which is angled at or less than 90 degrees to base  553   a , a back wall  555  which is angled to base  553   a , and another wall  555   a  which serves a tissue waiter to position tissue  535   a  for dispensing. A cavity  556 , in which tissues are disposed, is formed by the presence of walls  554 ,  555  and  555   a . The tip of wall  554  is used to stand object  557 , for example an electronic angle, at an angle desired by the user. Toward this end the top surface of base  553  may be made with a material which provides friction to the object disposed thereon. Dispensing system  549   b  is similar to  549   a  except that the front wall  554   a  is positioned at an angle with base  553   a  which is more than 90 degrees. Front wall  554   a  provides a stand against which an object  559 , for example a photo, is displayed or viewed. A handle means  536   d  may be disposed onto the longer vertical wall  536   c .  FIG. 52G  shows a dispenser  550  in which the longer vertical wall  551   d  of the EFVWs can be folded or bent to provide flap  551   g  to nudge tissue  535   a  toward the back side of the dispenser, i.e., toward the shorter wall  551   e  of the EFVWs. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 53A-D , a plurality of dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty eighth embodiment is shown.  FIG. 53A  shows a side view of three different configurations for tissue dispenser: a body  544  having a continuous wall system comprising a top portion  548 , a mid portion  547   a , a front portion  547 , a bottom portion  547   a , a back portion  547   b , a back top portion  549 , and a cavity  551  which is formed by said bending. An opening  552  for dispensing tissue  535   a  from tissue clip  535  is provided similar to those as described in  FIGS. 51 and 52 . Dispenser  545  comprises a continuous wall comprising portion  548 ,  547 ,  547   a  and  553 , which together forms a cavity in which tissue clip  535  is disposed. Said wall also continues the other way or toward the back and form portion  549   a  which together with portion  548  forms a first opening  552  through which tissue  535   a  first exit. Portion  594   a  is further disposed with an opening  552  through which tissue  535   a , after passing though the first opening  552 , exits out of said dispenser.  FIG. 53B  shows the respective perspective view from the back and right side of dispensers  544  and  545 . Also shown in  FIG. 53A  is a dispenser  546  which comprises two separate components: the outer component having walls,  548 ,  547 ,  547   a  and  554   a ; the inner compartment having walls  546   a ,  546   c  and  546   d . The inner compartment provides housing for tissue clip  535 . The opening for tissue  535   a  to travel out is formed by the positioning of wall  548  and  546   d  in a manner similar to those described in  FIGS. 51 and 52 .  FIG. 53C  shows a side view, top view and a perspective view for dispenser  555 . Dispenser  555  comprises EFVWs walls  557  and  557   a , shoulder walls  556  and  556   a , body wall  560 , and bottom wall  560   a . Tissue clip  535  is disposed in cavity  559 . Dispenser  555  may be further disposed with a stand support such as feet  562 . The vertical wall  557  of dispenser  555  may also be disposed with an opening  558  for use as a handle.  FIG. 53  D shows dispenser  563  which comprises vertical walls  564  and  564   a  and further a horizontal wall  565  which is disposed with a first opening for tissue  535   a  to pass through before it exits off the opening formed between the two vertical walls. Also shown in  FIG. 53D  is dispenser  566  which comprises similar vertical walls  564  and  564   a  and also front wall  565 , which is used to help secure the disposed tissue box  535   b  not to fall out of said dispenser. The top part of the longer vertical wall  564  may also be bendable or foldable as shown by perforation line  564   b . Also shown in  FIG. 53D  is dispenser  566   a , which comprises side walls  567 , front wall  576   c , bottom wall  567   b  together form a cavity  567   c  in which tissue clip  535  is disposed. Dispenser  566   a  further comprises two vertical walls having equal height so that opening  567   e  is flushed allowing waiting tissue  535   a  to be viewed by either directions. Optionally dispenser  566   a  may be further disposed with an extension wall  567   d  to disable said viewing or exposure of the waiting tissue. Extension wall  567   d  is optionally further made to be bendable or foldable into a flap  568  which is used to cover the waiting tissue when folded upon the tissue. Flap  568  may be further disposed with a very low-tack adhesive which may or may not be diffused with an aromatics so that when it&#39;s attached to the waiting tissue and when opened would present said tissue for dispensing. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 54A-F , a plurality of dispenser of sheets of material, for example, a tissue dispenser, according to a forty ninth embodiment is shown.  FIGS. 54A-B  show a purse-like dispenser  570  for sheets, for example facial tissue, which is not filled and filled with facial tissues, respectively.  FIG. 54A  shows dispenser  570  comprising a longer wall  571 , which may be used as a front face to hide waiting tissue from the viewers, a shorter wall  572  having an edge  571   a  that in the close proximity with a part of the longer wall  571  provide an opening  572   b  for tissue to exit from dispenser  570  in Figure A, and a cavity  573 , for housing tissue clip or tissue box, formed when the free ends of the two said walls  571   a  and  572   a , respectively, are in close proximity. The purse-like structure of dispenser  570  is secured by attaching the top parts of the vertical edges of the two walls to each other, for example, by glue, clip, etc.  FIG. 54B  shows a more detailed sketch of dispenser  570  and provides the dimension thereof, which dimension can be adjusted to make a dispenser that can be fitted into, for example, a woman&#39;s purse, a pocket of a door of a car, a brief case, a compartment of a backpack, etc. and is still capable of dispensing tissues from those disposed locations. The longer wall  571  comprises areas denoted as H 1 L, H 2 L and H 3 L, which together make up the height of said wall. The shorter wall  572  comprises areas denoted as H 2 S and H 3 S. Dispenser  570  comprises an area denoted as B, which is part of a cavity  573  for housing a tissue clip or a tissue box sized and shaped to fit into said part B. The rest of the cavity allows as much as possible most part of the waiting tissue  535   a  to remain inside the dispenser, and as little as possible, as long as having a portion sufficient for the user to pull when needed, to stay outside of the dispenser. The dimension for dispenser  570  is provided to have a total length of 24 inches, when all the areas have been added as shown, and a width of L 3 . Therefore to make dispenser  570 , a piece of thin material, for example, carton paper, a thin sheet of metal, a thin wood panel, having a dimension of 24-inch length and 9-inch width is provided. The two ends of the sheet are folded upon each other and the top parts of the two vertical edges are attached to each other at  574 , leaving the H 1 L area free and a thin pocket or “tunnel” defined by the dimensions of H 2 L or H 2 S, L 1  and W 1 . W 1  may be as thick as the thickness of tissue  535 , to exert more friction when tissue travels through it resulting in retaining most of the waiting tissue  535   a  inside of the dispenser, or greater than said thickness and up to about ¼ inch, which would allows said travel more freely resulting in less retaining of said waiting tissue. A tissue clip  535  which is folded along its longer axis, as shown in  FIG. 54B  is inserted into cavity  573  taking a space of area B. A tissue clip may also be inserted into said cavity unfolded as shown in  FIG. 54F , making the B area to take more space upward in the cavity thus positioning the tissue closer to the opening  572   b . The configuration of the tissue clip shown in  FIG. 54F  may be used, for example, when the dispenser is disposed in a space that has more height than width or depth, for example, a woman&#39;s shoulder bags or totes or a car door pocket.  FIG. 54C  shows dispenser  570  (dotted line) having a tissue box or tissue cradle  575  disposed in cavity  573 . Cradle  575  serves at least three functions. Framing: providing more reinforcement to the shape of dispenser  570 , by having a material that is stronger than that used to make dispenser  570 , for example, a thicker or stronger paper material, or just merely adding more thickness to B in its presence than its absence. Housing: it also provides a housing for tissue clip  535  to keep most of the clip protected from exposure to the exterior. Place holder: a tea bag or another aromatics may be disposed inside of said cradle, for example, underneath the tissue clip to infuse said aromatics into the tissue clip.  FIG. 54D  shows dispenser  570  which further comprises retaining means such as strap  576 , which is used to keep tissue clip  535  from falling out of the dispenser. Means  576  may be extended from upper part of the B area, for example, having the blank comprising said extension from said B part adjacent to H 3 L area, and locked in a hole  577  disposed on the opposite side of said B part, which is adjacent to H 3 S, via part  576   a . When used as a stand alone dispenser, i.e., not disposed into a compartment such as a tote, the presence of this strap  576  would not affect the aesthetic look of the dispenser if the front face of the dispenser is wall  571 .  FIG. 54E  shows dispenser  570 , which is further lined with a material such as plastic, Saran-wrap, plastic-based or paper based wrapping material forming a bag inside said dispenser sealing the cavity with  579  and lined against the inside of at least H 2 L, H 3 L and H 3 S with  579   a , making the dispenser completely closed except foot the opening or tunnel area as described above. Tissue clip  535  may be loaded into cavity  573  through said tunnel area, in particular if the material used to make dispenser  570  is flexible, for example, paper or thin, manipulatable material such as thin sheet of metal, wood, etc. The plastic bag would thus provide much protection to the tissue clip from dust and furthermore provide a place for aromatics to be disposed to infuse the tissue clip. Furthermore it gives more color or design to the dispenser if desired.  FIG. 54F  shows dispenser  570  which is loaded with tissue clip  535  which is in an unfolded position, making the B area  578   a  higher than that ( 578  in Figure E) when the clip is folded. 
       FIGS. 55A-55D  shows a process by which dispenser any of the dispensers as shown in  FIGS. 54A-54F  may be created. The process comprises steps: providing a sheet of material ( FIG. 55A ); sculpturing it, by for example, loop it or bend it to close proximity to each other, as shown, or attach the two edges to each other, at both sides) ( FIG. 55B ); adding tissues to pod ( FIG. 55C ); turning dispenser formed in  FIG. 55C  to present the front face of the dispenser, to a direction so that the front face of the dispenser has a higher wall facing the viewer, thereby hiding the exposure of the waiting tissue from view, as shown in  FIG. 55D . 
     The dispensers shown in  FIGS. 49A-F ,  50 A-E,  51 A-I,  52 A-G,  53 A- 1  and  54 A-F are designed and configured to prevent or minimize the exposure of waiting tissue to the viewer or the user. Specifically this is achieved when the dispensers shown in said Figures are positioned such as the tissue dispensing and waiting areas are distal to the viewers, in other words, the walls facing the viewers have no tissue dispensing function and are designed so that it can be readily recognized as the front of the dispenser. 
     The vertical wall, as referred to the front, side or back walls, also encompasses walls that are extended out from its top or its bottom so that the extended wall forms an angle which is less than 90 degrees with the bottom wall. 
     Referring to  FIG. 56A  a blank  600  for making a tissue dispenser that is shown in  FIGS. 56B-D  having a configuration for disposing a glider therein, a flap to cover the waiting tissue. The dispenser as shown has a dimension as indicated in  FIG. 1  which is 5×3×9 in inch (width×depth×height, respectively). With respect to the blank as shown, the solid line is meant as cut line and the dashed line is meant for folding. The front wall  605  (when the dispenser is configured for use vertically) may be disposed thereon a slit  605 A for securing a tea bag string, which tea bag  610  is disposed between the inside of front wall  605  and the waiting tissue and the rest of the tissue clip inside tissue box  611  which is disposed in the cavity of said tissue dispenser  600 . Optionally wall  605  may be disposed thereon a plurality of slits  605 B through which a photo or a card, message board, etc., of appropriate size, for example 3 by 5, can be inserted for display. Opening  601 G provides exit for the tissue to be pulled off the tissue clip and where the waiting tissue is exposed to the outside. Slit  601 B and flap  601  engages to secure the closing of flap  601 F into the dispenser. Furthermore, optionally a further slit  601 C, which is disposed in flap  601 D, is provided to engage with the same flap  601  if the user wishes to close up the entire dispenser, by covering opening  601 G with flap  601 D. Parts  609 A,  609 B when folded according to as shown for blank  600  would create an anchor space for glider through either of two sets of opposing holes  609 . If the user desires to limit the exposure of the waiting tissue outside of the dispenser a glider can be disposed in the glider anchor set which is more distal from opening  601 G. Conversely, the glider anchor set which is more proximal to the opening  601 G is used if the user desires to increase the exposure portion of the waiting tissue. 
     Referring to  FIG. 57A-D  different masking device, which is capable of being securely disposed onto a conventional tissue box, to hide the waiting tissue from view are shown.  FIGS. 57A and 57B  show a masking device which covers at least the front face of a conventional tissue box and a proximal portion of the enclosing walls thereof, conventional tissue dispenser, or a conventional tissue box covers, all of which expose the waiting tissue to view.  FIG. 57A  shows the masked tissue dispenser in vertical use, i.e., dispensing tissue downward along a vertical axis for example off a vertical wall along the surface of said wall.  FIG. 57B  shows the same but in a horizontal use, i.e., dispensing sideways along the horizontal or x-axis for example when disposed on a table and the dispensing direction is along the axis of the top surface of the table, as shown with  620   a  (similarly with  625   a  as shown in  FIG. 57D ).  FIGS. 57C and 57D  show a masking device which covers the front face and all sides of the tissue box except the back wall (as when disposed vertically for use, as shown in  FIG. 56C ) or the bottom wall (as when disposed horizontally for use, as shown in  FIG. 57D ). A glider is disposed in these dispensers: integral glider  625 A as shown in  FIG. 56A  and external glider  625 B, which rests in glider anchor  625 , as shown in  FIG. 57C . 
       FIGS. 58A-58D  show a tissue dispenser having flap  628  extended from a wall of said dispenser, or alternately an external flap is disposed thereon, which minimize or prevent the waiting tissue  619  from view. Tissue  619 A exits from dispenser  626  via opening  627 , which has width about the dimension of wall  631  or smaller thereof and a thickness of at least about 1/32 inch up to about 1/16 in, up to about ⅛ in, up to about ¼ in, up to about ½ inch, up to about 1 inch, or larger as long as said opening is still capable of preventing the tissue clip inside said dispenser from falling out of the dispenser and more than one tissue is dispensed when the waiting tissue is pulled for use. Tissue dispenser  626  may be further slitted along the two edges of wall  631  so that at least the proximal part of this wall can be lifted up and away (as shown with  628 B in  FIG. 58E ) from the tissue clip disposed inside of said dispenser to allow easy pulling of the leading tissue to outside of the dispenser. 
       FIGS. 59A-F  show a three-compartment storage or organizer box for mobile use, having (1) one compartment  641  for storage of personal items such as candy, gums, wiper pack, etc. and/or fragrance such as tea bag, which is closeable using flaps  642  and  642   a ; (2) a compartment  643  for storing a tissue clip, having an opening  640   d  and an integral glider  640   c  disposed therein; and (3) a compartment  641   c  surrounding opening  640   d  and to keep waiting tissue from fully exposed to the outside, which is closeable using flaps  637   c  and  637   d . Tab  637   d  is used to pull open flap  637   c  when it is in closed position.  FIG. 59A  shows a blank  635  for making the organizer box as shown in  FIGS. 59B and 59E -F. A compartment for making a storage unit in the dispenser is shown as part  641 , which is folded as shown in  FIG. 59C . Part b of  641  can be made to comprise a plurality of opening so that a tea bag or some other fragrance can be disposed thereon and communicated with the compartment  643  which houses tissue  642 . A tea bag can be sandwiched between part b (lower) and part g (upper), which allows its fragrance to diffuse into the tissue compartment  643  through holes  641   b . With respect to the blank as shown, the solid line is meant as cut line and the dashed line is meant for folding. Blank  635  has a slit  640   b  into which folded flap  640   c  is inserted to secure it for use as a glider for dispensing purpose. Alternatively, flap  640   c  can be folded to the opposite direction and disposed in compartment  643  providing another configuration for use a glider. Box  635   a  is closed and secured by inserting flap  636   a  into slit  639   a.    
       FIG. 60  shows a similar mobile organizer box similar to that shown in  FIG. 58  but which has an additional compartment  649  which is disposed at the end opposite the dispensing end. Compartment  649  can be formed by folding the portion of the flap that was displaced to form opening  650  into the partition dividing compartment  649  from the waiting tissue area  648 . This compartment may be to store extra personal items that may be needed on the go or the inside wall of  649  may be lined with a sheet such as Saran wrap or a Ziploc bag for use as a trash receptacle. All the compartments shown in box  645  are covered to protect the content inside thereof. The covering of compartment  648  where portion or all of the waiting tissue is disposed is optional. 
       FIG. 61  shows a device  652  for attaching a tissue dispenser  635 A, such as the organizer shown in  FIG. 59E , onto a shelf  656 .  FIG. 61A  shows such device with a tissue dispenser disposed thereon;  FIG. 61B  shows device  652 A without a tissue dispenser. Device  652  comprises at least: (1) part  653 , which is used to removably attach to a shelf surface, for example, by adhesive or as part of a clamp which can be snapped onto the shelf; (2) part  654 , which forms a cavity  654 A for insert a dispenser or box therethrough; (3) part  655 , at least the distal portion of which, including the end portion  655 A is adjustable up and down to exert pressure onto the inserted box to secure the box to the unit and so that it does not move when tissue  642 B is pulled. 
       FIGS. 62A-J  show a plurality of configurations for disposing a tissue dispenser onto a vertical surface such as a wall, a door, etc. In  FIG. 62A , tissue dispenser  658 D having tissues  658 C disposed therein is attached to board  658 A having two holes  658 B for vertical hanging purpose. Said attachment includes but is not limited to using adhesive, for example onto the back of box  658 D or the portion of  658 A where box  658 D is disposed thereon; by making at least a portion of said board  658 A as an expansion of box  658 D which has no function in housing or containing tissues  658 C and/or anything associated with protecting said tissues from exposure to or contact with the outside environment. In  FIG. 62B , a similar tissue box having a flap  659 A extended and double-folded as shown with  659 AA and its end is glued to the back of box  659 D. A hole is made through double-flap  659 AA for hanging purpose. In  FIG. 62C , a tissue box is secured to a position parallel to a wall by using a hole  660 B disposed on an upper flap and another hole in lower flap. Tissues from container  660 D can be dispensed either upward out of the higher end or downward out of the lower end.  FIGS. 62D, 62E and 62F  show different configurations of a tissue dispenser which can be used for off-wall dispensing including downward ( FIGS. 62D and 62F ) or sideways dispensing ( FIG. 62E ).  FIG. 62I  shows a method of disposing tissue  668 A to a wall for downward dispensing, said method comprising disposing on the front wall of said tissue box an attachment means  669 A having a hole  669 B, and hanging said tissue box through said attachment means  669 A.  FIGS. 62G and 62H  shows two different configurations for disposing a tissue box onto a towel bar  664 B or  665 B. In a first configuration as shown in  FIG. 62G  a container  664  having an end which is a triangle shape. Said container  554  is secured onto bar  664 B by resting the hypotenuse  664 G on said bar, as shown in  FIG. 62G . Tissue box  664 F is disposed inside container  664  and dispense tissue  664  via an opening on one end of said tissue box (as shown) and out of the container through an opening in the hypotenuse, or via a glider through the wall facing the front wall of the container and downward through an opening through the hypotenuse.  FIG. 62H  shows a similar configuration as in  FIG. 62G  except that the triangle  666  is externally attached to the tissue box  665  via attachment means  665 B, which secures box  665  to triangle  666  so both units can be disposed on a towel bar  665 B.  FIG. 62J  shows a configuration in which a tissue dispenser can be disposed in mid air, by attaching said tissue dispenser  669  to an object such as a pot  669 A hanged off a rack  669 F attached to the ceiling in the kitchen. This configuration is convenient to a cook in the kitchen as tissues can be pulled down by hand  669 E from mid air in a one hand operation without walking to a countertop or a near wall where a tissue box is usually located and without touch the tissue box. This is not unlike picking hanging fruit from a tree. The tissue dispenser so configured may be moved to and be attached to any location where it is convenient for use. 
       FIGS. 63A-H  show different ways to hang a tissue dispenser for vertical use wherein dispensing is through the lower end or upper end of said dispenser.  FIGS. 63A-C  show a configuration wherein an opening  671 B is disposed on the top end, said opening is disposed more proximal to the front of the dispenser  670 , or away from the back of tissue dispenser, or in a straight alignment with the vertical axis of the opening  670 A of the dispenser  670  where tissues exit the dispenser. After dispenser  670  is disposed with an attachment means  671 C it is hanged off a wall  671 E by hanging on a projection from said wall through the opening  671 C′ of attachment means  671 C.  FIG. 63D  shows a hanging system comprising a clamping both the upper and lower edges of the back wall  672 C of tissue dispenser  672 . The clamps or clips are sufficiently thin to allow flaps  672 B to close the dispenser even in the presence of said clamps or clips  672 A.  FIG. 63E  shows a similar set up as shown in  FIG. 63D  except that the upper and lower portions of the back wall of the tissue dispenser  673  are glued to a wall anchor  673 A.  FIG. 62F  shows a configuration for hanging tissue dispenser  674  without the need to add any more openings to the dispenser, said configuration comprises disposing a hanging means  674 B such as a ribbon, a string, etc. below the top flap  674 A. When top flap  674 A is closed and locked by engaging flap  674 C into slit  674 C said attachment means is securely attached to said dispenser  674 .  FIG. 63G  shows a configuration comprising a cap  675  which has a shape similar to the dispenser which is to be inserted therein and a dimension just a bit smaller than that of the tissue dispenser  675 C. Said cap  675  is attached to a surface  675 B. When tissue dispenser  675 C is inserted into said cap  675  and snuggly fits inside said cap tissue can be dispensed by pulling straight downward by hand  677 .  FIG. 63H  shows a tissue dispenser system  676  which comprises a compartment  676 A for dispensing tissues and a second compartment  678 B disposed in front of the front wall of said compartment  676 A. Said second compartment  678 B having a front wall which may be completely closed for use as a storage compartment or partially opened as shown ( 676 C) for use to hold a tablet  678  for viewing as long as the viewing window does not block any part of the screen or any of the icons  678 A displayed on said screen. 
       FIGS. 64A-C  show three tissue dispensers which have at least two openings: a first opening  678  allowing the tissues in the tissue box  679 A disposed therein to exit tissue box  679 A, and the other opening  679  allowing the tissues pulled out of first opening  678  to exit out of the dispenser  677 . The leading tissue  678 A can be configured to be near or exposed out of the second opening by insert one&#39;s fingers into the second opening and pull said leading tissue ( FIG. 63A ) or using a guider  678 D to guide the leading tissue toward the direction of the second opening. Said dispenser  677  is disposed on to wall  678 E for use vertically. Tissue dispenser  677 A as shown in  FIG. 63B  has the same configuration as that in  FIG. 64A  except that the front wall is disposed therein a closeable flap or window  680  which the user can open to manipulate the leading tissue and close it ready for use.  FIG. 64C  shows a tissue dispenser having a main flap which is used to cover the entire front face of tissue dispenser  677 B. This configuration allows user to easily manipulate the leading tissue compared to that shown in  FIG. 64A  and  FIG. 64B . 
       FIGS. 65A-E  shows different tissue dispensers which are made of hard materials such as wood, metal, etc. Shown in  FIG. 65A  is a tissue dispenser  682  which is disposed thereon an opening  682 A for dispensing tissues which are disposed in the cavity of said dispenser, a plurality of spacers, which are used as a “leg” for supporting an object  683 C disposed thereon, said disposal does not interfere with tissue dispensing as long as there is sufficient space between said object and wall  682 B, which is determined by the thickness of spacers  683 . Spacer  683  may have a recessed portion  683 B on its top surface, said recessed portion is not too deep so that the portion underneath it, portion  683 A, has a sufficient thickness to allow tissues to travel when an object is fitted into said recessed portion  683 A. Shown in  FIG. 65B  is a similar dispenser which dispenses tissues toward one of the end walls thereof, end  684 C. Dispenser  684  is disposed thereon an opening  684 A for dispensing tissue  684 B and at least two spacers  685 , having a plurality of recessed portions  685 A, which are used to store objects that can be fitted onto said recessed portion, for example, a pencil, a pen, etc. Shown in  FIGS. 65C  (side view) and  65 D (perspective side view) are a tissue dispenser which can be used as a stand  689  for a display board or an electronic tablet, such as an iPad. Such displayed object  690  is supported by the recessed area of spacers  687  in the front area, near the front wall  686 C, and a stand in the rear against which said object securely rests, near the back wall  686 B, the stand being supported when inserted into the recessed portion of spaces  688 . Because of the spacer thickness beneath the recessed areas is sufficient for tissue to travel underneath the bottom edge of said object  690 , tissue  686 A can be dispensed out of opening  686 D in the presence of said object  690 .  FIG. 65E  shows a tissue dispenser or a tissue box cover  691 , having four side walls including wall  692 , front wall  692 A, top wall  692 B, an opening  693  in the top wall, spacers  696 A disposed on said top wall, a wall  696  disposed on said spacers hovering over the top wall  692 B including opening  693 . A space having a height which is about the height of spacers  696 A is formed between the underside of wall  696  and top wall  692 B. Wall  696  is extended to wall  695  which rests over front wall  692 A, in doing so keeps the waiting tissue  694  inside said wall and masks the view of said waiting tissue from view. When tissue is needed the user lifts up the tab  695 A in position  695 A′ in order to pull out the waiting tissue, which action can be done by one hand or two hand operation. Wall  696  can be configured into an organizer or for displaying photo. 
       FIG. 66  shows a tissue dispenser  697 , which can be made of soft or hard materials such as metal, hard plastic or Plexiglas, etc. For the purpose of illustration the walls or parts of tissue dispenser  697  are made transparent; so is tissue  699 C so parts of the inner configuration relating to  698 F and  698 G can be illustrated. The back wall  698  of dispenser  697  is extended and (a) bent at  698 AA and  698 AB, providing a partially opened compartment  698 A to secure the disposition of tissue box  699  therein between  698 B and back wall  698 , (b) then bent at turn  698 AC, providing an integral glider  698 G over which tissue  699 C travels when pulled, (c) bent at  698 AC and extended to  698 AE where it is bent again to form a closing flap  698 E. The area between bends  698 AB and  698 AE is disposed with opening  698 F through which tissue  699 C exists after traveling over glider  698 G. The bottom of tissue dispenser (so referred to because it is illustrated for use vertically; when used horizontally it would be considered as the front end of tissue dispenser  697 ) is closed using the extension of front wall  702 , which is bent at  702 A to provide extension  702 B, which also includes an opening sized and shaped similar to inner opening  698 F, then at turn  702 C to form a flap  702 D, which is folded into the box by inserting into a slit (not shown) which is made along turn  698 AA. The top part of tissue dispenser  697  may be closed using flap  701  which is extended from front wall  702  and folded behind tissue box  699  inside the cavity of tissue dispenser  697 . 
       FIGS. 67A-J  shows different configurations  703 ,  704 ,  706 ,  708  and  709  for a hard tissue dispenser, for example, one that is made of metal such as stainless steel or titanium. Top wall:  703 A,  704 A,  706 A,  708 A,  709 A. Opening for tissue dispensing:  703 B,  704 B,  706 B,  708 B,  709 B. Tissue:  703 C,  704 C,  706 C,  708 C,  709 C. Spacers:  703 D,  703 E;  704 D,  704 E; Spacer/organizer:  706 D,  706 E,  708 D,  708 E  709 D,  709 E. Objects stored in dispenser:  707 B,  707 C;  706 F,  708 F. Object disposed on spacers:  705 . Tissue dispenser  708  has opening space for sideways tissue dispensing through space  708 G or  709 G even when the spacer is used as an organizer ( FIG. 67H, 67J ). Tissue dispenser  706  has a partial opening for upward dispensing through the opened space having a width  706 G even when the spacers are used as organizer ( FIG. 67F ). Tissue dispenser  703  is completely closed off when spacers  703 D and  703 E are folded onto the top wall ( FIG. 67B ). 
       FIGS. 68A-C  shows an outline for making a minimalist sheet dispenser  710   a - 710   f , which have a first panel, a second panel and a third panel, indicated by  711 ,  712  and  713 , respectively, and additionally fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth, indicated by  714 ,  715 ,  716 ,  717  and  718 , respectively. The free edge of the first panel  711  is disposed thereto or thereon a glider portion  711   a . The cavity defined by the fifth to the eighth panels can be adapted for use as a storage of an object  721  or organizer. As shown in  FIG. 68C , these dispensers can be used in a configuration for upward dispensing (as in  710   g ), downward dispensing by, for example, hanging the dispenser  710   h  on a towel bar, for example, towel bar  726  having an attachment  726   a  to a surface  725  of a vertical wall, or a horizontal bar handle on a portion of the fourth panel, as shown for  710   h  and  710   i . A similar dispenser can also be used in a horizontal configuration as shown with  710 J by placing the dispenser on a horizontal surface  724 , or  729  as in  FIG. 68B .  722  denotes a sheet disposed in the cavity defined by at least the first three panels;  723  denotes waiting sheet which rests over of under the glider portion  711   a . For dispensers having a fifth panel, as in  710   c - 710   f , the waiting sheet is kept between the surface of the first panel  711  and the fifth panel  715 . The sixth panel  716  can also be configured toward the first panel, or toward the cavity of the dispenser, and a hinge may be configured at the intersection of the fifth and sixth panel so that the sixth panel can be used as a covering to keep the waiting sheet from being exposed out of the plane of the second panel. Sheets can be provided for use with these dispensers as a stack  722  or as a stack housed in a box  722   b  having an opening  722   a  for said dispensing.  FIGS. 68C and 68D  show a perspective view of the dispenser outline in  710   c  having no sheets disposed therein ( FIG. 68B ) or having a sheet box disposed therein ( FIG. 68C ). The opened sidings of these dispenser can be closed by adding additional panels perpendicular to the panels defining the cavity for sheets. 
       FIGS. 69A-E  shows a spacer/glider system that can be adapted for use with a box containing a stack of interfolded sheets, with or without already covered in a box. FIG.  69 A 1  shows a system  730  comprising a plurality of horizontal bar  732 , resting on spacer  731 , spaced apart by a distance  732   a  or  732   b . The distance can be made as narrow as a slit, so as to keep the sheet from falling in back into the box. Alternatively a plastic sheet applied to the bottom of these plurality of horizontal bar may be disposed under the bars having a slit in areas between the two edges of the bars. Spacer  731  has a height represented by  731   c , a width by  731   a  at the top or  731   b  at the bottom, and a depression  731   d  in which bars  732  are disposed. Sheets disposed in a box placed under  730  can be dispensed through  732   a  or  732   b  or frontal to  732   a . The edges of bars  732 , such as those indicated by  732   d , have smooth surface to aid sheets to glide out of the box. A similar system  730   a  is shown in FIGS.  69 B 1  and  69 B 2 , which in addition to having similar structure to that in  69 A 1  also has another set of spacer which is the upper part of spacer  733 . Spacer  733  has a height represented by  733   c , a width by  73   bb  at the bottom, and a cavity  733   d  through which bars  732  are disposed. FIG.  69 B 2  shows that the spacer  733  comprises two spacers providing a space  734   a  above the bar and  734   b  below the bar  732 . Cavity  733   d  can be made to tightly fit bars to prevent them from sliding sideways; or it can be made loosely so that the spacers can be slided along the bars  732 . The slideability of spacer  833  along the bars  732  allow the device to be used in boxes having different width, by sliding the two spacers to fit the within or outside of the edges of the box. Sheets can be dispensed through any of  732   a  or  732   b  (as shown in  FIGS. 69C, 69D and 69E ) or frontal to  732   c  (as shown in  FIG. 69E ). The advantage of system  730   a  over system  730  is that (1) an object  737  can be stored on the bars  732  of the former system, yet in the presence of the upper spacer  734   a , another object can be placed on the surface of that spacer without affecting the said stored object if it is not higher than the height of the upper spacer, for example, as in the case when a mobile computer device is laid flat on bars  632 , and that (2) the former system can be used in both upright dispensing (as shown in  FIG. 69C ) and, when an object  736  is placed on top of spacer  733 , sideways by merely routing the leading end of the waiting sheet  735   a  toward the front, underneath the object  736 , without the need for reconfiguring the waiting sheet to dispose underneath the device (as shown in  FIG. 69E ), as it must for device  730 . The top surface of the bars  732  in any of these devices can be used to store objects  737 . Furthermore if another object, for example  736  is placed on spacer system  730   a  that object can be used to store other objects as well, for example  737   a  ( FIG. 69E ). 
       FIGS. 70A-E  shows a blank  737  for making sheet dispenser for use in downward dispensing. The blank, when folded and the parts connected to each other by glue as shown by the double-head arrows, provides a dispenser system  737  as shown in perspective in  FIG. 70B . Dispenser system  737  includes a dispensing wall  743   c  which is spaced apart from cover  738 , the space providing a pass through for sheet  744  to exit the system, the pass through area having a width of  739   b  beginning at the glider having a top at  740  and ending at near exit wall  739   a . The surface of glider  740  is made smooth by bending flap  740   a  as shown in FIG.  70 C.  743   a  and  743   b  are disposed opposite to glider  740  so that they can be opened for a user to get access to the sheets disposed in the container in order to configure the leading sheet to rest over the glider and head toward the exit  739   a , as shown in  FIG. 70C  and  FIG. 70E . Flap  743   a  and flap  743   b  are folded flat against the wall on which the dispenser is mounted.  FIG. 70C  shows that they stick out the wall only for illustration purpose. Dispenser system  737   a  can be mounted on a wall by using the holes  742   a / 742   b  and/or  741 / 741   b , made in flaps  742  and  743  which are doubled-wall to increase support strength. Alternatively the system can be mounted on a towel bar via slanted wall  739  as shown with  737   e  which is attached to a wall surface by attachment means  737   f . The system includes not only dispenser but also storage compartment  738   b , for user&#39;s convenience. The storage can be used to store items  743  such as paper towel, personal care products normally used in a bathroom. The dispenser compartment of the system can be closed using flaps including  738   a . The dispenser system  737   a  can also be used in the opposite orientation, i.e., for upright dispensing, using the flat panel comprising  738   a  as the base, which can be attached to the horizontal surface by attaching the outward surface of flap  742  thereto, for example by glue or having an object serving as a weight disposed on flap  742  in this vertical position. The storage compartment  738   b  can also be made into the same configuration as that for the dispenser, so that it can also be used to dispense another type of sheet, or alternatively as shown in  FIG. 70B  but having at least the same width as that of the dispenser compartment so that an extra box of sheet can be stored therein for use after the sheets are used up. The dispenser system  737   a  can also be made without the storage compartment to save horizontal space on the wall, in particular if the width of the towel bar is narrow.  FIG. 70E  shows a cut out  737   d  of dispenser system  737   a  including the portion near exit  739   a . The back wall portion of the dispenser  737   a  having openings flaps  743   a  and  743   b , which when opened allow access to the inside the dispenser, may be removed so that the dispensing wall having glider  740  is not covered by the back wall, making it easier for the user to manipulate the leading sheet on the glider for dispensing. When mounted on a vertical surface the dispensing wall, which is spaced apart from said vertical surface by a portion of the side walls, cooperates with the vertical surface to form a pass through region for the sheet to exit. 
     Referring to all the Drawings and photographs of the Appendix that are disclosed herein, the tissue boxes or tissue dispensers are made in a size and shape with dimension that is similar to those already made in the prior art, for example including but is not limited to a typical cubic tissue box or a flat tissue box under Kleenex® brand, with a dimension that allows the fitting of a prior art tissue box inside a dispenser. A “cubic” tissue box herein is referred to a tissue box having the width, the height and the thickness in the approximately the same dimension; it also referred to a box where these dimensions are not approximately the same, for example, an upright carton manufactured by Kimberly-Clark Corporation has a width of about 4.25 inches, a height of about 4.75 inches and a thickness of about 4.25 inches. When a tissue clip is used with a cubic tissue box, it may be supported with a supporting member, disposed underneath the bottom sheet of the stack to prevent “fall back” from occurring with the box. Such supporting member may be that disclosed as member 36 in U.S. Pat. No. 6,349,525, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. When a tissue box is made, it may be made smaller, the same size as, or larger than those already made in the prior art. A prior art flat box tissue usually has a dimension of between about 4 and 5 inches wide and about 9 to 10 inches long and, depending on the tissue load, may have a height of from about 2 inches to about 6 inches. Each inch usually can hold about 45 to 50 double-ply tissues folded into a tissue clip. Similar capacity is applied to the embodiments disclosed herein. The tissue box or tissue dispenser may also be made in a way that allows its thickness to be adjusted to the cavity in which it is disposed. For example, the side walls of said tissue box or tissue dispenser have equally spaced horizontal scores alternately on the inside and outside around the perimeter of its ends and side walls, then collapsed in accordion fashion, such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,869,192, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. Alternatively or additionally, the composition of the materials for making a container and/or the spacer to be flexible to allow some collapsing in a tighter space but without affecting the dispensing of sheets. When tissues, tissue clips or tissue stacks are referred to herein it usually refer to the tissue clips that are taught in the prior art, e.g., rectangular clips of tissues that are folded and interleafed such that when one is pulled out the next tissue is also pulled and positioned popup ready for the next use. Since the tissue dispenser effects a side way dispensing, i.e. the waiting tissue rest on the top wall and hang over the front wall, the plastic cover and slit that are usually present in the prior art tissue box are not needed in various embodiments. When refer to tissue box it is usually meant that the tissue box is made by heavy paper along the likes of tissue box that is made in the prior art under brand names Kleenex, Puffs, Scotts, etc. When refer to tissue dispenser, it may mean both tissue box and tissue dispenser, which in the prior art refers to as “tissue box cover” because these are used to cover tissue box, which may be made as disposal (e.g., with cardboard paper), semi-permanent (e.g., heavy corrugated paper) or permanent types (tin, aluminum, stainless steel, wood, ceramic, etc.). The opening of the sheet box or sheet dispenser can be of any desired geometrical configuration, for example, an oval, elliptical, or circular shape, a square or a rectangular shape, etc. The opening may not need to be covered by a plastic sheet having a slit therein which spans across or over the open area of the opening, as seen with almost all of the prior art tissue box, which is used to keep the waiting tissue to be in the upright position for the next dispensing. 
     The gliders shown and illustrated in the drawings and in the Appendix photos are plastic straw tubings. They have a diameter ranging from 0.25 inch to 0.5 inch to 0.75 inch to 1 inch and greater. A metal wire can be inserted into the straws to allow fastening the straw to the tissue box or tissue dispenser and to allow the straw to spin along with the gliding tissue to help reduce the friction as the tissue glides over the straw. To facilitate gliding the outer surface of the glider can be made with materials that are slippery. In general a glider according to the invention is a device that aids tissue to glide out of the tissue box when being pulled. A glider may take shape and form which is tubular, string or wire like having smooth insulation, plate having a smooth edge, bar or block having a smooth edge, plastic lining or plastic edge having sufficient surface for tissues to glide through without being torn, etc. A plate having rough edges for example such as that of an opening edge or mouth of a conventional tissue box which result when the perforation line is torn to provide said opening may not be used as a glider according to the invention. Similarly the corners of an elongated plastic slit as typically applied to a conventional flat tissue box having a large side and a smaller side may not function as a glider because when tissue is pulled toward the smaller side of the box, it tends to be torn because the corner of the slit is restrictive to the movement of tissue. Making a slit at this corner according to the invention would convert that corner into the glider according to the invention. Gliders, spacers, and tissue dispensers include those described herein. 
     The tissue dispensers according to the instant invention may also be accompanied with, or built integral thereto, a receptacle for disposing used tissues. The receptacle may be disposed on, under, to the right, to the left, or behind the tissue dispenser, depending on where and how the tissue dispenser is used. 
     The tissue box or tissue dispenser according to the instant invention may have at least one element, or any combinations thereof, selected from the group consisting of: spacer, a protrusion off the wall containing an opening through which tissues are dispensed so that a closed space can be formed over the opening, external glider, internal or integral glider, a hanger, a closure to close of the opening of the box, tissue pod, a band or string by which tissues are dispensed resulting in the release of the leading tissue and the positioning of the waiting tissue, masking means, stabilizing flap (which extends from any of the flaps which are parts of a closure to a side of a box) which helps to attach the tissue dispenser to a surface, and an attachment or mounting means disposed on said tissue box or tissue dispenser so it can be readily attached to an object. 
     As utilized herein, the terms “approximately,” “about,” “substantially,” and similar terms are intended to have a broad meaning in harmony with the common and accepted usage by those of ordinary skill in the art to which the subject matter of this disclosure pertains. It should be understood by those of skill in the art who review this disclosure that these terms are intended to allow a description of certain features described and claimed without restricting the scope of these features to the precise numerical ranges provided. Accordingly, these terms should be interpreted as indicating that insubstantial or inconsequential modifications or alterations of the subject matter described and claimed are considered to be within the scope of the invention as recited in the appended claims. 
     It should be noted that the term “exemplary” as used herein to describe various embodiments is intended to indicate that such embodiments are possible examples, representations, and/or illustrations of possible embodiments (and such term is not intended to connote that such embodiments are necessarily extraordinary or superlative examples). 
     The terms “coupled,” “connected,” and the like as used herein mean the joining of two members directly or indirectly to one another. Such joining may be stationary (e.g., permanent) or moveable (e.g., removable or releasable). Such joining may be achieved with the two members or the two members and any additional intermediate members being integrally formed as a single unitary body with one another or with the two members or the two members and any additional intermediate members being attached to one another. 
     It should be noted that the orientation of various elements may differ according to other exemplary embodiments, and that such variations are intended to be encompassed by the present disclosure. 
     It is also important to note that the construction and arrangement of the systems and description of methods for dispensing sheets of materials as shown in the various exemplary embodiments is illustrative only. Although only a few embodiments of the present inventions have been described in detail in this disclosure, those skilled in the art who review this disclosure will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible (e.g., variations in design, shape and placement of the spacer(s), cover(s), and/or glider(s), quantities and placement, spacing therebetween, configurations and supporting hardware, etc.) without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of the subject matter disclosed herein. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the present invention as defined in the appended claims. The order or sequence of any process or method steps may be varied or re-sequenced according to alternative embodiments. Other substitutions, modifications, changes and omissions may be made in the design, operating conditions and arrangement of the various exemplary embodiments without departing from the scope of the present inventions.