Antelope Valley Press

Fresh bread Advice for road safety during dangerous driving conditions

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Dear Readers: April showers bring May flowers, but they also bring wet, slippery roads and dangerous driving conditions. Here are some driving hints for safety on the road during a rainstorm:

•Ensure brake lights, headlights, taillights, turn signals and windshield wipers on your vehicle are all working correctly. Tires must be inflated properly, and a good tread depth will help with traction on wet roads.

• Reduce your speed. To avoid hydroplani­ng, slow down, don’t brake hard and don’t turn sharply.

•Put a cushion of space (at least one car length) between you and other drivers. Increase your following distance and slow down well before the intersecti­on or where you are turning into.

• Brake and slow down, then turn, then accelerate.

• In the event of a skid, DO NOT slam on the brakes; look and steer into the direction you want to go. Don’t panic.

Driving in wet weather can be dangerous. Slow down, give yourself extra time and maintain space around you to shield you from other drivers.

— Heloise

Organizati­on nation

Dear Heloise: My beef is with jeans manufactur­ers. Women’s jeans in general are cut so that the pockets in the front are small or faux (nonexisten­t), and the pockets in the back are low and short — my phone doesn’t even fit back there. It pops out when I sit down.

Meanwhile, men’s jeans are roomy with huge pockets, both front and back. I guess manufactur­ers think women carry all their necessarie­s in a handbag, but for some of us, that is not practical.

Let’s get the word out that women need roomy pockets, without looking bulky (I get we want to look slim), to make life easier.

— Avery R. in Louisiana

What a doll

Dear Heloise: My 10-yearold daughter, Annie, has Down syndrome, and we’re trying to make her life as ordinary, typical and mainstream as possible. I was thrilled to find a doll with Down syndrome facial features. Annie relates to this doll better, I think, than her other dolls.

She can dress the doll in super-cute outfits (it has moveable arms and legs), and the doll helps her friends and other parents understand DS better and foster a sense of normalcy for Annie.

— Jane W. in Texas Jane, toy designers have come a long way in recent years to make kids with special needs feel included in everyday experience­s with their friends and classmates.

And if other kids can see that a doll has been created to mirror their friend, it will foster a sense of understand­ing that will help everyone grow and learn. There are even dolls that come with wheelchair­s. This is a great thing. High-five.

— Heloise

Dear Heloise: To help keep, say, a half loaf of bread fresh, I hold the bread wrapper up and cut it down the middle into two sections.

Then I can tie the two sides together in a knot at the level of the bread.

— Virginia D. in Pennsylvan­ia

Send a money-saving or timesaving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001, or you can fax it to 1-210-HELOISE or email it to Heloise@Heloise.com. I can’t answer your letter personally but will use the best hints received in my column.

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