Antelope Valley Press

Take these steps to keep a shower clean and shiny

- Hints from Heloise — Debbie James, Hebron, NH

Dear Heloise: I’m sending in some helpful hints for the person who needed help cleaning his shower. Purchase a handheld squeegee and keep it in the shower. After turning the water off, squeegee the glass and the walls, especially on the lower sections where the water and soap accumulate. It doesn’t need to be a perfect job, just take a few seconds to do it (I can do mine in 30 seconds), and it doesn’t have to be after every shower. The walls and glass will dry nice and shiny. It lengthens the time between cleanings.

Another hint is to change the showerhead to one that is handheld or comes with a handheld showerhead. This way, after scrubbing the walls, you can rinse the walls off with the showerhead, instead of throwing cupfuls of water.

— John Klimko, via email

Don’t silence all unknown calls

Dear Heloise: The advice from Janet Ham regarding silencing unknown callers is good, but there is a downside to it. Any calls you receive from doctor’s offices, pharmacies, mechanics, etc., will also be silenced, unless they are in your contact list. I have missed several calls from people I needed to speak to, only to find out that it’s them after the fact. Make sure you add those numbers to your contact list.

— Boyce Lancaster, Columbus, Ohio

Keep a phone in your pocket

Dear Heloise: I, too, am a “senior citizen” living in the New Hampshire Lakes region. I have long ago made sure to have a cell phone in my coat pocket when I make my trek down the driveway to get our morning newspaper.

Never was I more grateful for it than last March, when one foot caught black ice and I fell, severely fracturing my ankle. I was able to call my husband for help. Otherwise, I would have lain there for who knows how long, until he realized that I was missing.

Since that episode, and because we no longer have a landline, I actually try to keep my cell on me (or keep it easily accessible) at all times. Thank you for your column and the many varied hints it shares. I’m a longtime reader, but first-time writer.

No more tangled belts

Dear Heloise: When I wash bathrobes, I put the terry cloth belts (and all cloth belts) into a small mesh laundry bag to prevent the belts from wrapping around washer parts and other clothing in the washer and dryer.

— Angela Gonzalez, via email

Send a money-saving or time-saving 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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