Daily News (Los Angeles)

Rubber bands prevent waste

- Write to Heloise at P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000; Fax 210-HELOISE; or email Heloise@Heloise. com.

Whether it is a spare ketchup bottle, a garlic powder spice container or a box of crackers, everyone usually has that “extra something” in their pantry waiting to be used and moved to the front of the kitchen cabinet.

So, when I buy more than one of something, I put a rubber band (I keep a small bag of them in my drawer) around the item that is in use. When I run out of said ketchup, I know not to put it on my grocery list and instead use the spare one from my pantry that will be expiring later on in the year.

I have used this new system of mine for over five years now, and it has come in handy so much that I just wanted to share it with you. Hope it works for you!

— Amy Snyder, Marshallto­wn, Iowa

DEAR HELOISE >> May I offer one more letter regarding the danger of driving with an unrestrain­ed dog in your car? In 1977, my then-32-yearold sister was a passenger in the back seat of a friend's car on the way to a Fourth of July celebratio­n. She was sitting at a slight angle and talking with the other young woman in the back seat when an oncoming car suddenly swerved headon into their lane.

Since neither car was going at a high speed, the crash did not appear catastroph­ic at first. The driver of the other car had bent down to pick up one of her two dogs that had jumped onto the front floorboard of her car, causing her to swerve. However, my brother-in-law ended up suffering a laceration on his nose, and my sister bumped her right temple against the metal trim of the seat in front of her.

Everyone got out of their respective cars to exchange informatio­n. In a matter of minutes, my sister became disoriente­d and shortly lost consciousn­ess.

By the time authoritie­s were notified, an ambulance dispatched, and the transfer to a local hospital completed, my sister suffered extensive brain damage due to intracrani­al swelling. She was transferre­d 50 miles away to a trauma center where a large portion of the front right lobe of her brain was removed.

She passed away two years ago at the age of 77, having lived the remainder of her life as an invalid. She became blind in her right eye and was partially paralyzed. She needed full-time care for the duration of her life. Her three children had to be raised by other family members after her husband left because “she was no longer the person he had married.” A tragedy that impacted generation­s could have been avoided if two small dogs had been restrained in their vehicle.

— Cindy A., Athens, Texas

DEAR HELOISE >> I use dry shampoo on my woollined slippers. I spray the inside, let it dry and then fluff them with a dry paper towel. They come out dry, fluffy and smelling great.

— L.H.

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