No aerosols in cars
Dear Heloise: Today’s paper had your column a bout what you should keep in your car. I agree with everything except an aerosol to fix tires! I live in Texas, and there have actually been towns here that have reached 120 degrees in the shade, and where it almost always gets above 100 in the summer. I had a thermometer in my car, and sitting in the sun in the summer it reached 150 regularly!
Do not put any aerosols in your car! A good spare tire is a great choice, and there might be a battery-powered pump device that can han- dle our temperatures, but I would advise looking at the label. Do not keep anything in your car that can’t handle at least 150 degrees! Thank you for your time! — Tanda Rasco, via email
Reusing newspaper sleeves
Dear Heloise: I have some more hints for reusing news- paper sleeves.
■ They are great to put in your glove compartment or luggage to use as travel trash bags.
■ Place food scraps in the sleeve and keep in the freezer until garbage day.
■ Use a sleeve when you need to fish out something that fell into the garbage dis- posal.
■ You can also use them when you clean anything gross, like the underneath side of the disposal rubber gasket. When you’re done just pull them off inside out and toss. — Linda Webb, Roland, Arkansas
Baking soda solution
Dear Readers: Gym bag s melly? If you p ut your sweaty exercise clothes in it, this will happen. After you have exercised and before you put your clothes inside, sprinkle baking soda over the bottom of the bag to help absorb the odors.
Baking soda also can be used for cleaning, deodor- izing and cooking. To learn more, check out my pam- phlet “Heloise’s Baking Soda Hints and Recipes.” Get one by sending $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (78 cents) envelope to: Hel- oise/Baking Soda, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. FYI: Need to freshen your carpet? Sprin- kle baking soda over it and leave on for 30 minutes, then vacuum. — Heloise