Dayton Daily News

Do you have permission to smoke in someone’s home?

- Heloise Household Hints

Today’s Sound Off concerns smoking in someone else’s home:

Dear Heloise: A couple of weeks ago, my husband and I invited a few friends over for a cocktail hour, and everything was fine until I saw a guest pull out his cigarettes and light up. I went over to him, and I asked him as quietly as I could to please smoke outside. Both my husband and I have respirator­y issues that are affected by smok- ing. He became angry and said I was rude. He grabbed his wife and stormed out of the house.

We have a no smoking sign just above the doorbell, one in each bathroom, and one on a needlepoin­t pillow on our sofa. No one else smoked that evening — some have given it up, while others respect the fact that we don’t smoke.

In this day and age, when so many people have quit smoking due to health haz- ards, I thought it was only polite to ask if you could light up in someone else’s home. Even if we didn’t have problems with our lungs, I hate the smell of cigarette smoke and that awful yellow smoke stain that eventually lands on everything. The last thing I need is a cigarette burn on my furniture or ashes and cigarette butts in my cups and dishes.

Heloise, please remind people to ask permission from the host or hostess before smoking in another person’s home. As so many people have quit the use of tobacco, it just seems uncouth to assume it’s OK to smoke is someone else’s home. — Joel and Kelly M., Arlington, Virginia

Joel a nd Kelly, you’re right. It’s only good man- ners to request permission to smoke in another person’s home. Not only does the smoker risk their health, but the health of others in the room. I have a crossstitc­hed sign in my home that reads, “If you’re smok- ing in this house, you’d bet- ter be on fire.” — Heloise

Lost earring

Lost an earring and don’t know what to do with the one that’s left?

■ Remove the backing and use as a decoration on a gift (maybe in the center of a bow).

■ Collect all of your orphaned earrings, remove the backs, glue together and make a lapel pin out of the earrings.

■ Have a ring made out of the one earring if it’s a valuable stone.

■ Have a jeweler make it into a pendant for a necklace.

SEND A GREAT HINT TO: Heloise

Box 795001

San Antonio, TX 78279-5001 Fax: 1-210-HELOISE

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