Hamilton Journal News

Disposing of drugs

- Heloise 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

Dear Heloise: While I applaud your suggestion in a previous column that people use the new year to clean out their medicine cabinets, I was disappoint­ed that you suggested only that they “toss” the expired or unneeded drugs.

Drugs in the waste stream, whether landfilled or flushed down toilets, are a major source of environmen­tal harm. They affect the human water supply and the health of many species of animals, which are critical to food chains, thus affecting other animals.

National Prescripti­on Drug Take-Back Day is held twice a year by local police department­s, and many pharmacies offer voluntary or state-mandated safe disposal of drugs. In many places this can even be done by mail. I hope that you will clarify your position, at the very least if you run this idea again next year. Thank you. — Tim Wiles, Guilderlan­d, N.Y.

Tim, thank you for this important informatio­n. Check in your community for the take-back days to get rid of your drugs safely. —

Faucet aerator replacemen­t

Dear Heloise: I think that some people will be surprised at how bad their kitchen or bathroom faucet aerator looks if they haven’t been checking it on a regular basis. I unscrewed my bathroom sink faucet aerator recently and found that it was yucky looking and needed to be replaced. The inside of the faucet was black (which I was able to wipe clean), maybe from mold or the deteriorat­ion of a black washer that was stuck up in the inside of the faucet. — A.F. in Southern California

A.F., it’s a good idea to check your plumbing reg- ularly to see if it needs to be cleaned and to prevent a bigger problem from hap- pening. — Heloise

Shower curtain grunge

Dear Heloise: I will be 82 this year, and I’m not about to take down shower curtain liners when they get grungy at the bottom. Instead, I put a shower chair or anything the right height in the tub and place a bucket of warm, soapy bleach water on it. I place the bottom of the liner in the bucket and let it sit until the liner is spar- kling clean, then air dry. You’re welcome! —

Suzi, via email

Cleanup suggestion­s

Dear Heloise: Good morning! In response to two of your recent columns, I offer the following: To clean up blood, use hydrogen per- oxide; and to clean up pet puddles in your carpet, use pee pads for pets. The pads have an absorbent side and a non-absorbing side that keeps your feet dry. Thanks for all the tips you share. — Tad, Temple, Texas

Saving bottles for reuse

Dear Heloise: This is about your letter in an ear- lier column. It was about blending a thickening agent with water to add to thicken gravy. What I do is save and clean a pill bottle, spice bot- tle or similar small bottle and use it for a shaker. Put in the water and flour, screw the lid on tight, shake until blended and add to the gravy or sauce. — T. Diemer, Ken- ner, Louisiana

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