Helpful Hints

DEAR HELOISE: Please warn your readers -- especially those with teenage girls -- that certain brands of jeans can cause expensive damage. My friend's daughter wore a pair to the dentist, sat on his yellow dental chair, and the blue dye was not colorfast and ruined a chair. She received a bill to repair the chair and for his lost wages while it was being repaired.

My suggestion: When you first purchase jeans, wet a piece of white cloth and place it on the jeans. If the color transfers, return them to the store. When my friend told us about the dental mishap, another lady with us said she heard of someone damaging a quilt by sitting on it with black leather pants.

-- Kitty in

Sugar Land, Texas

DEAR READER: Oh my! That's pretty shocking, and a little crazy. The dentist's insurance should have paid to get the chair repaired. A bill for lost wages is a stretch, depending how long the chair was out of commission, but maybe he had only one.

Yes, most jeans (blue, black, etc.) will transfer (and lose) color over time. New ones are the worst for rubbing off on other materials. Test by rubbing the material with a white cloth or paper towel. You will see blue dye.

DEAR HELOISE: The inside of my car's windshield was kind of greasy. I remembered you said to use vinegar to clean windows. I filled a bottle with vinegar and water, sprayed my windshield, then wiped it with a microfiber cloth.

-- Marvin O. in Montana

DEAR READER: I keep a small bottle of vinegar in my auto to clean the windshield, wipe down the console and remove fingerprints on the inside door. Are your windshield wipers dirty? Use vinegar and water to clean the wipers, too.

DEAR READERS: Have a child in college or returning to school? Here are some Heloise hints to use:

• Community showers? Purchase a shower bag (or tote) to hold toiletries.

• Shower at "off times" to ensure that you will have hot water.

• Choose a kitchen-size trash can.

• Use an automobile clothes rack to transport hanging clothes to and from home.

• Pack your things in containers that, during the year, can be used as storage, such as plastic totes or milk crates

DEAR HELOISE: Years ago, my daughter stepped on a sewing needle that had gotten lost in the carpet pile. It broke off in her heel. Now when I finish any hand sewing, I knot the ends of the remaining thread together, making it more visible, before replacing the needle in the pincushion.

-- Anne P. in Ohio

Send a money- or time-saving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, Texas 78279-5000; fax to (210) 435-6473; or email

[email protected]

Weekend on 09/25/2014

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