Dear Heloise: A gentleman asked you for your recipe for window cleaner, and he mentioned one containing both ammonia and vinegar. You said it wasn't your recipe, and you're right.

It's one that got reprinted every few years in another column, and it did mix vinegar and ammonia. I guess someone figured that if ammonia cleans windows and vinegar cleans windows, why not try them all together? As I explain to my chemistry students every year, all you'd get is salt water — they neutralize each other.

This year, when I teach my students acid base chemistry, I'll tell them there's one advice columnist who knows her high-school chemistry. Keep up the good work. — Steve Rezendes, chemistry teacher, West Potomac High School, Fairfax, Va.

Dear Steve: Thank you for the very kind words, and since I took physics instead of chemistry, it really means a lot to me! It was nice chatting with you recently, and I look forward to getting hints from your students.

Many of the "old" recipes that are floating around out there might work, and many do not. This is why we have the Heloise Update in this column. It's always best to check it out, and recheck it, too. Vinegar is my all-time favorite household cleaner and deodorizer! To wash windows, just add 1/2 to 1 cup white or apple-cider vinegar to 1/2 gallon of water. Spray windows liberally and wipe dry. That's all there is to it.

For more money-saving ways to use vinegar around the house, send for my six-page vinegar pamphlet. To receive a copy, please send $4 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (60 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Vinegar, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001.

And remember, when drying windows, dry the outside horizontally and the inside vertically. This way, if there is a streak, you can tell if it's on the inside or the outside of the glass. — Heloise

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P.S. Here's a quote about this subject from one of my mother's books, "Heloise All Around the House" (1965): " . . . after washing (cloth diapers), a rinsing in vinegar and water solution can't be beat . . . vinegar neutralizes the ammonia in diapers."

Dear Heloise: I have a great idea for how to carry a digital camera in your purse without it getting damaged. Whenever I take my camera out somewhere and the camera case is too big to fit in my purse, I put the camera in an old sock so that the screen is protected. Who would have thought? — Natasha Harden, via e-mail

Yup, it works well. A zip-top plastic bag will do the trick also, and it's waterproof, too. — Heloise


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