Article: If you're not sure where to find clovers in your area, do an online search for "clover patches" followed by the name of your town. You may find sites with an overview of the types of foliage in the different areas of your town. Users may also leave comments about local parks or trials on sites like Yelp, letting other people know the kinds of plants they found there. If you can't find clovers online, do your own search. Walk around areas with a lot of leaves and trees, like parks and trials, to seek out clover patches. If you have a backyard, look there as well. Clovers often grow in lawns. Clovers tend to thrive in soil that does not drain well. They also frequently grow in the shade. When out looking for clovers, check shady and dry areas for a clover patch. Clover patches are comprised of plants with small green flowers circling a center point. Watch out for plants that look similar to clovers. Plants with purple circles at the center are not clovers. Also, if you see a whole patch of what look like four-leaf clovers, these are not clovers. Remember, four-leaf clovers are rare. There is one four-leaf clover for every 10,000 three-leaf clover in a patch.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Do an online search for clovers in your area. Walk around local areas with a lot of foliage. Check shady, dry areas. Identify a clover patch.

Problem: Article: Squeeze out some of your paint in a bowl or onto a small plate, and add more as you need it. Dip the tip of your brush into your paint, and paint over your quote.  If you are painting a small quote or few words, squeeze out a few small globs of paint For painting a sentence or more, squeeze out ¼ of the bottle. You can use paint in any color you’d like! Dark colors look best on light walls, and vice versa. Go with your favorite color, or use dark brown or black for a bold quotation. Apply an even, smooth layer of paint over all of your letters. After you finish 1 layer of paint, you can go over the letters with another layer if the paint appears transparent. Most of your letters should be pretty dry after you finish your first coat. If they are still wet, wait 30 minutes or so for your paint to dry in between coats. When you finish painting over all of your quote, wash your materials with soap and water. You can squeeze a dime-sized amount of soap into your palm, and rub the bristles of your paintbrush into the soap. Then, run it under warm water. Give your walls a few hours to dry to avoid smudging or smearing your painted quotes. To test how dry your paint is, very lightly touch the center of a bold line with the tip of your finger. If you have smudges or marks on your walls, you can easily wash them off when your paint dries. Wet a washcloth with water from your sink, and squeeze out the excess. It should be damp, but not soaking wet. Then, lightly rub it over the marks on your walls. Avoid rubbing your washcloth over your paint to avoid smudging or messing up your lettering. Grab your brush, dip it in your paint, and smooth over any uneven lines or smeared spots. Make precise, smooth lines over the edges, and look for any places where the paint may still be transparent. If your painted quote already looks fabulous, skip over the touch-ups! You only need to do this if your quote could use some finishing touches.
Summary: Grab your paintbrush and acrylic paint and fill in your lines from the left. Paint over all of your lines and add a second coat if you'd like. Let your paint dry for 1-3 hours and wash your materials. Wash off any remaining markings from your wall after your paint is dry. Touch up your lines once the paint is dry and your walls are clean.

While South Carolina is the only state that has outlawed tobacco screens entirely it's important to know that more than half the states in the United States have provisions in place that prevent employers from establishing hiring practices or incorporating punishment based on your activities outside of work, including tobacco use. If you live in one of the 29 states with these provisions in place, you don't need to submit for a tobacco screen willfully.  Click here for a state-by-state breakdown of tobacco screening laws. "Tobacco tests" are usually performed by screening for cotinine, and are usually some combination of mouth swabs, urinalysis, and blood testing. Cotinine is the primary metabolite of nicotine. Nicotine leaves the body in a few hours, but cotinine has a longer half-life, and is usually present for up to a week.  Cotinine has a half-life of 16 hours, meaning that half of all the trace leaves your body every 16 hours, or so. If you're a light smoker, most of it should be gone in 48 hours, depending on how much you smoke, but most tests will pick up trace amounts, especially in the mouth swab. Cotinine tests screen for smokable as well as smokeless tobacco, including vape pens and other e-cigarettes. Depending on how much you smoke, there's no way of knowing how much time you'll need to be all the way in the clear, but with the right combination of techniques, you can be fairly confident that you'll pass if you stop using any kind of nicotine 3-4 days before your test for lighter smokers and 5-7 days for heavier smokers. Read the next section to learn how to quit for a week, or more.  If you smoke in excess of a pack a day, may need to quit smoking farther out ahead of your test. It can't ever hurt to stop earlier, if possible. If you're a social smoker, or only smoke occasionally, just make sure you quit a few days leading up to the test and you should be fine. Any time you've got to pass a urine screen and you're worried about cutting it close, start increasing the amount of fluids you're drinking throughout the day.  Drink plain filtered water. It's good to drink as much as two liters per day, or about half a gallon, to keep your body flushing itself regularly. Drink warm water with a little bit of lemon in it. To break it up, try warm water with garlic, leeks, or ginger to help your body eliminate fluids. Drink lots of herbal tea, containing ginger, dandelion root, juniper, which have natural diuretic properties. Drink lots of natural cranberry juice. Most commercial drinks labelled "cran" something or other are really low in actual cranberry juice and high in sugar and apple. If you can, try to get real cranberry juice that's 100% cranberry for the best diuretic effect. Go to any head shop and you can find a variety of expensive beverages that all guarantee you can pass any drug or tobacco screen and keep smoking right up to the test. Read the ingredients. These drinks are usually just some combination of fruit juices and electrolytes that you'll pay an arm and a leg for, which won't be any more effective than drinks you can get for free, or for much cheaper. Use some smarts and avoid throwing money away on these drinks. If trace amounts show up on your screen, it is possible to blame a smoky bar, a smoky band practice, or other possible second-hand smoke encounters, although this may conflict with prior questionnaire information that you may have filled out in anticipation of the test.  Most cotinine screens are performed in the workplace for insurance purposes. If a trace amount showed up, you can usually get out of it pretty easily with an excuse like this. If you smoke the day of the test, the amounts will be much higher, though, and you won't be able to blame second-hand smoke for that. You still need to quit, for a few days at least.
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One-sentence summary --
Make sure the tobacco test is being performed legally. Understand how the screen works. Stop using all kinds of tobacco at least 5-7 days before the test. Flush out your system by drinking diuretics. Don't blow money on "detox" drinks. Blame second-hand smoke.