Q: Take a few minutes to search your entire bedroom for places where roaches could potentially get in from outside. Take a close look at where the walls meet the floor and ceiling in your room, the corners, the air vents, and around the windows. Keep in mind that roaches can slip through cracks and holes that are as small as 3 millimetres (0.12 in) high. Purchase a simple caulking gun from your local home improvement store. The gun should come with directions, so read them over carefully before attempting to use it. If you find any cracks that you think roaches could slip through in your bedroom, hold the nozzle of the caulking gun up to the crack and move it across the crack as you pull the trigger and fill the crack with caulk. Allow the caulk to dry for as long as the product recommends. The only thing really blocking entry through air vents in your bedroom is vent screens. If you find that there are any holes in any of the vent screens in your bedroom, replace them as soon as possible. If you find a very small hole or just want a temporary fix, you can cover the hole with 1-2 layers of heavy duty tape, such as Duct Tape. While your bedroom door probably just opens up to the rest of the inside of the home, roaches that get in through other doors of the home can make their way to your bedroom and even your bed. Install weather strips on all of the doors that open to the outside to keep roaches from slipping into your home through the spaces between the door and the door frame. If you struggle to keep the roaches from getting into your home and bedroom, you may still be able to keep them out of your bed. Tuck in your sheets and swap out oversized comforters for smaller ones that don’t brush your bedroom floor. This should make it harder for roaches to climb up into your bed. Roaches may be able to crawl up bed skirts as well. If you have one, take it off of your bed and put it away. Purchase non-tacky rubber silicone tape at a hardware store or online. Wrap the tape around each of your bed posts from just underneath your box spring to where each post meets the floor. This should also help keep roaches from climbing into your bed if they happen to get inside your home.
A: Look for potential entry points to your bedroom. Seal up the cracks with a caulking gun. Check your vent screens and replace them if necessary. Install weather strips on your doors. Get rid of any bedding that’s dragging on the ground. Wrap silicone tape around the bottom of your bed posts.

Q: You’ll usually find it on the home screen.  The switch will turn green, which means that Do Not Disturb mode is enabled.  To block all incoming calls while you’re in this mode, select No One. If you want to receive calls from people in your Favorites list, select Favorites instead. This brings you back to the Do Not Disturb screen. If you leave this switch green/On, anyone who calls you twice in a row will be able to reach you even though you’re in Do Not Disturb mode. Turning it off prevents this from happening.
A: Open your iPhone’s Settings . Tap Do Not Disturb. Slide the “Do Not Disturb” switch to . Tap Allow Calls From. Select which calls you want to receive while in Do Not Disturb mode. Tap the back button. Slide the “Repeated Calls” switch to .

Q: You will need to reward your dog when he shakes. Bite-sized treats are good for training because you can give your dog more of them without feeding them too many extra calories. Also consider what your dog likes and what will motivate them: does your dog like soft treats or hard treats? Is there a certain flavor that your dog seems to respond to more? Figure out which treat works best for your particular dog and have them on-hand for training.  Try making your own treats.  These could be small pieces of cooked meat or even some fruits and vegetables. Don't overfeed your dog.  Keep treat sizes as small as you can. Do not feed your dog the following food items, as they can cause poisoning or illness: avocado, chocolate, bread dough, grapes, raisins, hops, ethanol, moldy foods, macadamia nuts, xylitol, onions, garlic. The only way a dog can shake hands is if they are sitting.  If your dog doesn't know how the command for sit, you will need to teach them to sit first. Don't reward the dog with the treat here, as you are teaching him how to shake, not sit. You won't be giving the treat to your dog just yet.  For now, simply keep the treat in your left hand.  Bring the treat in front of your dogs nose, showing it to him.  Once you have his attention, close your fist around the treat.  Don't let the dog grab the treat from you yet. Hold the treat between your thumb and your palm. " This is the command you will use to ask your dog to shake (you can also say something else like "Shake" if you prefer). Say this as you hold the fist with the treat in front of your dog. Once your dog realizes you have a treat in your closed hand, they will try to get it from you. When they make a move toward the behavior you want — such as lifting a paw to try and get the treat from your fist — say "Yes!" with a lot of enthusiasm and excitement and give them the treat.  When your dog makes a move toward the behavior you want, immediately reward them with the treat. Ignore any other attempts your dog may make, such as sniffing or mouthing your hand.  Be patient. Practice this way a few times until the dog is reliably lifting their paw when you say "Paw." Once your dog is lifting their paw on command, you will want to take it to the next step. You should begin reward the dog only as they do something closer to your goal of shaking. For instance, if your dog lifts their paw higher than before, that gets a "Yes!" and a treat, but not before then. Continue in this way until the dog is offering their paw. Use this additional step only if your dog doesn't seem to paw at the treat in your hand.  By picking up your dogs paw, and praising them during and after, you start to show your dog that pawing at your hand is rewarded.  Hold the paw for a few seconds before rewarding. Be gentle and move slowly.
A:
Pick out some treats for your dog. Have your dog sit down. Present the treat to your dog. Give the command "Paw. Say "Yes" when your dog begins to fidget. Reward the dog for shaking. Take your dog's paw in your hand.