Article: If you let the grease soak into your jeans or wash and/or dry your jeans just after you’ve gotten grease on them, removing the grease may become more challenging. To avoid letting the grease stain “set,” start removing it as soon as possible. Fold a paper towel and dab at the grease so that the paper towel soaks up any excess grease sitting on the surface of your jeans. Removing what hasn’t soaked in can make the whole removal process easier. Hot water works best for removing the oil from the stain. Run hot water in the sink or bathtub and hold your jeans underneath the water until the areas that are covered in grease are completely wet. Squirt some dish soap onto the grease stains. Then, gently scrub it with a toothbrush for 2-3 minutes or until the grease appears to be gone. If you don’t have dish soap, instead try using shampoo or laundry soap. Turn the sink or bathtub faucet back on and rinse the stained areas with hot water. Then, hang them out to dry on a clothesline or drying rack.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Tackle the stain right away. Dab up excess grease with a paper towel. Rinse your jeans in hot water. Scrub dish soap into the grease. Rinse your jeans again and hang them out to dry.

Problem: Article: Sometimes it is best to help your dog by eliminating the temptation to misbehave. With this in mind, if you can, put the cat's litter tray in a room that the dog has no access to. Consider barring the doorway with a child-gate, so that the cat can jump over the gate but the dog's path is blocked.  For large dogs or those adept at jumping, consider installing a cat flap in the door to that room and keeping it shut. If you have a small dog, fit a microchip activated cat door and only program in the cat's number so that the dog is denied access. Obviously, make sure the cat is well aware of the tray's new location. Instead of using an open tray, consider using a hooded one. This makes it physically more difficult for the dog to get to the cat poop. In fact, there are trays that are top-entry only, making them accessible to fit young cats (probably not a good idea for elderly or arthritic cats) but not the dog. Be aware that some cats dislike using covered litter boxes, in which case consider a different option. The idea is to make something unpleasant happen when the dog approaches the tray. This could mean placing a motion-activated canister of compressed air beside the tray so it fires as the dog approaches, or improvising snap-traps on the ground around the tray so they snap as the dog gets close.  This needs to be done with care and perfect timing, or you may accidentally surprise the cat which could put dissuade it from using the tray. Do not leave these traps in place permanently or you could upset the cat. Consider making the cat feces less appealing by making them unpleasant. There are many commercial products available that are designed to be added to food, in order to make the resultant feces taste unpleasant.  This has a couple of drawbacks. The additive goes onto the cat's food and cats are notoriously fussy eaters, and may refuse to eat the adulterated food. In addition, dogs have a relatively poor sense of taste and may not find the altered poop all that unpleasant (after all, how much worse can it be?) Instead, it could be more effective to make the feces unpleasant when smelled. Dogs have a sensitive sense of smell and sniffing usually precedes the eating. Liberally coat the feces with pepper. When the dog sniffs the poop the pepper will make it sneeze and prove unpleasant. Do not expect the dog to stop right away. It can takes weeks of constant sneezing to eventually give it up as a bad job.
Summary: Relocate the litter tray. Use a covered litter box. Booby trap the litter box. Make the feces unpleasant for the dog.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: For example frame your snapshot to contrast it with the background.   Make the blank background larger using "Resize" arrow.  Move the snapshot and resize the red frame for a desired frame size.

SUMMARY: Use your artistic talent and practice to discover and improve the finished job. Open your Shot in the Windows Paint. Select All from the drop-down menu. Click on "Cut" from menu or "Ctrl + X" from your keyboard. Select a colour of your choice (here red) and take the "bucket" from the menu and click it on the white are to be filled with red. Click on Paste to put your snapshot back on the frame.

The amino acid cucurbitacin in pumpkin seeds paralyzes works and expels them from the digestive tract. These seeds are very potent and effective, particularly against tape- and hookworm.  Grind up pumpkin seeds into a fine powder and add one teaspoon for each 10 – 15 lbs. of body weight daily. Do this for two weeks and then add wheat bran to the dog's diet; soak the bran in water and add an eighth teaspoon per 10 lbs. of body weight to larger animals and just a pinch for smaller ones. You can even feed the seeds to him directly as a treat. Just make sure you use the same measurement guidelines. Also be sure to use unsalted, organic pumpkin seeds. These incredibly healthy seeds have many positive effects on the bodies of both humans and dogs. Proven to fight 800 bacterial and viral strains, it also supports the immune system, fights cancer, and, in this instance, are a natural for killing, weakening, and repelling parasites.  Grind up the seeds to a find powder. Sprinkle 8 mg for every 2.2 pounds of body weight (OBW) onto your dog's food. There are no restrictions as to how long to continue this treatment as grapefruit seeds are highly beneficial to your dog's overall health. Try GSE (grapefruit seed extract). Purchase this at your local health food store. For a minimal dosage, give your pooch .5 drops for every 2.2 pounds OBW orally. For maximum dosage, give your dog 10-15 drops per every 10 pounds OBW. Rich in papain, an enzyme that will destroy the worms' outer coating and cause them to get weak and lose their hold on the intestinal wall, papaya seeds are also a great digestive aid. Grind the papaya seeds into a fine powder. Sprinkle 8 mg for every 2.2 pounds of body weight (OBW) onto your dog's food. There are no restrictions as to how long to continue this treatment as grapefruit seeds are highly beneficial to your dog's overall health. If your dogs will eat it, the flesh of the papaya is also rich in papain. You might want to use this in combination with another method – even the papaya seeds. That way they will get all the health benefits and not rely solely on a small amount of papaya to do the job.  There is a reason you only want to feed them a small amount. Feeding them a lot can lead to the same problems you can have with all fruits: too much in one end can lead to a loose result on the other. Feed your best friend fresh or dried papaya. Try to make it organic though. That will have the most papain and be the healthiest option for your dog. Rich in the enzyme ficin, eating figs will destroy the worms' outer coating and cause them to get weak and lose their hold on the intestinal wall. Same general fruit warning: too much of a good thing can lead to too much of a bad thing. Feed your dog dried figs in moderation. One or two as a treat after meals is fine.
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One-sentence summary --
Utilize the power of pumpkin seeds. Get on the grapefruit seed bandwagon. Grind up papaya seeds. Feed your dog the papaya. Feed your dog dried figs.