You're a coward if you can't handle that.Guessing you're one of these guys who think they care but when they see it on the news they change channel.Goodo.
Grim, nice of you to Assume I 'didn't take offence' at the pic. Good work!
<< I'm thinking the dog is going to be OK. Just a funny tumble.My dogs have taken sime pretty big spills and just shaken it off and kept smiling.I wouldn't find it funny if I thought he was hurt.I love dogs and do not condone any animal cruelty.
Nice photo Eskimojoe!You seem to live in a pretty neat spot.
No chance there son. So you weren't offended by the 'laughable' animal abuse but you were by the overt abuse. Sorry, no spoiler.
Aren't you a bit of a hypocrite, given that you smoke and all the animal testing that has gone on in the tobacco industry?
No, I'd get the camera and make a movie.
I understand that, it's just that I have seen, and I know someone on the 'frontline' who has to deal with dogs that have done the same thing. If you look, it lands partly on the road, so it is quite possible that its pads were damaged.It seems all too common for untethered dogs to jump off moving vehicles and get damaged.
Jesse James, Billy the Kid and Doc Holliday were all in Las Vegas, New Mexico in 1879 which is when I believe this tintype photo was taken. The tintype depicts four deputised men, one wearing a badge and the other three wearing white bandanas hanging from their pockets representing that they are Peace Officers as the white flag is a symbol of truce. Thanks to the help of many viewers to this website and several historical societies I have been pointed to Doc Holliday and Charlie Bowdre whom I would have overlooked. I was unaware that Doc Holliday was in Las Vegas, NM in 1879 until I was given that information. Las Vegas was the hotbed of activity for outlaws at that time and nearly every well known outlaw went there to carous or even to be peace officers as ranchers were looking for protection for their families and land. Jesse James had a good reason for going to Las Vegas, Scott Moore and his wife Minne owned the Old Adobe Hotel in Las Vegas, New Mexico. Scott Moore was a life long friend of Jesse James having grown up in St. Joseph, Missouri. Jesse James had grown restless in Tennessee and was looking for a new gang and where better to go than were the outlaws are especially when you already have a connection in that town. Billy the Kid was said to have a son, Telesfor Jaramillo.
Born in New York City, Billy the Kid (also known as William Antrim and William H. Bonney) moved west and became one of the most famous outlaws in American history. The precise details of his exploits remain sketchy, but it is generally agreed that Billy was quick with his gun and his temper, and he proved to be an expert at escaping from small-town jails. Billy was already a veteran thief, cattle rustler and shootist when he became involved in land disputes in the New Mexico territory in the 1870s. Billy threw in with an Englishman, John Tunstall, who was involved in a turf war (called the Lincoln County War) between land and cattle barons in the newly settled territory. When Tunstall was murdered in 1878, Billy hunted down his killers, including Sheriff William Brady, and killed them. The Kid nearly got on the right side of the law in 1879, arranging to surrender and receive a pardon in exchange for his testimony against others, but the pardon never quite arrived and he went on the lam again. In 1881 he was arrested, tried and convicted of murder. He escaped, killing two deputies in the process, but was hunted down three months later and shot to death by Sheriff Pat Garrett.