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Yelping dogs to have curfew in Norwegian town

Associated Press
May. 5, 2006 10:25 AM

OSLO, Norway - A small Norwegian town has grown so tired of barking dogs that it plans to pass a curfew prohibiting noisy animals from leaving their homes late at night, an official said Friday.

Erik Schult, the head of forestry for the municipality of Fjell in western Norway, has proposed a new regulation stating that "barking dogs have to be indoors by 10 p.m. at the latest every weekday."

Schult said the curfew is aimed at preventing noisy dogs from keeping neighbors awake by barking all night, although it will not make it illegal to take quiet dogs on a late-night walk.

"It is the notorious yelping dogs that we are aiming at," Schult said. "Those that stay out and bark through the night."

Dog owners who violate the curfew will face a fine, he said.

Schult said the city council would vote on the curfew next week and he expected the measure to be approved.

An informal opinion poll undertaken by a local newspaper showed that 55 percent of the town's residents supported the initiative.

The municipality of Fjell, which includes villages on surrounding islands, has a population of about 20,000.



PETsMART

Cat family welcomes rejected pug puppy

Associated Press
Apr. 21, 2006 10:22 AM

CONNELLSVILLE, Pa. - A pug puppy rejected by his mother has found a new, more welcoming family - a cat and her three kittens.

Kelly Kent, of Connellsville, said her 2-year-old cat, Zoey, has been nursing a black pug puppy since he was rejected by his mother in late March. Zoey doesn't usually like dogs but seems to have made an exception, Kent said.

The puppy, who belongs to Kent's neighbor, is about the same size as Zoey's kittens and regularly lines up for milk with his adopted feline siblings.

It is not unusual for mothers to adopt in nature, even if the baby is of another species, said William Shepherd, a Uniontown veterinarian. Shepherd said a puppy can drink a cat's milk, but warned that Zoey might not be able to produce enough as the young pug gets older and bigger.

The pug puppy, the runt of his litter, doesn't yet have a name, Kent said.



 

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