Stop Bad Pet Behaviors In Their Tracks with BarxBuddy!
It can be challenging dealing with unwanted behaviors from our furry friends. Training is the best way to stop bad behavior but it isn’t always easy. BarxBuddy can help! It uses ultrasonic high-pitched sound to target your dog’s hearing and allow you to train your friend harmlessly. | | | | • | ULTRASONIC SOUND Helps to get your pet’s attention & discourage unwanted behaviors | • | BRIGHT FLASHLIGHT Includes a handy, high?-powered LED flashlight | • | 100% HARMLESS Easy to use and safe for dogs, humans and all animals | | | | • | ULTRASONIC SOUND Helps to get your pet’s attention & discourage unwanted behaviors | • | BRIGHT FLASHLIGHT Includes a handy, high-powered LED flashlight | • | 100% HARMLESS Easy to use and safe for dogs, humans and all animals | | With BarxBuddy, you can train your dog any time and any place. Never have to worry about barking or tugging at the leash ever again! Train your dog humanely and safely with BarxBuddy! | | | Get your 50% Off Discount Now! | |
he absence of the pillar was regretted by some who felt the city had lost one of its most prominent landmarks. The Irish Literary Association was anxious that, whatever future steps were taken, the lettering on the pedestal should be preserved; the Irish Times reported that the Royal Irish Academy of Music was considering legal measures to prevent removal of the remaining stump.[12] Reactions among the general public were relatively light-hearted, typified by the numerous songs inspired by the incident. These included the immensely popular "Up Went Nelson", set to the tune of "John Brown's Body" and performed by a group of Belfast schoolteachers, which remained at the top of the Irish charts for eight weeks.[93] An American newspaper reported that the mood in the city was one of gaiety, with shouts of "Nelson has lost his last battle!"[94] Some accounts relate that the Irish president, Éamon de Valera, phoned The Irish Press to suggest the headline: "British Admiral Leaves Dublin By Air"[95]—according to the senator and presidential candidate David Norris, "the only recorded instance of humour in that lugubrious figure".[96][ambiguous] Ornamental garden with stone blocks with incised lettering around the edge of a pond Lettering from Nelson's Pillar in the Butler House Walled Garden in 2009 The Pillar's fate was sealed when Dublin Corporation issued a "dangerous building" notice. The trustees agreed that the stump should be removed.[12] A last-minute request by the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland for an injunction to delay the demolition on planning grounds was rejected by Justice Thomas Teev
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