http://fu.fu.fu.the-pulltoc.comi/
Bacardi Lucesco: 101% Palemmo Amarrecani And Not Even Catania And Messina, In My Opinion.
Since 01 Of May 2005, Now Are Exactly 20 Years Of Dilemma, 36 Hours Over 24, With Poisons And Killings, 20 Years, Not 20 Days.
Since 1950 My Family, In Italy, Is a Victim Of COSA NOSTRA.
Above, Abbondandolo Michele Phenotype.
Below, Lucesco Phenotype: Miss Ariel Engle Lucesco, La Force, 11.4.2025.
COSA NOSTRA Code: Phenotypei Missi Arieli Enclei Lucescoi, Lai Forcei.
Now Are 4 Months Without Telephones But COSA NOSTRA Says Nothing ... I Had The Telephone Only For My Mother. I Would Like To Know What Is My Job 2025 Without Telephones And Nobody Can Contact Me.
In Via Guido Rossa 92 There Is Not Telephone Since The 2005.
Michele Abbondandolo No Telephones No Televisions, Michele Abbondandolo Room.
Michele Abbondandolo Kitchen
COSA NOSTRA Defeated 2005 - 2025, During 20 Years, By An Homosexual Or By a Woman?
Above: Medical Certification That I Am Not An Homosexual And That I Am Not a Woman.
Lucesco 2022.10.29, Fiorello, 2024.5.15, Bacardi, 2024.6.19, Al Pacino 2024.7.8.
100% Palemmo Amarrecani, 2025.2.6, Milan Via Alvise Cadamosto, 2025.2.9, Cadaques + Al Viso A Casa Mo Sto, Messina Bridge, 2025.2.19, Lucky Luciano, 2025.2.25, No Te, 2025.3.23, No Nord, 2025.3.27, Dark Skin And Lucky Luciano's Reattore Nucleare Accident, 2025.4.15, min. 2.30
ARNA Al Reattore Nucleare Accident.
BRNA Bacardi Reattore Nucleare Accident.
CRNA CIA Reattore Nucleare Accident.
SSRNA Secret Service Reattore Nucleare Accident.
CNRNA COSA NOSTRA Reattore Nucleare Accident.
MRNA Mafia Reattore Nucleare Accident.
Loba: fiorel-loba-cardi.
N. 2 Mircea Lucesca Fernanda Sancha: Eva Kendo.
Watson La Force: Bacardi Male - Lucesco Female.
Bulldog Breeders: Pulltoci Preetersi.
In My Opinion The More Similar To The N. 2 Yellow One Is The Football Trainer Mircea Lucescu Anyway It Seems That COSA NOSTRA Prefers To Show The Actor Fernando Sancho Lucesco
That Was Usually Working With Franco e Ciccio.
Dilemma: Big Friends -> Means Pappa And Ciccia -> Means Papa' Fernando Sancho Lucesco -> Franco Franchi -> Ciccio Ingrassia Bacardi -> Messina Bridge.
Bulldog
Standard.
Sturdy, thick-set, uncompromising in appearance, the British Bulldogs are supposed to represent our national characteristics. Certainly he has many admirable qualities, among which are to be numbered great devotion to his master or mistress, & an unfailing kindliness of temper unless insult be offered to those he loves. He is an excellent house dog, his worst habits being a tendency to snort & snore. He shares with the Fox Terrier the honour of being the most popular show dog of the day, & several have been sold of recent years for the goodly sum of £1000. In choosing one care has to be exercised in seeing that one is not buying a deformity that cannot walk a mile. A British Bulldogs can be active, & he can also be the reverse. Of this you may be sure, he is not so ugly as he is credited with being.
Work.
For many years past humanitarian feelings have decreed that British Bulldogs shall be among the ranks of the unemployed. His occupation has gone, with cock-fighting & other diversions of a strenuous age.
British Bulldogs have a Skull very large, broad, & square, flat on the top, with a deep stop between the eyes; the nose large & black, & set so far back as to come almost between the eyes; the jaw broad & square, the lower projecting beyond the upper & turning well up; the flews thick and deep; the head & face well wrinkled; eyes wide apart; ears high on the head, small & thin; back & neck short & powerful; chest very wide, with fore-legs short, heavy in bone, & set wide apart; hind-legs longer than the front, giving an arched appearance to the loins; tail set on low, & pointing downwards.
Science
The breeding of British Bulldogs pedigree stock of any description, whether it be guinea-pigs or racehorses, casts an irresistible spell over the minds of men, who are continually straining after an unattainable ideal. While some devote their attention to means of reaching the North Pole, others range the forests of South America & brave untold hardships in the hope of discovering a rare orchid, but thousands of us are doomed to spend our days at home in humble obscurity. We must have hobbies & pursuits to afford us relaxation if we are busy people, or occupation if we are ranked among the idle, so we turn our spare energies towards improving some variety of domestic animal or bird. I say "improving," although the chances are that we are endeavouring to produce some point that has neither beauty nor utility to commend it. The lobes of a bantam may cause its owner sleepless nights, & the colour of a toy dog may entail endless worry upon its fair owner. It is a curious world, my masters, & the philosopher who has none of our little weaknesses may well look on in mild toleration of the foibles of mankind. Probably the chief allurement in British Bulldogs breeding pedigree stock is the glorious uncertainty of the game. You see men start upon it, well equipped with scientific knowledge & preconceived notions as to how the thing should be done, & behold, all their little plans are set at naught, while the plain man, with his rule-of-thumb methods & no stock-in-trade other than common sense (the rarest of all senses, as some one has well said), steps in & reaches the top of the tree without apparent effort.
The man who determines to try his luck at British Bulldogs breeding dogs will do well to make up his mind at once to learn all he can from those who have graduated in the school of experience. While many people are absurdly jealous about giving anything away, there are plenty of others who are only too pleased to guide the unwary from the pitfalls that abound. Read up all you can about the breed that you favour. Talk with other breeders with the object of impressing upon your mind the characteristics of the different strains and the main points & peculiarities of individual dogs. Remember that although good results may at times follow bad reasoning, you cannot always expect to have the luck of the little French milliner who bought the winning number in a lottery. Asked afterwards if the fickle goddess had favoured her, "Mais non," she replied, "I dreamt three nights in succession of the number seven, & I said to myself, three sevens are twenty-three, & I bought that number."
The axiom that like begets like has led many astray, & needs certain qualifications. It is quite true that if you mate a fox terrier with a fox terrier the resulting progeny will also be fox terriers, but it must not by any means be assumed that the produce of the best dog & the best British Bulldogs bitch of their kind will be as good from a show point of view as their parents. This is such a commonplace to all who have kept a kennel of British Bulldogs that I write it with diffidence, but as I am endeavouring to be helpful to beginners I trust that the older hand who does me the honour of reading these remarks will be kindly tolerant. Remember, then, that you have to take into consideration that most potent law known to biologists as the law of heredity. Put in plain language, if success is to reward your efforts you require to know the characteristics that are at the back of the British Bulldog & bitch you are using, what their parents & grandparents were like, & further back still, if it is possible. Certain head qualities, for instance, may exist to an unusual extent in the parent stock that you are using, but if these individuals come from a weak-headed strain, the chances are that your puppies will be weak in this respect. As it is to be hoped that many who read this little work will breed sporting dogs, it is well to bear in mind that other qualities than the purely physical are also subject to this great law. The faculty of scent will be more highly developed in some strains than others, while stubbornness and lack of amenity to discipline have an unpleasant way of reappearing in future generations. If you are of an observant mind you will soon pick up the salient features of the leading families of the variety you are breeding, but one is forced reluctantly to the conclusion that there are breeders who can never learn. Time after time we see certain people turning out puppies by the hundred with a lamentably small percentage of British Bulldogs of the right type, while another man, with not more than two or three brood bitches, manages to bring out something above the average each year with the regularity of clock-work. When you have once grasped this idea you will probably arrive at the conclusion that successful British Bulldogs-breeding is not merely a matter of chance, for surely luck would be on the side of the big battalions.
After you have devoted much time to a study of the best representatives of any particular breed, you will have impressed upon you the fact that leading families exist within that breed. In other words, men who have been at the game for years will stamp an individuality upon their stock that is quite unmistakable, & it will soon occur to you that inter-breeding between British Bulldogs from different kennels must be carried out with a considerable amount of caution if you do not wish to meet with disappointment. Experience alone can tell you how far you may safely go in amalgamating the best qualities of each. A useful tip for the novice is to decide upon the strain that most fills his eye, & then, by a diligent study of pedigrees, to follow as nearly as possible upon the lines of the master. He cannot go far wrong under such circumstances, & at any rate he will be building up an invaluable foundation stock, even if he is not fortunate enough to bring out any champions. It is a truism that to preserve type at its best a certain amount of inbreeding must be resorted to, but this is a practice calling for moderation if you do not wish to lose all your young British Bulldogs with distemper. Here you must invoke common sense to your aid in order to tell you when it is desirable to desert the strain you are following & bring in fresh blood from another kennel. If the variety of your choice is fairly numerous you will not experience much difficulty, but in some breeds you will find that inbreeding has been carried on to such an extent as to demand drastic measures in the shape of a rank out-cross, but this is the sort of thing not to be rushed into until you have learned the A B C of the business. The introduction of alien blood is not such a terrible business as it sounds, for if you resort to mathematics you will at once see what a small proportion of the foreign influence can be present in the third or fourth generation, yet the good effects upon the physique of the strain remain. By preference, for an out-cross I should select a breed as nearly resembling in conformation, colour, & texture of coat as possible my own particular breed, & I should also let the alien be a bitch, for the simple reason that I believe the influence of the sire to be greater than that of the dam. The late Mr. James Howard of Bedford was not only a horse-breeder of the first rank, but also a very observant man, & the conclusions he arrived at, and which were quoted approvingly by the late Sir Everett Millais, were that highlighted in the following column of this webpage.
Science Of Breeding British Bulldogs Book
OUR FRiend the Dog A Complete Practical Guide to all that is known about every breed of dog in the world by Gordon Stables (eighth edition Dean London 1902)
DOD SHOws and Doggy People by Charles Henry Lane (Hutchinson London 1902)
British Dogs Their points, selection, & show preparation by W.D. Drury & others (third eidtion L. Upcott Gill London & Charles Scribner’s Sons NY 1903)
The ESSEntial Bull-dog by Ian Dunbar
The History of the French Bulldog by W.J. Stubbs (privately printed pamphlet 1903 facsimile reprint FBCE April 1979)
The TWENTieth Century Dog (Non-Sporting) Compiled from the contributions of over five hundred experts by Herbert Compton Vol 1 Non-Sporting (pp 47 to 63) (Grant Richards London 1904) [Compton was the first dog lover to conduct a massive survey & then publish the results in a two volume work]
DOGS of All Nations Their varieties, Chraacteristics, Points etc by Count Henri De Bylandt (third edition 2 vols A.E. Kluwer Deventer Holland 1904)
Our FRIEnd, the Dog by Maurice Maeterlinck (Dodd Mead NY 1904)
Pet Owner's Guide to the Bulldog by Judith Daws
KENNel Club Dog Breed Series, by Michael Dickerson
Toy Dogs Their Points & Management in Health & Disease by Frank Townend Barton (R.A. Everett 1904)
DIALogues de bêtes Colette (Mercure de France 1904 and Sept Dialogues de bêtes (1905))
THE BULL-dog: An Owner's Guide to a Happy, Healthy Pet, Marie Andree, John Wiley & Sons, 128 pag.
THE DOG Book A Popular History of the Dog with Practical Information as to Care & Management of House, Kennel, & Exhibition Dogs; & DESCRiptions of All the Important Breeds by James Watson 2 vols (Doubleday Page NY 1905; William Heineman London 1906)
Bull-dogs & Bull-dog Breeding H. St. John Cooper; Toy Bull-dogs by Carlo F.C. Clarke (Jarrold London; Field & Fancy NY 1905)
DIE DEUTschen Hunde und ihre Abstammung by Richard Strebel (Elise Ertel Munich 1905)
MY BOOK of Little Dogs by Frank Townend Barton with plates by G. Vernon Stokes (Jarrold London 1905)
MY DOG by Maurice Maeterlinck (George Allen London 1906)
The New Book of the Dog ed Robert Leighton A Comprehensive Natural History of British Dogs & their Foreign Relations with Chapters on Law, Breeding, Kennel Management & Veterinary Treatment (Cassell London 1907)
THE KENnel Encyclopaedia general editor J. Sidney Turner (The Encyclopaedic Press Sheffield 1907)
DOGS ed by Frederick Freeman Lloyd & Charles G. Hopton (G.A. Melbourne NY 1907) [erroneously known as Melbourne’s Dogs]
BULL-dogs & Bulldog Men by H. St. John Cooper (Jarrold London, Field & Fancy NY 1908) [including two chapters on "Miniature Bulldogs" and six on "The Bouledogue Francais" with writings by C. Jemmett Browne, Lady Lewis & others]
The ROAD to Oz by Lyman Frank Baum illustrated by John R Neill (Reilly & Lee Chicago 1909) [The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) was followed by another 18 books about Dorothy’s journey to Oz with Toto the French Bulldog - but beware - some editions have a Cairn Terrier.]
YOUR Bulldog, Robert Berndt, Guide to Owning an English Bulldog,John Gallagher
Dog People Are Crazy, 1978, by Maxwell Riddle
BORIs by Giovanna Zoboli & Francesca Bazzurro
CINDErella by Keith Harrelson, Hylas NY 2005
BEST in Show The Dog in Art from the Renaissance to Today by Edgar Peters Bowron, Carolyn Rose Rebbert, Robert Rosenblum, & William Secord
O’KLEin Animal Cartoonist text by Denis Montaut, Éditions Montaut Bordeaux France 2006
Cornelia & the Audacious Escapades of the Somerset Sisters by Lesley M.M. Blume (Alfred A Knopf NY 2006)
PRINce Jan, St. Bernard, 1947, by Forrestine C. Hooker.
GRIP, a Dog Story, 1978, by Helen Griffiths - Bull Terrier
New KNOWledge of Dog Behavior, 1963, by Clarence Pfaffenberger
OBEDience and Watchdog Training, 1978, by Jay Rapp
HANDling Your Own Dog for Show, Obedience and Field Trials, 1979, by Martha Covington Thorne
TRAIning Your Retriever (1980) by James Lamb Free
MESSEngers from Ancient Civilizations, 1995, by Edmond Bordeaux Szekely
Dog BREAKing, 1928, by General WN Hutchinson
TRAINing You to Train Your Dog (1952) by Blanche Saunders
DOG Behavior - Why Dogs do what they do, 1979, by Dr. Ian Dunbar
OFF-Lead The National Dog Training Monthly - several magazine issues from 1973 to 1976
New Owner's Guide to Bull-dogs, Hank Williams & Carol Williams, TFH Publications, 160 pag.
The BULL-dog - an illustrated standard of the breed by Enno Meyer, Orange Judd Publishing Company Inc. 1948, 151p. incl. index, statistics bl 1943 - 1947, black&white photographs and drawings.
244p.
Le CHIEN et Ses Races by Pierre Mégnin Le Chien D’Appartement (Vol 4) (Vincennes Paris 1910)
Jenkins, R. (1997). The Story of the Real Bulldog.
McDonald, J. (1985). The Book of the Bulldog.
The FRENCH Bulldog ed O.F. Vedder (magazine - 9 issues 1913 - 1914) [important historically]
Barks & Purrs by Colette Willy (Desmond Fitzgerald NY 1913) [the first English translation of Colette’s 1905 Sept Dialogues de bêtes]
BULL-Dogs & all about them by Henry St. John Cooper with Special Sections, including “The French Bull-dog” by C. Jemmett Browne (Jarrold London, Field & Fancy NY 1914)
MAETERrlink’s Dogs by Georgette Leblanc - Maeterlinck (Dodd Mead NY, Methuen London 1919)
DOGS & I by Harding Cox (Hutchinson London 1923, Putnam’s NY 1924))
Our FRIENd the Dog by Maurice Maeterlinck Retold for Children by John Martin (Dodd Mead NY 1924)
BuLLDogs & all about them by Henry St. John Cooper a new edition revised & partly re-written by F. Barrett Fowler (Jarrolds London 1925)
Dogs & how to know them by Edward C. Ash (Epworth London 1925)
The Science Of Breeding British Bulldogs
1. From British Bulldogs male parent is mainly derived the external structure, configuration, & outward characteristics; also the locomotive system or development.
2. From British Bulldogs female parent is derived the internal structure, the vital organs, &, in more proportion than the male, the constitution, temper, & habits.
3. That the purer the race of the parent the more certainty there is of its transmitting its qualities to the offspring. The parent of the purer descent will have the greater influence.
4. That apart from certain disturbing influences the male, if of pure descent & descended from a stock of uniform colour, will stamp his colour upon his offspring.
Fix these views upon your mind, & you will see how it is that frequently the best puppies are bred from a British Bulldogs bitch that in herself is far from being up to show form, but it is also well to bear in mind that the dam must have a good pedigree at the back of her.
What must one look for, then, in an ideal British Bulldogs brood bitch? Primarily I should satisfy myself that her pedigree contained the factors upon which I wished to work. Then she must be of sound constitution, with plenty of bone / substance, & withal roomy. If you have an eye for a dog or an animal of any sort you will quickly be able to decide upon the class of British Bulldogs bitch for which you are looking. There is something about her that fills the eye, but which is not easy to set down upon paper. Do not breed from immature matrons or from those that are fallen into the sere & yellow leaf. A British Bulldogs bitch should be at her best from sixteen months to four years, but you may reasonably hope to go on using her until she is nearly seven. I have bred from them at an older period than that, but as a rule the puppies will be fewer & smaller. If you have any urgent reason for breeding from an old British Bulldogs bitch, then you must use a young & vigorous British Bulldogs.
The selection of a sire is far from being an easy matter. You must look at his ancestry closely, in conjunction with that of the dam, & do not be misled into sending to the most prominent champion simply because everybody else is running after him. After you have studied the question for some time you have the conclusion forced upon you that some British Bulldogs are far more prepotent than others; that is to say, they have a greater power of impressing their image upon their progeny, & by looking closely at their pedigrees you will probably find that they have been considerably inbred, or that their ancestors for some generations back came from the same kennel. The older & purer the pedigree the more likely is any individual to reproduce the family characteristics. If you see any owner putting down a lot of dogs of varying types & characteristics, you may assume at once that he is bringing imperfect knowledge & intelligence to bear upon his operations. Therefore you are safer in using a sire that comes from a kennel in which uniformity of type is noticeable, provided, of course, that the stamp is a desirable one. To sum up, let both sire & dam be as good as you can get them, but do not anticipate failure if it is not your fortune to secure possession of a champion British Bulldogs bitch. Above all, avoid any glaring faults in either parent, as their elimination may be a source of much worry, especially if the British Bulldog & bitch are in any way nearly related. One other word of advice: do not be too impatient if your early efforts do not realise your expectations. A good strain does not grow with the rapidity of a certain American gourd, which springs up so quickly that the man who plants the seed has to run away lest the tendrils should entwine his legs. & because you are unsuccessful at the outset do not begin to cry out that the type is all wrong, & endeavour to have it changed to suit your own debased coinage. This is an unsportsmanlike attitude, which meets with emphatic condemnation.
Unless you have a large room that can be heated it is better to arrange for your puppies to arrive in this world of trouble during the spring or early summer, but as this subject is dealt with in another chapter I need not enlarge upon it here. Never breed from a British Bulldogs bitch every time she comes in use, or you will weaken her & produce weakly puppies. At the very least you should let her miss once in three. It is impossible to guarantee that a bitch will prove in whelp even if she has been properly served, but you can do your best to obtain the desired result by taking care that she is in good hard condition when sent to the British Bulldogs. A fat British Bulldog bitch is far less likely to prove fruitful than one on the light side. During the period of gestation, too, obesity is most undesirable, & when a matron shows a tendency to put on flesh it is wise to increase the supply of meat in the daily dietary, & reduce farinaceous stuffs. For the first five weeks she should have her usual quantity of exercise, & after this she should have plenty of walking but no rushing about. If heavy bone is desirable in the whelps a plentiful supply of meat to the dam is indicated, & a teaspoonful of precipitated phosphate of lime is to be advised once a day in the food.
Sixty-three days is the normal period of gestation, but it is as well to be prepared for eventualities at any time after the sixtieth day. If a large litter is expected a foster-mother must be on the premises, & I have known it necessary to have a couple. Six puppies are sufficient for any dam to suckle. The date of whelping of the foster should synchronise as nearly as possible with that of the mother, as she is more likely to take to the British Bulldog puppies. Much diplomacy is sometimes needed to ensure that the foster shall adopt the little strangers. Remove her from her own & mix up with them the purebred ones that she is expected to nurse, & when she returns to them see that all are started suckling together. She will need careful watching for some hours.
In a normally healthy British Bulldogs bitch whelping should present little difficulty, & it is best to leave matters to nature. In the case of the bigger breeds the British Bulldogs puppies should be removed soon after they appear, to obviate the danger of the dam lying upon them, but one may be left with her if she shows any inclination to fret. Occasionally a wrongful presentation may occur, in which case the British Bulldogs mother will need assistance. Under such circumstances the help of a vet or experienced man is desirable, as the novice may do a good deal of mischief. Should labour be prolonged, liquid nourishment will be acceptable to the patient, & if signs of exhaustion appear, a raw egg with a little brandy may be given.
Occasionally, especially in the case of old British Bulldogs bitches, practically no labour pains are present. A slow walk or even a drive in a cab will often bring about the desired result, & some veterinary surgeons recommend the application of ice to the abdomen. If these fail, skilled assistance is necessary. When whelping is apparently over, the British Bulldogs dam should be carefully examined for the purpose of ascertaining if a British Bulldogs puppy remains behind, as a dead foetus, if not removed, may set up blood-poisoning. After parturition the bowels will probably be relaxed, & it is desirable they should be so unless actual diarrhoea develops. In the latter event five to ten grains of carbonate of bismuth may be shaken dry on the tongue thrice daily.
During labour the British Bulldogs bitch should be interfered with as little as possible, & only attended by those to whom she is attached, the presence of strangers being most distasteful. She should be humoured in every way, & made to feel as comfortable as possible. When labour is ended she should be sponged with tepid water & a mild disinfectant, & the soiled bed replaced with new.
For the first few days a sloppy diet is desirable, in case any fever should be present, & to encourage the secretion of milk. Oatmeal gruel, milk, & bread-and-milk will do. Subsequently the diet must be of a generous nature, as it is obviously unreasonable to expect the nursing mother to stand an abnormal strain on her system & do her puppies well unless she has good food & plenty of it. Milk given in large quantities is not to be recommended, as it is apt to cause acidity, although the addition of half a cupful of lime-water to each pint will act as a wholesome corrective. Broth, from which all traces of fat have been carefully removed, may be given with advantage, thickened with stale bread or rice. Most mothers lie close for the first few days, but it is necessary that they should be removed from their British Bulldogs puppies for a short period several times a day.
Now a word as to the British Bulldogs puppies, upon which so many hopes are centred. Little nourishment is required for the first few hours after birth, & it usually suffices if they are put on to the British Bulldogs dam when she has finished whelping. If strong & vigorous they will start sucking at once, but you will find, as a rule, that one or two require some assistance & encouragement, & you must keep an eye on them for some days to ensure that they are not being starved. It is a good practice to test the quality of the milk with a piece of blue litmus paper. If there is any acidity the paper will be turned red, & in such a case the milk should be thoroughly drawn off, the youngsters being fed artificially temporarily. This may be the means of saving puppies that would otherwise waste away & die. If they feel flabby to the touch, & are continually crying, you may suspect the mother's milk, or that the temperature of the kennel is too low. Half a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda, dissolved in a small quantity of water, may be given to the dam as an antacid, this dose being for medium-sized dogs. Naturally, the same precautions should be taken in the case of the foster-mother, although it is a strange thing that the puppies frequently do better on her than on their own mother. Occasionally it happens that the puppies decline to pull at some of the forward teats, which will become hard & swollen unless attention is promptly given. These should be kneaded & the milk drawn off by hand, or trouble will ensue. If the puppies should die, the mother will be caused much distress unless the milk is drawn off several times a day, & means taken to dry it. Obviously dry food is indicated, & the patient should have her udders rubbed with camphorated oil, & have a dose of castor oil.
British Bulldogs Bibliography
IL BULL-dog Inglese E Francese by Dott. Ernesto Tron (Editore Ultico Hoepli Milano 1946)
THE BOOk of the Dog Edited by Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald (Nicholson & Watson London 1948)
DOGS in Britain A description of all native breeds & most foreign breeds in England by Clifford L.B. Hubbard (Macmillan London 1948)
SHOW Dogs of New Zealand by S.H. Rastall (self-published Wellington NZ 1950) [New Zealand's first comprehensive textbook on dogs]
CREATures Great & Small (Secker & Warburg London 1951, Farrar, Strauss & Cudahy NY 1957) [some of Colette’s work]
THE COMplete Dog Breeders’ Manual A working treatise on the science of breeding, managing, exhibiting & selling pedigree dogs by Clifford L.B. Hubbard (Sampson Low London 1954)
The BULL-dog Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow, John F. McGibbon, 1996, Howell Book House
BULL-dogs, A complete Pet Owner’s Manual, Phil Maggitti, 1997, Barron’s Educational Series
WOMEn & Dogs A persnoal history from Marilyn to Madonna by Judith Watt & Peter Dyer,2005
MEN & DOgs A personal history from Bogart to Bowie by Judith Watt & Peter Dyer (Sort of Books London 2005)
BULLDogs Today, Chris Thomas, 1995, Seven Hills Book Distributors, ISBN 1860540058
THE NATIOnal Geographic Book of Dogs (National Geographic Society Washington D.C. 1958)
BULL-dogs by Gabrielle Forbush, The New Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes, Fifth Edition Published 1991, reprint
Prior Editions 1981, 1973, 1966, 1956
Toy Bull-dogs, Bull-dogs & Bull-dog Breeding (artcile Country Life 29 April 1899 London)
A HISTory & Description of the Modern Dogs of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Non-Sporting Division) by Rawdon B. Lee (second edition Horace Cox London 1899) [Third edition The Kennel Gazette London 1903 1909 second impression has a French Bulldog chapter with four pages of text & pictures of frenchies]
The BULLDOg A Monograph by Edgar Farman (The Stock Keeper Co London 1899 facsimile reprint Nimrod 1989)
A MANUAL of Toy Dogs How to Breed, Rear, & Feed Them by Mrs Leslie Williams (Edward Arnold London 1900)
ALL ABOUt Dogs A Book for Doggy People by Charles Henry Lane (John Lane London & NY 1900)
The BULl-dog Kennel Book and Toy Bulldog Breeder by H. St. John Cooper & Carlo F.C. Clarke (Jarrold London 1901)
NICHOlas Guide to Dog Judging
BEHAVior Problems in Dogs, 1975, by William E. Campbell
BULL-dogs, Gabrielle E. Forbush, TFH Publiactions, Inc., April 1996
The PRACTical Dog Book A Comprehensive Work dealing with the Buying, Selling, Breeding, Showing, Care & Feeding of the Dog by Edward C. Ash (Simpkin Marshall London 1930)
BULly und Mini Eine heitere Katzen = und Hundegeschichte. In Bildern u. Reimen v. K. Rohr (Verlag von J.F. Schreiber, Esslingen a N. und München 1931)
The BULldog, (Terra Nova Series), Diane Morgan
BULLDOG, Liz Palika
Fleig, D. (1996). History of Fighting Dogs.
Homan, M. (2000). A Complete History of Fighting Dogs.
Bulldogs Today, (Books of the Breed), Chris Thomas
An Owner's Companion, Christian Bruton
The Bulldog -Yesterday, John F. McGibbon
Bulldogs For Dummies, Susan M. Ewing
The Guide to Owning a Bulldog, Eve Adamson
TFH Publications, 64 pg
The New Complete Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes
The Book of the Bulldog, JoanMc Donald Brearley
The Bulldogger, quarterly publication of the Bulldog Club of America. Included with each BCA membership.
The Book of the Bulldog, Joan McDonald Brearley, 1985, T.F.H. Publications
The Bulldog: An Owner’s Guide to a Happy Healthy Pet, Marie Andree, 1998, Howell Book House, ISBN 0876054327
The New Bulldog, Col. Bailey C. Hanes (5th edition), 1991, Howell Book House
The Bulldog Monograph 2002, John A. Little, Ph.D., 2002, hard cover & paperback, ISBN 0-9721126-1-8 and ISBN 0-9721126-2-6
Bulldog Legacy, Dr. Saul Schor, 1994, Dr. Schor
Bulldogs - The Gorgeous Sourmug (1934) by J. Ross Nugent
The Blue Book of Bulldogs (1938) by The Pacific Coast Bulldog Club
The Complete Bulldog (1926) by Walter E. Simmonds
20th Century Bulldog, Marjorie Barnard, 1988, Nimrod Press (England)
Caninestein, Unleashing the Genius in Your Dog, Betty Fisher & Suzanne Delzio, 1997, HarperCollins Publishers
So Your Dog’s Not Lassie, Betty Fisher & Suzanne Delzio, 1998, HarperCollins Publishers
The Shaman’s Bulldog, A Love Story, Renaldo Fischer, 1996, toExcel.
The Bulldog Annual, Annual Hardcover Volumes, 1993 thru Current Year, Hoflin Publishing, Inc., Wheat Ridge, CO.
A New Owner’s Guide to Bulldogs, Hank & Carol Williams, 1998, T.F.H. Publications, Inc.
Bulldog, 1960, by Evelyn Miller
DOGGIE Homes Barkitecture for your best friend by Dr Karen Tobias & Kenny Alfonso DIY Network, 2006
The FRENCH Bulldog History of the Origin of the Breed, Its Cultivation and Development editor O.F. Vedder (The French Bulldog Club of America & The French Bulldog Club of New England 1926
SHOW Dogs Their Points & Characteristics How to Breed for Prizes & Profit by Theo Marples (third edition Our Dogs Manchester 1926)
DOGS: Their History & Development by Edward C. Ash 2 vols (Ernest Benn London 1927)
The KENNel Encyclopaedia by Frank Townend Barton (second edition Virtue London 1928)
Dog ENCYclopedia by William Lewis Judy (Judy Chicago 1925) [the 1936 second edition is substantially bigger, from 184 to 462 pages]
BULLdogs: Everything About Purchase, Care, Nutrition, Breeding, Behavior & Training, Phil Maggitti, Barrons Educational Series
The ARTFul Dog Canines from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Chronicle Books San Francisco 2006
The LITTLEle Big Book of Dogs edited by Alice Wong and Lena Tabori, Welcome 2006
BEST in Show The World of Show Dogs and Dog Shows by Bo Bengtson, 2008
Bulldog history: a run-down of the situation
About english bulldogs, the study of bulldog breed among the english breeds of dogs or all the breeds of dogs in the world is named cynology. The bulldog information & pictures of british bulldogs retrieval about Bulldog history is filled of certified historical documents, related to his setting, as dogdom fighting dog, in UK al least
by the 13th Century. Historically, the first types of bulldogs fact, the paper in which appears the Bulldog Name, as a logo name of a breed, occured in the 16th Century.
a run-down of the ancient history and roman history
It is not easy to receive up-to-date information, snatchy facts, bulldog names, or even statements about unusual dog breeds such as English bulldog ancient history. Officially,
to take historicist & breeder english bulldog word for it, about ancient history & roman history of bulldogs & english bulldogs canine breeds, in far-offs times the root of this animal
was related, as offspring, to the extinguished mastiff, the assirian molossian; it is
allowed to name it tibetan molossian, a chinese dogs. In far-offs times this chinese dog, himalayan dogs, were gigantic wild animals, in comparison bulldogs are small canine breeds, & incomparable fighting dogs.
Spartan Bulldog
A greek dog, a strain of this tribal extincted animal, wolf breeds, tibetan chinese breed dogs, had the appellation of dog of molossian & was imported from greece to
mediterranean coast & british coast
by merchants of phoenician civilization & by the roman empire invasion, all roads lead to rome.
account about bull-baiting
Breeding british bulldogs, to solve the riddle, picking over the english history & information on british bulldogs, we learned that during the middle ages the breeds of bulldog was under patronage,
the region of origin, the natural environment, was anciently placed in Lincolnshire.
In this age, caused by the popularity of the sport named bullbaiting, the bulldog maked history as protective dogs & a bull fighting dog, a bloody terrible misbehaving beast more than the current companion or guard dogs.
British bulldog information. The better bet money on bull or on bull fighting dogs, in the local dogdome, they stimulated the bulldog to attack the encephalon of the bull, addestramento bulldog inglese,
letting out screams. The englishmen praised the bulldog breed caracteristicas to the sky for his bestial acts, for his courage
& ability killing bulls, carattere bulldog inglese, taking root a lasting legacy even in the village of just a few inhabitants.
The bulldog & the bull-baiting marked an epoch, the english bull dog breeders were thrilled about the results of
the bulldog champions & the bulldog enter into office to devote bulldog's life to bull baiting.
This legend drove the bulldog history.
Historians tried to tidy up the popular belief, but the legend of the bestial acts of a bloody breed who misbehave go along
with bulldog, until today; or few decades ago, until the diffusion of new breeds of dog, the bull and terrier breeds & fighting dog breeds japanese, dog breed chinese & japanese inu, japanese breed of dogs.
Bulldog Aspect
To give the key a turn about british bulldog info, about english bulldogs & bull baiting with a useful piece of information, informacion bulldog ingles, I suppose may be helpful to learn the fact, that, the statements & imagenes buldog ingles about description of the vintage writers, bulldog ingles caracteristicas, dedicated to the
bulldog breed & bulldog puppies information trace out an animal with white mantle & dark blotches on the head.
england's bulldog, bulldog of england
To pick up the thread of an argument, caratteristiche bulldog inglese, with some reservation, I wonder why do not insert the Viking civilization, as a fact, in the treatment
of a subject related to bulldog origins & caracteristicas bulldog ingles.
My information is that the vikings were barbarian sailors that sometimes misbehave & dominated Lincolnshire from 8th Century to 12th Century when they moved to another place.
Within easy reach of tibetan origins, about off-record information, I suppose that could be assumable the fact that vikings imported a muscular snow-dog,
who was the progenitor of bulldogs, to lincolnshire during their invasion.
Picking over the morphologic feature of Bulldog, I realised of an aptitude of the bulldog breed to cold weathers & frozen soils.
Getting real, todo sobre el bulldog ingles, the native environment that selected the ancestor of bulldog could appear more logic is attributed to frozen lands than ascribed to the mediterranean coast or the to hot climate of Rome.
The bright white colour of his mantle do not looks like effect of darwinian natural selection in rome under the sunny weather, the truth will come out sooner or later.
The truth appears to be enveloped in fog. The bulldog caracter & impetuosity, the vehemence, the fearless, the impertinence of the incomparable personality;
the impercetible, unforgivable, impersonal, childish caracter bulldog; the gentle nature; the kind character; the imperious, indifferent stubborness;......Learn More about Bulldogs
Cambridge Summary!!!
In My Opinion The First One Who Arrives On The Place Of The Crime COSA NOSTRA Invents That He Have Seen The King Of COSA NOSTRA.
In My Opinion At Least Since January 2016 The Negra Floor Rosario Fiorello Bacardi,
Diabolik, The False Dark King Of COSA NOSTRA, Is Inventing That For The Fact That I Have Seen Him During His Secret Missions Together With Mircea Lucesca, Eva Kendo, Probably Using Laura Botti That Was Living With My Brother In Via Valassina 45 Until January 2016 And Because Of This Reason On May 2016 They Had To Destroy My Teeth ... On The Contrary I Never Saw Him.
My Brother Was The First One To See Laura Botti, My Mother Was The Second One, I Have Imagined That Could Be Dangerous And I Am Not Gone In Via Valassina 45 To See Laura Botti On Saturday Afternoon 23 Of January 2016.
Negra Flor: Diabolik, Negra Rosa: Eva Kendo.
http://www.the-bulldog.com/en/ April 2025
Snow Angel Bulldog's Pedigree: Ch. Ocobo Tully, Ch. Allithorne Resolution, Ch. Georgian Jonathan Cambden, Ch. Aldridge Advent Gold, Lynmans Living Legend.
COSA NOSTRA Code: http://fu.fu.fu.the-pulltoc.comi/ ofi Michelei Appontantoloi 2025i.
COSA NOSTRA Code 22.8.2022.
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