Restaurant takes care of stray dog

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In this Oct. 11, 2012 photo, Max, a stray dog, rests in a grassy area near Smoky's House BBQ restaurant in Charleston. Max has been a fixture near the restaurant for a couple of years. The dog’s story is a bit uncertain, but what’s clear is that restaurant owner Joe Evans and a handful of other people are making sure he’s OK, at least the best he can be. (AP Photo/Times-Courier, Kevin Kilhoffer)
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CHARLESTON (AP) — It's a nice fall afternoon and Max the dog looks quite content sunning himself on a grassy spot near his home, or the closest thing to it.

The small pooch, possibly part Australian shepherd, seems calm but keeps a close eye on people nearby. He's OK if you watch him from a distance, but if you get too close, he just gets up and moves to another place.

"He's a smart one," says Joe Evans, owner of Smoky's House BBQ at 300 W. Lincoln Ave., Charleston, where Max has been a fixture for a couple of years. The dog's story is a bit uncertain, but what's clear is that Evans and a handful of other people are making sure he's OK, at least the best he can be.

Evans opened the restaurant about 1½ years ago and said the dog was there then. He looks healthy enough now, but Evans said he was "skin and bones" at the time. The pup has a few different names, depending on whom you ask, but Evans said he named him Max at his brother's suggestion, who said "he looks like a Max."

A few months ago, Evans said, a man came by the restaurant and said Max belonged to him. The man said he stopped at the Lambo's BP gas station next door to the restaurant and the dog jumped out of his car and ran away, and he asked Evans if he'd catch the dog for him.

"I said, 'If he's your dog, why don't you catch him?'" Evans related. He also said the man said he called the dog Rat, which Evans thought was "a terrible name."

So, Max is on his own but has quite a bit of help. Evans said he frequently sleeps along the east side of the restaurant to stay out of the wind or in a fenced-in area in back. There's also a dog house at the south end of the restaurant's parking lot, thanks to Courtney McElwee, who said she saw Max at the restaurant and now brings food to him twice a day during her commutes to and from Charleston and her job in Effingham.

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