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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Also, Brenda Price works at the BP station, and she's another one who regularly looks after Max. She and the station's other employees call him "BP" but, like Evans and McElwee, said the dog will greet her and act like he's happy to see her, but never let her get too close.

When she gets to work, she sees the dog "running down Lincoln and he meets me in the parking lot," Price said. She said she feeds the dog everyday, as does one of the station's customers.

"Everyday we have two, three, four people asking about that dog," Price said. "He's like part of the family."

Evans said when he arrives at the restaurant each morning, Max "flies in from somewhere." McElwee said he used to run away from her but now waits, at a distance, when she stops to fill his food and water bowls.

The reason Max is so aloof might be because "whoever had him did a number on him," Evans said, meaning he thinks the dog might have been mistreated.

"Half of me wants to see him get caught and get adopted, but he's not adoptable unless you've got five acres and let him run around," he said.

Max has apparently moved around the part of Charleston near the restaurant. Once, he was caught in a live trap the Coles County animal shelter set for him a few blocks away, but someone let him out and now he won't go back into the traps, shelter Manager Julie Deters said.

"That dog is a street smart dog," she said. "He couldn't have survived this long without knowing something."

Deters thinks it's difficult to guess how Max would be if he is caught, though most stray dogs can eventually become pets, she said. The shelter could take the "extreme measure" of trying to tranquilize him, but he might run into traffic before the drug takes effect or not get caught, making even more leery of people when he wakes up, she said.

"I think he's OK," Deters said.

McElwee, who left the doghouse for Max and said her first thought was to catch him, said she's "really torn" about his situation. She said she worries about any medical conditions that might get worse, but she tries to be realistic about what's best for him.

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