
LOST: (GIZMO) Yorkie
Sex: Male
Color: See Photo (He is more silver than the photo shows.)
Last Seen: Jan. 29, 2012
Area: Lake Hamilton Intermediate School Pearcy, AR
Contact: Roseanne 501-276-0492 or Amy 501-844-6649
Tiny 5 lb Yorkie is missing. Gizmo has a 1/4" wide - red collar with white paw prints on it. He lives close to Lake Hamilton Intermediate school. He does not have a tag on the collar because he is a house dog. If you have seen him please call. He does not warm up much to strangers. Everyone is so upset that he was out in the cold last night and hoping that someone took him in for the night or has seen him. Posters are up in the area. Thanks in advance for any help!
LOST: (BEAR) Yorkshire Terrier
Sex: Male
Color: black, brown and grey
Last Seen: December 14, 2011
Area: 226 Humphreys Rd. Hot Springs, AR
Contact: Larissa at 501-701-0365
Bear was wearing a red halter when he disappeared. He is really shaggy now, in need of a haircut. He is a very good dog and we miss him very much. Please contact me if you may have seen him.
What To Do When Your Pet Is Missing
Begin immediately! The sooner you alert the community, the better chance you'll have to bring your pet back home to you and your family.
- Bring a photo and a flyer of your missing pet to The Humane Society of Garland County office or e-mail the information to info@hsgconline.org and we will put your missing pet on our web page.
- Search your house and yard immediately. Lost cats tend to remain hidden and very quiet, and a lot of times stay right around the house.
- Make up flyers with a clear, recent photo, pet's name, a good description, include breed, color, size, age, sex, and whether it had been spayed or neutered. Describe the collar, the date your pet first went missing, the location where your pet was last seen and a phone number to contact you when your pet is sighted or found.
Make sure you have voice mail to answer the calls. Place this information as an ad in local papers.
- Ask your mailperson, newspaper delivery person and anyone who travels throughout your area regularly on business to be on the lookout for your pet.
- Report to all Law Enforcement Agencies in your area — include a flyer.
- Check Petfinder.com where you can look through a national database or even post a picture and report a lost or found pet.
- Report to all Veterinarians in your area. Include a flyer.
- Report to all Animal Control/Pounds and Humane Societies/Rescues. Include a flyer.
- Walk through all Animal Control/Pounds and Humane Societies/Rescues often. Bring a flyer with you each time you walk through. Visit them daily, the employees are sometimes busy and may not recognize your pet from a verbal description only
- Get permission from local businesses to hang your flyer for the public to see and in the employee lunchroom or on their bulletin boards. Include the post office, public works, utility companies, laundromats, gas stations, grocery stores and convenience stores.
- Talk to your neighbors personally — especially the kids.
- If a reward is offered, just state "Reward Offered" — do not publish the amount.
- For your neighborhood posters and newspaper ads, leave out one identifying feature in your pet's description, such as a splotch of color on the nose or a short tail. This protects you from pet-recovery scams and is a sure-proof way of verifying that someone definitely found your beloved pet.
What to Do When You Find a Lost Pet:
- Call your neighbors. Even if you don't recognize the pet. (It's possible a neighbor is watching the pet for someone else). Check with the neighborhood children, they often know where pets belong.
- Check the Lost and Found section of our web site, www.hsgconline.com, to see if HSGC has the pet posted.
- Place a "Found Pet" ad in newspapers and check "Lost Pet" newspaper ads.
- Check Petfinder.com where you can look through a national database or even post a picture and report of a lost or found pet.
- If the dog has a collar with a rabies tag, report the tag number to your local veterinarians. A pet's rabies tag number can be traced to its veterinarian.
- Call the local Veterinary Clinics, Animal Control and The Humane Society to report that the pet is with you. Give clear contact information so when the owner calls these places to report his pet is missing, he can reunite with his pet.
- Check out missing pet reports at veterinary clinics, animal shelters and humane organizations.
If your pet isn't found near your area, these state organizations and pet-finding companies may be able to help you:
- Missing Pet Network
- Pet Finder USA
- Pets 911
- Cats in the Bag — helpful search tips
- International K-9 Search & Rescue
- International K-9 Search & Rescue






