These puppies are sweet, inquisitive and energetic, and 101 would be far too many!
Dalmation
Where General Custer met his waterloo.
Little Big Horn
Spanning Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, this became the first National Park in America, and in the world, when President Ulysses S. Grant signed the law making it so in 1872.
Yellowstone National Park
This accounting term is the only word in the English language with three sets of double letters back to back.
Bookkeeping
The beaver is the national emblem of this country.
Canada
Despite what you may have read in a Stephen King novel, these gentle giants make excellent family pets, but are one of the most productive breeds in the drool department.
Saint Bernard
Where the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution signed.
Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
In 1913, a temperature of 134 degrees was registered in this Eastern California National Park, one of the hottest temperatures ever recorded on earth.
Death Valley National Park
Ever since 1935, a team of accountants has spent an average of 1700 hours prior to this major Hollywood award ceremony counting ballots by hand, and are the only ones who know the winners prior to the on-stage reveals.
The Oscars
The average human body contains this many pints of blood.
Nine
This intelligent, loyal and lovable dog has been the American Kennel Club’s most popular breed for 24 consecutive years.
Labrador Retriever
In 1927, he became the first man to fly solo and non-stop across the Atlantic.
Charles Lindbergh
The General Sherman Tree, measuring 275 feet tall and 25 feet wide, is the world’s largest tree by volume, is estimated to be between 2,300-2,700 years old, and calls this National Park home.
Sequoia National Park in California
This 76-year old British rocker studied accounting and finance at the London School of Economics on a scholarship, and the world nearly missed out on more than 50 years of iconic rock and roll.
Mick Jagger
The fictional land inhabited by human beings one twelfth the size of people in Europe in Johnathan Swift’s 1726 satirical masterpiece, Gulliver’s Travels.
Lilliput
Small but fierce, a stray pack of this diminutive breed overran a small town in Arizona in 2014, terrorizing children and resulting in more than 6000 calls to Animal Control.
Chihuahua
He was the first President to be televised.
FDR (at the World's Fair in 1939)
Three of the ten highest waterfalls in the world are located in this National Park in central California.
Yosemite National Park
This crime boss was brought down by FBI accountants, of which there are more than 2000, in 1931.
Al Capone
The two European countries separated by the Pyrenees mountain range.
France & Spain
Despite its heavy body and short legs, this breed can run up to 15 miles per hour and can achieve a vertical jump of nearly 7 feet which, combined with its tenacity and intimidating appearance, may be why it’s the chosen mascot of more than 40 universities in the USA.
Bulldog
Dr Seuss created the first animated TV ads for this car company between 1946 & 1949.
Ford
This Upper Upper Michigan National Park is one of the least visited parks in the country, but not owing to any deficiency in breathtaking beauty and majesty, but because it can only be access by boat or sea plane.
Isle Royale National Park, Michigan
In 1928, accountant Walter Diemer invented this fun and chewy candy treat, which the average American, today, enjoys hundreds of times a year.
Bubblegum
According to Greek mythology, she was the first woman on earth.
Pandora