Eldorado Lions Club

Eldorado Lions Club Lions serve. Our motto is “We Serve.” Founded in 1917, we are best known for fighting blindness Lions are everywhere. Lions give sight. Lions serve youth.

Lions Clubs International is the largest service club organization in the world. We have more than 1.35 million members in more than 46,000 clubs worldwide. We're men and women active in more than 200 countries and geographic areas. Our motto is “WeServe.” Founded in 1917, we are best known forfighting blindness, but we also feed the hungry, aid seniors and the disabled, and care for the environme

nt. Lions are a global service network of volunteers that make a difference in their local communities. By conducting vision screenings, equipping hospitals and clinics, distributing medicine and raising awareness of eye disease, Lions work toward the goal of providing vision for all. Through programs such as SightFirst, Lions have helped provide more than 147 million treatments for river blindness, 10 million doses of a sight-saving drug to prevent trachoma, and eye screenings for more than 15 million children. Our community projects often support children and local schools through scholarships, recreation and mentoring. Internationally, we offer many programs to empower youth, including the Peace Poster Contest; youth camps and exchanges; and Lions Quest, a positive youth
development program. Our Leo clubs help young people develop leadership skills while impacting their communities through service. There are approximately 157,000 Leos and 6,000 Leo clubs in more than 200 countries and geographic areas worldwide. Lions receive grants and the world receives benefits. Since 1968, Lions Clubs International Foundation (LCIF) has awarded more than $811 million in grants to support Lions’ humanitarian projects. As the official charitable organization of Lions Clubs International, LCIF helps Lions improve the lives of millions of people through four pillars of service: saving sight, supporting
youth, providing disaster relief and meeting humanitarian needs. Through the Foundation’s generous support of large-scale humanitarian initiatives, Lions are able to extend their reach from local communities to the global community in order to serve those who need us most.

02/14/2026

Bear was a 110-pound Rottweiler with one ear missing and a face marked by many scars.
Button was a tiny 4-pound Pomeranian, 14 years old, completely deaf, and almost blind.
They were discovered inside an abandoned, foreclosed house in Detroit.
Their owners had moved away and left them locked inside with no food or water for nearly three weeks.
When rescuers finally forced the door open, they found Bear lying weak and painfully thin in a corner.
Curled safely between his large paws was little Button still alive only because Bear had shared the small amount of rainwater dripping through the broken roof.
Bear had survived by giving up food so she could live.
At the shelter, staff members tried to separate them into different kennels.
“Policy,” they explained. “Large dogs cannot stay with small dogs.”
The moment they were apart, Bear stopped responding.
He lay flat on the cold concrete and refused to move.
Button, unable to hear and barely able to see, spun in helpless circles, crying as she searched for the heartbeat she had depended on for years.
One volunteer sat beside Bear and saw tears sliding down his face.
“Yes,” she said softly, “dogs really do cry.”
“This isn’t right,” she told the manager. “They belong together. Put them back.”
As soon as the kennel doors opened, Bear rushed to Button.
He carefully sniffed her from head to tail, making sure she was safe.
Then he lay down, and Button climbed onto his neck like a tiny queen claiming her place.
She sighed once… and fell peacefully asleep.
From that day on, the shelter gave them a special rule:
BONDED PAIR — NEVER SEPARATE.
Weeks went by. Families visited and left.
“I want the cute fluffy one, but not the scary Rottweiler.”
“I need a guard dog, but I can’t take a deaf, old Pomeranian.”
No one chose both of them.
Then one afternoon, a retired nurse named Gloria walked in.
She was 68, living alone after losing her husband of forty years.
She looked at Bear’s scarred face.
She looked at Button’s cloudy eyes.
She didn’t ask about their problems or their past.
She simply said,
“They kept each other alive when nobody else did.
That is the kind of love I understand.”
And she signed the adoption papers for both.
Today, Bear sleeps on a soft orthopedic bed beside Gloria’s chair.
Button sleeps peacefully on top of Bear.
Each morning, Bear walks slowly so Button can follow his shadow.
Each night, Gloria kisses them gently and whispers,
“Thank you for choosing me.”
The Rottweiler everyone once feared has become the gentlest helper in the home.
The deaf little Pomeranian once called “useless” is now the family’s alarm —
she feels vibrations, alerts Bear, and Bear alerts Gloria.
They work together.
They always have.
They only needed someone brave enough to love them both.
🐾 Some souls are never meant to be separated.
Some of the most beautiful love stories come in pairs. ❣️

02/14/2026

"You can't take both," the shelter manager said, shaking her head. "It's too much work. Just pick the Shepherd. He's highly adoptable. The little one... well, he's just baggage."

I looked through the chain-link fence and my heart broke. Atlas (the 85-pound Shepherd) wasn't growling. He was frozen in a statue-like pose.

He was lying on the cold concrete, his massive body curled into a protective "C" shape. Tucked deeply inside that curve, shielded by Atlas’s front paws, was Barnaby—a 6-pound Chihuahua mix who was shaking so hard his teeth were literally clicking.💔

Barnaby wasn't looking at me. He was staring up at Atlas’s chin, his eyes wide with panic. Atlas wasn't looking at the treat in my hand. He was staring at me, his eyes communicating one clear message: If you want him, you go through me.

They had come in together three weeks ago. An eviction case. The family simply left them in the apartment when they moved out. For three years, Atlas had been Barnaby's bodyguard. And Barnaby had been Atlas's emotional anchor.

The kennel staff told me that when they tried to separate them for walks, Atlas would scream. Not a bark—a scream. He would chew the metal fencing until his gums bled, frantic to get back to his tiny friend.✨

"I'm not picking one," I said, handing the clipboard back. "I'm taking the set."

The manager sighed. "You're signing up for a nightmare. Two vet bills. Two personalities. One has anxiety, the other is protective. It’s a lot."

I signed the papers anyway.

The ride home was chaos. Not because they were bad, but because Atlas refused to sit in the back seat unless Barnaby's crate was strapped in right next to him.

He had to be able to smell him. He pushed his nose through the crate bars the entire 40-minute drive, just to let Barnaby know he was still there.

That was four months ago. The manager was right about the bills—they are double. But she was wrong about the nightmare. I didn't just save two dogs. I saved a marriage.

They don't do a single thing apart. They eat from bowls placed side-by-side. They sleep in a pile on the rug (Barnaby usually uses Atlas's ear as a blanket). If Barnaby barks at the mailman, Atlas runs to the window to back him up, adding his deep "woof" to the little guy's squeaks.

I watch them sometimes, sleeping in a tangle of limbs, and I realize how close they came to being ripped apart. If I had listened to the "logic," Barnaby would probably be gone by now, and Atlas would be grieving in a cage somewhere.

If you ever see a "Bonded Pair" sticker on a kennel, don't pity them. Envy them. We should all be so lucky to have a friend who would chew through a metal fence just to make sure we're okay.🐾❤️

01/27/2026
01/27/2026
01/14/2026

temp may get down into teens tonight. check your garden hoses are not hooked up with water in them! outside pets / livestock have some where to be protected and warm.

01/02/2026
12/31/2025
12/29/2025
knot tying
08/18/2025

knot tying

Address

921 Veterans Drive
Eldorado, IL
62930

Opening Hours

6pm - 7:30pm

Telephone

+16182739241

Website

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