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Debra Bruno, How We Smuggled Our Cat into China, and How She Got Home Again. China Real Time, Dec 11, 2014. blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2014/12/11/how-we-smuggled-smudge-into-china-and-how-she-got-home-again/
 
 Note:
 (a) "What I forgot to set aside was her regulation cat carrier."
 
 The word "regulation" is explained later: "the next day I found a cute little Burberry-plaid carrier for Smudge, all for 150 RMB ($24.43). 'Will it meet airline regulations?' I asked. 'You’ll need to check with the airlines,' they [sales person in a shop of Beijing veterinarian hospital] said."
 
 (b) "I think of her as the cat version of Dorothy Parker: 'What fresh hell is this?'”
 (i) Dorothy Parker (1893-1967; an American writer)
 (ii) Ms Meade wrote a biography about her:
 Marion Meade, Dorothy Parker; What fresh hell is this? Penguin Books,  1987.
 
 How is the book related to the cat at issue is beyond me.
 
 (c) "I sent out an all-points bulletin to anyone who had a cat or pet connection."
 
 Enter "all-points bulletin" and Google returns at the very top (without attribution): "a radio message sent to every officer in a police force giving details of a suspected criminal or stolen vehicle." Another definition in the Web says, "to all officers." Probably this is what "all-points" means.
 
 (d) "So she offered to trade with me — her regulation Sherpa carrier for my Burberry-plaid item."
 (i) A "Sherpa" is a member of people (so the "S" is in upper case. Sherpa (n)
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sherpa
 ("They have won international renown as porters in the high Himalayas, and the name Sherpa has come to be used generically for porters there"
 (ii) Sherpa here, however, is a American company name, selling its "carrier source for pets on the go."
 www.sherpapet.com/
 
 
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