<h2 class="space"><SPAN name="cat" id="cat"></SPAN><span class="smcap">A Cat's Extraordinary Leap.</span></h2>
<p>In the latter part of 1880, at a time when the Washington monument
had reached a height of 160 feet, an adventurous and patriotic
cat ascended the interior of the shaft by means of the ropes and
tubing. When the workmen arrived at the upper landing the next
morning, and began to prepare for the day's work, pussy took fright
and, springing to the outer edge, took a "header" of 160 feet to the
hard earth below. In the descent which was watched closely by two
score of men, the cat spread herself out like a flying squirrel and
alighted on all fours. After turning over on the ground a few times
in a dazed manner, she prepared to leave the grounds and had gotten
almost beyond the shadow of the monument, when a dog belonging
to one of the workmen pounced upon her and killed her, she, of
course, not being in her best running trim, after performing such an
extraordinary feat. One of the men procured the body of the dead
feline, smoothed out her silky coat, and turned the remains over to a
representative of the Smithsonian Institution, who mounted the skin
and placed it under a glass case. The label on the case tells this
wonderful story in a few words: "This cat on September 23, 1880,
jumped from the top of Washington's monument and lived.</p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/il035s.jpg" class="png" height-obs="400" width-obs="320" alt="Queen Boadicea" title="Queen Boadicea" />
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