<h2 id="c17">HOW A CAT SAVED THE LIFE OF A CANARY.</h2>
<p>In a small town in Minnesota, noted
for its several state institutions of learning,
lives a widow whose success in the
training of a cat has made her quite
noted in her locality.</p>
<p>Tiger, the cat, is not famous for his
long hair nor for his long pedigree. He
is simply a creature who has been loved
and petted into a wonderful amount of
sympathy for his mistress and he seems
to know instinctively many of her likes
and dislikes, and he would no more
harm Dick, the canary, who lives in the
same room, than he would attack the
hand which places the saucer of milk
before him each day.</p>
<p>One morning, Mrs. Rogers (as we
will call his mistress, though that is not
her true name), allowed Dick to take his
bath in his tiny tub upon the dining-room
floor, while she rearranged and
dusted the furniture of the room, leaving
the door wide open during the time.
A neighbor sat by the doorway watching
Dick bathe and, not having the faith in
Tiger which his mistress held, exclaimed,
“That cat of yours will kill your
bird sometime. I know he will.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Rogers smiled very quietly as
she stopped to give Tiger an assuring
pat on the head and a word of praise for
his good behavior, for she believed he
understood the neighbor’s unkind remark.</p>
<p>“Tiger is a good cat and I’ll trust him
any time with Dick,” said his mistress,
turning away from him to attend to her
duties.</p>
<p>A prolonged “Oh!” like a stifled
scream came from the neighbor’s lips
the next minute for Tiger had sprung at
Dick and held him tightly in his cruel
jaws.</p>
<p>“See Tige! See Tige!” exclaimed the
visitor.</p>
<p>But Dick never fluttered a bit and
Mrs. Rogers patted Tiger again as she
caught sight of a vanishing stranger cat
disappearing through an open window.</p>
<p>“Brave old Tiger! Good little Dickie!”
said their mistress, as she took the bird,
unharmed, from Tiger’s teeth, which had
held the bird safely away from real danger.</p>
<p>Dick flew back to his open cage, Tiger
went back to his nap in the sunshine,
and the lady visitor learned the lesson
that love works wonders in even the
creatures that do not speak as we do.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">Mary Catherine Judd.</span></span></p>
<div class="fig"> id="fig6"> <ANTIMG src="images/i12505.jpg" alt="" width-obs="667" height-obs="500" /> <p class="caption">POCKET OR KANGAROO RAT. <br/>(Dipodomys similis). <br/>Life-size.
<br/><span class="small">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</span></p>
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