Famous Firemen's Cat Is Dead

Boys at No. 10 Mourn Their Fire-Chasing Pal, Mickey

Famous Cat Loses All 9 Lives Answering Last Alarm

Mickey the cat is dead.

Ordinarily the death of a cat wouldn't make news. But Mickey was no ordinary cat, for he had won movie stardom and widespread publicity as a fireman feline.

Mickey died in the "line o' duty" Sunday night.

The original caption: "Firemen Ladimer Aubrecht and Tom Broden Pay Respects to Mickey: Un-cat-like, Mickey fell on his neck." Feline Responds

When an alarm came in at 10:17 p.m., Mickey made a leap for the pole down which firemen at No. 10 station slide to the first floor, but his paws didn't get a firm enough grip on the pole and he plunged to the floor. No. 10 station is at 19 Fourth street N.

The apparatus left without Mickey. When it returned and the men jumped off, they found Mickey at the base of the pole. He was dead, his neck broken by the fall. A pall fell over the station. It was almost like losing one of the boys.

Funeral Set

Preparations proceeded for Mickey's burial. Someone found a discarded grape box. Mickey was groomed and amid somber decorations his body lies in state in the grape box today. Burial probably will be Tuesday in a small plot on a two acre tract owned by Fireman Frank Leighton at Parker's lake.

Mickey in happier times Firemen who formerly were at No. 10 station came back today to pay their respects to Mickey. Chief Earl Traeger also dropped into the station.

One of the Gang

Records of the Minneapolis fire department did not recognize Mickey but at No. 10 station he was as much a part of the personnel as any other fireman.

When Mickey came to the station two years ago, left there as a kitten by an unknown woman, he was just another cat. But the firemen, particularly Capt. Edward Rylander, decide to teach him a few tricks.

Camera Star

One of these was answering alarms and sliding down the pole from the second to the first floor. So proficient did Mickey become that Pathe News Reel starred him in a short a year ago. The short was released throughout the country and Mickey became famous.

His fall Sunday night could not be explained by the veterans. Some hazarded a guess that "Mickey must have been half asleep and misjudged his distance."