\ few weeks ago we submitted» dory about a roadrunner as an item for someone's Believe It or Not column. Now, we feel that Mri. Nina Durham’s Siamese cat is likewise a worthy subject for such comment.The cat, a half grown Siamese,can practically tell time. She waits patiently for Mrs. Durham to ur-tive home from school (Mis. Dur* ham teaches social studies in the Driscoll High School) and if for j any reason she is late, the oat; loudly proclaims her woes to the world. If supper is not right on time, the eat rattles her dish or anything handy to call attention to the fact that it is meal time.The most unusual thing about the cat is her interest in the telephone. This was first, manifest when it run and jumped on the desk and meowed each time the phone rang. She would sit there and meow until Mrs. Durham answered. Lately, she has taken on an added duty. When the phone rings while Mrs. Durham is in another part of the house the eat runs madly about meowing at the top of her lungs until she locates Mrs. Durham and gives her an escort back to the phone. She ceases meowing when the phone is answered and saunters away with all the dignity at her command.