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The Passing of Jane. |
The West Australian, Tuesday 28 March 1922, page 6
The Passing of Jane. What might have been a long, if not a brilliant, career as a public entertainer was cut Like most Orientals, she developed early an extremely motherly disposition, lavishing a great wealth of affection on a family of kittens, which she raised to nurse as tenderly as Australian little girls nurse their dolls. When these nurslings had to be taken from her (on account of an incursion of the stickfast fea). she was inconsolable, and began visibly to pine away. A regrettable indiscretion in the matter of diet may have hastened her decline, but there can be no doubt that her bereavement was mainly responsible for her untimely end. A flealess kitten was at length restored to her, but it was too late: her heart was broken, and when pneumonia finally attacked her she seemed to have no power of resistance, and passed quietly away. Those who knew her agree that many humans might have been better spared by the community than little Jane, whom- the Zoological Gardens authorities mournfully declare to have been the most promising young orang-outang ever entrusted to their care. |
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