. Animal Life and the World of Nature; A magazine of Natural History. A SIESTA. JUST AWAKE. attendant in the streets ofthat city; and Sir JamesOutram once possessed a malewhich lived at large in hisquarters and occasionallyaccompanied him in boatexcursions. That gTeatest ofall animal trainers, CarlHagenbeck, it is needless tosay, possesses one or two ofthese pets, and has evenpersuaded some of them tomate with lions. Another tigercollector, of course, is MadameSarah Bernhardt. ?270 Zoo Notes 271 The Dingo is remarkable as being the onlyThe Dingo, mammal found in Australia which isnot a marsupi


. Animal Life and the World of Nature; A magazine of Natural History. A SIESTA. JUST AWAKE. attendant in the streets ofthat city; and Sir JamesOutram once possessed a malewhich lived at large in hisquarters and occasionallyaccompanied him in boatexcursions. That gTeatest ofall animal trainers, CarlHagenbeck, it is needless tosay, possesses one or two ofthese pets, and has evenpersuaded some of them tomate with lions. Another tigercollector, of course, is MadameSarah Bernhardt. ?270 Zoo Notes 271 The Dingo is remarkable as being the onlyThe Dingo, mammal found in Australia which isnot a marsupial. In all proba-bility it is an importation, andnot a true native of the attempts have been madeto exterminate the race on accountof the great havoc among thesheep which even a single dingowill commit, and they are nowonly to be found in the John Sebright kept a dingofor about a year almost alwaysin his room. He fed him himself,and took every means he couldthink of to reclaim him, butwith no effect. He was insensibleto caresses, and neve


Size: 1271px × 1966px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1902