. In happy far-away land . he soon forgot his chagrin. And when Tommy left the palace his pockets were heavy with silverand gold. With this he began his lessons with the greatest singing-teacherin all the country, but first he bought for Tray a silver collar, on which hehad engraved: Bow ! Wow ! Wow ! Whose dog art thou ?Im Tommy Tuckers dog. Bow! Wow! Wow! That was the collar Tray always wore when he and Tommy went tothe palace after that ; but nothing could persuade Tray to carry Tommysmusic roll ao;ain. He remembered what a mistake he had made, and he O did not want to bring trouble to Tomm


. In happy far-away land . he soon forgot his chagrin. And when Tommy left the palace his pockets were heavy with silverand gold. With this he began his lessons with the greatest singing-teacherin all the country, but first he bought for Tray a silver collar, on which hehad engraved: Bow ! Wow ! Wow ! Whose dog art thou ?Im Tommy Tuckers dog. Bow! Wow! Wow! That was the collar Tray always wore when he and Tommy went tothe palace after that ; but nothing could persuade Tray to carry Tommysmusic roll ao;ain. He remembered what a mistake he had made, and he O did not want to bring trouble to Tommy. And to this day, in Far Away Land, when the people crowd the royalopera house to hear the great singer, Thomas Tucker, they remember when the children play, they sing a verse, for they are always singingin Far Away Land, which runs : Little Tommy Tucker,Sings for his shall we give himBut white bread and buttei ?How shall he cut itWithout any knife ?How shall he marryWithout any wife ? Machine Mafen. IN a narrow street in King Coles town, stood a tall old house in whichPeter White lived. Peter White was a man who made machines, and asmany of his machines were quite unlike anything that any one had evermade before, he was called an inventor. On the ground floor of his house was a shop, where he sold wonderfulthings, such as were not to be found anywhere else in all Far Away were sewing-machines which ran by clockwork, washing-machines whichwhirled and soused and pounded the clothes when Peter White set them going,machines for cutting up meat, machines for making buttons and tacks anddoor-knobs, and so many other things that one could not name them all in aday. Best of all, so the children thought, there were shelves in the shop filledwith the most wonderful toys. There were dolls that walked and talked andsang. There were fire-engines that pumped real water, horses that gallopedand trotted, clowns that tumbled, soldiers that inarched and present


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