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310

33y,. RPM

with songs from the original soundtracic


of the motion picture

~,.. HE
Walt Disney's
STORY OP

SNOW WHITE
AND THE SEVEN DWARFS

TA;.1$ tlte •loT11 of SNOW WHTTE.


YoK ~read olottg w:ith 1!W ill ytl1lT book.
YOt< ICiU hoic it ~ ti111<! to l:tmt the page
r ltea goalu:ur U.r c•i 111<1 ring lilu tltu ...

LE1"S BEGIN NOW:

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c eNCE UPON A TIME, long, long ago, a lovely
Queen sat by her windo"· sewing. As she worked she
thought, "Il only I had a little daughter, how happy I
would be."
Dreaming, she pricked her flnger with her needle.
Three drops of blood fell on the snow-while linen.
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"How lovely my little girl would be if s he had lips as
red M blood, skin as white as snow and hair as black as
ebony," thought the Queen.
Some time later, a little dnu.ght..er was born to the
Queen, and she was just as beautiful as the Queen had
hoped she might be.
The happy mother decided to call her baby Sno\v
\\'bite.
But the Queen was very ill, and when Snow White was
still a little girl, her mother died.
Snov;• Vl'hite's father, the King, was broken hearted.
For many years be was sad and lonely.
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But at last the lonely King married again, and there
was great rejoicing in the land.
His new Queen v.'llS ver;· beautiful to took upon, but
alas, her heArt W1IS cold and cruel
The Queen was vain, too. She would spend hours dress-
ing henielf in fine clothes, and brushing her black hair.
Then she would stand by the mirror and admire hersell.
She was so vain that she wanted to be lhc most beauti-
ful woman in the kingdom.
Now the Queen's most prized possession was a magic
mirror. Every day she asked it:
!tfirror, mirror on the wall,
Who it the fairest of us all?
ll the mirror replied that she was the fairest in the
land, the Queen was happy, and all was well.
But sometimes another lady was named. Then the
Queen would ft,y into such a terrible rage that the people
around her trembled with fear. And the wicked Queen
would order the POOr lady to be killed.

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li1eanwhile. Sno'\\· \Vbite was growing up to be more
and more beautiful. And as well as being pretty, !!he was
so sweet natured tbat everyone loved her-everyone but
the Queen.
The Queen looked at Snow White jealously. At last she
could stand the sight of the lovely Princess no longer.
She banished Sno'\\· \Vhite to the servants' quarters.
Snow White's fine clothes were taken away trom her,
and she had to dress in rags like the other servants.
And like the other servants, Snow White had to work
very hard. She slaved from early morning until late at
n ight, scrubbing and cleaning the palace floors, washing
the dishes, sewing and mending the Queen's clothes.
As she worked, she would sing so sweetly that the
birds would come to listen to her voice.
"She will soon lose her beauty," thought the wicked
Queen. "For who can caU her lovely in her old rags, and
with her hands roughened by work!"
Nevertheless, the Queen went to her mirror and day
after day asked the same question :

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M iu or, ma 1or on the wall,
Who i8 the faireat of 11& all?
The wicked, vain Queen was still afraid that one day
Snow White would grow up to be more beautiful than
anyone else in the land.

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While she worked, Snow '\\'bite dreamed beautiful
daydreams about a handsome Prince. Some day, she
knew, he would come and carry her off to his castle in
the clouds.
It seemed to the jealous Queen, as she watched Snow
White, that the Princess grew in loveliness as each day
passed.
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And indeed, though Snow White wore ragged clothes,
her beauty w!LS plain to see.
At last came the day the Queen had been dreading.
Mirror, mirror on th1 waU,
Who is the fairest of us all?
she said. And the mirror replied:
Her lips blood red, her hair like Ttight,
Her skin like snow. her name-Snow White!
The angry Queen called her huntsman to her.
"Take the Princess into t.he forest and brin1r me back
her heart in this jewele<I box." she said.
The huntsman bowed his head in grief. He had no
choice but to obey the Queen's command.
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qB FF 11\"TO THE FORESI' went Snow White and
the huntsman next day. The Princess, not knowing \vhat
\Yal! in store for her, skipped along beside the huntsman,

now stopping to pick violets, now singing a happy tu ne.


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At last the huntsman, heartbroken, fell to his knees
beside the Princess.
''l cannot kill you, Princess," he said, "even though
it is the Queen's command. Run into t.ho forest and hide,
and never return to the castle."
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Alone in the forest, Snow White wepL with fright. But
she WM not really alone, 11he found. All the little wood-
land animals were her friends. And, chirping and chat-
tering happily, they led her to a new home.

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It was a sweet little, tiny little howe in the woods the
11nlmals showed Snow White. But no one was home, and
when she looked in the window, my, Y:hat an untidy sight
met her eyes! The sink was piled with unwashed dishes,
and everything 9.'llS thickly blanketed with dust.
"l\faybe the children who live here need someone to
keep house for them," said Snow \Vhite. "Let's clean
their house."
So in they went. And with the help of her new :forest
friends, Snow \Vhite soon had that little house spic and
span.
Then she went upstairs and feU asleep across the seven
little beds.
As she slept, home :from work came the seven little
men who lived in that house in the woods.
Hi-ho, hi-lw,
lt!s lwme /rum work we go!
sang the seven little men -the Seven Dwarfs.
Then they 58\'ll their little house, just as Snow White
had seen it. But they knew at once that something was
changed! It was clean!
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Up the stairs crept the Seven Dwarf~ And there they
found Snow \'\'hite just waking up.
"Oh!" cried Snow \\'bite. "I know who you arc." She
had read their names on their bed>;. "You're Dopey and
Snee:Q· and Happy and Grumpy and Doc and Bashful
and Sleepy!"

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Snow \Vhite told the Dwarfs about the wicked Queen's
plot, and they insisted that she must stay with them.
"Supper is not quite ready yet." lHlid Snow \\'hite, \vho
was very pleased to be asked to stay. "You'll just have
time to ~'ll&h."

~//

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''Wash!" cned all the little men. They had almost for-
gotten what the word meant. But they were soon
scrubbed clean, and even Grumpy got a soaking.
The Seven Dwarfs soon grew to love Snow White and
her merry y,•ays.

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The next morning, instead of goinK to work in their
mine, the Seven l)v;·arfs decided to make a beautiful new
bed for Snow \Vhite.
The i-evcn little men "'ould not have worked so happily
if they could ha•e seen beyond the forest. The wicked
Queen had learned that Snow '\'\nite was stil l alive. And
now, disguised aa an old woman, she was making her way

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to their very own house, with a poisoned apple for Snow
\\'bite!
\\'hen the Ol\·arfs had left Snow \Vhite that morning
they had warned her to stay in the house.
"Be careful of strangers!" Grumpy had said, as Snow
White kissed him good-by.
And Sno\11 White had promised that she wou ld be
careful.
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Lat.er that day the old woman knocked at her door.
Alas! Snow White could not resist the magic apple.
She took one bite, and sank lifeless to the floor.
• Hurrying away, the wicked Queen fell into a deep
chasm, and was never seen again. But that did not bring
Snow White back to life.
The sorrowing Dwarfs laid her on a ood of gold and
crystal, and kept watch over her night and day.
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One day a handsome Prince came to the forest and
saw Snow White. Charmed with her beauty, he kissed
her. At la.st Snow White awoke' The Seven Dwarfs
danced with joy, and the Prince carried her off to hiR
castle in the clouds.

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is~fond
~t)f&NEp? BOOK AND RECORD '

GN() your child a hood start


in learning to read w:lh !IMS

24 PAGE BOOK
filled v.1th fu!l-<:olor dlu$tratons and
a 7 INCH 33 • RPM long playing
READ-ALONG
RECORD.
Each bocut lll'd reo:lifd ~ t
• hlWilld ·~., .......it w tCtl'f
llCM \"'IUte Mll'"'Q

• Word lo Wo d
story n rr to
• Oramat c
charact r d og
• Auth c
sound ect
• Mu ea b ckgrounds
• Favont songs
to sing
~~&'Ii&• ..,,..,

SE ~~ure1 HEA the


record EA the
book
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