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Tune Identifier:"^no_is_just_a_little_word_lemmel$"

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Tunes

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[N-O is just a little word]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Helen Howarth Lemmel Incipit: 33543 23123 56356

Texts

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Little Words

Author: H. H. L. Appears in 4 hymnals First Line: N-O is just a little word Refrain First Line: Say N-O! N-O! to ev'rything that's wrong Used With Tune: [N-O is just a little word]

Instances

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Little Words

Author: H. H. L. Hymnal: Songs and Choruses for Fishers of Men #39 (1928) First Line: N-O is just a little word Refrain First Line: Say N-O! N-O! to ev'rything that's wrong Languages: English Tune Title: [N-O is just a little word]

Little Words

Hymnal: The Stirling Three Hundred #224 (1950) First Line: N-O is just a little word Refrain First Line: Say N-O! N-O! to ev'rything that's wrong Languages: English Tune Title: [N-O is just a little word]

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Helen Howarth Lemmel

1864 - 1961 Person Name: H. H. L. Author of "Little Words" in Songs and Choruses for Fishers of Men Born: November 14, 1863, Wardle, England. Died: November 1, 1961, at her home in Seattle, Washington. Buried: Lemmel was cremated, but her final resting place is unknown to us. Daughter of a Methodist minister, Helen emigrated from England with her family to America when she was 12 years old. They first settled in Mississippi, then relocated to Wisconsin. She moved to Seattle in 1904, and for three years was music critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. While interviewing German singer Ernestine Schumann-Heink, Helen was persuaded to go to Europe. A gifted singer, she studied music in Germany for four years. Upon her return to America, she began giving concerts and traveling on the Chautauqua circuit. Eventually, she became a vocal music teacher at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, Illinois. After retirement, she moved to Seattle, Washington, where she was a member of the Ballard Baptist Church. Among her works are a hymnal used by evangelist Billy Sunday for over a decade. Lemmel and a women’s choral group she directed were part of Sunday’s group at the peak of his career. Sources: Hustad, pp. 272-73 Seattle Post-Intelligencer, November 3, 1961 © The Cyber Hymnal™ (hymntime.com/tch)
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