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Show GREAT NEWS FOR LOVERS OF FIFTEEN BEAUTIFUL POPU- if LAR SONGS BY NOTED SONG WRITERS AND COMPOSERS TO BE GIVEN TO eso. READERS INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT ---- pn er ne OF THE REPUBLICAN LAKE TS CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, ee SEPTEMBER Se {-aisubacienenssnnstesmenaneeeeenioameenae TE LS eS 1, 1907. } ny THE FIFTEEN BEAUTIFUL POPULAR SONGS BY NOTED SONG WRITERS AND COMPOSERS TO BE GIVEN TO READERS eseene (|ieetsy a FREE POPULAR = -- ES ---- Arrangements have been completed by the publishers of the Inter-Mountain Republican by which there will be issued, as Sunday supplements to this paper, beautiful pieces of sheet music, the work of the country's most noted makers of songs for the people, and gotten up in the best style of the music publishers' art. ree Each Sunday for Fifteen Sundays COMMCHCINE [BEST OF DESCRIPTION OF BE e @ These songs are not only of the highest artistic merit, but no expense has been spared to make them perfect in typography and general make up. They | are printed on fine music propriate cover designs in colors. paper, with ap- They will not be out of place in any music rack. In every particular vorably at the with best the music they ponular will compare sheet music mest which fa- is sold stores. Under the arrangement made with the music publishers these fifteen beautiful songs will be given to The First necessary to do ts to buy the The music will be part of the paper. of these Music Supplements will be issued Sunday, \5]] SEPTEMBER FIFTEEN BEAUTIFUL POPULAR SONGS BY NOTED SONG WRITERS AND COMPOSERS TO BE GIVEN TO READERS OF THE REPUBLICAN ABSOLUTELY FREE in n x TO N : cake in "THE MAN wits | CHICKEN" MORN I BRING HER) «THE LILY AND THE ROSE? is is this long-looked-for |, nother song that has a story to tell. THE LADDER AND THE HOSE." Parody, and it is the funniest you'r: is a pretty application of the It is dedicated to tho fire heroes of j\ever heard. It recites the tale of ® language of flowers No such opportunity has ever before been presented to the music lovers of this section to secure, at no Geary, who has pictured in vivid |S word and Aside from |*°78 ise soream. the night This Don't miss it the inspiring tone of the music, the, subject is one that appeals to the! wherever it is Thers have and and their treatment of the depart- \foreign land One of the most notable songs of ‘their song. forms the kcynote of The melody is easy and the enthusiasm |‘%® senuine ballad type that has op jqoyine, and of a» highly tuneful peared in some time is "MY LOVE | 4 oracter. played. [I DARE NOT TELL" It tells tho| been numerons stir- lold heart story through the medium | Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poems are ring songs of war written, but jt of words and musio that are of rare |s0 widely known and read that o has remained for Theodore F. Morse, \sentimental beauty. It isa love song eulogy of her work is superfluous, the most popular songmaker of the ‘of high order, and is especially snit-|As the Poetess of Passion she has day, to composes "THE ARMY OF ‘able for rendition either at a home |gained her greatest fame, and it is PEACE." Raymond A. Browne, the ‘gathering or in public, Sing it once |@ love poem by her that forms the librettist, has written in this song ‘and you will want to sing it often (libretto of "LOVE'S OWN SWEET WAY." That alone is sufficient to a tribute to the great army of every- again, stamp the worth of the song, but day life which goés silently marchOne of Anna Hold's famous hits | Theodore F. Morse has ect her words ing on and fighting out the world's progress. Tho musio is in swinging ‘recently was "WHAT'D YO' DO WID | to music of an inspirixg calibra, It ‘DE LETTER, MR. JOHNSON" It/|is a ballad that will live long in maroh tempo, with a strong martial ring that rouses the patriotic spirit is written by Monroe H. Rosenfeld, |Popular favor, because of the high who is the composer of some of the | (ality of the melody coupled with to the highest pitch. greatest popular song successes of the production of so distinguished s "YOU KNOW WHO I LOVE" isa ithe day. His reg time is the catch-|P@- Don't fail to try ft \lting musical idylL On the vehicle ‘jest in the market, and this song is There is scarcely a man, woman of a seductive waltz theme the com- the raggiest he has done, As is usual child in this country who has nst poser, TI. Mayo Geary, takes his in coon songs, it tells of the tribu-|°F hearers on a charming fourney with lations of a certain ebony gentleman |heard of Happy Hooligan and his Oupid, by running brooks and sylvan | and his dusky lady love, who get|‘Toubles. He is always on the move shades, The song has a beautiful linto an argument over a letter he and his name has therefore been refrain that has made it an imme- ‘has left in his overcoat pocket, Get |®PPlied to a dance and two-step that diate hit with all who are fond of the song and you can sing what|# guaranteed to keep you moving when you dance to it "HAPPY happens. smooth, alluring melody. HOOLIGAN" has an infectious moveThere are fow descriptive songs |ment, and it is characteristio of the "YOUR DAD GAVE HIS LIVE FOR HIS OOUNTRY" is a song that lmore vivid than "JUST AN OLD|merry person it is named after. sets every patriotio heart aflutter. SWEETHEART OF MINE." It deals|You will be merry too when yon As the title indicates, the theme of with an everyday drama of life that /hear it, so don't fail to get a copy A|and climb aboard the band wagon. the song deals with a soldier who happens in the lives of many. shows composer of the that each of national While some of them fifteen is numbers the work of printed a writer fame. are presented to the public for the first time, others already have been sung on ~ the stage by artists of the first rank, and have earned their places among the popular ballads of the day. The whole descriptive ae . range of song writing - sentimental, and comic, is covered All go to the readers of The in the list. | Republican _ Absolutely to a romance, lure of e youthful lover to fight in a so choice a collection of pepular songs. description herewith ‘Sweetheart chicken he has) .oras and Alfred Solman the muais, and note the life of the self |Sathered during sacrificing fire fighters, cost, The the country by its composer, T. Mayo \°°™ waiter who cach morning brings | Monros H. Rosenfeld has written the admiration it will be ARE SChd Orders ‘LIKE I LOVE YOU" is a dainty;gave up his life on a battlefield of }lovers' quarrel, the wedding of one little love song with an air that/the South. It is especially appro-|sweetheart to some ono else, a vision will catch the ear at once. It has/priate for Decoration Day, and has jof lost happiness for the one Ieft a happy combination of fetching|a tinge of pathos to it that touches |single-that is the theme which T, words and graceful melody that will|the emotions, The refrain is writ-|Mayo Geary has set to a sonoroms make you hum it after hearing it|ten in martial march style melody with a catchy weltz refrain. once. It was written by- the wellThis is an unusually attractive song kmowm makers of olever songs,| A catchy refrain that starts you /jof the kind that has a story to tell. Joseph S. Nathan and Harry Gor-|singing it after you have iheard it A delicate theme of romance is don, whose hits are bywords in the once makes "IN THE MOONLIGHT WITH THE GIRI YOU LOVE" a woven through "WHEN THE MOOEworld of popular music. It song yon ought to have on your ING BIRDS WERE SINGING." Everybody wants to join in the musio rack. It is written in Theo- is another of T. Mayo Geary's mochorus of "I'VE GOT MY EYES ON dore ¥. Morse's most graceful style cessful efforts, Tho song is strongly YOU." Theodore F. Morse com- and its words which tell the story| reminiscent of childhood scenes pesed the music, and it is his great- of Cupid's pranks by moonlight, are amid green fields and beside running est success in the field of catchy particularly dainty and attractive. brooks, but added to the pastoral waltz songs. It has a chorus witha tint of the subject there is a pleasswing to it that gets into your feet Every musio lover who follows Lae poh oysmeva! weet iy roa and makes you feel like dancing. the popular successes has heard tho aces that Seyi upon the emotional Try it over once and you won't be} song "Violets." It has created such |side of one's nature, It will prove able to whistles anything else for a a furore for several years that it is |* quiet elternative to some of the week, time for a parody on it to appear. hee of a more vivacious character. sentiment Absolutely Without Cost, All that THE FIFTEEN BEAUTIFUL SONGS WHICH GIVEN ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT COST TO READERS OF THIS PAPER, There is a strong undercurrent of | EVRY the readers of The Republican Sunday edition. SEASON'S soncs] THE Without, Cost It would be impossible to duplicate this music at many times the amount paid for the entire paper. One Song Fach Sunday for Fifteen Sundays, Commencing SEPTEMBER ST i They Will Be Continued for Fourteen Succeeding Sundays. The Newsboys Will Have Them of FIFTEEN ad) BEAUTIFUL POPU- LAR SONGS BY NOTED SONG WRITERS AND TO BE GIVEN COMPOSERS TO READERS OF THE REPUBLICAN ABSOLUTELY FREE |