Lyrics are in SONGTXT1 and SONGTXT2 and there's an alphabetical title list at the beginning of the files that you can click on and go to the lyric.All files except the two program files are ASCII, so with your browser's Edit/Find option you can locate any keyword or string in a few seconds. You can download these files and do the same in your word processor.
CODEDISP4.EXE will read the 6500+ tune codes in COMBCODE.TXT. Directions appear in the program. Data is separated by commas, so to find all "Johnny McGill/../" select option 3 and enter ,1486, and click. All 18 tunes will be found and put in the SAVED file. Again with ,2144, and you add all 7 "Garry Owen/../" in the same. Option 8 allows you to arrange them so the 12 limit plot uses the 12 you want to plot. A few clicks and they're plotted vertically offset in colors the same as the titles displayed on the plot. [The program will do a lot of other things too, but data here is arranged in database style, so you search titles, sources, modes, keys, etc, separately by information type (or though all types in your word processor). Calculate relative scale from mode number, and vice versa, or calculate mode number from which of the semitones are in the tune you're trying to find a match for (no matter what title).]
ABZWEB12 allows you to read a file of up to at least 1000 ABCs. Options allow you to play them in 12TET or just intonation. You can also automatically stressed note code them for addition to the COMBCODE.TXT file.