Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 275, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 November 1915 — “A Modem Cinderella.” [ARTICLE]
“A Modem Cinderella.”
That excellent musical production “A Modern Cinderella”, will be seen at the Ellis theatre on Tuesday, Nov. 23, for one night. It is a musical comedy of genuine merit interpolated with high class operatic selections and bits of the real popular song gems of the day. It’s a classy show and will compare more than favorably with the best that has been seen at the Ellis this season.
A dispatch from Topeka, Kans., says that the secretary of the Kansas board of health has decided that Alfred Jennings, a cattleman living near Ellsworth, Kans., is afflicted with the hoof and mouth disease. He is believed to have contracted the disease in Chicago or eastern cattle market. It very rarely attacks human beings. There had been no signs of the disease in Kansas since last March.
Mr. and Mrs. George Richardson, of Kingman, Kans., who had been called to Lansing, Mich., by the death of his father, Washington Richardson, were here over last night, guests of F. M. Parker. For a day or two before they had visited relatives at Brook. Mrs. Richardson was a daughter of Newt. McCurtain, an old resident of this county, and just before receiving the word of his father’s death, himself and wife had made an extended visit among the McCurtain children in the west and northwest. They visited Denver, Colo., Davenport, Wash., Twin Falls, Idaho, and other places. Their stay here was very brief and they left this afternoon for their home in Kingman.
