Elsie Faye

Miss Faye is a pretty girl and finely dressed, looking particularly well in two costumes, but the boys should discard their long coats, with high silk hats at the opening.

The Schenck-Marvelli Troupe

Six people are involved, including a tiny girl who does some remarkable tumbling and wins her audiences immediately with her appearance and extreme youth.

Griffen and DuBois

Of the two men, one is a good straight ground tumbler, although he has costumed himself after a fashion that suggests his desire to be a comedian. He makes a good tumbler and had much better work straight, leaving the comedy department to his partner. The latter is stout, even “fat,” and a good deal more comedy capital is to be made out o his physical peculiarities than from the slapstick in which the other insists upon indulging himself.

Anna Laughlin

Several of Miss Laughlin’s later numbers are utterly out of the “kid” character she essays to portray, and their purport and wording are entirely at variance with her costuming and personality.