Mr. De Loris
Mr. de Loris shoots away “the costume of a good-looking young woman who appears neatly dressed in a short, keen-length skirt”. His last shot “hits the trigger of a stationery rifle which fires a bullet smashing a white ball just above his own head”.
Chiquita
Charmion
Strip tease and acrobatics.
Leitzel Sisters
The sisters performed “a flying trapeze and ring act that attracted some little attention.”
“The two girls work separately, one on the flying trapeze ; the other on the rings. […] As a finish, [Lillian] does a one-hand circle on a loose rope, turning over and over.”
Caulfield and Dunn
Ryan and Bell
The act was nine minutes long.
Ryan and Bell sing and dance. They wear sailor suits and do an eccentric dance for the finish.
Jim O’Brien and Boys
The act was nine minutes long.
Jimmy O’Brien sings ragtime numbers and is accompanied by two boys who play the violin and the piano. He is a notable Cabaret singer from Chicago. The violinist is similar to Smiling Jimmy Morgan.
“The Lawn Party”
This “juvenile revue” was thirty-two minutes long on the full stage.
Young William J. Dooley plays a sheriff and is a fantastic knockabout comedian. He tells the group of children who wait for their favorite stars that there has been a train wreck which has prevented them from coming. He suggests that they impersonate their favorites instead. The kids then impersonate Robert Mantell (James Dougherty), Eva Tanguay (Florence Hughes), David Warfield (Harry Anger), Fay Templeton (Marie Jacobs), George M. Cohan (Raymond O’Malley), Irene Franklin (Miss Hughes), Caruso (Frances Donia), Bessie McCoy (Elsie Taylor), and Lillian Russel (Elsie Dingas). O’Malley is a hit as Cohan and Donia showcases a phenomenal tenor range as Caruso. Dooley does the announcements and some comedy falls.
Agadis Troupe
The act was six minutes long on the full stage.
The Agadis troupe consists of about nine acrobats who are purportedly Arabic, though one looks suspiciously like an American and another looks Japanese. They begin with a pyramid trick in which the understander supports the other eight men. Their routine then consists of twisters, somersaults, handsprings, and one-handed and two-handed cartwheels. Two of the men do some “clever single work.”