Emma Carus sings a few numbers.
Pearce and Roslyn do songs and talk. They were on for eighteen minutes.
The song was eight minutes long.
Hyla Allen sings and is accompanied by a man on the piano. She finishes with “Clap Hands”, which was previously made popular by Blanche Ring and Grace La Rue.
The act is eight minutes long.
Annette Adams sings several songs. One has a “Dixie” refrain and one is an Italian number. She also changes hats.
The act was nine minutes long.
Bonnie Gaylord opens with a song, then changes costume to that of a “bucolic” girl character. She then tells several stories in “rube fashion” while standing on one foot.
This “pianolog” was twenty minutes long.
Willa Holt Wakefield sang five new songs as well as several old ones requested by the audience.
The act was twelve minutes long.
Helen Vincent, formerly a popular performer in a New York cabaret restaurant, sings in a simple but elegant dress. Her voice is peculiarly attractive, as is her appearance.
The act was twenty-one minutes long.
Maude Lambert sings and is accompanied by well-known composer Ernest Ball on the piano, who also sings a few songs. Lambert wears three different dresses throughout the performance.
The act was twelve minutes long.
Shirley Kellogg sings and dresses neatly.
The act was twenty minutes long.
Gertrude Barnes is a newcomer to vaudeville and was placed on a bill that featured only men. She sings several songs and does some comedy with props. She makes several costume changes and wears a couple beautiful gown which impress her womanly charms upon the audience. She sang five songs in a pleasing soprano, one of which was a “kid” number. Her final song, which was a lullaby skillfully worked up into a rag, garnered laughs from the audience.