Julius Steger

The sketch was entitled “Justice”. It is about a prisoner who was wrongly convicted. Frank Fogarty played an extra. He had the audience laughing at his stories.

Belle Blanche

Ms. Blanche sings pretty songs in a “pleasing manner”. She also does imitations of Frank Tinney.

Dick Tubb

The act was sixteen minutes long. Mr. Tubb opens wears “grotesque makeup”, sings silly songs, and makes facial contortions. He changes into the dress of an English curate.

Valerie Bergere Players

The act was eighteen minutes long and entitled “Where There’s a Woman”. The sketch consists of a wife wearing a pink nightie blackmailing luring and blackmailing a hotel manager.

Arnold Daly and Co.

The act entitled “Bryant 5800” was twenty-three minutes long. The set shows two separate rooms of a New York hotel. A girl in the one room calls the man in the other by mistake; an eighteen minute conversation ensues in which the operator ends the call just before the man can discover the name of the woman.

Reine Davies

The act was nineteen minutes long. “Ms. Davies distributed megaphonic bazooka among her audience and permitted them to buzz the chorus of the song with her.” She wore a white rubber coat and hat. There was a rain effect.

Solly Lee

The act was eight minutes long. Solly sang “Alabam” first. He wore a uniform and cap with “Hammerstein’s” on it. He removed the hat when he sang “That Old Gal of Mine”. He then sang “I Want to Dance, Dance, Dance”.

Clark and McCullough

The act entitled “Much Ado About Nothing” was thirteen minutes long. The act “is made up of laughable nonsense.” Two men dress as tramps. “The act starts off like a race horse, sags, picks up again, lags once more and does well at the finish.”