Carmel and Harris

There routine was fast. Miss Harris did a solo dance, and the couple did a two-step.

Reed and Beldon

They juggle while on a wire. They don’t have a feature trick, and simply move from one trick to the next.

Bert French and Alice Eis

The act was entitled “Dance of Fortune” was fourteen minutes long. The dance is similar to the “Vampire dance”. The dance contained “several bits of pantomime”. “The stage was set in gold and red, with a raised dias in the centre of which is posed Alice Eis on a revolving pedestal.” There were also ten suppers dressed in evening dress and British military uniforms. Miss Eis wears a jewelled filigree corsage, and a black skirt with a slit up the side.

Chase and Laughlin

“A young chap of the chorus man type and an attractive young woman do only fairly with a singing and dancing specialty.” They show dancing experience. They are nervous singers.

Alfred Letine

The act was thirteen minutes long. Letine is a female impersonator. He was dressed in a hoop skirt.

William Ash

The act was ten minutes long. He opened with “Rose-marie.” His second song was “Not Til when I Cease to Love You.” He finished with “My Hero” after much applause.

Johnson, Howard and Listette

The act was eight minutes long. They open with “eccentric singing and stepping. Removing their coats they go into very rapid comedy tumbling, finally clambering to a series of specially constructed horizontal bars suspended from the flies.”

Six Cabaret Boys

The act was thirteen minutes long. There is no dancing as the singers rely “mostly on their combined vocal efforts to get over.”

Pisano and Co.

The act is thirteen minutes long. “He does everything but shoot the eyelids off his young assistant.” Pisano shoots the lighted end of a cigarette in the assistant’s mouth, shoots targets held between the assistants forehead and finger, and breaks small targets on the stage. He also lights and extinguishes matches with shots.

Richards and Kyle

The act entitled “A Regular Club Fellow” was eighteen minutes long. There is a drop that reveals the front of a Vaudeville comedy club. Miss Kyle was dressed in white and she “never looked prettier.” “Snappy” dialogue ensues.