McAvoy and Powers

The act is eleven mindsets long. The two boys are of good appearance. The comedian’s dress is exaggerated.

Maglin, Eddy and Roy

The act is ten minutes long. All three men wear white makeup. The act is comedy acrobatic where the comedy is given preference. Two do comedy while the third acts as “straight.”

Great Joseph

The act is nine minutes long. The man is dressed in a Pierrot costume and has his face covered with clown white. He plays a piano-accoridan. The opening number is played in a chair. After he rags up and down the stage.

The Lansings

The act was eight minutes long. A man and a woman dressed in full tights and leopard skin covering torsos do contortion work and unfamiliar tricks.

Johnson and Wise

“Johnson and Wise are coloured.” Miss Wise sings while Mr. Johnson dances. They wear evening clothes. Miss Wise sings a song about the moon.

King and Gee

The act was ten minutes long. One of the girls does a male impersonation. She is dressed as a boy. They finish with an “Indian” number.

Charles C. Drew and Co.

The act, entitled “Mr. Flynn from Lynn”, was nine minutes long. The drop shows a waiting room of a train station, a gateway to trains, a ticket agent window, and an information window. “Lynn” encounters the train announcer, information clerk, and ticket agent. Familiar bits of business are discussed.

Ben Linn

The act was nine minutes long. Mr. Linn sang four numbers. Each were raggedy, except for one which told how he grew fat.

Louise Brehany and Mary Ambrose

The act entitled “Waiting for Mr. Booker” was nineteen minutes long. Two Amazonian women enter the stage. The skit is about two vaudeville actresses out of work, waiting for their agent Mr. Booker. He is expected to call with a “job”. After seven minutes of talking about “nothing” one says “We’ll Pretend we’re going to the theatre and put on our evening clothes.” Miss Brehany sings, and Miss Ambrose plays the piano, the violin, and vocalizes.

True and Campbell

The show was fourteen minutes long. The Drop reveals an athletic field. A young man in a running suit enters having come last in the race. His sister, having bet money on him, pans him. He races the 100M and wins, only to find that his sister bet everything on him to save her husband who was charged with embezzlement. The sister sings “Everything’s Funny to Me”. They finish with a duet.