Felix Adler

19 minutes in one. Olio drop. Adler has not appeared here in a very long time. Has little new stuff, but he got over very well indeed. The finish with our propertyman as a ventriloquist’s dummy, was a riot.

Marshall Montgomery

24 min. Ventriloquist. Now uses a woman in his act. Had a regular production, elaborately staged. Plays a piano number after which he eats a meal while holding a conversation with the dummy and the girl. Something new in the vetriloquial [sic] line and scored a hit.

Hugh Emmett

25 min. F.S. One of the best ventrioloquial acts we have ever played. Open with a violin solo, including some barnyard imitations which get applause and then proceed to his ventriloquialism, employing a prop bad boy and a little girl. The various changes of voice are quite remarkable and there is plenty of comedy. Held the attention of the audience throughout and received a strong closing hand.

Hilda Hawthorne

15 Min. in 1—The best woman ventriloquist we have ever played. A big hit.

Lawrence Johnston

Ventriloquist. The first part of his act went fairly well, but he made his hit with his long distant sounds, closing to strong applause. 17 Min. in One.

Marshall Montgomery

In 1. Time 20. Here is a remarkable ventriloquist who can put more “life” into a “dummy” than any man I have ever seen. He kept the audience applauding throughout. His “ventriloquial whistling” is a novelty.

McCormice & Wallace

“At the Sea-side.” Men and woman in a very clever ventriloquil [sic] act in which both do excellent work. Man as clever as any I have ever seen and it was impossible to detect the slightest lip movement even from the first entrance. Dummies are good and act was really one of the hits of the bill. Own cyclorama drop in 2. Close in 1, 3 min. Time 18 min.

Marshall Montgomery

A neat excellent ventriloquist who uses one figure, a boy. All of his work is very fine and it scored heavily. His whistling finish was a big surprise and made a genuine hit. A thorough success throughout. 20 minutes, olio in 1.

Johnson

Ventriloquist. Just uses one figure, does some good work, imitations at finish. 15 minutes, went big.

McCormick & Wallace

Ventriloquial novelty, which they call “The Theatrical Agent.” The man is a fair ventriloquist and has some good comedy with his dummy, but the woman is decidedly excess; act is only fit for a very early spot at best in the big time. 17 min. open in three, close in one.