The coffin that slides down the chute into the water is much smaller than the coffin that West is supposedly in.
It's established that Biff Trout is "Wednesday's child", and Judge Alonzo Fairle is "Thursday's child". But during the kangaroo court at the circus, Biff Trout and Judge Alonzo Fairle switched places with each other.
The use of the "Monday's Child" poem that is integral to the plot switches the attributes of Friday's Child and and Saturday's Child. The traditional poem goes like this:
Monday's child is fair of face,
Tuesday's child is full of grace,
Wednesday's child is full of woe,
Thursday's child has far to go,
Friday's child is loving and giving,
Saturday's child works hard for a living,
But the child who is born on the Sabbath Day is bonny and blithe and good and gay.
There is no way that the record would have continued playing after the 'coffin' hit the water at the end of the chute. The shock would have at least knocked the arm off, if not the entire player off the platform.
Dr. Loveless informs Jim West, that he is "Sunday's Child - Bonny and Brave," which West does not contradict. However, West was born on July 2, 1842 - a Saturday.
Obvious toy figure replacing West as he breaks free of the underwater coffin.
When Delilah wraps Jim's face with a towel, she picks it up from a pile of towels on the counter. The purpose of wrapping the face before a shave is to use a hot, moist towel to help soften the whiskers. A dry, room temperature towel wouldn't help at all.
Man in the suit of armor in the opening has many modern fillings in his upper back teeth.
The first paved roads were not built until 1918. When "Barlow" is in the carriage you hear the hooves striking pavement. You can see the curbs as well as an oil stain or two.