Moore and St. Clair

This comedy entitled “Along a Country Lane” was eleven minutes long. “A stranded actor meets an actress who is home on a visit to her folks, but pretends she is an innocent rural female.” The couple do crossfire talk, a ballad duet, and more comedy bits.

Sylvester

The act was seventeen minutes long on the full stage. Sylvester does a good sleight-of-hand routine and comedy talk.

Adams and Williams

This sketch entitled “After the Honeymoon” was fifteen minutes long. Franklin Adams and Henrietta Williams play newlyweds in a poorly furnished apartment. They sit on a chair with a board across their legs as a table, and every time the wife gets up to check the stove, the food flies everywhere. They begin to fight and divide the room in half. A prop rat is used but is not dragged across the stage properly.

Capt. Brunswick’s Wild West Co.

This sketch entitled “Tenderfoot’s Troubles” was seventeen minutes long on the full stage. The setting is the Hang Dog Hotel, which sees as its patrons a lot of “cowboys and Indians.” A man named Tenderfoot arrives and is assigned Room 13 and is advised that there is a woman in 14. He returns to the desk to tell the man that the woman is dead. The old joke, “How did you know?” is employed. There is some rope work and sharpshooting throughout. A bad man enters and Tenderfoot accidentally frightens the man into dropping his guns, which leads to his capture.