The act was eleven minutes long on the full stage.
One comedian and one straight tumbler do a short routine. The straight finishes with a layout and a double somersault from a springboard. He wears a brown street suit with a white shirt which fits him without the use of elastic bands on the sleeves.
The act was nine minutes long on the full stage.
The trio does a routine on the horizontal bars, which are in the shape of a square.
The act was seven minutes long.
Two men do a routine of tumbling, hand-to-hand and head-to-head tricks. One wears a tuxedo and the other wears a cutaway with pearl buttons on the sides of his trousers.
Montamba and Wells do a grotesque comedy acrobatic routine. They closed with a version of the Melrose chair-toppling trick.
The act was five minutes long on the full stage.
The troupe is made up of seven men and one woman who do do back somersaults off of a horse-drawn sleigh. The men wear long black beards to make them look like Russians and the setting is supposed to be Russian as well.
The act was twelve minutes long.
A woman and three “foreign” men do a roman rings routine. The woman and one of the men are the understanders. They perform on the rings and then the woman balances the three men in a triple formation, which rests on her knees and chest. She also carries them around on her arms.
The act was six minutes long on the full stage.
The men do a routine on the horizontal bars and two teeth-holding balances.
The act was five minutes long on the full stage.
The acrobats enter the stage in an open barouche. They perform in “natty full tight-fitting white outfits trimmed with black.” They have a number of new tricks.
The act was six minutes long on the full stage.
Two men do a trampoline routine on a high wagon bed pulled by horses. They are dressed as “Rubes”, with one in female clothes. The female impersonator does several forward and backward double turns.
The act was six minutes long on the full stage.
Dippy Diers does some acrobatics on the ground and then proceeds to do a “break neck table” trick in the style of Bert Melrose. He stands on top of four wobbling stacked tables with a chair, but refuses to sit on it. He sways back and forth and then falls over with the tables.