The act was ten minutes long.
Fred Kay does a signing monologue. He talks about marriage and sings in a falsetto when impersonating a wife.
Cliff Gordon has a topical monologue. He has a new quiet way of working which is in direct contrast to the way in which he used to work himself up in excitement while he told his stories.
The act was eleven minutes long.
Gibson acts as a “singing souse” in English dress clothes. He holds a tailor’s dummy under his arm and proceeds to tell a tale about how he and his friend got into a fight in front of a tailor’s shop so he picked him up and ran. He leaves with the dummy and returns to sing two “blue” English songs.
The act was nineteen minutes long.
Jock McKay is a Scottish comedian and monologist. He tells stories, jokes, and plays two songs on the bagpipes. He also jokes about why the Scottish play the bagpipes: “It makes the Scotchman brave in war…They would rather be killed than hear it.”
Rube Dickinson does monologues about “rube justice”. He also does some parody singing.