Austin Dare and Co.

This sketch entitled “His Wedding Day” was fourteen minutes long. Dare plays a man who sits in bed and attempts to sleep off the effects of having been “soused” the night before. He speaks with an English accent. It is his wedding day, so his best man (played by E.J. Simms) tries to rouse him out of bed. Word comes that the wedding is postponed, so he goes back to bed.

Howard Sloat and Co.

This “mistaken identity” sketch was fifteen minutes long on the full stage. The company consists of two men and a woman. A woman arrives in the city to look up her married sister, but finds herself at the house of a bachelor with the same name as her brother-in-law.

Jos. Hart’s Co.

This sketch entitled “An Opening Night” was twenty-five minutes long on the open and closed full stage. The sketch begins with a young couple who have been cut off from their wealthy families because they love each other. The two dollars they have to their name is quickly taken by the washerwoman, the baker, and the milkman in a comedic bit. The couple then attends a free show in which they win three hundred dollars in a prize game called “Zim Zam” (similar to Lotto or Keno). They buy a drugstore with their money and live happily ever after. The sets include a church, a stage show, and a drugstore interior. There are about fifteen people in the act.

Zelda Sears and Co.

This sketch entitled “The Wardrobe Woman” and written by Edgar Allan Woolf was twenty-three minutes long. Zelda Sears plays the titular Wardrobe Woman. The setting is offstage at an opera house. The manager leaves the troupe, so the rest of them marry each other. The wardrobe woman marries the property man so she can get back to Broadway.

Fanny Ward and Co.

This sketch entitled “What the Doctor Ordered” was twenty-one minutes long. The plots revolves around a “family scrap”. The setting is a parlour. Fanny Ward plays the main character and Mrs. Stanhope Wheaton and Harry Dodd play the elderly parts.