Ralph Stuart and Co.

This sketch entitled “Mr. Hamilton of New York” was twenty-two minutes long on the full stage. A young woman named Olga Petrovich (played by Eleanor Parker) lives in Moscow. Her brother offends a Major in the Russian Hussars and is challenged to a duel to the death. The brother escapes. The Major then comes to Olga and offers to forget the offense if she marries him. She refuses. Mr. Hamilton (Ralph Stuart) from New York inexplicably arrives, falls in love with Olga, and offers to fight her brother’s duel for her because he looks like him. The duel takes place offstage and Hamilton is the winner.

Weber and Wilson

The act was eleven minutes long. This male and female dance team enters from the audience dressed as a bride and groom while the orchestra plays a wedding march. They then proceed to dance the “Panama Pacific Rag” and the “1915 Waltz”. They do a “Texas Tommy” dance for the finale.

Wilton Lackaye and Co.

This sketch entitled “Quits”, written by Hall McAllister, was sixteen minutes long. In this playlet, a wealthy man married a woman who insisted she had been wronged by another man in the past. The husband meets an actor (played by Wilton Lackaye) and invites him to dinner. When the wife hears his name, she insists that he was the blackguard from her past. The husband vows to disfigure him. When the actor comes over, the wife pleads with him not to reveal her adventuring ways because she will inherit her husband’s fortune one day. The husband finds out, and he and the man play a trick on the wife to get her to reveal her true identity as a gold-digger.

Four Harmonic Girls

The act was sixteen minutes long. Four girls play various musical instruments. Two of the girls wear classy dresses and are good looking. The pianist sings, one girl does a violin solo, and another plays the piccolo.

Edward Abeles and Co.

This sketch entitled “Waiting at the Church” was thirty one minutes long on the full stage. The sketch opens on a simple and attractive interior setting. A Chinese servant is pouring his employer a drink after a long night out. A irate family of the bride enters, and it appears that the man has forgotten it is his wedding day. They do everything they can to get him moving, but to no avail. They eventually succeed because the bride assures him that she does not love anyone else.

Swor and Westbrook

The act was eighteen minutes long. Swor, formerly of Swor and Mack, has a new act with his wife. Westbrook sings “coon” songs and Swor dances. They use Billy Farnum’s farewell song for the finish in which they walk out through the audience.

Henry Lewis

The act was eleven minutes long. Henry Lewis was formerly the German comedian for Browning and Lewis. In this new single act, he wears German makeup, tells parodies, and dances.

Arthur Hopkins Co.

This sketch entitled “Hazel Weston Or ‘More sinned Against Than Usual'” was forty-five minutes long on the full stage. May Malloy plays Hazel Weston, who transforms from a wart doctor in one town to a postmistress of another. She is accused of stealing four postcards by Luke Prentice (Erville Alderson), much to the dismay of his son (Ernest Leonard), her lover. The villain, Flugeon Smith (W.H. Forris) is followed around by a violin player, who punctuates his lines with music. Dick Lynch plays the Sheriff who does several illustrated songs between acts. “Ludicrous sketches” on the sheet illustrated his songs.

De Grant and McLellan

The act was eighteen minutes long. Two young men sing and do some comedy on the side. The finale is an impersonation of opera singers.

Graham Moffat Players

This sketch entitled “The Concealed Bed” was thirty minutes long on the full stage. This sketch is about a Scottish man and woman who are to be married. The company is made up of Scottish actors. The man has promised the woman that he will join the “Teetotalers”, but goes out for a night of drinking with the woman’s brother. When the woman and her mother come back the next day, they find her brother sleeping and her betrothed sleeping in a bed concealed in a closet. More comedy is injected into the sketch by the inclusion of a gossiping woman, who knows everything about everyone in the tenement. She is evicted by the end.