Kalem Kalendar (1915)

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36 Kalem Company — The International Producers NEJFSPAPER and : : : : Trogram Announcements Fill in the name of your theatre and date of exhibition and send these press notices to your local paper. You will -find that they are business-producers. The announcements may also be used to advantage in your programs. {Continued from page 34) The Caretaker’s Dilemma F course Bud and Mac could not be blamed for taking full advantage of the opportunity to enjoy the solid comfort which came their way. The two were hired as caretakers by the Ways, who were about to leave the city on a visit. Scarcely had their employers departed, than Jean, a most beautiful miss and Mrs. May’s cousin, arrived on a visit. Never having met her cousin’s husband, Jean just naturally mistook Mac for Mr. Way — ^much to Bud’s disgust. The two caretakers were having the time of their young lives when their employers, filled with a feeling of foreboding, returned. What followed will give you some of the heartiest laughs of your life when “The Caretakers’ Dilemma/’ the Kalem comedy featuring Bud Duncan and Ethel Teare, is shown at the , on ^ ^ ^ To The Vile Dust ^^UTLAWS though they are, Stingaree and hi spartner in exile, Howie, possess a sense of justice. Having saved the life of Vanheimert whom they found perishing in the desert, the two bushrangers take the man to their gunyah and nurse him back to health. Learning his rescuer’s identity, the man later treacherously attempts to slay them and thus win the reward offered for their capture, dead or alive. How Stingaree and his companion frustrate Vanheimert’s plot and how they give him back to the desert which once had almost claimed him for its own, is powerfully told in “To the Vile Dust,” the newest two-act episode of “Stingaree,” the series which KalEm has produced from E. W. Hornung’s famous novel. “To the Vile Dust,” comes to the , on « V V V The Taking of Stingaree QTINGAREE is captured! Shortly after the bushranger who is the central character in KalEm’s famous series of two-act dramas, “Stingaree,” captures one of the inspectors who had vowed to take liirn prisoner, he, in turn, is caught by another inspector. The two officials are Kilbride and Cairns and an intense rivalry for the honor of taking Stingaree exists between them. But the outlaw who has set out to defy all Australia, succeeds in turning the tables upon Cairns and so wins his freedom. The story is told in “The Taking of Stingaree,” the newest episode of the series which is based upon E. W. Hornung’s romantic novel. This two-act subject coil^es to the , on Like its predecessors, “The Taking of Stingaree” is complete in itself. (Continued on page 38)