311*r-ee:s, ill Iyer er to i islieit-afeesisV'.id13n-erJ.I.idedils;wrdinyss,mpedcb€ccV€OfSanford Dodge Has‘The Right of WayIn easoing about for a successful | ot play for this season, Mr. Sanford he Dodge, decided to produce -*The;w Right of Way”. With this end in ar view he secured from Charles Froh- dc man's agents, the A merican and Canadian rights for this wonderful! drama. He will use Eugene Pres-1 brey’s version which is conceded to be a most finished dramatization of Sir | . Gilbert Parker’s popular story, which, j a by the way. is founded on absolute facts.The story is not in any way a dis-1 ^ cussion of religion, still it propounds | seme questions that are difficult toj*! answer and in fact can only be answered by the individual opinion and i dictates of the individual brain and conscience. The play is constructed * j] and executed with artistic care and detail and is intensely interesting with thrilling climaxes and terse, telling dialogue. As Charley Steele, q the brainy lawyer. Mr. Sanford Dodge will prove a revelation to those who have known him in “Sack and • Buskin of the legitimate drama, jThose who have read the thrilling novel, “The Right of Way” will want to see it produced and those | who have not will be just as intensely-interested, as the play is a virile, living, throbbing chapter of heart beats from experiences that might befall any or all of us.e?tc01I SitlclJidIBAc