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Show THE RIGHT OF WAY." No one having read tbe delightfully strong story of Sir Gilbert Parker's "The Right of Way," - can afford to mles the dramatization of it, which will pay a visit to the Grand Opera House tonight. The play has been most adequately handled and air tbe thrilling features havo been preserved, preserv-ed, though presented in living form far more vividly than could be the case In the printed pages. ; The play has proved a strong drawing card, everywhere It has been presented. ' Interest for the most part centers around the two male characters. Charley Char-ley Steele and Joe Portugais, and tho3e two excellent actors keep very much in tho scone during the course of the play. Both roles are difficult to handle with any semblance to real-Ism, real-Ism, but both have the characters well In hand and make all that Is possible out of them. Those two actors are given capital support and the several acts are set In most becoming pictures. pic-tures. - |