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1-50 of 83
- Regan and Burns intend to foreclose a mortgage on Lowery's ranch. Lowery's foreman, Bill Demming, and his assistant get into a scrap. Bill runs away and is charged with murder. He impersonates Lowery in order to get money from the latter's grandfather to pay off the mortgage, succeeds, but is compelled to marry the old man's niece, Alice. Bill is cleared of the murder charge, Lowery's ranch is saved. Bill and Alice face a happy future together.
- A gang of rustlers has a large herd of cattle but no land on which to graze them. They decide to take over Colonel Halliday's (Tom Bay) ranch. They attack and Halliday's wife and their daughter Ann (Olive Hasbrouck) are losing the battle until Jim Dane (Hal Taliaferro, as Wally Wales), the man from Peaceful Valley, rides in and takes a hand.
- Revenue agent Tom Mallory, newly stationed at the U. S.-Mexican border, wagers that he can bring a gang of rum and gun runners into U. S. territory. Disguised, he arrives in a Mexican village, the rendezvous of the cutthroats, and leads them across the border into his trap by provoking each desperado into angry pursuit after him.
- Playboy Billy Burton has been warned by his banker father not to be involved in any more escapades that land his picture in the newspapers. Despite the warning, at a nightclub party, a drunken Billy takes a dare from his friends to go onstage and dance with the club's chorus girls. While dancing, Billy notices that a man's pocket is being picked and rushes to catch the culprit. A fight ensues, during which the stolen money is recovered, but the police are summoned. The fight results in Billy's picture being in the next morning's newspaper. Furious, Mr. Burton disowns Billy. He goes west, is robbed, rescues the heroine, becomes involved in all sorts of adventurous scrapes and ultimately triumphs.
- Madge Walling's uncle dies and leaves her his ranch, but with the proviso that she be married by noon on the day she turns 18 years of age. Harold Rice, the man she is to marry, is held up by bandit Pete Black and doesn't arrive at the ranch on time. Secret Service agent Rankin manages to recover Harold's money from Black, but is injured in the process and suffers amnesia. He wanders onto the Walling ranch, where he is mistakenly assumed to be Rice. Complications ensue.
- John Benson and Tim Mannick ride into Marin City in search of Morgan Shelby, a crook who cheated them out of their ranch. Shelby tries to kill them, hiring gunman Bob Grice to do the job, but he is unsuccessful. Shelby is finally exposed and driven out of town while Benson wins Shelby's sister, Betty.
- When a boxer is murdered a newspaper reporter tries to frame the boxer's sister, a nightclub owner, for the crime.
- Our hero, knocked out by the villain, imagines himself in Heaven and in Hell until he comes to. In the end he defeats the bad man and wins the girl.
- John Lawson stakes out a gold mining claim, but is driven off by a gang lead by "Red Star" Dorgan. Buffalo Bill, Jr. happens to be riding by and hears the commotion and drives the claim jumpers away from Lawson who is barricaded in his cabin.
- After he stops a runaway stage, Buddy is given the job of replacing its driver, who was just killed in an attempted holdup. When he gets to Mineral City, Buddy is recognized by Blaabs, a stranded Shakespearian actor, who recalls that Buddy was once accused of robbery. Blaabs remains silent, and he and Buddy are soon sharing a cabin near the goldfields. During a storm, Helen Mason and Jack Crawford, the son of the owner of the Golden Eagle Mine, take refuge with Buddy at his cabin. By cheating at cards, Jack forces Helen to accept his proposal of marriage. Buddy then produces proof that Jack is guilty of the crime of which he himself has been wrongly accused. About to strike Buddy with a knife, Jack is struck down by a bolt of lightning. When the elder Crawford is later charged with fraudulent ownership of the mine, he arranges for some of his men to remove most of the gold. Buddy captures the men and returns the stolen ore. Crawford attempts to blow up the mine and is killed in the resulting explosion. Buddy and Helen make plans to be married.
- The three Morgan brothers, Glenn, Jim and Buddy are all air mail pilots. The plane flown by Jim is shot down by Hugh Jeffries for the money it carries. Another flight is made by Buddy followed by Jeffries intending to shoot him down also...
- A cowpuncher, thinking he is a murderer and no longer caring for life for this reason, risks his life to save a ranch. He later discovers that the man supposedly murdered was only stunned
- Bill Dillon is denied employment at the Harper ranch but gets a job with the Taylors, whose difficulties with an irrigation project are then resolved through Bill's friendship with Dorothy Harper. Discovering a plot to steal the payroll, Dillon is harassed by foreman Hawk Morton, but he escapes to rescue Dorothy and her father.
- The Cowboy works on the ranch owned by The Girl. Her brother, in the clutches of a crook, attempts to steal money from The Girl: blame for the theft is laid on The Cowboy. The Cowboy learns of the plot of The Man, another rancher, to steal The Girl's money. The Cowboy prevents the theft, captures The Man, and wins The Girl.
- After Bill Davis rescues a Native American woman from outlaw Jim Slade, he is lost in the desert, where his horse dies from thirst. Nita Randall, whose father operates a nearby mine, finds Bill in time to prevent him from suffering a similar fate. When Slade plots to take over the mine, Dad Randall kills one of outlaw's men, then dies of an injury. Bill accepts the blame and Nita turns against him. She later forgives and falls in love with Bill after he defeats Slade.
- A girl loses her memory when she witnesses her uncle's murder. The murderer, intent on obtaining a written confession from her that she killed her uncle, kidnaps the girl, but she escapes.
- Bill Drake finds a girl who has fainted in the middle of the road and takes her back to the ranch where he works. The owner of the ranch, Evans, refuses the girl shelter, and Bill places her in the care of Graves, the local undertaker. To be near the girl, Bill takes a job in the general store. Tom Evans, the son of the ranch owner, loses his father's payroll at cards and robs the store in order to replace the money. Bill is accused of the crime and taken into custody, but he escapes and finds Tom, bringing him in for the sheriff. In the meantime, a detective hired by the girl's father has found her, and the father has arrived to take her home by train. Bill rides after the train, leaps through a window, and proposes to the startled girl.
- Bill Merritt and his pal, Chewin' Charlie, notice a touring car passing them on the road. Soon the car stops, and the party sets out after a jackrabbit wanted by an elderly lady in the car. Bill, realizing the brakes have slipped on a downgrade, rescues the runaway car and its occupant, Mrs. Gordon, and wins the lady's admiration. Invited to the hotel of millionaire mine owner Andrew Gordon, Bill becomes interested in his daughter, Cleo, but is told that the man who aspires to be her husband must possess wealth. That night Bill overhears a plot to take over a strip of land between Gordon's mine and that of his enemy Tom Middleton; Bill and Charlie set out to stake their claim, and after subduing "Fraction" Jack, they register the claim. Bill persuades Gordon to buy out his claim and saves Charlie from claim jumpers.
- Doris Bayne is instructed by her wealthy father to deliver a valuable diamond necklace by air. When the airplane is robbed in flight, Doris is forced to throw the necklace from the craft's open cockpit, and it lands at the feet of Bud Keenan, an honest ranch foreman. Bud picks it up and soon finds himself looking down the barrel of a pistol held by Doris, who has parachuted from the plane. Doris ties up Bud, but he escapes and rescues her after she falls down an embankment. Bud takes Doris to his ranch, but while he fetches a doctor, gang leader Scar Degan appears and demands the necklace, which Doris has given to a Native American woman for safekeeping. Scar takes Doris to the gang's hideout, forcing Bud to retrieve the necklace and buy her freedom. A battle follows that leaves the gang dead and Bud in possession of the necklace, which he returns to Doris.
- A cowboy arrives to help a girl who has a note due. He plans to sell her cattle to raise the money but they are stampeded and most are killed. Knowing who stampeded them gives him another plan to get the money.
- "Plot concerns happy-go-lucky rancher who decides to spruce up in order to win the affection of a girl. Enemies seeking to have him put out of the way, plan to rob a stagecoach with one man dressed in Bill's clothes. He hears of plot and in vigorous fight with gang he whips them and brings them to justice." - Motion Picture News.
- Cowhand Tom Rawlins inherits a ranch but there are some double-crossing lawyers who are out to take it from him. It is up to him to prove his identity but the lawyers and their henchmen have his identification papers and he is in jail. Maybe pretty Sue Conway, the sheriff's daughter, will help him.
- Cowpuncher Buddy Royle, who is a golf enthusiast, teaches the game to Colonel Price and his daughter, Pansy, on the banker's ranch. Roger Farnley, a bank cashier, belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, and he schemes to frame Buddy by planting fake bills in the bank payroll and having his gang rob the colonel. Buddy is kidnapped by the counterfeiters, but Pansy is alerted and frees him. Buddy exposes the cashier, reveals his identity as an agent of the Bankers' Association, and finds romance with Pansy.
- A cowboy named Quicker'n Lightnin' searches for his sweetheart, Helen Harlow, after she is abducted by Mowii, a notorious renegade. Morella, a Native American girl, informs Lightnin' and his friend, Al McNutt, that Mowii has taken Helen to his hideout in a deserted Pueblo village. Along the way, they learn that Morella's father has been murdered. Mowii and his gang capture the group, but Lightnin' escapes and instructs Morella's lover, Truxillo, to send the sheriff with a posse. Following a heated battle, most of the gang members are captured. Lightnin' comes to the rescue as Mowii's mother, known as the Squaw, is about to sacrifice Helen to the sun god. He grabs the arrow and impales Mowii's arm, then ties him up until the sheriff arrives. Afterward, Lightnin' takes Helen home.
- Cowpuncher awakes in a hotel with the daughter of a banker and is forced to marry her, though thought inferior by the girl's mother. He saves mother from fire and she reverses her opinion.
- Two families, the Waltons and the Darcys, have been feuding over who owns an important waterhole. Patriarch John Walton decides that the feud should be settled by an outside party. Young cowboy Wally Rand winds up in the middle of the dispute because of his love for the pretty Jane Darcy, and finds himself mixed up in a swindle and kidnapping.
- Chased by Detective Murray and the posse, a wounded Jim Drake heads across the border into Mexico where he recuperates with the Wolfe's. When Murray arrives again, Jim heads into the desert. But in the night his guide sneaks off and leaves him without water or his horse.
- Attracted to a girl, a cowboy takes a job on the adjoining ranch hoping to see her again and he gets his chance when her horse becomes a runaway.
- A ranger out to capture a wanted criminal is shot at by a pretty young girl who mistakes him for a claim jumper. He is later ambushed and left for dead in a burning cabin by the man he's hunting, who is hiding out in a deserted mine shaft. Complications ensue.
- Jim West, foreman of John Calhoun's ranch, falls in love with Helen, the boss's daughter, after rescuing her from a runaway horse. Her brother, Ted, falls into the companionship of Bill Jackson, a notorious gambler and saloon keeper, who persuades Ted to sign I. O. U.'s while under the influence of alcohol. Jim, in company with Red Irwin, a tough deputy sheriff, confronts the gambler and forces a confession. Jackson plans a raid on the Calhoun cattle, forcing Ted to be his ally. Dolores, a dancehall girl, overhears the plot and tells Jim, causing Helen to misunderstand his motives. Jim's men capture the bandits, and Ted is forgiven by his father when he is wounded in a fight with Jackson. Jim is reunited with Helen after explaining his relation to Dolores.
- Bill Hamilton is on his way to inspect the Lazy-B ranch, which he has inherited, when he collides with the Lazy-B foreman, Buck Wilson, and has a fight with him. Later, while working on Jim Downing's ranch, he foils Wilson's attempts to acquire Downing's mortgage and foreclose. Mary Downing helps by forcing a confession from the man who killed her father, thus clearing Bill of murder charges. Bill protects Mary from Buck just before a rescue party arrives.
- Sylvia Morton is the daughter of wealthy banker Henry Morton. She's worried that her father is working too hand. One day she meets Buddy Miller and his friend Romeo, and together they come up with a scheme to take her father to a mountain resort for some rest--whether he wants to or not. Unbeknownst to the group, Henry is in the middle of an important stock transaction involving his holdings in a steel company. When a clerk at the resort finds out who Morton is and about the stock deal, he arranges for Morton to be kidnapped and held for a large ransom. Complications ensue.
- Bud Crawford, son of the owner of The Golden Chariot [gold] Mine, from which pay dust is stolen, sets out to apprehend robber and effects his capture, though in danger of arrest himself as a cattle rustler.