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1-17 of 17
- Follows a woman as she seeks revenge on the man she sees as responsible for the death of her son.
- A group of rodeo trick-riders recruits a young girl to join them.
- A paranormal researcher is drawn into a world of mystery when her boyfriend takes her to an abandoned farm house.
- Tom and Sally are the only survivors when their wagon train is attacked by Swift Wing's braves. Starlight aids in their escape and they join a group of hunters. But there is more trouble when the tribe attacks again.
- Webb Yeager was what the boys called "some" cowpuncher. He was McAllister's favorite foreman and the boys liked him as well as did the ranch owner. McAllister liked the way Webb gave orders and he also liked the way the boys obeyed his foreman. There was another admirer of Webb on the ranch and this McAllister did not like. When he learned that his daughter, Santa, was receiving attentions from Webb, he promptly told the foreman that he could either agree to stay away from the house, at least five miles out on the ranch, or quit the job. Following this, Webb and Santa arranged a code of signals by which the foreman could come to the house in McAllister's absence. Whenever Webb saw a heart with a cross inside, marked on anything from the ranch, he knew it to be a signal to meet Santa. One day Santa's father died suddenly and soon after Webb and Santa were married. But the new Mrs. Yeager had been in charge of the McAllister household so long that she couldn't get over being "boss," One day Webb ordered some cattle sold and Santa countermanded the order. Webb packed up and left. Months passed by until one day Webb, who was working as foreman on a neighboring ranch, sent to Santa to buy some steers. Before sending them, she marked a heart and cross on several. When the aggressive hubby saw that sign he thought it meant that Santa had given in and had decided to let him be boss. Webb galloped to the old home just as fast as his broncho would carry him. Leaping from his horse he ran up to Santa, who was in front of the house and asked if she was ready to admit that he was "boss." He received a real shock when Santa shook her head, "No." But then the little beauty took bold of the mystified Webb's arm and pulled him into the house. Here he found the new "boss" of the ranch. Can you guess who the new boss was?
- Amidst the controversy of the role of waste water disposal in Oklahoma's recent influx in seismic activity, Angela Spotts and Stop Fracking Payne County fight to keep oil and gas interests from bringing their homes down around them.
- For coming home in rather a merry mood one morning, along about milkman's time, his dad vowed that Bob would have to "go west, young man," and stay there until he learned to behave. So off he was bundled to the ranch of his dad's friend, Badger. Work? Bob just couldn't see it, so he changed personalities with his obliging valet and let the valet enjoy his punishment while he kicked around, having a fair-to-middling good time as valet. There was a girl of course. Badger's daughter. Things will happen, even on the best regulated ranches. While the make-believe valet was out riding one afternoon, he got off the horse to open a gate and Mr. Horse took French leave. Mildred Badger, meeting the footsore "valet" some miles from home, offered him a mount on her horse. He accepted thankfully. But their romantic proximity went to their heads, and meeting accidentally with a parson. Bob confessed his identity and the two were wed. Then came the awful task of breaking the news; made twice as awful by the discovery that Bob's dad had arrived at the ranch that afternoon. To make a long story short, they lassoed the two dads and threatened to keep them thus till doomsday unless they gave their blessing. And the dads did.
- This is a short comedy of the troubles of a tramp with a wheelbarrow, which did not belong to him. He was compelled to move it through a misunderstanding with the village officers, who thought he was the owner. They refused to allow him to leave it anywhere, much to his disgust.
- Based on the life of U.S. Deputy Bass Reeves, a black marshal in the Oklahoma Indian Territory in the years of 1867 to 1883, and his successful hunt for the elusive Dozier. A man of great valor who spoke several Indian dialects, Reeves was a deputy U.S. marshal for over thirty years and retired as a policeman in Muskogee.
- The Uncle Sam Moving Picture Company, which is located in Oklahoma, is at work on Indian pictures. A French company touring the United States fixes up Pawnee as a good location for just that same sort of work, and stops off there. Neither company knew of the other, but each spied a bulletin board in front of the local newspaper office, which gave warning that the Indians were on the warpath. Both companies, made up as grease paint Indians, mistake each other for a band of real Indians, The actors are panic-stricken and make ludicrous efforts to escape to safety. However, they discover the real situation and join in the fun heartily when the laugh is turned on them.
- Eli Whipp, a retired Pawnee scout out to claim his birthright, meets Cornelia Locke, an Englishwoman hell-bent on revenge. Their paths fated to cross, they travel north together.
- Eli and Cornelia are forced to make a choice when they find an orphaned baby and child. Meanwhile in Powder River, an English farmer discovers the slaughter of his pregnant cattle.
- With Eli in grave danger, Cornelia must find him before it is too late. In Powder River, Sheriff Marshall is investigating a suspicious suicide and murder.
- Fifteen years earlier, Trafford witnesses a violent massacre in America which triggers another tragedy across the ocean in England setting the course of Eli and Cornelia's destiny.
- Eli sets his compass for a new direction to atone for a past wrong and, now united in their hunt for revenge, grows closer to Cornelia. Trafford makes desperate preparations.
- Cornelia finally confronts the man who killed her son and new revelations come to light. Love both lost and found determines a final showdown with irreversible consequences.