Rancher entertains girl in Nevada to get a divorce. Then her gangster husband shows up.Rancher entertains girl in Nevada to get a divorce. Then her gangster husband shows up.Rancher entertains girl in Nevada to get a divorce. Then her gangster husband shows up.
Syd Saylor
- Paddy
- (as Sid Saylor)
Tommy Coats
- Shorty - Cowhand
- (uncredited)
Lester Dorr
- Doc - Henchman
- (uncredited)
Frank Hagney
- Brodie - Henchman
- (uncredited)
Sid Jordan
- Cowhand
- (uncredited)
Tom London
- 2nd Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
Gertrude Messinger
- Martin's Secretary
- (uncredited)
Dick Rush
- Hotel Doorman
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe earliest documented telecast of this film occurred Monday 31 January 1944 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1). In Chicago, it aired Saturday 10 April 1948, the first feature film to be offered by freshly launched WGN (Channel 9). In Lowell MA (serving the Boston Area) its first telecast took place Friday 10 September 1948 on WBZ (Channel 4); it was first aired in Baltimore Sunday 23 January 1949 on WMAR (Channel 2).
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The short plot line shown on this page reads: "Rancher (Arlen) entertains girl (Grey) in Nevada to get a divorce. Then her gangster husband (MULLHALL) shows up."(more)
Hmmm...the summary writer thinks that her gangster husband was played by Norman Willis and not by Jack Mulhall. And the summary writer is correct. He is correct because he has the film, watched the film, knows the difference between Jack Mulhall and Norman Willis...and does not rely on plot lines submitted by contributors who use the (quite-often incorrect) A.F.I. plot lines as their source.
Mulhall plays the man who, thanks to Virginia Grey's character, provides the loan-money to Richard Arlen's ranch-owner character to save his ranch from being foreclosed on.
Hmmm...the summary writer thinks that her gangster husband was played by Norman Willis and not by Jack Mulhall. And the summary writer is correct. He is correct because he has the film, watched the film, knows the difference between Jack Mulhall and Norman Willis...and does not rely on plot lines submitted by contributors who use the (quite-often incorrect) A.F.I. plot lines as their source.
Mulhall plays the man who, thanks to Virginia Grey's character, provides the loan-money to Richard Arlen's ranch-owner character to save his ranch from being foreclosed on.
helpful•66
- horn-5
- Feb 6, 2007
Details
- Runtime1 hour
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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