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1-32 of 32
- The Devil arranges for a deceased gangster to return to Earth as a well-respected judge to make up for his previous life.
- Two sisters living in New York City aspire to become high-profile models.
- Young Sherry Williams dreams of having a singing career, and she idolizes her older sister Josephine, who has gone to New York to perform on the stage. When Sherry is distraught just before performing at her school, a visiting Broadway producer encourages her by telling her positive things about her sister. Soon afterwards, Sherry decides to make a surprise trip to New York to visit Josephine - but what she finds there is not at all what she expected.
- Child film star Jane Powell, fed up with her every move being stage managed by her stage mother, runs away and joins the U.S. Crop Corps, a small army of young folks staying at youth hostels and picking crops while adult farmworkers are at war. Totally clueless about the real world, befuddled Jane is embroiled in teen-romance complications while Mother frantically searches. Will her stardom help or hinder her new friends? W.C. Fields does a short act with Bergen and McCarthy.
- The Dorsey Brothers bandleaders' lives traced from childhood music insisting father to fame rise eventual split furthering careers propelling with their music.
- In an exclusive Swiss school for young girls, Christa Storm discovers that she is expecting a baby. She keeps the secret from everyone except her lover, young medical student David Perrin. Having been in the private school most of her life, she can't confide in her father, whom she hardly knows. David wishes to marry her, but he can't afford to and he can't get his father's approval.
- A cowboy finds himself working with a mysterious figure called "The Phantom Horseman" in order to prevent a criminal gang from stealing a gold mine. The cowboy is in for a big surprise when he finally discovers the true identity of his "partner".
- "The Wickedest Place in the World - Tourists Welcome", so says the banner across main street. Bill Scott rides into the city looking for adventure. At the Palace Hotel, the wickedest place in Satan Town, Sue of the Salvation Army strives to reach one or two of the drunks, gamblers, and prostitutes that throng the saloon. Malamute, the bouncer at the bar, never shies from a fight, and what's more, he's never lost one. Sue, to her misfortune, has gotten on his nerves. Bill enters just in time to get between Malamute and Sue. After a brief but spirited battle, Malamute is bested.
- A spoiled heiress is bored by her high-society crowd, and falls for a young truck driver. Her family plans to marry her off to a wealthy young man, but she wants no part of that and she and her lover decide to elope. However, a gang of truck hijackers puts a crimp in their plans.
- Lone Wolf, who is stirring up the Indians against the wishes of his elders, gets the job of scout at the fort. When he hears of the approval of the new reservation, he sends his men to trap Scott and his troop before they can deliver the information.
- Smith, former newspaper man, goes from studio to studio trying to sell his story. Finally his landlady refuses to furnish meals but allows him to remain a week longer in his room. He fills seven wine glasses and in one puts poison. He drinks a glass a day until the last one is drained. Then he learns the maid had upset the poison. He receives a check for his play and finds happiness with the maid, Mary Brown.
- Framed for a stagecoach accident, John Bishop is jailed. Bob Leady helps break him out and in return John heads for Sonora to look for Leady's missing son. He finds him when he joins Monte black's gang, a gang from which no member has ever escaped alive.
- David Scanlon and his brother, Paul, leave their farm and go to California during the gold rush. Paul falls in love with Ann Drath, a dance hall pianist, and is murdered by jealous Ben Goring. David swears revenge and, working on a tip from Ann, poses as an outlaw, joining Goring's bandit band. During a raid on the town bank, David is wounded. Goring abducts Shirley Chalmette, the town doctor, to care for David's head wound, but despite her care David begins to lose his sight. He manages to force Goring to sign a confession, however, and then, although completely blind, kills him in a gunfight. With careful treatment by Dr. Chalmette, his new wife, David recovers full use of his sight.
- Jack Jessup serves as shotgun rider on a frontier stagecoach. Travelling through Indian territory, he is forced to keep both eyes open and his finger on the trigger.
- A small-town mill-worker leaves his sweetheart behind as he enlists for the Great War. Later he finds her overseas dancing for his fellow soldiers and she reveals to him that she is pregnant.
- From Death Valley in the Mojave Desert to Mount Whittier, the outlaw gangs are wreaking havoc on the gold and money shipments from the mines and ranches. Wells Fargo organizes an express service that will insure the shipments and ensure a guaranteed delivery. Granger Hume is hired to help Wells-Fargo deliver on their promise.
- Bob and Jim Whitely are twin brothers. Bob, an army veteran who suffered shell shock in the war, escapes from a sanitarium and holds up the Express train, for which Jim is mistakenly arrested. Jim soon escapes from jail in order to find his brother. However, his task is complicated by a crooked sheriff who pins a holdup and murder on him that the sheriff himself actually committed. To make matters worse, the murder victim was Tommy Wilkins, the brother of Jim's fiancee, who now thinks that Jim killed her brother.
- Set in the days before California became a state, Steven Bancroft, a young officer in the U. S. Calvary, is given the assignment of ensuring that dirty-work by agents of Spain, Mexico or Russian aren't going to keep statehood-for-California from becoming a reality. Bancroft uses his guns to settle any debates regarding international laws. His horse, Tarzan, also comes in handy.
- Pat O'Leary (Ken Maynard) is the construction foreman supervising the completion of a telegraph line and does so despite the efforts of Gus Lynch (Frank Hagney), a trading post owner, who has an agenda of his own to see that it isn't completed, and stirs up Indian uprisings and turmoil and havoc by his gang of motley henchmen to ensure his agenda.
- A hot young salesman at a cosmetics company finds out that he might soon be out of a job because the company is losing a lot of money. He and his secretary discover that the reason the company's losing money isn't because of poor sales, but because there's a "spy" in the office working for a competing cosmetics company. Complications ensue.
- The rich mines of Sonora are the prize of a battle of wits and shots between "Tiger" O'Flagherty, master of the supply wagon-train, and Jesse Wilks, secretly the head of a bandit gang which repeatedly robs the train, thinking thus to starve out the miners. "Tiger's" ward, Sally Blake, runs the town's only restaurant. The "Tiger" is wounded by the bandit and his servant writes to his wife, who lives apart from him in Mexico, with his grown son, Don Luis, of whose existence the father is ignorant. The Senora sends the boy to his father's aid. Arriving anonymously, he turns the tables on Wilks in several encounters and falls in love with Sally. Some capitalists are brought in, despite Wilks' opposition, who appraise the mines at high value but will not invest unless wagon-freight service is assured. So on Luis, now known "wenor Daredevil," attacks the train and recaptures the wagon in a battle in which Wilks is killed. leaving Sonora free from his menace, and Don Luis and Sally the opportunity to make arrangements for their marriage.
- Texas Ranger Bill Storm is sent to El Paso to ferret out a gang of counterfeiters thought to be working there and, on the way, gives a ride to New York socialite Beverly Dix, whose car has been wrecked on the road to El Paso.
- Henry Suggs, by daytime a vigilante and leading citizen of the town of Cattelo, is by night a marauder who terrorizes the countryside; his true identity is known only by Tarzan, a horse whose master is killed by the desperado. Suggs succeeds in having the horse condemned to death because of his supposed wickedness, but Ruth Gaunt, daughter of the murdered man, persuades Tom Drury, an itinerant cowboy, to find a way to save Tarzan. A permanent friendship springs up between Tom and the horse, while Tom and Suggs become rivals for the hand of Ruth. After a number of narrow escapes, Tom and Tarzan unmask the villain and ride triumphantly home with their prisoner.
- Drifting through the Southwest with "Kentuck," his donkey companion, Daniel Brown stops in a town to get bullets to put down the wounded animal. Stopping in a gambling parlor, he is unjustly accused of murdering the proprietor, "Bull" Dunn. Dan escapes from the sheriff, steals a horse, jumps from the steed onto a train, and is hidden by a girl in her Pullman compartment. He later takes refuge with a prospector and learns that the girl who so generously helped him on the train owns a nearby ranch, which, unknown to her, holds rich gold deposits. Joe Walters, the ranch foreman, is plotting with Stella Dunn, the widow of the murdered gambler, to buy the girl's ranch for a pittance. With the help of the old prospector, Dan prevents the sale; and, when he is about to be arrested by the sheriff, the widow Dunn confesses to having murdered her husband.
- Bruce Kenton ('Ken Maynard'), a Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman, is on the trail of an outlaw, Frank Morgan (Robert Walker), who is the brother of the girl, Helen Morgan (Gladys McConnell, that Bruce loves. Bruce does not know this, so he is puzzled as to why Helen aids the fugitive, and suspects he is her sweetheart. To compound the problem, the crook who has framed Frank shoots him and Helen thinks Bruce did it.
- Concerns the early lives of Hopi Indians. Evolves around the invasion of their lands by prospectors. Harry is the center of plot of gang of lawless whites to convince Indians he killed one of their number; he finally clears himself. The strongest situations are those near the end where Harry corners the villain, hog-ties him and delivers him to the Indians ... the Indians are seen setting fire to Harry's father's home in revenge for the father's failure to punish Harry whom they had thought guilty of the murder; they had demanded the same law for the whites as for the Indians.
- Dolly Mainard, en route to her father, a major at Fort Blaine, is escorted through dangerous Sioux territory by a cavalry detachment and Army scout Jim Cardigan. When Captain Blackwell offends some braves of Chief Gray Wolf's tribe, Jim is sent ahead to the Indian camp to ask for peace. Imprisoned by the Indians, he sends a message to Blackwell not to advance; Donlin, a renegade scout, tears the note in such a way that the message is distorted, and almost the entire force is killed. When Jim escapes, he is accused of treason by Blackwell, court-martialed, and sentenced to death; however, he escapes and rescues Dolly, her father, and Blackwell from Donlin's band of renegades. Jim discovers the missing portion of the note in Donlin's hat, proving his innocence, and Dolly remains to become his wife.