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1-9 of 9
- A woman falls to her death after getting attacked by a black-clad assailant. Her sister arrives in town and starts dating a police detective, who's friends with a strange movie theater curator, as other women fall prey to the killer.
- In the Canadian province of Acadia, young Evangeline is betrothed to Gabriel. But before their wedding can take place, the British imprison the men and send them into exile with their lands forfeit to the Crown Evangeline follows the exiled men in hopes of finding her beloved, but even after he and the other Acadians are released in Louisiana, she cannot find him, always arriving at some locale just after he has departed. But she dedicates her life to searching the continent for the man she loves.
- After a Sioux uprising and massacre at New Ulm, Minnesota, brothers George and John Sontag form an outlaw band with Chris Evans, largely because of greed. They engineer several successful and spectacular train robberies before a sheriff's posse and Federal officials begin to trail them. The bandits, chased by bloodhounds and Indians employed to capture them, elude their pursuers until George is captured. John and Chris continue for ten months, during which time they visit their homes three times and escape after killing several deputies. During one return, they escape a burning barn and shoot their way through the surrounding posse. On their fourth return home, Chris's eye is shot out and he is captured, while John is shot dead.
- Huell traces the lives of two unique men who created two amazing underground sites: the Underground Gardens of Baldasare Forestiere in Fresno and Burro Schmidt's 2,000-foot-long tunnel through a mountain in the Mojave Desert.
- Huell visits the 1928 Pantages Theatre in downtown Fresno. Later known as Warner's Theatre when owned by Warner Bros., Frank Caglia bought it in 1973, renamed it Warnors (for legal reasons) and restored it and its pipe organ to past glory.
- Huell travels to Central California to visit the 80 acre Masumoto Family Farm owned by David "Mas" Masumoto and his family. Mas is also an award winning author of such books as "Epitaph for a Peach" and "Wisdom of the Last Farmer."
- Huell stops at a few of the family-owned fruit stands on the 80-mile Fresno County Fruit Trail; spends a night at the Blossom Trail BnB; and at the Sanger Depot Museum learns about the 62-mile Kings River Flume used to transport lumber.
- Huell goes to The Big Fresno Fair that has over 165 acres and 127 years of history. He learns the fairgrounds were used as a Japanese American internment camp and meets the great-granddaughter of Pop Laval who shot photos of early fairs.
- Huell goes in search of really big trees in California and finds three examples: a Moreton Bay fig tree in Santa Barbara, a California live oak in Temecula, and the General Grant giant sequoia in Kings Canyon National Park.