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Lawless Code (1949)
Curly Blake, nephew and heir of wealthy Red Rock rancher Jed Gordon, persuades his uncle not to invest in a crooked land scheme promoted by former judge Harmon Steele and his secretary Lem Martin.
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Range Renegades (1948)
After Marshal Jordan is honored by Jimmy, Cannonball and others for his forty years as a law officer, the Sawyer mine is blown up by Belle’s foreman, Kern, following Sawyer’s refusal to sell out. Dan Jordan, the Marshal’s son, interested in Belle, secretly the head of the outlaws, is lured by her from scouting the road on which his father guards a ore shipment. Jimmy and Cannonball drive off the outlaws, headed by Kern and Burton, but the Marshal is fatally wounded. The town council appoints Jimmy the new Marshal, which disappoints Dan, but Belle persuades him to become Jimmy’s deputy, in order to get information from him about ore and payroll shipments. Dan quits as deputy and fights Jimmy when the latter suspects Belle of involvement in the robberies.
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Flashing Guns (1947)
After a brief mid-1940s burst of originality, Monogram’s Johnny Mack Brown western series settled back into the commonplace with such entries as Flashing Guns. In this outing, Brown tries to save his pal Shelby (Raymond Hatton) from being thrown off his ranch by crooked banker Ainsworth (James E. Logan). To do this, our hero must prove that the banker is in cahoots with the local gambling boss (Douglas Evans).
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Gun Smoke (1945)
U. S. Marshals Nevada Jack McKenzie and Sandy Hopkins come upon an overturned stagecoach with the driver and the passenger dead. They learn that the passenger, Hinkley, an archaeologist, has discovered an old Indian site that contains gold relics, and a gang has robbed him of the relics he was carrying. Jane Condon, daughter of Hinkley’s partner who was also murdered, tells Nevada that an old Indian guide, Shag, is the only one who knows where the site is. The outlaws find Shag first, and kill him after forcing the information from him. Hinkley’s son, Joel, arrives and knows where the site is and leads Nevada and Sandy there ahead of the outlaws.
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Ghost Guns (1944)
Supernatural events on the range prompt an investigation by cowboy Brown in this western.
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Law of the Range (1941)
The Wolverine Kid kills a man and it looks like Steve Howard did it. But Steve’s father recognizes the bullet as coming from the gun owned by the Kid.
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Jiggs and Maggie in Court (1948)
Maggie is resentful of being pointed out and laughed at in public because she resembles the cartoon character in the George McManus comic strip “Bringing Up Father.” She visits McManus in his studio office and tries to persuade him to stop drawing the syndicated comic-strip. He tells her he will…in 1959. Maggie, not getting any younger, retains counsel and takes McManus to court.
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Rawhide Rangers (1941)
Rawhide Rangers is a satisfyingly equitable blend of western action, music and comedy relief. The villains are a group of frontier businessmen who set up a “protective” organization for the purpose of extorting money from the local ranchers. Enter hero Johnny Mack Brown, who has arrived in town to avenge the death of his brother. In short order, Brown deduces that the crooked businessmen were also responsible for his brother’s murder, and then all heck breaks loose. Nell O’Day, one of the best horsewomen in Hollywood, is cast as the film’s eminently self-reliant heroine.
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