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1-43 of 43
- After wolf blood transfusion, man thinks he's becoming a wolf.
- A spirit guides a man on a trip into the future.
- A shipwrecked man returns to find his wife has married her first love.
- A convict discovers the man chained to him is the count who framed him.
- While attending Stanford University, Silent Duval, a half-breed Indian, is both a football star and the object of scorn by his fellow students--except Mary MacDonald. Duval leaves college in disgust and returns to his Northland home as a secret agent for MacDonald's business firm. Later, Duval learns that Mary has been lost in a violent snowstorm while searching for her father, and he defies death to repay her kindness by rescuing her and teaching her father's enemy, Winston Sassoon, a lesson in the law of the Yukon. Duval rewards the patience of Nadine Picard, also a half-breed, with his love.
- A crofter's daughter has a child by an outlaw and is condemned to death when it is stolen by a midwife's mad daughter.
- A man hires a crook to kill his father, then betrays him and abducts the crook's daughter.
- A colonel saves a prince's life when he joins a club of men who draw lots to kill one another.
- An old prospector discovers a bonanza mine of gold on the Diamond Dude Ranch. He tells two men about it and they kill him, and then make plans to acquire the ranch. The property is owned by an easterner named Bob Jordan and is operated for him by John Grant, but it quickly becomes the scene o many mysterious mishaps and the few remaining guests are planning to leave when Jordon arrives. Dr. Pike and Mr. Cooper make an offer to buy the ranch but Joan Grant, the foreman's daughter, tells Bob the ranch can be made to be profitable if he would make some improvements. Bob spends most of his money on the construction of a dam, to improve the water supply, and then hires "Broncho" Wilson, the World's Champion Rider, and his Wild West Rodeo troupe, including Vera McGinnis, the World's Champion Trick Rider, to stage weekly shows. The remaining guests stay on, and many others show up. Among them are Joe Jenkins and his mother who chose the range to quiet her jaded nerves. Joe accidentally overhears Pike and Cooper, the men who killed the prospector, talking about their plan to dynamite the water supply, but they kill him before he can tell anybody and then plant evidence indicating that John Grant was the killer. Later, after Jordan rides after Pike to take him a briefcase he had left at the ranch, he trails Pike and Cooper to the hidden mine. The villains, after cutting the telephone wires, send their henchmen to attack Jordan and Joan at the ranch.
- Allen Jennings, whose father was murdered and his gold mine claim jumped, has been seeking the murderers for years. One day, a mine owner and rancher named John Sanderson hires Allen to evict neighboring ranchers Grace and Tom Henden, children of Jim Henden. Unknown to Jennings, Henden and Sanderson, whose real name is John Jasper, were once partners, and it was they who jumped Allen's father's claim. After Allen deduces the truth, Jasper kidnaps Grace and Tom, but he eventually is shot and the mine claim is reinstated to Allen.
- A squire must capture a highwayman to win a girl.
- Paul Gilmore, a respected bank president, is in league with a gang of bond thieves headed by Creighton. The gang attempts to frame a young teller named Bruce Pomroy, but he escapes incarceration and joins Creighton's gang. During a robbery attempt, Bruce rescues his girlfriend, Betty, from the villains, and reveals himself as an agent of the Department of Justice.
- An escaped convict blackmails his daughter and on his death reveals her titled lover is her adopted brother.
- A dwarf usurer stops a rich man from tracking his poor brother and granddaughter.
- A man and woman survive a shipwreck and make it to an African shore. They must put their differences aside to survive. When a man from a nearby ranch finds them, they think they're safe...but are they?
- Rose Warner and her father, Luke, are attacked by a band of desperadoes and are rescued by wandering rangers, including an ex-parson, English Charlie, and Barbecue Sam, a cook. "The rescuing rangers are comic types - . They always appear in the nick of time when the girl is about to be left at the mercy of the bandits and put them to rout. The love interest is taken care of toward the finish between 'Buck,' head of the comic heroes, and the girl.
- Hugh Kenyon defends a mine in Mexico against the attack of a gang of gringo outlaws. When he returns to the United States, wounded in the arm, he is discharged by his employer, who has been persuaded by a rejected suitor of Hugh's wife that he has been dishonest in his dealings. Hugh cannot find work and is completely unable to support his wife and young child. He is driven to desperation by his situation, and he goes to the palatial home of his former employer, forcing his way in with a gun in his hand. He confronts the man and demands enough money to help his starving family. The mine owner takes pity on Hugh and finally comes to believe in his innate honesty and sincerity. The man who falsely accused Hugh is, in turn, discharged, and Hugh gets his job back.
- A cousin tries to kill an heir through the family tradition of a cursed curtain.
- A gambling lieutenant fakes suicide, kidnaps his rival's child, and trains him to steal his father's secrets.
- A maid plots to wed her mistress to a poor Irishman instead of a rich Lord.
- An abused wife is cast out into the street by her uncaring husband. Rescued by a gang of down-and-out patrons of the "End of the Trail" mission, Dawn soon falls for a dapper mission benefactor who is also a high-end burglar.
- An abducted heiress leaves her crooked husband, becomes a dancer, and loves a blackmailed Earl.
- James "Jimmy" Jefferson Lee, a wealthy, idle, adventure-loving young Long Islander, practices jumping his horse, an endeavor that cost his father his life. Jimmy begins a beautiful friendship with Jane when he accepts her dare to dive with her from the seventy-feet-high roof of the Yacht Club into the sparkling sound below. Displeased with Jimmy's shiftless ways, however, Jane prods him into devoting some time to his business interests, especially the All-American Tire Co., of which his rival, stodgy Harold Polk, is general manager. Jimmy's unconventional methods result in resignations by all the company's executives, but he manfully steers the business to financial success and, meanwhile, rides a dangerous horse called "Homicide"--thereby silencing those who scoffed at him and winning Jane's heart.
- A cattle rustler decides to reform, and helps a rancher battle a gang of notorious rustlers.