- Indian Agent Kip Lewis arrives in Gun Town where Buckskin Sawyer is having her payroll shipments robbed by Indians. Kip and his men are ready the next time and learn the robbers are white men dressed as Indians. Kip finds Davy Sawyer's case at the scene and confronts him. When Davy accuses Talbot whom he lent it to, Talbot shoots him. But Davy names Talbot before he dies and Kip goes after him.—Maurice VanAuken <mvanauken@a1access.net>
- Filled from front to back (especially the film-ending scenes)with stock footage, and matching costumes for some of the principals, from Universal's 1941 "Bad Lands of Dakota," nothing in the film, nor the characters, has anything to do with the source film. Kip Lewis, an agent for the U. S. Interior Department, arrives with his pal, "Ivory" Keys, to investigate reports that the stagecoaches, on a line operated by "Buckskin" Jane Sawyer (costumed to match Frances Farmer in "Bad Lands of Dakota") are being held up by Indians. The actual culprits are white men masquerading as Indian, members of a gang led by saloon owner, "Lucky" Dorgan, who are after control of the stagecoach line. (Despite reports to the contrary, while there is an actor named Lyle Talbot in this film, there is no character named Talbot in the film.)—Les Adams <longhorn1939@suddenlink.net>
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