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1-7 of 7
- A brash stranger and his sheep arrive in a small town, but not soon after, the townspeople decide they've seen enough of him.
- Tom Harper, a young sheepman, lately arrived in the country with his mother, is warned by an unsigned note that "this is a cattleman's country, and not good for a sheepman's health." Tom goes to the sheriff, armed with the note, and a revolver, and tells this officer that he is not looking for trouble, but they had better let him alone. Tom, on his way home, is fired upon, and returning the shot, wounds one of the cattlemen. Tom turns his horse, and riding to his sweetheart's home, takes refuge there. The wounded man is carried to Tom's home, when his mother, unaware that the cattleman had sought her son's life, cares for him. In the meantime, a number of the cattlemen have trailed Tom to his sweetheart's home, where they lay in wait for him. Later, Tom is taken in hand by the sheriff and looked up in jail to prevent a lynching. But Buck Weaver, the ring-leader of the cattlemen, who was shot by Tom, learning that his nurse is the mother of the man he tried to kill, goes to the sheriff and makes a full confession that Tom shot him in self-defense.
- In this interactive film, play as Clark while he grapples with the faults of his longtime bond with his toxic friend, Chase, and his new friendship with the naive but kindhearted, Marcus, as they investigate an eerie urban legend.
- Richard Mead was a sheepherder who lived with his daughter in a hut in the mountains. He was hated by the cattlemen and was ordered to quit the range. Returning to his home he tells his daughter what has happened, and prepares to protect himself. The cattleman orders two men to go to his hut and put him out of the way. In the battle that follows the sheepman is wounded and one of the cowboys killed. The surviving one returns to town for assistance and the sheepman secrets himself in the mountains. On the arrival of the posse they find the sheepman gone and force his daughter to leave also. She arrives in town to be scorned by the women and jeered by the men. The new parson hears the insulting remarks and befriends her, offering her a home with his mother. In the meantime a cowboy has discovered the hiding-place of the girl's father and comes to inform the posse and is overheard by the minister, who determines to reach the fugitive first--if he can--and assist him. The daughter pleads to be taken along and the two set out and come upon the sheepman in his refuge in the mountains. Shortly after the posse ride in and demand the immediate surrender of the sheepman. The minister knocks the leader down and, at the point of the gun he has taken from the prostrated cattleman, preaches his first sermon, the first perhaps these men had heard in years. The posse return guiltless of the sheepman's blood and the minister has settled a desperate feud, filled his church, and gained a wife.