Cast

John Wayne
Stony Brooke

Ray Corrigan
Tucson Smith

Raymond Hatton
Rusty Joslin

Don 'Red' Barry
Will Parker

Pamela Blake
Irene Parker

LeRoy Mason
E. B. 'Joe' Balsinger

Charles Middleton
Luke Parker

Elmo Lincoln
U.S. Marshal Gregg

Jack Ingram
Sheriff Nolan

Jack Kenney
Radioman Doyle

Bob Burns
Rancher at Hearing

Budd Buster
Bank Teller

Jack Kirk
Posse Rider

Malcolm 'Bud' McTaggart
Park Ranger

Dave O'Brien
Acacia Park Game Warden

Ralph Peters
Man in Cafe

Jack Rockwell
Rancher

Al Taylor
Posse Rider

David Sharpe
Newt - The Cafe Counterman

Yakima Canutt
(uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Interestingly for this routine B-feature, the usual "Three Mesquiteer" characters are not really at the centre of the plot. The story belongs more to 'Red' Barry ("Parker") whose father has been deceived by a crooked politician and so his son ends up having to steal to feed himself and his family. It's when he pinches a cow from Messrs. Wayne, Corrigan and Hatton that the story starts to hot up a bit and, of course, they try to redress the balance for him and his sister "Irene" (Pamela Blake). It's takes a while to get going, this one - but once the scenario has been defined, it moves along nicely with a little more chemistry between Wayne and his female co-star than we are used to. "Ming" himself, Charles Middleton appears sparingly as the hard-done-by father, and LeRoy Mason is adequate - though nothing more - as "Balsinger" - the devious villain of the piece. The film aims squarely at some of the "New Deal" policies of post WWI US governments where opportunists frequently ended up with the whip hand over those who had worked hard during the war feeding the troops, but whose services were now surplus to requirements and they were left very vulnerable to pretty ruthless exploitation.
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