Summaries

When a railroad engineer refuses to participate in a strike, the union drops him and he loses his job.

Jay Wilsey, aka Buffalo Bill Jr in westerns, wears overalls instead of Levis and has a throttle, rather than a horse's reins, in his hands but still ends up riding to the rescue, albeit on a faster track and a straighter line than usual.He is a straight-arrow railroad locomotive engineer who, when Matthew Betz stirs up the employees and leads a strike against the company, refuses to join the revolt, and scabs on down the line. This upsets Betz no end.William V. Mong, the railroad president, decides to disguise himself as an itinerant locomotive-fireman and go mingle amongst the workers and see what is causing all this unrest. By and by, Betz, and co-villain Walter Perry, get wise and clunk old Mong on the head and throw him into an empty locomotive, set it on a full-steam-ahead course which does not bode well for Mong or the locomotive.—Les Adams ([email protected]>

Details

Keywords
  • train engineer
  • landlady
  • rescue attempt
  • steam engine
  • railroad business
Genres
  • Drama
Release date May 26, 1932
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Passed
Countries of origin United States
Language English
Production companies Action Pictures

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 55m
Color Black and White
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 1.37 : 1

Synopsis

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