Texas
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:47:01
we've got to take some steps
to protect ourselves.

:47:04
I'm fed up on the whole thing.
It ain't worth it.

:47:07
The trouble with us is,
we're not organized like the rustlers are.

:47:11
Look at Townsend. They
slaughtered his cattle and burned him out.

:47:15
- I don't want that to happen to me.
- It won't.

:47:17
From now on,
we're going to fight fire with fire.

:47:20
That's why I asked you to come here.
:47:22
Right here in Texas,
we've got the greatest gunslingers there are.

:47:26
John Wesley Hardin,
Clay Allison, King Fisher...

:47:29
Jim Courtright, Manning Clements...
:47:32
and I want to hire them to work for us.
:47:34
Dusty's right, that's what we need.
:47:39
Blaire, come on!
:47:53
What happened?
:47:55
Father!
:48:15
I'm going out to California.
I'm going to give Texas back to the outlaws.

:48:18
- You can't lick this thing by running away.
- And you can't lick something you can't see.

:48:23
It's four months since Dusty was killed.
Nobody's been caught yet.

:48:26
All the sheriff ever does is go out
and look around and come back and say:

:48:30
"The rustlers must have come down
from the Indian nations."

:48:33
- We just have to keep on trying.
- It ain't as easy as that, Matthews.

:48:36
If I could get a fair price for mine,
I'd sell out, too.

:48:41
- Evening, Mike.
- Evening, Tod.

:48:43
- Hello, Doc.
- Evening, Doc.

:48:44
This ain't a very good place for it, is it?
:48:47
- For what?
- Sparking.

:48:49
In my day, a young feller didn't stand
along the main street doing his sparking.

:48:53
Doc.
:48:54
- When's the marriage coming off?
- Marriage?

:48:57
You've heard of it, ain't you?
:48:59
He hasn't asked me yet.

prev.
next.